James M. Schools v. United States , 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 799 ( 2013 )


Menu:
  • Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the
    Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound
    volumes go to press.
    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 12-CF-1448
    JAMES M. SCHOOLS, APPELLANT,
    V.
    UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (CF2-7397-11)
    (Hon. Stuart Nash, Trial Judge)
    (Submitted October 22, 2013                         Decided December 19, 2013)
    Jamison Koehler was on the brief for appellant.
    Ronald C. Machen Jr., United States Attorney, and Elizabeth Trosman,
    Suzanne Grealy Curt, Ben Schrader, and Peter S. Smith, Assistant United States
    Attorneys, were on the brief for appellee.
    Before THOMPSON, Associate Judge, and WAGNER and SCHWELB, Senior
    Judges.
    Opinion for the court by Associate Judge THOMPSON.
    Dissenting opinion by Senior Judge WAGNER at page 20.
    THOMPSON, Associate Judge: A jury convicted appellant James Schools
    (aka David Schools) of unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon, possession of
    an unregistered firearm, and unlawful possession of ammunition (acquitting him of
    2
    possession with intent to distribute cocaine while armed, lesser-included cocaine-
    possession charges, and possession of a firearm during a crime of violence). He
    seeks reversal of his convictions on the ground that the evidence at trial was not
    sufficient to show that he had constructive possession of the gun and ammunition
    — i.e., that ―no jury could have reasonably concluded beyond a reasonable doubt
    that [he] knew about the firearm and ammunition‖ or that he ―had the requisite
    intent to exercise dominion and control‖ over them. We are persuaded by his
    argument and therefore reverse.
    I.   The Evidence
    The government presented evidence that shortly after 7:00 a.m. on April 21,
    2011, Metropolitan Police Department (―MPD‖) officers executed a search warrant
    of an apartment located at 1608 17th Place, S.E. The apartment, which was on the
    first floor of a two-story building, had a front bedroom and a second ―back
    bedroom‖ that had been converted from a sleeping porch and had a door that led
    outside. Officer Alvin Cardinal testified that when police arrived at the apartment,
    they knocked on the door and one officer loudly yelled, ―Police, search warrant‖ at
    least twice. After waiting 15 to 30 seconds and hearing no response from inside
    3
    the apartment, officers used a battering ram to force entry into the apartment. They
    first encountered a woman and a child near the front of the apartment. Officer
    Cardinal and Detective Scott Brown, another member of the search team, testified
    that two other people were stopped just outside the apartment, on the ―ledge‖ of the
    back-bedroom door that led to the outside. When Officer Cardinal first approached
    the back bedroom, he found appellant, whom he described as a ―large gentleman,‖
    standing next to a bed, his back turned away from the door, and his hands
    positioned ―as if he was manipulating or hiding something.‖         Appellant was
    wearing only a pair of boxers and a tank top. Officer Cardinal twice ordered
    appellant to ―put his hands up.‖ After the second order, appellant dropped a ―white
    object,‖ raised his hands, and turned around. Officer Cardinal handcuffed the
    appellant and took him into the living room, where officers were detaining ―all the
    other . . . occupants who were in the house[.]‖
    When officers returned to the back bedroom after taking appellant into the
    living room, they saw, in the area where appellant had dropped the white object, a
    white, man‘s shoe, inside of which were 53 green zip-lock bags containing crack
    cocaine.   Officers also found a digital scale on the windowsill of the room.
    Detective Erick Alvarado testified that in the right middle drawer of a three-level,
    4
    six-drawer dresser, ―hidden underneath clothing,‖1 he found a .45-caliber handgun
    in a plastic bag, five rounds of ammunition, and a shaving-kit-like bag that
    contained, in a side pouch, a potato chips bag, inside of which were empty, pink
    ziplock bags. Police were unable to recover any fingerprints from the handgun or
    the ammunition.2
    Officer Cardinal identified Government Exhibit 37 as a videotape that a
    police technician took on the morning of the search, which, the officer explained,
    was recorded before officers started searching, ―just to show where all the
    evidence‖ was before anything was moved. As the prosecutor played the video for
    the jury, Officer Cardinal identified a shot of appellant (whom the video shows to
    be a heavyset man) and a shot of two other (much smaller) men, who are shown
    seated in the living room and who Officer Cardinal testified were ―in the search
    warrant.‖
    1
    Detective Alvarado, who found the gun, testified that he recalled that there
    was ―clothing on top‖ of the items, but he could not say ―exactly what the piece of
    clothing was.‖
    2
    As defense counsel emphasized during closing argument, the government
    also presented ―no scientific evidence linking‖ appellant to the ziplock bags found
    in the dresser drawer.
