Williams v. United States ( 2022 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 20-CM-0051
    PIERRE WILLIAMS, APPELLANT
    V.
    UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (2019 CMD 10257)
    Hon. Michael L. Rankin, Trial Judge
    (Submitted June 1, 2021                               Decided September 29, 2022)
    Sicilia C. Englert was on the brief for appellant.
    Channing D. Phillips, Acting United States Attorney, and Elizabeth Trosman,
    Erin M. DeRiso, and Ethan L. Carroll, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on
    the brief for appellee.
    Before EASTERLY and DEAHL, Associate Judges, and THOMPSON,* Senior
    Judge.
    * Senior Judge Thompson was an Associate Judge of the court at the time of
    submission. On October 4, 2021, she was appointed as a Senior Judge but she
    continued to serve as an Associate Judge until February 17, 2022. See 
    D.C. Code § 11-1502
     & 1504(b)(3). On February 18, 2022, she began her service as a Senior
    Judge. See 
    D.C. Code § 11-1504
    .
    2
    Opinion for the court by Associate Judge EASTERLY.
    Opinion by Senior Judge THOMPSON, dissenting in part, at page 7.
    EASTERLY, Associate Judge: Pierre Williams (whose true name is apparently
    Eric Ross Williams) seeks reversal of his convictions for unlawful possession of
    drug paraphernalia, 
    D.C. Code § 48-1103
    (a)(1), and unlawful possession of a
    controlled substance, 
    D.C. Code § 48-904.01
    (d)(1). 1 He argues that the trial court
    erred in denying his motion to suppress (1) statements he made to police without the
    benefit of Miranda warnings, (2) purported drug paraphernalia (a glass “stem” and
    a rolled up dollar bill) found during a warrantless search of his car, and (3) crack
    cocaine found in his sock during a subsequent search of his person. We review the
    court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal rulings de novo. In re D.M., 
    94 A.3d 760
    , 764 (D.C. 2014). Based on the arguments briefed to the court, we vacate
    in part and affirm in part.
    We turn first to Mr. Williams’s argument that the trial court erred in denying
    his motion to suppress his incriminating statements, which the police elicited without
    Mirandizing him. In issuing its ruling, the court correctly acknowledged that, after
    the police stopped Mr. Williams for driving a car with stolen license plates, removed
    1
    Mr. Williams was also convicted of operating a motor vehicle without a
    permit, 
    D.C. Code § 50-1401.01
    (d), but raises no challenge to that conviction.
    3
    him from his car, surrounded, searched, and handcuffed him, “he was clearly
    detained [and] had no liberty to go anywhere.” But while acknowledging that Mr.
    Williams had clearly been seized for Fourth Amendment purposes, the court
    appeared to conclude that neither “the level of custody” nor the “public safety”
    nature of the questions the officers posed to Mr. Williams implicated Miranda. We
    cannot agree.
    Although the Fourth and Fifth Amendment inquiries are distinct, Miranda
    does not require a greater degree of restraint than formal arrest, see Berkemer v.
    McCarty, 
    468 U.S. 420
    , 441 (1984) (defining custody for Miranda purposes as
    “comparable to [the level of restraint] associated with a formal arrest”), and a person
    in Mr. Williams’s situation would not have felt they were “at liberty to terminate the
    interrogation and leave,” see White v. United States, 
    68 A.3d 271
    , 276 (D.C. 2013)
    (internal quotation marks omitted) (identifying this as the relevant inquiry for
    assessing Miranda custody). Moreover, in that custodial situation, when the police
    asked Mr. Williams an investigatory question about the presence of contraband in
    his car that they reasonably should have known was likely to elicit an incriminating
    response, 2 the standard for Miranda interrogation was squarely met. See Rhode
    2
    The police asked Mr. Williams, “Anything in the car we need to know about?
    Drugs, guns, anything of that sort?”
    4
    Island v. Innis, 
    446 U.S. 291
    , 301 (1980); accord Jones v. United States, 
    779 A.2d 277
    , 282-83 (D.C. 2001) (en banc). We therefore hold that the trial court erred in
    denying Mr. Williams’s motion to suppress his un-Mirandized statements.
