COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Petty and Huff
Argued at Richmond, Virginia
PUBLISHED
ALEX MICHAEL RAMOS
OPINION BY
v. Record No. 1595-18-2 JUDGE GLEN A. HUFF
NOVEMBER 12, 2019
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE
Richard E. Moore, Judge
John P. Joyce (Snook & Haughey, P.C., on brief), for appellant.
Rosemary V. Bourne, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R.
Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
Alex Michael Ramos (“appellant”) appeals his conviction for malicious wounding in
violation of Code § 18.2-51 for his participation in a fight at the disturbances arising out of the
“Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville. After a jury trial in the Circuit Court for the City of
Charlottesville, the jury convicted appellant, and the trial court sentenced him to six years’
imprisonment in accordance with the jury’s recommended sentence.
Appellant raises three assignments of error. First, he argues the trial court erred by not
excusing, for cause, jurors who were aware that another defendant was convicted the prior day
for a malicious wounding of the same victim in the same incident. Second, he argues the trial
court erred by denying his motion to change venue. Third, he argues the trial court erred in
denying his motion to strike because the evidence was insufficient to prove he acted with the
requisite malice.
This Court disagrees with appellant’s assertions. First, this Court declines to create a per
se rule requiring a trial court to strike those familiar with another defendant’s conviction.
Second, appellant waived his change of venue claim by failing to renew it after a jury was
empaneled. Third, a single punch to the head is a significant enough attack from which the jury
could infer malice when the blow was struck after the victim was already on the ground having
been repeatedly struck by a mob of individuals.
I. BACKGROUND
“This Court considers ‘the evidence presented at trial in the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth, the prevailing party below.’” Hawkins v. Commonwealth, 64 Va. App. 650,
652 (2015) (quoting Bolden v. Commonwealth, 275 Va. 144, 148 (2008)). So viewed the
evidence is as follows:
On August 12, 2017, several white-supremacist groups held the “Unite the Right” rally in
Charlottesville. Deandre Harris, the victim of the malicious wounding, gathered with several
friends in the area and joined a group of counter-protesters. After several hours of conflict—
before the rally was scheduled to start—between rally participants and the counter-protestors, the
police ordered everyone to disperse.
As the participants and counter-protesters headed back toward the parking garages, Harris
observed an acquaintance in a dispute over a flag. Believing his acquaintance was about to be
stabbed with the flagpole, Harris intervened and struck the flagpole with a Maglite flashlight he
had been given earlier in the morning. Harris was pepper sprayed. A general melee broke out.
As Harris stumbled away, he was struck. The group of people fighting moved away from him.
Harris staggered to his feet and ended up surrounded again. At least three individuals other than
appellant struck Harris. One used poles; one used a large stick of wood like a 2” x 4”; and
another used a shield. Several of them, and a few others, kicked him at the same time. Harris
fell to the ground. Appellant joined the fray. He had a shirt wrapped around his fist and might
have had an object in his hand concealed by the shirt. He wound up with his fist and struck
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Harris while Harris was still on the ground. Harris then got up and ran away with a bloody face,
stumbling as he went.
Appellant was indicted for malicious wounding in violation of Code § 18.2-51. Before
trial, he moved for a change of venue. He argued the publicity and public outcry over the violent
events of that day made it impossible for him to receive a fair trial before an impartial jury. The
trial court declined to grant the motion before jury selection, taking the motion under advisement
and inviting appellant to renew his motion during voir dire. Appellant never renewed the motion
or further requested a ruling on the motion. After the jury had been sworn and the first witness
had testified, the Commonwealth noted that the motion for a change of venue had not been
finally ruled on, and the trial court then denied the motion.
Jacob Goodwin, the individual with the shield who participated in attacking Harris, was
tried on the two days immediately before appellant’s trial. Goodwin was found guilty of
malicious wounding and sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment. See Goodwin v.