    5
    MPD Detective Lavinia Quigley, who also participated in the search,
    testified that as it got underway, she gave appellant men‘s clothing (a shirt and
    sweat pants) that she had found on a chair in the back bedroom, and he put the
    clothes on. She had also looked in the front bedroom for clothes for appellant, but
    found only female clothing and children‘s clothing. She also gave appellant shoes
    that she testified she believed she got from the back bedroom (although, when
    pressed on cross-examination, she testified that she was ―not sure‖ that she got the
    shoes from the back bedroom rather than from a clothes closet in the living room). 3
    She testified on cross-examination that her recollection was that there were clothes
    in the living room closet.
    MPD Detective George Thomas testified about the use of digital scales and
    ziplock bags in drug distribution, the distribution-quantity and heat-sealed ziplock
    packaging of the cocaine found in the apartment, and the ―reason[s] that someone
    might possess a gun in connection with narcotics.‖ He also testified that the color
    of ziplock bags used can be ―representative of [a drug dealer‘s] brand of
    packaging.‖ On cross-examination, Detective Thomas testified that a drug dealer‘s
    stash might be kept in ―someone else‘s place of abode[.]‖
    3
    The police videotape appears to show a pair of shoes (in addition to the
    white shoes) on the floor in the back bedroom.
    6
    Valene Mason and MPD Officer Christopher Eckert testified for the defense.
    Mason testified that she lived in the apartment with appellant and the couple‘s
    young daughter. Appellant‘s nephew Jervel Mason (―the nephew‖) had also been
    living there since the beginning of April, and both the nephew and a man by the
    name of Timothy Thomas had stayed in the apartment on the night before the
    search. ―[N]ormally,‖ Mason testified, the nephew slept in the back bedroom, and
    appellant slept in the living room and kept his clothes in the living room closet and
    the closet in the front bedroom. Mason further testified that on the night of the
    search, appellant, whose health was ―pretty bad,‖ slept in the back bedroom
    because he was feeling sick. Mason testified that the clothing inside the dresser in
    the back bedroom belonged to the nephew.4             She testified that the shoe
    (Government Ex. 2) containing cocaine also belonged to the nephew, as did a
    wallet in the back bedroom that was shown in the police videotape. She testified
    that a pack of Marlboro cigarettes in the back bedroom also shown in the video
    belonged to Timothy Thomas. Mason further testified that when police came to
    4
    Mason also testified that before the police arrived, she had gone into the
    back bedroom to retrieve her daughter‘s uniforms so that she could get her
    daughter dressed in the front bedroom. She testified that there was no way to hang
    clothes in the closet in the back bedroom, but that the closet contained a laundry
    bag of clothes (including some men‘s clothes) that someone had given her and that
    needed to be washed.
    7
    the apartment to execute the search warrant, the nephew and Thomas ran out the
    door of the back bedroom. Mason identified two young men whom the video
    shows sitting in the living room as the nephew and Timothy Thomas.
    Officer Christopher Eckert testified that he arrested a man name Ronnie
    Caldwell on June 1, 2011, and recovered 42 green zip lock bags containing crack
    cocaine.5      Mason testified that Mr. Caldwell had been regularly visiting the
    apartment during the week leading up to appellant‘s arrest, that she was afraid of
    Caldwell because he had been ―involved in . . . shootings‖ in the neighborhood and
    because she had seen him engage in physical violence, and that she had seen
    Caldwell bring a gun into the apartment.
    II. Applicable Law
    The government proceeded against appellant on the theory that he
    constructively possessed the gun and ammunition. Accordingly, the government
    was required to prove that he ―(1) knew of the presence of the contraband, (2) had
    5
    When Officer Eckert first spotted Caldwell, he was standing in front of
    th
    1606 17 Place (apparently, next door to appellant‘s apartment building).
