Butler & Duncan v. State , 231 Md. App. 533 ( 2017 )


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  • Circuit Court for Baltimore County
    Case No. 03-K-12-004853 (Butler)
    Case No. 03-K-12-004851 (Duncan)
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1004
    September Term, 2015
    CLIFFORD BUTLER
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    No. 1104
    September Term, 2015
    DERIUS DUNCAN
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    Meredith,
    Graeff,
    Raker, Irma S.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Meredith, J.
    Filed: February 2, 2017
    These consolidated appeals arise out of the convictions of Derius Duncan
    (“Duncan”) and Clifford Butler (“Butler”), appellants, for various crimes stemming from
    the murder of Ronald Givens (“Givens”) on October 3, 2011. Appellants were jointly tried
    in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County beginning on April 28, 2015, and were each
    convicted of first degree murder of Givens, conspiracy to commit Givens’s murder,
    influencing a witness, and use of a firearm in commission of a crime of violence. Their
    timely appeals were consolidated.
    QUESTIONS PRESENTED
    Duncan presents the following three questions for our review:
    1.     Whether the trial court erred in denying severance of
    [Duncan’s] trial from his co-defendant [Butler] when the State
    intended to introduce a confession of the non-testifying co-defendant
    that implicated Appellant during the trial[.]
    2.    Whether the trial court erred in denying [Duncan’s] multiple
    motions for mistrial after the State used a non-testifying co-
    defendant’s confession during trial that implicated [Duncan.]
    3.    Whether the trial court erred in permitting admission of other
    crimes evidence in the form of a handgun allegedly possessed by
    [Duncan] in an unrelated crime and permitting that handgun to be
    shown to the jury[.]
    Butler presents only one question for our review:
    4.    Did the lower court err in allowing the State to use Mr. Butler’s
    statements made during two proffer sessions against him at trial?
    We answer “Yes” to Question 2 and Question 4, and we will reverse both appellants’
    convictions and remand both cases to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County for new trials.
    We need not answer Questions 1 and 3.
    FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The Traffic Stops of Ronald Givens and Derius Duncan
    The events giving rise to this appeal began on March 22, 2011. At around 9:00 p.m.
    that evening, Baltimore City Police Officer Steffon Scott was on patrol with his partner in
    southwest Baltimore when he observed a black PT Cruiser automobile parked “in an
    unusual spot.” Officer Scott stopped his patrol car to observe the vehicle, and observed a
    man “jump out” of the passenger side of the vehicle and run out of sight. The PT Cruiser
    then drove down the street, prompting Officer Scott to follow, and eventually pull over,
    the vehicle. Upon pulling the vehicle over, Officer Scott encountered Ronald Givens, who
    was the driver. There were no other individuals in the vehicle with Givens at this time.
    During the traffic stop, Officer Scott smelled marijuana and observed marijuana within the
    vehicle. Officer Scott requested that Givens step out of the vehicle so that he could ask
    Givens some “routine questions.” Officer Scott and his partner then searched the vehicle,
    including the glovebox, and confiscated the marijuana they found, but they did not issue
    Givens a citation. Officer Scott concluded the traffic stop by telling Givens that he was
    “done hacking for the night” and that he needed to leave the area. 1
    Roughly 25 to 30 minutes later, Officer Scott again observed the same black PT
    Cruiser traveling in the neighborhood where the first encounter with Givens had occurred.
    Officer Scott observed the PT Cruiser pull over to the side of the street, at which point an
    individual approached and entered the vehicle. Officer Scott noticed that the individual was
    1
    “Hacking” is a term used to describe the operation of an unlicensed taxi service.
    2
    “like holding his waistband.” Based on the individual’s appearance, Officer Scott believed
    that it was the same person who had previously jumped out of the passenger side of the
    vehicle when Officer Scott had first observed Givens’s vehicle. Officer Scott followed
    Givens’s vehicle, and initiated a second traffic stop by turning on his lights and siren.
    Officer Scott additionally activated a “spotlight” on his vehicle so that he could “clearly
    see anything [that was] going on inside the vehicle.” As Officer Scott approached the
    vehicle on foot, he observed the passenger “motion towards the glovebox” and then close
    the glovebox.
    Officer Scott instructed Givens and the passenger (later identified as Duncan) to exit
    the vehicle. Officer Scott searched the glovebox, and found a loaded black handgun which
    had not been in the glovebox during the search of the vehicle 30 minutes earlier. Duncan
    was arrested and later charged with illegal possession of the handgun. Duncan’s trial on
    those charges was scheduled for October 26, 2011.
    Ronald Givens’s Death
    On the morning of October 4, 2011, a neighbor of Ronald Givens found him lying
    face down on his front lawn with no pulse. The neighbor testified at appellants’ trial that
    she had heard what she thought was a series of “cherry bombs” at roughly 9:00 p.m. the
    previous evening, but thought nothing more of it after the sounds ceased. After discovering
    Givens on the morning of October 4, the neighbor called 9-1-1. A Baltimore County police
    officer dispatched in response to the call discovered that Givens had multiple bullet wounds
    in his torso.
    3
    Detective Brian Wolf, from the Homicide Division of the Baltimore County Police
    Department, was assigned to be the lead detective for the investigation of Givens’s death.
    Detective Wolf arrived at the crime scene at approximately 8:15 a.m. on October 4. Once
    at the crime scene, Detective Wolf spoke with Givens’s mother. During their conversation,
    Givens’s mother provided Detective Wolf a subpoena Givens had received from the Circuit
    Court for Baltimore City. The subpoena ordered Givens to appear as a witness for the State
    in the case of “State of Maryland v. Derius Duncan” on October 26, 2011. During the
    course of Detective Wolf’s investigation, he later learned that Duncan was on probation at
    the time he was charged with illegal possession of the handgun, and was therefore facing
    fifteen years of additional incarceration if found to be in violation of conditions of his
    probation.
    After investigating the crime scene and meeting with Givens’s mother, Detective
    Wolf contacted the “Diagnostic Center” in Baltimore City, where Duncan was being held
    pending his trial for the illegal handgun charge. Detective Wolf requested that the officers
    at the Diagnostic Center search Duncan’s cell. After the search was completed, Detective
    Wolf was provided with copies of documents found in Duncan’s cell. This included a
    piece of paper with “a lot of phone numbers,” in addition to “a name with two addresses
    underneath of that.” The name written down by Duncan was “Dave,” which Detective
    Wolf later determined was a reference to Butler’s nephew David Johnson.
    Detective Wolf also obtained a subpoena for records of phone calls made by Duncan
    while he was incarcerated. Detective Wolf listened to over 100 calls Duncan had made
    during his incarceration. The Detective determined that 19 of the calls were relevant to the
    4
    investigation of Givens’s murder. Clifford Butler’s voice was heard on several of the calls
    made by Duncan.
    Butler’s Offers of Cooperation
    Detective Donald Anderson was assisting Detective Wolf in his investigation of
    Givens’s murder. At the time Detective Anderson first interviewed Clifford Butler
    regarding Givens’s death, Butler was not incarcerated, and had not been subpoenaed to
    appear for any matter. Nevertheless, counsel for Butler contacted Detective Anderson and
    requested a meeting to discuss the Givens case. That contact resulted in Butler entering
    into a proffer agreement with the State which provided, in relevant part:
    1.    Except as otherwise provided in paragraphs two and three, no
    statements made or other information provided by you or your attorney
    during the proffer will be used against you in any criminal trial.
    2.    You agree that the State may make derivative use of, and may pursue,
    any investigative leads suggested by any statements made or other
    information provided by you or your attorney during the proffer.
    3.     Your complete truthfulness and candor are express material
    conditions to the undertaking of the State set forth in this letter. Therefore,
    the State may use statements made or other information provided by you or
    your attorney during the proffer under the following circumstances. . . .
    ***
    b.     If the State should ever conclude that you have
    knowingly withheld material information from the State or
    otherwise have not been completely truthful and candid
    with the State, the State may use any statements made or
    other information provided by you or your attorney during
    the proffer against you for any purpose. If the State does
    ever so conclude, it will notify you prior to making any such
    use of any such statements or other information.
