State v. Murray ( 2017 )


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  • IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    STATE OF DELAWARE, )
    )
    )
    v. ) I.D. No. 1602007591
    )
    )
    IMEIR MURRAY, )
    )
    Defendant. )
    Submitted: October 25, 2016
    Decided: January 11, 2017
    Opinion ISsued: April 13, 2017
    OPINION
    Upon Defendant Imeir Murray ’s Motion to Dismiss,
    DENIED.
    Cynthia F. Hurlock, Deputy Attorney General, Department of Justice, Wilmington,
    Delaware, Attorney for the State of Delaware.
    Colleen E. Durkin, Esquire, and Matthew C. Buckworth, Esquire, Collins &
    Associates, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Defendant Imeir Murray.
    WALLACE, J.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    Just over a year ago, Delaware decriminalized the act of possessing a small
    quantity of marijuana for personal use. This motion, brought by a criminal
    defendant arrested shortly after that enactment, brings to the f``ore some
    underexamined (or, more likely, some wholly unanticipated) consequences of that
    change.
    II. STATUTORY BACKGROUND:
    DELAWARE’s FAsT-CHANGING DRUG LAwsl
    In 2011, at the urging of the Drug Law Revisions Committee, Delaware
    repealed significant portions of its extant criminal drug code and replaced it with
    laws creating three main drug crimes.2 The least serious drug offenses - those
    prohibiting simple possession of controlled substances were: (1) re-written;
    (2) enumerated as Sections 4763 and 4764 of`` Title 16; (3) placed within the
    original jurisdiction of`` the Court of Common Pleas; and, (4) assigned the lowest
    criminal penalties.3
    l For simplicity’s sake, the statutory history recounted here and referenced throughout this
    Opinion will speak only to the changes made and the present statutory language applicable to
    adults who violate Delaware’s marijuana and firearms laws.
    2 See Del. H.B 19 syn., 146th Gen. Assem., 78 Del. Laws ch. 13 (2011).
    3 See 
    id. (noting the
    new drug laws classified “the simplest form of unlawful [drug]
    possession"’ _ i.e., those defined in the new 
    16 Del. C
    . §§ 4763(a) & 4764(b) - as Delaware’s
    lowest grade misdemeanors); ia'. at § 58 (stating simple possession of`` any controlled substance
    other than marijuana became a class B misdemeanor); ia’. at § 61 (stating simple possession of
    marijuana became an unclassified misdemeanor).
    _2-
    That same 2011 Act also introduced a new felony to the Delaware Criminal
    Code. That crime defined a brand-new set of persons prohibited from possessing
    or controlling certain weapons:
    Any person, if the deadly weapon is a semi-automatic or
    automatic firearm, or a handgun, who, at the same time,
    possesses a controlled substance in violation of § 4763,
    or § 4764 of rule 16.4
    As the rather simple language manifests, this statute created this new low-grade
    felony “for a person who possesses a handgun or semi-automatic or automatic
    firearm at the same time as the person possesses a controlled substance.”5
    Four years later, Delaware reduced the penalties for simple possession of
    marijuana even further. The provisions outlawing the illicit possession of
    marijuana were: (1) again re-written; (2) still enumerated as Section 4764 of Title
    16; (3) conferred split original jurisdiction between the Court of Common Pleas
    and the Justice of the Peace Court; and, (4) assigned the lowest criminal
    misdemeanor and civil violation status.6 As applicable to this case, the law now
    4 
    Id. at §
    5 (codified at ll Del. C. § l448(a)(9) (2011) [hereinafter “PFBPP”]).
    
    Id. at syn.
    6 See Del. H.B. 39 syn., l48th Gen. Assem., 80 Del. Laws ch. 38 (2015); 
    id. at §
    2
    (creating new civil violation for possession of less than an ounce of marijuana for personal use
    and leaving that offense within § 4764 of Title 16); ia’. at § 5 (conferring original jurisdiction
    over criminal marijuana possession offense to the Court of Common Pleas and original
    jurisdiction over civil marijuana possession violation to the Justice of the Peace Court).
    _3_
    provides:
    Any person 18 years of age or older, but under 21 years
    of age, who [knowingly or intentionally possesses
    1 ounce or less of marijuana in the form of leaf
    marijuana] shall be assessed a civil penalty of 8100 for
    the first offense . . . .7
    When simple possession of marijuana became a civil offense, no change was made
    to the 2011 PFBPP statute prohibiting a person from possessing a handgun and a
    controlled substance at the same time.
