Joseph Jones v. United States , 99 A.3d 679 ( 2014 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 12-CF-1719
    JOSEPH JONES, APPELLANT,
    V.
    UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (CF3-21632-10)
    (Hon. Ann O‘Regan Keary, Motions Judge)
    (Hon. Robert I. Richter, Motions and Trial Judge)
    (Submitted April 3, 2014                           Decided September 18, 2014)
    Richard S. Stolker for appellant.
    Ronald C. Machen Jr., United States Attorney, and Elizabeth Trosman,
    Elizabeth H. Danello, Tejpal Chawla, and Margaret Barr, Assistant United States
    Attorneys, were on the brief for appellee.
    Before GLICKMAN and THOMPSON, Associate Judges, and REID, Senior
    Judge.
    THOMPSON, Associate Judge: A jury convicted appellant Joseph Jones of
    conspiracy to commit robbery, two counts of armed robbery, and obstruction of
    justice. He appeals his convictions, arguing that (1) the trial court erred when it
    admitted testimony relaying the statements of an alleged co-conspirator without
    2
    first determining the existence of a conspiracy in which appellant was a
    participant; (2) the government‘s failure to disclose to appellant before trial the
    transcript of the grand jury testimony of one of the victims violated appellant‘s due
    process rights; (3) the trial court erred in not suppressing the identification of
    appellant by one of the complainants; (4) appellant was deprived of an opportunity
    to prepare adequately for trial when his trial counsel‘s representatives were
    prevented from attending the plea proceeding of the alleged co-conspirator; and (5)
    the evidence did not support a conviction for obstruction of justice as charged in
    the superseding indictment. For the reasons explained below, we reject appellant‘s
    arguments and affirm all of his convictions.
    I.
    The government presented evidence at trial showing that on October 22,
    2010, Tierra Fenwick and Chauncey Terrell were victims of an armed robbery
    committed by two assailants. Fenwick, who was carrying a large sum of cash, and
    Terrell traveled to the Mayfair/Paradise neighborhood, where they planned to
    purchase marijuana and phencyclidine (―PCP‖). Fenwick asked a man in the
    neighborhood where she could make the purchases, and he advised her to go see
    Gary Nichols and a man known as ―Tip‖ or ―Tipper.‖ After finding the two men,
    3
    Fenwick and Terrell purchased marijuana from Tipper. According to Terrell‘s
    testimony, when Fenwick was making her purchase, she took out a large wad of
    cash. When Fenwick asked Nichols about purchasing PCP, he told Fenwick to
    meet him at an apartment in a nearby building.
    Fenwick and Terrell entered the indicated apartment building and knocked
    on the door of the designated unit, but no one answered the door. Fenwick then
    called Nichols on his cell phone, and he said he was on his way to the apartment.
    From inside the building, Fenwick saw two men ―with T-shirts tied around their
    face[s], like ninjas‖ outside, approaching the front entrance. Before Fenwick and
    Terrell could leave the building, the two men entered through the back door and
    ―rushed‖ Fenwick and Terrell. Fenwick testified that, upon seeing his eyes and
    hearing his voice as he addressed her by her nickname, she recognized one of the
    men as appellant, whom she had known for four to six years and knew as ―J-Mo.‖1
    As appellant, who was holding a gun, took Fenwick‘s money, he threatened to kill
    her if she snitched.
    1
    While Terrell did not know appellant, he also heard the exchange between
    Fenwick and her assailant.
    4
    James Lindsey, who lived in the Mayfair neighborhood, testified that on the
    day of the robbery he saw and heard Nichols and appellant outside speaking to
    each other. Nichols then ―left for a moment,‖ walked toward his house, came back
    and passed to appellant an object (which the government alleged was a gun).
