Jonathan Dawkins v. United States ( 2018 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 14-CF-919
    07/26/2018
    JONATHAN DAWKINS, APPELLANT,
    V.
    UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (CF1-12634-12)
    (Hon. Russell F. Canan, Associate Judge)
    (Argued September 20, 2016                                Decided July 26, 2018)
    William Collins, Public Defender Service, with whom Samia Fam and
    Jaclyn S. Frankfurt, Public Defender Service, were on the brief, for appellant.
    Stephen F. Rickard, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Channing
    D. Phillips, United States Attorney at the time the brief was filed, and Elizabeth
    Trosman, John P. Mannarino, and Veronica Sanchez, Assistant United States
    Attorneys, were on the brief, for appellee.
    Before GLICKMAN, EASTERLY, and MCLEESE, Associate Judges.
    2
    EASTERLY, Associate Judge: Jonathan Dawkins appeals his conviction for
    voluntary manslaughter. 1     He argues that the jury was deficiently instructed
    regarding his claim that he used deadly force in self-defense. Specifically, Mr.
    Dawkins argues that the trial court erroneously permitted the jury to reject his self-
    defense claim based on his failure to retreat, before the decedent initiated a fistfight
    with him, before he (mistakenly) perceived that fight as escalating into a two-on-
    one attack, and thus before he employed deadly force or had any possible
    justification (based on a reasonable belief that he was in imminent danger of death
    or serious bodily injury) to do so. Mr. Dawkins also argues that the trial court
    compounded the harm of the deficient jury instruction by overruling his objections
    to the government‟s similarly impermissible arguments about Mr. Dawkins‟s
    ability to retreat. We agree that the trial court‟s instruction did not give the jury
    adequate guidance and that this inadequacy was not harmless, particularly in light
    of the government‟s closing and rebuttal arguments. Accordingly, we reverse.
    1
    D.C. Code § 22-2105 (2013 Repl.).
    3
    I.    Facts and Procedural History
    This case arises from an encounter between three men previously unknown
    to one another: the decedent Dwayne Brisbon, Mr. Dawkins, and Daniel Cheek.
    Certain facts are undisputed. After leaving different bars early one morning, Mr.
    Dawkins and Mr. Cheek struck up a conversation on the street and decided to walk
    together to a nearby gas station to buy cigarettes. As they were walking, Mr.
    Brisbon (who had been in the same bar as Mr. Cheek) drove by, and for reasons
    that are not clear from the record, stopped to see if Mr. Cheek “was . . . okay.” Mr.
    Cheek reassured Mr. Brisbon that he was “fine” and told Mr. Brisbon, who was
    making him feel “a little uncomfortable,” to “go ahead.” But Mr. Brisbon did not
    leave. At this point, Mr. Dawkins also asked Mr. Brisbon to move on, and an
    argument developed between the two men. Mr. Brisbon exited his vehicle and
    went to the back of the car, Mr. Dawkins followed, and there the fight became
    physical, with Mr. Brisbon throwing the first punch. At some point, Mr. Cheek
    tried unsuccessfully to get the two men to separate. The fight ended with Mr.
    Dawkins stabbing Mr. Brisbon in the neck, severing his carotid artery and jugular
    vein.   Mr. Dawkins fled, and Mr. Brisbon returned to his car, drove a short
    distance, and crashed into a building. Mr. Brisbon bled out before the paramedics
    arrived.
    4
    The government obtained an indictment against Mr. Dawkins for second-
    degree murder while armed, but it announced on the day of trial that it would only
    pursue a conviction for voluntary manslaughter while armed.
    A. The Prosecution and Defense Theories and the Evidence at Trial
    In its opening statement, the government told the jury that it believed the
    evidence would show both that Mr. Dawkins “did not actually and reasonably
    believe that his life was in danger that night[] and that he used excessive force to
    defend himself.” Although the government subsequently disclaimed to the court
    and defense counsel that it was arguing Mr. Dawkins provoked Mr. Brisbon or
    “was the first aggressor” “in the technical use of the word,” the government
    highlighted for the jury that Mr. Dawkins, “without any warning, without any
    provocation . . . aggressively approached the passenger side of Mr. Brisbon‟s car”;
    “charged to the back of the car” with Mr. Brisbon “instead of walking away,
    instead of saying hey, man, I didn‟t mean anything by it”; and, “after Mr. Brisbon
    punched him, continued to engage with Mr. Brisbon.” Over defense counsel‟s
    objection, the government “encourage[d]” the jury “to think . . . of all the things
    the defendant could have done, rather than engaging Mr. Brisbon.” Specifically,
    5
    the government urged the jury to consider that Mr. Dawkins “could have walked
    away. He could have, again, let Mr. Brisbon go. He could have stayed at the side
    of the car rather than charging to the back at the same time that Mr. Brisbon did.”
    Through the testimony of Mr. Cheek, its central witness, the government
    sought to present evidence in support of its narrative. The government elicited
    testimony from Mr. Cheek that Mr. Dawkins was the first to raise his voice,
    directing Mr. Brisbon to “move.” Mr. Cheek also testified that Mr. Dawkins went
    over to the passenger‟s side of the car, leaned into the car, and spoke to the driver
    in an “aggressive” tone. But much of Mr. Cheek‟s testimony indicated that Mr.
    Brisbon and Mr. Dawkins contributed equally to the discord. Mr. Cheek testified
    on direct that the incident seemed to escalate because of the “energy” coming from
    both men.    He recalled that “[b]oth [men‟s] voices were pretty loud” and he
    described both men as “sort of aggressive.” He could not hear everything they
    said, but both men were cursing, saying things like “F you.” Mr. Cheek further
    testified that when Mr. Brisbon “charged out of the car,” Mr. Dawkins responded
    “[i]n a similar way” and met him by the trunk. At that point, the men “were just
    face-to-face, like chest to chest,” and although Mr. Cheek tried unsuccessfully to
    6
    pry them apart—“like elevator doors,” with “one hand on each” 2—it “just seemed
    like they both wanted to fight.” Mr. Cheek testified that Mr. Brisbon threw the
    first punch, and Mr. Dawkins punched back.
