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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
No. 13-FS-1347
IN RE D.P., APPELLANT
Appeal from the Superior Court
of the District of Columbia
(DEL-2275-12)
(Hon. Florence Y. Pan, Trial Judge)
(Argued May 14, 2015 Decided August 13, 2015)
Aaron Marr Page, with whom Randy Evan McDonald was on the brief, for
appellant.
John D. Martorana, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Eugene A.
Adams, Interim Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Todd S. Kim,
Solicitor General, Rosalyn Calbert Groce, Deputy Solicitor General, and John J.
Woykovsky, Assistant Attorney General, were on the brief, for appellee.
Before FISHER and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, and FARRELL, Senior Judge.
EASTERLY, Associate Judge: As sixteen-year-old D.P. was traveling home
from school on a crowded Metrobus, she and two girlfriends started a fight with
M.G., another girl from a different high school. The entire incident was captured
on video by the Metrobus camera. From start to finish, the fight lasted
approximately fourteen seconds. D.P. and her friends pushed through other
passengers standing in the aisle to get at M.G., exchanged blows with M.G., and
2
then got off the bus. M.G. stood her ground for most of the incident but, at the
very end, disappeared from view. Apparently, she hit her head on a pole, and she
was knocked unconscious. A friend of M.G.’s helped her into a seat, where she
quickly revived. Minutes later, M.G. walked off the bus and declined to go to the
hospital.
One of D.P.’s friends pled out to simple assault, a misdemeanor, and the
other friend’s case was apparently never adjudicated. But D.P. went to trial. The
trial court adjudicated her delinquent after finding her involved in the most severe
form of assault in the District, aggravated assault, as well as its lesser included
offense, assault with significant bodily injury, both felonies. D.P. now appeals,
arguing that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of her guilt of (or
involvement in) either crime. We agree.
Fights on public transit are unquestionably a cause for concern, and D.P.’s
actions cannot be condoned, but D.P. did not engage in felonious conduct in this
case. As to aggravated assault, the evidence is at the very least inadequate to
demonstrate that D.P. possessed the requisite mens rea under the government’s
theory of the case: extreme indifference to human life, equivalent to the mental
state required for second-degree murder. As to assault with significant bodily
3
injury (“felony assault”), M.G.’s minimal bruising and brief unconsciousness do
not, under this court’s binding precedent, amount to the kind of “significant” injury
that would take this incident out of the realm of simple assault. Thus, we reverse
and remand.
I. Facts1
Around 3:35 p.m. on September 27, 2012, sixteen-year-old D.P. boarded a
Metrobus along with several other teenage companions, including codefendants
M.P. and I.C. The group, identifiable as students from the same school by their
matching school uniforms, filed onto the bus and seated themselves in the rearmost
several rows. There, the schoolmates engaged in typical teenage socializing and
horsing around. One student shared his snacks with M.P. and I.C.; another young
man perched briefly on M.P.’s lap; and a third student showed off a dance move.
D.P. and her schoolmates chatted and laughed, gestured across the aisle, and stood
frequently to switch seats.
1
The government presented the following facts via testimony from the
complainant, M.G. and her companion on the day of the assault, H.A., and the
display of video footage from the Metrobus’s security camera. The government
supplied a copy of this footage to the court. It shows video from the relevant
timeframe from eight different vantage-points on the bus. The footage provides
solely a visual record; there is no audio component.
4
Then, around 3:45 p.m., fifteen-year-old M.G. boarded the bus with H.A.
and another group of teenagers; they were also wearing school uniforms, but theirs
were different from those of D.P. and her companions. M.G. and her schoolmates
moved to the center area of the articulated (double-length) bus. By this time, the
bus was quite crowded, and there were no more seats available. M.G. and H.A.
squeezed in alongside other standing passengers, holding onto the bus railings.
M.G. noticed D.P. and her friends in the back of the bus; she testified that
they were being “loud,” and were shouting for the students from M.G.’s school to
come to the back of the bus. H.A. additionally testified that teenagers at the back
of the bus were “yelling” that students from his and M.G.’s school were “bitches.”
Neither M.G. nor H.A. knew D.P. or her friends.
