REPORTED
IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 142
September Term, 2013
WILLIAM R. KYLER
v.
STATE OF MARYLAND
Krauser, C.J.,
Graeff,
Hotten,
JJ.
Opinion by Graeff, J.
Filed: July 31, 2014
A jury sitting in the Circuit Court for Calvert County convicted appellant,
William Kyler, of two counts of being a drug kingpin, one count of possession with intent
to distribute more than 448 grams of cocaine, one count of possession with intent to
distribute more than 50 grams of cocaine base, one count of possession of cocaine with intent
to distribute, one count of possession of cocaine base with intent to distribute, one count of
concealing the proceeds of a controlled dangerous substance (“CDS”) offense, and one count
of conspiracy to distribute cocaine. The court sentenced appellant to a term of imprisonment
totaling 65 years.1
On appeal, appellant presents three questions for our review, which we have rephrased
slightly as follows:
1. Did the circuit court abuse its discretion and violate appellant’s Sixth
Amendment right to a public trial by closing the courtroom during the
testimony of five undercover police officers?
2. Was the evidence sufficient to support appellant’s drug kingpin
convictions?
3. Did the circuit court err in imposing separate sentences for the
convictions of volume dealing and possession with intent to distribute?
For the reasons set forth below, we agree with appellant that his convictions for
volume dealing merge, for sentencing purposes, with the convictions for possession with
1
The court sentenced appellant to 20 years for the one drug kingpin conviction, 25
years, consecutive, for the conviction of possession with intent to distribute cocaine, and 20
years, consecutive, for the conviction of possession with intent to distribute cocaine base.
It merged the other drug kingpin conviction and the conspiracy conviction for sentencing
purposes and imposed concurrent sentences on the remaining convictions.
intent to distribute. Accordingly, we shall vacate the volume dealing sentences. Otherwise,
we shall affirm the judgments of the circuit court.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Detectives in the Calvert County Sheriff’s Department, who worked undercover in the
Drug Enforcement Unit, began investigating appellant in the summer of 2010.2 They
conducted surveillance of appellant and used confidential informants to assist in investigating
appellant’s drug activity.
Detective B. conducted several controlled buys from appellant with the assistance of
an informant. Detective B. observed the informant purchase narcotics from appellant, and
the informant would then give the narcotics to Detective B. The informant purchased
narcotics from appellant at various locations: appellant’s residence; the King office building
(the “King Building”), where appellant’s business, Kyler Photo Inc., was located; a
barbershop; and a wireless telephone store, adjacent to the barbershop.
Detective B. observed appellant engage in other hand-to-hand drug transactions
between July and September 2010. One such transaction occurred behind the King building,
where appellant received money from an individual in exchange for what Detective B.
believed, based on his training and experience, to be narcotics.
2
In order to protect the identity of the undercover officers, we will refer to them using
only their initials.
-2-
Detective B. also observed what he believed to be hand-to-hand drug transactions
arising from the barbershop. In one transaction, an unknown male exited the barbershop,
walked across the street to a gas station, and placed an item on a cooler, at which time a
woman walked to the cooler, placed money there, and walked away. The unknown male then
took the money and returned to the barbershop.
On several other occasions, Detective B. observed individuals pull in front of the
barbershop, exit their vehicles, and go into the barbershop for such a short period of time that
it was “impossible for them to get a haircut.” At times, the visitors to the barbershop spent
more time looking for a parking space than they spent inside the shop. Although the
barbershop offered only men’s haircuts, women were seen entering the shop alone and
leaving several minutes later. Detective B. recognized several of the individuals he observed
entering and quickly leaving the shop from prior CDS cases. Based on the visitor traffic at
the shop, including the cars pulling in front of the shop and the drivers entering only briefly,
Detective B. believed that the activity he witnessed was consistent with illegal drug activity.
Detective B. saw appellant at the barbershop on approximately 20 occasions during
his investigation. Appellant often visited the shop following days when there was a lull in
activity. After his visit, however, traffic would pick up again. Appellant typically was inside
the shop for approximately 30 minutes, although he stayed for one to two hours during
several visits. Sometimes, he would enter and leave the shop carrying a gym bag or a
suitcase.
-3-
Detective B. also observed activity that was consistent with illegal drug transactions
at the wireless telephone store owned by appellant. After customers entered the wireless
shop, they left without a bag, cell phone, or any other merchandise one would expect to be
sold at a wireless store. The shop itself did not contain any cell phone or cell phone related
merchandise; the only merchandise in the shop was clothing.
Corporal P. assisted with the investigation. He conducted surveillance of appellant’s
activities at the King building, where the photo shop was located in Suite 220. The exterior
of the shop consisted of a door with the numbers 2-2-0 on the outside; there was no
indication that the business was a photo shop. Corporal P. never observed appellant enter
or leave the shop with photography equipment.
On October 14, 2010, four months after his investigation began, Corporal P. executed
a search warrant for the photo shop, where he found evidence of drug dealing. Inside a
locked, navy blue suitcase, Corporal P. found a large quantity of suspected cocaine and
suspected crack cocaine, “several items used in the process to convert cocaine into crack
cocaine,” a digital scale, and $14,000.3 Corporal P. also found materials in the premises used
to package cocaine and crack cocaine, as well as a candle, a hotplate, a mixer, and pyrex
measuring glasses with a charred white residue. The police also found a lease agreement for
the space in which the barbershop and wireless store were located.
3
The items used to convert cocaine to crack cocaine included nail polish remover, a
bottle of Inositol, and boxes of baking soda.
-4-
Appellant was present during the search of the photo shop. His person was searched,
and the police recovered money, more than 10 grams of suspected crack cocaine, and
“independence cards” issued to individuals other than appellant.4 Corporal P. testified that
these cards often are used by people to pay for drugs.
Greg Crump, a crime scene technician, analyzed the contents of the suitcase seized.
He obtained from one of the measuring cups Corporal P. seized from the photo shop one
latent fingerprint, which he sent to the Charles County crime lab. Earnest Jones, a fingerprint
specialist with the Charles County Sheriff’s Office, testified that the print on the measuring
cup was from appellant’s left middle finger.5
Detective B. also obtained a search warrant for the barbershop and wireless store. No
items indicative of a functioning business, such as a cash register or a receipt book, were
found. The police did find receipts for phones, cell phone equipment inside of a locked filing
cabinet, and a sports bag with cell phones inside.