    Mr. Cheek testified that once the physical fight began, the men appeared
    evenly matched and that Mr. Dawkins never asked for help or tried to walk away.
    Mr. Cheek testified that both men exchanged blows for “I don‟t want to say, 15, 20
    seconds”; then, “the smoke cleared,” and the men separated. At that point Mr.
    Cheek saw that Mr. Brisbon was bleeding and Mr. Dawkins had a knife in his
    hand. It seemed to Mr. Cheek that Mr. Dawkins “was processing everything that
    had just happened”—“it seem[ed] . . . almost like something overcame him”;
    according to Mr. Cheek, Mr. Dawkins then “snapped back into reality” and ran
    from the scene. Mr. Brisbon, seemingly in shock, was walking around holding his
    neck. Mr. Cheek tried to persuade him to stay where he was, but Mr. Brisbon got
    back into his car, drove it a short distance, and then crashed the car into a building.
    Mr. Cheek‟s testimony on direct indicated that he tried to separate Mr.
    Brisbon and Mr. Dawkins before the fight went beyond words. But on cross-
    2
    Mr. Cheek also tried to defuse the situation by urging them, “Black man,
    black man. No need to fight.”
    7
    examination he was impeached with his statement to police, taken the night of the
    incident, and later adopted under oath in his Grand Jury testimony and admitted at
    trial as substantive evidence. In this statement, Mr. Cheek told the police that Mr.
    Brisbon and Mr. Dawkins were already “physically fighting” when he tried to
    break them up. He further told the police that it was at this point, when the men
    separated, that he saw that Mr. Dawkins had a knife and that Mr. Brisbon was
    injured.3
    3
    The only other eyewitness, Justin Harbison, was sitting on his front stoop
    at the time of the incident (around 12:30 a.m.) and observed the fight illuminated
    by street lights, from across four lanes of traffic, with cars somewhat blocking his
    view. He testified that he “saw the punch get thrown”—he could not say by
    whom—“and then [he] couldn‟t really tell what happened after that.”
    The government also presented the testimony of Louis Falls, who testified
    that he had heard about the stabbing from Mr. Dawkins and that Mr. Dawkins had
    not said that he was afraid of Mr. Brisbon or that he thought Mr. Brisbon had a
    weapon. But Mr. Falls‟s account of the incident—specifically that Mr. Dawkins
    stabbed Mr. Brisbon immediately after the first punch—did not align with Mr.
    Cheek‟s eyewitness account, and his testimony included details (e.g., Mr.
    Dawkins‟s post-confession avoidance of Mr. Falls‟s calls) that were contradicted
    by documentary evidence (Mr. Dawkins‟s phone records). Mr. Falls also admitted
    that he had traded information that Mr. Dawkins purportedly shared with him for
    the possibility of leniency with respect to his own pending drug charges.
    (Arguably, this plan was successful; instead of being charged with possession with
    intent to distribute crack cocaine, carrying a 30-year maximum sentence, he was
    charged with a 180-day misdemeanor.) And Mr. Falls admitted both that he did
    not “have a problem lying to the police if it [would] help [him] out of a bad
    situation,” and that he had done so before.
    8
    Mr. Dawkins, testifying in his own defense, explained that he was under the
    misimpression that Mr. Cheek knew Mr. Brisbon—Mr. Brisbon had pulled over to
    talk to Mr. Cheek and “[t]hey seemed friendly.” After Mr. Cheek stepped away
    from the car, Mr. Dawkins asked Mr. Brisbon for a cigarette. But Mr. Brisbon
    “got rude immediately . . . [and] said something like, F off or F you.”       Mr.
    Dawkins then asked Mr. Brisbon “what the F is your problem” and it “escalat[ed]
    verbally from there.” Mr. Dawkins said he was walking away from the car back to
    Mr. Cheek when Mr. Brisbon got out of the car and confronted him near the trunk. 4
    He thought he heard Mr. Cheek say to Mr. Brisbon “something like [„]go ahead,
    man.[‟]”5 When Mr. Brisbon got close enough to Mr. Dawkins, he punched Mr.
    Dawkins in the throat. The two men then exchanged punches, but at some point,
    Mr. Dawkins felt someone else grab his left arm from behind, “like they were
    holding me.” Mr. Dawkins looked back and saw it was Mr. Cheek. Mr. Cheek
    was not holding Mr. Brisbon, and Mr. Dawkins “immediately thought, like, they‟re
    about to jump me.” Mr. Dawkins testified he “flashed back” to an earlier time
    when this had happened to him. He and a friend had been attacked and beaten
    4
    On cross-examination, the prosecutor focused on this stage of the
    encounter and pressed Mr. Dawkins about his decision not to immediately walk
    away from Mr. Brisbon and on to the gas station where Mr. Dawkins and Mr.
    Cheek had planned to buy cigarettes.
    5
    Compare supra note 2.
    9
    unconscious by a group of men; he ended up needing stitches and his friend had to
    get surgery to repair a broken jaw. He felt he “had to do something immediately to
    try to get them off of” him. While his left arm was restrained, he pulled a folding
    knife from his right pocket and swung at Mr. Brisbon.            Mr. Dawkins only
    remembered swinging once, but he acknowledged that Mr. Brisbon had two stab
    wounds. After he stabbed Mr. Brisbon, Mr. Brisbon walked back to his car, and
    Mr. Dawkins, still scared, ran.
