MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions
Decision: 2020 ME 106
Docket: Ken-19-364
Argued: July 15, 2020
Decided: August 13, 2020
Panel: MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HUMPHREY, HORTON, and CONNORS JJ.
STATE OF MAINE
v.
JAHNEIRO PLUMMER
CONNORS, J.
[¶1] Jahneiro Plummer appeals from a judgment of conviction entered
by the trial court (Kennebec County, Stanfill, J.) after a jury found him guilty of
two counts of aggravated trafficking of scheduled drugs (Class A), 17-A M.R.S.
§ 1105-A(1)(D), (H) (2020), and found for the State on one count of criminal
forfeiture, 15 M.R.S. § 5826 (2020). Plummer argues that the trial court
committed obvious error in its instructions to the jury on accomplice liability
and by instructing the jury on a written report not admitted in evidence. He
also asserts that the court abused its discretion by denying his motion for a
new trial because statements made during the State’s closing argument
impermissibly commented upon his out-of-state residence. We affirm the
judgment.
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I. BACKGROUND
[¶2] Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, the
jury could have rationally found the following facts beyond a reasonable
doubt. See State v. Chan, 2020 ME 91, ¶ 2, --- A.3d ---.
[¶3] On two separate occasions in July 2018, an undercover Maine Drug
Enforcement Agency (MDEA) agent purchased cocaine base from a man
known as “G-Town” in a back bedroom of an apartment in Gardiner. On
July 31, 2018, MDEA agents executed a search warrant at that apartment.
After announcing themselves, agents observed two men fleeing from the back
door. Outside, agents arrested the two men and identified them as Michael
Nelson (G-Town) and Plummer.
[¶4] After arresting the two men, the agents searched the back
bedroom of the apartment. Agents found a paper plate on the floor containing
“a large amount” of loose tan powder, as well as a scale, scissors, and
sandwich bags. The agents also found several bags in the bedroom. One of
the bags was tipped over, and it contained Plummer’s identification card, his
wallet, two digital scales, a cellphone, and rubber bands. Near the bag, agents
found a sock “the size of a baseball” containing heroin and cocaine base. In
another bag, the agents found $14,035 in United States currency wrapped in
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rubber bands. In total, the agents seized 150 grams of heroin and 230 grams
of cocaine base.1
[¶5] In November 2018, Plummer was indicted on two counts of
aggravated trafficking in scheduled drugs (Class A), 17-A M.R.S.
§ 1105-A(1)(D), (H), and one count of criminal forfeiture, 15 M.R.S. § 5826.
Plummer pleaded not guilty.
[¶6] In February 2019, after Plummer’s trial was severed from
Nelson’s, the court held a two-day jury trial. During the trial, Plummer
testified, introducing the fact that he was from Brooklyn, New York, and
stating that he had traveled to Maine to smoke marijuana and record music
with Nelson using his phone. He testified that he did not know Nelson was
selling drugs and had fled “on instinct.”
[¶7] On rebuttal, the State sought to introduce evidence from an agent
as to the location of certain hubs from which drugs come into Maine.
Plummer objected on the ground that it would be unfairly prejudicial to
1 Although the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the State supports this fact
scenario, the record is not a model of clarity as to which items were found in or near which bag. As
the trial judge stated, “It is very true that the officers were all over the place in terms of where—
which bag and where it was located.” When one of the agents broke into the back bedroom, he “felt
a tingling on [his] face” from the drugs on the paper plate being released into the air, requiring the
MDEA to secure the premises before taking any further action inside the room. Perhaps as a result
of this situation, by the time the technician entered to record the evidence, the bags were on the
bed, and the agents’ testimonies as to what they contained and where they were originally located
bore inconsistencies.
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submit evidence to the effect that the trip from New York was a typical drug
route, and this objection was sustained. See M.R. Evid. 403. The State was,
however, allowed to ask the agent whether drugs such as cocaine base and
heroin are generated in Maine or come from elsewhere, over no objection.
The agent testified that based on his experience, “it’s typical that drugs are
imported from other places” and are not made in Maine.