    It is against this backdrop that the Court examines the viability of the two
    indicted offenses that Defendant Imeir Murray faces.
    III. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On February 11, 2016, Imeir Murray was asleep in his bedroom of his
    family’s apartment when law enforcement came to execute an arrest warrant for
    his mother. A subsequent search of Murray’s bedroom revealed two caches of
    marijuana One was in his dresser; the other was on a lower shelf of his closet,
    mere feet from his head as he slept. On an upper shelf of that same closet was a
    loaded semi-automatic handgun. Police arrested Murray that day.
    Murray was indicted by the Grand Jury for one count of possession of a
    firearm by a person prohibited and one count of possession of marijuana as an
    7 DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 16, § 4764(c) (2015) (defining the offense of simple possession of
    marijuana and setting forth its classification, when a first offense, as a civil violation); 
    id. at §
    4701(33) (defining “personal use quantity” and “leaf marijuana”).
    _4_
    unclassified misdemeanor offense, At that time, it was believed that the marijuana
    weighed more than an ounce.8
    After Murray’s arrest and indictment, the State’s drug lab report confirmed
    that the substance seized from Murray’s bedroom was indeed marijuana. That
    report also showed that the total drug weight of both caches was 22.63 grams.9
    Under Delaware law, one ounce10 of “leaf marijuana” or less is deemed a “personal
    use quantity” of marijuana. And now, under Delaware law, the simple possession
    of a personal use quantity of marijuana is a civil, not criminal, offense,ll
    lt is undisputed that the amount of marijuana found in Murray’s room
    exposes him to, at most, a civil marijuana possession violation. lt is disputed what
    8 See Indictment, State v. Murray, I.D. No. 1602007591 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 25, 2016)
    (D.I. 14) (charging Murray with PFBPP, a felony, pursuant to ll Del. C. § l448(a)(9) and
    misdemeanor possession of marijuana under 
    16 Del. C
    . § 4764(b)); St.’s Resp., State v. Murray,
    I.D. No. 1602007591, at l n.l (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. ll, 2016) (the preliminary estimated weight
    of the marijuana seized was 30 grams).
    9 See Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss Ex. A., State v. Murray, I.D. No. 1602007591 (Del. Super. Ct.
    Sept. 8, 2016).
    10 One ounce is equal to approximately 28.35 grams. See WEBSTER’s ENCYCLOPEDIC
    UNABRIDGED chrloNARY oF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE, Weights and Measures Table (1996)
    (showing 28.35 grams are the metric system equivalent of the one U.S. ounce). Without doubt,
    this weight conversion also applies to leaf marijuana See Marl``juana Weight: Grams, Quarters
    and Ounces Explained, STUFF STONERS LIKE, http://stuffstonerslike.com/2016/01/marijuana-
    weight-grams-quarters-and-ounces-explained/ (last visited Apr. 12, 2017).
    “ See DEL. CODE ANN. rit. 16, §§ 4764(¢), 4701(33) (2015).
    _5_
    legal effect that fact has on the two charges for which Murray was indicted and
    faces trial in this Court.12
    IV. DISCUSSION
    Murray suggests that his two indicted charges should be dismissed as a
    matter of law. First, as to the possession of marijuana count, Murray argues that
    because the weight of the drug actually recovered qualifies only as a “personal use
    quantity,” he committed only a civil violation and the indicted drug count should
    be “dismissed” here. Second, as to the PFBPP count, Murray argues that the
    weapons possession statute wasn’t intended to be applied in connection with a civil
    violation quantity of marijuana. So, he contends, his second indicted charge
    should also be dismissed Murray is wrong on both counts.
    A. MURRAY ls NoT DUE OUTRIGHT DIsMIssAL oN THE PossEssIoN oF
    MARIJUANA CoUNT; RATHER, HE FACEs PoTENTIAL LIABILITY FoR A
    CIvIL VIoLATIoN UNDER TITLE 16, SECTIoN 4764(c).
    ln Count ll of his indictment, Murray was charged with marijuana
    possession as a criminal misdemeanor under 
    16 Del. C
    . § 4764(b). lt turned out,
    however, that the later lab report revealed he may only be liable for marijuana
    possession as a civil violation under 
    16 Del. C
    . § 4764(c). When the statutory
    creature of a “violation” subject only to a “civil penalty” was born into Delaware’s
    12 Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss 2_3; St.’s Resp. 2.