    After the robbery, Fenwick called the police. After Fenwick recounted to
    them what had happened, officers showed Fenwick a photo array that did not
    include a picture of appellant, and Fenwick did not make an identification. Several
    days later, appellant called Fenwick‘s house telephone and stated that he had heard
    that the ―police was looking for him and if he found out it wasn‘t going to be
    pretty.‖ On November 11, Metropolitan Police Department detectives showed
    Fenwick another photo array, and in ―less than a minute‖ Fenwick pointed to a
    photograph of appellant and stated, ―That‘s J-Mo right there.‖
    The government introduced evidence about the time of Fenwick‘s 911 call
    (6:40 p.m.) and evidence of appellant‘s phone records before and after the time of
    the robbery. At 5:09 p.m., appellant received a text message from an unknown
    person saying, ―I need to get . . . $250 real quick, or I‘m going to be locked up.‖
    [7/26: 630] Appellant responded, ―We got to make something happen ASAP[,]‖
    and ―I‘m going to try to make it to you as soon as I can.‖ Four short phone calls
    5
    between Nichols and appellant occurred between 6:25 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. and
    between 6:41 p.m. and 6:45 p.m.
    April Gatewood testified that on the day of the robbery, when she met with
    appellant sometime after 6:49 p.m., appellant told her that he had just ―done
    something to get some money,‖ and, upon seeing police officers on the street,
    stated, ―they might be looking for me.‖
    II.
    Appellant contends that the trial court erred when it ―refus[ed] to conduct a
    pretrial hearing as to [whether the government had proved by a preponderance of
    the evidence] the existence of a conspiracy‖ before allowing the government ―to
    offer a statement of a purported co-conspirator in evidence.‖2 We disagree.
    ―[A] coconspirator‘s out-of-court assertions may be admitted as nonhearsay
    evidence [against a defendant]. . . only if the prosecution proves that (1) a
    2
    In declining to hold the pre-trial hearing, the court ruled that while the
    government would be required to establish evidence of a conspiracy before the
    court would admit co-conspirator hearsay statements, it was not necessary for the
    government to make the requisite showing before trial.
    6
    conspiracy existed, (2) the defendant had a connection with the conspiracy, and (3)
    the coconspirator made the statements during the course of and in furtherance of
    the conspiracy.‖ Butler v. United States, 
    481 A.2d 431
    , 439 (D.C. 1984). ―[T]he
    judge should determine the ultimate admissibility of co-conspirators‘ statements,‖
    
    id., while considering
    only ―independent nonhearsay evidence,‖ Jenkins v. United
    States, 
    80 A.3d 978
    , 990–91 (D.C. 2013) (holding that, despite Bourjaily v. United
    States, 
    483 U.S. 171
    (1987), ―Butler‘s ‗state law‘ holding‖ ―remains controlling
    authority in [this jurisdiction]‖). However, the determination prescribed by Butler
    is necessary only if the statement at issue is otherwise inadmissible hearsay. See
    Walker v. United States, 
    982 A.2d 723
    , 737 (D.C. 2009) (co-conspirator‘s
    testimony that other participants in a burglary asked him whether he would ―go on
    the move [i.e., the robbery]‖ and told him ―to look in the basement‖ for the money
    was not hearsay testimony because the statements were a question and an
    instruction, not an assertion of fact) (internal quotation marks omitted). ―Hearsay
    is an assertion of fact or belief made out of court and offered to prove the truth of
    the matter asserted.‖ Mercer v. United States, 
    864 A.2d 110
    , 117 (D.C. 2004).
    Here, the putative ―hearsay‖ statements, which appellant argues were
    admitted without a finding about the existence of the charged conspiracy, came in
    through Lindsey‘s testimony: ―I just heard [alleged co-conspirator] Mr. Nichols
    7
    telling Mr. Jones that a young lady wanted to buy some PCP. She had — at least a
    thousand, or $1,500 worth. And he said we need to get that up off her.‖ We agree
    with the government that these statements either were not hearsay3 or fell within an
    exception to the hearsay rule. The statements about the ―young lady‖ and the large
    amount of cash she had available to buy drugs were not offered for the truth of the
    matters asserted, but, as reflected in the prosecutor‘s closing argument, instead
    were offered to prove that appellant was led to believe that Fenwick was carrying a
    large amount of cash (whether or not she truly was) and to show the effect of the
    information on appellant (i.e., that he conspired with Nichols to steal Fenwick‘s
    money).4 Cf. In re Dixon, 
    853 A.2d 708
    , 712 (D.C. 2004) (―[T]his court has
    routinely recognized out-of-court statements as non-hearsay when they are used to
    3
    The same conclusion applies to two other items of testimony that appellant
    highlights: (1) ―testimony [that] phone calls [occurred] between Nichols and
    appellant‖ (without mention of the substance of those calls) and (2) Fenwick‘s
    testimony that ―Nichols told her to go to the apartment building to purchase
    drugs.‖ Cf. 