After about two minutes of this, at about 3:47 p.m., D.P. and her friends
stood up and, moving single file—with M.P. in the lead, followed by D.P. and then
I.C.—pushed their way to the center of the bus where M.G. stood. Seemingly
without warning, M.P. punched M.G. in the face.
A brief scuffle ensued. M.P. continued to hit M.G., who tried to fight back
as H.A. attempted to pull M.G. away. D.P. and I.C. also threw punches towards
5
M.G., but initially hit only air (or each other) until they were able to push past two
women who were standing in the aisle and partially blocking their path. For the
next several seconds, D.P. and her friends swung at M.G., but because of the
crowded conditions it is difficult to see on the video where their blows landed.
M.G. described that “we were just going back and forth,” that she was “getting
multiple hits,” and that she “was hitting back,” though she did not know whether
any of her punches connected. Meanwhile, nearby passengers attempted to pull
the girls apart or at least push them away.
After approximately fourteen seconds,2 the fight ended just as quickly as it
had begun. D.P. and the other girls turned around and made their way through the
crowd to the rear door and exited the bus, which had come to a stop. About the
same time, M.G. disappeared from the view of the camera. M.G. testified that she
fell, hit her head on a pole, and briefly blacked out.3 H.A. picked her up and
2
The government represented at oral argument that it was “about an
eighteen-second assault” but, in its brief, it specifically identified “14:47:54” as the
time on the tape when M.P. threw the first punch, and “14:48:08” as the time when
the fight broke up.
3
In its brief, the government inconsistently argues that D.P. and her friends
“continued the assault until M.G. was knocked unconscious,” and that they
“continued the assault even after [M.G.] fell to the floor.” But the government
never made the latter argument at trial and the trial court never made a finding that
the assault continued after M.G. was knocked down. Based on our review of the
(continued…)
6
placed her, sitting upright, in an available seat. According to H.A., M.G. was
unconscious for “maybe a minute, maybe less.” M.G. testified that she came to
“on the chair.” A woman unbuttoned her shirt to help her breathe and directed the
other passengers to give her some space. The crowd of passengers quickly
thinned, bringing M.G. back into full view of the security camera.
About two minutes later, M.G. stood up and walked unassisted to the front
of the bus where she sat down again, with H.A. beside her. The bus driver told
M.G. that an ambulance had been called to take her to the hospital, but M.G. told
the driver that she did not want to go. Two emergency medical technicians
(“EMTs”) subsequently entered the bus and spoke briefly to M.G. and H.A. before
escorting them out the front door. M.G. testified that she went with the EMTs to
their ambulance, where they “checked [her] blood pressure,” “checked [her] head,”
and asked whether she was okay. From this examination, the EMTs apparently
determined that M.G. did not need to go to the hospital, but they “made” her call
her father.
(…continued)
videotape it is impossible to see whether D.P. and her friends continued to hit M.G.
after she hit her head and fell to the ground, and there is no other evidence in the
record to support the government’s representation on appeal that they did.
7
The government presented no medical evidence regarding the nature of
M.G.’s injuries, and M.G. provided no testimony that she had received any medical
care after this incident. M.G. testified that “[t]he day after [she] had a headache,”
and that “for like two, two/three days” afterwards she experienced “minor
headaches,” but she did not go to the hospital. When asked if she had “any
injuries, any swelling, anything at all” as a result of the incident, the only injury
she identified was “the one when I first got hit, that’s the only one I had,” referring
to the right side of her face where she had first been punched by M.P.
The government charged M.P., I.C. and D.P. with aggravated assault and
assault with significant bodily injury. M.P. pled out to simple assault. There is no
indication in the Superior Court docket that delinquency proceedings against I.C.
were ever pursued. D.P. alone went to trial.4
The government’s theory at trial was that D.P. was involved in both crimes
as an aider and abettor, and the government and the court correctly understood that
4
There appears to have been some miscommunication between the
government and D.P.’s counsel regarding an offer to permit D.P. to plead guilty to
simple assault; on the day of trial, counsel for D.P. indicated that D.P. was willing
to plead guilty to this charge, but the government stated that the plea offer was no
longer available.