    _6_
    criminal and drug codes, it was, unfortunately, not concomitantly framed a
    statutory (or other) procedural home in which to dwell.13
    There have since been efforts by some Delaware courts to build the structure
    needed, but it has become increasingly clear that there is little solid footing.14 So
    3715
    how does this Court accommodate a “civil violation that arrives via indictment,
    '3 see, e.g., Dei. s.B. 63, i43d Gen. Assem., 75 Del. Laws ch. 204 (2005) (adding a new
    chapter the Delaware Motor Vehicle Code to provide a framework for enforcing civil trq}jic
    offenses) (emphasis added).
    14 See Preface, Del. J.P. Ct. Civ. Viol. R. (adopted June l, 2013) (“Statutory violations
    which result in civil penalties present the Justice of the Peace Court with unique issues.
    Although the penalty imposed for a violation of these statutes is civil, the process by which the
    penalty is acquired and processed is similar to that of criminal matters. These unique
    circumstances are addressed by the following rules.”). Other states too offer little consistent
    guidance on procedural issues for civil violations, such as the appropriate charging instruments,
    burden of proof, joinder with criminal matters, etc. See also MD. CODE ANN., LOCAL GOV’T §
    11-207 (West 2013) (providing that for a Maryland “civil infraction,” the defendant may be
    found guilty or not guilty, “the court shall apply the evidentiary standards provided by law for
    the trial of a criminal case”, and “the burden of proof is the same as required by law in the trial of
    a criminal case.”); 
    id. at §
    11-211 (stating that in Maryland, the “[a]djudication of a civil
    infraction is not a criminal conviction for any purpose.”); MICH. COMP. LAWS ANN. § 600.8821
    (West 2016) (ln Michigan, after a “formal hearing,” a judge “determines by a preponderance of
    the evidence that the defendant is responsible for a state civil infraction. . . .”); ia'. at § 600.8827
    (a Michigan state civil infraction “is not a lesser included offense of a criminal offense.”); N.J.
    Ct. R. 3:15-3(a) (stating “the court shall join any pending non-indictable complaint for trial with
    a criminal offense based on the same conduct or arising from the same episode” and a New
    Jersey Superior Court judge “shall sit as a municipal court judge” simultaneously with the jury
    hearing the criminal charge but renders the verdict him- or herself with the respect to the
    infraction based on the trial evidence, or on evidence heard outside the jury’s presence if
    necessary); WASH. REV. CODE ANN. § 7.80.070 (West 2006) (stating a notice of civil infraction
    in Washington represents a determination that a civil infraction has been committed and that
    determination is final unless contested); 
    id. at §
    7.80.100 (stating in Washington, “[a] hearing
    held for the purpose of contesting the determination that a civil infraction has been committed
    shall be without a jury” and the burden is upon the state “to establish the commission of the civil
    infraction by a preponderance of the evidence.”).
    15 The situation of having no statutory definition of “civil violation” in Delaware’s criminal
    or drug codes is made only worse by the mixing in of terms that are clearly defined elsewhere in
    those codes and applicable to crimes and criminal procedure. E.g., DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 16, §
    _7_
    information, or, as here, legal happenstance? With the only blueprint it has: its
    own Criminal Rule 57(d).16
    Delaware statutory law and this Court’s rules provide for the consideration
    of an included offense by a jury or judge when the State’s evidence is insufficient
    to prove the originally indicted offense.17 ln turn,
    A defendant may be convicted of an offense included in
    an offense charged in the indictment or information. An
    offense is so included when . . . [i]t is established by
    proof of the same or less than all the facts required to
    establish the commission of the offense charged. 111
    4764 (2015) (dubbing possession of marijuana under § 4764(0) a “civil violation”); 
    id. at §
    4764(0) (providing that an individual like Murray would be “assessed a civil penalty of 8100
    for the first offense”) (emphasis added); 
    id. at §
    4764(0) (referring to the proscription in 
    16 Del. C
    . § 4764(c) as “a civil offense” and later requiring payment within a certain time “of final
    adjudication of the violation”) (emphasis added); ia’. at tit. 11, § 233(a) (defining an “offense” as
    synonymous with “crime” and that it is “an act or omission forbidden by a statute of this State
    and punishable upon conviction by . . . imprisonment . . . fine . . . or [o]ther penal discipline)
    (emphasis added); ia’. at tit. 11, § 233(c) (noting that a kind of “offense” is a “violation”)
    (emphasis added).