    8
    the power to exercise dominion and control over it, and (3) intended to exercise
    dominion and control over it.‖     Ramirez v. United States, 
    49 A.3d 1246
    , 1249
    (D.C. 2012) (internal quotation marks omitted).        Appellant contends that no
    reasonable juror could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that he knew about
    the contraband because it was hidden from view, he made no movement toward it,
    and he gave no ―other indication that he knew what was tucked away under some
    clothes inside,‖ ―much less‖ that the other criteria for constructive possession were
    satisfied.
    An appellant making a claim of evidentiary insufficiency ―bears the heavy
    burden of showing that the prosecution offered no evidence upon which a
    reasonable mind could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.‖ Olafisoye v. United
    States, 
    857 A.2d 1078
    , 1086 (D.C. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted). In
    considering an evidentiary-insufficiency claim, we ―view the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the government, giving full play to the right of the jury to
    determine credibility, weigh the evidence, and draw justifiable inferences of fact.‖
    Freeman v. United States, 
    912 A.2d 1213
    , 1218 (D.C. 2006) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).     ―Expressed more fully, this means a reviewing court[,] faced
    with a record of historical facts that supports conflicting inferences[,] must
    presume — even if it does not affirmatively appear in the record — that the trier of
    9
    fact resolved any such conflicts in favor of the prosecution, and must defer to that
    resolution.‖ McDaniel v. Brown, 
    558 U.S. 120
    , 133 (2010) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    ―Although the government is entitled to any reasonable inferences, [a court
    reviewing an insufficiency-of-the-evidence claim] must consider all of the
    evidence including that favorable to the defendant.‖ United States v. Rapone, 
    131 F.3d 188
    , 197 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (Silberman, J., concurring) (citing Jackson v.
    Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979) (―[U]pon judicial review all of the evidence is
    to be considered in the light most favorable to the prosecution.‖) (emphasis in the
    original); United States v. Grey Bear, 
    828 F.2d 1286
    , 1292 (8th Cir.), vacated in
    part on other grounds, 
    836 F.2d 1088
    (8th Cir. 1987) (noting that the appellate
    court must review ―the evidence taken as a whole, including that offered by the
    defendant‖); United States v. Beck, 
    615 F.2d 441
    , 448 (7th Cir. 1980) (―The
    standard is not so strict that the defendant‘s evidence must be disregarded.‖). And,
    although ―a jury is entitled to draw a vast range of reasonable inferences from
    evidence, it may not base a verdict on mere speculation.‖ Rivas v. United States,
    
    783 A.2d 125
    , 134 (D.C. 2001) (en banc) (internal quotation marks and brackets
    omitted). At the same time, the government ―need not disprove every theory of
    10
    innocence in order to sustain a conviction.‖ 
    Olafisoye, 857 A.2d at 1086
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    Constructive possession ―may be proven by direct or circumstantial
    evidence.‖ 
    Rivas, 783 A.2d at 129
    . However, a defendant‘s mere presence on the
    premises where contraband is found or mere proximity to contraband is not enough
    to satisfy the test for constructive possession of the contraband. 
    Ramirez, 49 A.3d at 1249
    ; 
    Rivas, 783 A.2d at 130
    . ―Rather, there must be something more in the
    totality of the circumstances that — together with proximity and knowledge —
    establishes that the accused meant to exercise dominion or control over the
    [contraband].‖ 
    Rivas, 783 A.2d at 130
    . ―[P]roximity or association may establish
    a prima facie case of constructive possession if it is colored by evidence linking the
    accused to an ongoing criminal operation of which that possession is a part.‖
    Guishard v. United States, 
    669 A.2d 1306
    , 1312 (D.C. 1995) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). ―[A]cts evincing consciousness of guilt‖ may also provide the
    essential link between the appellant and the contraband. (Devenn) Smith v. United
    States, 
    899 A.2d 119
    , 122 (D.C. 2006). In general, a jury may ―infer that a person
    exercises constructive possession over items found in his home[,]‖ but this
    inference is ―plainly not as strong‖ and may be unwarranted where the defendant
    11
    shares the premises with other people. Moore v. United States, 
    927 A.2d 1040
    ,
    1050 (D.C. 2007).
