Priscilla Ann Holmes v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2022 )


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  •                                           COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Fulton, Ortiz and Senior Judge Petty
    PUBLISHED
    Argued by videoconference
    PRISCILLA ANN HOLMES
    v.     Record No. 0250-22-3
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA                                              OPINION BY
    JUDGE JUNIUS P. FULTON, III
    PRISCILLA ANN HOLMES                                              NOVEMBER 22, 2022
    v.     Record No. 0251-22-3
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF AUGUSTA COUNTY
    W. Chapman Goodwin, Judge
    H. Eugene Oliver, III (Evans Oliver, PLC, on brief), for appellant.
    Ken J. Baldassari, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Following a jury trial, the Circuit Court of Augusta County convicted Priscilla Holmes of
    two counts of racketeering in violation of Code § 18.2-514(C). Holmes appeals her convictions,
    challenging the sufficiency of the Commonwealth’s evidence against her and the trial court’s
    denial of three proposed jury instructions. For the following reasons, we affirm in part, reverse
    in part, and remand this case to the circuit court for a new trial.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The Commonwealth charged Holmes by indictment alleging two counts of
    knowingly, intentionally, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously,
    while associated with any enterprise, as defined in Virginia Code
    Section 18.2-513, did commit namely two or more of the following
    offenses: possession of a Schedule I or II controlled substance,
    and/or distribution or possession with intent to distribute a
    Schedule I or II substance, and/or distribution or possession with
    intent to distribute 28 grams or more of methamphetamine.1
    At trial, the Commonwealth presented evidence of racketeering activity during two time frames.
    A. Evidence of Racketeering
    Benjamin Hartless testified for the Commonwealth that after meeting Holmes in
    December 2017 until his arrest in July 2018,2 he distributed methamphetamine, purchased from
    Holmes, in Augusta County. At the time of the trial, Hartless had been using methamphetamine
    for approximately twenty years. Hartless was introduced to Holmes by a friend. He began
    selling for her “pretty much right off the bat,” starting off selling “eight-balls” or an eighth of an
    ounce. Hartless would typically break down the eight-ball, “sell a couple of grams out of it to
    make the money back and then either keep the rest or sell a little bit more out of it.” During that
    time, Hartless was using “anywhere from a half a gram to a gram a day” of methamphetamine.
    After about a month of selling eight-balls for Holmes, Hartless began to get “a couple of ounces”
    of methamphetamine at a time from Holmes, which he would break down into eight-balls and
    sell to people who were further dealing to others.
    Eventually, Hartless received one, two, and three pounds of methamphetamine at a time
    from Holmes. He paid Holmes $15,000 per pound with cash bundled together and wrapped in
    rubber bands. He would pay the cash to Holmes directly or to Andrea Verdi, a woman who
    would deliver methamphetamine for Holmes. While Hartless was selling for Holmes, he
    testified that he generally saw her on a weekly basis when she would drive to Augusta County to
    1
    In addition to the two violations of Code § 18.2-514(C), for which Holmes was
    convicted, she was acquitted of two violations of Code § 18.2-514(A).
    2
    Notwithstanding Hartless’s testimony to these start and end dates, Hartless also testified
    that he sold for Holmes for around a year.
    -2-
    meet him. Holmes would typically drive nice-looking SUVs with Georgia plates, which Hartless
    believed to be rental cars.
    When Hartless received methamphetamine by the pound, it would arrive in “like a
    [Z]iplock bag, wrapped up real tight with plastic wrap around it and then it’d have . . . axle
    grease around it and then wrapped up again in plastic wrap and then duct taped all tight.” Once
    he received the large quantity of methamphetamine, Hartless would “unwrap it all and break it
    down into ounces and then distribute to people” who would then break it down further and sell it.
    Hartless testified that he sold methamphetamine to at least five other people whom he knew to be
    dealing to others. Over the period he sold for Holmes, Hartless estimated he sold fifty or more
    pounds of methamphetamine. Hartless testified that until his arrest he maintained a “good name
    in drug circles” and had a trustworthy reputation on the street.
    Roger Holmes (hereinafter “Roger,” no relation to the appellant) also testified that he
    purchased methamphetamine from Holmes for resale in Augusta County. At the time of trial,
    Roger had been a methamphetamine user for approximately twenty years. Roger explained that
    he met Holmes about thirty years ago, lost contact for fifteen to twenty years, and was
    reintroduced by a friend in 2018. Shortly thereafter, Holmes sent two pounds of
    methamphetamine to Roger, through another person, in a block that was packaged “in a
    vacuum-sealed bag with coffee in it,” which Roger broke up into smaller packages and resold.