Detective J. executed a search warrant for appellant’s home. He seized a money
counter from the closet of the master bedroom, as well as 37 cell phones and two memory
cards. He did not find any cameras, photo paper, or other photo printing supplies.
4
The term “independence card” refers to a debit card where public assistance funds,
such as food stamps, are deposited on a monthly basis.
5
The parties stipulated that Jeffery Merchant, a member of the Charles County crime
lab, would have testified that he previously had obtained appellant’s prints, and those
fingerprints were given to Mr. Jones for comparison.
-5-
Detective B. believed that appellant might have a storage unit because “drug dealers
often hide currency” or “evidence of illegal activity” in storage units. He sent subpoenas to
all the area storage facilities and learned that appellant leased a storage unit less than an
eighth of a mile from the barbershop, on Calvert Beach Road.
Corporal P. obtained and executed a search warrant for the storage unit. He found
appellant’s personal belongings, as well as documents with appellant’s and
Cranston Brown’s names on them, including documents identifying appellant as Mr. Brown’s
employer.6
On October 21, 2010, in response to a tip, Corporal P. obtained a search warrant for
an additional storage unit leased by appellant. That storage unit contained a dresser, which
contained a black “laptop style carrying case” with $91,000 in cash and a piece of paper with
numbers written on it. Detective G., who had conducted surveillance of appellant at the
barbershop, identified the black laptop bag as the same bag that she had seen appellant carry
into and out of the barbershop on at least one occasion.
During the course of the investigation, Detective B. connected two other men to the
activities at the barbershop, Antoine Savoy and Roosevelt Brooks. Mr. Savoy rented the
6
Mr. Brown was incarcerated at the time of trial. Prior to his arrest in 2008, he had
been residing with appellant. He was in jail for his conviction for possession of cocaine with
intent to distribute, based on cocaine that was found inside a safe in his closet at appellant’s
home. Mr. Brown ultimately pled guilty to the charge, although he initially told police
investigators that the safe was there when he moved into appellant’s residence. Certified
records from the Division of Corrections indicated that appellant visited Mr. Brown in jail,
and appellant deposited substantial funds into Mr. Brown’s commissary account.
-6-
building in which the barbershop was located, and Mr. Brooks frequented the shop every few
days.
In one controlled-buy, an undercover police detective, Detective T., arranged to
purchase crack cocaine from Mr. Brooks. He went to Mr. Brooks’s front yard, and
Mr. Brooks told him that he “had to wait for his man to show up.” Mr. Brooks received a
phone call, and a few minutes later, a black Mercedes pulled in front of the house.
Mr. Brooks got into the vehicle, and the vehicle drove around the block. Detective B.
recognized the car as one he had seen Mr. Savoy drive to and from the barbershop, and
Detective T. recognized Mr. Savoy as the driver. Mr. Brooks then exited the Mercedes and
sold Detective T. cocaine.
Detective G. applied for, and received, a search warrant for Mr. Brooks’s home.
During the search, she found a copy of the search warrant that was executed at appellant’s
house.
Sergeant Matthew McDonough, a member of the Calvert County Sheriff’s Office,
testified as an expert in the field of CDS investigations. His expertise included methods of
distribution and trafficking, CDS distribution organizations, packaging, use and value of
CDS and paraphernalia, and circumstances indicative of CDS distribution and/or an intent
to distribute CDS.
Sergeant McDonough explained the significance of the evidence found. Five
packages recovered from the photo shop appeared to contain cocaine in its powder form, and
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one package contained cocaine that had “been converted back into its base form, which is
known as crack.” The packing of the cocaine and crack indicated that they would each be
sold for $150 to $200. Other packages of cocaine found at the photo shop, which were
packaged in much larger, quarter kilo amounts, indicated that the dealer had staff to whom
he would give the quarter kilos to sell.
Other items found in the photo shop were related to drug dealing. The hotplate and
baking soda found in the suitcase in the office could be used to convert powder cocaine into
crack cocaine. Acetone, a component of the nail polish remover, is used to wash cocaine,
i.e., to dissolve the materials used in diluting the cocaine during the process of converting the
cocaine to crack. Inositol is used to dilute cocaine to increase profits to dealers.
The independence cards in other people’s names, found on appellant’s person, were
also indicative of drug dealing activity. Sergeant McDonough explained that it is “fairly
common” for people who do not have cash to purchase drugs with the funds on their
independence cards by giving their cards to the dealer.
Sergeant McDonough stated that the large amount of money recovered from the laptop
bag in the storage unit, $91,000, as well as the “substantial amount of cocaine,” indicated that
appellant had sold a portion of an even larger amount of cocaine and was in the process of
selling the remaining portion. He opined that the piece of paper that was found with the
money appeared to be a ledger, where appellant kept track of money going in and out.
-8-
With respect to appellant’s visits to Mr. Brown, and his deposits into Mr. Brown’s
commissary accounts, Sergeant McDonough stated: “If a person is a standup person, does
not give information to law enforcement and goes ahead and eats the charge or takes the
arrest and goes to jail,” then “the individual(s) who did not get charged will sometimes help
out that person by putting money into their commissaries.”
Evidence that appellant had spent over $18,000 on rental cars over the course of 18
months was also significant to Sergeant McDonough. He explained that drug traffickers
often drive different vehicles to avoid police surveillance and avoid having their personal
vehicle forfeited in the event that they get caught. Drug traffickers also tend to avoid
keeping any funds in a bank as an additional measure to avoid police detection. Based on
the testimony and evidence presented against appellant, Sergeant McDonough opined that
appellant was a mid-to-high level drug dealer.
After the State rested its case, appellant moved for judgment of acquittal. With
respect to the drug kingpin charges, counsel argued that there was insufficient evidence to
establish that appellant was “an organizer, supervisor, financier, or manager” of a drug
distribution network. The State disagreed, arguing that there was evidence from which the
jury could draw inferences that appellant was “in a position of a supervisor, manager,
organizer, [or] financier” of a drug conspiracy. The court denied appellant’s motion.
Appellant then called John Boome, his cousin, who testified that appellant worked as
a photographer, taking photos at events and parties. Beginning in 2006 or 2007, Mr. Boome
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worked, when he was available, as appellant’s photography assistant, helping him photograph
events on the weekends. Mr. Boome went with appellant to events, including night clubs,
and accepted payments for appellant’s services, which typically cost $700 or $800 for adult
events, and $70 or $80 for children’s parties. All of the payments for appellant’s
photography services were made in cash. Mr. Boome testified that appellant possessed “all
kinds” of photography equipment, including tripods, printers, and several cameras. The last
event with which Mr. Boome helped occurred in August 2010.