[¶8] During closing arguments, the State focused on Plummer’s
testimony regarding his travel to Maine shortly before the raid:
And as we know from [the agent’s testimony], in his
22 years of drug enforcement experience these drugs don’t come
from Maine, they’re imported from outside the state.
Now, Mr. Plummer has told you that he came by bus from
New York to Maine the night of July 30th, that he did so to record
music and smoke marijuana with his friend, Mr. Nelson, that he
had no idea Mr. Nelson was dealing drugs and he was sleeping
when the agents executed the search warrant.
Ladies and gentlemen, is it reasonable that Mr. Plummer
had no idea what was going on in that room or why Mr. Nelson
was in Maine. Is it reasonable that he took, as he testified, a
10 hour bus ride to Maine to record music with a friend, a friend
who he records music with 15 minutes from his house in
Brooklyn? Is Gardiner a hotbed of music recording that we’re
unaware of?
[¶9] During its rebuttal closing, the State further argued,
Now it’s true not everybody who comes to Maine by any
means, boat, bus, plane, is carrying drugs. And people leaving the
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state aren’t necessarily carrying drugs and money. But not
everybody shows up at the apartment, at that room, and flees the
minute law enforcement shows up.
Plummer did not object to the State’s closing argument.
[¶10] After the close of evidence, the court gave—both orally and in
writing—the following jury instructions regarding accomplice liability:
A person may be guilty of a crime if he personally does the
acts that constitute the crime or if he is an accomplice of another
person who actually commits the crime. A person may be found
guilty of a crime as an accomplice if the [S]tate proves beyond a
reasonable doubt that with the intent of promoting or facilitating
the commission of a crime the person solicits or aids or agrees to
aid or attempts to aid another person who commits a crime in the
planning or commission of that crime. Mere presence at the scene
of a crime without more does not prove that a person is an
accomplice to a crime. However, once a person’s presence at a
crime scene is proven, he may be guilty of the crime as an
accomplice if he intentionally engages in any conduct, however
slight, that promotes or facilitates the commission of the crime.
Thus, a person may be guilty of aggravated trafficking in drugs as
a principal if the [S]tate proves beyond a reasonable doubt that
the defendant personally did the acts that constitute the crime.
Alternatively, the defendant may be guilty of aggravated
trafficking in drugs or unlawful trafficking in drugs if the [S]tate
proves beyond a reasonable doubt that with the intent of
promoting or facilitating the crime of aggravated trafficking or
unlawful trafficking in drugs the defendant solicited or aided or
agreed to aid or attempted to aid another person that committed a
crime in the planning or commission of that crime.
Plummer did not object to the jury instructions.
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[¶11] During deliberations, the jury requested a transcript of one
MDEA agent’s trial testimony, as well as the agent’s written report, which was
used during his cross-examination to refresh his recollection. The court
provided the jury with the trial testimony but denied the jury’s request for the
written report because the report had not been entered in evidence.2 The
court then gave the following instruction regarding the written report:
You must decide the case based on the evidence presented
to you and admitted in evidence. That evidence does not include
any of the written reports. You must not speculate about what
others might have said or what those materials may show. You
can draw no inference, favorable or unfavorable, from the fact
that there is no evidence of the reports in the materials submitted
to you. You’re free to consider the testimony about the reports or
what the reference is but the reports themselves are not
in[] evidence.
Plummer did not object.
[¶12] The jury found Plummer guilty on all counts. Plummer filed a
motion for a new trial, arguing that he was unfairly prejudiced by the State’s
closing argument, as well as by the agent’s testimony about drugs coming into
Maine from out of state. The court orally denied Plummer’s motion.
2The prosecutor and defense counsel agreed that because the report was not in evidence it
should not be given to the jury.
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[¶13] In August 2019, the court sentenced Plummer to fifteen years’
imprisonment, with all but six years suspended, and four years’ probation.
Plummer timely appealed. See 15 M.R.S. § 2115 (2020); M.R. App. P. 2B(b)(1).