    Mr. Williams also challenges the admission of the stem and the dollar bill
    found in his car after he was taken into Miranda custody. The court concluded that
    these objects were in plain view, see Umanzor v. United States, 
    803 A.2d 983
    , 998-
    99 (D.C. 2002) (citing Horton v. California, 
    496 U.S. 128
    , 136-37 (1990)), in the
    absence of any testimony to that effect. (The court observed that the police took a
    photograph of the objects on full display on the passenger seat, and “usually, that’s
    done to show defense or prosecution where something is when [the police] see it.”)
    On appeal, the government acknowledges that the body-worn camera footage shows
    that the stem and the dollar bill were not in plain view when the police approached
    the car and that an officer had to go into the car and unfold a piece of cloth on the
    front seat to make them visible. We conclude that the trial court’s factual finding
    that the stem and dollar bill were visible from outside the car was without adequate
    foundation and that its conclusion that the seizure of these items was justified under
    the plain view doctrine was in error.
    5
    The government urges us to uphold the seizure of the stem and rolled up dollar
    bill on different grounds, asserting that the police had probable cause to search Mr.
    Williams’s car. 3 Specifically, the government suggests that, under United States v.
    Patane, 
    542 U.S. 630
     (2004), any Miranda violation would not require the
    suppression of any resulting physical fruits, and that Mr. Williams’s un-Mirandized
    statements could establish probable cause for the search of the car. As it effectively
    concedes, the government did not advance this theory before the trial court. 4 We
    3
    At trial, the government argued that the stem and dollar bill were separately
    admissible under the doctrine of inevitable discovery because, once the police
    lawfully discovered the drugs on Mr. Williams’s person (in his sock, see infra
    discussion of the conviction for possession of a controlled substance), they would
    have had a basis to search his car for drugs as well. However, the government
    abandons this theory on appeal.
    4
    The government argues we should address this unpreserved Patane-based
    probable cause argument for the first time on appeal because, it asserts, addressing
    a purely legal question would not be procedurally unfair. Effectively, the
    government appears to be asking this court to relieve it of its burden to justify the
    legality of searches and seizures in the trial court. We decline to do so.
    Even though the government does not argue that it preserved a probable cause
    argument, the dissent identifies places in the trial record where it perceives this
    argument to have been made. In particular, the dissent highlights a sentence in the
    government’s opposition to Mr. Williams’s motion to suppress where the
    government argued that the court should recognize an “officer safety” exception to
    Miranda, and then asserted that Mr. Williams had made an “admission in response
    to an officer safety question” to which Miranda’s requirements did not apply
    (emphasis added). The novelty of this reasoning aside, this one sentence cannot
    reasonably be said to have raised an argument that a statement obtained in violation
    of Miranda can alone provide probable cause for a subsequent search of Mr.
    Williams’s car. And there is no indication in the record from the evidentiary hearing
    that the trial court, or either of the parties, understood the government to be making
    6
    therefore decline to consider whether the search of Mr. Williams’s car was lawful
    on this basis. 5 See Robinson v. United States, 
    76 A.3d 329
    , 341 n.24 (D.C. 2013)
    (concluding that the government “forfeited its opportunity to defend its seizure and
    search of [the defendant] based on [a] new theory” not litigated in the trial court).
    Without Mr. Williams’s statements regarding his possession of drug
    paraphernalia or the items themselves, his conviction for possession of drug
    paraphernalia lacks any evidentiary foundation and must be vacated. The same,
    however, cannot be said of his conviction for drug possession. That conviction is
    based on the drugs found on Mr. Williams’s person, which the court concluded were
    that argument. Rather, the government (unsuccessfully) argued the stem and the
    dollar bill would have been inevitably discovered based on the later search of Mr.
    Williams’s person, see supra note 3, thereby seeming to concede that the search
    required some basis outside of Mr. Williams’s un-Mirandized statements regarding
    the contents of his car.
    5
    The dissent correctly notes that “parties are not limited to the precise
    arguments they made below,” as long as the overarching claim was properly
    presented before the trial court. Post at 9 (quoting Yee v. City of Escondido, 
    503 U.S. 519
    , 534 (1992)). But, setting aside that the government has not made a Yee-
    based argument, to say that the government presented a “claim” under Patane to the
    trial court would be to consider a “claim” at such a level of abstraction that the term
    would lose all meaning. We would effectively be saying that the government could
    preserve any and all arguments against suppression whenever it simply asserts its
    agents did nothing wrong. We have never before in a criminal case permitted the
    government such leeway, and we decline to set aside our standard preservation
    requirements to allow for the government’s argument here.