    Sometime thereafter, Holmes traveled to Roger’s residence to collect the $28,000 he owed her
    for the two pounds of methamphetamine he had sold. Roger only had $24,000, which he paid
    her in cash.
    After that initial money pickup, Roger and Holmes communicated via phone: “She called
    and asked . . . what I needed, and I told her how much money I’d had, she said somebody would
    be by. Then another stranger stopped in and picked up the money and left what I was getting.”
    -3-
    Roger sold methamphetamine for Holmes approximately twenty times to five different people,
    for a total of five pounds. He confirmed that Verdi delivered a pound of methamphetamine to
    him for Holmes once and that Holmes never personally brought him any drugs.
    Roger began dealing for Holmes after Hartless’s arrest in July 2018 and ceased on
    December 21, 2018, when the Skyline Drug Task Force arrested Holmes at Roger’s residence.
    Roger, along with Task Force Officer Rosemeier, testified that Roger “set [Holmes] up,” telling
    officers that Holmes was going to Roger’s home to bring him two pounds of methamphetamine
    and collect $14,000 that he owed her. Although Holmes arrived at Roger’s house at the date and
    approximate time she was expected, driving an SUV with Georgia license plates, she did not
    have any drugs on her person or in her vehicle and did not attempt to collect any money from
    Roger before she was arrested.
    Verdi testified for the Commonwealth that, at the instruction of Holmes, she delivered
    large quantities of methamphetamine to Hartless, Roger, and another individual in Virginia,
    making a total of seven-to-eight trips. Each of Verdi’s visits to Virginia was for the purpose of
    “either picking up [money], dropping off [methamphetamine], or both.” At Holmes’s
    suggestion, Verdi delivered the drugs using SUVs and would store them either in the trunk or
    “above the tire underneath the cupholders.” The methamphetamine was packaged “in like
    freezer bags . . . like vacuum sealed.” Holmes provided the addresses, paid for the rental cars,
    and paid Verdi between $800 and $1,200 per trip. On two separate occasions, Holmes also sent
    Verdi to pick up methamphetamine from an individual in Atlanta.
    Officer Hilliard of the Skyline Drug Task Force testified, without objection, that
    “numerous people” identified Holmes as a drug dealer in Augusta County. In addition to the
    testimony of Holmes’s three accomplices and the task force officers involved in the investigation
    and arrest, the Commonwealth introduced into evidence two certificates of analysis. The first
    -4-
    certificate of analysis showed that on July 31, 2018, police recovered just over half a pound of
    methamphetamine from Hartless. The second showed that in December 2018, nearly one pound
    of methamphetamine was recovered just after Verdi delivered it to Roger on his property.
    At the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s evidence, Holmes made a motion to strike,
    which was denied. Holmes declined to present any evidence and made renewed motions to
    strike, which the court also overruled.
    B. Jury Instructions
    Three of Holmes’s proposed jury instructions were rejected by the trial court. Proposed
    Instruction I stated (rejected paragraphs italicized):
    You are the judge of the facts, the credibility of the
    witnesses, and the weight of the evidence. You may consider the
    appearance and manner of the witnesses on the stand, their
    intelligence, their opportunity of knowing the truth and for having
    observed the things about which they testified, their interest in the
    outcome of the case, their bias, and, if any have been shown, their
    prior inconsistent statements, or whether they have knowingly
    testified untruthfully as to any material fact in the case.
    You may not arbitrarily disregard believable testimony of a
    witness. However, after you have considered all the evidence in
    the case, then you may accept or discard all or part of the
    testimony of a witness as you think proper.
    Although one or more witnesses may positively testify as to
    an alleged fact and although that testimony may not be
    contradicted by other witnesses, you may altogether disregard that
    testimony if you believe it to be untrue.
    You are entitled to use your common sense in judging any
    testimony. From these things and all the other circumstances of
    the case, you may determine which witnesses are more believable
    and weigh their testimony accordingly.
    If you believe from the evidence that any witness has
    knowingly testified falsely as to any material fact in this case, you
    have a right to discredit all of the testimony of that witness or to
    give to such testimony such weight and credit as in your opinion it
    is entitled.
    -5-
    The court instructed the jury on the first, second, and fourth paragraphs of Instruction I, but
    rejected the third and fifth paragraphs, holding that the issues raised there were “adequately
    covered” by the model jury instruction and that “anything more[] was duplication and/or could
    be confusing to the jury.”