Commonwealth, ___ Va. App. ___, ___ (Nov. 12, 2019). During voir dire in appellant’s trial, it
was discovered that some in the venire were aware, to varying extents, of Goodwin’s conviction.
One potential juror, R.A., saw a headline about Goodwin’s conviction, but did not read the story.
Another, M.W., knew Goodwin was convicted and sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment, but did
not know the charge on which he was convicted. The potential juror who knew the most, L.T.,
stated he knew the previous defendant was convicted of malicious wounding and sentenced to
ten years. Four more potential jurors knew something, but three had knowledge that was similar
to M.W., R.A., or L.T. and one was never asked specifically what she knew.1
1
A fifth who also had knowledge was excluded for cause when the trial court doubted
her answer that she could set aside what she knew.
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After the individual voir dire of the last of the potential jurors, M.W., appellant moved to
strike M.W. and “people who know about the Goodwin verdict.” The trial court denied the
motion. It concluded appellant could not make a general objection to multiple jurors in that
fashion, but stated it would permit appellant to question any of the jurors more specifically if he
wanted to so he could make individualized motions. Appellant did not question any potential
juror further.
At the close of the evidence, appellant moved to strike on the ground that the
Commonwealth had not proved malice because appellant only hit the victim once. The trial
court denied the motion. The jury convicted appellant and recommended a sentence of six years’
imprisonment. The trial court imposed the jury’s recommended sentence, and this appeal
followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Juror Selection
Appellant argues the trial court erred by not striking jurors who were aware Goodwin had
been convicted of malicious wounding the previous day. Appellant argues that because they
knew Goodwin had been convicted the day before for his participation in the same beating, they
would defer to the earlier jury on the issue of whether the Commonwealth had proved a
malicious wounding occurred. He argues that when a defendant is accused based on a concert of
action theory and prospective jurors know about the conviction of a co-defendant who was tried
separately, those prospective jurors are per se disqualified. This Court disagrees.2
2
The Commonwealth argues that appellant waived his argument as it relates to any
potential juror except Juror M.W. Appellant makes no individualized argument in his brief. He
contends that any knowledge of Goodwin’s conviction creates a bar to serving on the jury. As he
confirmed at oral argument, he is only arguing for a per se rule. If he is correct that a per se bar
is warranted, then a general objection to all who possessed that knowledge, like appellant made
in this case, would sufficiently alert the trial court to the issue to be determined.
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On review, this Court gives significant deference to a trial court’s decision to strike a
prospective juror or not, “because the trial court was able to see and hear each member of the
venire respond to the questions posed.” Lovitt v. Commonwealth, 260 Va. 497, 510 (2000), cert.
denied, 534 U.S. 815 (2001). Accordingly, our review is “for an abuse of discretion and [the
trial court’s] ruling will not be disturbed on appeal unless it appears from the record that the trial
court’s action constitutes manifest error.” Cressell v. Commonwealth, 32 Va. App. 744, 755
(2000). “In conducting our review, we consider the juror’s entire voir dire, not merely isolated
statements.” DeLeon v. Commonwealth, 38 Va. App. 409, 412-13 (2002) (quoting Lovitt, 260
Va. at 510).
A defendant in a criminal case in Virginia is entitled to a jury panel free of potential bias
or other disqualifying characteristics before exercising peremptory challenges. Id. at 412. A
prospective juror must be able to give the defendant “a fair and impartial trial.” Breeden v.
Commonwealth, 217 Va. 297, 298 (1976). Through the voir dire process, “the trial judge must
probe the conscience and mental attitude of the prospective jurors to ensure impartiality.”
Griffin v. Commonwealth, 19 Va. App. 619, 621 (1995). Although a potential juror may have
some knowledge of the case, or preconceived or even erroneous notions about the legal system,
the “test of impartiality is whether the venireperson can lay aside the preconceived views and
render a verdict based solely on the law and evidence presented at trial.” Id.