    B. The Discussions About Jury Instructions
    The court and counsel had multiple conversations about how best to instruct
    the jury about the law of self-defense. Defense counsel‟s particular concern was
    the standard instruction in the Criminal Jury Instructions for the District of
    Columbia, No. 9.503 (5th ed. rev. 2013), which explains that a defendant in this
    jurisdiction has no duty to retreat before using deadly force, but that a defendant‟s
    ability to retreat before using deadly force is a factor that the jury may consider in
    assessing a self-defense claim.6 Defense counsel asked that this instruction be
    6
    The full “Redbook” instruction reads:
    The law does not require a person to retreat or consider
    retreating when s/he actually and reasonably believes that s/he
    is in danger of death or serious bodily harm and that deadly
    (continued…)
    10
    modified to respond to the government‟s focus on Mr. Dawkins‟s failure to walk
    away from Mr. Brisbon before or immediately after Mr. Brisbon punched him,
    which, defense counsel argued, Mr. Dawkins had no legal obligation to do.
    Counsel asked the court to distinguish between nondeadly and deadly force and to
    explain that a defendant‟s ability to retreat, consistent with his own safety, is not a
    concern unless and “until [the conflict] escalated to the point of using deadly
    force.”
    The government initially objected to any modification, arguing, inter alia,
    that Mr. Dawkins was attempting “to make this two separate incidents when, in
    fact, the facts . . . as we believe they came out were that this was one continuous
    incident where there‟s this fistfight and during the course of the fistfight, the
    (…continued)
    force is necessary to repel that danger. But the law does say
    that a person should take reasonable steps, such as stepping
    back or walking away, to avoid the necessity of taking a human
    life, so long as those steps are consistent with the person‟s own
    safety. In deciding whether [name of defendant] acted
    reasonably, you should therefore consider whether s/he could
    have taken those steps, consistent with his/her own safety.
    Criminal Jury Instructions for the District of Columbia, No. 9.503 (5th ed.
    rev. 2013).
    11
    defendant stabs Mr. Brisbon.” 7 But after the court expressed concern about juror
    confusion, the government proposed to modify the standard instruction by adding
    an introductory sentence: “The law does not require a person to retreat or consider
    retreating if he actually and reasonably believes it is necessary to use nondeadly
    force to prevent imminent bodily harm.” Although defense counsel‟s competing
    proposal likewise incorporated language that there is no duty to retreat in a
    nondeadly force situation, the defense proposal kept its focus on the use of deadly
    force and sought to clarify that, in assessing whether a defendant reasonably
    employed such force, the jury could only consider a defendant‟s ability to retreat at
    the time deadly force was used. 8
    7
    The government also argued that there might in fact be a duty to retreat
    before using nondeadly force, but it later abandoned that argument.
    8
    The defense proposal replicated language from the standard instruction
    explaining that there is no duty to retreat in the deadly force context, although a
    jury may take into account the defendant‟s ability to retreat in assessing his self-
    defense claim. It then distinguished a situation where a defendant faced nondeadly
    force and explained that there is no duty to “take . . . reasonable steps, such as
    stepping back or walking away prior to using nondeadly force.” Lastly, it
    explained that the jury should “first” consider whether Mr. Dawkins “was
    authorized to use nondeadly force under the circumstances,” and second and
    “[s]eparately, in deciding whether Mr. Dawkins acted reasonably in using deadly
    force,” the jury “should . . . consider whether he could have taken those steps,
    consistent with his own safety after the nondeadly force was used in this case.”
    (emphases added).
    12
    Over Mr. Dawkins‟s objection, the court adopted the government‟s
    modification of the standard instruction, which, the court concluded, “give[s] the
    defense what it needs to explain [its understanding of the law] during the closing
    argument.”
    C. The “Retreat” Instruction
    Pursuant to its conversation with counsel, the trial court instructed the jury:
    The law does not require a person to retreat . . . or
    consider retreating if he actually and reasonably believes that it
    is necessary to use nondeadly force to prevent imminent bodily
    harm.
    The law does not require a person to retreat or consider
    retreating when he actually and reasonably believe[s] that he
    [i]s in danger of death or serious bodily harm and that deadly
    force is necessary to repel that danger. But the law does say
    that a person should take reasonable steps, such as stepping
    back or walking away to avoid the necessity of taking a human
    life, so long as those steps are consistent with the person‟s own
    safety.
    In deciding whether the defendant acted reasonably, you
    should therefore consider whether he could have taken those
    steps consistent with his own safety.
    13
    D. Closing Arguments and Verdict
    In summation, the government sought to persuade the jury to reject Mr.
    Dawkins‟s claim of self-defense. The government explained that an individual
    acting in self-defense had to reasonably believe he was in imminent danger of
    death or serious bodily harm. But the government argued that Mr. Dawkins had
    not actually and reasonably believed he was in such danger. The government
    highlighted that Mr. Dawkins had been “just as aggressive” as Mr. Brisbon and had
    “continu[ed] to engage Mr. Brisbon” by going to the back of the car with him and
    participating in a fistfight. The government further argued that “at the time that
    Mr. Dawkins decided to take out that knife and stab Mr. Brisbon he wasn‟t in
    danger of anything except maybe a couple of bruises from Mr. Brisbon‟s hands.”
    And the government reread a portion of the instruction about a defendant‟s ability
    to retreat. The government emphasized that “the law does say that a person should
    take reasonable steps, such as stepping back or walking away to avoid the
    necessity of taking a human life. So long as those are consistent with the person‟s
    own safety.” The government then argued that Mr. Dawkins could have taken
    “many other steps aside from using his knife to stab Mr. Brisbon . . . [among
    them,] Mr. Dawkins could have stopped, punched [Mr. Brisbon] back, walked
    away.”
    14
    Counsel for Mr. Dawkins responded in summation that the evidence
    presented did not disprove his self-defense claim.         Counsel took pains to be
    “absolutely clear about what the law says” about Mr. Dawkins‟s ability to retreat
    regarding his claim of self-defense. Counsel explained that it was important for
    the jury to focus on the correct timeframe, and if the jury did so, the evidence
    supported Mr. Dawkins‟s claim of self-defense: it showed that Mr. Dawkins
    “wasn‟t in fear for his life until there were [he thought] two people attacking him”;
    at that point, he stabbed Mr. Brisbon to defend himself; and when Mr. Brisbon
    stopped punching him and turned away, he took his first opportunity to retreat and
    run.