8
the government was required to establish the same mens rea for D.P. as it would if
she were the principal actor committing the offense.5 The defense vigorously
contested the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to D.P.’s mental state and the
gravity of the injury M.G. suffered, both in a motion for a judgment of acquittal at
the close of the government’s case and in summation. Although the trial court
indicated at one point that it thought the issue of mens rea for aggravated assault
was “more of a close call,” it ultimately rejected all of D.P.’s sufficiency of the
evidence challenges and concluded that the government had proved D.P.’s
involvement in both charged crimes beyond a reasonable doubt. This appeal
followed.
II. Standard of Review
The only claims before us on appeal are challenges to the sufficiency of the
evidence. We review sufficiency claims de novo, “view[ing] the evidence in the
light most favorable to the prosecution, with due regard for the right of the . . . trier
of fact[] to weigh the evidence, to determine the credibility of witnesses, and to
draw reasonable inferences.” Nero v. United States, 73 A.3d 153, 157 (D.C. 2013).
5
See Perry v. United States, 36 A.3d 799, 817 (D.C. 2011) (citing Wilson-
Bey v. United States, 903 A.2d 818 (D.C. 2006)).
9
We will reverse if the evidence, so viewed, “is such that a reasonable juror must
have a reasonable doubt as to the existence of any of the essential elements of the
crime.” Teneyck v. United States, 112 A.3d 906, 908-09 (D.C. 2015) (quoting
Rivas v. United States, 783 A.2d 125, 134 (D.C. 2001) (en banc)).
III. The Insufficiency of the Evidence to Support D.P.’s Conviction
for Aggravated Assault
The District has a three-tiered classification system of assault. Simple
assault is the lowest-level offense. A misdemeanor, it does not require that any
actual injury be incurred and requires only general intent to perform the assaultive
act.6 Assault with significant bodily injury, commonly referred to as “felony
assault,” is the intermediate crime. As its name suggests, it requires the defendant
to cause significant bodily injury and to do so “intentionally, knowingly, or
recklessly.”7 Aggravated assault is the highest-level assault crime recognized in
the District.8 To obtain a conviction for aggravated assault, the government must
prove that the defendant caused serious bodily injury to the victim and must prove
6
D.C. Code § 22-404 (a)(1) (2012 Repl.); see also Macklin v. United States,
733 A.2d 962, 964 (D.C. 1999).
7
D.C. Code § 22-404 (a)(2) (2012 Repl.); see also Nero, 73 A.3d at 158-59;
Quintanilla v. United States, 62 A.3d 1261, 1263-64 (D.C. 2013).
8
D.C. Code § 22-404.01 (2012 Repl.).
10
one of two qualifying mental states: that the defendant (1) caused this injury
“knowingly or purposely,” D.C. Code § 22-404.01 (a)(1), or (2) “[u]nder
circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to human life, . . . intentionally or
knowingly engage[d] in conduct which create[d] a grave risk of serious bodily
injury to [the victim],” D.C. Code § 22-404.01 (a)(2).
D.P. argues that the government’s evidence in this case was insufficient to
establish her guilt for aggravated assault both because there was no proof that she
caused M.G. a “serious bodily injury,” and because there was inadequate proof
that, manifesting extreme indifference to human life, she intentionally or
knowingly created a grave risk of serious bodily injury under D.C. Code § 22-
404.01 (a)(2).9 We agree that the government’s evidence fell far short of proving
that D.P. possessed the state of mind set forth under this subsection for this most
severe type of assault in the District of Columbia.10
9
This was the only mens rea theory the government advanced at trial and
the trial court accordingly determined that it was the only “basis the Government
[had] s[ought] to proceed on” to establish D.P.’s involvement in the crime of
aggravated assault. Because the evidence was clearly insufficient to show
“know[ledge] or purpos[e]” under D.C. Code § 22-404.01 (a)(1), we limit our
assessment of the sufficiency of the evidence to the second prong of the statute.
10
In light of our conclusion that D.P. lacked the requisite mens rea for
aggravated assault, we do not determine whether the complainant’s brief loss of
unconsciousness—from which she fully recovered without medical treatment and
(continued…)
11
Our analysis begins with Perry v. United States, 36 A.3d 799 (D.C. 2011).