    III.    Analysis
    Notwithstanding appellant‘s acquittal on the drug and drug paraphernalia
    charges, the evidence in this case was certainly sufficient to permit the jury to infer
    that appellant possessed the 53 bags of cocaine and the digital scale: They were in
    plain view, supporting an inference that he knew of them; and the evidence
    permitted the jury to find that he exercised dominion and control over the drugs by
    attempting to hide them from police and also to infer, from appellant‘s
    involvement with the drugs, that he intended to exercise dominion and control over
    the scale. ―Where knowledge and ability to exert control over contraband are
    shown, the additional evidence necessary to prove constructive possession is
    comparatively minimal.‖      
    Moore, 927 A.2d at 1050
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    However, even viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    government, as we must, we think a reasonable fact-finder must have been left
    12
    with reasonable doubt about whether appellant knew about the firearm and
    ammunition found hidden beneath clothing in the dresser drawer in the back
    bedroom and intended to exercise dominion and control over these items. Any
    inference of knowledge that might have been drawn from appellant‘s occupancy of
    the apartment was weakened because of the evidence that appellant shared the
    apartment with, or had given or yielded access to, several others. See In re R.G.,
    
    917 A.2d 643
    , 649 (D.C. 2007) (―[W]hen two or more people are occupying a
    place, a defendant‘s control over the place is not by itself enough to establish
    constructive possession of contraband found there.‖) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    Specifically, during the government‘s case-in-chief, the jury heard, or saw
    on the videotape, evidence that the nephew and Timothy Thomas were present in
    the ground-floor apartment along with appellant on the (early) morning of the
    search. The jury also heard Officer Cardinal‘s testimony that both men were ―in
    the search warrant,‖ from which they could infer that both men had a repeated if
    not regular presence in the apartment. The government‘s evidence (including the
    videotape) also established that the back bedroom had a door to the outside (that
    presumably would have enabled an individual to access the room without passing
    through the rest of the apartment). In addition, the jury heard Mason‘s testimony
    13
    for the defense that she and the nephew resided in the apartment, that each of them
    plus Timothy Thomas had stayed there the night before the search, that the nephew
    normally slept in the back bedroom, that the nephew and Timothy Thomas exited
    the apartment through the back bedroom when the police came; and that Caldwell
    had frequently and recently been in the apartment. The jury was not required to
    believe (and, for purposes of our analysis, we may not presume that they believed)
    any of Mason‘s testimony, but the foregoing testimony, uncontradicted, informs
    our view that, as to the firearm and ammunition, the government failed as a matter
    of law to prove appellant‘s knowledge and intent.6
    The evidence that appellant was in the back bedroom in his underclothes at
    the time police arrived and that he had been sleeping there established that he had a
    connection with the back bedroom, as did the fact that, without protest, he accepted
    and donned clothing and shoes that Officer Quigley retrieved from the back
    bedroom. But the clothing was found on a chair in the back bedroom, rather than
    6
    Cf. Curry v. United States, 
    520 A.2d 255
    , 262 (D.C. 1987) (concluding, in
    a case where police executing a search warrant at an apartment found several
    occupants and evidence of a drug-distribution operation, that the evidence was
    insufficient to sustain Curry‘s conviction for possession of a gun and ammunition
    that police found in her bedroom nightstand among her clothes, and relying on
    Curry‘s testimony and other defense evidence that she had lived in the apartment
    only sporadically and for only about two weeks, and that, at the time police
    arrived, she had been away from the apartment for several hours).
    14
    in a closet or in a drawer, a location consistent with Mason‘s claim that appellant
    did not usually occupy that room as his own.
    We have often found that evidence was sufficient to establish a defendant‘s
    constructive possession of contraband where the contraband was recovered in
    proximity to the defendant‘s personal items such as mail or personal papers,
    photographs, and identification cards.7 Here, however, there was no evidence that
    any mail or papers, photographs, wallet, identification cards, or any other personal
    effects linked to appellant were found in the back bedroom where the gun and
    ammunition were found. The videotape shows, sitting on a shelf in the back
    7
    See, e.g., (Tamara) Smith v. United States, 
    55 A.3d 884
    , 885–86 (D.C.