II. DISCUSSION
A. Jury Instructions on Accomplice Liability
[¶14] Plummer asserts three arguments challenging the instructions
given to the jury on accomplice liability. First, he contends that the trial
court’s instruction implied that accomplice liability could be found upon the
commission of any crime, not just aggravated trafficking or unlawful
trafficking. Second, Plummer argues the court erroneously instructed jurors
that he could be convicted of aggravated trafficking as an accomplice if he
acted with the intent to promote or facilitate merely unlawful trafficking.
Finally, he argues that the court erred by failing to instruct the jury on the
“reasonably foreseeable consequence” basis for accomplice liability.
17-A M.R.S. § 57(3)(A) (2020). Because Plummer did not object to the jury
instructions given at trial, we review the instructions for obvious error. See
State v. Coleman, 2019 ME 170, ¶ 22, 221 A.3d 932.
[¶15] Obvious error exists when there is “(1) an error, (2) that is plain,
and (3) that affects substantial rights.” State v. Pabon, 2011 ME 100, ¶ 29,
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28 A.3d 1147. “If these conditions are met, we will exercise our discretion to
notice an unpreserved error only if we also conclude that (4) the error
seriously affects the fairness and integrity or public reputation of judicial
proceedings.” Id. Importantly, “we review jury instructions in their entirety
to determine whether they presented the relevant issues to the jury fairly,
accurately, and adequately, and we will vacate the court’s judgment only if the
erroneous instruction resulted in prejudice.” State v. Hansley, 2019 ME 35,
¶ 8, 203 A.3d 827 (quotation marks omitted).
[¶16] Here, viewing the instructions as a whole, there was no error, let
alone obvious error.
1. Accomplice Liability upon the Commission of Any Crime
[¶17] Plummer asserts that the court’s jury instruction implied that
accomplice liability could be found upon the commission of any crime because
one sentence in the instructions provided a defendant
may be guilty of aggravated trafficking in drugs or unlawful
trafficking in drugs if the [S]tate proves beyond a reasonable
doubt that with the intent of promoting or facilitating the crime of
aggravated trafficking or unlawful trafficking in drugs the
defendant solicited or aided or agreed to aid or attempted to aid
another person that committed a crime in the planning or
commission of that crime.
(Emphases added.)
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[¶18] Even in isolation, this sentence is logically understood to require
facilitation of “that crime,” i.e., the primary crime. When viewed in the context
of the entire instructions, the clarity of this necessary linkage is underscored.
When the court initially identified the elements of accomplice liability in its
general instruction, the court stated, “A person may be guilty of a crime if he
personally does the acts that constitute the crime or if he is an accomplice of
another person who actually committed the crime.” (Emphases added.) The
court, following the general instructions, informed the jury that the crimes at
issue were aggravating trafficking or unlawful trafficking.
[¶19] Thus, when viewed in their entirety, the instructions created no
ambiguity as to which crimes Plummer might be found to be an accomplice,
and accurately described the elements necessary for accomplice liability.
2. Accomplice to Unlawful Trafficking
[¶20] Plummer also argues that the instructions suggested he could be
convicted of aggravated trafficking as an accomplice if he acted with the intent
to promote or facilitate merely unlawful trafficking, extracting the following
portion of the instructions:
[T]he defendant may be guilty of aggravated trafficking in drugs
or unlawful trafficking in drugs if the [S]tate proves beyond a
reasonable doubt that with the intent of promoting or facilitating
the crime of aggravated trafficking or unlawful trafficking in drugs
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the defendant solicited or aided or agreed to aid or attempted to
aid another person that committed a crime in the planning or
commission of that crime.
(Emphasis added.)
[¶21] Although the court shortened the jury instructions by not
providing two separate instructions on accomplice liability for each crime,
aggravated trafficking and unlawful trafficking, again viewing the instructions
as a whole, the court did not err.
[¶22] The use of the term “or” between “aggravated trafficking” and
“unlawful trafficking” in the jury instructions established that the jury could
convict Plummer of (1) aggravated trafficking as an accomplice if he acted
with the intent to promote or facilitate aggravated trafficking or (2) unlawful
trafficking as an accomplice if he acted with the intent to promote or facilitate
unlawful trafficking. The way the court structured this section of the jury
instructions was not likely to mislead the jury and was not so unclear as to
create a risk that the jury would find Plummer guilty as an accomplice of a
greater crime than the principal actor.