    7
    discovered in a search incident to his arrest. Mr. Williams argues that these drugs
    were the fruits of earlier unauthorized conduct by the police. Even if we were to
    assume that this argument is adequately preserved, Mr. Williams fails to substantiate
    it on appeal. He argues conclusorily that “[t]he drugs found in [his] sock after his
    arrest[] should have been suppressed as fruit of the poisonous tree” and fails to
    explain why the search could not have been conducted incident to the original basis
    of his arrest for possession of stolen license plates. See Comford v. United States,
    
    947 A.2d 1181
    , 1188 (D.C. 2008) (“[I]ssues adverted to in a perfunctory manner,
    unaccompanied by some effort at developed argumentation, are deemed waived.”).
    Thus, we conclude that the trial court did not err in admitting the cocaine from Mr.
    Williams’s sock.
    For these reasons, we vacate Mr. Williams’s conviction for possession of drug
    paraphernalia and affirm his conviction for possession of a controlled substance.
    So ordered.
    THOMPSON, Senior Judge, dissenting in part: In this case, appellant was
    8
    stopped by police because the vehicle he was driving had tags that had been reported
    stolen.    After the stop, officers asked appellant to step outside the vehicle,
    handcuffed him, and, without reading him his Miranda rights, asked him whether
    there was anything in the vehicle they should know about. Appellant responded that
    he had a “stem” — a pipe used to ingest crack cocaine — on the front passenger
    seat. The officers eventually looked on the front passenger seat of the vehicle and
    found the stem with a white powdery substance on it and, in the same place, a rolled-
    up dollar bill also containing a white powdery substance. Appellant argues that
    discovery of the stem and rolled-up dollar bill — the basis of his conviction of
    possession of drug paraphernalia — was the fruit of his un-Mirandized statements
    and that the drug paraphernalia items should have been suppressed. My colleagues
    in the majority agree, declining to consider the government’s arguments that under
    United States v. Patane, 1 the physical fruits of appellant’s un-Mirandized statement
    need not be suppressed and that there was no Fourth Amendment violation entailed
    in the search that led to recovery of the stem because appellant’s statement about the
    stem located on the passenger seat made the search for that item lawful.
    1
    
    542 U.S. 630
     (2004).
    9
    My colleagues’ stated reason for declining to consider the government’s
    arguments is that the government forfeited its opportunity to defend its search based
    on a new theory not litigated in the trial court. I respectfully disagree, as I believe
    that my colleagues’ crabbed view of what was required to preserve the government’s
    claim that the search violated neither Miranda nor the Fourth Amendment cannot be
    squared with this court’s jurisprudence applying Yee v. City of Escondido, 
    503 U.S. 519
    , 534 (1992) (“Once a . . . claim is properly presented, a party can make any
    argument in support of that claim; parties are not limited to the precise arguments
    they made below.”). See Wilson-Bey v. United States, 
    903 A.2d 818
    , 839 & n.39
    (D.C. 2006) (en banc) (explaining that even though conspiracy and accomplice
    liability “are distinct legal theories that require proof of different elements,” the
    government’s invocation of a conspiracy theory “for the first time in its brief to the
    en banc court might reasonably be viewed not as an impermissible new ‘claim,’ but
    rather as a permissible new argument in support of a previously made and preserved
    claim [regarding accomplice liability]” (citing Yee, 
    503 U.S. at 534
    )). 2
    2
    See also, e.g., D.C. Dep’t of Health v. D.C. Off. of Emp. Appeals, 
    273 A.3d 871
    , 876 n.4 (D.C. 2022) (reasoning that agency’s argument that “any breaches of
    the regulatory timelines were harmless” “adequately preserved for [appellate]
    review” the agency’s argument that the regulatory ninety-day duration limit for an
    employee performance improvement plan was directory rather than mandatory);
    Miles v. United States, 
    181 A.3d 633
    , 643 n.16 (D.C. 2018) (rejecting the
    government’s contention that Miles’s failure to argue at the suppression hearing that
    his flight was provoked, and his trial testimony that he did not flee from the officers
    10
    A review of the government’s written opposition and supplemental opposition
    to appellant’s motion to suppress shows that the government’s principal arguments