    16 Del. Super. Ct. Crim. R. 57(d) (“Procedure Not Provided. ln all cases not provided for by
    rule or administrative order, the court shall regulate its practice in accordance with the applicable
    Superior Court civil rule or in any lawful manner not inconsistent with these rules or the rules of
    the Supreme Court.”) (emphasis added).
    17 see stare v. Cex, 
    851 A.2d 1269
    , 1274-75 (Del. 2003) (explaining Delaware’s lesser
    included doctrine and procedures for jury trials); Ramsey v. State, 
    996 A.2d 782
    , 784-86 (Del.
    2010) (explaining the same for bench trials).
    18 DEL. CODE ANN. tit. ll, § 206(b)(1) (2015). See also Del. Super. Ct. Crim. R. 31(0)
    (“Conviction of lncluded Offense. The defendant may be found guilty of an offense included in
    the offense charged in accordance with 
    11 Del. C
    . § 206.”); Wara’ v. State, 
    575 A.2d 1156
    , 1158
    (Del. 1990) (“A defendant may be convicted of a crime for which he has not been indicted if all
    of the elements of that crime are included in the definition of the crime with which he has been
    charged.”).
    And, by virtue of its return, “a defendant is . . . on notice of all lesser-
    9919
    included offenses under an offense charged in an indictment While his is now a
    lesser-included civil violation, Murray has been no less “on notice” that a liability
    finding for that possession of marijuana violation was possible. That this has been
    determined pre-trial is of no moment.
    “Leave to amend an indictment to state a lesser-included offense is a matter
    ”20 Superior Court Criminal Rule 7(e)
    within this Court’s discretion to permit.
    pennits such an amendment “if no additional or different offense is charged and if
    substantial rights of the defendant are not prejudiced.”21 Because Murray was
    already on notice of potential lesser-included offenses of the indicted marijuana
    possession crime, he is hardly prejudiced by amendment of the indictment to
    charge the civil violation and proceedings on that civil violation.22 “Dismissal” of
    the marijuana offense is not required.
    '9 stare v. Gressberg, 
    1998 WL 278391
    , at * 1 (Del. super. Ct. Apr. 13, 1998).
    20 Gressberg, 
    1998 WL 278391
    , ar * 1 (eirarien emitted).
    21 Del. Super. Ct. Crim. R. 7(e).
    22 For the reasons mentioned above, how precisely to proceed on that civil violation is a
    thorny issue still to be resolved by the Court and counsel. See, e.g., supra notes 14 & 15. That
    issue, however, need not be resolved in this Opinion.
    _9_
    B. UNDER THE PLAIN REAI)ING oF TITLE 11, SECTIoN 1448(a)(9), ONE
    CANNoT PossEss A SEMI-AUToMATIC HANDGUN AND MARIJUANA,
    REGARDLEss oF THE AMoUNT, “AT THE SAME TIME.” IF THIs
    STATUTORY PROHIBITION Is To BE ELIMINATED, IT ls UP To THE
    GENERAL AssEMBLY, NoT THIs CoURT, To Do So.
    ln Count l of the indictment, Murray is charged under 
    11 Del. C
    .
    § 1448(a)(9). This prohibits the possession of a firearm by “[a]ny person, if the
    deadly weapon is a semi-automatic or automatic firearm, or a handgun, who, at the
    same time, possesses a controlled substance in violation of § 4763, or§ 4764 of
    Title 16.”23 Murray argues that because he possessed a “personal use quantity”, he
    cannot be found guilty under the PFBPP statute. Not so.
    As our Supreme Court recently reminded,
    [W]e do not sit as an iiberlegislature to eviscerate proper
    legislative enactments lt is beyond the province of the
    courts to question the policy or wisdom of an otherwise
    valid law. Rather we must take and apply the law as we
    find it, leaving any desirable changes to the General
    Assembly.24
    Murray doesn’t agree. He thinks that this Court should ignore the plain language
    of an undoubtedly properly enacted criminal statute, because in his view the
    General Assembly “could not possibly have contemplated” and “would have never
    imagined a scenario” where one’s illegal possession of marijuana - now a civil
    23 DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 11, § 1148(3)(9) (2015).
    24 sheehan v. obzares of s¢. aneis de sales, 
    15 A.3d 1247
    , 1259 (Dei. 2011) (eiratien
    omitted).