Shemeka Cole, an event organizer, hired appellant from 2002 to 2008 to take photos
at events. After she stopped working with appellant, she would still see him at events taking
photographs. Appellant was always paid for his services in cash. April Harrod, appellant’s
ex-girlfriend, testified that appellant had a photography business called Flick It Up Photo.
After the defense rested, the State moved into evidence several exhibits, including
appellant’s bank records, as well as a certificate from the Custodian of Records with the
Comptroller of Maryland, which indicated that appellant had not paid income taxes in 2010.7
Appellant then renewed his motion for judgment of acquittal, which the court denied.
7
Bank records from PNC Bank were for appellant, doing business as “B & K Multi
Services,” and bank records from M&T Bank contained transactions by appellant, as well as
Kyler Inc. The State sought to introduce the records to rebut testimony implying that the
large amounts of cash found in appellant’s possession could be explained as proceeds from
his photography business. In closing, the State argued as follows: “You’ll see in
[appellant’s] bank records. . . . the amounts of deposits he makes and all of the expenditures
he has.” The State asserted that, relative to the large amounts of money found in his storage
unit and suitcase, “it does not add up.”
-10-
As indicated, the jury found appellant guilty of multiple drug charges. This timely
appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
I.
Right to a Public Trial
Appellant contends that the circuit court “abused its discretion and violated [his] Sixth
Amendment right to a public trial” when it closed “the courtroom to the public during the
testimony of five undercover officers based solely on a general proffer from the State,
without making the requisite case-specific findings of fact to support an ‘overriding interest’
that would justify the closure.” He asserts that the denial of the constitutional right to a
public trial is a structural defect, and therefore, we must remand his case for a new trial.
The State argues that appellant’s contention is not preserved for this Court’s review,
noting that appellant did not object to the State’s request to screen the officers from view or
the court’s proposed solution to close the courtroom during the testimony of the five officers.
It asserts that appellant’s “failure to make any noise about the State’s request and the trial
court’s subsequent ruling invited any error that may have arisen as it negated the State’s need
for a more extensive proffer or the circuit court’s need for more specialized findings.” In any
event, the State contends that the court acted “within its discretion in allowing for the limited
closure of the courtroom while instituting other accommodations for public consumption of
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the trial in order to protect the identities of undercover police officers during their
testimony.”
A.
Proceedings Below
At the start of appellant’s trial, the State expressed its concern regarding “undercover
officers who remain assigned in an undercover capacity” being required to testify in “the
open courtroom with their faces displayed to individuals who may be here watching the
trial.” The State requested that the court allow the officers to “testify from the side of the
courtroom close to the jury box, screened from view of the gallery, and that precautions be
made to close those portions of the courtroom that would allow them to be seen [by]
individuals seated in the gallery of the courtroom.” The State further requested that the court
allow the officers to wear masks when they entered the courtroom, to block the view from
the gallery, and then remove the masks when they were behind the screened area.
The court asked for input from appellant’s counsel, and counsel replied that it would
have “a chilling effect in terms of giving [appellant] a fair trial.” The following colloquy
then occurred:
THE COURT: The other alternative is we can clear the courtroom when they
come in and then leave the screen up. For officer safety I think we need to
have some accommodation for that.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Perhaps if that can be done in such a way that’s not
obvious to the jury. I wouldn’t have a problem with that.
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The court stated that there were two options it could use to protect the identity of the
officers: “Keep the witness in the witness stand but clear the courtroom or have the witness
testify over closest to the jury.” The State clarified that either procedure would need to be
employed for five witnesses, each of whom was an undercover police officer. At that point,
appellant’s counsel stated: “I would ask the court to clear the courtroom if that’s the choice.”
He then went on to elaborate on his election:
And again, I think given the choice, given those two choices from the
defense’s point of view, it’s probably best to have all witnesses testify. It
doesn’t suggest that one witness maybe has greater importance than another.
It might be a chilling effect. I don’t think these jurors – I think they’re highly
intelligent, and I think that they will perhaps view those precautions in a way
that’s suggestive that my client poses somehow a danger. They might
misunderstand or misconstrue the purpose, and I think for those reasons, if the
court’s going to recognize these concerns from the [S]tate, best to have the
witness testify here and we’ll clear the courtroom.
The State then expressed concern about appellant’s “ right to have a public trial,”
stating: “I don’t want there to be an issue with respect to the lack of a public trial if certain
witnesses are testifying without the public being permitted to observe.” The State explained,
however, that “we live in a small county and we have only so large a pool of officers to work
in an undercover capacity,” and as “[t]hey continue in that assignment,” their testimony raises
“an officer safety issue.”
The court then suggested, as a way to accommodate the parties’ concerns regarding
officer safety and appellant’s right to a public trial, that the courtroom could be closed, but
individuals who wanted to listen to the testimony could do so by listening to recorded trial
-13-
proceedings in another room. It believed that would resolve defense counsel’s concern
regarding “perhaps highlighting those witnesses to the jury panel” by having them testify
behind a screen. The court stated that interested individuals could “listen in to the trial and
then they can come back and observe. So I think we’ve solved both problems.” Appellant’s
counsel voiced no objection to that arrangement.
After speaking to the court administrator regarding setting up a listening room, the
court then made the following findings, noting again its view that the proposed arrangement
“solves all concerns”:
The court certainly makes an affirmative finding that we do live in a
small community. Four or five of these witnesses are still working in an
undercover capacity. It is a small community. For officer safety I think we
need to make some accommodation for their safety as well as make an
accommodation for a public trial for the defendant.
So the witnesses – the observers will be able to listen to the testimony
but not see the witnesses. And I do think [defense counsel’s] comments of
highlighting the witnesses either if they came in masked and sat behind a
screen might highlight their testimony. So I think our jury . . . . will not realize
that there’s no one in the courtroom because there will be a rule on witnesses.
So if anyone is going to be a witness, they wouldn’t be allowed in the
courtroom anyway. And then all of the witnesses will testify in the courtroom
in the same spot.
Appellant’s counsel again voiced no objection.
-14-
The courtroom was closed during the testimony of the five undercover officers, and
during that time, members of the public were allowed to listen to the testimony in another
courtroom. The courtroom otherwise was open during trial for public viewing.8
B.