    Proposed Instruction Q stated:
    Where a fact is equally susceptible to two interpretations,
    one of which is consistent with the defendant’s innocence, you
    may not arbitrarily adopt the interpretation which finds him guilty.
    Declining to give Instruction Q, the court stated that it “has given an instruction as to the jury’s
    obligation and rights and how they should interpret evidence that comes in. It is their factual
    determination as to whether to believe and what weight and credibility should be applied to each
    piece of evidence and to each piece of testimony.” The court further concluded that Instruction
    Q was “argumentative with regard to the obligation that [the jury] ha[s] and it intrudes upon their
    fact finding issues.”
    Proposed Instruction T stated:
    You have heard testimony from accomplices in the
    commission of the crime charged in the indictment. While you
    may find your verdict upon their uncorroborated testimony, you
    should consider such testimony with great care and you are
    cautioned as to the danger of convicting the defendant upon the
    uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice or accomplices.
    Nevertheless, if you are satisfied from the evidence of the guilt of
    the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt, the defendant may be
    convicted upon the uncorroborated evidence of an accomplice or
    accomplices.
    In rejecting Instruction T, the court noted that “the testimony of the witness itself can contain the
    corroboration and in this case there was ample corroboration of the cases.”3
    3
    The court continued in its analysis:
    The question as to the admissibility of the statement is where this
    matter is determined. The Court is obligated as a matter of law to
    -6-
    At the end of the trial the jury found Holmes guilty of “Racketeering with regard to
    criminal activity occurring in Augusta County between July 31, 2017 and July 31, 2018,” and
    “Racketeering with regard to criminal activity occurring in Augusta County between August 1,
    2018 and December 21, 2018.”
    II. ANALYSIS
    Holmes assigns error to her convictions, asserting that the trial court erred in convicting
    her “because the Commonwealth failed to prove two distinct acts” of criminal activity in support
    of each of the racketeering indictments and because the evidence was insufficient as a matter of
    law to sustain the racketeering convictions. She likewise assigns error to the trial court’s
    rejection of Instructions I, Q, and T.
    A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    “When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, ‘[t]he judgment of the trial court is
    presumed correct and will not be disturbed unless it is plainly wrong or without evidence to
    support it.’” McGowan v. Commonwealth, 
    72 Va. App. 513
    , 521 (2020) (alteration in original)
    (quoting Smith v. Commonwealth, 
    296 Va. 450
    , 460 (2018)). “In such cases, ‘[t]he Court does
    determine whether there is sufficient evidence to support that or to
    corroborate that before it allows the statement in. There was no
    objection to the statement at the time that it was put in and the
    Court made the determination that there was corroboration of that.
    So the Court has made the determination as a matter of law that the
    testimony was admissible and the matter of law determination is
    for the Court to make and not for the jury to make. And to give
    this instruction allows the jury to get a second bite at something
    that the Judge has already determined as a matter of law.
    The jury instruction arguments in this case were made in chambers, off the record, and Holmes’s
    objections to the court’s rulings, along with the court’s explanations, were put on the record after
    the jury retired to consider the case. Consequently, the court’s explanation for its ruling on the
    record is somewhat incomplete. We note that the court, in making its ruling on the record, seems
    to conflate the issues of admissibility and whether there was sufficient corroboration to obviate
    the need for the cautionary jury instruction. Nevertheless, the trial court’s reason for its denial is
    immaterial as we review its ruling de novo.
    -7-
    not ask itself whether it believes that the evidence at the trial established guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt.’” 
    Id.
     (alteration in original) (quoting Secret v. Commonwealth, 
    296 Va. 204
    ,
    228 (2018)). “Rather, the relevant question is whether ‘any rational trier of fact could have
    found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’” Vasquez v.
    Commonwealth, 
    291 Va. 232
    , 248 (2016) (quoting Williams v. Commonwealth, 
    278 Va. 190
    , 193
    (2009)). “If there is evidentiary support for the conviction, ‘the reviewing court is not permitted
    to substitute its own judgment, even if its opinion might differ from the conclusions reached by
    the finder of fact at the trial.’” McGowan, 72 Va. App. at 521 (quoting Chavez v.
    Commonwealth, 
    69 Va. App. 149
    , 161 (2018)). To the extent determining whether the evidence
    was sufficient to support a conviction involves interpreting the statute itself, that is a question of
    law which we review de novo. See Woodard v. Commonwealth, 
    287 Va. 276
    , 280 (2014).
    Holmes was convicted of two counts of racketeering, in violation of Code § 18.2-514(C),
    which provides that “[i]t shall be unlawful for any person employed by, or associated with, any
    enterprise to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in such enterprise through racketeering
    activity.” “‘Racketeering activity’ means to commit, attempt to commit, or conspire to commit
    or to solicit, coerce, or intimidate another person to commit two or more” enumerated offenses.