    2012) (evidence sufficed to establish defendant‘s constructive possession of a
    firearm found in a backpack, where the backpack was found next to the
    defendant‘s bed near a photograph of defendant, defendant‘s identification cards
    were in the pocket of a pair of shorts on the bed, and mail addressed to the
    defendant was in a file cabinet in the bedroom closet); 
    Ramirez, 49 A.3d at 1250
    (defendant‘s constructive possession of cocaine was proven where police found the
    cocaine in a pair of pants in a closet containing mail addressed to the defendant and
    photographs of the defendant, and the closet was near a bed that the appellant
    admitted to sleeping on); 
    Moore, 927 A.2d at 1051
    (evidence sufficed to prove
    defendant‘s constructive possession of contraband where the contraband was found
    in the apartment‘s only bedroom, ―lying in plain view next to [the defendant‘s]
    personal papers.‖); 
    Guishard, 669 A.2d at 1311
    (defendant‘s constructive
    possession of a firearm was proven where the firearm was found in a dresser
    drawer and atop the dresser were two traffic tickets issued to the defendant and two
    medical bills addressed to him).
    15
    bedroom, a wallet with slots containing numerous papers or cards, but the
    government offered no evidence about the contents of the wallet, and — without
    contradiction — Mason testified that the wallet belonged to the nephew. Mason
    also testified without contradiction that the clothing in the drawer where the gun
    and ammunition were found belonged to the nephew. For its part, the government
    presented no evidence about the size or type of clothing found in the drawer, an
    omission that is particularly notable since the evidence established that appellant is
    a large man (defense counsel described him as ―obese‖ in her opening statement),
    while the other men who were found in the apartment and were named in the
    search warrant are much smaller men,8 who (it can reasonably be assumed) would
    have worn clothing much smaller than appellant could have worn.
    Drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the government, we take
    appellant‘s stance with his back to the door and his apparent effort to hide a
    distribution quantity of zipper bags after police, shouting loudly, entered the
    apartment with a battering ram, as evidence of his involvement with ongoing
    8
    We say this based on the videotape. Cf. Scott v. Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    ,
    380-381 (2007) (explaining that although the court of appeals, in reviewing a grant
    of summary judgment, was required to view the facts in the light most favorable to
    the nonmoving party, the court also ―should have viewed the facts in the light
    depicted by the videotape‖ that was part of the summary judgment record).
    16
    criminal drug activity and of his consciousness of guilt of something. But the jury
    would have had to speculate to conclude that he demonstrated guilty knowledge of
    the gun and ammunition in the drawer. We do not think that inferences that
    appellant (1) knew of the presence of the firearm and ammunition hidden beneath
    someone‘s clothing in the drawer and (2) intended to exercise dominion and
    control over them are reasonable inferences from the limited evidence the
    government presented. The prosecutor argued in closing that appellant ―knew
    where that gun was‖ because ―[i]t was his dresser, his clothes in it‖ and referred to
    ―that dresser where he keeps his things, his clothes,‖ but there actually was no
    evidence presented that the dresser (or the closet in the back bedroom) contained
    clothing belonging to appellant.
    The government relies heavily on our case law recognizing that proximity to
    contraband may establish a prima facie case of constructive possession if there is
    also evidence linking the defendant ―to an ongoing criminal operation of which
    that possession is a part.‖ 
    Guishard, 669 A.2d at 1312
    (emphasis added). Its
    reliance is not entirely misplaced.    Undisputedly, there was evidence linking
    appellant to an ―ongoing criminal (drug distribution) operation‖; the jury‘s
    verdict‘s acquitting appellant of the possession-with-intent-to-distribute-cocaine
    17
    charge ―does not show that they were not convinced of [his] guilt‖9 of that charge.
    However, evidence that a defendant was ―found [during the execution of a search
    warrant] to be involved in . . . illegal activity consisting of drug distribution‖ is not
    necessarily enough to show that ―the loaded pistol [found in a bedroom during the
    search] was part of that operation‖ when ―there were . . . others present in the
    apartment when the gun was found.‖ Curry, 
    520 A.2d 255
    , 265-66 (D.C. 1987)
    (holding that the evidence that appellants Jones and Washington were found in the
    living room of the apartment with drugs and other evidence of drug distribution did
    ―not permit a reasonable mind to fairly conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that
    either Jones or Washington, or both, knew of the existence of a loaded pistol in the
    bedroom nightstand,‖ because appellant Curry, ―amongst whose personal
    belongings the weapon was apparently found, or any of the three others
    present during the raid could have placed the loaded pistol in the bedroom
    nightstand unbeknownst to‖ Jones and Washington).10
    9
    Mayfield v. United States, 
    659 A.2d 1249
    , 1255 (D.C. 1995).