    But in rebuttal the government returned to its argument that Mr. Dawkins
    could have avoided the use of deadly force by retreating earlier. The government
    focused on Mr. Dawkins‟s failure to walk away at the outset, before the argument
    got physical:
    And while the defendant doesn‟t have a duty to back
    away if he believes that his life is being threatened, he should
    take reasonable steps before taking a human life. And so even
    15
    the defendant himself admitted that he could have walked in the
    other direction, towards the gas station. There were . . .9
    He didn’t have to walk away. But because he didn’t—
    because even he admitted—and I almost forgot this—the
    defendant himself admitted that if it was just him and the
    driver, it would have been a fair fight. . . .
    But the defendant was the one who aggressively went
    over to the car. . . . [T]he reason this all starts . . . [was]
    because of the way the defendant approached the car; it was
    because of the exchange that occurred between Mr. Brisbon
    and the defendant. It’s because they walked to the back of the
    car.
    (emphases added).
    After deliberating for a full day, 10 the jury found Mr. Dawkins guilty. This
    appeal followed.
    II. Analysis
    Mr. Dawkins challenges the trial court‟s self-defense instruction in this case
    on the ground that it erroneously permitted the jury to consider his failure to walk
    away from Mr. Brisbon at the wrong time—before he employed deadly force or
    9
    Defense counsel interrupted with an objection, which was overruled by the
    court.
    10
    During this time the jury sent a note expressing uncertainty that it could
    reach a unanimous verdict. The trial court asked it to continue deliberating.
    16
    had any possible justification to do so.    To assess whether the trial court‟s
    instruction provided the jury with adequate guidance, we must first consider the
    law of self-defense, in particular how and when a defendant‟s ability to retreat
    from conflict can be considered.
    A. The Law of Self-Defense
    A successful claim of self-defense overrides the mens rea required to
    commit the charged crime, and thus makes the defendant‟s action not criminal. To
    find a defendant guilty of murder or voluntary manslaughter, the jury must
    conclude the defendant committed the actus reus of killing with the requisite mens
    rea. See Morissette v. United States, 
    342 U.S. 246
    , 251 (1952) (Crime is “a
    compound concept, generally constituted only from concurrence of an evil-
    meaning mind with an evil-doing hand”); Rose v. United States, 
    535 A.2d 849
    , 852
    (D.C. 1987) (Generally, “a crime consists in the concurrence of prohibited conduct
    and a culpable mental state.” (quoting 1 WHARTON‟S CRIMINAL LAW § 27, at
    135 (C. Torcia 14th ed. 1978))).11 This court has defined that mens rea as some
    11
    Concurrence has no definitive definition but seems to be understood at
    times as requiring simultaneity, see, e.g., 1 WAYNE R. LAFAVE, SUBSTANTIVE
    CRIMINAL LAW § 6.3(a) (3d ed.) (discussing Sabens v. United States, 
    40 App. D.C. 440
    , 444 (1913)), and at other times as requiring “actuation,” 
    id. at §
    1.2(b)
    (continued…)
    17
    form of malice,12 Comber v. United States, 
    584 A.2d 26
    , 35-42 (D.C. 1990) (en
    banc)), a term of art that encompasses multiple mental states, 
    id. at 38-41,
    that
    appear to fall within the range of purpose to recklessness, but does not encompass
    negligence, see Carrell v. United States, 
    165 A.3d 314
    , 321-22, 324 (D.C. 2017)
    (en banc) (endorsing the Model Penal Code hierarchy of mens rea terms). If a
    defendant kills another in lawful self-defense, however, the act, even if purposeful,
    is deemed to have been committed without malice: “even an intentional killing, if
    it comports with legally accepted notions of self-defense is not malicious; [instead]
    it is excused and accordingly no crime at all.” 
    Comber, 584 A.2d at 41
    (internal
    citation omitted)).
    “Where a defendant has presented any evidence that she acted in self-
    defense, the government bears the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt
    (…continued)
    (“Generally, it may be said that the defendant‟s [mens rea] must concur with his
    [actus reus], in the sense that the former actuate the latter.”); see also 
    id. at §
    6.3(a)
    (providing examples and noting exceptions).
    12
    In the case of voluntary manslaughter, this malice is circumstantially
    mitigated. 
    Comber, 584 A.2d at 38-41
    ; Jackson v. United States, 
    76 A.3d 920
    , 936
    n. 8 (D.C. 2013) (“[V]oluntary manslaughter is not, precisely, a killing
    without malice aforethought but rather a killing „with a state of mind which, but for
    the presence of legally recognized mitigating circumstances, would render the
    killing murder.‟”).
    18
    that the defendant did not act in self-defense.”13 Williams v. United States, 
    90 A.3d 1124
    , 1128 (D.C. 2014). The government may carry this burden by showing that a
    defendant who employed deadly force either did not reasonably believe that she
    was in imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury,14 or “used greater force
    than she actually and reasonably believed to be necessary under the
    circumstances.” Id.; Richardson v. United States, 
    98 A.3d 178
    , 187 (D.C. 2014)
    (explaining that the defendant “was entitled to an acquittal on th[e] basis [of self-
    defense] only if the jury concluded (1) that he honestly believed that, when he
    stabbed [the decedent], he was in imminent danger of serious bodily harm or death,
    and that he had to use lethal force to save himself from that harm and (2) that both
    beliefs were objectively reasonable”) (emphasis added); see Ewell v. United States,
    
    72 A.3d 127
    , 131 (D.C. 2013) (“[W]here an accused, claiming self-defense, uses
    deadly force, he must—at the time of the incident—actually believe and
    13
    However, “where the government proves beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the defendant was „the [first] aggressor‟ or „provoked the conflict upon herself,‟
    the fact-finder need not even reach the core self-defense inquiry.” Parker v.
    United States, 
    155 A.3d 835
    , 848 n.26 (D.C. 2017) (citing Criminal Jury
    Instructions for the District of Columbia, No. 9.504.A). The government did not
    pursue a legal theory of first aggressor or provocation in this case.