    (Emphasis added.)
    5
    The proffer agreement was read and explained to Butler, and was signed and dated
    by Butler, his attorney, and the prosecutor during a proffer session on December 1, 2011.
    A copy of the agreement was again read and initialed at a second proffer session on
    December 5, 2011.
    During the first proffer session, Butler was not “completely truthful and candid with
    the State.” Butler had indicated that three individuals were involved in the murder of
    Givens: Derius Duncan, Darren Thomas, and Keon Beads. Toward the beginning of the
    December 1 proffer session, Butler indicated that he had not been personally involved in
    the murder. Butler explained that the jail calls on which his voice could be heard, and a
    letter exchanged between him and Duncan, concerned a drug transaction and trying to
    persuade Givens to provide exculpatory testimony at Duncan’s trial on the handgun charge,
    but did not include discussions of actually harming or killing Givens. However, later
    during the December 1 proffer session, Butler stated that he had been in contact with Darren
    Thomas on Duncan’s behalf regarding the Givens case. By the end of the first proffer
    session, Butler acknowledged that he had, in fact, asked Darren Thomas to either harm or
    kill Givens. Butler further stated that he had been told that the murder of Givens had been
    carried out by Keon Beads.
    Based on Butler’s statements during the December 1 proffer session, Detective
    Anderson took numerous steps to try to corroborate the information provided by Butler,
    including interviewing Darren Thomas, subpoenaing phone records, and eventually,
    issuing a grand jury subpoena for Thomas. Based on their investigations following the first
    6
    proffer session, Detectives Anderson and Wolf believed that Butler had made false
    statements during the first proffer session.
    But, at the request of Butler’s attorney, a second proffer session was held on
    December 5, 2011. According to Detective Anderson, Butler was made aware at the outset
    of the second proffer session that, “if he’d already lied that the [proffer agreement] would
    in some sense already be breached.” Detective Anderson testified that Butler was told that,
    if he “continued to lie,” the State would be able to use his statements against him. But
    Detective Anderson also acknowledged in his testimony at a hearing regarding the use of
    Butler’s statements that everyone “started fresh” on December 5:
    Q [COUNSEL FOR BUTLER]: So wouldn’t you say, detective, at this point
    in time you started fresh? You believed that Mr. Butler had told you a lie,
    you asked him to tell you the truth in the second proffer; correct?
    A [DETECTIVE ANDERSON]: Yes.
    Q: And you said if he didn’t tell you the truth now the State could use it
    against him; correct? Correct?
    A: Yes, it’s in the agreement.
    A second proffer agreement – which appears to be a photocopy of the December 1 proffer
    agreement – was initialed by all parties at the beginning of the second session and dated
    “12/5/11.”
    At the December 5 proffer session, Butler told Detective Anderson that Keon Beads
    had offered Givens drugs and money to induce Givens to change his testimony or not show
    up in court for Duncan’s trial on the handgun charges. Butler also changed his account of
    Darren Thomas’s role in Givens’s murder.           Butler told Detective Anderson at the
    7
    December 5 session that Thomas had refused to be involved in the Givens matter, and that
    Butler had asked his nephew David Johnson to carry out the murder. Butler told Detective
    Anderson that he had given Johnson certain information pertaining to Givens, such as a
    description of his car and his address, during a meeting to plan the murder. Butler also told
    Detective Anderson that he had received two letters, rather than one, from Duncan
    discussing hurting or killing Givens. According to Detective Anderson, Butler also
    changed his prior statement regarding the identity of the person who had told him of
    Givens’s murder, stating at the December 5 proffer that he learned of the murder from
    David Johnson himself, not Keon Beads. Following the December 5 proffer session,
    Detective Anderson concluded that Darren Thomas had no involvement in the murder of
    Givens, and Anderson believed that, in addition to Duncan and Butler, David Johnson and
    Keon Beads had been involved in the murder as Butler had said on December 5.
    The Charges, Request for Severance, and Trial
    Duncan and Butler, as well as David Johnson and Keon Beads, were all charged
    with various crimes arising out of the October 4, 2011, murder of Givens. On April 7, 2015,
    a pretrial hearing was held in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, at which time the
    court considered Duncan’s motion for severance of his trial from the trials of both Butler
    and Johnson. The State agreed that severance of Johnson’s trial was appropriate, but
    argued that there was no need to conduct separate trials of Duncan and Butler. As we will
    discuss in more detail later in this opinion, based upon assurances from the prosecutor, the
    circuit court denied Duncan’s motion for severance of his trial from that of Butler.
    8
    Later, immediately prior to jury selection, the court considered the State’s motion
    in limine for permission to introduce evidence of any statements Butler made during the
    proffer sessions. The State argued that, because Butler had made false statements to
    Detective Anderson during the first proffer session, the terms of the proffer agreement
    permitted use of any statements made during the proffer sessions. Butler opposed the
    State’s motion, arguing that he had been given a “fresh start” at the second proffer session
    in exchange for the information he provided that proved useful to the State, and that the
    premise of participating in the second proffer session was that any lies he had told during
    the first session would be forgiven if he was truthful during the second session. Following
    a hearing on the matter, the circuit court ruled in favor of the State, finding that Butler had
    clearly breached the proffer agreement by lying during the first proffer session.
    Consequently, the court ruled that, under the terms of the proffer agreement, the State could
    introduce any statements Butler had made.
    Following a multi-day trial, appellants were each convicted of first degree murder,
    conspiracy to commit murder, influencing a witness, and use of a firearm in commission
    of a crime of violence. Additional relevant facts arising out of the trial are discussed at
    greater length later in this opinion. This consolidated appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    I. Denial of Duncan’s Motion for Severance & Motions for a Mistrial
    A.     Standard of Review
    We “will only disturb a trial court’s decision to deny a motion for a mistrial if the
    court has abused its discretion, and it is clear that the accused has been prejudiced.”
    9
    Conyers v. State, 
    345 Md. 525
    , 561 (1997). Accord Parker v. State, 
    189 Md. App. 474
    ,
    493–96 (2009). As we explain in the following section, there are some circumstances in
    which the trial court’s discretion is limited by constitutional considerations.
    B.     The Bruton Violation
    Duncan contends that, in light of the Supreme Court’s holding in Bruton v. United
    States, 
    391 U.S. 123
    (1968), the circuit court erred in denying both his motion for severance
    of his trial from Butler’s and his multiple motions for mistrial that followed. The Court of
    Appeals has succinctly summarized the holding of Bruton as follows:
    Bruton rights are triggered when testimonial hearsay is introduced into
    evidence. In Bruton, the Supreme Court addressed “whether the conviction
    of a defendant at a joint trial should be set aside although the jury was
    instructed that a codefendant’s confession inculpating the defendant had to
    be disregarded in determining his guilt or innocence.” 
    Bruton, 391 U.S. at 124
    –25, 88 S.Ct. at 
    1622, 20 L. Ed. 2d at 478
    . During Bruton’s joint trial with
    Evans, Evans’s out of court confession inculpating both defendants had been
    admitted into evidence. The trial judge had given a limiting instruction to the
    jury to consider the confession only against Evans, but not against Bruton.
    The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit affirmed. Bruton
    v. United States, 
    375 F.2d 355
    (8th Cir.1967).
    The Supreme Court reversed. The Court held that the trial court’s
    limiting instruction did not sufficiently protect Bruton’s Sixth Amendment
    rights, because Evans had not testified, the introduction of Evans’s
    confession added substantial weight to the Government’s case against
    Bruton, and Bruton could not cross-examine Evans. 
    Bruton, 391 U.S. at 137
    ,
    88 S.Ct. at 
    1628, 20 L. Ed. 2d at 485
    . The Court opined that a limiting
    instruction was insufficient to protect Bruton’s right to cross-examine
    and that there was no basis upon which to admit Evans’s confession against
    Bruton. When “the powerfully incriminating extrajudicial statements of
    a codefendant, who stands accused side-by-side with the defendant, are
    deliberately spread before the jury in a joint trial”, the Court concluded,
    “limiting instructions [were not acceptable] as an adequate substitute
    for [Bruton’s] constitutional right of cross examination.” 