Appellant argues that Farrar v. Commonwealth, 201 Va. 5 (1959), mandates reversal. In
Farrar, the defendant and another man were charged with consensual sodomy with each other.
Their trials were severed. The other man was tried first. When Farrar was later tried, eight
members of the venire from the other man’s trial were part of the venire for Farrar’s trial.
Although those prospective jurors did not hear the evidence in the earlier trial, they did hear the
other defendant’s arraignment and the charges, which mentioned Farrar’s name. Although Farrar
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did not establish that the prospective jurors had read the newspapers, the other defendant’s
conviction had been reported in the paper. The Supreme Court held that those prospective jurors
should have been excluded from the venire. Id. at 9. The Court noted that the jurors had such an
“association with [the first defendant]’s case that it may be reasonably inferred that bias on their
part operated in the trial of Farrar.” Id. at 8 (emphasis added). Appellant contends that the
juror’s awareness of the verdict in Goodwin’s case creates the same reasonably inferred bias that
should require a per se exclusion of those prospective jurors.3
Nevertheless, a key distinction separates this case from the circumstances of Farrar.4
Even assuming, without deciding, that Farrar created a per se rule of exclusion, the prospective
jurors in Farrar learned about Farrar’s potential involvement in the crime in official proceedings
related to his co-defendant. A baseline of what they knew could be obtained from the official
record of the proceedings, and all the prospective jurors knew that Farrar had been named in the
other defendant’s charges. Here, the prospective jurors’ knowledge of Goodwin’s case, and its
3
Appellant also contends that his jury would be likely to defer to the Goodwin jury on its
findings because some members of his jury knew about the Goodwin verdict. Although both
juries returned guilty verdicts, the two juries recommended significantly different sentences.
This suggests appellant’s jury did not rely on the Goodwin verdict despite having some
knowledge of it.
4
A second distinction also limits Farrar’s applicability. Farrar and the other defendant
had been charged with consensual sodomy with each other, and their names were in each other’s
indictments. Convicting the first defendant—under those circumstances—necessarily meant the
jury found Farrar had also engaged in consensual sodomy. Here, although the Commonwealth
proceeded on a concert of action theory, Ramos was not named in Goodwin’s indictment.
Moreover, given the number of people in the crowd attacking Harris, Goodwin’s jury did not
necessarily conclude that Ramos was part of the concert of action. Given the unique
circumstances, if Farrar creates a per se rule, it is limited to cases where the conviction of one
defendant necessarily means the other defendant engaged in criminal conduct.
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connection to appellant’s, varied greatly, and the source of that knowledge was the media, not
the court itself.5
“Per se rules of disqualification, which are based on ‘a presumption of bias or prejudice,’
are disfavored in Virginia.”6 McGann v. Commonwealth, 15 Va. App. 448, 454 (1992) (quoting
Scott v. Commonwealth, 1 Va. App. 447, 452 (1986)). Given that “jurors need not be totally
unaware of the facts and issues involved in the case,” Mueller v. Commonwealth, 244 Va. 386,
404 (1992), overruled on other grounds by Morrisette v. Warden of Sussex I State Prison, 270
Va. 188 (2005), this Court concludes that per se disqualification is not warranted merely because
a potential juror has knowledge of the conviction of a separately tried co-defendant.
When the prospective juror learns about separate proceedings involving a co-defendant,
the extent of the venireperson’s knowledge about the other case will be critical in determining
whether they can remain impartial. A prospective juror who vaguely knows that another person
was convicted of some crime will not need to be excluded on that basis, but a prospective juror
who knows the details of the other case and how it is connected to the case for which he is being
5
One potential juror, L.B., had been a part of the venire in Goodwin’s trial and had been
stricken from that jury with a preemptory strike. He knew about the guilty verdict and assumed
the conviction was for malicious wounding. Nevertheless, appellant moved to strike him for
cause because of his associations with movements associated with the counter-protestors and his
admitted beliefs about the participants in the Unite the Right rally. Appellant did not move to
strike him, pursuant to Farrar, because he was part of the venire for Goodwin’s trial. Thus, any
argument that L.B. should not have been seated on the jury because he was part of Goodwin’s
venire is waived. Rule 5A:18.