    Code § 18.2-513. In this case, the Commonwealth amended the indictments from the broad list
    of enumerated offenses contained in Code § 18.2-513, narrowing them to allege more specific
    drug crimes. The Commonwealth was therefore required to prove that Holmes specifically
    committed “two or more” violations of “possession of a Schedule I or II controlled substance,
    and/or distribution or possession with intent to distribute a Schedule I or II controlled substance,
    and/or distribution or possession with intent to distribute 28 grams or more of
    methamphetamine.”
    -8-
    Holmes argues the evidence was insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she
    “committed two distinct acts as alleged in the indictments, for each indictment.” Specifically,
    she argues that only one certificate of analysis proving the presence of methamphetamine was
    established for each indictment, and the other circumstantial evidence of a second distinct act did
    not sufficiently establish the nature of the substances delivered to and subsequently redistributed
    by Hartless and Roger.
    It is not necessary for the Commonwealth to prove the nature of an illegal substance
    using direct evidence, such as a certificate of analysis. Hill v. Commonwealth, 
    8 Va. App. 60
    , 63
    (1989) (citing United States v. Zielie, 
    734 F.2d 1147
    , 1156 (11th Cir. 1984); United States v.
    Gregorio, 
    497 F.2d 1253
    , 1263 (4th Cir. 1974)). Rather, the nature of the substance can be
    proven by circumstantial evidence. 
    Id.
     The types of circumstantial evidence that may be
    considered in assessing whether the illicit nature of a substance is proven beyond a reasonable
    doubt includes, but is not limited to:
    the physical appearance of the substance involved in the
    transaction, evidence that the substance produced the expected
    effects when sampled by someone familiar with the illicit drug,
    evidence that the substance was used in the same manner as the
    illicit drug, testimony that a high price was paid in cash for the
    substance, evidence that transactions involving the substance were
    carried on with secrecy or deviousness, and evidence that the
    substance was called by the name of the illegal narcotic by the
    defendant or others in his presence.
    
    Id.
     (quoting United States v. Dolan, 
    544 F.2d 1219
    , 1221 (4th Cir. 1976)).
    Holmes notes that none of the methamphetamine use Hartless and Roger testified about
    was “tied to the specific methamphetamine [Holmes] is alleged to have distributed” and neither
    Hartless nor Roger was qualified as an expert witness. However, circumstantial evidence of the
    nature of an illegal substance need not include expert testimony. “Users and addicts, if they have
    gained familiarity or experience with a drug, may identify it. Numerous courts have permitted
    -9-
    lay purchasers of drugs to testify as to the identification of drugs after previous use has been
    demonstrated.” Hill, 8 Va. App. at 63. In this case, the evidence clearly established that Hartless
    and Roger were longtime methamphetamine users and, therefore, were familiar enough with the
    drug to identify it. Further, although Hartless did not testify directly about any particular
    occasion when he ingested the methamphetamine he received from Holmes, he testified that
    during the period he was selling for Holmes he was using “anywhere from a half a gram to a
    gram a day” and would sometimes keep a portion of the methamphetamine he received from
    Holmes. Moreover, we note that although the testimony in Hill was that the witness had used
    the cocaine at issue, the standard described by this Court in Hill does not require testimony that
    the user/addict used the specific batch of drugs about which they are testifying. See id. (allowing
    users to testify about the identity of drugs “after previous use has been demonstrated”).
    Hartless and Roger both testified they paid Holmes $14,000 to $15,000 per pound of
    methamphetamine. The price was paid in cash, which was packaged in rubber bands. The
    substance delivered to them was also packaged like large quantities of methamphetamine.
    Hartless, Roger, and Verdi all testified that it was packaged in vacuum-sealed bags and delivered
    to Hartless and Roger surreptitiously. Hartless and Roger both explained that the bags were
    packaged with another substance to conceal the scent of the methamphetamine and deter
    narcotics dogs, such as coffee or axle grease. Verdi testified that she would deliver the
    methamphetamine using rented SUVs and, at Holmes’s instruction, concealed the drugs “above
    the tire underneath the cupholders.” Thus, “a high price was paid in cash for the
    [methamphetamine]” and “transactions involving the [methamphetamine] were carried on with
    secrecy or deviousness.” Id. (quoting Dolan, 
    544 F.2d at 1221
    ).