    10
    Nor did the evidence in Curry that ―the loaded pistol was found in the
    bedroom nightstand amongst [Curry‘s] clothes,‖ and that packets of heroin were
    found in the bedroom dresser on top of which there were items of identification
    belonging to her, lead to a conclusion that the evidence sufficed to convict her of
    possession of the gun and ammunition, because ―a reasonable mind must concede
    the reasonable possibility that . . . any of the three others found in the midst of [the]
    drug distribution operation could have placed the weapon in the bedroom
    unbeknownst to its occupant.‖ Curry, 520 A.2d. at 259-60, 262, 265 (so reasoning
    (continued…)
    18
    Moreover, while we must assume the jury credited Detective Thomas‘s
    testimony about the ―many instances where we find firearms in conjunction to
    narcotics,‖ Detective Thomas did not testify that the co-presence of drugs and
    firearms was inevitable, or invariable, or even usual. Rather, Detective Thomas
    testified that ―[s]ometimes drug dealers have been victimized‖ and that ―[s]ome
    dealers want to possess a weapon as a form of protection.‖          His generalized
    testimony about what ―sometimes‖ occurs did little to make an inference that
    appellant knew of the gun and ammunition less speculative.11
    (…continued)
    notwithstanding Curry‘s acknowledgment that, to her knowledge, ―nobody else
    slept there or used the bedroom‖).
    11
    Detective Thomas‘s testimony was more tentative than expert testimony
    about the link between drugs and guns that has been given in some other cases.
    See, e.g., United States v. Bruce, 
    939 F.2d 1053
    , 1054 (D.C. 1991) (referring to
    ―expert testimony that ―in today‘s operations drugs and guns go hand in hand‘‖);
    Hinnant v. United States, 
    520 A.2d 292
    , 293 (D.C. 1987) (D.C. 1989) (noting that
    the expert testified that a drug seller in the circumstances described in the case
    ―would be likely to carry a gun to avoid being robbed‖); Curry v. United States,
    
    520 A.2d 255
    , 265 (D.C. 1987) (reasoning that expert testimony that drug dealers
    ―typically‖ set up a security system to protect a house where drugs are sold ―did
    not permit a blanket inference that a gun [found in the house] . . . comprised such a
    security system‖).
    19
    ―Reasonable doubt is a doubt arising from the evidence, or from a lack of
    evidence, after consideration of all the evidence.‖ Bishop v. United States, 
    107 F.2d 297
    , 303 (D.C. Cir. 1939) (emphasis added). ―The reasonable doubt standard
    of proof requires the factfinder ‗to reach a subjective state of near certitude of the
    guilt of the accused.‘‖ 
    Rivas, 783 A.2d at 133
    (quoting 
    Jackson, 443 U.S. at 315
    ).
    For us to conclude that the evidence permitted the jury to find beyond a reasonable
    doubt that appellant constructively possessed the gun and ammunition, it is not
    enough that the evidence taken in the light most favorable to the government
    supported an inference that he ―might have [known of and] intended to exercise
    dominion and control over the weapon, or even that it is more likely than not that
    []he had such [knowledge and] intent.‖ 
    R.G., 917 A.2d at 648-49
    . To be sure, the
    government was not required to negate all possibilities that appellant was innocent
    of the gun and ammunition possession charges. But the prosecution‘s total failure
    to present evidence of the kind discussed in the paragraphs above (i.e., evidence
    that might have established who owned the wallet found in the back bedroom and
    who could wear the clothes found in the dresser drawer) persuades us that the
    evidence as a whole was not ―enough to establish beyond a reasonable doubt -- the
    most exacting standard of proof known to our law -- that [appellant] had the
    necessary personal relationship to the weapon and ammunition‖12 for his
    12
    In re T.M., 
    577 A.2d 1149
    , 1153 (D.C. 1990).
    20
    convictions to be sustained. Accordingly, we concluded that his convictions must
    be, and they are hereby,
    Reversed.