    were that there was no Miranda violation because appellant was not in custody when
    he made his statements to the officer and that the stem and rolled-up dollar bill were
    in plain view and also would inevitably have been discovered after the search
    incident to appellant’s arrest revealed cocaine in appellant’s sock. But, in opposing
    the motion to suppress, the government also argued that “even if [appellant] was in
    custody [and Miranda was applicable]” the search that recovered the drug
    at all, precluded him from arguing on appeal that any inference of consciousness of
    guilt was unwarranted because his flight was provoked; noting that Miles “clearly
    contended in the trial court that the police lacked reasonable suspicion to stop him”;
    and reasoning that his failure to argue provocation “boiled down to a failure to
    highlight certain facts that made his conduct less suspicious”); Anthony v. United
    States, 
    935 A.2d 275
    , 282 n.10 (D.C. 2007) (“[T]he underlying ‘claim’ was that the
    prosecutor’s misstatements prejudiced Anthony and that the judge failed adequately
    to cure the prejudice. The contention that the judge should have asked the court
    reporter to read back the testimony, and that if he had done so the misrepresentations
    could have been remedied, is simply a (somewhat) new argument in support of that
    claim.”); West v. United States, 
    710 A.2d 866
    , 868 n.3 (D.C. 1998) (holding that the
    defense argument that “there was no constructive refusal to admit the police officers”
    was sufficient to preserve for review the issue of whether the time lapse between the
    officers’ announcement of their presence and their use of a battering ram to break
    down defendant’s door was too short to establish compliance with the authorizing
    statute); W.M. Schlosser Co. v. Md. Drywall Co., 
    673 A.2d 647
    , 651 n.9 (D.C. 1996)
    (“Robertson contends that the District failed to preserve the issue of whether the
    construction work being performed by him was an inherently dangerous activity. . . .
    The crux of the District’s argument now is that implicit in its argument in the trial
    court that it owed no duty to Robertson — because it had delegated that duty to
    Schlosser — is the theory that Robertson’s activity was not inherently dangerous.
    We agree; the District’s argument below can fairly be held to encompass its
    argument in this court.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    11
    paraphernalia was lawful in light of appellant’s “admission . . . that he had a stem in
    the vehicle.” 3 In other words, in the trial court, in response to the defense arguments
    that the fruits of the search must be excluded under Miranda and the Fourth
    Amendment, the government articulated essentially the same argument it has made
    in its brief in this appeal: that any Miranda violation did not render the search based
    on appellant’s voluntary statement unlawful, 4 and that there was no Fourth
    Amendment violation entailed in the (front-passenger-seat) search that turned up the
    stem and dollar bill.
    Moreover, the trial judge confirmed his understanding that appellant was
    asking the court to rule that the claimed Miranda violation “would lead to the
    suppression not only of the statements but of the fruits of the statement.” That is,
    “the trial judge was fairly apprised as to the questions on which []he was being asked
    3
    To be precise, the government stated in its initial opposition, “However, even
    if he was in custody, Defendant and the immediate area were lawfully searched, with
    Defendant’s admission in response to an officer safety question that he had a stem
    in the vehicle.” It repeated in its supplemental opposition, “However, even if he was
    in custody, notwithstanding the officer’s inquiry about whether there were weapons
    or anything the officers should know about[,] Defendant and the immediate area
    were lawfully searched, with Defendant’s admission in response to an officer safety
    question that he had a stem in the vehicle.”
    4
    In the trial court, appellant did not dispute the government’s assertion that
    his statement about the stem was voluntary, and he does not contend on appeal that
    his statement was involuntary.
    12
    to rule,” which “preserved the . . . [Patane] issue for our review.” Tindle v. United
    States, 
    778 A.2d 1077
    , 1082 (D.C. 2001) (internal quotation marks omitted). The
    trial judge also understood that the government disputed the point, as the court
    remarked that its finding that there was no interrogation for Miranda purposes “does
    away with [the court’s need to analyze] the fruit of the poisonous tree thing.”