    14
    In a nondeadly force case, the government must establish that the
    defendant did not reasonably believe that she was in imminent danger of bodily
    injury, as opposed to death or serious bodily injury. 
    Ewell, 72 A.3d at 131
    .
    19
    reasonably believe that he is in imminent peril of death or serious bodily harm.”
    (quoting McPhaul v. United States, 
    452 A.2d 371
    , 373 (D.C. 1982))).
    These means of disproving a self-defense claim are available to the
    government whether a defendant employs nondeadly force or deadly force. Supra
    note 14. But in the deadly force context, this court has acknowledged that a
    defendant‟s ability to retreat is a special consideration in assessing the viability of
    his self-defense claim.15 See Gillis v. United States, 
    400 A.2d 311
    , 313 (D.C.
    1979). In Gillis, this court acknowledged the existence of a common law rule that
    required an individual who was “threatened with death or serious bodily harm . . .
    to retreat, if it could be done safely, before using such force.” 
    Id. at 312.
    We
    noted that this “retreat to the wall” rule had been adopted by some states, but
    others (“probably the majority”) had rejected it and had adopted the contrary
    “American” rule that an individual confronted with death or serious bodily injury
    “is not required to retreat but may stand his ground and defend himself.” 
    Id. We sought
    a “middle ground between the two extremes,” balancing a recognition “that,
    15
    Distinct from this consideration of retreat, our case law recognizes that a
    defendant who was the first aggressor may regain the ability to claim self-defense
    if he withdraws in good faith from the conflict he initiated. See, e.g., Potter v.
    United States, 
    534 A.2d 943
    , 946 (D.C. 1987); see also Criminal Jury Instructions
    for the District of Columbia, No. 9.504B & C (5th ed. rev. 2013).
    20
    when faced with a real or apparent threat of serious bodily harm or death itself, the
    average person lacks the ability to reason in a restrained manner how best to save
    himself and whether it is safe to retreat” with a “call[] for some degree of restraint
    before inflicting serious or mortal injury upon another.” 
    Id. at 313;
    see also Brown
    v. United States, 
    256 U.S. 335
    , 343-44 (1921) (explaining that the law of self-
    defense has evolved “in the direction of rules consistent with human nature” and
    that what “may seem to have been unnecessary when considered in cold blood,”
    may be reasonable “while the heat of the conflict was on, and if the defendant
    believed that he was fighting for his life”).
    Accordingly, this court held in Gillis that a defendant‟s failure to retreat,
    instead using deadly force, is one factor the jury is “allow[ed]” to consider
    “together with all the other circumstances” in determining if the government has
    disproved beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant acted in self-defense. 
    Gillis, 400 A.2d at 313
    ; see also Carter v. United States, 
    475 A.2d 1118
    , 1124 n.1 (D.C.
    1984) (“In the District of Columbia, it is recognized that when an individual is
    faced with a real or apparent threat of serious bodily harm or even death itself,
    there is no mandatory duty to retreat.”); accord 
    Brown, 256 U.S. at 343
    (holding
    that in a federal murder prosecution there is no duty to retreat and, instead, that
    “[r]ationally the failure to retreat is a circumstance to be considered with all the
    21
    others in order to determine whether the defendant went farther than he was
    justified in doing; not a categorical proof of guilt”).16
    The threshold question before us is whether the jury‟s consideration of a
    defendant‟s ability to retreat is temporally limited.       Our prior cases have not
    squarely addressed this question, but they support an affirmative answer. Gillis
    itself indicates that the jury‟s consideration of a defendant‟s ability to retreat is
    limited to the time when deadly force was employed. In that case we said the
    District‟s “middle ground” rule regarding consideration of a defendant‟s ability to
    retreat instead of using deadly force “permits the jury to determine if the defendant
    acted too hastily, was too quick to pull the trigger.” See 
    Gillis, 400 A.2d at 313
    .
    Thus we linked the consideration of retreat to the moment the defendant used
    deadly force. Our self-defense cases subsequent to Gillis likewise indicate that the
    16
    In Gillis, we indicated that the ability to retreat is relevant to whether a
    defendant in fact reasonably believed he was in imminent danger of death or
    serious bodily harm. Accord Edwards v. United States, 
    619 A.2d 33
    , 38 (D.C.
    1993); 
    Carter, 475 A.2d at 1124
    n.1 (citing Gillis). But other cases, like the
    Supreme Court‟s decision in Brown, indicate that the ability to retreat is relevant to
    whether the defendant‟s use of deadly force was excessive. Accord Cooper v.
    United States, 
    512 A.2d 1002
    , 1003 (D.C. 1986) (upholding an instruction that
    permitted the jury to consider whether, in failing to retreat, the defendant “went
    further in repelling the danger, real or apparent, than he was justified in doing
    under the circumstances”). Either way, it is clear that the ability to retreat is
    relevant to the viability of a self-defense claim in a case where the defendant‟s use
    of deadly force is at issue.
    22
    fact-finder must focus on the defendant‟s assessment of his circumstances “at the
    time of the incident,” i.e., at the time deadly force was employed. See 
    Ewell, 72 A.3d at 131
    ;17 see also Richardson v. United 
    States, 98 A.3d at 187
    (focusing on
    the time of the stabbing).