    Id. at 135–36,
           
    137, 88 S. Ct. at 1628
    , 20 L.Ed.2d at 483, 484. Bruton, then, is premised
    upon the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment and limits joinder,
    10
    as well as the efficacy of cautionary instructions when evidence of a
    testimonial nature is introduced.
    State v. Payne, 
    440 Md. 680
    , 717 (2014) (emphasis added) (alterations in original). 2
    Prior to trial in this case, the State conceded at the April 7 pre-trial hearing that
    Butler’s statements made during his proffer sessions and phone calls with Duncan “do
    constitute testimonial statements and therefore trigger the confrontation clause which
    therefore implicates Bruton.” At that hearing, the State also acknowledged that a mere
    redaction of Duncan’s name from any of Butler’s communications would not be sufficient
    to satisfy Bruton, but the State assured the circuit court that a Bruton violation could be
    avoided and that any Bruton issue “could be remedied” because the State would take
    greater precautions than those that had been held insufficient in “[Gray v. Maryland, 
    523 U.S. 185
    , 197 (1998)] . . . which was a simple deletion.” 3
    The following colloquy then took place regarding the State’s assurances that it
    would avoid the potential Bruton violation without the need for severing Butler’s case from
    Duncan’s:
    THE COURT: So these proffers by Mr. Butler don’t say that he
    was soliciting and enlisting Mr. Johnson to do Duncan’s bidding?
    2
    The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution – incorporated to apply
    to the states via the Fourteenth Amendment, Pointer v. State of Texas, 
    380 U.S. 400
    , 406
    (1965) – provides, in pertinent part:
    In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be
    confronted with the witnesses against him . . . .
    3
    In Gray v. Maryland, the Supreme Court held that a Bruton violation occurred
    where the prosecution inserted blanks or “delete” in place of the defendant’s name in the
    incriminating confession of a codefendant. 
    523 U.S. 185
    , 197 (1998).
    11
    [THE STATE]: They do implicate Mr. Duncan, but the jail calls --
    THE COURT: Well, okay so the --
    [THE STATE]: -- so there’s no doubt about that. But respectfully,
    the State submits that first of all what we would be referring to is
    conversations that are on the jail calls themselves.
    But secondly, Your Honor, I think this is why we were alluding to the
    redaction solution, if the court has concerns, and what I was gonna add is if
    the court has concerns as trial is unfolding as to the substance of those passing
    references the State would be prepared to agree that what Mr. Butler
    told detectives about Mr. Duncan’s role in that would not be presented
    to the jury through the detectives.
    So in other words the State would present the jail calls to establish Mr.
    Duncan and Mr. Butler talking together about what they would do. The State
    would then present the detectives to present what Mr. Butler told them about
    getting Mr. Johnson and then Mr. Johnson reporting back to them. So that’s
    the only part that . . . implicates the testimonial comments by Mr. Butler, and
    then the State would return to the jail calls with respect to Mr. Butler
    reporting back to Mr. Duncan what had happened. So the, the silo of
    information that would come from the testimonial statements, which is
    the only category of statements that would implicate Bruton, would be
    redacted if the, if the court wished and if defense counsel wished to not
    implicate Duncan.
    ***
    THE COURT: The State’s prepared to, so with respect to the
    detective’s testimony that’s how you’re presenting this information?
    [THE STATE]: That’s right Your Honor.
    THE COURT: So you’re prepared to direct the detectives that in
    answering questions about what Mr. Butler said to them, they are not to
    include references to what Mr. Butler said about Mr. Duncan.
    [THE STATE]: Exactly your honor.
    ***
    12
    THE COURT: All right. You’re gonna direct the detectives when
    they testify what Butler said to them at these proffer sessions, said to
    them about Johnson. They are not to mention Duncan.
    (Emphasis added.)
    With that assurance from the prosecution, the court concluded that Duncan could be
    tried jointly with Butler. Cf. State v. Hines, 
    450 Md. 352
    , 369–70 (2016) (recognizing that,
    in some instances, it may be possible for a trial judge to eliminate any unfair prejudice
    attributable to non-mutually admissible evidence by “redacting evidence to remove any
    reference to the defendant against whom it is inadmissible”).
    At trial, however, the State introduced statements made by Butler that incriminated
    Duncan. During the direct examination of Detective Wolf, for example, the State played
    recordings of jail calls between Duncan and Butler, in which the voices of both defendants
    could be heard. Detective Wolf testified that, in his opinion, Duncan, whom the State
    identified by name, was one of the individuals participating in the calls played by the State.
    Over objections from appellants, the jury was also provided with transcripts of the calls
    between Duncan and Butler which identified Duncan by name in the left hand column of
    the transcript as one of the speakers.
    The State then asked Detective Wolf to explain the meaning of various portions of
    conversations between Duncan and Butler – in essence, translate the coded words used by
    Duncan and Butler – and Detective Wolf provided those translations based upon the
    explanations of the meaning of certain words and phrases Butler had provided to Detective
    Wolf during his proffer sessions. In this manner, the State utilized incriminating statements
    codefendant Butler had made during the proffer sessions to support its case against Duncan.
    13
    Those statements Butler made during the proffer sessions were clearly testimonial hearsay
    which would have been otherwise inadmissible against Duncan. 4
    After Duncan had made numerous objections to the State’s examination regarding
    Detective Wolf’s translation of Duncan’s jail calls with Butler, the circuit court sua sponte
    called a bench conference during which the following exchange occurred:
    THE COURT: I’m thinking further about [counsel for Duncan’s]
    objection and it seems that it’s appropriate at this time[, a]lthough [counsel
    for Duncan] didn’t request it, to tell the jury that this information is not to be
    considered against Mr. Duncan.
    [THE STATE]: I know that that happens in jury instructions and we
    anticipated that, --
    THE COURT: But it seem --
    [THE STATE]: -- don’t know that we have an objection to it here.
    THE COURT: All right.
    [COUNSEL FOR DUNCAN]: I, while we’re up here I have a motion
    to make. I’m gonna make a motion for a mistrial on behalf of Mr. Duncan.
    When we had our motions hearing I asked for a severance when I learned
    that the State intended to use the statements by Mr. Butler. The State assured
    all of us that it would redact the statements by Mr. Butler so that it would not
    implicate Mr. Duncan and thereby not offend Bruton.
    4
    One example of Butler’s translations of conversations he had with Duncan that
    was introduced at trial via Detective Wolf explained what Duncan and Butler meant when
    they used the words “air holes.” At trial, a recording of a jail phone call between Duncan
    and Butler was played for the jury, in which Butler could be heard asking “where was the
    air, air, air holes at for real?” In response, Duncan told Butler that “it’s still in the house.”
    On direct examination, the prosecutor asked Detective Wolf: “And did you speak to Mr.
    Butler about the term air holes? . . . What did he say air holes meant?” Detective Wolf
    responded, over objection from appellants’ counsel, that he had spoken to Butler regarding
    the meaning of the term air holes, and that Butler had explained that air holes “referred to
    a, a gun.”
    14
    When the State asked this detective to explicate what Butler meant
    he’s talking to Duncan. Butler says, according to the detective, that what I
    meant here is we’re going to get, we’re going to get the victim, we’re going
    to kill the victim, everything’s in place in the victim. It’s, and [Duncan is]
    talking to him. It’s . . . hopeless that the State has elected to go further than
    what they indicated at the motions hearing. They’ve gone further in the sense
    that they’re asking the detective now to explicate what Butler meant. That
    would be fine if my client weren’t there but he’s sitting right there and he’s
    on the phone with him. It’s hopeless.
    THE COURT: Well I’ll consider that further. It’s not without merit.