    In addition to Hartless’s implication that he personally used the methamphetamine he
    purchased from Holmes, he testified that he sold about fifty or more pounds of
    - 10 -
    methamphetamine that he received from Holmes for around a year to at least five different
    people whom he knew to be dealing to others and that prior to his arrest he had a “good name in
    drug circles” and a trustworthy reputation on the street. Roger testified that he sold a total of five
    pounds of methamphetamine for Holmes to five different people spread out over approximately
    twenty different sales. A reasonable factfinder could conclude from this evidence of the large
    and steady amount of Holmes-supplied methamphetamine in Augusta County that the substance
    Hartless and Roger sold for Holmes “had the physical appearance of [methamphetamine],” “was
    used in the same manner as [methamphetamine],” and “produced the expected effects when
    sampled by someone familiar with [methamphetamine].” Hill, 8 Va. App. at 63 (quoting Dolan,
    
    544 F.2d at 1221
    ).
    Finally, the court received testimony from Hartless, Roger, and Verdi that each of them
    communicated with Holmes regarding the purchase, delivery, and sale of methamphetamine.
    Hartless testified that a friend introduced him to Holmes and initially told him that Holmes
    wanted to purchase methamphetamine from him, but when the two met in person Hartless
    learned that Holmes was actually trying to sell to him. This included discussions about the
    quantity and price of the methamphetamine, how it would be packaged, and how it would be
    delivered. A reasonable factfinder could conclude from the accomplices’ testimony about their
    communications with Holmes that “the substance was called by the name of the illegal narcotic
    by the defendant or others in his presence.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Dolan, 
    544 F.2d at 1221
    ).
    Taking the totality of the Hill factors into consideration, there was sufficient
    circumstantial evidence for a factfinder to conclude that the substance Holmes dealt to Hartless
    and Roger was methamphetamine.
    - 11 -
    Holmes also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence “tying [her] to the charges at
    hand.” She argues that the evidence at trial failed to exclude all reasonable hypotheses of
    innocence because
    she was never caught with drugs or money, she was supposed to
    have been delivering narcotics where there were no narcotics and
    no cash, she had known Roger Holmes and Andrea Verdi outside
    the context of the alleged distribution ring, and brought
    grandchildren to a supposed large scale methamphetamine deal
    among many others.
    We disagree and hold that when viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the
    record contained sufficient evidence to convict Holmes of racketeering.
    Three accomplices, Hartless, Roger, and Verdi, all testified that Holmes facilitated and
    directed the distribution of methamphetamine in Augusta County. As our Supreme Court has
    held, a “jury if satisfied of guilt, may convict an accused upon the uncorroborated testimony of
    an accomplice.” Dillard v. Commonwealth, 
    216 Va. 820
    , 821 (1976). The accomplices testified
    unequivocally that they communicated with Holmes about purchasing and distributing large
    quantities of methamphetamine, which she then either delivered or directed to be delivered to
    Augusta County, and for which she collected large payments. This testimony, taken in the light
    most favorable to the Commonwealth, foreclosed all reasonable hypotheses of innocence and
    provided the factfinder with more than sufficient evidence to conclude, beyond a reasonable
    doubt, that Holmes was guilty of racketeering.
    B. Jury Instructions
    The responsibility of properly instructing a jury “rest[s] in the sound discretion of the trial
    court.” Cooper v. Commonwealth, 
    277 Va. 377
    , 381 (2009). “A reviewing court’s responsibility
    in reviewing jury instructions,” however, “is ‘to see that the law has been clearly stated and that
    the instructions cover all issues which the evidence fairly raises.’” Fahringer v. Commonwealth,
    
    70 Va. App. 208
    , 211 (2019) (quoting Darnell v. Commonwealth, 
    6 Va. App. 485
    , 488 (1988)).
    - 12 -
    “We review a trial court’s decisions in giving and denying requested jury instructions for abuse
    of discretion.” Conley v. Commonwealth, 
    74 Va. App. 658
    , 675 (2022). Whether a proffered
    jury instruction accurately states the law, however, is reviewed de novo. Sarafin v.
    Commonwealth, 
    288 Va. 320
    , 325 (2014). “And in deciding whether a particular instruction is
    appropriate, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the proponent of the instruction.”
    Cooper, 277 Va. at 381.