    Further, the prosecutor’s argument apprised the court that the government was
    linking the vehicle search with appellant’s admission about the stem. The prosecutor
    told the court that in light of appellant’s “voluntary statement that there’s a stem in
    there,” the “stem and that dollar bill was [sic] going to be found no matter what.”
    To be sure, the government did not cite to the trial court the authorities it cites
    in its brief on appeal: Patane, 
    542 U.S. at 636
     (holding that Miranda does not require
    the suppression of the fruits of a voluntary but un-Mirandized statement made during
    custodial questioning); and Mitchell v. United States, 
    746 A.2d 877
    , 890 (D.C. 2000)
    (“Mitchell’s admission that he had marijuana in his car unquestionably established
    probable cause to search the vehicle and any containers found therein that might
    contain the contraband.”). But that is of no moment, because numerous decisions of
    this court applying Yee have interpreted it to “permit us to consider on their merits
    . . . the more refined arguments which appellate counsel . . . have made for the first
    time on appeal.” Salmon v. United States, 
    719 A.2d 949
    , 953 (D.C. 1997); see supra
    13
    n.2 and accompanying text; see also Baker v. United States, 
    867 A.2d 988
    , 1001
    (D.C. 2005) (“[C]itation to a particular case is not a prerequisite to the preservation
    of an objection for appellate review . . . .”).
    Taken together, the government’s written oppositions to appellant’s motion to
    suppress tangible evidence and the prosecutor’s argument during the suppression
    hearing can fairly be read to encompass claims that appellant’s un-Mirandized
    admission that he had a stem did not require suppression of the fruits of the officers’
    follow-up search of appellant’s vehicle, and that appellant’s admission about having
    a stem on the front passenger seat of the vehicle rendered the search of that location
    lawful under the Fourth Amendment. The government is entitled on appeal to make
    additional arguments in support of those claims, including by making arguments
    based on Patane and Mitchell. 5 Under those authorities, there was no legal basis
    5
    This is not a case in which the government has advanced a constitutional
    claim for the first time, e.g., Gilchrist v. United States, 
    954 A.2d 1006
    , 1012-13
    (D.C. 2008) (“[T]he constitutional claim presented in this court is not ‘fairly
    included’ in the question presented to the trial court regarding the question of a
    witness’ general credibility. . . .”); or where the government’s arguments rely on
    facts not established in the trial court, e.g., Jones v. United States, 
    990 A.2d 970
    , 981
    n.34 (D.C. 2010) (“[I]t is one thing to make new legal arguments on appeal to
    support a claim made below. It is another thing to advance an entirely new factual
    claim.”); or where evaluation of the government’s arguments requires consideration
    of different rules of evidence than were the focus of the trial court’s ruling, e.g.,
    Butts v. United States, 
    822 A.2d 407
    , 415 n.7 (D.C. 2003) (“Because challenges to
    14
    for suppressing the stem and dollar bill. 6 Accordingly, I would uphold appellant’s
    conviction for unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia.
    relevancy and expert qualification involve entirely different rules of evidence, we
    view them as separate claims rather than as different arguments in support of the
    same claim.”); or where “there is no meaningful resemblance between [the
    government’s] position in the trial court and the claim that [it] presents to us,”
    Perkins v. United States, 
    760 A.2d 604
    , 609 n.9 (D.C. 2000). Nor is this a case in
    which the government did no more in the trial court than argue that “its agents did
    nothing wrong.” Ante at 6 n.5. Rather, this is a case in which the government,
    having met its evidentiary burden of presenting facts showing that the search was
    justified based on appellant’s statement about the stem, “presented the same general
    theme in both courts and then added additional arguments on appeal in support of
    the same theme.” Perkins, 
    760 A.2d at
    609 n.9.
    6
    E.g., United States v. McCoy, 407 F. App’x 514, 516 (2d Cir. 2010) (“[T]he
    Government’s citation to Patane was not a new argument but rather supplied further
    support for a contention that the Government consistently pressed: that the firearm
    and ammunition should not be suppressed despite the officers’ failure to give
    Miranda warnings.” (citing Eastman Kodak Co. v. STWB, Inc., 
    452 F.3d 215
    , 221
    (2d Cir. 2006), a Second Circuit case that itself cites Yee, 
    503 U.S. at 534
    )).