    [THE STATE]: Your Honor, if I may? At the beginning of this trial if
    [counsel for Duncan] had said I’m gonna concede that this is Mr. Duncan’s
    voice, and this is his SID number, and this is him talking . . . . [B]ut the State
    has had to laboriously address his comments in pretrial, as well as in opening,
    and establish that this is Mr. Duncan. If the State is, has to prove that we have
    to prove that. With the thanks [sic] of an admonition that this is not be used
    against him, with the jury instruction that indicates that separate
    consideration [of] the [defendants] is appropriate I respectfully --
    THE COURT: I think it’s almost impossible for the jury to
    disregard all of these conversations being with Mr. Duncan. How, how
    does this information [come] in against Mr. Duncan?
    [THE STATE]: Your Honor, it, it, we’re not trying to bring it in
    against Mr. Duncan. The catch is that we have had to prove that this is Mr.
    Duncan. [Counsel for Duncan] is two-thirds of the way through this trial now
    indicating that it’s obvious to the jury. That, it is not obvious to the jury until
    we prove it. And we have now, perhaps in [Duncan’s counsel’s] view, proven
    that and so he’s prepared to concede it. But that is not the beginning of --
    THE COURT: Well no, the testimony from this detective is that this
    is Mr. Duncan’s voice which we’ve been listening to.
    (Emphasis added.)
    The circuit court then elected to defer ruling on Duncan’s motion for a mistrial.
    After additional testimony, the circuit court initiated another bench conference regarding
    Duncan’s objections and motion for a mistrial:
    15
    THE COURT: [Mr. Prosecutor], I’ve been considering further
    Detective Wolf’s testimony about the words [that] Mr. Butler told Detective
    Wolf and the others at the meeting the words meant. And that seems
    testimonial. And that should not be coming in against Mr. Duncan. And so I
    am going to tell the jury to disregard that testimony of Detective Wolf.
    [THE STATE]: Very well Your Honor.
    THE COURT: I’m gonna strike it from this record.
    The circuit court then instructed the jury to disregard Detective Wolf’s testimony
    regarding the meaning of the coded language used in the jail calls between Duncan and
    Butler:
    Members of the jury I have considered further over our luncheon
    recess some arguments that had been made to the court, and pursuant to my
    consideration of those issues I believe it appropriate at this time to tell you
    that you are to disregard, and I am going to strike from the record
    testimony by Detective Wolf about what words meant according to Mr.
    Butler in the meeting that Mr. Butler had with Detective Wolf, Mr.
    Butler’s attorney and some other individuals that they have des [sic], that
    Detective Wolf has described. So disregard what Detective Wolf said Mr.
    Butler said that words mean in the jail calls that we’ve heard.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Later, during closing arguments, the State used a visual aid asserting that Butler had
    explained to Detective Anderson the entire conspiracy to murder Givens. Counsel for
    Duncan objected, and again moved for a mistrial as to Duncan. The circuit court denied
    the motion, but provided a second limiting instruction to the jury which arguably
    contradicted the court’s prior instruction for the jury to disregard what the detective had
    “said Mr. Butler said that words mean in the jail calls.” This time, the circuit court
    instructed the jury:
    16
    The statement made by Clifford Butler about which you’ve heard
    testimony that alleged, those alleged statements by Mr. Butler to Detective
    Anderson and Detective Wolf must only be considered by you against Mr.
    Butler in consideration of the charges against Mr. Butler. So the alleged
    statements by Mr. Butler to the detectives should not be part of your
    consideration of the charges against Mr. Duncan.
    Despite the second instruction, the State now contends that no Bruton violation
    occurred because the testimony of Detective Wolf regarding his conversations with Butler
    that implicated Duncan was “stricken” from the record by the circuit court and the jury was
    instructed to disregard those conversations. In support of this contention, the State argues
    that this case was “not one of those extraordinary circumstances where the jury cannot be
    trusted to follow instructions.” The State asserts in its brief: “With regard to the trial court’s
    instruction to disregard entirely a portion of Detective Wolf’s testimony, this type of
    instruction is commonplace and there is no reason to doubt the jury’s ability to follow it.”
    But the Supreme Court said in Bruton that limiting instructions will generally be
    inadequate to cure the prejudicial impact of “powerfully incriminating extrajudicial
    statements of a codefendant, who stands accused side-by-side with the defendant, [when
    those statements] are deliberately spread before the jury in a joint trial.” 
    Bruton, supra
    , 391
    U.S. at 135–36. The Bruton Court further observed that “there are some contexts in which
    the risk that the jury will not, or cannot, follow instructions is so great, and the
    consequences of failure so vital to the defendant, that the practical and human limitations
    of the jury system cannot be ignored.” 
    Id. at 135.
    As the Supreme Court stated in Bruton, “in the context of a joint trial we cannot
    accept limiting instructions as an adequate substitute for petitioner’s constitutional
    17
    right of cross-examination” where incriminating statements made by one codefendant are
    presented to the jury in a joint trial in which the codefendant does not testify and there is
    no opportunity for cross examination. 
    Id. at 137
    (emphasis added). Cf. Crawford v.
    Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 59 (2004) (“Testimonial statements of witnesses absent from
    trial have been admitted only where the declarant is unavailable, and only where the
    defendant has had a prior opportunity to cross-examine.”).
    The State’s contention that “[t]he general rule that juries are expected to comply
    with a court’s instructions applies here” is in direct conflict with what the Supreme Court
    said in Bruton. This Court has also previously rejected this very argument, stating:
    In Bruton, the “basic premise of Delli Paoli[ v. United States, 
    352 U.S. 232
    , 242 (1957),] that a properly instructed jury would ignore the
    confessor’s inculpation of the nonconfessor in determining the latter’s 
    guilt,” 391 U.S. at 129
    , was given a full burial and replaced by a completely
    opposite premise or assumption, i.e., that in spite of limiting instructions,
    a jury could not and would not disregard the inadmissible hearsay
    evidence contained in a confessor’s inculpation of the nonconfessor in
    determining the latter’s guilt. Admission of such an extrajudicial statement
    at a joint trial, where the declarant confessor does not take the witness stand,
    would thus violate the defendant’s right of cross-examination secured by the
    Confrontation Clause of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United
    States Constitution.
    Earhart v. State, 
    48 Md. App. 695
    , 698 (1981) (emphasis added). Accordingly, we reject
    the State’s contention that the Bruton problem in this case was cured by the circuit court’s
    limiting instructions to the jury.
    The State contends in the alternative that “Detective Wolf’s and Andersons’s
    testimony about Butler’s statements did not mention Duncan even in the abstract,” and
    therefore, did not implicate Duncan, which is necessary for a Bruton violation to occur,
    18
    citing: Gray v. Maryland, 
    523 U.S. 185
    , 195–96 (1998); Richardson v. Marsh, 
    481 U.S. 200
    , 208 (1987) (for a Bruton violation to occur, a statement by a codefendant must be
    “incriminating on its face” or expressly implicate a codefendant); United States v.
    Coleman, 
    349 F.3d 1077
    , 1085 (8th Cir. 2003) (stating that “Bruton is not violated if the
    non-testifying defendant’s statement only inculpates a codefendant inferentially–through
    linkage to other evidence.” (citing 
    Richardson, supra
    , 481 U.S. at 208)); Brooks v. State,
    
    32 Md. App. 116
    , 119 (1976) (“In a joint trial, Bruton proscribes the admission of a non-
    testifying co-defendant’s confession which implicates another co-defendant.”).
    We again disagree with the State. The testimony of Detective Wolf regarding
    Butler’s explanatory statements to him clearly implicated Duncan and thereby triggered
    Bruton. Although the State contends that “substantial evidence was necessary in this case
    to link Butler’s statements to Duncan,” the record reflects otherwise. During direct
    examination of Detective Wolf, before playing recordings of jail calls during which
    Duncan could be heard, the State asked: “Are you able to compare the voice that you heard
    on the excerpts, as well as the full calls corresponding to these 19 records and determine
    whether or not in your opinion these are Mr. Duncan’s voice on the calls at points or not?”