    1. Jury Instruction I
    Holmes argues that the trial court erred in refusing two specific paragraphs from Jury
    Instruction I. The first rejected paragraph, which states: “Although one or more witnesses may
    positively testify as to an alleged fact and although that testimony may not be contradicted by
    other witnesses, you may altogether disregard that testimony if you believe it to be untrue,”
    arises from an instruction given in Blount v. Commonwealth, 
    213 Va. 807
    , 808 (1973). The
    second rejected paragraph states: “If you believe from the evidence that any witness has
    knowingly testified falsely as to any material fact in this case, you have a right to discredit all of
    the testimony of that witness or to give to such testimony such weight and credit as in your
    opinion it is entitled,” and originates in Zirkle v. Commonwealth, 
    189 Va. 862
     (1949), and
    Ronald J. Bacigal & Margaret Ivey Bacigal, Virginia Practice Series: Jury Instructions §§ 57:4
    and 57:7 (2014-2015 ed.).
    Both rejected paragraphs in Jury Instruction I are accurate statements of the law, but our
    analysis does not stop there. Rather, we must look to whether the “granted instructions fully and
    fairly cover a principle of law.” Daniels v. Commonwealth, 
    275 Va. 460
    , 466 (2008) (emphasis
    added). When they do, “a trial court does not abuse its discretion in refusing another instruction
    relating to the same legal principle.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Stockton v. Commonwealth, 
    227 Va. 124
    , 145
    (1984)). In this case, the principles of law discussed in the rejected paragraphs were already
    - 13 -
    covered by other instructions that were given to the jury. In Instruction Number 5, the court
    instructed that the jurors “are the judges of the facts, the credibility of the witnesses, and the
    weight of the evidence,” that they “may not arbitrarily disregard believable testimony of a
    witness,” but after they “have considered all the evidence in the case, then [the jurors] may
    accept or discard all or part of the testimony of a witness as [the jurors] think proper.” Further,
    the jury was instructed that it may consider a witness’s “bias, and, if any have been shown, their
    prior inconsistent statements, or whether they have knowingly testified untruthfully as to any
    material fact in the case.” Because Instruction Number 5 fairly and adequately instructed the
    jury on the principles of law discussed in the rejected paragraphs of Jury Instruction I, a
    duplicative instruction would inappropriately “single out for emphasis a part of the evidence
    tending to establish a particular fact,” Woods v. Commonwealth, 
    171 Va. 543
    , 548 (1938), and
    “would be confusing or misleading to the jury,” Bruce v. Commonwealth, 
    9 Va. App. 298
    , 300
    (1990).
    2. Jury Instruction Q
    Our conclusion that Jury Instruction Q was properly rejected results from the same
    analysis that defeated Holmes’s claims regarding Jury Instruction I. An instruction that “Where
    a fact is equally susceptible to two interpretations, one of which is consistent with the
    defendant’s innocence, you may not arbitrarily adopt the interpretation which finds him guilty” is
    simply duplicative of other granted instructions. The court already instructed the jury on the
    presumption of innocence (Instruction Number 1), including that “the Commonwealth [must]
    prove[] each and every element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” The court likewise
    instructed, through Instruction Number 6, that “When the Commonwealth relies upon
    circumstantial evidence, the circumstances proved must be consistent with guilt and inconsistent
    with innocence. It is not sufficient that the circumstances proved create a suspicion of guilt,
    - 14 -
    however strong, or even a probability of guilt” and that “The evidence as a whole must exclude
    every reasonable theory of innocence.” The “court’s use of the[se] model jury instruction[s] left
    no vital issue unaddressed.” Shaikh v. Johnson, 
    276 Va. 537
    , 546 (2008).
    Instruction Number 1 and Instruction Number 6 fairly and adequately instructed the jury
    on the principles of law discussed in rejected Jury Instruction Q. To nevertheless grant Jury
    Instruction Q would be duplicative, inappropriately single out a particular fact or issue, and may
    cause confusion to the jury. Therefore, the trial court did not err in rejecting Jury Instruction Q.
    3. Jury Instruction T
    The final rejected instruction cautioned the jury against the danger of convicting Holmes
    upon the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice. Virginia appellate courts have consistently
    held that:
    if satisfied of guilt, [a jury] may convict an accused upon the
    uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice. Where accomplice
    testimony is uncorroborated, however, it is the duty of the court to
    warn the jury against the danger of convicting upon such
    uncorroborated testimony. This warning is required because the
    source of accomplice testimony is tainted with the temptation to
    exculpate oneself by laying the crime upon another.
    Dillard, 
    216 Va. at 821
     (citations omitted). Dillard makes it clear that if an accomplice’s
    testimony is uncorroborated, it is error for a trial court to refuse the cautionary instruction. 
    Id.