    The test for self-defense in a deadly force case itself further supports a
    determination that the jury‟s consideration of a defendant‟s ability to retreat has a
    temporal limit. As noted above, the viability of a self-defense claim turns on
    whether the government can prove that a defendant did not reasonably believe that
    he was in imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury, or that he used greater
    force than he reasonably believed was necessary under the circumstances. An
    assessment of what the defendant reasonably believed may in turn depend on
    17
    Ewell is a nondeadly force case, but it nonetheless focuses on the moment in
    time when a defendant acts in 
    self-defense. 72 A.3d at 131
    —32 (concluding that
    the trial court‟s findings were inadequate because “we cannot determine whether,
    as a matter of law, when appellant struck [the complainant], he reasonably
    believed that she posed” such a threat) (emphasis added). Accord Gay v. United
    States, 
    12 A.3d 643
    , 648 (D.C. 2011) (“The right of self-defense, and especially
    the degree of force the victim is permitted to use to prevent bodily harm, is
    premised substantially on the victim‟s own reasonable perceptions of what is
    happening.” (quoting Fersner v. United States, 
    482 A.2d 387
    , 391 (D.C. 1984)));
    
    Edwards, 619 A.2d at 38
    (Rejecting a self-defense claim where defendant pointed
    a gun at his alleged assailant, Mr. Booker, as Mr. Booker ran away from defendant,
    observing that defendant‟s “right of self-defense at the onset of the encounter did
    not survive Mr. Booker‟s flight down the street.”).
    23
    whether retreat was an option. But the only relevant time frame for that inquiry is
    after the actual or apparent danger arose. It is irrelevant that a defendant might
    have been able to retreat before a defendant faced the actual or apparent danger and
    thus before a defendant might reasonably believe he needed to use deadly force.
    As it has developed in our jurisdiction, our law of self-defense “calls for some
    degree of restraint before inflicting serious or mortal injury upon another,” 
    Gillis, 400 A.2d at 313
    , but it does not require anticipatory disengagement from every
    potential interpersonal conflict. The rules of civility do not define the boundaries
    of self-defense.
    Our relevance analysis indicates that the jury‟s proper temporal focus vis à
    vis retreat should be the time at which a defendant employs deadly force or had a
    possible justification to do so.     We acknowledge that such a rule at least
    theoretically expands the jury‟s consideration of a defendant‟s ability to retreat
    beyond the moment deadly force is used, the temporal limit previously suggested
    by our cases. We surmise that our precedent suggests this temporal limit because
    typically, as was the case here, 18 the moment when a defendant faces the actual or
    18
    The circumstance giving rise to a possible justification to use deadly force in
    self-defense arose in this case when Mr. Dawkins perceived the threat of a two-on-
    (continued…)
    24
    apparent danger potentially justifying the use of deadly force is virtually
    simultaneous with the use of deadly force—thus the consideration of a defendant‟s
    ability to retreat is limited to that moment. But there may be cases in which there
    is an appreciable gap between the moment when the defendant perceives the actual
    or apparent danger potentially justifying the use of deadly force and the moment
    when defendant actually responds to the perceived danger and employs deadly
    force.19 In such cases, the jury may consider the defendant‟s ability to retreat
    between these two points in time.
    The government does not argue in its brief that the jury was authorized to
    reject Mr. Dawkins‟s self-defense claim based on his failure to retreat from Mr.
    Brisbon before Mr. Dawkins perceived an actual or apparent imminent danger of
    (…continued)
    one attack, a perception which was simultaneous, or nearly so, with his act of
    stabbing Mr. Brisbon.
    19
    Allowing the jury to consider a defendant‟s ability to retreat at a point in time
    earlier than he employs deadly force might seem in tension with our general
    requirement of concurrence, supra note 11, but the fact remains that the
    government still bears the burden to prove that a defendant accused of murder or
    voluntary manslaughter acted to kill someone and did so with malice or mitigated
    malice. Supra note 12. Self-defense itself is an exception to the rule that guilt is
    established when the government proves both the actus reus and the mens rea
    elements of a crime.
    25
    death or serious bodily injury. 20 Instead, the government contemplates a different
    question—whether a jury assessing the reasonableness of a defendant‟s use of
    deadly force may consider a defendant‟s ability to retreat before using nondeadly
    force—and argues that the fact-finder should be permitted to consider whether a
    defendant could have retreated before using any type of force. This would, in
    essence, require anticipatory disengagement from every potential interpersonal
    conflict which, for the reasons discussed above, is not required; furthermore, as the
    government acknowledges, the weight of authority is to the contrary.          See 2
    LAFAVE, SUBST. CRIM. L. § 10.4(f) (3d ed.) (“It seems everywhere agreed that one
    who can safely retreat need not do so before using nondeadly force.”); accord
    Higgenbottom v. United States, 
    923 A.2d 891
    , 899 n.7 (D.C. 2007); N. Mariana
    Islands v. Demapan, 2008 MP 16, ¶ 22 & n.9 (N. Mar. I. 2008).
    The government further argues that the jury was properly instructed on the
    consideration of retreat and that the government never invited the jury to consider
    Mr. Dawkins‟s ability to retreat at a time before he perceived a threat of death or
    serious bodily harm. But again we disagree, for the reasons discussed below.
    Infra II.B & C.
    20
    To the extent the government indicated at oral argument that it was now
    advocating this position, this argument comes too late. See Scott v. Burgin, 
    97 A.3d 564
    , 565 n.2 (D.C. 2014).
    26
    We hold that, in assessing the reasonableness of a defendant‟s actions in the
    context of a self-defense claim, and specifically the defendant‟s ability to retreat,
    the jury‟s proper temporal focus is the time at which a defendant employs deadly
    force or has a possible justification (based on a reasonable belief that he is in
    imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury) to do so. We acknowledge that
    consideration of a defendant‟s earlier actions might be permissible for other
    purposes, for example, to show that the defendant was the first aggressor, supra
    note 13, or to challenge his credibility. 21 But, for the reasons discussed above, the
    government may not carry its burden to disprove the reasonableness of a
    defendant‟s actions by relying on a defendant‟s ability to retreat before any actual
    or apparent need to use deadly force in self-defense arose.
    21
    Cf., Bassil v. United States, 
    147 A.3d 303
    , 316—18 (D.C. 2016) (concluding
    that there was “sufficient evidence for a jury to disbelieve beyond a reasonable
    doubt that appellant acted in self-defense” as she had testified, noting, inter alia,
    the “abundant evidence of an acrimonious relationship in which appellant had
    serious unresolved grievances against [the decedent] that came to a boil in the
    hours just before their final conflict . . . [which] was more indicative of her motive
    for stabbing him than fear for her physical safety”).