    _10_
    offense - could prohibit one from simultaneously possessing a semi-automatic
    handgun.25
    “The role of the judiciary in interpreting a statute is to determine and give
    ”26 When the statute itself is unambiguous, then its
    effect to the legislature’s intent.
    plain language controls.27 “ln that instance, a court must apply the statutory
    language to the facts of the case before it.”28 The words of 
    11 Del. C
    .
    § 1448(a)(9) are plain and simple. As such, this Court’s only job is to apply the
    literal words of the statute to the facts of Murray’s case.29
    Eleven Del. C. § 1448(a)(9) prohibits simultaneous possession of a firearm
    and a controlled substance. Mere simultaneous possession of both items is all that
    . . . . 30
    1s requlred for a conv1ction under the statute.
    25 Def.’s Reply 2.
    26 Ross v. Staie, 
    990 A.2d 424
    , 428 (Del. 2010) (citing LeVan v. Indepena’ence Mall, Inc.,
    
    940 A.2d 929
    , 932 (Del. 2007)).
    22 see rn re Adep¢ien efswansen, 
    623 A.2d 1095
    , 1096-97 (Del. 1993) (“lfrhe statute as s
    whole is unambiguous and there is no reasonable doubt as to the meaning of the words used, the
    court’s role is limited to an application of the literal meaning of those words.”); Hoover v. State,
    
    958 A.2d 816
    , 819 (Del. 2008) (“lf the language of the statute is unambiguous, the plain meaning
    of the words controls.”) (citing lngrarn v. Thorpe, 
    747 A.2d 545
    , 547 (Del. 2000)).
    28 Ress, 990 A.2d, 61428.
    29 see Disiefane v. Warsen, 566 A.2d1,4(De1. 1989).
    30 see ran rim v. s¢a¢e, 
    2016 WL 4978436
    , at *3 (Del. sept 16, 2016) (noting that it is
    drug possession that is the required element of ll Del. C. § 1448(a)(9), not operating a drug lab
    or manufacturing the subject drug) (emphasis added), ajj"g State v. Van Vliet, 
    2015 WL 5554058
    , at * 1 (Del. Super. Ct. Sept. 18, 2015) (distinguishing between manufacturing and
    _11_
    Still, Murray argues, his alleged possession of a “personal use quantity”
    cannot render him a person prohibited under § 1448(a)(9) because the drug
    possession statutes were recently amended to “decriminalize the possession or
    ”31 that possessory act, in his
    private use of a personal use quantity of marijuana;
    case, is now only a civil violation with a financial penalty.32 Even so, possession
    of marijuana in any amount, a “personal use quantity” or not, remains illegal under
    Delaware law. ln fact, it still remains an act “in violation of . . . § 4764 of Title
    16.”33
    To gain a PFBPP conviction, the State need only prove that Murray
    possessed both the handgun and the marijuana at the same time. Murray correctly
    points out that the language of 
    11 Del. C
    . § 1448(a)(9) was added to the statute in
    2011 during Delaware’s drug law revisions.34 Murray incorrectly concludes that
    possessing a controlled substance and finding that it is drug possession only that need be proven
    under ll Del. C. § 1448(a)(9)).
    3' Dei. H.B. 39 syn., 148ih Gen. Assem., 80 Del. Laws eh. 38 (2015).
    32 See DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 16, § 4764(c) (2015) (“Any person [who knowingly or
    intentionally possesses a personal use quantity of a controlled substance or a counterfeit
    controlled substance classified in § 4714(d)(l9) of this title, except as otherwise authorized by
    this chapter] shall be assessed a civil penalty of 8100 for the first offense . . . .”).
    33 see DEL. CODE ANN. iii. 11, § 1448(a)(9) (2015) (quaiifyirig erie as a person prohibited
    from possessing a semi-automatic firearm or a handgun when he, at the same time, possesses a
    controlled substance “in violation of § 4763, or § 4764 of Title 16.”).
    34 see Del. H.B. 19 syn., 146th Gen. Assem., 78 Del. Laws eh. 13 (2011).