In that case, this court examined the mens rea element defined under subsection
(a)(2) of the aggravated assault statute. Reasoning that aggravated assault was
created by the Council of the District of Columbia to “penalize certain egregious
forms of assault more severely,” we determined that the mens rea for aggravated
assault must reflect “heightened culpability.” Id. at 815-16. With this
understanding, we read the statutory requirements—that a defendant “intentionally
or knowingly engage[] in conduct which creates a grave risk of serious bodily
injury,” and that the defendant do so “under circumstances manifesting extreme
indifference to human life”—as requiring a showing of “gross recklessness.” Id. at
(…continued)
which did not amount to significant bodily injury, see infra Part IV—amounted to
serious bodily injury. See Nixon v. United States, 730 A.2d 145, 149 (D.C. 1999)
(importing from Chapter 30 of the D.C. Code (addressing sex abuse crimes) the
definition of serious bodily injury as that which “involves a substantial risk of
death, unconsciousness, extreme physical pain, protracted and obvious
disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment of the function of a bodily
member, organ or mental faculty”). But see Swinton v. United States, 902 A.2d
772, 775 (D.C. 2006) (describing serious bodily injury in the context of aggravated
assault as “life-threatening or disabling” and explaining that, in prior cases where
this court determined that the complainants had experienced such injury, they
“typically required urgent and continuing medical treatment (and, often, surgery),
carried visible and long-lasting (if not permanent) scars, and suffered other
consequential damage, such as significant impairment of their faculties. In short,
these cases have been horrific.”); see also Vaughn v. United States, 93 A.3d 1237,
1269 n.39 (D.C. 2014) (questioning but not deciding whether any loss of
consciousness, however brief, could amount to the requisite serious bodily injury
to sustain an aggravated assault conviction).
12
817. We then said this mental state was “substantively indistinguishable” from the
minimum state of mind required to prove second-degree murder, id. at 818; see
also id. at 823 (Farrell, J., concurring), i.e., “such a wanton and willful disregard of
an unreasonable human risk as to constitute malice aforethought,” commonly
known as “depraved heart malice.” See Comber v. United States, 584 A.2d 26, 38-
39 (D.C. 1990) (en banc) (reviewing the mental states that may support a
conviction for murder).
As we explained in Comber, depraved heart malice can be properly
inferred11 from actions such as “firing a bullet into a room occupied, as the
defendant knows, by several people; starting a fire at the front door of an occupied
dwelling; shooting into a moving automobile, necessarily occupied by human
beings; [or] playing a game of ‘Russian roulette[.]’” Id. at 39 n.13. Evidence of
such malice was “extremely strong” in Powell v. United States, 485 A.2d 596
(D.C. 1984), where the defendant led police officers on a chase down a highway at
speeds exceeding ninety miles per hour, swerving across traffic lanes, driving on
11
Inference is often necessary as “[i]t is the rare case where the defendant
will clearly articulate his intent before he acts.” McKnight v. United States, 102
A.3d 284, 287-88 (D.C. 2014) (citing Jones v. United States, 716 A.2d 160, 166
(D.C. 1998)).
13
the shoulder of the road, and ultimately crashing into a car stopped on a congested
exit ramp.
The circumstances of this case are not analogous, and the trial court could
not fairly infer beyond a reasonable doubt the “heightened culpability,” see id. at
815, that aggravated assault requires. D.P. and her girlfriends did not act in a
manner that manifested the requisite gross recklessness/depraved heart malice.
D.P. and her friends were unarmed; they had no knives, no guns, and no other
implements that could be recklessly employed. Their assaultive conduct was brief,
lasting approximately fourteen seconds. A number of their blows did not even
connect (at least not with M.G.). Their choice of venue meant that they would be
on display and likely impeded in achieving any objective to injure M.G.—if not
because concerned citizens would intervene to assist her, then because their fellow
travellers would want to quickly quell the unrest to protect themselves. Indeed, it
suggests that, more than inflicting injury, intimidation and harassment were their
likely objectives. Without question, the fact that D.P. and her friends chose,
seemingly on the spur of the moment, to stage their assault on a crowded bus
evinces their general disregard for the safety and well-being of D.C. commuters,
but that is not enough; it does not evince “extreme indifference to human life.” See
14
Johnson v. United States, No. 13-CF-929, 2015 WL 3768986, at *5 (D.C. June 18,
2015) (explaining what mens rea the government must prove under D.C. Code
§ 22-404.01 (a)(2)).