    1
    2
    3
    4         WAGNER, Senior Judge, dissenting: Viewing the evidence ―‗in the light
    5   most favorable to government, giving full play to the right of the jury to determine
    6   credibility, weigh the evidence, and draw justifiable inferences of fact . . . ,‘‖ as we
    7   must, the evidence was sufficient to sustain appellant‘s convictions. Moore v.
    8   United States, 
    927 A.2d 1040
    , 1049 (D.C. 2007) (quoting Curry v. United States,
    9   
    520 A.2d 255
    , 263 (D.C. 1987)) (restating our oft repeated standard of review for
    10   testing evidentiary sufficiency). Only by crediting evidence and making inferences
    11   that the jury apparently rejected in this case can the majority conclude otherwise.
    12   Such an analysis is inconsistent with our well-established precedents. Although
    13   true, as the majority states, that in applying our familiar standard, courts have
    14   recognized that ―we must consider all of the evidence including that favorable to
    15   the defendant,‖ the principle remains that ―the government is entitled to all
    16   reasonable inferences.‖ United States v. Rapone, 
    327 U.S. App. D.C. 338
    , 347,
    17   
    131 F.3d 188
    , 197 (1997) (Silberman, J., concurring) (citing Jackson v. Virginia,
    18   
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979), for the proposition that ―upon judicial review all of the
    21
    1   evidence is to be considered in the light most favorable to the prosecution‖).
    2   Further, while recognizing that the reviewing court must consider ―the evidence
    3   taken as a whole, including that offered by the defendant,‖ in United States v. Grey
    4   Bear, cited by the majority, the court also made clear that it is the jury‘s province
    5   to make credibility determinations and resolve evidentiary conflicts that in turn are
    6   viewed in the light most favorable to the government. 
    828 F.2d 1286
    , 1292 (8th
    7   Cir. 1987), vacated in part on other grounds, 
    836 F.2d 1088
    (8th Cir. 1987). Put
    8   another way, ―[i]n general, a sufficiency challenge is to be evaluated in light of all
    9   the evidence adduced at trial, including any inculpatory evidence presented in the
    10   defense case, even if the government‘s evidence by itself would have been
    11   insufficient to sustain the conviction.‖ 
    Moore, supra
    , 927 A.2d at 1049 (emphasis
    12   added). As this court has stated repeatedly, ―[w]e must deem the proof of guilt
    13   sufficient if, ‗after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    14   prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the
    15   crime beyond a reasonable doubt.‘‖ 
    Id. (emphasis in
    original) (quoting Rivas v.
    16   United States, 
    783 A.2d 125
    , 134 (D.C. 2001)) (en banc) (quoting Jackson v.
    17   Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979)). When these well-established principles are
    18   applied to the facts of the present case, it is clear that the evidence was sufficient
    19   for a reasonable juror to find that appellant constructively possessed the handgun
    22
    1   and ammunition that the police found in a dresser drawer inside his residence
    2   where he was shown to be engaged in a drug operation.
    3
    4         Briefly stated, in the light most favorable to the government, the evidence
    5   showed that appellant actually resided in the two-bedroom apartment where the
    6   contraband was found.1 The jury may infer that ―a person exercises constructive
    7   possession over items found in his home‖ and that, although not as strong, the
    8   inference applies even when the person shares the premises with another. See
    9   
    Moore, supra
    , 927 A.2d at 1050 (citation omitted). At 7:00 a.m., when the police
    10   entered the smaller bedroom where the testimony showed appellant had slept the
    11   night before, he was standing in his underwear in close proximity to the dresser
    12   where the weapon and ammunition were found.             There was testimony that
    13   appellant‘s fianceé and the child slept in the larger front bedroom and that the
    14   closet in that room contained only women‘s and children‘s clothing, while the
    15   smaller bedroom contained men‘s clothing. Later, a police detective retrieved a
    16   shirt and pants from the back bedroom that appellant, a remarkably large person,
    17   put on. When the police found appellant, he was facing away and appeared to be
    1
    Appellant‘s fianceé, Valene Mason, testified that she lived in the
    apartment with appellant and their young daughter. A video taken of the apartment
    showed a family photograph of appellant, a woman, and child on the living room
    wall.