Waiver
We first address the State’s preservation argument. Pursuant to Maryland Rule 8-
131(a), an appellate court ordinarily “will not decide any . . . issue unless it plainly appears
by the record to have been raised in or decided by the trial court.” The rationale for “the rule
limiting the scope of appellate review to those issues and arguments raised in the court below
‘is a matter of basic fairness to the trial court and to opposing counsel, as well as being
fundamental to the proper administration of justice.’” In re: Kaleb K., 390 Md. 502, 513
(2006) (quoting Medley v. State, 52 Md. App. 225, 231 (1982)).
In Robinson v. State, 410 Md. 91, 110 (2009), the Court of Appeals held, “[c]onsistent
with the vast majority of the courts that have spoken on the subject,” that “a claimed
violation of the right to a public trial must be preserved for appellate review by a timely
objection at trial.” The Court stated that, although an appellate court has discretion to review
an unpreserved claim of error, it should do so “‘only when it is clear that it will not work an
8
After opening statements, the court made the following announcement: “So if there
are any spectators that wish to listen to the testimony in the State of Maryland versus
[appellant], if you would go through this gate and follow the gentleman in the yellow shirt
and tie.”
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unfair prejudice to the parties or to the court.’” Id. at 104 (quoting Jones v. State, 379 Md.
704, 714 (2004)). Unfair prejudice may result for several reasons, including “when counsel
fails to bring the position of [his or] her client to the attention of the trial court so ‘that court
can pass upon and correct any errors in its own proceedings.’” Id. (quoting Jones, 379 Md.
at 714). Noting that “the very analysis Appellant complains was not done by the trial court
likely would have been done had he brought the matter to the court’s attention,” the Court
declined to exercise its discretion under Maryland Rule 8-131(a) to address Robinson’s
unpreserved claim that the court erred in excluding Robinson’s family from trial. Id. at 105.
It held that, under the circumstances, “it would be unfair to the court and prejudicial to the
State to review [Mr. Robinson’s] unpreserved claim of error.” Id.
The analysis in Robinson informs our decision in the present case. Here, although
defense counsel expressed concern with the State’s suggestion of erecting a screen to protect
the identities of undercover police officers, stating that it might have “a chilling effect,”
defense counsel voiced no objection to the procedures employed by the court. Indeed, when
the court suggested clearing the courtroom and setting up an alternate listening site for
members of the public during the testimony of the officers, defense counsel stated that he
“wouldn’t have a problem with that” if it was “done in such a way that’s not obvious to the
jury.”
The State, not appellant, then addressed whether such an arrangement would implicate
appellant’s right to a public trial. After considering the State’s concerns, as well as
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appellant’s concerns about highlighting the testimony of the undercover officers, the court
proposed a solution that would protect officer safety and address defense counsel’s concern.
Again, appellant voiced no objection to the court’s proposal.
Under these circumstances, it is clear that appellant’s argument on appeal, that the
alternative procedure employed by the court violated his constitutional right to a public trial,
was not presented to the circuit court. We hold, as the Court of Appeals did in Robinson, 410
Md. at 105, that it “would be unfair to the court and prejudicial to the State to review
[appellant’s] unpreserved claim of error.”
II.
Drug Kingpin
Appellant next argues that the evidence was insufficient to support his drug kingpin
conviction. He contends that “[t]here was no evidence at trial from which a rational trier of
fact could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that [he] organized, supervised, financed or
managed Antoine Savoy, Roosevelt Brooks, or Cranston Brown in a drug conspiracy,” and
without such evidence, the State failed to establish the requisite elements of his drug kingpin
status.
The State disagrees. It argues that the evidence was sufficient to establish appellant’s
role as a drug kingpin, asserting that the evidence permitted the jury to find that appellant
“oversaw the entire drug enterprise.” The State contends that the evidence supported a
finding that appellant’s “role was that of directing, managing, and supervising the drug
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conspiracy, which included a number of players,” including Mr. Savoy, Mr. Brooks, and
Mr. Brown.
This Court recently set forth the applicable standard of review in determining the
sufficiency of the evidence on appeal:
The test of appellate review of evidentiary sufficiency is whether,
“‘after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
beyond a reasonable doubt.’” State v. Coleman, 423 Md. 666, 672 (2011)
(quoting Facon v. State, 375 Md. 435, 454 (2003)). The Court’s concern is not
whether the verdict is in accord with what appears to be the weight of the
evidence, “but rather is only with whether the verdicts were supported with
sufficient evidence -- that is, evidence that either showed directly, or
circumstantially, or supported a rational inference of facts which could fairly
convince a trier of fact of the defendant’s guilt of the offense charged beyond
a reasonable doubt.” State v. Albrecht, 336 Md. 475, 479 (1994). “We ‘must
give deference to all reasonable inferences [that] the fact-finder draws,
regardless of whether [the appellate court] would have chosen a different
reasonable inference.’” Cox v. State, 421 Md. 630, 657 (2011) (quoting Bible
v. State, 411 Md. 138, 156 (2009)). Further, we do not “‘distinguish between
circumstantial and direct evidence because [a] conviction may be sustained on
the basis of a single strand of direct evidence or successive links of
circumstantial evidence.’” Montgomery v. State, 206 Md. App. 357, 385
(quoting Morris v. State, 192 Md. App. 1, 31 (2010)), cert. denied, 429 Md.
83 (2012).
Donati v. State, 215 Md. App. 686, 716, cert. denied, 438 Md. 143 (2014).
Maryland Code (2012 Repl. Vol.) § 5-613(a) of the Criminal Law Article (“CL”)
defines a “drug kingpin” as “an organizer, supervisor, financier, or manager who acts as a
coconspirator in a conspiracy to manufacture, distribute, dispense, transport in, or bring into
the State a controlled dangerous substance.” When a drug kingpin “conspires to
manufacture, distribute, dispense, transport in, or bring into the State,” a CDS in an amount
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listed in CL § 5-612 (which for purposes of this case includes 448 or more grams of cocaine
or 50 or more grams of “crack”), he or she is subject to a mandatory minimum sentence of
20 years, without the possibility of parole. CL § 5-613(b)(1).9
The Maryland appellate courts have addressed the drug kingpin statute on several
occasions. In Williams v. State, 329 Md. 1, 14 (1992), the Court of Appeals applied well-
settled rules of statutory interpretation in determining the meaning of the statute. Noting that
the “‘cardinal rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and effectuate legislative intent,’”
id. at 15 (quoting State v. Bricker, 321 Md. 86, 92 (1990)), the Court looked to the terms
“organizer,” “supervisor,” “financier,” and “manager” and determined that they are “common
words with well understood meanings.” Id. at 11. The Court explained:
As these words are defined by Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
(1981), an “organizer” is “one who organizes” (to “organize” is “to unify into
a coordinated functioning whole; ... to arrange by systematic planning and
coordination of individual effort”). A “supervisor” is “one that supervises a
person, group, department, organization, or operation” (“supervise” is “to ...
oversee with the powers of direction and decision the implementation of one’s
own or another’s intentions”). A “financier” is “a large scale investor.” A
“manager” is “one that manages, a person that conducts, directs, or supervises
something.”
