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McCoy v. State
State: Maryland
Court: Court of Appeals
Docket No: 187/97
Case Date: 12/15/1997
Preview:The

appellant,

Tony

Lorenzo

McCoy,

was

convicted

by

a

Frederick County jury, presided over by Judge Mary Ann Stepler, of 1) distribution, 2) possession with intent to distribute, and 3) possession of cocaine. On this appeal, he raises the four

contentions: 1. 2. 3. that the evidence was not legally sufficient to sustain the convictions; that Judge Stepler erroneously refused to admit a statement by one Lester Bethea; that the court erroneously admitted Detective Ledwell's statement that numerous drug arrests had been made in the area in which the appellant was arrested; and that the court failed to merge the convictions for possession with intent to distribute and simple possession into the conviction for distribution.

4.

We hold that the evidence was legally sufficient to support the convictions. The testimony of Sergeant Thomas Ledwell of the

Frederick City Police Department alone was enough to establish, in terms of naked legal sufficiency, the guilt of the appellant. The

appellant argues that Sergeant Ledwell's identification of him should not have been persuasive for two reasons: Sergeant Ledwell was using binoculars at the at time a he 1) because distance observed of the

approximately

twenty-five

yards

critical sale of narcotics and 2) because a defense alibi witness testified that the seller could not have been the appellant because the appellant was in a telephone booth at a different location at the time of the sale. These defense arguments, of course, go to

-2the weight of testimony and the credibility of witnesses. They are

concerned with whether the State met its burden of persuasion and not with whether the State met its burden of production. On the

issue of legal sufficiency, an appellate court is concerned only with the burden of production. Our inquiry is that of whether the

testimony of Sergeant Ledwell, if believed and if given maximum weight, would have established the necessary elements of the crime. We hold that his testimony, if believed and if given maximum weight (contingencies beyond our power of review), would have established the necessary elements. On February 9, 1996, Sergeant Ledwell was working in an undercover capacity, as the supervisor of a tactical unit

investigating narcotics activity, in the area of the John Hanson Apartments in Frederick City. From a hidden observation post in a

vacant apartment and using binoculars, he observed a courtyard surrounded by four three-story apartment buildings. At 9:15 P.M.,

he observed the appellant and one Lester Bethea walk toward the back of a hallway to an area behind a stairway. give the appellant paper currency. Bethea several small white objects. He observed Bethea

He observed the appellant give He observed the appellant and

Bethea part company and walk away in opposite directions. Sergeant Ledwell's observations were broadcast to other

members of the police team in the area. was stopped and searched.

Within one minute, Bethea

On his person was found three rocks of Within three

crack cocaine with an estimated street value of $60.

-3minutes, the appellant was arrested. $25 in currency. Recovered from his person was

Clearly, this testimony, if believed and if given

maximum weight, was enough to permit the jury reasonably to infer that the appellant was guilty of the crimes with which he was charged. With respect to the testimony of the alibi witness, moreover, the appellant ignores the obvious fact that although such testimony might be a sound predicate for arguing that the State failed to meet its burden of persuasion, it has absolutely nothing to do with whether the State met its burden of production. In measuring legal

sufficiency, which is what the burden of production is concerned with, the alibi testimony which the appellant invokes does not even exist. We examine that version of the facts most favorable to the

State, to wit, Sergeant Ledwell's version, and look at it as if it were the only testimony in the case. When measuring legal

sufficiency, the appellate concern is not with whether the jury should or should not have been persuaded of the appellant's guilt. It is only concerned with whether the judge was correct, as a matter of law, in submitting the case to the jury. If she was,

what the jury then does with the case is beyond the purview of appellate review. In short, a perfectly good jury argument may be

an utterly immaterial appellate argument. The appellant's thwarted second his contention to is that Judge an Stepler

erroneously

effort

introduce

exculpatory

statement from the alleged purchaser of the crack cocaine, Lester

-4Bethea. The witness on the stand was Officer Timothy Duhan.

During Officer Duhan's cross-examination, defense counsel asked him about a statement given to him by Lester Bethea. It was proffered

that Bethea's out-of-court declaration would have asserted that he purchased the drugs from someone other than the appellant. out-of-court declaration offered for the truth of the As an thing

asserted, the declaration was classic hearsay.

It did not qualify

for any of the accepted exceptions to the rule against hearsay and, therefore, was properly excluded by Judge Stepler. The appellant's third contention is that Judge Stepler

erroneously permitted Sergeant Ledwell to testify that the area where the surveillance was being conducted on the night of February 9 was a high drug area. The appellant argues that this fact On the contrary,

possibly subjected him to guilt by association.

it may have strengthened his argument that the sale to Lester Bethea was actually made by someone else. quibble over that. The segment of testimony in issue was as follows: [Prosecutor]: Now why was your Tactical Unit working at that particular location on the night of February 9, 1996? A: We'd made a lot of previous-- Objection. Would you repeat the We will not, however,

[Defense Counsel]: The Court: question?

Excuse me?

[Prosecutor]: Yes. Sergeant Ledwell, why was the Tactical Unit working in the area of John

-5Hanson Apartments on the night of February 9, 1996? The Court: Overruled. You may answer.

A: We had previously made numerous drug arrests in the area and we continued to receive complaints about drug activity in the area. [Defense Strike. Counsel]: Denied. Objection. Motion to

The Court:

It strikes us that the relatively innocuous explanation by Sergeant Ledwell was a legitimate explanation of why the police were conducting a surveillance at the time the appellant was observed making what apparently was an unlawful sale of narcotics. In terms of prejudice, we think that the appellant's actions speak for themselves and that the character of the neighborhood did not contribute to his guilt. We see no error.

The appellant's final contention will fare better than his earlier three. He argues that his conviction for simple possession

should have merged into the conviction for possession with intent to distribute and that the conviction for possession with intent to distribute should, in turn, have merged into the conviction for actual distribution and that he should not have received separate, albeit concurrent, sentences for three convictions. That

contention is absolutely correct. that this is the case.

Commendably, the State concedes

JUDGMENT OF CONVICTION FOR

-6DISTRIBUTION AFFIRMED; CONVICTIONS FOR POSSESSION WITH INTENT TO DISTRIBUTE AND FOR SIMPLE POSSESSION VACATED AND MERGED INTO CONVICTION FOR DISTRIBUTION; COSTS TO BE DIVIDED EQUALLY BETWEEN FREDERICK COUNTY AND THE APPELLANT.

REPORTED IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS OF MARYLAND No. 187 September Term, 1997

TONY LORENZO McCOY

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND

Moylan, Davis, Sonner, JJ.

OPINION BY MOYLAN, J.

Filed: December 15, 1997

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