6
Nevertheless, per se disqualification of some jurors to “maintain public confidence in
the judicial system,” is sometimes warranted. Mayfield v. Commonwealth, 59 Va. App. 839,
846 (2012). Challenging a juror for cause based on potential bias does not preserve an argument
that the juror is one who is per se disqualified to preserve the public confidence. Id. Here,
appellant only argued, both in this Court and the trial court, that the jurors were potentially
biased against him. Thus, this Court will not consider whether jurors who have some knowledge
of the conviction of a separately tried co-defendant should be per se disqualified to preserve
public confidence in the judicial system.
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considered might warrant further questioning about potential bias. The trial court would need to
evaluate that individually.7 Thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting
appellant’s challenge to all the prospective jurors who had any knowledge of Goodwin’s
conviction.8
B. Change of Venue
Appellant argues that the trial court erred by denying his motion for a change of venue.
He argues it was impossible for him to have a fair trial in Charlottesville, i.e. to be tried by an
impartial jury. He claims that there was significant danger that he would be punished because he
was a part of the Unite the Right rally that caused the disturbances in the city. He also claims
that there is a danger that the jurors would be overly concerned with the fallout from an acquittal
and would convict him merely to avoid another riot. He thus claims that jurors from
Charlottesville would likely decide his case for reasons other than the evidence and the
applicable law. Appellant, however, failed to preserve these arguments.
Although appellant moved to change venue, he did not timely obtain a ruling on the
motion. The trial court did not initially deny the motion. Instead, the trial court took the motion
under advisement and nothing further was said until after the jury was empaneled and the case
7
Obviously, the trial court and counsel will have to exercise care during voir dire, even
during individual questioning, to ensure they do not provide a juror with information about the
other case, or the connection between the cases, that the juror does not already have. Although
that may be a difficult task, that difficulty does not warrant a per se rule of exclusion.
8
Although the Commonwealth concedes that appellant preserved an argument that
prospective juror M.W. should have been excluded based on his knowledge of the Goodwin
conviction, appellant does not make an argument in this Court why, when considered
individually, M.W.’s knowledge specifically justified his exclusion. Appellant’s argument is all
or nothing. By failing to make an individualized argument, appellant has waived any argument
as to M.W.’s specific knowledge and whether it justified his exclusion. Accordingly, this Court
need not consider it. See Rule 5A:20(e) (requiring appellant’s brief include argument and
authorities in support of his claims on appeal).
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was being heard. The Supreme Court has held that when a trial court takes a change of venue
motion under advisement, it is “incumbent upon [the defendant] to renew the motion before the
jury was empaneled and sworn, or at least remind the court that it was still pending and that he
wanted the court to rule on it.” Riner v. Commonwealth, 268 Va. 296, 310 (2004) (quoting
Green v. Commonwealth, 266 Va. 81, 94 (2003)). Appellant did not renew his motion for a
change of venue, or insist on a ruling, before the jury was empaneled. Although the
Commonwealth eventually requested a ruling on the motion, it was not until after the jury was
sworn, the first witness had testified, and jeopardy had attached. Cummings v. Commonwealth,
24 Va. App. 248, 251 (1997) (“[J]eopardy attaches . . . after a jury is empaneled and sworn in a
jury trial . . . .” (quoting Martin v. Commonwealth, 242 Va. 1, 8 (1991))). That was too late.
Thus, appellant has waived his claim, and this Court will not consider it. Rule 5A:18.