    After objection from appellants’ counsel, Detective Wolf stated “Yes sir,” and indicated
    that one of the voices on these calls was Duncan’s. The jury was also provided transcripts
    of the calls with Duncan’s name next to portions of the transcript indicating when he was
    speaking. Detective Wolf went on to testify regarding specific calls between Butler and
    Duncan, and what Butler told him regarding the meaning of the statements made during
    those calls.
    19
    As the Supreme Court said in 
    Gray, supra
    , 523 U.S. at 196, where “[t]he inferences
    at issue [] involve statements that, despite redaction, obviously refer directly to someone,
    often obviously the defendant, and which involve inferences that a jury ordinarily could
    make immediately,” Bruton is triggered. Detective Wolf’s testimony rehashing his
    conversations with Butler “obviously refer[red] directly to someone,” namely, Duncan.
    The jury did not need additional “substantial evidence,” as the State contends, in order for
    Butler’s statements to incriminate Duncan. Rather, the jury was told by the State that
    Duncan was one of the parties speaking in these phone calls, and that, based on Butler’s
    incriminating statements to Detectives Wolf and Anderson, the subject matter of many of
    these calls was a plan to murder Givens and efforts to avoid prosecution after Givens had
    been murdered. Butler’s statements implicated Duncan, who was not able to cross-
    examine Butler. Therefore, the statements fall under Bruton. See also Hines, 
    supra, 450 Md. at 385
    (stating: “Because the evidence implicated [the defendant] in a manner so
    obvious that there is a risk that the jury would not have followed the limiting instruction
    and not have considered [the codefendant’s incriminating] statement against [the
    defendant], the trial court erred in denying a trial severance.” (footnote omitted)).
    The State also argues that any Bruton violation constituted harmless error. See
    Dorsey v. State, 
    276 Md. 638
    , 658–60 (1976) (applying the harmless error analysis in the
    context of Bruton). The Court of Appeals has summarized the harmless error standard as
    follows:
    [“]In Dorsey v. State, . . . we adopted the test for harmless error announced
    by the Supreme Court in Chapman v. State[, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 
    87 S. Ct. 824
    , 
    17 L. Ed. 2d 705
    (1967)] . . . . As adopted in Dorsey, the harmless error rule is:
    20
    [‘]When an appellant, in a criminal case, establishes error,
    unless a reviewing court, upon its own independent review of
    the record, is able to declare a belief, beyond a reasonable
    doubt, that the error in no way influenced the verdict, such
    error cannot be deemed “harmless” and a reversal is mandated.
    Such reviewing court must thus be satisfied that there is no
    reasonable possibility that the evidence complained of –
    whether erroneously admitted or excluded – may have
    contributed to the rendition of the guilty verdict.[’]
    [“]In performing a harmless error analysis, we are not to find facts or weigh
    evidence. Instead, what evidence to believe, what weight to be given it, and
    what facts flow from that evidence are for the jury . . . to determine. Once it
    has been determined that error was committed, reversal is required unless the
    error did not influence the verdict; the error is harmless only if it did not play
    any role in the jury’s verdict. The reviewing court must exclude that
    possibility beyond a reasonable doubt. To say that an error did not contribute
    to the verdict is, rather, to find that error unimportant in relation to everything
    else the jury considered on the issue in question, as revealed by the record.
    The harmless error rule . . . has been and should be carefully circumscribed.
    Harmless error review is the standard of review most favorable to the
    defendant short of an automatic reversal.[”]
    Taylor v. State, 
    407 Md. 137
    , 164–65 (2009) (quoting Bellamy v. State, 
    403 Md. 308
    , 332–
    33 (2008)) (citations omitted) (some internal quotation marks omitted). In applying the
    harmless error standard, it is not appropriate to simply focus on the strength of other
    evidence in the State’s case. Dionas v. State, 
    436 Md. 97
    , 116–17 (2013).
    Upon reviewing the record in this case, we cannot say beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the testimony of Detective Wolf describing Butler’s statements explaining the alleged
    conspiracy to murder Givens “in no way influenced the verdict” against Duncan, even
    though the trial court gave instructions to disregard that portion of Detective Wolf’s
    testimony. Taylor, 
    supra, 407 Md. at 165
    .
    21
    We hold that the circuit court abused its discretion in denying Duncan’s motions for
    a mistrial once it became clear that Detective Wolf’s testimony about Butler’s
    incriminating statements also implicated Duncan.
    II. Butler’s Proffered Statements
    Prior to the beginning of trial, the circuit court held that Butler breached the proffer
    agreements he entered into with the State, finding: “I think the proffer agreement is clear.
    The fact that Mr. Butler initially says that Mr. Thomas is the shooter [during the first proffer
    session] and then says Mr. Johnson is the shooter [during the second proffer session;] when
    he said Mr. Thomas was the shooter, he breached the agreement that existed between the
    parties.”
    Butler, however, contends in his brief that the December 1 proffer agreement
    was orally modified when, on December 5, 2011, he was told by Detective
    Anderson, without objection by . . . the prosecutor in Mr. Butler’s case who
    was also present, that the parties were going to “start over”, that Mr. Butler
    was being given “an opportunity to start from the beginning”, and that “if he
    continued to lie . . . the proffer will be used against him.”
    (Emphasis in original, citations to the record omitted.)
    Under these circumstances, Butler argues, the December 5 proffer agreement
    “abrogated the previous one.” Butler asserts that the circuit court should have found that
    the second proffer session gave him a “fresh start,” and any false statements he had made
    during the first proffer session would be of no consequence so long as he was truthful
    during the second session that he had requested. As a result, Butler argues, the circuit court
    erred by allowing the State to declare the proffer agreements materially, and incurably,
    breached because of false statements the circuit court determined he made during the first
    22
    proffer session, and the court erred in ruling that the State could offer into evidence any
    statements Butler had made during the proffer sessions. We agree with Butler.
    A. Standard of Review
    “As a general proposition, pre-trial agreements such as cooperation and proffer
    agreements are interpreted according to principles of contract law.” United States v.
    $87,118.00 in U.S. Currency, 
    95 F.3d 511
    , 516 (7th Cir. 1996). Given the lack of case law
    in Maryland concerning proffer agreements, and the similarities between proffer
    agreements and plea agreements, we view cases addressing construction and breaches of
    plea agreements as instructive. “‘[C]ontract principles should generally guide the
    determination of the proper remedy of a broken plea agreement.’” Cuffley v. State, 
    416 Md. 568
    , 579 (2010) (quoting Solorzano v. State, 
    397 Md. 661
    , 668 (2007) (second internal
    quotation omitted)).
    “Contract principles, however, ‘are not enough to resolve disputes over the proper
    interpretation of a plea bargain.’” 
    Id. at 580
    (quoting Solorzano, 
    supra, 397 Md. at 668
    ).
    “Rather, ‘[d]ue process concerns for fairness and the adequacy of procedural safeguards
    guide any interpretation of a court approved plea agreement.’” 
    Id. (quoting Solorzano,
    supra, 397 Md. at 668
    ). “‘[T]he standard to be applied to plea negotiations is one of fair
    play and equity under the facts and circumstances of the case, which, although entailing
    certain contract concepts, is to be distinguished from . . . the strict application of the
    common law principles of contracts.’” Tweedy v. State, 
    380 Md. 475
    , 488 (2004) (quoting
    Jackson v. State, 
    358 Md. 259
    , 278 (2000)).
    23
    The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has expressly ruled that
    similar concerns of fairness and due process apply when interpreting proffer agreements.
    United States v. Farmer, 
    543 F.3d 363
    , 374 (7th Cir. 2008) (“[P]roffer agreements that are
    a part of ongoing criminal proceedings are unique contracts and the ordinary contract
    principles are supplemented with a concern that the bargaining process not violate the
    defendant’s rights to fundamental fairness under the Due Process Clause.”) (internal
    quotation marks omitted)). Cf. United States v. Pielago, 
    135 F.3d 703
    , 709 (11th Cir. 1998)
    (“The construction of proffer agreements, like plea agreements, is governed generally by
    the principles of contract law, as we have adapted it for the purposes of criminal law.”