    27
    B. The Trial Court’s Instruction
    We turn to the trial court‟s instruction to determine whether it provided the
    jury with adequate guidance on the law of self-defense and in particular its
    consideration of Mr. Dawkins‟s ability to retreat. The government argues that we
    should review Mr. Dawkins‟s challenge to the court‟s instruction for abuse of
    discretion. None of the cases the government cites for this proposition concern
    instruction regarding the legal boundaries of a self-defense claim. And even the
    government‟s cases acknowledge that the trial court must exercise its discretion so
    as to deliver an instruction that “considered as a whole, fairly and accurately states
    the law.”   Fearwell v. United States, 
    886 A.2d 95
    , 101 (D.C. 2005).22              We
    conclude that the retreat instruction delivered by the trial court did not clearly
    prohibit the jury from considering conduct that occurred before Mr. Dawkins
    employed deadly force or had a possible justification to do so.23
    22
    See also Pannu v. Jacobson, 
    909 A.2d 178
    , 198 (D.C. 2006) (“[I]t is
    incumbent on the trial court to properly instruct the jury on the law. . . . [T]he trial
    court must give the jury an accurate and fair statement of the law.”) (emphasis
    added).
    23
    On appeal, the government focuses on Mr. Dawkins‟s proposed jury
    instruction regarding retreat. But Mr. Dawkins‟s argument is not that his precise
    instruction should have been given, rather it is that the trial court‟s instruction was
    inadequate. E.g., Whitaker v. United States, 
    617 A.2d 499
    , 507-08 (D.C. 1992)
    (opinion on rehearing) (“If the language used by counsel in bringing up the subject
    was considered unsatisfactory, the proper remedy was to reinstruct the jury, but to
    (continued…)
    28
    The trial court‟s instruction first informed the jury that there was no duty to
    retreat before using nondeadly force. Supra I.C. This instruction directed the
    jury‟s attention to the outset of the altercation when Mr. Dawkins had no possible
    justification to use deadly force in self-defense. Moreover, it told the jury only that
    there was no duty to retreat at this earlier juncture, permitting reasonable jurors to
    misunderstand that the failure to retreat before using nondeadly force could be
    considered by the jury to reject Mr. Dawkins‟s claim that he used deadly force in
    self-defense at a later time when he stabbed Mr. Brisbon.
    The court then continued with the standard instruction No. 9.503. Supra I.C.
    But when coupled with the introductory sentence focusing the jury on an earlier
    point in time, this language was not clarifying and may well have increased the
    danger of confusion and misapprehension.24 After informing the jury that there
    (…continued)
    do so with greater precision. Even a request for an instruction which is not entirely
    perfect may in some situations impose upon the court the duty to give a more
    specific instruction on an issue, where it soundly appears that such an instruction is
    needful to enable the jury intelligently to determine the question.”) (brackets and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    24
    Mr. Dawkins‟s challenge to the trial court‟s instruction, as it was given, is
    fully preserved, even though, as the government argues, defense counsel did not
    object to the components of the court‟s instruction that came from the standard
    retreat instruction. After the government raised the issue of retreat into the case,
    (continued…)
    29
    was likewise no duty to retreat before using deadly force, the court told the jury
    that a defendant “should take reasonable steps, such as stepping back or walking
    away to avoid the necessity of taking a human life, so long as those steps are
    consistent with the person‟s own safety,” and then concluded that “[i]n deciding
    whether the defendant acted reasonably, you should therefore consider whether he
    could have taken those steps consistent with his own safety.”            Taking this
    instruction “as a whole,” 
    Fearwell, 886 A.2d at 101
    , a jury could have
    misunderstood that it “should” consider whether Mr. Dawkins had taken
    “reasonable steps” to avoid the use of deadly force at any point in his encounter
    with Mr. Brisbon; that these “reasonable steps” could encompass the time before
    (…continued)
    counsel for Mr. Dawkins made clear that they were concerned that the jury might
    misunderstand whether and when Mr. Dawkins‟s ability to retreat from Mr.
    Brisbon could be considered, and counsel argued to the court that the standard
    instruction as modified in accordance with the government‟s proposal did not
    adequately address its concerns. Counsel‟s arguments sufficiently alerted the trial
    court to this issue. Russell v. United States, 
    698 A.2d 1007
    , 1012 (D.C. 1997)
    (“[O]bjections to jury instructions must be specific enough to direct the judge‟s
    attention to the correct rule of law; a party‟s request for jury instructions must be
    made with sufficient precision to indicate distinctly the party‟s thesis.”); see also
    Brooks v. United States, 
    39 A.3d 873
    , 881 (D.C. 2012) (“Once an objection is
    lodged, and its basis asserted, it is the judge‟s responsibility to exercise judgment
    in accordance with applicable legal principles.”).
    It is correct, however, that there is no preserved challenge to the language of
    the standard instruction, and Mr. Dawkins has not asked us to review that language
    for plain error; thus, we take no position on whether that language accurately
    reflects the District‟s law.
    30
    Mr. Brisbon initiated the fistfight; and that Mr. Dawkins‟s earlier failure to retreat
    could defeat his self-defense claim, even if at the time he used deadly force in the
    midst of the fight he reasonably believed he was in imminent danger of death or
    serious bodily injury.25
    In short, the trial court failed to “properly instruct the jury on the law,”
    
    Pannu, 909 A.2d at 198
    , because its instruction did not clearly explain that any
    consideration of Mr. Dawkins‟s ability to retreat was temporally limited to the time
    at which he used deadly force.
    C.     Harm
    Having concluded that the trial court‟s instruction was deficient, we consider
    if this instruction prejudiced Mr. Dawkins such that we must reverse. The parties
    dispute which standard of harm applies. Mr. Dawkins argues that because the trial
    court‟s deficient instruction reduced the government‟s burden of proof with respect
    25
    The government argues that “the retreat instruction that [the trial court]
    provided—particularly when combined with the other self-defense instructions and
    appellant‟s theory of the case instruction—clearly informed the jury that it could
    acquit if it found the facts as appellant urged them.” We cannot agree. We see
    nothing in these other instructions that limits the jury‟s consideration of retreat-
    related facts to the proper timeframe.