Id.10
9
Md. Code (2012 Repl. Vol.) § 5-613(d) provides: “(d) Merger. — Notwithstanding
any other provision of this title, a conviction under this section does not merge with the
conviction for any crime that is the object of the conspiracy.”
10
Other courts similarly have defined these terms. See U.S. v. Hutching, 75 F.3d
1453, 1458 (10th Cir. 1996) (“‘An organizer arranges a number of people engaged in
separate activities into an essentially orderly operation,’ and a supervisor gives orders or
directions to another person who carries them out.”) (quoting U.S. v. Smith, 24 F.3d 1230,
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The Court noted, however, that although there were plain meanings for the terms,
“[u]ndeniabily . . . some ambiguity creeps into the statutory terms at the margins.” Id. at 16.
Accordingly, the Court looked to the “larger context of the statute and to other relevant
materials to ascertain legislative intent.” Id. at 16. Accord Morse v. Erie Ins. Exch., 217 Md.
App. 1, 34 (2014) (“When the text is ambiguous, we must look beyond the statute’s plain
language to determine legislative intent. . . . ‘The Court will look at the larger context,
including the legislative purpose, within which statutory language appears.’”) (quoting
Consol. Constr. Servs., Inc. v. Simpson, 372 Md. 434, 457 (2002)).
After conducting this legislative review, the Court stated:
It is plain to us that the phrase “drug kingpin” was intended by the
legislature to apply to a leader of a drug trafficking network. It thus follows
that the words “organizer,” “supervisor,” “financier,” and “manager,” read in
the context of the statute, were not intended to encompass a person occupying
a role substantially less than that of a large-scale drug trafficker. In other
words, in looking to the larger context of the statute (which prescribes lesser
penalties for non-kingpins); at the bill’s title; and at external evidence in order
to chart the blurry perimeters of the statute’s operative terms, we believe that
the legislature intended the statute’s heightened penalties for “drug kingpins,”
or leaders, to have limited application to those acting as organizers,
supervisors, financiers, or managers of large-scale drug trafficking operations.
Id. at 17.
1233 (10th Cir. 1994)); State v. Alexander, 643 A.2d 996, 1002 (N.J. 1994) (in jury
instructions a court “might define an ‘organizer’ as a person who arranges, devises, or plans
a drug-trafficking network; a ‘supervisor’ as one who oversees the operation of a drug-
trafficking network; a ‘financier’ as one who is responsible for providing the funds or
resources necessary to operate a drug-trafficking network; and a ‘manager’ as one who
directs the operations of a drug-trafficking network”).
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In Williams, the Court summarized Mr. Williams’ limited role in the drug conspiracy
as follows:
(1)[] agreeing to and transporting the drugs . . . to Salisbury; (2) negotiating the
final purchase price of $34,000; (3) engaging a driver to transport him and the
drugs to Salisbury; (4) receiving and counting the . . . money; (5) secreting that
money in his car; and (6) advising [the undercover officer] that he could be
directly contacted for further sales.
Id. at 20. Although the evidence indicated that Mr. Williams was “an important cog” in
effectuating a large drug transaction, and he was “more than a ‘mule’ or mere courier of the
drugs,” the Court held that the evidence did not permit a rational fact finder to conclude,
beyond a reasonable doubt, that Mr. Williams’ “participation amounted to that of an
organizer, a supervisor, or manager within the contemplation of the statute.” Id.
In two cases decided by this Court, however, we held that there was sufficient
evidence to allow the jury to determine that the respective defendants acted as drug kingpins.
In Allen v. State, 89 Md. App. 25, 52 (1991), cert. denied, 325 Md. 396 (1992), this Court
held that the evidence sufficiently demonstrated that Allen was more than just a
co-conspirator; he was an organizer, manager, and supervisor, in addition to serving as a
financier. The State “presented witnesses who testified that they participated in the narcotics
operation under Peter Allen’s supervision.” Id. at 52. There was evidence that Mr. Allen
paid his sister-in-law to transport money for him, that another witness used to sell drugs for
him, and that Mr. Allen would supply that witness with drugs to sell. Id. at 52-53. We
determined that the latter evidence, along with tapes played at trial of Mr. Allen organizing
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the times, locations, and prices of drugs to be sold, established that Mr. Allen “was a leader
of a drug operation, rather than a mere player with no greater authority than the others.” Id.
at 53. Accordingly, we held that “[t]here was clearly sufficient evidence for the jury to find
that Peter Allen was, indeed, a ‘drug kingpin.’” Id. at 53.
Similarly, in Velez v. State, 106 Md. App. 194, 203 (1995), we addressed whether
there was sufficient evidence to find that Isabel Velez acted as a drug kingpin in a family
drug operation. In that case, there was evidence that Ms. Velez “supervised and
orchestrated” the family’s drug transactions, including that she helped determine who owed
the family money for drugs, directed others to collect money owed, gave approval before
drug sales were made, made arrangements to purchase drugs from their supplier, and
distributed drugs to lower-level players. Id. Under these circumstances, we determined that
“a rational fact-finder could have found that Velez’s role was that of an organizer,
supervisor, or manager of the drug operation, not just a low-level player with no more
authority than the others.” Id.
Based on these cases, it is clear that, to qualify as a drug kingpin, a defendant must
be more than a “mere player,” Allen, 89 Md. App. at 53, or an “important cog” in a
trafficking scheme. Williams, 329 Md. at 20. Rather, there must be evidence that the
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accused acted as “a leader of a drug trafficking network,” id. at 16-17, and he or she
exercised a measure of control over the drug conspiracy. Allen, 89 Md. App. at 51-52.11
With that background in mind, we address whether there was sufficient evidence to
support appellant’s drug kingpin conviction. Appellant argues that there was not sufficient
evidence that he “organized, supervised, financed or managed Antoine Savoy, Roosevelt
Brooks, or Cranston Brown in a drug conspiracy.” He asserts that there was no evidence
establishing that he controlled their activities, as required by statute.
