State v. Smith , 223 Md. App. 16 ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •               REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 563
    September Term, 2013
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    v.
    ZENNO SMITH, III
    Nazarian,
    Leahy,
    Thieme, Raymond G., Jr.
    (Retired, specially assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Thieme, J.
    Filed: May 27, 2015
    Following a jury trial on January 6-8, 2009, Zenno Smith, III, appellee, was
    convicted of first-degree felony murder, first-degree burglary, and possession of a
    handgun after having been convicted of a felony. He was sentenced to life imprisonment
    for the murder conviction and a consecutive term of five years for possession of a
    handgun. The burglary conviction was merged for sentencing purposes. Smith’s
    convictions were affirmed by this Court in an unreported opinion, Zenno Smith, III v.
    State, No. 184, Sept. Term 2009 (filed September 29, 2010). Smith filed a petition for
    writ of certiorari that was denied by the Court of Appeals. See Smith v. State, 
    417 Md. 502
     (2011).
    Thereafter, Smith filed a petition seeking post-conviction relief. On April 15,
    2013, the Circuit Court for Caroline County granted Smith’s petition. The State filed an
    application for leave to appeal, which we granted.
    QUESTIONS PRESENTED
    The State presents the following questions for our consideration:
    I. Was Smith’s trial counsel not legally entitled to have objected to the
    nolle prosequis?
    II. Even if entitled to object, did Smith’s counsel have a valid tactical
    reason for not objecting to the trial judge’s granting the nolle prosequi to
    the second-degree felony murder charge?
    For the reasons set forth more fully below, we shall affirm.
    PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Smith was charged in the Circuit Court for Caroline County with the following
    crimes arising out of the shooting death of Ronald Gibson on June 15, 2008:
    Count 1   - first-degree murder
    Count 2   - second-degree murder
    Count 3   - first-degree burglary
    Count 4   - first-degree assault
    Count 5   - second-degree assault
    Count 6   - handgun use in the commission of a felony
    Count 7   - accessory after the fact to first-degree murder
    Count 8   - accessory after the fact to second-degree murder
    Count 9   - felon in possession of a firearm
    We provided a detailed recitation of the underlying facts in our unreported opinion
    on direct appeal, which we include here for ease of reference:
    The evidence adduced at trial revealed the following events leading
    to Gibson’s death. Trooper Derek Carabello, assigned to the Easton
    Barrack of the Maryland State Police, testified that on June 15, 2008, he
    responded to a call for a report of a possible shooting at a trailer park in
    Caroline Acres. When Trooper Carabello arrived at the scene he saw
    Gibson lying face down just inside the threshold of the doorway to the
    trailer. Initially, Trooper Carabello detected a faint pulse from Gibson, but
    later, after searching the trailer for officer’s safety, Trooper Carabello found
    no pulse.
    Sergeant Nancy Nagel, assigned to the Caroline County Sheriff’s
    Department, testified that she arrived at the scene shortly after Trooper
    Carabello, and noticed that the front door, the storm door, and the entry
    door were both opened and that there was a broken locking latch laying on
    the deck. Sergeant Nagel stated that in searching the residence, she
    recovered a long barrel 12 gauge shotgun propped up against a sofa. In
    checking the gun for safety, Sergeant Nagel indicated that there was no
    ammunition inside the gun.
    Dominique Fountain (“Dominique”)1 testified that on June 14, 2008,
    his mother, Tonyett Fountain (“Tonyett”), and appellant, who was Tonyett’s
    boyfriend, went to Gibson’s mother’s home located in Cordova, Maryland
    1
    Dominique Fountain, who was sixteen years old at the time of this incident, was
    charged with first-degree murder and agreed to testify pursuant to a plea agreement.
    -2-
    to “get my mom’s dog.” At that time, Gibson was engaged to marry
    Tonyett’s mother, Denise Fields. Appellant, Tonyett, and Dominique took
    the dog to their home in Dover, Delaware. According to Dominique, after
    the retrieval of the dog, Gibson called Tonyett and told her that she was a
    “bitch” and that, if the dog was not returned, she was not going to “live to
    see tomorrow.”
    Dominique stated further that he, Tonyett, and appellant, who was
    armed with a loaded .45 caliber handgun, drove to Gibson’s home in the
    Caroline Acres trailer park in Henderson, Maryland to make peace with
    Gibson. During the drive, there were discussions about a gun that Gibson
    kept in his home. When they arrived, Dominique asked appellant to give
    him the handgun because he “felt that it would have been more safer with
    [him] and nothing like that would have happened.” Appellant complied and
    Dominique put the gun in his pants pocket. Dominique admitted that it was
    unusual for them to take a gun when visiting Gibson.