    31
    to Mr. Dawkins‟s mens rea, we must determine if the instruction was harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt, the standard set forth in Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    (1967), for assessing the harm of constitutional error. 
    Id. at 24.
    The
    government opposes review under Chapman and argues that any deficiency in the
    “wording of jury instructions” is reviewed as non-constitutional error under
    Kotteakos v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    (1946). Under that standard, we must
    reverse when we “cannot say, with fair assurance, after pondering all that
    happened without stripping the erroneous action from the whole, that the judgment
    was not substantially swayed by the error.” 
    Id. at 765.
    We need not decide which
    standard applies because, even under Kotteakos, the court‟s inadequate instruction
    necessitates reversal.
    It was the government‟s burden to disprove Mr. Dawkins‟s claim of self-
    defense. It sought to do so by two means—one permissible under the law of self-
    defense as we have clarified it in this opinion, the other not. The government
    permissibly attempted to discredit Mr. Dawkins‟s narrative that Mr. Cheek had
    intervened and pulled his arm back in the midst of the fight, causing him to think
    Mr. Cheek and Mr. Brisbon were acting in concert and giving rise to his fear that
    he was in imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm. To show that this
    intervention never happened, the government relied on Mr. Cheek, who testified on
    32
    direct that he tried to intervene and stop the fight before Mr. Brisbon threw the first
    punch, and Mr. Falls, who testified that Mr. Dawkins had stabbed Mr. Brisbon
    after Mr. Brisbon punched him once. But there were substantial reasons for the
    jury not to credit either of these witnesses. Mr. Cheek had told the police—
    inconsistent with his trial testimony but consistent with Mr. Dawkins‟s recollection
    and testimony—that he had intervened in the midst of the punching, and he
    adopted this statement under oath in the grand jury, allowing this statement to
    come in at trial as substantive evidence.        Supra I.A.     Mr. Falls‟s narrative
    contradicted Mr. Cheek‟s (and Mr. Dawkins‟s) testimony that the fight lasted
    fifteen to twenty seconds with both men exchanging punches; in addition, Mr.
    Falls admitted that he was testifying in hopes of leniency in his own criminal
    matter, that he would lie if it benefited him, and that he had done so before. Supra
    note 3. A reasonable jury could have credited Mr. Dawkins‟s and Mr. Cheek‟s
    original account of the fight and could have concluded that Mr. Dawkins
    reasonably employed deadly force in self-defense.
    Alternatively, the government suggested throughout trial that Mr. Dawkins‟s
    self-defense claim could be rejected because he had not retreated from Mr. Brisbon
    at the outset of their encounter. In its opening, the government highlighted Mr.
    Dawkins‟s “aggressive” manner before the fight began and his failure to “say hey,
    33
    man, I didn‟t mean anything by it,” when he “could have walked away.” The
    government questioned its witnesses and Mr. Dawkins in this vein, eliciting
    testimony from Mr. Cheek that before the fight began, Mr. Dawkins had matched
    Mr. Brisbon in his aggression and pressing Mr. Dawkins on his failure to walk
    away from Mr. Brisbon and Mr. Cheek and walk on to the gas station alone.
    Indeed, the government so strongly insinuated that Mr. Dawkins could not assert a
    claim of self-defense because he should have retreated well before he believed
    himself to be in imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm, that Mr.
    Dawkins‟s counsel asked the court before closing arguments to modify the
    standard instruction to clarify that this was not the case.
    As discussed, the instruction failed to provide the jury with adequate
    guidance, and the jury was thus ill-equipped to evaluate the “should have walked
    away earlier” arguments the government then made in closing and rebuttal. In
    closing the government not only highlighted that Mr. Dawkins had been aggressive
    and had “continu[ed] to engage” with Mr. Brisbon by walking to the back of the
    car and participating in a fistfight, the government also argued that Mr. Dawkins
    could have taken “many other steps aside from using his knife to stab Mr. Brisbon”
    including “walk[ing] away” after Mr. Brisbon punched him. Granted, defense
    counsel strenuously argued that Mr. Dawkins had no obligation to walk away at
    34
    these earlier points in time and that the only question under the law was whether he
    reasonably believed he was in imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm
    when he stabbed Mr. Brisbon.          But counsel‟s argument was inadequate to
    counteract the combination of the judge‟s erroneous instructions and the
    government‟s repeated suggestion that the jury could consider Mr. Dawkins‟s
    failure to walk away before he had any possible justification to use deadly force.
    And Mr. Dawkins‟s counsel could not respond to the government‟s subsequent
    rebuttal, directing the jury‟s attention to Mr. Dawkins‟s decision to aggressively
    engage Mr. Brisbon and to “walk[] to the back of the car,” and his failure to “walk
    away,” toward the gas station, before the argument became physical—as if these
    predicate events did, in fact, have legal significance with respect to his later use of
    deadly force.
    The government contends that its questions and arguments implicating Mr.
    Dawkins‟s failure to walk away “only made permissible points about [his] state of
    mind and credibility.”    As noted above, while there may be other legitimate
    reasons for the government to highlight a defendant‟s earlier actions in a conflict
    involving deadly force, we disagree that a boundless “state of mind” justification is
    one of them, as it would erase the temporal boundary we clarify with this opinion.
    Regarding the government‟s desire to use to Mr. Dawkins‟s prior conduct within
    35
    other permissible limits, we note only that the government did not expressly
    articulate these limits to the jury and neither did the trial court.
    Against the backdrop of Mr. Dawkins‟s trial, therefore, we cannot say that
    the court‟s deficient instruction to the jury was harmless.
    III.   Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth above, we reverse Mr. Dawkins‟s conviction for
    voluntary manslaughter and remand for a new trial.
    So ordered.