The trial court determined, however, that it was enough that D.P.
“participat[ed] in a group attack in which multiple blows were landed with force,”
and the government seeks to defend that ruling.12 The trial court relied on Owens
v. United States, 982 A.2d 310 (D.C. 2009), and In re D.E., 991 A.2d 1205 (D.C.
2010). But Owens and In re D.E., which predate Perry and its detailed analysis of
the mens rea element of D.C. Code § 22-404.01 (a)(2), do not create any per se
“group attack” rule for proving state of mind. Rather in Owens this court rejected
appellant’s sufficiency challenge to his aggravated assault conviction by examining
the particular facts of the case: there, appellants struck the victim so many times
and with such force that he died hours later as a result of “blunt impact with
compression of abdomen, fractures of ribs, [and] injury to spleen, pancreas and
12
The government also tries to argue that depraved heart malice is evident
in this case as reflected by the fact that D.P. and her friends continued to beat M.G.
after she was knocked unconscious, but as noted above, the record does not support
this argument. See supra note 3.
15
stomach.”13 982 A.2d at 312, 316-17. And in In re D.E., this court did not assess
the sufficiency of the evidence of the appellant’s mental state at all, because the
appellant only challenged whether the victim’s injuries “were insufficient to meet
our standard for serious bodily injury.”14 991 A.2d at 1210.
The incident captured in the Metrobus video is disturbing, and we do not
mean to suggest that it was not a frightening experience for M.G. But the scene of
D.P. and her girlfriends throwing punches at M.G. for fourteen seconds and then
walking away when M.G. was no longer fighting back, does not evoke the reckless
disregard for human life or brutality we have held in other cases supported a
conviction of aggravated assault. Thus we conclude that the government failed to
prove that D.P. possessed the requisite mental state to support her conviction on
this charge. Our holding is consistent with our three-tiered classification of assault
13
Undoubtedly the conduct in Owens would have reflected depraved heart
malice, but since we had not yet decided Perry, we did not specifically consider
the point. Owens, 982 A.2d at 317 (concluding only that appellants had
“knowingly engag[ed] in conduct which created a grave risk of serious bodily
injury”).
14
Nevertheless, In re D.E., like Owens and Perry, reflects a level of wanton
violence not seen in this case. Appellant, with others, attacked the victim on a
Metrobus and continued to beat her up after she fell onto the driver’s seat. D.E.
then tried to pull the victim by her hair out of the bus driver’s window; as the
victim was partially hanging out of the window, her attackers continued to beat
her, resulting in severe injuries, including a fractured nose, severe bruising to her
face, and lasting damage to her vision. See 991 A.2d at 1207.
16
crimes in the District, and reinforces the restricted application of aggravated
assault to the worst cases where there is both “heightened culpability” at the level
of gross recklessness/depraved heart malice and serious bodily injury results.
Perry, 36 A.3d at 815-16.
IV. The Insufficiency of the Evidence to Support D.P.’s Conviction
for Felony Assault
D.P. additionally argues that the evidence was insufficient to establish that
she was involved in the lesser included offense of assault with significant bodily
injury.15 Specifically, D.P. argues that M.G. did not suffer “significant bodily
injury” as defined by statute and interpreted by this court.16
15
Medley v. United States, 104 A.3d 115, 132 (D.C. 2014) (recognizing that
assault with significant bodily injury is a lesser included offense of aggravated
assault and citing Collins v. United States, 73 A.3d 974, 985 (D.C. 2013)).
16
We must acknowledge a procedural oddity. Although the government
vigorously argued in the trial court that D.P. could and should be convicted of
felony assault, it did not respond to D.P.’s sufficiency challenge in its brief to this
court, other than to assert that this conviction merges with D.P.’s aggravated
assault conviction (an argument which presumes that there is a valid conviction to
be merged). At oral argument, however, the court specifically inquired whether
the government was conceding that it had failed to present sufficient evidence to
support determination that D.P. was involved in an assault with significant bodily
injury, and the government responded that it was not making any such concession.