To be sure, unlike in Allen and Velez, there was no direct testimony in this case that
appellant exerted control over Mr. Brooks, Mr. Savoy, or Mr. Brown. Rather, the State’s
case was based on circumstantial evidence that appellant was the leader of a drug conspiracy.
A conviction, however, may be based on circumstantial evidence. See Johnson v. State, 154
Md. App. 286, 305 n.6 (2003) (“Circumstantial evidence is entirely sufficient to support a
conviction, provided the circumstances support rational inferences from which the trier of
11
We note that, in other state and federal drug kingpin statutes, there is a requirement
that the defendant supervise a certain number of co-conspirators. See State v. Afanador, 631
A.2d 946, 952 (N.J. 1993) (to convict a defendant as being a drug kingpin under the New
Jersey statute there must be evidence that “the drug-trafficking conspiracy involve[s] at least
three persons: the kingpin defendant and two others”); 21 U.S.C. § 848(c) (2014) (a
defendant must “act in concert with five or more other persons with respect to whom such
person occupies a position of organizer, a supervisory position, or any other position of
management”). There is no such requirement in Maryland. See Williams v. State, 329 Md.
1, 13 (1992) (“By stiffening the penalties for those who act in the management ranks of drug
conspiracies, without regard to the number . . . of coconspirators, the Maryland statute simply
constructs a wider net” than other kingpin legislation.).
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fact could be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused.”), cert.
denied, 380 Md. 618 (2004).
Here, the circumstantial evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict that
appellant acted as a drug kingpin, i.e., leader of the drug operation. Sergeant McDonough,
an expert in drug distribution organizations, testified that appellant was a mid-to-high level
drug dealer. He based his opinion on the large quantities of drugs, as well as materials used
to package cocaine and crack cocaine for sale, and materials used to convert cocaine to
cocaine base, or crack, found in appellant’s photo shop. Moreover, the packages of cocaine
found in the photo shop included: (1) packages that were packed to be sold for $150 to $200;
and (2) larger, quarter kilo amounts, indicating a dealer who had staff to give the quarter
kilos to sell. Appellant also had on his person several independence cards belonging to other
people, a common method of payment for drug users, and he had been seen driving several
rental cars during the surveillance period, consistent with the practice of drug traffickers.
Thus, there was evidence for the jury to find that appellant was a high level drug dealer.
The evidence also showed that appellant’s drug operation included Mr. Brooks and
Mr. Savoy, and that appellant was the leader of the operation. There was evidence that
appellant visited the barbershop that Mr. Savoy co-leased with appellant, and Mr. Brooks
frequented, approximately 20 times in the three month surveillance period. Appellant was
seen entering and leaving the shop with a bag, and after he left, the CDS activity would
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increase.12 Mr. Savoy and Mr. Brooks sold drugs to an undercover agent. A copy of the
search warrant for appellant’s house was found during a search of Mr. Brooks’ house.
In addition, almost $100,000 in cash was found inside a bag in appellant’s storage
unit, which was leased in his name. That bag, which matched the description of the bag that
appellant was seen carrying when entering and exiting the barbershop, also contained what
an expert determined was a ledger to track funds coming in and out. During the execution
of the warrant for appellant’s home, detectives found a money counter. Thus, in addition to
being in possession of large quantities of CDS, and quantities of cocaine indicating a dealer
who had staff to give large quantities of cocaine to sell, the evidence supported a finding that
appellant was the person responsible for retaining large quantities of cash, as well as the
means to count and track that cash. This evidence supports the jury’s finding that appellant
was a leader of a large drug operation, and that he managed the operation.13 Accordingly,
the evidence was sufficient to support the drug kingpin conviction.
12
The police also found a lease agreement for the barbershop in the photo shop.
13
Although Cranston Brown was incarcerated at the time of the central drug
conspiracy at issue here, there was evidence that appellant was his “employer” and placed
funds in his commissary account after he pled guilty to possession of drugs found in
appellant’s home. This evidence also permitted the jury to infer that appellant acted in a
supervisory capacity with respect to Mr. Brown.
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III.
Sentence
Appellant’s final contention involves his sentences for possession with intent to
distribute more than 448 grams of cocaine (count 3), possession with intent to distribute more
than 50 grams of cocaine base (count 4), possession of cocaine with intent to distribute
(count 5), and possession of cocaine base with intent to distribute (count 6).14 He argues that
the circuit court erred in sentencing him “both for being a volume dealer and for possession
with intent to distribute,” asserting that his sentences for possession with intent to distribute
cocaine and cocaine base (counts 5 and 6) should merge into the sentences for volume
dealing of more than 448 grams of cocaine and more than 50 grams of cocaine base (counts
3 and 4).
Appellant argues that merger is appropriate pursuant to any of the following four
theories: (1) the required evidence test; (2) because legislative intent requires merger; (3) the
rule of lenity; and (4) principles of fundamental fairness.15 Noting that this argument was not
raised below, appellant asks us to invoke the plain error doctrine to review the merits of his
claim.
14
The court sentenced appellant as follows: (1) 25 years for the possession with intent
to distribute cocaine conviction; (2) 20 years, consecutive, for the possession with intent to
distribute cocaine base conviction; and (3) 5 years, concurrent, for each of the convictions
under the volume dealer statute.
15
In his brief to this Court, appellant also argued that “[t]he volume dealer statute is
a sentence-enhancing provision, not a separate offense.” At oral argument, however, counsel
withdrew this argument.
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A.
Preservation
Because the merger argument was not raised below, appellant asks us to invoke the
plain error doctrine to review the merits of his claim. As the Court of Appeals has explained,
however, when a court imposes a sentence that is not authorized by law, the sentence is
illegal,” and an illegal sentence claim “‘is not subject to waiver.’” Waker v. State, 431 Md.
1, 7 (2013) (quoting Johnson v. State, 427 Md. 356, 371 (2012)). Accord Fisher v. State, 367
Md. 218, 292-93 (2001) (“an illegal sentence can, and should, be addressed even if not
preserved or properly raised”). In Britton v. State, 201 Md. App. 589, 598-99 (2011), Chief
Judge Krauser, writing for this Court, explained that, “when the trial court is required to
merge convictions for sentencing purposes but, instead, imposes a separate sentence for each
unmerged conviction,” “the result is the imposition of a sentence ‘not permitted by law.’”