    Walker, 982 A.2d at 737
    (testimony about ―directions given‖ by one of
    the co-conspirators could be admitted without Butler-type findings); 
    Butler, 481 A.2d at 438
    n.10 (―a directive offered to prove that instruction was given‖ was ―not
    hearsay‖).
    4
    The prosecutor argued, ―And how do we know that [Nichols] saw her?
    Because Mr. Lindsey told you he‘d heard [Nichols] and [appellant] talking about
    the money that Ms. Fenwick had and saying that they needed to get it up off her,
    conspiring to commit this robbery.‖
    8
    show the effect on the listener and not to prove their truth.‖).5 The statement ―we
    need to get that up off her‖ was admissible as a non-hearsay statement in that it
    was a ―verbal act[] that manifest[ed] the conspiratorial agreement.‖ 
    Jenkins, 80 A.3d at 993
    (―Statements between alleged coconspirators can be relevant wholly
    apart from their truth or falsity because the very act of plotting is itself compelling
    proof of the existence of the conspiracy.‖); see also State v. Henry, 
    752 A.2d 40
    ,
    46 (Conn. 2000) (statement by a coconspirator to the defendant that they would
    shoot the victim upon sight was not hearsay because it was ―evidence of [an]
    agreement to shoot [the victim]‖ and thus had ―probative value without respect to
    its truth‖).6   In addition, since it conveyed the speaker‘s state-of-mind, the
    5
    Even if the statements that Fenwick sought to buy PCP and that she was
    carrying a large amount of money had been offered or were considered by the jury
    for their truth, there was ample other evidence of these facts (i.e., Fenwick‘s own
    testimony and Terrell‘s testimony to the same effect). Moreover, in his closing
    argument, appellant emphasized the fact that Fenwick ―went to the area to buy
    drugs‖ and went to the building because ―she wanted to buy some PCP.‖ Thus,
    even if we assume arguendo that the trial court erred in some way in admitting this
    testimony, we cannot conclude that appellant was prejudiced by the error.
    6
    We also note that while appellant complains of the trial court‘s ruling
    declining to hold a pre-trial hearing on the admissibility of co-conspirator hearsay
    statements, this court has specifically instructed that the trial court ―should make
    the admissibility determination during the prosecution’s evidence[,]‖ to ―avoid[]
    the impracticality of [a] mini-trial[.]‖ 
    Butler, 481 A.2d at 441
    (italics added).
    9
    statement ―we need to get that up off her‖ also was admissible under the state-of-
    mind exception to the hearsay rule.7
    III.
    Prior to trial, the government sent appellant a letter disclosing the substance
    of certain portions of Terrell‘s grand jury testimony, including in relevant part: (1)
    that Terrell described ―Tip,‖ from whom Fenwick and Terrell purchased
    marijuana, as ―approximately 5‘6‖, light skinned, wearing an all black coat with a
    ski mask folded up on top of his head; (2) that Terrell described Nichols as ―dark
    skinned, 5‘6‖ or 5‘7‖, with a tattoo under his right eye‖; (3) that Terrell testified
    that one of the robbers had ―‗like a ski mask on‘ and the other had ‗like a shirt tied
    around his face.‘‖ Thereafter, appellant filed a motion to compel the government
    7
    See Clark v. United States, 
    412 A.2d 21
    , 26 (D.C. 1980) (explaining that
    exception to the hearsay rule, which applies to statements that ―convey[] the intent
    of the declarant to perform an act in the future, where there is an issue as to
    whether in fact the act later was performed.‖); Laumer v. United States, 
    409 A.2d 190
    , 201 n.14 (D.C. 1979) (en banc) (explaining that a declarant‘s ―incriminating
    statement of future intent to commit [a] crime for which an accused is charged‖ is
    covered by the state-of-mind exception).
    10
    to disclose immediately the actual transcripts of Terrell‘s grand jury testimony.
    The trial court denied appellant‘s motion.8
    Appellant argues on appeal that ―[t]he description given by Terrell of ‗Tip,‘
    . . . was quite similar in appearance to the description of one of the robbers in the
    hallway,‖ and therefore the government had ―an obligation . . ., even without a
    defense request, for turnover of the transcript of Terrell‘s grand jury testimony.‖
    He contends that the government‘s failure to timely disclose that information
    (which he suggests was relevant to a third-party perpetrator defense) violated
    Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    (1963),9 and prejudiced his defense.
    To succeed on a Brady claim, an appellant must show that the government
    failed to disclose favorable or impeaching evidence and that he ―was prejudiced by
    the suppression of the evidence.‖ 
    Tyler, 975 A.2d at 860
    . Appellant‘s Brady
    8
    Generally, ―the pretrial release of a grand jury transcript‖ is mandated only
    when ―the party seeking disclosure has established a particularized need that
    outweighs the time-worn considerations.‖ Davis v. United States, 
    641 A.2d 484
    ,
    490 (D.C. 1994) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    9
    ―Under Brady, the suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to
    an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either
    to guilt or punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the
    prosecution.‖ Tyler v. United States, 
    975 A.2d 848
    , 860 (D.C. 2009) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    11
    claim fails because he has not identified any favorable or impeaching information
    contained in the transcript of Terrell‘s grand jury testimony that was not disclosed
    in the government‘s pre-trial disclosure letter. Likewise, appellant fails to explain
    how he was prejudiced by the delayed disclosure of the transcript (which was
    provided by the government as Jencks Act10 material before Terrell testified at
    trial).        Since appellant has neither identified what exculpatory or impeaching
    evidence was ―known to the government but unknown to him‖ from the testimony
    summary the government provided pre-trial, see United States v. Ruggiero, 
    472 F.2d 599
    , 604 (2d Cir. 1973), nor shown any ―reasonable probability‖ that earlier
    disclosure of the transcript ―would have produced a different verdict,‖ see Rowland
    v. United States, 
    840 A.2d 664
    , 687 (D.C. 2004) (quoting Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U.S. 263
    , 282 (1999)), we can find no Brady violation here.
    IV.
    Appellant filed a pre-trial motion ―to suppress[] identification testimony‖
    regarding Fenwick‘s photo-array identification of appellant. He argued that two of
    the photographs in the array, including his, ―st[oo]d out from the others.‖ The trial
    10
    18 U.S.C. § 3500.
    12
    court (Judge Richter) found the photo array to be ―one of the least suggestive
    arrays [the court had] ever seen,‖ and denied the motion to suppress.
    In this appeal, appellant no longer argues that the photo array was
    suggestive. Instead, he emphasizes that Fenwick recognized appellant because of
    his eyes and ―tattoos on his neck,‖ but then conceded at trial that there were no
    tattoos on appellant‘s neck.11      Appellant argues that these inconsistencies
    ―rendered [Fenwick‘s] identification of appellant too unreliable to present to the
    jury.‖12
    11
    Appellant also highlights that after the robbery, Fenwick said during the
    911 telephone call that ―the individuals who had robbed her . . . were wearing ski
    masks,‖ but then at trial ―changed her testimony and said that the robbers were not
    wearing ski masks, but had black T-shirts wrapped around their faces ‗like
    ninjas.‘‖ This inconsistency, however, is unrelated to Fenwick‘s identification of
    appellant; she did not identify appellant as her assailant based on the ski mask or
    shirt wrapped around his face. In any event, appellant cross-examined Fenwick
    about this apparent inconsistency, and it was for the jury to consider whether this
    inconsistency rendered Fenwick incredible. See Graham v. United States, 
    12 A.3d 1159
    , 1164 (D.C. 2011) (―Credibility is normally for the jury to determine.‖)
    Appellant points to another ―inconsistency‖ — that Fenwick ―claimed to
    recognize [appellant‘s] voice on the telephone after the robbery, [but] at trial she
    admitted that she had recognized [appellant‘s] voice only when hearing him at the
    trial.‖ Appellant misstates Fenwick‘s testimony. She testified that the trial was the
    first occasion on which she stated that she recognized appellant by his voice, not
    that it was the first time she recognized his voice.
    12
    At times, appellant‘s brief seems to conflate the admission of the photo-
    identification evidence, to which he objected at trial, and the admission of
    (continued…)
    13
    Without a claim that the photo array was unduly suggestive, appellant‘s
    argument is unavailing.        If an identification procedure was impermissibly
    suggestive, the issue becomes whether ―under all the circumstances, the
    identification was reliable nonetheless.‖ United States v. Brown, 
    700 A.2d 760
    ,
    761 (D.C. 1997). However, barring a finding of undue suggestivity, ―it is the
    function of the jury to determine whether eyewitness identification is reliable.‖
    United States v. Hunter, 
    692 A.2d 1370
    , 1374 (D.C. 1997). Here, we defer to the
    trial court‘s unequivocal finding, uncontroverted on appeal, that the identification
    procedure was not suggestive, and we may not second-guess the jury‘s (implicit)
    determination about reliability. See 
    Brown, 700 A.2d at 762
    (disapproving of the
    trial court‘s approach of ―failing to find undue suggestivity but suppressing [the
    identification], nonetheless, for unreliability‖).
    We also reject appellant‘s suggestions that inconsistencies in Fenwick‘s
    identification of her assailant rendered the government‘s evidence insufficient for
    (…continued)
    Fenwick‘s in-court identification of him, to which he did not object. We focus on
    the former; as to the latter, we note that a trial judge does not err in admitting
    evidence of an in-court identification ―in the absence of a timely objection to its
    admissibility unless it is plain error.‖ Reavis v. United States, 
    395 A.2d 75
    , 79
    (D.C. 1978). Here, we find no error, plain or otherwise.
    14
    conviction13 and that Fenwick‘s identification of appellant was ―so inherently weak
    or unreliable as to [be wholly] lack[ing in] probative value.‖14 Sheffield v. United
    States, 
    397 A.2d 963
    , 967 (D.C. 1979). We cannot reach that conclusion given
    that Fenwick had known appellant for several years and testified that she
    recognized him by his eyes and voice.
    V.
    Nichols, who was originally appellant‘s codefendant, pled guilty in a closed
    proceeding prior to trial. Appellant now contends that his ―right to prepare an
    adequate defense‖ was violated by the closure of Nichols‘ guilty-plea proceeding.
    13
    Appellant asserts that the trial court ―compounded the error when it
    denied appellant‘s motion for judgment of acquittal after [Fenwick] . . . conceded
    that she had identified the masked robber only by his eyes and by a distinctive
    tattoo.‖
    14
    Appellant cites to Hunter‘s admonition that ―eyewitness identification by
    strangers may often be fraught with peril.‖ 
    692 A.2d 1370
    , 1377 (D.C. 1997).
    Here, however, the evidence showed that appellant was not a stranger to Fenwick;
    rather, Fenwick had known appellant for ―four to six years.‖ Moreover, Hunter
    confirms that even though trial judges must ―be alert to any danger that the wrong
    man is in the dock[,] . . . [t]his responsibility does not . . . permit the judge to
    exclude probative evidence from the jury because the judge has doubts as to its
    reliability.‖ 
    Id. 15 In
    a motion he filed in the trial court to unseal the transcript from the
    Nichols proceeding, appellant asserted that when his trial counsel became aware of
    the proceeding, counsel assigned his interns to ―sit in . . . the courtroom and to
    observe Mr. Nichols‘ demeanor and to take as many notes as possible concerning
    the specifics, the atmospherics, etc. of Mr. Nichols‘ guilty plea[,]‖ because counsel
    was unable himself to be present for the proceeding. However, the interns were
    not allowed to enter the courtroom where the plea agreement proceeding was
    taking place. At a hearing on the motion to unseal, the motions judge (Judge
    Keary, who also presided over Nichols‘s plea proceeding) stated that, after
    receiving the government‘s earlier motion to close the proceeding, she had made
    the findings required under Nellson v. Bayly15 without difficulty. Judge Keary
    stated that had she known that appellant was ―interested in being present,‖ she
    would have afforded him an opportunity to challenge the government‘s motion to
    close the proceeding and ―would have made a fuller record.‖ Judge Keary denied
    appellant‘s motion to unseal the transcript of the plea proceeding, but allowed
    appellant to receive the government‘s proffer of facts from the proceeding.
    15
    
    856 A.2d 566
    , 567 (D.C. 2004) (citing Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior
    Court, 
    474 U.S. 1
    , 14–15 (1986), and summarizing the holding of that case as
    follows: ―to justify closure of a protected judicial proceeding, the trial court must
    find that closure serves a compelling interest; that in the absence of closure there is
    a ‗substantial probability‘ that this compelling interest would be harmed; and that
    there are no alternatives that would adequately protect that compelling interest.‖)
    16
    Appellant does not now seek to have the transcript unsealed (a remedy that
    he asserts now could not ―ameliorate the violation of [his] rights‖), but seeks
    reversal of his convictions, asserting that the court closed the Nichols plea
    proceeding without giving the public notice and an opportunity to be heard,16 and
    arguing that he was hampered in preparing his defense because his trial counsel‘s
    surrogates were prevented from ―observ[ing] the live colloquy‖ in order to
    ―evaluat[e] Nichols‘ body language, his credibility and his reaction to the
    prosecution proffer.‖ Appellant also contends that the motions judge ―failed to
    make any findings at all to support its conclusion that closure was necessary to
    preserve the defendant‘s fair trial right‖ (brackets omitted).
    We need not determine whether the motions judge made the necessary
    findings17 before restricting access to Nichols‘s plea agreement proceeding, or
    16
    See Globe Newspapers Co. v. Superior Court, 
    457 U.S. 596
    , 609 n.25
    (1982) (―[R]epresentatives of the . . . general public must be given an opportunity
    to be heard on the question of their exclusion.‖) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    17
    See McIntosh v. United States, 
    933 A.2d 370
    , 376–77 (D.C. 2007)
    (explaining that before closing the courtroom, the trial court must first hear the
    views of counsel, and ―then make a proper determination that strict and
    inescapable necessity‖ and ―an overriding interest‖ ―compel[] such a course of
    action,‖ must consider reasonable alternatives to closing the proceeding, and must
    ensure that any closure is no broader than necessary to protect that interest)
    (continued…)
    17
    whether it erred in declining to unseal the transcript, because appellant has not
    demonstrated that he suffered prejudice as a result of the closure of that
    proceeding.18 The consolidated Eleventh Circuit case United States v. Ochoa-
    Vasquez, 
    428 F.3d 1015
    (11th Cir. 2005), is instructive in our analysis. In that
    case, appellant Ochoa, who was charged with conspiracy for his participation in a
    drug cartel, intervened in the case against his alleged co-conspirator Bergonzoli
    and unsuccessfully moved the trial court in that case to unseal certain files,
    including plea colloquies, so that he could evaluate his co-conspirator as ―a
    potential trial witness.‖ 
    Id. at 1022-25,
    1027. Ochoa‘s arguments that the trial
    court erred were ―unpersuasive‖ because he ―failed to demonstrate that he would
    have called Bergonzoli as a witness, let alone that Bergonzoli‘s testimony would
    have made any difference in the outcome of the trial.‖ 
    Id. at 1027.
    Furthermore,
    even though the Eleventh Circuit concluded that the trial court had ―violate[d] First
    Amendment standards‖ by sealing certain documents without making the requisite
    findings ―to rebut the presumption of openness,‖ it reasoned that the appropriate
    (…continued)
    (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted); see also United States v.
    Edwards, 
    430 A.2d 1321
    , 1343–44 (D.C. 1981) (en banc).
    18
    We are not concerned here with a violation of appellant‘s Sixth
    Amendment right as a defendant to have his own trial be a public proceeding,
    violation of which would constitute a structural error that we would presume to be
    prejudicial ―‗without need for further analysis in the context of the particular
    trial.‘‖ Barrows v. United States, 
    15 A.3d 673
    , 678 (D.C. 2011).
    18
    remedy was to ―reverse and remand‖ the orders denying access, not reversal of
    Ochoa‘s drug-trafficking conviction. 
    Id. at 1030.
    A new trial, the remedy Ochoa
    sought, was not warranted, because Ochoa ―has not shown prejudice.‖ 
    Id. Here, appellant‘s
    statement that he was ―foreclosed from evaluating Nichols‘
    body language, his credibility and his reaction to the prosecution proffer‖ similarly
    falls short of an adequate showing of prejudice.      The government did not call
    Nichols to testify at appellant‘s trial, so there was no cross-examination in which
    appellant might have been hampered by having been deprived of an opportunity to
    observe Nichols‘s demeanor at the plea proceeding. Further, appellant has not
    argued that any aspect of his defense at trial would have been different had he been
    allowed access to Nichols‘s plea-agreement proceeding. He has not stated that he
    wanted to call Nichols as a witness or that the ability to view Nichols in the
    proceeding would have altered his theory of his case or led him to introduce
    evidence at trial. Appellant‘s claim fails because he has not demonstrated, nor
    even argued, that there is a likelihood that the outcome of his trial would have been
    different if not for the closure of the plea-agreement proceeding. Cf. Hurt v.
    United States, 
    314 A.2d 489
    , 494 (D.C. 1974) (rejecting appellant‘s ―professed
    impairment of his ability to prepare an adequate defense‖ where appellant‘s
    argument ―rest[ed] purely on speculation‖).
    19
    VI.
    In the original indictment in this case, appellant was charged with
    obstruction of justice in violation of D.C. Code § 22-722 (a) (3) (B) (2012 Repl.)
    (―subsection (a)(3)‖), which provides that ―a person commits obstruction of justice
    if that person . . . [h]arasses another person with the intent to hinder, delay,
    prevent, or dissuade the person from . . . [r]eporting to a law enforcement officer
    the commission of, or any information concerning, a criminal offense.‖ In the
    superseding indictment, appellant was instead charged with obstruction of justice
    in violation of D.C. Code § 22-722 (a) (6) (2012 Repl.) (―subsection (a)(6)‖),
    which provides that ―a person commits obstruction of justice if that person . . .
    [c]orruptly, or by threats of force, any way obstructs or impedes or endeavors to
    obstruct or impede the due administration of justice in any official proceeding.‖
    At a preliminary hearing, the government moved to dismiss the obstruction
    count under subsection (a) (6) and to proceed to trial under subsection (a) (3) (with
    the prosecutor explaining to the court that this court‘s then-very-recent decision in
    Wynn v. United States, 
    48 A.3d 181
    (D.C. 2012), had ―cast doubt‖ on whether a
    police investigation qualified as an ―official proceeding‖ under subsection (a) (6)).
    20
    The trial court granted the government‘s motion, over appellant‘s objection that the
    superseding indictment ―either explicitly or implicitly‖ had caused the original
    indictment to be dismissed.
    On appeal, appellant suggests that the government was bound to proceed on
    the obstruction charge, if at all, under subsection (a) (6). He argues that he is
    entitled to reversal of his conviction because the evidence was insufficient as a
    matter of law to convict him under that subsection, since ―there was no court case,
    no grand jury investigation, nor indeed any relevant charges pending against
    appellant‖ (and thus no occasion for him to obstruct ―the due administration of
    justice in an[] official proceeding‖) at the times he warned Fenwick not to ―snitch.‖
    We disagree with appellant‘s contention that the government could proceed on the
    obstruction charge only as alleged in the superseding (rather than the original)
    indictment.19 Although we have not heretofore squarely addressed the issue, we
    agree with numerous federal appellate courts that an indictment remains pending
    against a defendant until it is dismissed by the trial court.20 Thus, the return of the
    19
    We need not and do not reach the issue of whether the evidence in this
    case could have supported a conviction under subsection (a) (6).
    20
    See, e.g., United States v. Hickey, 
    580 F.3d 922
    , 929–30 (9th Cir. 2009)
    (rejecting the appellant‘s contention that ―a superseding indictment that omits a
    (continued…)
    21
    superseding indictment in this case did not, as appellant‘s argument implies,
    automatically render the original indictment ineffectual or a nullity.21 The original
    indictment remained pending against appellant because the trial court had not
    dismissed it at the time it ruled that the government could proceed on the
    obstruction count under subsection (a) (3).
    (…continued)
    charge against a defendant is essentially the same as dismissing that charge‖ and
    holding that ―the government may elect to proceed on any pending indictment,
    whether it is the most recently returned superseding indictment or a prior
    indictment.‖); United States v. Walker, 
    363 F.3d 711
    , 715 (8th Cir. 2004) (noting
    that a ―superseding indictment and the original indictment can co-exist,‖ and citing
    with approval circuit court decisions holding that ―a superseding indictment does
    not in effect dismiss the original indictment.‖); United States v. Vavlitis, 
    9 F.3d 206
    , 209 (1st Cir. 1993) (―It is clear that the grand jury‘s return of a superseding
    indictment does not void the original indictment.‖); United States v. Bowen, 
    946 F.2d 734
    , 736 (10th Cir. 1991) (―[finding] no authority which supports the
    proposition that a superseding indictment zaps an earlier indictment to the end that
    the earlier indictment somehow vanishes into thin air.‖); United States v. Stricklin,
    
    591 F.2d 1112
    , 1115 n.1 (5th Cir. 1979) (explaining that where a superseding
    indictment was returned, and an original indictment was never dismissed, there
    were ―technically two pending indictments against [the appellant], and . . . the
    government may select one of them with which to proceed to trial.‖); United States
    v. Cerilli, 
    558 F.2d 697
    , 700 n.3 (3rd Cir. 1977) (stating that the defendants‘
    contention that ―the issuance of [a] ‗superseding‘ indictment necessarily constitutes
    dismissal of the original indictment‖ was ―not convincing,‖ because both
    indictments remained pending, ―and the government may select one of them with
    which to proceed to trial.‖).
    21
    United States v. Rojas-Contreras, 
    474 U.S. 231
    , 237 (1985) (―The term
    ‗superseding indictment‘ refers to a second indictment issued in the absence of a
    dismissal of the first.‖) (Blackmun, J., concurring) (italics added).
    22
    We discern no basis for concluding that appellant was unfairly prejudiced by
    the court‘s ruling or that appellant or jurors were misled about the substance of the
    obstruction charge appellant faced. The original indictment clearly alleged, and
    the prosecutor‘s opening and closing arguments clearly indicated, that the
    government‘s theory of the crime was that appellant had tried to prevent Fenwick
    from reporting the robbery to the police. Similarly, the trial court instructed the
    jury that in order to convict appellant of obstruction, the government was required
    to prove that ―the Defendant harassed Tierra Fenwick[,] [a]nd [that] . . . [t]he
    Defendant did so with the intent to hinder, delay or prevent Tierra Fenwick from
    reporting to a law enforcement officer the commission of a criminal offense and
    any information concerning a criminal offense.‖
    For the foregoing reasons, appellant‘s convictions are affirmed
    So ordered.