    (emphasis added)). Cases from the United States Courts of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
    and Second Circuit have limited construction of proffer agreements to the four corners of
    the document, see, e.g., United States v. Gillion, 
    704 F.3d 284
    , 292 (4th Cir. 2012) (“[A]
    proffer agreement operates like a contract; accordingly, we examine its express terms to
    determine whether the defendant is in breach.”); United States v. Liranzo, 
    944 F.2d 73
    , 77
    (2d Cir. 1991) (“Where the language of a contract is unambiguous, the parties’ intent is
    discerned from the four corners of the contract.”). But, because the view expressed by the
    United States Courts of Appeals for the Seventh and Eleventh Circuits is more in line with
    the approach that the Maryland Court of Appeals has adopted with respect to plea
    agreements, we conclude that Maryland courts should apply the principles of interpretation
    those courts have applied to proffer agreements, i.e., ordinary contract principles
    supplemented with due process concerns for fundamental fairness as in Cuffley, Solorzano,
    and Tweedy.
    24
    In Ray v. State, 
    230 Md. App. 157
    , 189 (2016), we stated that an “appellate court
    makes the de novo determination, as a question of law, as to what the terms of a plea
    agreement actually were.” Our “prime directive for statutory construction, for contract
    construction, and now for the construction of a plea agreement is simply to read the words
    themselves that call for construction. If their meaning is clear and distinct and undisputed,
    the interpretive exercise is over. This is the core principle for construing the meaning of
    any contract.” 
    Id. at 182–83.
    We also note that any “ambiguity in [a] plea agreement is
    resolved against the government ‘[b]ecause of the Government’s advantage in bargaining
    power.’” Cuffley, 
    supra, 416 Md. at 583
    (quoting United States v. Gebbie, 
    294 F.3d 540
    ,
    552 (3d Cir. 2002) (second alteration in original)). In 
    Ray, supra
    , 230 Md. App. at 188–
    89, we endeavored to determine objectively “what a reasonable non-lawyer’s version of
    the deal would have been under circumstances similar to those of the defendant . . . .” We
    shall apply similar principles to our interpretation of Butler’s proffer agreements, and our
    consideration of whether the circuit court properly held that the version of the proffer
    agreement dated December 5 did not, as Butler contends, supersede the agreement signed
    December 1.
    B. One or Two Proffer Agreements?
    First, we review de novo whether the circuit court correctly viewed the December 5
    proffer agreement as ineffective to provide Butler any protection against the prosecution’s
    use of the statements he made during either of the proffer sessions. During a hearing
    conducted prior to jury selection, the circuit court addressed a motion by the State to avoid
    the proffer agreement’s restrictions on the use of Butler’s statements. The State argued
    25
    that Butler’s proffered statements, in their entirety, should be admissible in evidence
    against him because he clearly gave false information during the December 1 session:
    [THE STATE]: Your honor, just to clarify the scope of the motions
    hearing it’s my understanding that Mr. Butler does not claim, nor does
    defense counsel claim that there was a constitutional defect of this . . . . Mr.
    Butler’s counsel, was present for the proceeding. He was not subpoenaed. He
    was not there against his will. He had . . . initiated the proceeding. The
    question is whether or not there was a breach of contract with respect to the
    proffer agreement. As the proffer agreement sets forth, the statements
    cannot be used against Defendant unless an, an express material
    condition he withholds material information knowingly, or if he is not
    fully truthful and candid. And the contract is explicit that if he is not
    truthful during the proffer then the State is permitted to use the statements
    that Mr. Butler makes with counsel present against him for any purpose in
    any proceeding is the express language of the contract. As a consequence the
    State intends to present testimony and evidence this morning that what Mr.
    Butler said during those proffer sessions was untruthful. Some of it was
    certainly truthful, but there are material misrepresentations and material
    omissions in the course of those.
    (Emphasis added.)
    The State then called as its witness Detective Anderson, who participated in both
    proffer sessions with Butler. After Detective Anderson testified that Butler had made what
    he believed were false statements during the December 1 session, the following exchange
    took place concerning the second proffer session held on December 5:
    Q [THE STATE]: So let’s turn to the second proffer. You’ve already seen
    the Exhibit that was marked. This was reaffirmed at the beginning of the
    second proffer. Is that a fair characterization of what happened at the
    beginning of the second proffer?
    A [DETECTIVE ANDERSON]: Yes.
    Q: And again this was initiated by defense counsel?
    A: Yes.
    26
    Q: There was no grand jury subpoena for Mr. Butler at this point?
    A: No sir.
    ***
    Q: And on that second date on the right column of the proffer session there
    are initials next to my name, [and defense counsel’s] name, and Mr. Butler
    with the date 12/5/2011. Were you present when those initials were affixed
    to the, to the, to the dates?
    A: I was.
    ***
    Q: And was it made clear to Mr. Duncan that, excuse me, Mr. Butler,
    excuse me, was it made clear to Mr. Butler during that session that any
    lies that he had said during the first session would be forgiven and that
    it was a blank slate?
    A: No.
    Q: Was it clear that if he’d already lied that the contract would in some
    sense already be breached?
    A: Yes.
    (Emphasis added.)
    But, on cross-examination, counsel for Butler elicited the following testimony from
    Detective Anderson regarding the second proffer session:
    Q [COUNSEL FOR BUTLER]: Now [on December 5, 2011,] there was
    actually a new contract entered into; correct? And it’s indicated by the
    new date and the initials of the party; is that correct? Is that correct?
    A [DETECTIVE ANDERSON]: I don’t think that’s an accurate
    reflection. It’s not a new contract, it was the same contract with the same
    language --
    Q: Okay.
    27
    A: -- that they just initialed with a new, new date on it.
    Q: The original contract is a separate contract from this; correct? It’s
    not the same contract. The original contract doesn’t have December 5th
    date on it; correct?
    A: Correct.
    ***
    Q: Okay. And the proffer agreement is, is read to him correct?
    A: Yes.
    Q: And who actually reads the proffer agreement to him on that particular
    date?
    A: Same person from the State.
    Q: Okay the State? And on that particular date you started fresh; right?
    Correct?
    A: What do you mean by “fresh”?
    Q: You started fresh. It, it, it’s a new date as indicated by the initial,
    initials by the individuals and the date of 12/5/2011, it, you started from
    the beginning; correct?
    A: We started from the beginning --
    Q: And did you --
    A: -- but not, not because it was a, a new agreement, we started from the
    beginning because we didn’t have this, the actual story. So we had to
    start from the beginning. It was explained to him again that look, you
    have to be honest, you have to be truthful.
    Q: Um hum.
    A: And so let’s start over again because we don’t believe you were.
    Q: Okay.
    28
    A: So we gave him an opportunity to start from the beginning but it
    wasn’t a new, I don’t think that’s a good way to categorize it.
    ***
    Q: Okay. Did you tell Mr. Butler that if you gave us the, the true story that
    you were seeking that you were gonna use his statements against him?
    A: Yes.
    Q: So you, you asked the man for the true story and you said if you give
    me the true story, Mr. Butler, we’re gonna use this against you, and then
    he gave you a different story; is that your testimony?
    A: Yeah, it was not, I don’t think it was framed in that way but he was
    read the proffer agreement again and it was explained to him explicitly
    that if he continues to lie that the information he tells us will be used
    against, or could be used against him by the State.
    ***
    Q: -- so at that particular time you, you told Mr. Butler that if you tell us the
    truth now, or, or you told Mr. Butler if he continued to tell you the non-truth
    it would be used against him by the State; correct? Correct?
    A: I don’t think it was framed in those terms, no. I don’t think that’s an
    accurate statement.
    Q: Well detective, you just testified that you told Mr. Butler that you
    read him the elements of the proffer agreement.
    A: Yes.
    Q: And that you told Mr. Butler that if he continued to lie to you as you
    felt he did in the first proffer session it would be, the State would be able
    to use that against him; correct? You testified to that just now; correct?