(Quoting Campell v. State, 65 Md. App. 498, 510 (1985)). Thus, at least in a situation where
merger is required under the required evidence test or the rule of lenity, the issue of merger
is properly before us even in the absence of an objection below. See Pair v. State, 202 Md.
App. 617, 625, 649 (2011) (Although the failure to merge multiple convictions pursuant to
the required evidence test or the rule of lenity renders a sentence illegal, the failure to merge
convictions pursuant to fundamental fairness is not inherently an “illegal sentence.”), cert.
denied, 425 Md. 397 (2012).
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B.
Prior Statutory Scheme
Previously, this Court held that a conviction for possession with the intent to distribute
merged into a conviction for possession of CDS in a designated amount. See Simpson v.
State, 121 Md. App. 263, 290 (1998); Anderson v. State, 89 Md. App. 712, 727 (1991).
Those cases, however, addressed a different statutory scheme.
At the time the above cases were decided, Md. Code (1991 Supp.) Art. 27 § 286
provided as follows:
(a) Except as authorized by this subheading, it is unlawful for any person:
(1) To manufacture, distribute, or dispense, or to possess a controlled
dangerous substance in sufficient quantity to reasonably indicate under all
circumstances an intent to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, a controlled
dangerous substance . . . .
***
(f)(1) If a person violates subsection (a)(1) of this section and the violation
involves any of the following controlled dangerous substances, in the amounts
indicated, the person is subject to the penalties provided in paragraph (3) of
this subsection upon conviction:
***
(ii) 448 grams or more of cocaine or 448 grams or more of any mixture
containing a detectable amount of cocaine;
(iii) 50 grams or more of cocaine base, commonly known as “crack.”
(Emphasis added). This statute, by its terms, provided that the elements of an offense
charged under § 286(a) and § 286(f) contained the same elements, with the exception that §
286(f) contained a quantity requirement. Anderson, 89 Md. App. at 726. Section 286
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involved one offense, with an enhanced penalty when the violation involved listed CDS in
certain amounts. Wadlow v. State, 335 Md. 122, 125, 131-32 (1994).
In 2005, however, the General Assembly revised CL § 5-612 and other sentencing
enhancing provisions in response to the Supreme Court’s decision in Blakey v. Washington,
542 U.S. 296 (2004), which, as the legislature explained, held that “a sentencing judge’s
imposition of an enhanced penalty, based on facts that were not admitted by the defendant
or found by a jury, violated the defendant’s right to a trial by jury.” S.B. 429, Fiscal and
Policy Note (Feb. 15, 2005). To avoid running afoul of Blakely, the Committee to Revise
Article 27 recommended “repealing the factual penalty enhancement in the penalty
provisions and to place the factual circumstance that leads to the increased penalty into the
factual elements of the underlying offense to be charged as its own, separate, new offense.”
Id. (emphasis added).
Accordingly, the legislature revised CL § 5-612, in pertinent part, as follows:
(a) A person who violates § 5-602 of this subtitle with respect to any of the
following controlled dangerous substances in the amounts indicated is subject
on conviction to a fine not exceeding $100,000 and the enhanced penalty
provided in subsection (c) of this section may not manufacture, distribute,
dispense, or possess:
***
(2) 448 grams or more of cocaine;
***
(4) 50 grams or more of cocaine base, commonly known as “crack”;
***
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(c)(1) A person who is convicted under § 5-602 of this subtitle with respect
to a controlled dangerous substance in an amount indicated in of a violation of
subsection (a) of this section shall be sentenced to imprisonment for not less
than 5 years and is subject to a fine not exceeding $100,000.
2005 Md. Laws Ch. 485. Pursuant to the 2005 revisions, CL § 5-612 no longer refers to a
person “who violates” or “is convicted under” § 5-602.16
With this background in mind, we turn to the issue of merger under the new statutory
scheme.
C.
Required Evidence Test
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment of the United States
Constitution prohibits the State from punishing a defendant multiple times for the same
offense. Sifrit v. State, 383 Md. 116, 137 (2004), cert. denied, 543 U.S. 1056 (2005). Accord
Moore v. State, 198 Md. App. 655, 684 (2011) (“The merger doctrine, which is derived from
both federal and Maryland common law double jeopardy principles, ‘provides the criminally
accused with protection from, inter alia, multiple punishment stemming from the same
offense.’”) (quoting Purnell v. State, 375 Md. 678, 691 (2003)). Separate sentences are
prohibited when “a defendant is convicted of two offenses based on the same act or acts and
16
CL § 5-602 provides that: “a person may not: (1) manufacture, distribute, or
dispense a controlled dangerous substance; or (2) possess a controlled dangerous substance
in sufficient quantity reasonably to indicate under all circumstances an intent to manufacture,
distribute, or dispense a controlled dangerous substance.”
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one offense is a lesser-included offense of the other.’” Sifrit, 383 Md. at 137 (quoting
Khalifa v. State, 382 Md. 400, 432 (2004)).
In determining whether one offense merges with another, we initially apply the
“required evidence test.” Id. “The required evidence test ‘focuses upon the elements of each
offense; if all the elements of one offense are included in the other offense, so that only the
latter offense contains a distinct element or distinct elements, the former merges into the
latter.’” Kelly v. State, 195 Md. App. 403, 440 (2010) (quoting McGrath v. State, 356 Md.
20, 23 (1999)), cert. denied, 417 Md. 502, cert. denied, 131 S. Ct. 2119 (2011). “‘[I]f each
offense contains an element which the other does not, there is no merger under the required
evidence test even though both offenses are based upon the same act or acts.’” Moore, 198
Md. App. at 684 (quoting State v. Lancaster, 332 Md. 385, 391 (1993)).
Here, appellant asserts that all of the elements of possession with intent to distribute
cocaine are also present in the offense of possession with intent to distribute more than 448
grams of cocaine, and that all of the elements of possession with intent to distribute cocaine
base are also present in the offense of possession with intent to distribute more than 50 grams
of cocaine base, and therefore, merger of the latter offenses is required. The State contends
that “[t]his argument is plainly wrong.”