    23
    1   hiding something. When he complied with an order to show his hands, appellant
    2   dropped a man‘s white shoe that contained fifty-three green zip-lock bags filled
    3   with a substance later determined to be crack cocaine. See Smith v. United States,
    4   
    899 A.2d 119
    , 122 (D.C. 2006) (holding that additional evidence that can prove the
    5   knowledge and intent elements of constructive possession includes ―evidence
    6   linking the accused to an ongoing criminal operation of which possession is a
    7   part,‖ attempts to hide evidence, and other actions showing consciousness of guilt).
    8   A digital scale was on the windowsill in plain view. The weapon and ammunition
    9   were found in a dresser drawer in that room, along with numerous empty, pink zip-
    10   lock bags. An expert witness testified that drugs and guns are often found together
    11   and that some drug dealers use firearms to protect themselves from robbers. He
    12   also testified about the packaging of illegal drugs in small, plastic ziplock bags, the
    13   use of a particular color of ziplock to identify the ―brand‖ of drugs, and the use of
    14   digital scales by drug dealers to weigh drugs for sale. From this evidence, it was
    15   reasonable for the jury to conclude that appellant was engaged in an illegal drug
    16   operation of which possession of the weapon and ammunition were a part. See
    17   Guishard v. United States, 
    669 A.2d 1306
    , 1313 (D.C. 1995) (holding that,
    18   although not in plain view, the proximity of the gun in the room where defendants
    19   sold drugs was sufficient to permit the jury to infer they had convenient access and
    20   thus dominion and control over the weapon so as to establish constructive
    24
    1   possession.) As the cited cases show, we have held evidence like that presented in
    2   this case to be sufficient to prove that a defendant had constructive possession of a
    3   weapon and ammunition. See, e.g., 
    Guishard, supra
    , 669 A.2d at 1313.
    4
    5         Although Ms. Mason testified that appellant usually slept on the couch, that
    6   her nephew resided in the apartment, that except for the night before the raid the
    7   nephew usually slept in the back bedroom, that the wallet in the bedroom and
    8   clothing in the bedroom drawer belonged to her nephew, and that a drug dealer had
    9   brought a gun into the apartment, the jury was not required to credit this evidence.
    10   In assessing credibility, the jury is allowed to consider, among other things,
    11   whether a witness has any motive for not telling the truth and whether there are
    12   inconsistencies between the witness‘ testimony and other evidence in the case. In
    13   that connection, the jury was allowed to consider here that Ms. Mason‘s
    14   relationship with appellant might have given her a motive to provide him with
    15   exculpatory testimony. Further, her testimony that appellant stored his clothing in
    16   the front bedroom was inconsistent with Detective Quigley‘s testimony that she
    17   observed only female and a child‘s clothing in that closet, a matter that the jury
    18   could consider in deciding the extent to which to believe the witness. Given the
    19   jury‘s verdict, it is apparent that the jurors chose not to credit some of the evidence
    20   that might have been favorable to appellant and to infer from other credible
    25
    1   evidence that appellant was linked to the weapon and ammunition found in the
    2   drawer.
    3
    4         In challenges to evidentiary sufficiency, our standard of review requires us
    5   to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the government and to give ―full
    6   play‖ to the right of the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses, to weigh
    7   the evidence, to resolve any conflicts in the evidence, and to draw from the proven
    8   facts such reasonable inferences as the jury deems appropriate. See 
    Moore, supra
    ,
    
    9 927 A.2d at 1049
    (citing 
    Curry, supra
    , 520 A.2d at 263). Applying that standard
    10   to the evidence in this case, a rational fact finder could find the essential elements
    11   of the offenses of conviction beyond a reasonable doubt. See 
    id. Even if
    Ms.
    12   Mason‘s nephew and the other man named in the search warrant who were found
    13   hiding on a ledge outside the apartment‘s back door were also involved in the drug
    14   operation, the evidence was still sufficient to show that appellant possessed the
    15   weapon either solely or jointly with others. See 
    Guishard, supra
    , 669 A.2d at 1313
    16   (holding that ―circumstantial evidence linking both appellants‖ to the gun hidden in
    17   a drawer ―as well as to the drugs and other contraband found in the [shared]
    18   apartment‖ was sufficient to establish constructive possession).
    19
    26
    1            For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent from the opinion of the
    2   court.
    3