    In rejecting Jury Instruction T, the court held that the instruction was not warranted
    because the accomplice testimony was not uncorroborated. The court stated that “the testimony
    of the witness itself can contain the corroboration and in this case there was ample corroboration
    of the cases.” We disagree. “[T]he danger of collusion between accomplices and the temptation
    to exculpate themselves by fixing responsibility upon others is so strong that it is the duty of the
    court to warn the jury against the danger of convicting upon their uncorroborated testimony.”
    Jones v. Commonwealth, 
    111 Va. 862
    , 868 (1911). Moreover, “[I]f two or more accomplices are
    - 15 -
    produced as witnesses, they are not deemed to corroborate each other . . . and the same
    confirmation is required[] as if there were but one.” 
    Id.
     (quoting 1 Greenleaf on Evidence § 381
    (15th ed.)); see also Via v. Commonwealth, 
    288 Va. 114
    , 115 (2014) (“Whether accomplice
    testimony is corroborated is subject to the long established principle that accomplice testimony
    cannot be corroborated by the testimony of another accomplice.”). In this case, although the
    testimony of Holmes’s accomplices, Benjamin Hartless, Roger Holmes, and Andrea Verdi,
    corroborate each other, the “danger of collusion between [these three] accomplices and the
    temptation to exculpate themselves by fixing responsibility upon others” is not alleviated where
    the sole corroboration is the testimony of another accomplice to the crime. Jones, 
    111 Va. at 868
    .
    Whether the accomplice testimony was sufficiently corroborated is a question of law for
    the court. Dillard, 
    216 Va. at 824
    . It is, therefore, reviewed de novo on appeal. The correct
    standard for “determining whether a cautionary instruction should be granted becomes this: is
    corroborative evidence lacking? If it is, the instruction should be granted.” 
    Id. at 822
    . The
    proper standard for determining whether sufficient corroboration exists to refuse the cautionary
    instruction is: “[T]he corroboration or confirmation must relate to some fact (or facts) which
    goes to establish the guilt of the accused.” 
    Id. at 823
     (alteration in original) (quoting Jones, 
    111 Va. at 869
    ). This standard is “not as rigid as the ‘ultimate fact’ test. The corroborative evidence,
    standing alone, need not be sufficient either to support a conviction or to establish all essential
    elements of an offense.” 
    Id.
    An example of the “relation to guilt” standard was outlined in Crosby v. Commonwealth,
    
    132 Va. 518
     (1922). In that case, Crosby was charged with illegally selling alcohol, which he
    denied. 
    Id. at 520
    . “An accomplice, the purchaser of the liquor, testified for the Commonwealth
    that [Crosby] had made the sale.” Dillard, 
    216 Va. at 823
    . The Commonwealth’s only
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    remaining evidence came from “a police officer, who testified he saw the accused at the window
    of the house where the sale was alleged to have occurred; observed the accused look up and
    down the street; noticed the alleged purchaser enter the house; and afterwards found whisky in
    the possession of the purchaser.” 
    Id.
     The officer’s testimony provided corroboration for “the
    occasion and opportunity for the crime as well as the possession (by the purchaser) of the whisky
    alleged to have been purchased.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Crosby, 
    132 Va. at 520
    ). As such, Crosby was not
    “convicted upon the uncorroborated testimony of his accomplice.” Id.; see also Johnson v.
    Commonwealth, 
    42 Va. App. 46
    , 57 (2003) (finding sufficient corroborating evidence where
    Johnson was seen with her accomplice “immediately prior to the two drug transactions”);
    Richards v. Commonwealth, 
    187 Va. 1
    , 4 (1948) (finding sufficient corroboration where “[t]he
    occasion and the opportunity for the crime, as well as the possession of the beer, were
    established by testimony other than that emanating from the alleged accomplice”). Contra Yates
    v. Commonwealth, 
    4 Va. App. 140
    , 143 (1987) (finding insufficient corroboration to an
    accomplice’s testimony where “[e]xcept for the testimony of [the accomplice], there was neither
    physical evidence nor testimony that tended to connect Yates with the crime”).
    The Commonwealth relies upon three different items of evidence which it argues
    corroborate the accomplice testimony in this case. First, that Roger told the Skyline Drug Task
    Force that Holmes would go to his house on December 21, 2018, to conduct a methamphetamine
    transaction, and although Holmes did not have methamphetamine on her person or in her vehicle
    and no transaction was attempted, she did arrive at the location at the approximate time she was
    expected. Second, both Hartless and Verdi testified that Holmes used SUVs for the drug
    transactions, and she in fact arrived at Roger’s home on December 21, 2018, in an SUV. Third,
    Officer Hilliard testified that “numerous people” identified Holmes as a drug dealer in Augusta
    County. None of this evidence tends to connect Holmes with the racketeering crimes for which
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    she was convicted. Unlike in Crosby, where the police officer’s observations established
    Crosby’s proximity to the location of the illegal liquor sale, as well as the reasonable inference
    that the purchaser received the liquor from him, there was no non-accomplice testimony in this
    case that Holmes was ever seen with methamphetamine, in Augusta County or otherwise.