    A: Yeah, it was, it’s in the agreement --
    Q: Right.
    A: -- and the agreement was read to him.
    29
    Q: So wouldn’t you say, detective, at this point in time you started fresh?
    You believed that Mr. Butler had told you a lie, you asked him to tell you
    the truth in the second proffer; correct?
    A: Yes.
    Q: And you said if he didn’t tell you the truth now the State could use it
    against him; correct? Correct?
    A: Yes, it’s in the agreement.
    (Emphasis added.)
    After cross-examination and re-cross examination of Detective Anderson, the
    circuit court heard additional argument from Butler and the State. Following argument
    from both parties, the circuit court focused on a false statement Butler had made during the
    first session, and granted the State’s motion to avoid the use restrictions of both proffer
    agreements, stating:
    THE COURT: All right. So is your argument, is, I don’t know that I follow
    all these breaches you’ve listed. That the fact that in the first proffer he
    says Darren Thomas is the shooter, and second proffer he says Mr.
    Johnson is the shooter, that’s sufficient all by itself.
    [THE STATE]: Yes.
    THE COURT: Even if I don’t follow any                      of   these   other
    misrepresentations that you’re telling me about?
    [THE STATE]: Absolutely Your Honor. That, that is, that is exactly the
    State’s position. I was trying to reinforce the record on this matter with a
    number of additional ones, but this could have been perhaps a simpler
    proceeding by just pointing to that.
    THE COURT: All right.
    [THE STATE]: Thank you Your Honor.
    30
    THE COURT: All right. I think the proffer agreement is clear. The fact that
    Mr. Butler initially says that Mr. Thomas is the shooter and then says Mr.
    Johnson is the shooter, when he said Mr. Thomas was the shooter [during
    the December 1 session] he breached the agreement that existed between
    the parties.
    (Emphasis added.)
    Although the Maryland appellate courts have not addressed interpretations of
    proffer agreements, we recently addressed the application of contract principles to
    interpretations of plea bargains, and we described the appropriate perspective for a court’s
    interpretation as that of a reasonable non-lawyer in the position of the defendant:
    Rather than accept the defendant’s subjective version of what his
    understanding actually was, however, we prefer to determine objectively
    what a reasonable non-lawyer’s version of the deal would have been under
    circumstances similar to those of the defendant, confining the knowledge of
    that hypothetical reasonable man to that which was formally on the record of
    the hearing on the acceptance of the plea.
    
    Ray, supra
    , 230 Md. App. at 188–89 (emphasis omitted).
    We will apply a similar approach to our interpretation of proffer agreements. But,
    we recognize that, unlike the formal record available when plea agreements are accepted,
    there may not be any “record of the hearing on the acceptance” of the proffer agreement.
    Here, the evidence before the circuit court regarding the proffer agreements consisted of
    the two signed agreements and Detective Anderson’s testimony. Courts outside of
    Maryland have held that, in construing proffer agreements, “[t]he written agreement should
    be viewed against the background of the negotiations” leading up to the agreement, and
    “[a]ny ambiguities in the terms of a proffer agreement should be resolved in favor of the
    31
    criminal defendant.” 
    Pielago, supra
    , 135 F.3d at 709–10 (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    We have previously stated that “[t]he best evidence of what the contract (the plea
    agreement) is or what the contract says is indisputably the original contractual document
    itself.” Carlini v. State, 
    215 Md. App. 415
    , 446 (2013), rev’d on other grounds, 
    444 Md. 278
    , 292 (2015). But evidence of what the defendant reasonably understood may also be
    considered. 
    Ray, supra
    , 230 Md. App. at 188–90. The Court of Appeals stated in Baines
    v. State, 
    416 Md. 604
    , 615 (2010): “[I]f examination of the terms of the plea agreement
    itself, by reference to what was presented on the record at the plea proceeding before the
    defendant pleads guilty, reveals what the defendant reasonably understood to be the terms
    of the agreement, then that determination governs the agreement.” As the United States
    Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit noted in 
    Pielago, supra
    , 135 F.3d at 709, the
    negotiations leading up to a proffer agreement play a role in the interpretation of a proffer
    agreement similar to the manner the record at the plea proceeding plays a role in the
    interpretation of plea agreements.
    Bearing in mind that “[d]ue process concerns for fairness and the adequacy of
    procedural safeguards guide any interpretation” of a proffer agreement, Solorzano, 
    supra, 397 Md. at 668
    (addressing plea agreements), and that any ambiguity is resolved against
    the government, Cuffley, 
    supra, 416 Md. at 583
    (addressing plea agreements), we turn to
    the proffer agreements in this case and consider what a reasonable person in Butler’s
    position would have thought the agreement meant on December 5, 2011, when he
    32
    voluntarily met with the police and prosecutor, and agreed to provide additional
    incriminating statements. See 
    Ray, supra
    , 230 Md. App. at 188–89.
    The proffer agreements signed at each of the proffer sessions contain identical
    terms. The sole difference between the two versions of the agreements is the addition of
    dates and initials to the document dated “12/5/11.” On December 5, each party initialed to
    the right of the signature lines where they had signed on December 1, and added the date
    “12/5/11” next to their initials. In all other respects the agreements are identical.
    The language of the proffer agreement outlining Butler’s obligation of candor, and
    the consequences for failing to abide by the agreement, states:
    1.     Except as otherwise provided in paragraphs two and three, no statements
    made or other information provided by you or your attorney during the proffer will
    be used against you in any criminal case.
    ***
    3.     Your complete truthfulness and candor are express material
    conditions to the undertaking of the State set forth in this letter. Therefore,
    the State may use statements made or other information provided by you or
    your attorney during the proffer under the following circumstances. . . .
    ***
    b.     If the State should ever conclude that you have knowingly
    withheld material information from the State or otherwise have not
    been completely truthful and candid with the State, the State may use
    any statements made or other information provided by you or your
    attorney during the proffer against you for any purpose. If the State
    does ever so conclude, it will notify you prior to making any such use
    of any such statements or other information.
    As noted above, Butler’s proffer agreements “should be viewed against the
    background of the negotiations” leading up to the agreement, 
    Pielago, supra
    , 135 F.3d at
    33
    709, similar to the manner in which plea agreements are viewed in light of statements made
    during the hearing at the time a plea is accepted. 
    Ray, supra
    , 230 Md. App. at 188–89.
    During the circuit court’s hearing on the State’s motion to avoid the proffer agreement’s
    restrictions on the use of Butler’s proffer statements, Detective Anderson testified at
    different points during his testimony that Butler was told at the outset of the December 5
    session that, if he “continues” to lie, the State would be able to use his statements against
    him. The transcript reflects that, on December 5, Butler “was read the proffer agreement
    again and it was explained to him explicitly that if he continues to lie that the
    information he tells us will be used against, or could be used against him by the State.”
    (Emphasis added.)
    We are persuaded that, when Butler was cautioned that, if he “continues to lie,” his
    statements could be used against him, that would be understood by a reasonable defendant
    who appeared voluntarily for a second proffer session (and who was deciding whether to
    make additional incriminating statements) as an offer of a fresh start on December 5. From
    the perspective of a reasonable defendant, there would be nothing to gain by providing
    additional, and more accurate, incriminating evidence if the State had irreversibly
    determined he was already in breach of the agreements and everything he said – both before
    and during the second session – could be used in a criminal prosecution against him. The
    more reasonable interpretation that a defendant in Butler’s position would have inferred
    from the cautionary warning and the execution of the renewed non-use agreement was that,
    if he did not continue to lie, but now provided truthful information, he could enjoy the
    34
    benefit of Paragraph 1 of the proffer agreements, and “no statements made” by him would
    be used against him in any criminal case.
