United States v. McDuffie, 4th Cir. (2001)
United States v. McDuffie, 4th Cir. (2001)
United States v. McDuffie, 4th Cir. (2001)
No. 99-4883
No. 99-4914
No. 99-4915
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Dale Warren Dover, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellant
Dorsey; Thomas Brian Walsh, MARTIN, ARIF, PETROVICH &
WALSH, Springfield, Virginia, for Appellant McDuffie; David
Thomas Williams, WILLIAM B. CUMMINGS, P.C., Alexandria,
Virginia, for Appellant Turner. Robert Andrew Spencer, Assistant
United States Attorney, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee. ON
BRIEF: William B. Cummings, WILLIAM B. CUMMINGS, P.C.,
Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellant Turner. Helen F. Fahey, United
States Attorney, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee.
OPINION
WIDENER, Circuit Judge:
Defendants Gary McDuffie, Eric Dorsey and Bennie Turner appeal
their criminal convictions from a jury trial for assorted combinations
of conspiracy, bank and post office robbery, use of a firearm in a
crime of violence and other firearms violations, and witness tampering. The defendants raise multiple issues on appeal including, inter
alia, whether a police officer may request a passenger in a lawfully
stopped vehicle to produce identification; the admissibility of prior
out-of-court statements by a deceased robbery victim; evidence of an
overt act charged in the conspiracy that occurred outside the jurisdiction; and the district courts handling of three separate jury incidents.
For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
I.
On March 23, 1999 defendants were stopped for speeding by an
Arlington County police officer. Prior to the stop, the driver of the
van in which defendants were riding, Gary Spinner, had pulled alongside the police car and asked the officer for directions. Based on his
observations of the vehicle and its occupants, the officer followed the
van and subsequently initiated a traffic stop when the vehicle
exceeded the speed limit. Spinner was driving the van, Dorsey was in
the front passenger seat; Turner was sitting directly behind the driver;
and, McDuffie was sitting in the third seat, at the very rear of the van.
In the course of the traffic stop, the officer determined that the
driver of the van, Spinner, did not have a valid license. When the officer asked passenger Dorsey to check the glove box for Spinners
license and registration, he observed a surgical glove on the floor of
the van. The officer asked Dorsey for identification and ran a check
on the card Dorsey produced which revealed an outstanding warrant
for robbery. The officer asked Dorsey to step out of the van and as
he was doing so, a black ski mask fell to the ground.
With the assistance of backup officers, McDuffie and Turner were
also removed from the van and all four men were handcuffed. A
search of the van revealed a sawed-off shotgun, a handgun, ammunition, a black ski mask, surgical gloves, brown cloth gloves, a mask
made from a long underwear sleeve, a camouflage bandana and a
skull cap. In addition, Dorsey had straws and a pipe used for smoking
or inhaling narcotics, and both Spinner and Dorsey had pawn receipts
for jewelry which had been stolen from a Washington, D.C. jeweler
on January 26, 1999.
Spinner pleaded guilty to bank robbery and to using a firearm in
a crime of violence, cooperated with the government, and testified at
trial against McDuffie, Dorsey, and Turner.
Prior to trial, the district court denied defendants motion to suppress the evidence seized from the van, finding that the stop was a
legitimate traffic stop. The district court also denied defendants
motion to strike the D.C. jewelry store robbery from the indictment,
concluding that venue was proper in any district where at least one
overt act had occurred and there were significant substantive offenses
alleged to have occurred in the courts jurisdiction.
In addition, finding enough indicia of reliability, the court granted
the prosecutions motion in limine to admit a prior statement of identification made by a deceased witness. The witness, who committed
suicide before trial, was an employee in the D.C. jewelry store robbery who had made statements to police and identified Dorsey in a
photo spread.
Three jury issues developed in the final stages of the trial. First,
during the trial a personal friend of one of the jurors was stabbed to
death and the incident was reported in the Washington Post. Because
the event had been the subject of some discussion among the jurors,
the court conducted voir dire of each juror to determine if they had
been affected so that they could no longer be impartial. Based on the
jurors demeanor and responses to questioning, the court concluded
that the jury had not been tainted and denied defendants motion for
a mistrial.
Second, upon returning guilty verdicts on all counts, the jury
requested that the court address a question they had but "not in open
court:" "What safeguards are in place ensuring safety of jurors?" After
the verdicts were delivered, the court cleared the courtroom of both
spectators and the three defendants to address the jurys safety question. The court asked the jury if they had felt threatened or intimidated during the trial and if the people in the gallery had in any
respect affected the jurys judgment in the case. The court was satisfied by the jurys responses that the jury properly and fairly adjudicated the case. In response to the jury question about jury safeguards,
the court generally described the limitations on circulation of jury lists
and the prohibition on attorneys or party litigants questioning jurors
about the verdict without leave of court.