Thus we address this claim.
17
As discussed above, the District now has a three-tiered classification system
for assault crimes, but for many years the government had only two choices when
considering a prosecution for assault: simple assault or aggravated assault. The
Council added the crime of assault with significant bodily injury in 2006 to “fill
the gap”17 between these two offenses and to provide a more appropriate response
to assaults producing injuries that fall short of the “high threshold” required for
aggravated assault, but which are still “significant” within the meaning of the
statute. See Jackson v. United States, 940 A.2d 981, 986-87 (D.C. 2008); see also
Quintanilla, 62 A.3d at 1263-64 (acknowledging that “the legislative intent was to
provide a penalty for assault that results in significant (but not grave) bodily
injury”) (internal quotation marks omitted); In re R.S., 6 A.3d 854, 859 (D.C.
2010) (explaining that in assessing whether the evidence was sufficient to support
a conviction for felony assault, “[t]he focus . . . must be on the nature of the injury
itself”).
“Significant bodily injury” is defined in the felony assault statute as “an
injury that requires hospitalization or immediate medical attention.” D.C. Code
17
Council of the District of Columbia, Comm. on the Judiciary, Report on
Bill 16-247 at 6 (Apr. 28, 2006).
18
§ 22-404 (a)(2). This court’s decisions in Quintanilla v. United States, 62 A.3d
1261 (D.C. 2013), and more recently in Nero v. United States, 73 A.3d 153 (D.C.
2013), Teneyck v. United States, 112 A.3d 906 (D.C. 2015), and Blair v. United
States, 114 A.3d 960 (D.C. 2015), have further elucidated the nature of the injury
required to sustain a conviction for felony assault by explaining what it means to
“require[] . . . immediate medical attention.” These decisions constitute binding
precedent and dictate our decision in this case.
As interpreted by this court, “immediate medical attention” refers to
“treatment”; in other words, “the ‘attention’ required . . . is not satisfied by mere
diagnosis.” Quintanilla, 62 A.3d at 1265. This treatment, in turn, “must be aimed
at one of two ends—preventing long-term physical damage and other potentially
permanent injuries or abating pain that is severe instead of lesser, short-term
hurts.”18 Teneyck, 112 A.3d at 909 (citing Nero, 73 A.3d at 158). Such treatment
must exceed “first-aid remedies such as ice packs, bandages, and . . . over-the-
counter medications,” Teneyck, 112 A.3d at 909, even if administered by a medical
18
Similarly, “hospitalization” under the statute requires more than
admission for outpatient care. Teneyck, 112 A.3d at 909 n.4; see also In re R.S., 6
A.3d at 859 (explaining that “the fact that the treatment happened to be
administered at a hospital is not determinative whether hospitalization itself was
‘required.’”).
19
professional, see Quintanilla, 62 A.3d at 1264-65. “The standard is objective:
[t]he relevant inquiry is not whether a person in fact receives immediate medical
attention but whether medical treatment beyond what one can administer himself is
immediately required to prevent ‘long-term physical damage, possible disability,
disfigurement, or severe pain.’” Teneyck, 112 A.3d at 909 (quoting In re R.S., 6
A.3d at 859).
Applying this standard in Quintanilla, this court considered whether the
assault victim had received “medical attention” because she was “checked . . . out”
“by some EMTs” who responded to the scene with an ambulance. These EMTs
“took pictures of [her] head where [she] told them [she] had been hit,” 62 A.3d at
1263, and they “checked [her] for a concussion” and provided some cold
compresses, but they provided nothing more in the way of care. Id. We further
noted that the complainant’s head was “throbbing, sore and very tender to the
touch” for a “week and a half” after she was attacked, and she suffered swelling
from her “right eye to . . . behind [her] right ear.” Id. at 1262. Her fingers were
“swollen for about three weeks,” and her index finger remained “unusable for
about two months,” but she took no further steps to address the swelling beyond
“icing them,” and never took any medication stronger than aspirin for the pain. Id.
at 1262-63. Based on this record, we concluded that the complainant “received no
20
medical attention, as properly defined, and suffered no long-term consequences as
‘significant’ bodily injury requires.” Id. at 1265-66.
