COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Chief Judge Felton, Judges Frank and Alston
UNPUBLISHED
Argued by teleconference
CHARNCEY LAQUINN DANIELS
MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
v. Record No. 2492-11-4 JUDGE ROSSIE D. ALSTON, JR.
MARCH 12, 2013
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY
Jan L. Brodie, Judge
(Charles J. Swedish; Sloan and Swedish, on brief), for appellant.
Appellant submitting on brief.
David M. Uberman, Assistant Attorney General (Kenneth T.
Cuccinelli, II, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
Charncey Laquinn Daniels (appellant) appeals his conviction for failing to stop after an
accident in violation of Code § 46.2-894, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to support
his conviction. Finding no error, we affirm.
BACKGROUND 1
“When a defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence on appeal, the evidence is
viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth.” Murillo-Rodriguez v.
Commonwealth, 279 Va. 64, 68, 688 S.E.2d 199, 201 (2010) (citing Jones v. Commonwealth,
277 Va. 171, 182, 670 S.E.2d 727, 734 (2009)).
*
Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
1
As the parties are fully conversant with the record in this case and because this
memorandum opinion carries no precedential value, this opinion recites only those facts and
incidents of the proceedings as are necessary to the parties’ understanding of the disposition of this
appeal.
So viewed, the facts indicate that in the early morning hours of December 27, 2010,
Virginia State Police Trooper Kenneth Brown found a man, later identified as Jabrill Y. Mara,
stumbling along the right shoulder of Interstate 66 near the Nutley Street exit. Mara was unable
to speak. He had a bloody and “badly swollen” face, and his clothes were covered in blood.
Brown contacted emergency medical responders, who took Mara to the hospital. The emergency
room physicians discovered that Mara had been shot four times in the left side of the face and
head.
Mara died from his injuries three days later. An autopsy later revealed that Mara died
from four gunshot wounds to the left side of his face and head. The report further indicated that
Mara suffered abrasions to his nose, abdomen, knees, and left leg, as well as a contusion on the
right side of his chest.
Crime scene technicians examined the location where Brown had found Mara. They
discovered blood patterns on the pavement consistent with a body being dragged across it. The
distance between the first bloodstain and the next was several yards, with the distance between
each subsequent stain decreasing, “like if you were skipping rocks across a pond.”
After speaking with Mara’s sister, Brown focused his investigation on appellant. On
December 28, 2010, Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police arrested appellant, who was driving a
black rental car. Police discovered bloodstains inside the car consistent with someone being shot
at close range while seated in the passenger seat.
Appellant was tried for failure to stop after an accident in violation of Code § 46.2-894,
among other crimes. 2 Appellant did not testify at trial. However, during the trial, the
Commonwealth introduced into evidence a videotape of an interview the police conducted of
2
In addition to failure to stop after an accident, appellant was also tried and convicted of
second-degree murder. The murder conviction is not before us in the instant appeal.
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appellant after he was apprehended in Washington, D.C. The Commonwealth played the
videotaped interview for the jury during the trial. In the videotaped interview, appellant admitted
that he was with Mara on the night of December 26, 2010. Appellant claimed Mara had
contacted him and asked him to drive Mara to buy drugs at a shopping center. Appellant said
Mara was injured while buying the drugs and returned to the car bleeding and yelling, “Drive,
drive, drive!” Appellant claimed that as he drove, Mara tried to open the passenger car door and
ultimately fell out of the car near an interstate exit. Appellant said he “panicked” and left Mara
there because he did not want to take Mara to a hospital or call 911 because he had “just got[ten]
off parole.”
Appellant moved to strike following the Commonwealth’s case-in-chief. Appellant
argued that the Commonwealth had failed to prove that appellant was involved in an accident.
The trial court denied appellant’s motion to strike. Appellant renewed his motion to strike at the
close of all the evidence, and the trial court denied the motion.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty, and the trial court sentenced appellant to five years’
imprisonment for failure to stop after an accident. This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
On appeal, appellant argues that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction
because the Commonwealth failed to prove that appellant’s or Mara’s actions were accidental
and not intentional. In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a defendant’s
conviction, “the judgment of the trial court shall not be set aside unless it appears from the
evidence that such judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.” Code
§ 8.01-680.
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Assuming appellant properly preserved the argument he presents on appeal, 3 we find it
without merit. In Milazzo v. Commonwealth, 276 Va. 734, 738, 668 S.E.2d 158, 160 (2008), the
Supreme Court of Virginia held, “The purpose of Code § 46.2-894 is to protect persons injured
as the result of, and to ensure the assessment of liability arising out of, an unfortunate vehicular
event. The statute’s primary beneficiary is the injured victim, and it makes no difference whether
the collision was intentional or unintentional.” (Emphasis added). The instant case is squarely
controlled by Milazzo. Under Milazzo, it is irrelevant whether appellant’s or Mara’s actions
were intentional or unintentional. Id. Therefore, the evidence was sufficient to support
appellant’s conviction.
Affirmed.
3
In his motion to strike at trial, appellant argued that “in order for a driver of a vehicle to
be involved in an accident within the intent . . . of the statute, there must be physical contact
between the driver’s vehicle and another vehicle, person or object, or the . . . driver must have
been a proximate cause of an accident.” The trial court ruled that while there was no evidence
that appellant was the proximate cause of an accident or that appellant’s vehicle came into
physical contact with another vehicle, there was “contact between [appellant’s] vehicle and the
person,” which was sufficient to prove an accident. Appellant did not argue in his motion to
strike that the Commonwealth failed to prove an accident because the evidence showed his
actions were intentional.
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