[¶23] Furthermore, this distinction was explained to the jury earlier in
the general instructions when the court stated, “[A defendant] may be guilty of
the crime as an accomplice if he intentionally engages in any conduct, however
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slight, that promotes or facilitates the commission of the crime.” (Emphases
added.) The court’s instructions indicated that the jury could convict
Plummer of aggravated trafficking as an accomplice if he acted with the intent
to promote or facilitate the same crime, in this case aggravated trafficking.
Viewing the instructions as a whole, the instructions did not create the
ambiguity that Plummer could be convicted of aggravated trafficking as
accomplice if he acted with the intent to promote or facilitate merely unlawful
trafficking.
3. “Reasonably Foreseeable Consequence” Instruction
[¶24] Plummer asserts that the court committed obvious error by
failing to instruct the jury on the “reasonably foreseeable consequence” basis
for accomplice liability pursuant to 17-A M.R.S. § 57(3)(A).
[¶25] Title 17-A M.R.S. § 57(3)(A) provides:
3. A person is an accomplice of another person in the
commission of a crime if:
A. With the intent of promoting or facilitating the
commission of the crime, the person solicits such other
person to commit the crime, or aids or agrees to aid or
attempts to aid such other person in planning or
committing the crime. A person is an accomplice under this
subsection to any crime the commission of which was a
reasonably foreseeable consequence of the person’s
conduct.
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[¶26] “This statute establishes two bases for accomplice liability: first,
when the alleged accomplice intends to promote the commission of the
primary crime; second, when the alleged accomplice intends to promote the
primary crime and the commission of the secondary crime is a foreseeable
consequence of the accomplice’s participation in the commission of the
primary crime.” State v. Berry, 1998 ME 113, ¶ 11, 711 A.2d 142.
[¶27] We have concluded that an instruction on the reasonably
foreseeable consequence basis of accomplice liability “is warranted only when
a crime, other than the intended primary crime, has been committed by the
principal.” Id. (quotation marks omitted). This is because “[w]hen no
secondary crime is charged, an instruction on the reasonably foreseeable
consequence basis raises the possibility that the jury found accomplice
liability based on the fact that the crime was a foreseeable consequence of the
accomplice’s conduct and not because he intended the crime to occur.” Id.
(alterations omitted) (quotation marks omitted). In other words, in the
absence of a separate crime, the instruction can mislead the jury into
concluding the necessary intent for the crime charged is not required.
[¶28] Plummer was charged with two counts of aggravated trafficking.
See 17-A M.R.S. § 1105-A(D), (H). The court also gave the jury instructions on
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the lesser-included offense3 of unlawful trafficking. The court did not err by
failing to instruct the jury on the “reasonably foreseeable consequence” basis
of accomplice liability because unlawful trafficking and aggravated trafficking
are not distinct crimes with different elements—the conviction for either is
based solely on the amount of drugs that are found to be trafficked, not the
intent of the actor. See 17-A M.R.S. §§ 1103(1-A)(A), 1105-A(1)(D), (H)
(2020).
[¶29] Inclusion of the “reasonably foreseeable consequence”
instruction, moreover, as noted above, expands, not narrows, the universe of
accomplice liability: in addition to finding liability for intending a primary
crime, a defendant can also be found guilty as an accomplice for intending to
promote a primary crime without the intent to commit the secondary crime if
the secondary crime is a foreseeable consequence of the defendant’s
participation in the primary crime. This is why defendants have argued error
when the instruction has been given in the absence of a secondary crime.
See, e.g., Berry, 1998 ME 113, ¶¶ 10-11, 711 A.2d 142; State v. Armstrong,
503 A.2d 701, 703 (Me. 1986). The argument that the “reasonably foreseeable
3 “A lesser-included offense is one that has no elements different from or in addition to the
elements of the charged offense, making it impossible to commit the greater offense without having
committed the lesser.” State v. Gantnier, 2012 ME 123, ¶ 10, 55 A.3d 404 (alteration omitted)
(quotation marks omitted).