This court again concluded that the government failed to prove an injury was
“significant” in Teneyck, 112 A.3d at 911. There, the complainant was injured by
a shard of broken glass after a would-be robber smashed the window of the vehicle
in which the complainant was sitting. Id. at 908. The complainant chose to go to
the hospital, where a physician removed the shard of glass. We explained that in
the absence of evidence showing that the cuts were more severe than an “everyday
household injury people treat on their own after handling broken glass”; that
“professional medical treatment was required to remove the shard as opposed to
just making removal easier”; that the complainant would suffer “any protracted
injury to his hands as a result of the assault”; or that his pain was “severe,” we
could not infer, merely because a doctor tended to him, that his wounds required
“immediate medical attention.” Id. at 910-11.
By contrast, in Nero v. United States, this court determined that a gunshot
wound was “significant” where the victim was “shot at close range and the bullet
traveled through his bicep, causing ‘obvious pain’ and bleeding,” and the victim’s
doctor “testified that similar wounds can be life-threatening.” 73 A.3d at 158.
21
And most recently in Blair, this court concluded that the complainant suffered a
“significant bodily injury” in the form of abrasions on her “face, around her eye,
her neck, all four extremities, her feet and wrist, her back and shoulders, her
abdomen, her buttocks, and her inner thighs,” and a possible serious internal head
injury as a result of the appellant repeatedly “banging her head against the
ground.” 114 A.3d at 979-81. We acknowledged that even this array of injuries
might not obviously amount to significant bodily injury and that “not every blow to
the head in the course of an assault necessarily constitutes significant bodily
injury.” 114 A.3d at 980. But we emphasized that the complainant’s injuries,
including obvious trauma to her face, eyes, jaw and neck, caused her physician to
fear she had suffered a “significant head injury” and warranted an overnight stay in
the hospital for professional diagnostic testing and monitoring. Id. at 979-80. We
concluded that, under the circumstances, the need for such testing and monitoring
constituted a need for medical attention.
The injuries experienced by M.G. in this case are properly categorized with
those described in Quintanilla and Teneyck, not Nero and Blair. Apart from
bruising to the face, M.G. was briefly unconsciousness for a minute or less, and
“for like two, two/three days” after the incident she experienced “minor
headaches.” For these injuries she did not require or receive medical attention as
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we have defined that term. Immediately after the incident, the EMTs “checked
[her] head” and her blood pressure, but then released her (after she called her
father), apparently concluding that it was appropriate to send her home without any
further evaluation or care. Cf. Teneyck, 112 A.3d at 910 (suggesting that evidence
a trip to the hospital was “optional” showed an injury did not require “immediate
medical attention”); Nero, 73 A.3d at 158-59 (stating that an injury did not require
“immediate medical attention” where the treating physician stated that “probably
not much” would have happened had the complainant not received treatment);
Quintanilla, 62 A.3d at 1265 (suggesting that EMTs’ statements that the
complainant “probably did not have a concussion” supported the conclusion that
her injuries did not require “immediate medical attention”). Nor did M.G. seek out
any medical attention later, or, as far as the record reflects, even self-administer
over-the-counter medication.
* * *
We reiterate that the unprovoked assault of M.G. by D.P. and her friends
cannot be condoned. But the government failed as a matter of law to prove either
that D.P. had the requisite state of mind for aggravated assault, or that M.G.
required medical treatment for her injuries such that they amounted to the requisite
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“significant bodily injury” for felony assault. This assault was simply not “of the
same order of magnitude” as those we have held warranted an aggravated assault
or, in the lesser alternative, a felony assault conviction. See Swinton, 902 A.2d at
775. It was a simple assault, no more. Accordingly, we reverse D.P.’s
adjudication of delinquency for her involvement in the charged crimes, and remand
for entry of judgment that she was involved in a simple assault. See Robinson v.
United States, 100 A.3d 95, 110-12 (D.C. 2014).
So ordered.