    _12_
    this change meant that “the new (a)(9) section was developed to criminalize drug
    dealing while in possession of a gun” alone, not mere simultaneous possession of
    both items.35 The plain language of the statute requires only simple (but illicit)
    possession of a controlled substance. And that is just what the State alleges here.
    Undeterred, Murray goes on to assert that “[t]o prosecute individuals who
    are allegedly in possession of a firearm while committing a civil violation of
    marijuana possession is clearly not consistent with the General Assembly’s intent
    when it drafted ll Del. C. § 1448(a)(9).”36 Because there was no such thing as a
    civil marijuana violation when that PFBPP provision was first introduced, the
    General Assembly certainly could have had no such intent then. But a court looks
    behind the statutory language only if the statute is ambiguous``?'7 - which it is not
    here. And the General Assembly is presumed to be aware of extant statutes
    relating to the same subject matter when it enacts a new provision.38 For example
    35 Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss 11 13 (emphasis in original).
    36 Ia', Murray never really develops this statement into a claim of statutory ambiguity,
    although that is in effect what he argues. See Coastal Barge Corp. v. Coastal Zone Ina'us.
    Control Ba'., 
    492 A.2d 1242
    , 1246 (Del. 1985) (“Ambiguity may also arise from the fact that
    giving a literal interpretation to words of the statute would lead to such unreasonable or absurd
    consequences as to compel a conviction that they could not have been intended by the
    legislature.”).
    37 See, e.g., Ramirez v. Mura'ick, 
    948 A.2d 395
    , 398 (Del. 2008); Leatherbury v. Greenspun,
    
    939 A.2d 1284
    , 1288 (Del. 2007); State v. Cooper, 
    575 A.2d 1074
    , 1075-76 (Del. 1990).
    33 see Del. Dep’i efLaber v. Minner, 
    448 A.2d 227
    , 229 (Del. 1982) (“It is assumed that
    when the General Assembly enacts a later statute in an area covered by a prior statute, it has in
    mind the prior statute and therefore statutes on the same subject must be construed together so
    _13_
    here, when it made the lowest class of illegal marijuana possession a civil, rather
    than criminal, offense after putting § 1448(a)(9) on the books just fifty-one months
    earlier. lf the General Assembly wanted to then exclude the newly-minted civil
    offense of possessing a “personal use quantity” of marijuana from triggering that
    recent PFBPP provision, it could have easily done so. lt did not.
    When “a statute is unambiguous, and an application of the literal meaning
    of its words would not be absurd or unreasonable, there is no legal basis for an
    interpretation of those words by the court.”39 But even if the Court needed to
    consult other sources it might to discern § 1448(a)(9)’s meaning, Murray’s
    supposition would fair no better.
    The Synopsis of the enactment that created the new weapons prohibition was
    40
    clear: it was created “for a person who possesses a handgun or semi-automatic or
    automatic firearm at the same time as the person possesses a controlled
    that effect is given to every provision unless there is an irreconcilable conflict between the
    statutes, in which case the later supersedes the earlier.”) (quoting Green v. Cnty. Council of
    Sussex Cniy., 
    415 A.2d 481
    , 484 (Del. Ch. 1980)). See, e.g., State v. Hollobaugh, 
    297 A.2d 395
    ,
    396 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 25, 1972). See also 
    Cooper, 575 A.2d at 1076
    _77 (the General
    Assembly is also presumed to be aware of judicial decisions interpreting similar or identical
    language).
    33 
    Disiefaae, 566 A.2d, at 4
    .
    40 see Carper v. New Casize Cpiy. Ba. afEd., 
    432 A.2d 1202
    , 1205 (Del. 1981) (stating the
    synopsis of a bill is “a proper source from which to glean legislative intent”); Hoover v. State,
    
    958 A.2d 816
    , 820 (Del. 2008) (“[T]his Court may refer to parts of the legislative record to
    establish the purpose of legislation where the record reveals more information about the
    enactments.”).
    _14_
    substance.”41 Far from being an unreasonable or absurd prohibition, it is one
    similar, if not more narrow, than that found in federal42 and sister states’ statutory
    schemes.43 As federal courts have without fail found, such a law “proportionally
    advances the government’s legitimate goal of preventing gun violence”44 by
    aiming “to keep guns out of the hands of presumptively risky people.”45 And that
    may rightly include those who illegally use or possess marijuana46
    4‘ Del. H.B. 19 syn., 146th Gen. Assem., 78 Del. Laws eh. 13 (2011) (emphasis added).