The third jury issue arose from a comment made by a departing
juror. After the jury was excused, as the jury was leaving, the juror,
as she was exiting the courtroom made a thumbs-up gesture and comment to the prosecutors, saying, "You made up for O.J." The court
called the juror back and questioned her, under oath, about her comment and specifically inquired whether the defendants race (all were
Criminal Procedure to be present during trial and their Sixth Amendment right to a public trial, by addressing the jurys question regarding precautions for juror safety in the absence of defendants.
Additionally, defendants argue that the district court failed to provide
a meaningful opportunity to determine if there was juror bias.
The jury, in a note announcing it had reached a verdict, asked the
court to address its concerns about juror safety. After the jury rendered its verdict and was polled, the court, without objection from counsel,1 cleared the courtroom except for counsel, addressed the jurors
safety concerns and conducted voir dire to assess potential bias
related to the jurors fears. Satisfied that the jury had considered the
case properly and fairly, the district court dismissed the jury.
Also after the verdict, one juror, as she departed, made the congratulatory remark complained of to the prosecution, contrasting the trial
to the O.J. Simpson trial. The court recalled the juror, questioned her
about the remark itself and whether she harbored any racial bias that
may have influenced her verdict. Defense counsel were present,
although defendants were not, and declined the opportunity to have
the court pose additional questions of the juror.
Based on the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment and
the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, a defendant has a
constitutional "right to be present at all stages of the trial where his
absence might frustrate the fairness of the proceedings." United States
v. Rolle, 204 F.3d 133, 136 (4th Cir. 2000) (quoting Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806, 819 n.15 (1975)). In addition, Rule 43 of the
1
Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure not only embodies this constitutional guarantee, but also codifies the broader common law right of
presence, explicitly providing a defendant with the right to be present
at every stage of the trial.2 Rolle, 204 F.3d at 136-37 (citations omitted).
We have held that Rule 43 "mandates that a defendant be physically present at sentencing," United States v. Lawrence, 248 F.3d 300,
302 (4th Cir. 2001), and that defendants have "a right to be present
at trial during the impaneling of the jury and during direct testimony,"
United States v. Camacho, 955 F.2d 950, 953 (4th Cir. 1992), and the
right to be present at the voir dire of prospective jurors, United States
v. Tipton, 90 F.3d 861, 872 (4th Cir. 1996), even if the voir dire is
conducted individually in an in camera proceeding, United States v.
Rolle, 204 F.3d 133, 137 (4th Cir. 2000).
2
We note that the limited exceptions of 43(b) are not implicated in this
case.
10
In United States v. Rhodes, 32 F.3d 867 (4th Cir. 1994), we considered the narrow question of whether the defendant must be present
when an answer to a jury question sent out during deliberations is formulated and given. We held that it was "error to conduct, without the
presence of the defendant, an in chambers discussion with counsel for
the government and the defendant about a substantive question with
respect to its instructions sent out by a deliberating jury." Rhodes, 32
F.3d at 874. Unlike Rhodes, however, in this case, the exchange
between the court and the jury regarding juror safety and the questioning of the juror who made the departing comment occurred after
the jury had completed its deliberations and, significantly, after the
jury had delivered the verdict in the trial. There is nothing in the plain
language of Rule 43 or our cases to suggest that a defendant has a
right to be present after the verdict has been rendered.
Because defendants raised no objection at trial, we review the decision to exclude defendants from this exchange for plain error. Rolle,
204 F.3d at 138. The allegation of error in this case is significantly
undercut by the fact that the exchanges took place post-verdict and in
the presence of counsel. Even assuming arguendo that we could find
error, defendants cannot meet their burden to establish that such an
error affected their substantial rights, which requires a showing that
the error has caused "actual prejudice by affecting the outcome of the
trial." Rolle, 204 F.3d at 139. As the district court found, the evidence
of guilt was overwhelming, thus any alleged error was harmless.
In addition, the district court conducted extensive voir dire of the
jury in the presence of defendants counsel, who had the opportunity
to submit questions which would be posed to the jury by the court.
The unambiguous answers given by the jurors indicating that the verdict was not in any way affected by safety concerns further support
the lack of prejudice. Similarly, the district court found the explanation given by the juror who made the inappropriate comment upon
departing to be credible and the court was satisfied that the comment
was not a reflection of racial bias or misconduct. Accordingly, the
district court properly denied the motions for a new trial or mistrial.
III.
We have discussed in more detail above the principal points in this
appeal. We have also considered the various challenges to venue;
11