C. Sufficient Evidence of Malice
Appellant argues the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction. He argues there
is insufficient evidence of malice, and therefore the trial court should have stricken the malicious
wounding charge and only allowed the jury to consider unlawful wounding or some lesser
assault charge. Specifically, appellant argues that the evidence shows that at most he struck the
victim once and that a single blow cannot demonstrate sufficient malice to support a malicious
wounding conviction. This Court disagrees.
“When the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction is challenged, it is [the
appellate court’s] duty to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth
and to uphold the conviction unless it is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.” Case
v. Commonwealth, 63 Va. App. 14, 22 (2014) (quoting Powers v. Commonwealth, 211 Va. 386,
388 (1970)). “If there is evidentiary support for the conviction, ‘the reviewing court is not
permitted to substitute its own judgment, even if its opinion might differ from the conclusions
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reached by the finder of fact at the trial.’” Chavez v. Commonwealth, 69 Va. App. 149, 161
(2018) (quoting Banks v. Commonwealth, 67 Va. App. 273, 288 (2017)). “[T]he question is
whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a
reasonable doubt.” Lawlor v. Commonwealth, 285 Va. 187, 223-24 (2013).
“To be convicted of malicious wounding, the Commonwealth must prove that the
defendant maliciously stabbed, cut, or wounded ‘any person or by any means cause[d] him
bodily injury, with the intent to maim, disfigure, disable, or kill.’” Burkeen v. Commonwealth,
286 Va. 255, 259 (2013) (quoting Code § 18.2-51) (alteration in original). “The element in
malicious wounding that distinguishes it from unlawful wounding is malice, expressed or
implied . . . .” Hernandez v. Commonwealth, 15 Va. App. 626, 631 (1993). “Malice inheres in
the doing of a wrongful act intentionally, or without just cause or excuse, or as a result of ill will.
[Malicious intent to wound] may be directly evidenced by words, or inferred from acts and
conduct which necessarily result in injury.” Burkeen, 286 Va. at 259 (quoting Dawkins v.
Commonwealth, 186 Va. 55, 61 (1947)) (alterations in original). “Under ordinary circumstances
an intent to maim may not be presumed from a blow with a bare fist.” Fletcher v.
Commonwealth, 209 Va. 636, 640 (1969). Nevertheless, “an assault with a bare fist may be
attended with such circumstances of violence and brutality that [malice] may be presumed.” Id.
Assuming appellant only struck the victim once,9 the circumstances under which that
blow was struck support the conclusion that appellant acted with malice. Appellant punched the
9
The Commonwealth argues appellant also stomped, or attempted to stomp, on the
victim. It argues this was further evidence of malice. It points to the videos of the altercation as
support for that argument. Having viewed the videos, it is difficult to determine if the videos
support such a conclusion. This Court need not resolve that question, because even if appellant
did not attempt to stomp on the victim, his single blow still evidenced malice. See Foltz v.
Commonwealth, 58 Va. App. 107, 114 (2011) (“In this case, as in all others, we seek to decide
cases, ‘on the best and narrowest ground available’ from the record.” (quoting Kirby v.
Commonwealth, 50 Va. App. 691, 698 n.2 (2007))), aff’d, 284 Va. 467 (2012).
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victim only after the victim had already been kicked multiple times and beaten with poles, a
board, and a shield. The victim was already on the ground and had stumbled trying to rise at
least once. And although it is unclear how much force appellant imparted when he connected, it
is apparent from the video of the altercation that appellant utilized a large wind-up to deliver a
significant blow. Under these circumstances, the trial court’s finding that appellant acted with
malice is not “without evidence to support it.” Thus, this Court affirms.
III. CONCLUSION
This Court affirms. First, knowledge of a separately tried co-defendant’s earlier
conviction does not create a per se bar to jury service. Second, appellant waived his second
assignment of error because appellant failed to renew his motion for a change of venue before
the jury was sworn. Third, the evidence was sufficient to prove malice, because a single punch
can be malicious when delivered at the tail end of a beating by a mob.
Affirmed.
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