    During cross-examination, Dominique testified that during his
    interview with police, he told them that at some point, appellant stepped out
    onto the balcony, but came back inside before Gibson was shot. When
    asked by defense counsel if Dominique remembered telling the police that
    appellant “remained outside” when the shot was fired, he answered “[n]o.”
    Approximately twenty minutes after leaving Gibson’s trailer,
    Dominique and Tonyett were stopped by Corporal Christopher Emerick of
    the Maryland State Police. At that time, appellant was not in the vehicle.
    When Dominique exited the vehicle, the handgun he used to shoot Gibson
    fell from his lap.
    Katheryn Holland (“Katheryn”), Gibson’s neighbor, testified that
    immediately before the shooting, she heard loud noises and banging coming
    from Gibson’s trailer. After hearing a gunshot, she looked outside and saw
    “three people coming out of the residence and stand on [Gibson’s] deck,”
    and “[t]hey were all talking and smiling at each other and just conversing
    for a few minutes there on the deck.” After a few minutes, the three people
    left. Katheryn stated that she was only able to see the faces of two of the
    people, which she later identified as Tonyett and appellant. Katheryn asked
    her husband, Richard Holland (“Richard”), to go over to Gibson’s trailer
    and “make sure everything was all right” because she noticed that the door
    to Gibson’s trailer was open. After a few minutes, Richard was “flagging
    -3-
    his arms” and telling her to call 911 because Gibson had been shot.
    Richard testified that he went outside and obtained Tonyett’s tag
    number. After appellant, Tonyett and Dominique departed, he entered
    Gibson’s home and discovered that Gibson had been shot but was still alive.
    Richard stated that he moved the shotgun that was laying across Gibson and
    tried to make him comfortable. When he asked Gibson who shot you,
    Gibson told him who was involved in the shooting. Gibson succumbed to
    his injuries shortly thereafter.
    Appellant did not testify or present any witnesses.
    Throughout the trial, the State proceeded on the theory of first-degree felony
    murder based on the statutory felony of first-degree burglary. Smith’s defense was that
    all of the parties had gone to the victim’s residence solely for a peaceful encounter with
    the victim, to talk, and to “mend fences,” and that Smith did not “want anything to do
    with a confrontation, that’s not why he was there.” At the conclusion of the State’s case,
    and after the court’s denial of Smith’s motion for judgment of acquittal with respect to the
    burglary and felony murder charges, the State advised the court that it would enter nolle
    prosequis for the counts charging second-degree felony murder, first-degree assault,
    second-degree assault, and use of a handgun in the commission of a felony. The
    prosecutor commented that those charges were not lesser included offenses of felony
    murder and that they “could have been presented but . . . they raise an entire spectrum of
    imperfect third person self defense which will not apply to felony murder and that’s the
    State’s reason for, simplifying what is, you know, certainly, honestly a complex although
    in some ways simple and some ways complex case.” Trial counsel did not object to the
    -4-
    State’s request to enter nolle prosequis for the four counts. Subsequently, the State also
    entered a nolle prosequi as to the charge of accessory after the fact to second-degree
    murder. Ultimately, Smith was convicted of first-degree felony murder, first-degree
    burglary, and possession of a handgun after having been convicted of a felony.
    Smith sought post-conviction relief, arguing ineffective assistance of trial counsel
    for the following reasons:
    1. At the close of the State’s case trial counsel failed to object when the
    State entered a nol pros on the charges of 2nd Degree Murder, 1st Degree
    Assault, Handgun Use During a Felony or Violent Crime, and Accessory
    After the Fact to 2nd Degree Murder.
    2. Generally, counsel failed to object in order to preserve meritorious issues
    for appeal.
    3. At the beginning of the third day of trial, counsel failed to request
    dismissal of a juror who may have seen Petitioner in shackles.
    4. After the trial, counsel failed to request a review of Petitioner’s sentence
    by a three judge panel.
    5. At the pre-trial stage, counsel failed to adequately investigate and prepare
    his defense.
    6. During the voir dire of the jury, counsel failed to object to the Court’s
    failure to ascertain whether the jurors had a handgun bias.
    7. During the State’s case, counsel failed to present or adequately utilize
    photographs to impeach the Officer’s testimony.
    8. At the motion for judgment of acquittal, counsel failed to argue
    sufficiently and with particularity that burglary was not proven because
    there had been no breaking.
    9. Counsel failed to object that the felony murder jury instruction was
    -5-
    deficient.
    10. Counsel failed to request jury instructions for self-defense and
    imperfect self-defense.