    Although Detective Anderson testified that Butler was told that, “if he’d already
    lied that the contract would in some sense already be breached,” this would not
    communicate to a reasonable defendant in Butler’s position that he could never cure that
    breach, and, no matter how truthful he was during the second proffer session, his statements
    could all still be used against him due to false statements he had made during the first
    proffer session. In our view, a reasonable person in Butler’s circumstances would have
    understood the effect of re-signing the proffer agreement on December 5 as providing him
    an opportunity to speak truthfully during the second session, and thereby cure any breach
    he had previously committed by virtue of any prior lies he had told.
    The Court of Appeals has stated on multiple occasions that “ambiguity in [a] plea
    agreement is resolved against the government ‘[b]ecause of the Government’s advantage
    in bargaining power.’” Cuffley, 
    supra, 416 Md. at 583
    (quoting United States v. Gebbie,
    
    294 F.3d 540
    , 552 (3d Cir. 2002) (second alteration in original)); Solorzano, 
    supra, 397 Md. at 673
    (stating that it “is axiomatic that due process requires courts to construe any
    ambiguity in a plea agreement against the government”) (internal quotation omitted)).
    Accord 
    Pielago, supra
    , 135 F.3d at 709–10 (“Any ambiguities in the terms of a proffer
    agreement should be resolved in favor of the criminal defendant.”). Moreover, “[d]ue
    process concerns for fairness and the adequacy of procedural safeguards” support Butler’s
    interpretation of the proffer agreement. See Solorzano, 
    supra, 397 Md. at 668
    .
    35
    Detective Anderson testified that, at the conclusion of the first proffer session, he
    “didn’t necessarily believe what Mr. Butler was saying,” and, once he completed further
    investigation of Darren Thomas’s involvement, Detective Anderson definitely believed
    that Butler had falsely named Darren Thomas as the shooter. If the State’s interpretation
    of the proffer agreement were correct, Detective Anderson and the State would have known
    at the start of the meeting on December 5 that the proffer agreement had been breached,
    and that Butler’s statements could be used against him, regardless of Butler’s performance
    at that session. To permit the State’s encouragement of Butler to speak truthfully and
    provided additional incriminating statements under the guise of a “fresh start,” while the
    State actually viewed the proffer agreement as already having been incurably breached and
    providing no assurance against use of the statements, is an affront to the notions of fair play
    and equity we employ when scrutinizing proffer and plea agreements.
    As quoted above, the circuit court accepted the prosecutor’s argument that one
    specific false statement made during the first proffer session – namely, that Darren Thomas
    was the shooter – was sufficient to fully relieve the State of its agreement not to use in the
    criminal prosecution of Butler any statements he made during the proffer sessions. For the
    reasons we have explained above, we conclude that the circuit court erred in accepting the
    State’s argument and in failing to interpret the December 5 proffer agreement as a
    modification of the proffer agreement, providing Butler an opportunity for a fresh start.
    But the State argues on appeal that, even if the circuit court had focused on the
    December 5 session, it could have found that Butler committed material breaches of his
    36
    obligations to be completely truthful and not withhold information. In its brief, the State
    asserts:
    Even at the conclusion of the second proffer session Butler failed to
    be “completely truthful and candid” with the State. He neglected to tell police
    about a phone call with Duncan’s sister four hours before the murder; in fact,
    Butler claimed that he had only ever spoken with Duncan’s sister on three-
    way calls with Duncan. He also claimed that he never wrote Duncan any
    letters while Duncan was in jail . . . that he had not spoken with Keyon
    [presumably Keon] Beads after the murder. Phone records and the recorded
    jail calls established that both of those statements were false.
    Butler also failed to tell the State that the person referred to as “shorty”
    in the last recorded phone call was Johnson, and that when Butler said
    “shorty” was “deep somewhere,” “off the radar,” he meant that Johnson was
    hiding in Baltimore City to avoid detection. During argument on the motion,
    the State reiterated that Butler told police on December 1st that he did not
    know who “shorty” was, and failed to correct that misrepresentation on
    December 5th.
    But the State conceded at oral argument that Butler was not asked the identity of
    “shorty” during the December 5 session, and no letters between Butler and Duncan were
    ever introduced at trial. Butler points out that none of the other alleged misstatements made
    on December 5 were material or detrimental to the State’s prosecution of the case. Indeed,
    the trial court made no finding of any material misstatement during the December 5 proffer
    session. The State does not deny that it benefitted from the additional information provided
    by Butler during the December 5 session. During closing arguments at trial, the State told
    the jury that Butler had “confirmed the entire conspiracy for us. Everything we thought
    was true he told us was true.” Detective Anderson made a similar acknowledgment during
    the pretrial hearing addressing the State’s motion to use Butler’s proffer statements against
    him:
    37
    Q [COUNSEL FOR BUTLER]: Okay. Now sir, during the second proffer
    did Mr. Butler talk about Mr. Beads[’] involvement?
    A [DETECTIVE ANDERSON]: Yes.
    Q: Did Mr. Butler talk about Mr. Duncan’s involvement?
    A: Yes.
    Q: Did Mr. Butler talk about Mr. David Johnson’s involvement?
    A: Yes.
    Q: Did Mr. Butler talk about his own involvement?
    A: Yes.
    Q: And based on your investigation and . . . subsequent arrests[,] these four
    individuals were arrested for these charges; correct?
    A: Yes.
    Q: And at the time of the proffer on December 5, 2011, no one [had been]
    arrested; correct?
    A: Correct.
    Q: And this man [Butler] doing the proffer, when he agreed to tell you the
    truth, implicated, [he] implicated everyone that you . . . subsequently
    charged; is that correct?
    A: Yes.
    Q: So overall [as to] Mr. Butler, would you say he told you the truth as
    far as you putting together your homicide case?
    A: At the, at the end of the proffer, yes.
    Q: Okay. So at the end of the proffer he told you this was correct.
    A: Yes.
    (Emphasis added.)
    38
    We agree with Butler’s contention that the State failed to present evidence sufficient
    to show the motion court that he committed a material breach of the December 5 proffer
    agreement. Consequently, the circuit court erred in granting the prosecution permission to
    introduce evidence of the statements Butler made during the proffer sessions.
    The State contends in the alternative that any error on the part of the circuit court in
    denying the exclusionary effect of the proffer agreements and admitting Butler’s statements
    against him was harmless error. The State argues that “[t]he majority of the testimony
    about Butler’s statements to police was merely cumulative to the far more damning
    evidence in the recorded phone calls between Duncan and Butler” that were played for the
    jury. The State further contends that Detective Anderson’s testimony as to what certain
    words or phrases in Butler and Duncan’s calls meant, based upon Butler’s explanation of
    the calls, was “ultimately inconsequential” because “it does not take much imagination to
    decipher” the meaning of the words and phrases used by Duncan and Butler. We disagree.
    We cannot say, “beyond a reasonable doubt, that the error in no way influenced the
    verdict.” Dorsey, 
    supra, 276 Md. at 659
    (emphasis added). Detective Anderson’s
    testimony, based upon the proffer sessions with Butler, provided explanations for the jury
    of the words and phrases in multiple phone calls implicating both Butler and Duncan as
    participants in the murder of Givens. Although the State now contends that it does not take
    “much imagination to decipher” the meaning of the coded language used by Butler and
    Duncan in their phone calls, the prosecution elected not to take that risk at trial, and we
    cannot say beyond a reasonable doubt that the use of Butler’s statements via Detective
    Anderson’s testimony did not help persuade the jury to conclude that Butler and Duncan
    39
    plotted to kill Givens. 
    Id. Therefore, we
    hold that the circuit court erred in granting the
    State’s motion to find Butler in violation of the proffer agreements, and remand for a new
    trial as to Butler.
    IN APPEAL NO. 1004 JUDGMENTS OF
    THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE
    COUNTY    REVERSED,   AND   CASE
    REMANDED FOR NEW TRIAL. COSTS
    TO BE PAID BY BALTIMORE COUNTY.
    IN APPEAL NO. 1104 JUDGMENTS OF
    THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE
    COUNTY    REVERSED,   AND   CASE
    REMANDED FOR NEW TRIAL. COSTS
    TO BE PAID BY BALTIMORE COUNTY.
    40