    Roger’s “tip” that Holmes would arrive at his home at a specific time to conduct a drug deal
    failed to bear fruit when she arrived without any drugs and without attempting to collect any
    money. The bare fact that Holmes drove an SUV does not relate to her guilt to the extent that it
    can serve as the corroboration for the accomplice testimony.
    Finally, the testimony that “numerous people” had identified Holmes as a drug dealer,
    while “admitted without objection” and thus can be “properly” “considered” and “given its
    natural probative effect,” remains hearsay and is entitled to minimal weight. Baughan v.
    Commonwealth, 
    206 Va. 28
    , 31 (1965). “[T]he basis for the exclusion of hearsay testimony is
    that it is not subject to the tests which can ordinarily be applied for the ascertainment of the truth
    of such testimony. It has been said that it lacks ‘any guarantee of trustworthiness.’” Stevens v.
    Mirakian, 
    177 Va. 123
    , 131 (1941). The identity of the declarants, the context of the statements,
    and the bases of the declarants’ knowledge, are entirely unknown. It therefore cannot be known
    whether the declarants are likewise accomplices in this racketeering enterprise and thus subject
    to the same requirement of corroboration, or whether the statement that Holmes has been
    identified as a drug dealer even relates to the charged offenses. The testimony that “numerous”
    unidentified “people,” in unknown contexts, had, at some unknown point in time, identified
    Holmes as a drug dealer is so attenuated from the charged crimes, and so lacking in any indicia
    of reliability that it cannot, alone, serve as the corroboration necessary to obviate the need for the
    cautionary instruction warning against convicting based on the uncorroborated testimony of
    - 18 -
    accomplices. We, therefore, hold that the trial court erred in refusing to give the cautionary
    instruction.
    C. Harmless Error Analysis
    Having concluded that the trial court erred in refusing to caution the jury about
    convicting based on the uncorroborated testimony of accomplices, we now consider, as is
    required, whether that error was harmless. See Code § 8.01-678; Clay v. Commonwealth, 
    262 Va. 253
    , 259 (2001); Dandridge v. Commonwealth, 
    72 Va. App. 669
    , 685 (2021).
    “Non-constitutional error is harmless if other evidence of guilt is so ‘overwhelming’ and the
    error so insignificant by comparison that we can conclude the error ‘failed to have any
    “substantial influence” on the verdict.’” Dandridge, 72 Va. App. at 685 (quoting Lienau v.
    Commonwealth, 
    69 Va. App. 254
    , 270 (2018)). In a case such as this, where the trial court erred
    in refusing a cautionary instruction due to a lack of evidence corroborating accomplice
    testimony, there cannot be such overwhelming other evidence of guilt “that we can conclude the
    error failed to have any substantial influence on the verdict.” 
    Id.
     Denial of the cautionary
    instruction was not harmless error and remand for a new trial, thus, is appropriate. 4
    III. CONCLUSION
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the record contained sufficient
    evidence to convict Holmes of two counts of racketeering. Moreover, Jury Instructions I and Q
    4
    Although in Dillard the Court noted that its “research ha[d] not disclosed a single
    instance where a conviction was reversed because of a failure to grant a cautionary instruction,”
    that is no longer the case. 
    216 Va. at 822
    . Shortly after Dillard was decided the Supreme Court
    reversed and remanded a case solely based on the trial court’s error in refusing a cautionary
    instruction. See Smith v. Commonwealth, 
    218 Va. 455
    , 457 (1977) (“[T]he accomplice’s
    testimony was not sufficiently corroborated, and it was error to refuse a cautionary instruction.
    Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court will be reversed, and the case will be remanded for a
    new trial.”); Ward v. Commonwealth, 
    219 Va. 921
    , 926 (1979) (“For error in failing to grant the
    cautionary instruction, the judgment will be reversed and the case will be remanded for a new
    trial if the Commonwealth be so advised.”). The Supreme Court did not engage in harmless
    error analysis when reversing Smith and Ward.
    - 19 -
    were properly refused by the trial court as duplicative of other granted instructions.
    Nevertheless, the trial court erred in finding that the accomplice testimony of Hartless, Verdi,
    and Roger was sufficiently corroborated when it refused Jury Instruction T. Because this error
    was not harmless, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
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