    The post-conviction court found that Smith’s trial counsel rendered ineffective
    assistance by failing to object to the State’s entry of nolle prosequis for five of the charges
    against him and, thereby, failing to preserve meritorious issues for appeal. Specifically,
    the post-conviction court held that the State’s entry of nolle prosequis “effectively
    removed all the counts underlying the second degree felony murder theory of the case and
    operated to the substantial detriment of [Smith].” The post-conviction court rejected the
    State’s argument that second-degree murder is not a lesser included offense of felony
    murder, noting that Smith’s case did not involve an allegation of second-degree murder of
    the intent-to-kill variety. The court stated:
    The only possible theory of either first or second degree murder the State
    could pursue against [Smith] would be felony murder. The State’s theory of
    first degree felony murder was predicated on first degree burglary, which
    required intent to commit first degree assault, the only crime of violence
    outlined in Section 14-101 [of the Criminal Law Article][ 2] applicable to
    this case. First degree assault would however have also supported a
    conviction for second degree felony murder.
    (Internal footnote omitted). The court concluded that if trial counsel had objected on this
    issue, the second-degree felony murder charge might have reached the jury and the
    2
    Section 14-101 of the Criminal Law Article identified assault in the first degree
    as a crime of violence. See Md. Code (2002, 2008 Supp.), §14-101(a)(19), of the
    Criminal Law Article (“CL”). At all times relevant to the instant case, the applicable
    statutory provisions remained substantially unchanged.
    -6-
    verdict might have been different.
    Following the grant of post-conviction relief, the State filed an application for
    leave to appeal, which we granted.
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    The State first contends that Smith’s trial counsel was not legally entitled to object
    to the nolle prosequi of the second-degree felony murder charge because it was not a
    lesser included offense of first-degree felony murder. Alternatively, the State asserts that
    even if trial counsel was entitled to object to the entry of the nolle prosequis, his election
    not to do so under the facts of this particular case was “a sound, deliberate strategic
    decision.” We disagree and explain.
    A. Standard of Review
    The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees all criminal
    defendants the right to the assistance of counsel. Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    ,
    684-85 (1984). Both the United States Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals have
    recognized that “the right to counsel is the right to the effective assistance of counsel.”
    McMann v. Richardson, 
    397 U.S. 759
    , 771 n. 14 (1970); Mosley v. State, 
    378 Md. 548
    ,
    557 (2003). In order to prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a
    defendant must establish that trial counsel’s performance was constitutionally deficient
    and that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense. Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687
    ;
    -7-
    Mosley, 
    378 Md. at 557
    .
    In discerning whether counsel’s performance was deficient, we start with the
    presumption that he or she “rendered adequate assistance and made all significant
    decisions in the exercise of reasonable professional judgment.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 690
    ; Bowers v. State, 
    320 Md. 416
    , 421 (1990). Our review of counsel’s performance is
    “highly deferential.” Kulbicki v. State, 
    440 Md. 33
    , 46 (2014). We look to whether
    counsel’s “representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.” Harris v.
    State, 
    303 Md. 685
    , 697 (1985). We assess reasonableness as of “the time of counsel’s
    conduct.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 690
    .
    To satisfy the prejudice prong of Strickland, a defendant must show that “there is a
    reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient
    to undermine confidence in the outcome.” 
    Id. at 694
    . The ultimate inquiry is whether
    “‘counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive [the petitioner] of a fair trial, a trial whose
    result is reliable.’” Oken v. State, 
    343 Md. 256
    , 284 (1996)(quoting Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687
    ).
    Determinations by the post-conviction court regarding ineffective assistance of
    counsel claims are mixed questions of law and fact. State v. Purvey, 
    129 Md. App. 1
    , 10
    (1998). We will not disturb the factual findings of the post-conviction court unless they
    are clearly erroneous. Evans v. State, 
    151 Md. App. 365
    , 374 (2003); State v. Jones, 138
    -8-
    Md. App. 178, 209 (2001). We will make our own independent analysis, however, based
    on our own judgment and application of the law to the facts, of whether the State violated
    a Sixth Amendment right. Jones, 138 Md. App. at 209. Absent clear error, we defer to
    the post-conviction court’s historical findings, but we conduct our own review of the
    application of the law to the defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
    Evans, 151 Md. App. at 374 (citing Cirincione v. State, 
    119 Md. App. 471
    , 485 (1998)).
    B. Nolle Prosequi
    A nolle prosequi is simply the State’s abandonment of a charging document, count,
    or part of a count. Ward v. State, 
    290 Md. 76
    , 83 (1981). A nolle prosequi may be
    entered to a degree of an offense. State v. Ward, 
    284 Md. 189
    , 208 (1978). Maryland
    Rule 4-247, which governs dispositions by nolle prosequi, provides, in part, as follows:
    (a) Disposition by nolle prosequi. The State’s Attorney may
    terminate a prosecution on a charge and dismiss the charge by entering a
    nolle prosequi on the record in open court. The defendant need not be
    present in court when the nolle prosequi is entered, but if neither the
    defendant nor the defendant’s attorney is present, the clerk shall send notice
    to the defendant, if the defendant’s whereabouts are known, and to the
    defendant’s attorney of record. Notice shall not be sent if either the
    defendant or the defendant’s attorney was present in court when the nolle
    prosequi was entered. If notice is required, the clerk may send one notice
    that lists all of the charges that were dismissed.
    As a general rule, the entry of a nolle prosequi is within the sole discretion of the
    prosecuting attorney, “free from judicial control and not dependent upon the defendant’s
    consent.” Ward, 
    290 Md. at 83
    .
    -9-
    C. Hook and its Progeny
    The prosecutor’s power to enter a nolle prosequi is not without restraint. Hook v.
    State, 
    315 Md. 25
    , 36 (1989)(citing United States v. Batchelder, 
    442 U.S. 114
    , 124
    (1979)). In Hook, the Court of Appeals explained that while entry of a nolle prosequi is
    generally within the prosecutor’s sole discretion, that power is not absolute:
    When the defendant is plainly guilty of some offense, and the evidence is
    legally sufficient for the trier of fact to convict him of either the greater
    offense or a lesser included offense, it is fundamentally unfair under
    Maryland common law for the State, over the defendant’s objection, to nol
    pros the lesser included offense. ... In short, it is simply offensive to
    fundamental fairness, in such circumstances, to deprive the trier of fact,
    over the defendant’s objection, of the third option of convicting the
    defendant of a lesser included offense.
    Hook, 
    315 Md. at 43-44
    .
    Hook was charged with the murder of two people and related offenses. 
    Id. at 32
    .
    At the close of the evidence, the prosecutor entered a nolle prosequi as to the charge of
    second-degree murder. 
    Id. at 35
    . Evidence was presented at trial that Hook was
    intoxicated at the time the murders were committed. Had the jury determined that Hook
    was so intoxicated as to lack the requisite specific intent, a conviction of first-degree
    premeditated murder would have been precluded. As a result, defense counsel objected
    to the nolle prosequi arguing that, under the circumstances, the failure to submit the
    second-degree murder count to the jury was a violation of Hook’s due process rights,
    fundamental fairness, equal protection, and an abuse of prosecutorial discretion. 
    Id.
    The Court determined that there was evidence to support the charge of second-
    -10-
    degree murder as well as unequivocal evidence that Hook had murdered two individuals.
    As a result, the entry of the nolle prosequi left the jury with the “Hobson’s choice” 3 to
    either convict Hook of first-degree murder or return a verdict of not guilty. 
    Id. at 38
    . The
    entry of the nolle prosequi thereby enhanced the risk of an unwarranted conviction and
    denied Hook a fair trial. 
    Id. at 41-42
    .
    In reaching that conclusion, the Court called for a case-by-case evaluation to
    determine whether, under the particular circumstances of a case, the entry of a nolle
    prosequi for a charge would contravene fundamental fairness. With regard to
    fundamental fairness, the Court cautioned:
    “In order to declare a denial of [fundamental fairness, the reviewing court]
    must find that the absence of that fairness fatally infected the trial; the acts
    complained of must be of such quality as necessarily prevent a fair trail ....”
    
    Id. at 36-37
     (quoting Lisenba v. California, 
    314 U.S. 219
    , 236 (1941)).
    The Hook exception was discussed and applied in Fairbanks v. State, 
    318 Md. 22
    (1989). Fairbanks was charged with burglary, misdemeanor breaking and entering, felony
    3
    “Hobson’s choice” refers to the idea that a person either has no choice at all or a
    choice between two bad options. Garner’s Dictionary of Legal Usage 410-11 (3 rd ed.
    2011). The Court of Appeals has recently defined the phrase as the “paradox of an
    apparently free choice when in reality there is no alternative.” See Simpson v. State, ___
    Md. ___, No. 22, Sept. Term 2014 (filed April 7, 2015)(citing The New Lexicon
    Webster’s Encyclopedic Dictionary of the English Language 460 (Bernard S. Cayne ed.,
    Lexicon Publications, Inc. 1990)). The phrase originated from the practice of Thomas
    Hobson (1549-1631), a livery stable owner in England, who offered customers the choice
    of either taking the horse in the stall closest to the door or taking none at all. Garner’s
    Dictionary of Legal Usage, supra, at 410; Wilson v. John Crane, Inc., 
    385 Md. 185
    , 211
    n.11 (2005).
    -11-
    daytime housebreaking, and theft. Over objection, the prosecutor entered nolle prosequis
    as to misdemeanor breaking and entering and theft. In holding that the trial judge
    committed reversible error, the Court of Appeals stated:
    The entry of the nolle prosequi over the defendant’s objection in this case
    foreclosed the possibility of a guilty verdict of less than burglary. The jury
    had the singular choice of convicting Fairbanks of burglary under Counts 1
    or 3, or finding him not guilty of any crime. In the circumstances, we think
    the refusal of the trial court to permit the lesser included offense of
    misdemeanor breaking and entering to go to the jury was prejudicial error
    under the fundamental fairness concepts delineated in Hook that deprived
    Fairbanks of a fair trial.
    Fairbanks, 
    318 Md. at 26-27
    .
    Subsequently, the rule in Hook was clarified in Jackson v. State, 
    322 Md. 117
    (1991). Jackson was charged with both possession and distribution of cocaine and other
    charges. Jackson, 
    322 Md. at 123
    . Several police officers conducting drug surveillance
    observed Jackson and another man selling cocaine on several occasions and witnessed the
    exchange of currency and baggies containing a white substance. 
    Id. at 125
    . Over
    objection, the State entered a nolle prosequi as to the possession charges and Jackson was
    ultimately convicted of distribution. 
    Id. at 123-24
    .
    In the Court of Appeals, Jackson argued that under Hook the jury was required to
    have the option of convicting him of the lesser included offense of possession. 
    Id. at 127
    .
    In rejecting that argument, the Court acknowledged that Jackson satisfied the first step in
    the Hook test, in that a rational jury could have found him guilty of some offense, and that
    there was legally sufficient evidence from which a jury could have convicted him of
    -12-
    possession as well as distribution. But the Court noted that the evidence adduced at trial
    did not fairly support a conviction on the nol prossed counts. 
    Id. at 126
    . Under these
    circumstances, the Court agreed with the view expressed in our opinion on the case, that
    “‘it would have been an affirmative nuisance ‘to muddy the waters’ with unnecessary
    complications involving intermediate offenses that were only theoretically possible but
    not realistically plausible.’” 
    Id. at 126
     (quoting Jackson v. State, 
    82 Md. App. 438
    , 447
    (1990)). The Court clarified the Hook test, stating:
    It is clear from our decision of the subject that the test is not simply the
    existence of legally sufficient evidence [of the lesser included offense].
    Even when there is evidence that would support a finding of guilt of the
    lesser included offense, the State is not precluded from entering a nolle
    prosequi of that offense if, under the particular facts of the case, there exists
    no rational basis by which the jury could conclude that the defendant is
    guilty of the lesser included offense but not guilty of the greater offense.
    Jackson, 
    322 Md. at 127-28
    .
    Thus, in considering whether the entry of a nolle prosequi to a lesser included
    offense is unfair to a defendant, the evidence must be sufficient for the jury to convict on
    that offense and the evidence must be such that the jury could rationally convict only on
    the lesser included offense.
    In Dean v. State, 
    325 Md. 230
     (1992), the Court of Appeals considered whether to
    extend the Hook rule to a case involving a lesser related offense that was not a lesser
    included offense. Dean was charged with assault with intent to murder, attempted
    murder, assault with intent to disfigure, assault and battery, and assault, all of which arose
    -13-
    out of his act of pouring gasoline on his wife and lighting her on fire. Dean, 
    325 Md. at 233
    . Before jury selection, the prosecutor was permitted, over Dean’s objection, to enter
    nolle prosequis with respect to the charges of assault with intent to murder, assault with
    intent to disfigure, and assault, leaving only the charges of attempted murder and assault
    and battery to be litigated. 
    Id. at 233
    .
    At the close of all the evidence, Dean asked that the jury be instructed regarding
    the elements of assault with intent to disfigure. 
    Id. at 234
    . He was concerned that, given
    the choice between attempted murder and battery, the jury would convict him of
    attempted murder even if it believed that he merely intended to disfigure his wife. 
    Id.
    The trial court refused to give the instruction and the jury subsequently convicted Dean of
    attempted murder in the second degree. 
    Id.
    On appeal, Dean argued that the trial court erred in permitting the prosecutor to
    enter a nolle prosequi with respect to the charge of assault with intent to disfigure. 
    Id. at 234
    . He asserted that the evidence presented at trial would have supported the lesser
    related offense of assault with intent to disfigure and that the withdrawal of that charge
    fatally infected the trial by sabotaging his defense. 
    Id. at 236
    . According to Dean,
    allowing the nolle prosequi left the jury with the choice of convicting him of either
    attempted murder or assault and battery and, given the facts of the case, rendered the trial
    fundamentally unfair. 
    Id. at 235
    .
    The Court of Appeals refused to apply the Hook exception in Dean’s case because
    -14-
    the challenged nolle prosequi involved a lesser related offense, as opposed to a lesser
    included offense. The Court distinguished Dean’s case from Hook and other cases,
    stating:
    In the instant case, unlike Hook, Jackson, and Fairbanks, the
    challenged nol pros involves a lesser related offense, not a lesser included
    offense. Dean does not contend, nor can he, that assault with intent to
    disfigure is a lesser included offense of attempted murder; clearly they are
    separate and distinct crimes. Assault with intent to disfigure requires the
    specific intent to disfigure whereas attempted murder requires the specific
    intent to kill. Therefore, we hold that the limitation placed on a
    prosecutor’s authority to nol pros a charge set forth in Hooks and Fairbanks
    is not applicable.
    
    Id. at 236
    .
    In Burrell v. State, 
    340 Md. 426
     (1995), the Court of Appeals again considered
    whether the entry of a nolle prosequi to a charge of a lesser included crime deprived a
    defendant the right to a fair trial. Burrell was charged with a number of crimes arising
    out of the holdup of a gas station, including robbery with a deadly weapon, robbery, theft
    of $300 or over, theft of under $300 and two handgun offenses. Burrell, 340 Md. at 428-
    29. His defense at trial was that he did not participate in the crime. Id. at 429. An
    eyewitness, who happened to be at the gas station at the time of the holdup, testified that
    he noticed Burrell standing at a pay phone and watching in all directions. Id. at 428.
    When the eyewitness left the attendant’s booth and returned to his own vehicle, he
    realized that the station attendant was being robbed by two men who had just entered the
    station. Id. The eyewitness drove over to the pay phone where Burrell was standing and
    -15-
    asked him to call the police. Id. Burrell then got into the driver’s seat of the vehicle that
    the robbers had been in and drove off. Id. The eyewitness wrote down the license plate
    number and police traced it back to Burrell, who was eventually arrested. Id.
    At trial, at the close of the evidence, the prosecutor entered nolle prosequis with
    respect to the charges of robbery and theft under $300. Id. at 429. Burrell was
    subsequently convicted of robbery with a deadly weapon, theft of $300 or over, and the
    handgun charges. Id. The Court of Appeals considered whether the decision to enter the
    nolle prosequi to the lesser included charge of robbery, “which left the jury with the ‘all-
    or-nothing’ choice of complete acquittal of the robbery charge or conviction on the more
    serious charge of armed robbery, violated Burrell’s common law right to a fair trial.” Id.
    The Court determined that Burrell was not denied his common law right to a fair
    trial. In reaching that conclusion, the Court emphasized that its “sole task is to review
    whether the evidence at trial supported the trial judge’s decision to allow the nolle pros of
    the robbery charge.” Id. at 435. The Court noted that Burrell did not present any
    evidence to disprove the use of a deadly weapon and the only rational inference from the
    evidence presented at trial was that an armed robbery, not a simple robbery, had been
    committed. Id. The Court concluded that “the evidence at trial rationally supported only
    two choices: a conviction of accomplice to a robbery with a deadly weapon or acquittal.”
    Id. Because there was no evidence supporting a conviction of the lesser included offense
    of robbery without also convicting him of the greater offense of robbery with a deadly
    -16-
    weapon, the Court held that the entry of the nolle prosequi to the simple robbery charge
    was not unfairly prejudicial and did not deny Burrell of his right to a fair trial. Id. at 437.
    With these cases in mind, we turn to the issue before us.
    D. Lesser Included Offenses
    In granting Smith post-conviction relief, the circuit court construed the charges
    that were nolle prossed (second-degree felony murder, first and second-degree assault,
    and accessory after the fact to second-degree murder) as lesser included offenses of first-
    degree felony murder and first-degree burglary, and found, specifically, that under the
    facts of this case, first-degree assault was an element of both the first and second-degree
    felony murder charges. The State contends that this finding was erroneous because,
    under the required evidence test, second-degree murder predicated upon first-degree
    assault is not a lesser included offense of first-degree felony murder predicated upon
    consummation of a first-degree burglary with the intent to commit a first-degree assault.
    The long-standing rule of law to determine whether one offense is included within
    another when both are based on the same act or acts is the required evidence test of
    Blockburger v. United States, 
    284 U.S. 299
     (1932). The Court of Appeals discussed that
    test in Nicolas v. State, 
    426 Md. 385
     (2012), stating:
    The required evidence test focuses upon the elements of each
    offense; if all of the elements of one offense are included in the other
    offense, so that only the latter offense contains a distinct element or distinct
    elements, the former merges into the latter. Stated another way, the
    required evidence is that which is minimally necessary to secure a
    conviction for each offense. If each offense requires proof of a fact which
    -17-
    the other does not, or in other words, if each offense contains an element
    which the other does not, there is no merger under the required evidence
    test even though both offenses are based upon the same act or acts. But,
    where only one offense requires proof of an additional fact, so that all
    elements of one offense are present in the other, and where both offenses
    are based on the same act or acts[,] merger follows.
    Nicolas, 
    426 Md. at 401-02
    . (citations omitted) (quoting State v. Lancaster, 
    332 Md. 385
    ,
    391-92 (1993)).
    An examination of the relevant crimes in the case at hand is in order. At the
    outset, we note that a participating felon is guilty of murder when a homicide has been
    committed by a co-felon. Campbell v. State, 
    293 Md. 438
    , 442 (1982); Malik v. State, 
    152 Md. App. 305
    , 330 (2003). Smith was charged with first-degree felony murder, a
    statutory offense defined as murder committed in the perpetration of or attempt to
    perpetrate one of the enumerated felonies set forth in CL § 2-201(a)(4), which includes
    first-degree burglary. Notably, the list of felonies does not include first-degree assault.
    Smith was also charged with second-degree felony murder, which is a common
    law crime defined as murder committed in the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate a
    felony dangerous to human life but not enumerated in CL § 2-201(a)(4). Fisher v. State,
    
    367 Md. 218
    , 262-63 (2001); Deese v. State, 
    367 Md. 293
    , 296 (2001). Second-degree
    felony murder is premised on “the principle that a person participating in a felony is
    responsible for the natural and probable consequences of his or her criminal activity.”
    Roary v. State, 
    385 Md. 217
    , 231 (2005). To obtain a conviction for second-degree
    felony murder, the State must prove the underlying felony and that the death occurred
    -18-
    during the perpetration of the felony. 
    Id. at 227
    . “[T]he underlying felony must be
    sufficiently dangerous to life to justify application of the doctrine,” so that the jury must
    be able to find beyond a reasonable doubt that “the felonious conduct, under all the
    circumstances, made death a foreseeable consequence.” 
    Id. at 229
    . It is clear that a
    murder perpetrated in the commission of a first-degree assault would be a second-degree
    felony murder.
    Smith was also charged with first-degree burglary and first-degree assault. First-
    degree burglary required proof of the breaking and entering of the dwelling of another
    with the intent to commit theft or a crime of violence. CL § 6-202; Winder v. State, 
    362 Md. 275
    , 326 (2001). Under the facts of this case, there was no evidence of theft and the
    only qualifying crime of violence was the first-degree assault. See CL §14-101(a)(19).
    First-degree assault required proof that Smith intentionally caused or attempted to cause
    serious physical injury to another or committed the assault with a firearm. CL §3-202.
    The State contends that second-degree felony murder is not a lesser included
    offense of first-degree felony murder. It asserts that a second-degree felony murder based
    upon a first-degree assault requires the actual commission or attempt to commit the first-
    degree assault. In contrast, a first-degree felony murder based upon a first-degree
    burglary, requires only the intent upon entry to commit a first-degree assault and not the
    commission of the crime itself.
    In support of its contention that defense counsel was not entitled to object to the
    -19-
    State’s entry of nolle prosequi for the second-degree felony murder and other charges, the
    State directs our attention to Malik v. State, 
    152 Md. App. 305
     (2003). Malik was
    charged with a variety of crimes arising out of the murders of five women. Malik, 152
    Md. App. at 313. The State elected to proceed only on theories of premeditated first-
    degree murder and felony murder and abandoned possible verdicts of second-degree
    murder. Id. at 330-31. Malik was convicted of first-degree premeditated murder and
    various conspiracy charges. Id. at 313. On appeal to this Court, he argued, among other
    things, that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the theory of second-
    degree murder. Id. We agreed.
    In reaching that conclusion, we recognized that “second degree murder is a lesser
    included offense of first degree premeditated murder,” but it is not a lesser included
    offense of first-degree felony murder. Id. at 331-32 (citing Higginbotham v. State, 
    104 Md. App. 145
    , 152 (1995) and Hook, 
    315 Md. at 30
    ). As the first requirement of Hook
    was satisfied, we examined whether there was a rational basis upon which the jury could
    have concluded that Malik was guilty of the lesser offense, but not guilty of the greater
    offense. Id. at 333. We concluded that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury
    on second-degree murder because there was evidence to support the conclusion that
    Malik did not premeditate the murders. Id. Under those circumstances, Malik was
    entitled to an instruction on second-degree murder. Id. at 334.
    The State asserts that Malik is controlling in the instant case because, although it
    -20-
    determined that the second-degree murder was a lesser included offense of the first-
    degree premeditated murder conviction, the first-degree felony murder conviction was
    permitted to stand. We are not convinced.
    In the case at hand, the first-degree felony murder charge was predicated on the
    burglary. The burglary was complete at the time Smith and the others opened the door
    and entered into Gibson’s home with the intent to commit a crime of violence, in this
    case, first-degree assault. CL § 6-202. Although for a burglary conviction, only an intent
    to commit first-degree assault was required, in this case, the first-degree assault was
    actually committed when Gibson was shot. The actual first-degree assault was the
    predicate for the charge of second-degree felony murder.
    In Yates v. State, 
    429 Md. 112
     (2012), the Court of Appeals rejected the notion that
    once the elements of the predicate felony have been accomplished, a subsequent killing
    does not constitute a felony murder. On the contrary, for purposes of felony murder, a
    predicate crime such as robbery is treated as continuing beyond completion of the core
    event. Yates, 429 Md. at 126. In Yates, the Court explained that the “continuous-
    transaction approach has the advantage of addressing situations in which a killing is
    clearly part of an ongoing event stemming from an underlying felony but occurs after the
    elements of the felony are technically complete.” Id. at 128.
    It is this factual situation that distinguishes the case at hand from Malik and from
    Dean, in which the Court of Appeals declined to apply the Hook exception to a
    -21-
    prosecutor’s entry of nolle prosequi as to a lesser related offense. Here, the assault that
    was the predicate for the first-degree burglary was also the cause of Gibson’s death. It
    would be fundamentally unfair to say that the assault was sufficiently connected to the
    burglary so as to make the crime first-degree felony murder, while, at the same time,
    keeping the jury from having the option of convicting Smith of second-degree felony
    murder predicated on the very same assault. The assault that caused Gibson’s death and
    formed the predicate for first-degree felony murder is the same assault that formed the
    predicate of the second-degree felony murder charge. The crimes are so inter-related that
    principles of fundamental fairness demand that the second-degree felony murder be
    treated as a lesser included offense in this particular case.
    In reaching that conclusion, we are cognizant of the fact that the evidence in this
    particular case was such that the jury rationally could have convicted Smith only on the
    second-degree felony murder charge. There was compelling evidence that Gibson was
    killed as a result of the first-degree assault and there was sufficient evidence presented
    from which the jury could have concluded that Smith and the others did not break or enter
    Gibson’s home. Dominique Fountain’s uncontradicted testimony was that there was no
    plan to commit an assault on Gibson. Rather, the plan was only to talk to him and mend
    fences. In addition, the jury could have found that Smith and the others had at least
    implicit permission to enter Gibson’s home. Dominique Fountain testified that he used to
    stay at the home with his grandmother, who lived with Gibson, and there was evidence
    -22-
    that Smith and Tonyett Fountain had stayed at the house for some time. Moreover, a jury
    could infer that Gibson allowed them to enter the home when he turned his back and
    walked away from the door.
    The facts of this case, particularly the inter-connected relationship between the
    first-degree assault, the first-degree burglary, and the second-degree felony murder
    charges, convince us that the absence of fairness resulting from the entry of the nolle
    prosequi infected the entire trial. We hold that trial counsel was legally entitled to object
    to the entry of nolle prosequi as to the second-degree felony murder charge. Accordingly,
    we shall affirm the decision of the post-conviction court.
    II.
    The State next contends that even if trial counsel had been able to object to the
    entry of nolle prosequis at trial, he had a sound and tactical reason for not doing so. The
    State asserts that Smith was not confronted with a “Hobson’s choice” but, in fact, elected
    to give the jurors the option of an all-or-nothing verdict. According to the State, trial
    counsel specifically decided to focus on the difficulties the State had in proving culpable
    intent on Smith’s part. In addition, the State asserts that Smith was not prejudiced by trial
    counsel’s failure to object to the entry of the nolle prosequis. These contentions are
    without merit.
    The State’s argument that Smith elected to give the jurors the option of an all-or-
    nothing verdict, and that he pursued a trial strategy of putting before the jury only those
    -23-
    counts “which the defense deemed most propitious for securing an acquittal,” does not
    find support in the record. Trial counsel’s reasons for not objecting to the entry of nolle
    prosequi as to any count are not apparent. At the post-conviction hearing, trial counsel
    could not recall his thought process or whether he had discussed the issue with Smith.
    There is nothing in the trial transcript from which we can glean anything about counsel’s
    consideration of the issue. In addition, there is nothing at all to suggest that the defense
    believed the charges that went to the jury were the “most propitious for securing an
    acquittal.”
    As for the State’s contention that Smith was not prejudiced by trial counsel’s
    failure to object to the entry of nolle prosequis at trial, we have already determined that
    the absence of fairness resulting from the entry of the nolle prosequis infected the entire
    trial and was prejudicial to Smith.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
    CAROLINE COUNTY AFFIRMED; COSTS TO
    BE PAID BY CAROLINE COUNTY.
    -24-