CL § 5-602, entitled “Manufacturing, distributing, possession with intent to distribute,
or dispensing controlled dangerous substance,” provides, in pertinent part, that a person may
not “possess a controlled dangerous substance in sufficient quantity reasonably to indicate
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under all circumstances an intent to distribute or dispense a controlled dangerous substance.”
Pursuant to the statute, the elements of possession with intent to distribute cocaine or cocaine
base include: (1) possession of CDS; and (2) circumstances indicating an intent to distribute
the CDS.
CL § 5-612, entitled “Volume Dealer,” provides as follows:
Unlawful Amounts.
(a) A person may not manufacture, distribute, dispense, or possess:
***
(2) 448 grams or more of cocaine;
***
(4) 50 grams or more of cocaine base, commonly known as “crack.”
Pursuant to CL § 5-612, the elements of a volume dealer charge include: (1) manufacturing,
distributing, dispensing or possessing CDS; and (2) in the requisite quantity.17
Each of these offenses contains an element that the other does not. CL § 5-602
requires an intent to distribute, which is not required by CL § 5-612. And CL § 5-612
requires a minimum quantity of drugs, which is not required by CL § 5-602. Accordingly,
the offenses do not merge under the required evidence test. See Lancaster, 332 Md. at 391
(“[I]f each offense contains an element which the other does not, there is no merger under
17
The court instructed the jury regarding this count as follows: “The defendant is
charged as a volume dealer. A person may not manufacture, distribute, dispense, or possess
44[8] grams or more of cocaine . . . or 50 grams or more of cocaine base, commonly known
as crack.”
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the required evidence test[,] even though both offenses are based upon the same act or
acts.”).
D.
Rule of Lenity
Appellant next argues that, even if his sentences do not merge under the required
evidence test, merger is still required. In that regard, he asserts that “it is clear that the
Maryland legislature did not intend to authorize multiple punishments based on a single act
of possession of a controlled dangerous substance,” or, at the very least, the legislative intent
is unclear. The State disagrees, arguing that “[n]othing in the plain language of the statutes
nor their legislative history indicates that separate punishments cannot be imposed for these
separate crimes, to the contrary, it indicates that the circuit court’s imposition of sentences
here was entirely proper.”
Even if offenses do not merge under the required evidence test, merger may still be
required under the rule of lenity. Moore v. State, 198 Md. App. 655, 686 (2011). “The ‘rule
of lenity’ is a principle of statutory construction” that “amounts to an alternate basis for
merger in cases where the required evidence test is not satisfied, and is applied to resolve
ambiguity as to whether the Legislature intended multiple punishments for the same act or
transaction.” Marlin v. State, 192 Md. App. 134, 167 (2010). We have explained the rule
of lenity as follows:
“Two crimes created by legislative enactment may not be punished separately
if the legislature intended the offenses to be punished by one sentence. It is
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when we are uncertain whether the legislature intended one or more than one
sentence that we make use of an aid to statutory interpretation known as the
‘rule of lenity.’ Under that rule, if we are unsure of the legislative intent in
punishing offenses as a single merged crime or as distinct offenses, we, in
effect, give the defendant the benefit of the doubt and hold that the crimes do
merge.”
Moore, 198 Md. App. at 686 (quoting Clark v. State, 188 Md. App. 185, 207-08 (2009)).
Accord Quansah v. State, 207 Md. App. 636, 653 (2012), cert. denied, 430 Md. 13 (2013)
(where two sentences “do not merge under the required evidence test because each offense
requires proof of distinct elements, nevertheless merger may be necessary if the Legislature
did not intend to authorize multiple punishments based on a single act or there is uncertainty
as to whether the Legislature intended to do so,” and applying the rule of lenity); Pair v.
State, 202 Md. App. 617, 638 (2011) (“If the Legislature intended two crimes arising out of
a single act to be punished separately, we defer to that legislated choice . . . If the legislature
intended but a single punishment, we defer to that legislated choice. If we are uncertain as
to what the Legislature intended, we turn to the . . . ‘Rule of Lenity’”) (quoting Walker v.
State, 53 Md. App. 171, 201 (1982)).
As explained, infra, the legislative history establishes that, when Article 27 § 286(f)
was enacted, possession of a certain quantity of drugs was not intended to result in a sentence
additional to that for possession with the intent to distribute. Rather, it was intended to
“distinguish the volume drug dealer from the street corner dealer by establishing a mandatory
minimum penalty of 5 years in jail for the possession of certain threshold quantities of a
controlled dangerous substance.” State v. Wheeler 118 Md. App. 142, 148 (1997). Although
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the General Assembly subsequently changed CL § 5-612 to make it a separate offense from
§ 5-602, it did so to avoid a constitutional issue. There is no language in the amended statute,
as there is in CL § 5-613, the drug kingpin statute, providing that a conviction under § 5-612
does not merge with other crimes. And CL § 5-612 continues to refer to the penalty as an
“[e]nhanced penalty.”
Given these circumstances, it appears that the General Assembly did not intend that
volume dealing be punished separately from the offense of possession with intent to
distribute. At the very least, the intent is ambiguous. In that circumstance, we resolve that
ambiguity in appellant’s favor. See Quansah, 207 Md. App. at 656 (“When ‘we are uncertain
as to what the Legislature intended, we turn to the . . . ‘Rule of Lenity’ by which we give the
defendant the benefit of the doubt.’”) (quoting Walker, 53 Md. App. at 201); Handy v. State,
175 Md. App. 538, 577 (2007) (“‘doubt or ambiguity as to whether the legislature intended
that there be multiple punishments for the same act or transaction ‘will be resolved against
turning a single transaction into multiple offenses’”).
In applying the rule of lenity, however, the lesser penalty merges into the greater
penalty. See Spitzinger v. State, 340 Md. 114, 125 (1995) (“where there is a merger of
penalties as distinguished from offenses, on some ground, such as the rule of lenity, the lesser
penalty generally merges into the greater penalty”). Here, as indicated, appellant received
25 years for the conviction of possession with intent to distribute cocaine, 20 years,
consecutive, for the conviction of possession with intent to distribute cocaine base, and 5
-35-
years, concurrent, for each of the volume dealer convictions. Accordingly, for sentencing
purposes, appellant’s convictions for volume dealing merge into his convictions for
possession with intent to distribute.
SENTENCES IMPOSED PURSUANT
T O C L § 5-612 VACATED.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT FOR CALVERT COUNTY
OTHERWISE AFFIRMED. COSTS
TO BE PAID 67% BY APPELLANT,
33% BY CALVERT COUNTY.
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