    42 Cornpare 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3) (under the federal analogue it is unlawful for anyone
    “who is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” to possess a firearm), with
    DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 11, § l448(a)(9) (2015) (under Delaware law it is unlawful for one to
    possess a semi-automatic firearm or a handgun when he, “at the same time, possesses a
    controlled substance in violation of” Delaware drug possession statutes). While the federal
    statute prohibits a certain group of persons - those who unlawfully use drugs or are addicted to
    them ~ from possessing a firearm, the Delaware statute requires that the gun and drugs be
    possessed “at the same time.”
    43 see Uniied states v. Yapcey, 
    621 F.3d 681
    , 684 (7ih Cir. 2010) dising 25 states and D.C.
    that had by that time outlawed possession or carrying of firearms by habitual drug users).
    44 Unitea1 States v. Carter, 
    750 F.3d 462
    , 470 (4th Cir. 2014). See, e.g., Unitea’ States v.
    Patterson, 
    431 F.3d 832
    , 835-36 (Sth Cir. 2005); Yancey, 
    621 F.3d 681
    , 684; Unitea' States v.
    Seay, 
    620 F.3d 919
    , 924-25 (8th Cir. 2010); Unitecl States v. Dugan, 
    657 F.3d 998
    , 999-1000
    (9th Cir. 2011); Unitea’ States v. Conraa’, 
    923 F. Supp. 2d 843
    , 850-51 (W.D. Va. 2013);
    Roberge v. Unz'tea’ States, 
    2013 WL 4052926
    , at *18-19 (E.D. Tenn. Aug. 12, 2013).
    45 
    Yancey, 621 F.3d at 683
    (citing Dickerson v. New Banner lnst., Inc., 
    460 U.S. 103
    , 112
    (1983)). See United States v. Cheeseman, 
    600 F.3d 270
    , 280 (3d Cir. 2010) (noting that in
    passing the federal prohibition, Congress expressed its intention to “keep firearms out of the
    possession of drug abusers, a dangerous class of individuals”).
    46 See Wilson v. Lynch, 
    835 F.3d 1083
    , 1094 (9th Cir. 2016) (“lt is beyond dispute that
    illegal drug users, including marijuana users, are likely as a consequence of that use to
    experience altered or impaired mental states that affect their judgment and that can lead to
    irrational or unpredictable behavior.”); 
    Carter, 750 F.3d, at 470
    (“At bottom, we conclude that
    the empirical evidence and common sense support the government’s contention that drug use,
    including marijuana use, frequently coincides with violence.”); 
    Yancey, 621 F.3d at 687
    _15_
    Still, it may well be that during the many recent writes and re-writes of our
    drug laws the General Assembly never considered the use of non-criminal
    marijuana possession as a potential element of the newest PFBPP crime, Sure, it’s
    conceivable that if it ever did, the legislature might choose to eliminate non-
    criminal marijuana possession as an element of that compound weapons crime,
    But, the legislature has not done so. And, this Court cannot do so in its stead.47
    The unambiguous current language of § 1448(a)(9), the other clues one might use
    (if needed) to understand that language, and the easily discerned policy behind that
    language leaves the reader to conclude that language means precisely what it says
    - in Delaware one is prohibited from possessing a handgun and even a small
    amount of marijuana at the same time.
    (observing when discussing the federal statute’s application to an “unlawful user” of marijuana:
    “We have observed before that there is no constitutional problem with separating guns and
    drugs.”).
    47 See Seth v. State, 
    592 A.2d 436
    , 440 (Del. 1991) (“[W]hen statutory language is both
    clear and consistent with other provisions of the same legislation and with legislative purpose
    and intent, a court must give effect to that intent because it is for the legislature, and not the
    courts, to declare the public policy of the State.”). See also State v. Cephas, 
    637 A.2d 20
    , 28
    (Del. 1994) (“lt is the General Assembly and not this Court which has the prerogative to
    legislate. This Court’s role is to construe existing legislation.”).
    _16_
    V. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, Murray’s motion to dismiss the two counts of his
    lndictment must be DENIED.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ..,.
    @;)
    Paul R. Wallace, Judge
    _17_