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consequence” language in the statute limits, as opposed to expands,
accomplice liability was expressly rejected in State v. Goodall, 407 A.2d 268,
277-78 (Me. 1979).
[¶30] The court committed no error in not instructing on the second
statutory basis for accomplice liability.
B. Jury Instruction on MDEA Agent’s Report
[¶31] Plummer argues that the court’s instruction to the jury—
following the jury’s request for an MDEA agent’s report—that they should not
speculate about the content of any written reports and draw no inference,
favorable or unfavorable, from the lack of submission of any report, was
erroneous because juries are free to conclude that the reasonable doubt
standard has not been met due to a lack of evidence. Because no
contemporaneous objection was made to the instruction, we again apply the
obvious error standard. See Coleman, 2019 ME 170, ¶ 22, 221 A.3d 932.
[¶32] It was entirely appropriate for the court to instruct the jury not to
speculate, favorably or unfavorably, as to the contents of materials that
neither side wanted admitted and would likely have been inadmissible had
admission been sought. The court’s instruction was based on the
representative instruction in the Maine Jury Instruction Manual for material
15
not before the jury. See Alexander, Maine Jury Instruction Manual § 8-4 at 8-8
(2019-20 ed.). Because the jury requested to view an MDEA agent’s report
not admitted in evidence, it was necessary for the court to deny the jury’s
request for the report and explain the relationship between the agent’s
testimony and his written report. See id. at 8-8 cmt. (“When such requests are
made, the request for the unadmitted physical or written materials must be
denied unless all parties agree to allow the materials to go to the jury. To do
otherwise would have the effect of reopening the record for introduction of
new evidence.”).
[¶33] The jury was fully and properly instructed as to the State’s
burden of proof and the reasonable doubt standard, imposing the duty upon
the State at all times to produce sufficient evidence to meet its burden. The
standard instruction regarding material not before the jury did not undermine
those previously given instructions nor suggest any lessening of the State’s
burden. There was no error.
C. Motion for a New Trial
[¶34] Finally, Plummer asserts that the court abused its discretion by
denying his motion for a new trial, claiming that statements made during the
State’s closing argument impermissibly commented upon Plummer’s
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out-of-state residence as evidence of his guilt. Because Plummer did not
contemporaneously object to the State’s closing argument, but instead
challenged the State’s comments for the first time in a motion for a new trial,
we review “the court’s decision on the motion for a new trial for an abuse of
discretion, [but] review the effect of the challenged comments for obvious
error affecting [the defendant’s] substantial rights.” State v. Daluz,
2016 ME 102, ¶ 50, 143 A.3d 800.
[¶35] The court did not abuse its discretion. The State, in its closing,
reiterated aspects of Plummer’s testimony, namely that he was visiting Maine
from his home state of New York. The State never mentioned Plummer’s
residence in its case-in-chief. From the record before us, the thrust of the
State’s argument was to question Plummer’s account of why he was visiting
Maine, not to invoke jurors’ prejudices about individuals from out of state or
to insinuate that because Plummer was not from Maine, he was more likely to
commit the crime of drug trafficking.
[¶36] The evidence upon which the State focused included (1) the short
period of time between Plummer’s arrival and the raid; (2) the agents
appearing to interrupt the two men in the back bedroom as drugs were being
divided into baggies; (3) the men fleeing the room; (4) the fact that the drugs
17
found in the room were in a larger quantity than observed by the agent who
had recently engaged in two purchases from Nelson in the room; and (5) the
implausibility of Plummer’s testimony that he traveled to Gardiner for the
purpose of smoking marijuana and making music on his phone.
[¶37] That the State noted in its closing that an agent testified that
drugs come from out of state, while also acknowledging that not everyone
comes to Maine for the purpose of carrying drugs, suggests no incitement to
base the jurors’ verdict on anything but the evidence presented to them.
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
Rory A. McNamara, Esq. (orally), Drake Law, LLC, Berwick, for appellant
Jahneiro Plummer
Aaron M. Frey, Attorney General, and Katie Sibley, Asst. Atty. Gen. (orally),
Office of the Attorney General, Augusta, for appellee State of Maine
Kennebec County Unified Criminal Docket docket number CR-2018-1580
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY