COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
UNPUBLISHED
Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Beales and Raphael
Argued at Norfolk, Virginia
JACOB ALEXANDER MEADOWS
MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
v. Record No. 1096-22-1 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES
MARCH 19, 2024
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH
Steven C. Frucci, Judge1
James O. Broccoletti (Zoby & Broccoletti, P.C., on brief), for
appellant.
David A. Mick, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,
Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
Jacob Alexander Meadows was convicted of contempt in the Circuit Court of the City of
Virginia Beach.2 On appeal, Meadows challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his
conviction for contempt. Meadows also argues that the trial court’s final sentencing order was
invalid because the order did not identify which subsection of Code § 18.2-456(A) Meadows
violated.
I. BACKGROUND
“In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in the
light most favorable to the Commonwealth, [as] the prevailing party at trial.” Gerald v.
*
This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A).
1
The Honorable Steven C. Frucci presided over the proceedings below. Now a member
of this Court, Judge Frucci took no part in this decision.
2
Although the trial court convicted Meadows of indirect contempt, the final sentencing
order references Code § 18.2-456, the statute governing direct contempt.
Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 472 (2018) (quoting Scott v. Commonwealth, 292 Va. 380, 381
(2016)). “This principle requires us to ‘discard the evidence of the accused in conflict with that of
the Commonwealth, and regard as true all the credible evidence favorable to the Commonwealth
and all fair inferences to be drawn therefrom.’” Kelley v. Commonwealth, 289 Va. 463, 467-68
(2015) (quoting Parks v. Commonwealth, 221 Va. 492, 498 (1980)).
The parties stipulated in the trial court that on December 11, 2018, C.R. went to a house in
Virginia Beach to buy marijuana.3 Meadows was inside the house and saw C.R. pull out a revolver
during the marijuana deal. C.R. then attempted to flee from the house, and Meadows chased after
C.R. Meadows drew his handgun and fired eight rounds as C.R. tried to run away. C.R. was struck
multiple times in his head, neck, back, and pelvis, and C.R. died from his injuries. Meadows then
fled from the house, and he was later arrested by police. During his interview with police,
Meadows confessed to shooting C.R.
Meadows was charged with the following crimes: second-degree murder; use of a firearm in
the commission of a felony; two counts of possession with the intent to distribute more than
one-half ounce but less than five pounds of marijuana; two counts of conspiracy to distribute
marijuana; and possession, distribution, or intention to distribute a schedule I or II controlled
substance, imitation controlled substance, or marijuana on school property. On July 11, 2022,
Meadows appeared with his attorney before the trial court and pleaded guilty to voluntary
manslaughter in connection with the death of C.R.4 As part of his plea agreement, the
Commonwealth agreed to nolle prosequi some of Meadows’s other related charges, including
3
We use the initials of the victim, who was a minor at the time of his death, in an attempt
to better protect his privacy.
4
Meadows also pleaded guilty to two counts of possession with the intent to distribute
more than one-half ounce but less than five pounds of marijuana and one count of conspiracy to
distribute marijuana.
-2-
second-degree murder and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony — and also agreed to a
maximum of seven years of active incarceration.
Security camera footage of the courtroom showed that during Meadows’s plea hearing,
Meadows’s family and supporters were seated on one side of the courtroom while C.R.’s family
and supporters were seated on the other side of the rather small courtroom. Counsel for
Meadows presented Meadows’s guilty plea through this plea agreement to the trial judge, and the
trial judge agreed to allow Meadows to remain out of custody on bond after the hearing. The
trial judge took the matter of Meadows’s plea agreement under advisement before ending the
hearing. The courtroom video then showed that Meadows and his family exited the courtroom
while C.R.’s family waited and remained on their side of the courtroom. Gina Lee, the girlfriend
of C.R.’s father, testified that she was sitting with C.R.’s family in the courtroom during
Meadows’s plea hearing. Lee recalled that “when I saw him [Meadows] walking out, he had a
smirk smile on his face.”
Footage from the courthouse security cameras showed that when Meadows and his
family exited the courtroom, they proceeded down the hallway, passed through a double
doorway, turned to the right, and then disappeared around the corner toward the descending
escalator beyond the view of the courtroom entrance. Approximately 30 seconds after Meadows
and most of his family had left the courtroom — and with Meadows out of sight — C.R.’s
brother, Robert Ross, and the rest of C.R.’s family filed out of the courtroom. Tyler Meadows,
who had been holding the door to the courtroom open first for his family and then for C.R.’s
family as they all exited the courtroom, then walked away from the courtroom entrance to catch
up to Meadows and their family while Ross and his family gathered in the hallway right outside
the courtroom.
-3-
Ross testified to his state of mind after Meadows’s plea hearing, stating,
I was emotional thinking about the loss of my brother [C.R.] and
that I don’t feel like everything is going well and stuff like that. It
didn’t seem like it was fair to my family; so it was a lot of
emotions going on. It was a lot going on and things like that.
When asked if he had had a close relationship with his slain younger brother, Ross replied, “Very
close. It was my four brothers grew up together. Same mom, same dad. Did everything
together.” Ross acknowledged that, during Meadows’s earlier bond hearing in January 2020,
Ross had stormed out of the courtroom when the trial judge had granted Meadows bond,
prompting the trial judge to summon Ross back for further discussion.5 Ross apologized to the
trial judge for his behavior at that time.
Ross then recounted that he “wandered off down the hallway just a little bit to get a little
fresh air ‘cause everybody was talking, but we were all still in that same area.” As Ross reached
the double doorway — the same double doorway that Meadows and his family had passed
through before walking toward the descending escalator that led to the courthouse exit — Ross
encountered Meadows returning to the double doorway. Moments before, Meadows had crossed
paths with his brother, Tyler, who was now walking down the hall away from the courtroom and
toward the descending escalator in the same direction that his family had just taken. Footage
from the courthouse security cameras showed that Meadows was then alone as he walked back
toward the courtroom.
5
A different judge presided over Meadows’s bond hearing in January of 2020.
-4-
Ross further testified, “When I walked through that doorway, at first it was clear and
nobody was over there. I didn’t want to be around anybody and stuff like that because a lot of
emotions going on; and then I see him [Meadows] come around the corner.”6 Ross then recalled:
We made eye contact. It was a little smirk to the face. It felt very
disrespectful to me and my family, and he started to approach me.
I felt uncomfortable with that. He continued approaching me
down the hallway where me and my family was at.
I didn’t see any of his side, lawyers, family or anything like
that. It didn’t feel like there was any need to come over there.
And there was a pillar over there. Went around the pillar.
He was still coming that way. Didn’t seem like he tried to go the
other way or any kind of way or fall back or anything like that.
Just kept coming towards our way. And then it got real emotional.
In addition, Ross remembered that he told Meadows, “You are walking up on me.” 7
Ross acknowledged that Meadows did not respond to his statement. Ross became visibly
emotional and had to be physically restrained by his family members, who were still gathered in
the hallway outside of the courtroom. Ross explained that he did not expect to encounter
Meadows at the double doorway, stating:
’Cause that’s why we let them leave the courtroom first. We
stayed in the courtroom. We didn’t want to be around them. We
didn’t want to see anybody. We thought that area was clear just
me and my family.
Courthouse security cameras captured the melee as numerous courthouse deputies rushed
from different parts of the courthouse and from the courtrooms where they had been posted —
6
The brief encounter between Meadows and Ross was partially recorded on courthouse
security cameras, but the column between the double doors blocked the cameras’ view of
Meadows’s face as he encountered Ross.
7
Meadows testified in his defense at his contempt hearing that he doubled back towards
the courtroom because he remembered that his attorney “Mr. Broccoletti had asked me to talk to
him; so I turned around and was walking back towards the courtroom.” Meadows denied
smiling or smirking at Ross.
-5-
including the very same courtroom where Meadows had just pleaded guilty to killing Ross’s
younger brother, C.R. — to address the sudden situation in the hallway. Several of the deputies
had to escort the visibly distraught Ross and his agitated family members down the hallway and
away from the double doorway. Meadows testified that he “just stood there” in the hallway
outside the double doors watching as Ross was being restrained by his family members and then
as Ross and his family were being escorted by the courthouse deputies in the opposite direction
down the hallway. Meadows’s family then also returned to where Meadows was standing and
then began to usher Meadows away from Ross and his family. The security footage showed that
Meadows continued facing in the direction of Ross and his family for about 15 seconds before
turning and moving to the opposite end of the hallway. Meadows, his parents, and another
family member then stood at the opposite end of the hall, with Meadows remaining in view as he
faced in the direction of the fracas. The disturbance continued as a female member of C.R.’s
family appeared to yell in Meadows’s direction and was intermittently restrained by another
family member before the woman was eventually approached by a sheriff’s deputy. During the
same time period, 12 deputies had arrived in the hallway to provide assistance, at least two of
whom had entered the hallway running. While a group of deputies stood near Meadows and his
family members, Ross was visible at the opposite end of the hallway — also in the company of a
number of deputies. Several courthouse deputies then escorted Meadows and his family out of
the courthouse.
After learning about the disturbance that had taken place in the hallway just outside of his
courtroom, the trial judge issued a show cause order to Meadows on July 12, 2022, directing him
to appear before the trial court on July 18, 2022, “to show cause why he should not be held in
IN-DIRECT CONTEMPT for the actions taken outside of the courtroom on July 11, 2022.” The
show cause order further stated, “At the conclusion of the hearing, after exiting the courtroom,
-6-
the defendant allegedly smirked at the victim’s family, which caused an altercation in the
hallway.”
At the beginning of Meadows’s contempt hearing, the trial court announced that
Meadows had been charged with indirect contempt and recounted that a show cause had been
issued, giving Meadows notice of the contempt hearing. The trial judge detailed that after
counsel for Meadows presented his plea agreement, Meadows “walked out. There was a scuffle,
disturbance in the hallway. There were a lot of court resources utilized to address it.” The trial
judge recalled that he had issued a show cause after receiving “information that it was the
defendant [Meadows] who was the catalyst for the scuffle.” The trial judge also noted that the
courthouse alarm system had been activated, which “somewhat interrupted the procedures of the
court.” The trial court then heard witness testimony — including Meadows’s own testimony —
and counsel for Meadows presented evidence on Meadows’s behalf. Meadows was represented
by counsel throughout the contempt proceeding.
After watching the courthouse video footage and hearing witness testimony, the trial
judge found that although Meadows “didn’t walk up on Mr. Ross on purpose,” Meadows “kept
going” and was “certainly determined to stay in that space.” The trial judge remarked, “It was
incredibly unwise to come back. There’s procedure. The victim’s family was waiting for the
defendant [Meadows] and his people to leave.” The trial judge went on to find, “There’s a
history with Mr. Ross who’s the brother who is grieving in this case; so why he [Meadows]
would come back I don’t know.” The trial judge also determined that Ross’s “problem
slamming doors in the past” gave Meadows “knowledge that there’s volatility and grieving
family members as a result of him [Meadows] killing their family member.” Meadows’s father,
Jay Meadows, also testified and noted that he was present in January 2020 at his son’s bond
hearing when Meadows was granted bond and everyone witnessed Ross’s volatile emotional
-7-
reaction afterwards at that earlier bond hearing. Jay Meadows testified, “The same young man
stormed -- pushed the door open, both doors; and the judge said, These two [Meadows and Ross]
are going to change places.”
The trial judge clarified that Meadows’s acts on July 11, 2022, of coming back toward
the courtroom and encountering Ross in the hallway were not contemptuous acts by themselves.
However, “what’s telling to the court is the behavior of the defendant [Meadows] when Mr. Ross
is restrained. And that behavior is looking straight at him [Ross], not changing his [Meadows’s]
gait, walking towards the area where Mr. Ross is.” The trial judge reiterated that Meadows’s
contemptuous behavior — which the trial judge described as “abhorrent to the court” — “begins
with the instant encounter in that doorway, and it did not end after Mr. Ross was restrained. The
behavior continued, and that’s what gave rise to the eruption of everyone -- of the ruckus.” The
trial judge found that “any reasonable recipient who has had a family member killed by the
defendant [Meadows] who witnesses this would react violently.” The trial judge then also found
that Meadows “was smirking and walking towards Mr. Ross” and that Meadows’s behavior “was
calculated to lead to violent reaction in the recipient; and for that reason I find him in contempt.”
Meadows now appeals his conviction for contempt to this Court.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Meadows argues on appeal to this Court, “The trial court erred in finding the Appellant
guilty of Contempt of Court because the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law because the
evidence did not show that Appellant disrupted the administration of justice, nor did it show that
the Appellant intended to disrupt the administration of justice.”
“When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, ‘[t]he judgment of the trial court is
presumed correct and will not be disturbed unless it is “plainly wrong or without evidence to
-8-
support it.”’” Secret v. Commonwealth, 296 Va. 204, 228 (2018) (alteration in original) (quoting
Pijor v. Commonwealth, 294 Va. 502, 512 (2017)). “In such cases, ‘[t]he Court does not ask
itself whether it believes that the evidence at the trial established guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt.’” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Pijor, 294 Va. at 512). “Rather, the relevant
question is whether ‘any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the
crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’” Williams v. Commonwealth, 278 Va. 190, 193 (2009)
(quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979)).
The Supreme Court has stated, “It has long been recognized and established that a court
is invested with power to punish for contempt.” Scialdone v. Commonwealth, 279 Va. 422, 442
(2010) (quoting Higginbotham v. Commonwealth, 206 Va. 291, 294 (1965)). “A court has
discretion in the exercise of its contempt power.” Petrosinelli v. People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals, Inc., 273 Va. 700, 706 (2007). Thus, “we review the exercise of a court’s
contempt power under an abuse of discretion standard.” Id. (citing Tonti v. Akbari, 262 Va. 681,
687 (2001)). “Where the court’s authority to punish for contempt is exercised by a judgment
rendered, its finding is presumed correct and will not be reversed unless plainly wrong or without
evidence to support it.” Brown v. Commonwealth, 26 Va. App. 758, 762 (1998).
It is important to consider the unique contours of the crime of contempt of court.
“Contempt is defined as an act in disrespect of the court or its processes, or which obstructs the
administration of justice, or tends to bring the court into disrepute.” Epps v. Commonwealth, 47
Va. App. 687, 708 (2006) (en banc) (quoting Carter v. Commonwealth, 2 Va. App. 392, 396
(1986)). “Any act which is calculated to embarrass, hinder, or obstruct the court in the
administration of justice is contempt.” Kahn v. McNicholas, 67 Va. App. 215, 225-26 (2017)
(quoting Carter, 2 Va. App. at 396). “A contempt of court may be direct or indirect. Generally,
a direct contempt is one committed in the presence of the court. An indirect or constructive
-9-
contempt is one that has occurred outside the presence of the court.” Gilman v. Commonwealth,
275 Va. 222, 227 (2008) (citations omitted). “[U]nless the contempt is ‘committed in open
court,’ due process ‘requires that the accused should be advised of the charges and have a
reasonable opportunity to meet them by way of defense or explanation.’” Scialdone, 279 Va. at
444 (quoting Cooke v. United States, 267 U.S. 517, 537 (1925)). “This opportunity includes ‘the
assistance of counsel, if requested, and the right to call witnesses.’” Id. (quoting Cooke, 267
U.S. at 537).
This Court has previously held that “specific intent is not required and that willfulness or
recklessness will support a finding of criminal contempt.” Abdo v. Commonwealth, 64 Va. App.
468, 477 (2015); see also Singleton v. Commonwealth, 278 Va. 542 (2009). Significantly, this
Court has often stated, “Intent is a factual determination, and a trial court’s decision on the
question of intent is accorded great deference on appeal and will not be reversed unless clearly
erroneous.” Towler v. Commonwealth, 59 Va. App. 284, 297 (2011) (citing Robertson v.
Commonwealth, 18 Va. App. 635, 639 (1994)). “Intent may be, and most often is, proven by
circumstantial evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from proven facts.” Viney v.
Commonwealth, 269 Va. 296, 301 (2005); see also Secret, 296 Va. at 228-29 (“‘Intent is the
purpose formed in a person’s mind and may, like any other fact, be shown by circumstances,’
including the ‘words or conduct’ of the alleged offender.” (quoting Commonwealth v. Herring,
288 Va. 59, 75 (2014))). Furthermore, the Supreme Court has stated, “It is permissible for the
fact finder to infer that every person intends the natural, probable consequences of his or her
actions.” Commonwealth v. Perkins, 295 Va. 323, 330 (2018) (quoting Ellis v. Commonwealth,
281 Va. 499, 507 (2011)).
In this case, the trial judge, after watching the courthouse security camera footage and
hearing witness testimony, found that Meadows “was smirking and walking towards Mr. Ross.”
- 10 -
The judge emphasized that “what’s telling to the court is the behavior of the defendant
[Meadows] when Mr. Ross is restrained. And that behavior is looking straight at him [Ross], not
changing his [Meadows’s] gait, walking towards the area where Mr. Ross is.” The trial judge
further found that Meadows’s behavior “was calculated to lead to violent reaction in the
recipient; and for that reason I find him in contempt.”
The record demonstrates that the encounter between Meadows and Ross occurred inside
the courthouse very near the courtroom where Ross and his family members had just witnessed
Meadows plead guilty to the brutal killing of Ross’s younger brother, C.R. The encounter also
followed counsel for Meadows presenting a plea deal that, if approved by the trial court, would
have had some of Meadows’s other charges dismissed and his sentence capped at seven years of
active incarceration. Ross testified that Meadows made eye contact with him, smirked at him,
and approached him in the hallway near the courtroom following this plea hearing on July 11,
2022. The security camera footage and Meadows’s own testimony furthermore established that
Meadows stood basically stationary in the hallway near the double doorway and continued to
watch the fracas unfold as Ross’s family restrained Ross, lifted him, and physically carried him
away and as courthouse deputies rushed out to the hallway and then escorted a visibly upset Ross
and his family members away from Meadows.
- 11 -
(Meadows is in the foreground facing Ross and his
family members, who are in the background.)
- 12 -
(Meadows is in the foreground on the right.)
Meadows stood there and just stared at Ross and his family members for nearly a full 15 seconds
and only began to truly move away from the fracas once prompted to do so by Meadows’s own
family members when they arrived to retrieve him. Accordingly, the trial judge concluded,
“Even in that brief instance, that’s enough for me to find that his [Meadows’s] behavior was
calculated to lead to violent reaction in the recipient; and for that reason I find him in contempt.”
As noted supra, after hearing testimony in the case and viewing the security camera
footage of the confrontation, the trial court then accepted Robert Ross’s testimony that Meadows
made eye contact with him as Meadows walked toward him and then smirked at him, prompting
Ross’s reaction. See Marable v. Commonwealth, 27 Va. App. 505, 509 (1998) (“The credibility
of a witness and the inferences to be drawn from proven facts are matters solely for the fact
finder’s determination.”). As the trial judge explained and found, “I think any reasonable
- 13 -
recipient who has had a family member killed by the defendant [Meadows] who witnesses this
would react violently.”
Furthermore, in accepting Ross’s testimony, the trial court implicitly rejected Meadows’s
self-serving testimony that he did not smile or smirk at Ross, and the trial court implicitly found
that Meadows was lying to conceal his guilt. See id. at 509-10 (“In its role of judging witness
credibility, the fact finder is entitled to disbelieve the self-serving testimony of the accused and
to conclude that the accused is lying to conceal his guilt.”). In Armistead v. Commonwealth, 56
Va. App. 569 (2010), this Court stated:
[T]he trial court, sitting as factfinder, was at liberty to discount [the
defendant’s] self-serving statements as little more than lying to
“conceal his guilt,” Coleman v. Commonwealth, 52 Va. App. 19,
25 (2008) (citation omitted), and could treat such prevarications
as “affirmative evidence of guilt,” id. (quoting Wright v. West, 505
U.S. 277, 296 (1992)). This principle naturally follows from the
broader observation that “whenever a witness testifies, his or her
credibility becomes an issue.” Hughes v. Commonwealth, 39
Va. App. 448, 462 (2002) (citation omitted).
Id. at 581 (emphasis added); see Morris v. Commonwealth, 269 Va. 127, 133-34 (2005) (“[U]pon
finding [the defendant’s] testimony unworthy of belief, . . . [t]he judge could . . . ‘consider
whatever [he] concluded to be perjured testimony as affirmative evidence of guilt.’” (final
alteration in original) (quoting Wright, 505 U.S. at 296)).
Despite the dissent’s assertion that we are relying only on the trial judge not believing
Meadows’s testimony to find sufficient evidence, there is considerable evidence of his guilt here.
In deciding this case on appeal, we are mindful of the Supreme Court’s command that when
reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, “we eschew the divide-and-conquer approach, which
examines each incriminating fact in isolation, finds it singularly insufficient, and then concludes
that the sum of these facts can never be sufficient. Instead, in an appellate sufficiency review,
the evidence is ‘considered as a whole.’” Commonwealth v. Barney, ___ Va. ___, ___ (Mar. 16,
- 14 -
2023) (quoting Stamper v. Commonwealth, 220 Va. 260, 273 (1979)). “This approach
recognizes that ‘while no single piece of evidence may be sufficient, the combined force of many
concurrent and related circumstances . . . may lead a reasonable mind irresistibly to a
conclusion.’” Id. at ___ (alteration in original) (quoting Commonwealth v. Moseley, 293 Va.
455, 463 (2017)). Here, in addition to (1) the trial court’s findings of fact explaining why
Meadows had the necessary intent; (2) Ross’s testimony, which the trial court believed; and
(3) the testimony of Meadows’s father, the trial court also simply did not believe Meadows’s
own testimony. The trial court implicitly found that Meadows was lying to conceal his guilt, and
that finding constituted further evidence that the trial court could also consider in concluding
that the overall evidence was sufficient. Therefore, given the totality of all of these
circumstances (each piece mounting upon the others), we simply cannot say that no rational
finder of fact could have found Meadows guilty of intentionally or recklessly engaging in the
behavior that resulted in his being in contempt of court.
The trial judge also reasonably inferred that Ross’s “problem slamming doors in the past”
— namely, during Meadows’s January 2020 bond hearing where Ross stormed out of the
courtroom and slammed the door after Meadows was released on bond — gave Meadows
“knowledge that there’s volatility and grieving family members as a result of him [Meadows]
killing their family member.” Meadows’s own father, Jay Meadows, testified about how he
witnessed and remembered Robert Ross’s volatile emotional outburst after the judge granted his
son bond in January 2020. Jay Meadows specifically recalled, “The same young man stormed --
pushed the door open, both doors; and the judge said, These two are going to change places” —
indicating that Meadows was present at that outburst as the judge made them “change places,”
after which Ross apologized for his emotional outburst and behavior in the courtroom. Indeed, it
was not surprising that the trial judge made such a finding as anyone with common sense would
- 15 -
understand the emotional powder keg that was present at Meadows’s July 2022 guilty plea
hearing, even someone without the previous experience of observing Ross’s outburst at the
January 2020 bond hearing.
The dissent professes that this Court engages in “speculation” that Meadows was present
in the courtroom, at his own bond hearing, when Ross stormed out of the courtroom when the
judge decided to grant Meadows bond and free him from incarceration before his trial.
However, it is hardly “speculation” that Meadows was present in court for his own bond hearing
when he was granted bond and allowed to go free with his family. Meadows’s father was still
there, too, when Ross stormed out of the courtroom in anger over Meadows’s being freed on
bond. In fact, it might well rise to “speculation” to find that Meadows was not there at the point
the trial judge ruled, granted his motion for bond, and formally released him prior to trial.
A simple smirk alone would certainly not rise to the level of contempt, as the trial court
here appropriately implied. However, the totality of the circumstances of the specific evidence
in this case supports a finding that Meadows intentionally provoked Ross because Meadows
knew the highly emotional state of the victim’s family after their having just watched Meadows
plead guilty in the courtroom to killing Ross’s younger brother (and given Ross’s earlier
emotional outburst at the January 2020 bond hearing). Therefore, after considering the totality of
the circumstances and all of the evidence in the record before us, we certainly cannot say that the
trial court was plainly wrong or without credible evidence to conclude that Meadows intended to
evoke a violent response from Ross — i.e., when Meadows walked toward Ross and smirked at
him in the hallway right outside the same courtroom where Meadows had just pleaded guilty to
killing Ross’s younger brother.
Meadows also argues on brief that the evidence did not show that he actually disrupted
the administration of justice. However, at oral argument before this Court, counsel for Meadows
- 16 -
acknowledged that he did not make this argument to the trial court. Meadows asks this Court to
apply the “ends of justice exception” under Rule 5A:18 to this argument. However, we decline
to apply the exception here because Meadows has failed to “demonstrate that he . . . was
convicted for conduct that was not a criminal offense,” and he has also failed to “affirmatively
prove that an element of the offense did not occur.” 8 Quyen Vinh Phan Le v. Commonwealth, 65
Va. App. 66, 74 (2015) (quoting Redman v. Commonwealth, 25 Va. App. 215, 222 (1997)); see
Commonwealth v. Bass, 292 Va. 19 (2016). In short, Meadows acknowledges that he did not
preserve for appeal his argument that his actions toward Ross did not actually disrupt the
administration of justice.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the trial court did not err as the record provides credible
evidence in support of Meadows’s indirect contempt conviction, and the trial court did not abuse
its discretion in so holding Meadows in indirect contempt.
B. Validity of the Sentencing Order
Meadows also argues on appeal to this Court, “The trial court erred in finding Appellant
guilty of Contempt of Court because the final sentencing order was invalid.” However, the
record here indicates that Meadows never raised this argument to the trial court. Indeed,
Meadows did not file a motion to reconsider or any objection on this basis to the final sentencing
order on the contempt charge within 21 days after the trial court entered the final order — the
period in which the trial court retained jurisdiction over this case pursuant to Rule 1:1. As
8
Even so, the trial judge here noted at the beginning of the contempt hearing, “There was
a scuffle, disturbance in the hallway. There were a lot of court resources utilized to address it.”
The evidence in the record before this Court shows that numerous courthouse deputy sheriffs had
to rush from different parts of the courthouse — and even from the very same courtroom where
counsel for Meadows had just presented Meadows’s plea deal — to deescalate the altercation
between Meadows and Ross in the hallway outside the courtroom. Those courthouse deputies
then also had to escort both families out of the courthouse separately to prevent any further
confrontations or violence.
- 17 -
Meadows did not present the trial court with an opportunity to intelligently rule on his objection
to the validity of the final sentencing order, Meadows’s argument with respect to this assignment
of error is not preserved for appellate review under Rule 5A:18. In addition, Meadows has not
asked this Court to apply the good cause or ends of justice exceptions to Rule 5A:18 for this
assignment of error, and we will not invoke them sua sponte. See Edwards v. Commonwealth, 41
Va. App. 752, 761 (2003) (en banc). Therefore, we cannot reach the merits of this assignment of
error and cannot say that the trial court erred.9
III. CONCLUSION
In short, the trial court was not plainly wrong or without evidence in its finding of fact
that Meadows intended to evoke a violent response from Ross, that such a response did occur,
and that “there were a lot of court resources utilized to address it.” Meadows’s act of returning
to the area outside the courtroom where C.R.’s family members had gathered and then smirking
at Ross as Meadows walked toward him recklessly provoked Ross and caused him to lose
control of his emotions — as Ross had just watched Meadows plead guilty to the killing of
Ross’s younger brother. Furthermore, the record reflects that Meadows remained standing there
in the hallway, where he was continuing to stare at Ross after Ross had to be restrained and
pulled down the hallway away from Meadows. He simply stood there, watched, and stared at the
9
“The power to summarily punish direct contempt is more limited than the power to
punish indirect contempt.” Abdo, 64 Va. App. at 475 n.3 (citing Code § 18.2-456, the statute
“limiting the courts’ power to summarily punish contempt to the instances listed in that statute”).
Code § 18.2-456 is titled “Cases in which courts and judges may punish summarily for
contempt.” As this Court has previously noted, “Code §§ 18.2-456 and 18.2-457 limit the use of
summary proceedings and the sentences imposed during these proceedings to the examples listed
in the statute. It does not address plenary hearings for contempt conducted on the basis of a
show cause or other more formal attachment.” Robinson v. Commonwealth, 41 Va. App. 137,
146 n.7 (2003) (“As the proceeding was not for summary contempt, the trial court was not bound
by the constraints of Code § 18.2-456 and acted accordingly.”). Here, the trial judge issued a
show cause order to Meadows on July 12, 2022, directing him to appear before the trial court on
July 18, 2022, “to show cause why he should not be held in IN-DIRECT CONTEMPT for the
actions taken outside the courtroom on July 11, 2022.”
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now restrained, flailing Ross as the situation unfolded and as courthouse deputies scrambled to
defuse it, move Ross away, and quell the disruption. Given the totality of the circumstances here
and all of the specific evidence in this case, we cannot say that the trial court abused its
discretion when it found Meadows guilty of indirect contempt.
For all of these reasons, we do not disturb the trial court’s judgment.
Affirmed.
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Raphael, J., dissenting.
Meadows’s contempt conviction cites Code § 18.2-456 as the statute he violated. The
parties agree that the relevant provision is subsection (A)(1), prohibiting “[m]isbehavior in the
presence of the court, or so near thereto as to obstruct or interrupt the administration of justice.”
Code § 18.2-456(A)(1). As the Commonwealth notes, “None of the other provisions under the
code section would appear to apply to the defendant’s conduct.” Commonwealth Br. 8 n.2.
Because I disagree with the majority that the Commonwealth proved beyond a reasonable doubt
that Meadows intended to obstruct or interrupt the administration of justice, I respectfully
dissent.
“For more than a century, . . . Virginia courts have required the element of intent in order
to sustain a criminal contempt conviction.” Ragland v. Soggin, 291 Va. 282, 290 (2016).
“Therefore, we must decide whether the evidence was sufficient to establish that” Meadows
“intended ‘to obstruct or interrupt the administration of justice.’” Singleton v. Commonwealth,
278 Va. 542, 549 (2009) (quoting then-Code § 18.2-456(1)).
We held in Abdo v. Commonwealth, 64 Va. App. 468 (2015), that Code § 18.2-456 is not
a “specific-intent crime.” Id. at 476. So the Commonwealth need not prove that the defendant
intended “to accomplish the precise criminal act that [he] is later charged with.” Id. (quoting
Winston v. Commonwealth, 268 Va. 564, 600 (2004)). Still, Abdo recognized that “[t]here is no
question that ‘the element of intent’ must be present for a defendant to be found guilty of
contempt.” Id. (quoting Singleton, 278 Va. at 549).
“Contempt under Virginia law is ‘“an act in disrespect of the court or its processes, or
which obstructs the administration of justice, or tends to bring the court into disrepute.”’” Id.
(quoting Robinson v. Commonwealth, 41 Va. App. 137, 142 (2003)). It is an act “calculated to
embarrass, hinder, or obstruct the court in the administration of justice.” Carter v.
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Commonwealth, 2 Va. App. 392, 396 (1986). Contempt, in short, is “‘a frame of mind’ that
consists in ‘an unwillingness to recognize the authority and dignity of the court.’” Abdo, 64
Va. App. at 477 (quoting John L. Costello, Virginia Criminal Law and Procedure § 26.4[1] (4th
ed. 2014)).
As the majority correctly notes, a showing of “willfulness or recklessness satisfies the
intent element necessary for a finding of criminal contempt.” Id. A “willful” act “means an act
done with a bad purpose; without justifiable excuse; stubbornly, obstinately, perversely[,] . . .
without ground for believing it is lawful.” Barrett v. Commonwealth, 268 Va. 170, 183 (2004)
(quoting United States v. Murdock, 290 U.S. 389, 394 (1933)). It “imports knowledge and
consciousness that injury will result from the act done. The act done must be intended or it must
involve a reckless disregard for the rights of another and will probably result in an injury.” Id.
I agree, of course, that the Court must “review the evidence in the light most favorable to
the Commonwealth, according it the benefit of all reasonable inferences.” Singleton, 278 Va. at
548. We may reverse the trial court’s judgment “only upon a showing that it is plainly wrong or
without evidence to support it.” Id. But several cases have vacated the trial court’s contempt
finding when the evidence failed to prove the defendant’s intent to obstruct or interrupt court
proceedings.
For instance, our Supreme Court in Singleton reversed two contempt convictions of
defense lawyers who, after reaching agreement with the prosecutor to request a continuance, told
a client or a witness not to appear in court. 278 Va. at 551. The Supreme Court acknowledged
that the defense lawyers’ actions tied the hands of the trial judges, effectively forcing them to
grant a continuance when the client or witness did not appear. Id. at 552. But the evidence
failed to show that either lawyer “intended” to obstruct or interrupt the administration of justice.
Id.
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Similarly, we held in Carter that the trial court erred in holding a defendant in criminal
contempt for requesting a jury trial the day before trial, forcing a continuance because no jurors
had been summoned. 2 Va. App. at 399. The evidence failed to show that the defendant’s
“delayed request was made for the purpose of obstructing or interrupting the administration of
justice and not just for the purpose of exercising” his constitutional right to a jury trial. Id.
I would hold that the Commonwealth’s evidence here likewise failed to prove Meadows’s
intent to obstruct or interrupt the administration of justice, let alone flout “the authority and
dignity of the court.” Abdo, 64 Va. App. at 477 (quoting Costello, supra, § 26.4[1]). The entire
incident involving Ross and Meadows, after they and their families exited the courtroom, lasted
about 15 seconds. The video entered into evidence shows Ross and Meadows crossing paths at a
set of double doors separated by a column. Ross was exiting the hallway to walk to the
escalators. Meadows was returning because he forgot that his lawyer wanted to speak with him
after the hearing. Neither could see the other coming.
Ross testified that they “made eye contact” and Meadows had “a little smirk” on his face.
The video shows that Ross reacted immediately, backing up and raising his hands to his head.
Ross’s family members immediately restrained him and pulled him back into the hallway,
towards the courtroom that everyone had emerged from just seconds earlier. That initial
encounter lasted about two seconds.
The trial court found that Meadows “was smirking” when he first encountered Ross.
Even so, the court found that Meadows “didn’t walk up on Mr. Ross on purpose”; “he didn’t
encounter Mr. Ross on purpose.” The court found that this conduct by itself was not
contumacious: “When [Meadows] encounters Mr. Ross . . . by that door, is that contemptuous?
No. But he kept going.” (Emphasis added.)
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The decisive conduct on which the trial court relied is what happened next: “[W]hat’s
telling to the court is the behavior of the defendant when Mr. Ross is restrained.” (Emphasis
added.) Meadows was “looking straight at [Ross], not changing his gait, walking towards the
area where Mr. Ross is.” The court acknowledged, at that point, “you can’t tell if [Meadows is]
smirking or not, but he’s certainly determined to stay in that space.” That was the rub for the
trial judge, who said, “I think any reasonable recipient who has had a family member killed by
the defendant who witnesses this would react violently.”
For discussion purposes, let’s divide the 15-second encounter into the initial 2 seconds, in
which Ross lost his temper, and the last 13 seconds, when Ross was dragged down the hallway
by family members and also by deputies.
The initial two seconds cannot support the contempt finding. The standard of review, of
course, requires that we credit the trial court’s finding that Meadows had a “smirk” on his face
when Ross first saw him at the doorway. But the word smirk is doing a lot of work in the
analysis of the majority and the trial court. That word dates to the ninth century and means, “To
smile; in later use, to smile in an affected, self-satisfied, or silly manner,” Smirk, The Compact
Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary (1971); “to smile in an affected or conceited manner,”
Smirk, Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary Unabridged (2021). Whether Meadows was
smirking or just smiling is a subjective judgment that lies in the eye of the beholder. I accept that
Ross perceived that Meadows was smirking.
But is Ross’s interpretation of Meadows’s facial expression enough to conclude beyond a
reasonable doubt that Meadows actually smirked “with a bad purpose; without justifiable excuse;
stubbornly, obstinately, perversely[,] . . . without ground for believing it is lawful”? Barrett, 268
Va. at 183 (quoting Murdock, 290 U.S. at 394). Or that Meadows understood that by forming a
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“smirk,” he would cause Ross to fly into a rage and cause a disturbance? Does the evidence
show that Meadows intended to provoke Ross? I think not.
For his part, Meadows offered a perfectly innocent, justifiable excuse for his actions. See
id. He was returning to the courtroom because he had forgotten that his lawyer wanted to speak
with him. Meadows was smiling because the plea agreement that the Commonwealth had just
accepted resulted in reduced charges, a cap on jail time, and Meadows’s being released on bond
pending sentencing. As Meadows testified, he was “extremely happy” because “I got to go
home and see my daughter.” I see nothing in the record to support the speculation that Meadows
knew or should have known that, if he “smirked,” it would be unlawful because he would send
Ross into a fiery rage, requiring multiple court deputies to respond to keep order.
I also disagree with the majority that the record supported the trial court’s inference that
Meadows knew that Ross could be so easily provoked. The facts are too flimsy to support that
speculation. For one thing, Ross admitted that it was “very inappropriate” for him to have
suddenly lost his temper upon encountering Meadows at the doorway.
For another, the record fails to show that Meadows knew about Ross’s volatility. Ross
testified that he had attended Meadows’s January 2020 bond hearing—two-and-half years
earlier. Ross said that he “left the courtroom” after bail was granted because he was emotional.
He said the judge called him back to speak to him about his behavior, for which Ross
“apologized.” Yet the Commonwealth presented no evidence that Meadows witnessed Ross’s
hot-headedness at the earlier bond hearing or knew that Ross was the victim’s brother. The
Commonwealth introduced no security-camera footage from that hearing. To be sure, the trial
court heard testimony that Meadows’s father witnessed Ross’s conduct at the January 2020
hearing. After Ross “stormed” out of the courtroom, the father heard the hearing judge say
“[t]hese two are going to change places.” But the father was never asked if Meadows witnessed
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Ross’s walking out of the courtroom or Ross’s later apology to the hearing judge. Nor was the
father asked if Meadows knew Ross or knew Ross’s relationship to the victim. So I would not
credit the trial court’s inference that Meadows knew that Ross was volatile, let alone who Ross
even was. That is not a “reasonable inference[] fairly deducible” from the facts. Singleton, 278
Va. at 548.
As for the last 13 seconds of the incident, the record provides no evidence to show that
Meadows acted “with a bad purpose; without justifiable excuse; stubbornly, obstinately,
perversely,” or “without ground for believing [that his conduct was] lawful.” Barrett, 268 Va. at
183 (quoting Murdock, 290 U.S. at 394). The picture selected by the majority, ante at 12, shows
Ross standing in the hallway, looking down the corridor as Ross was being dragged away from
him. Meadows was joined several seconds later by his family members.
The trial court said that what happened in this second part of the incident was integral to
finding Meadows in contempt: Meadows was “looking straight at [Ross], not changing his gait,
walking towards the area where Mr. Ross is.” That omits that Ross was being dragged away in
the opposite direction. And as the court acknowledged “you can’t tell if [Meadows is] smirking
or not.”
Because Ross had already erupted and was being carried away during this second phase
of the incident, Meadows cannot be said to have engaged in contumacious conduct simply by
standing there with his family, looking down the hallway. Simply standing there, in a public
courthouse, looking down the hallway, fails to show that Meadows took any action taken with
“knowledge and consciousness that injury will result from the act done.” Abdo, 64 Va. App. at
477. Indeed, Meadows had a perfectly good reason to be standing there: he needed to speak with
his attorney outside the courtroom. And the scrum of people moving down the hallway with
Ross in tow now lay between Meadows and his lawyer.
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Finally, I would not paper over the absence of evidence of Meadows’s contumacious
intent by relying on the inference that the trial judge must have thought that Meadows lied on the
witness stand. Meadows denied having “smirked” and testified that he intended no disrespect to
the victim or his family. The majority reasons that by disbelieving Meadows, the trial judge
could treat Meadows’s denial of guilt as “affirmative evidence of guilt.” Ante at 14 (quoting
Morris v. Commonwealth, 269 Va. 127, 134 (2005)).
But our appellate precedent has never permitted the use of a negative inference from the
defendant’s testifying in his own defense to prove an essential element of the Commonwealth’s
case when the Commonwealth itself has failed to prove that element.
The giving by the accused of an unclear or unreasonable or false
explanation of his conduct or account of his doings are matters for
the [factfinder] to consider, but they do not shift from the
Commonwealth the ultimate burden of proving by the facts or the
circumstances, or both, that beyond all reasonable doubt the
defendant committed the crime charged against him.
Foster v. Commonwealth, 209 Va. 326, 330-31 (1968) (quoting Smith v. Commonwealth, 192
Va. 453, 461 (1951)). In cases like Morris, cited by the majority, there was ample evidence to
prove that the defendant knowingly possessed a firearm as a convicted felon. 269 Va. at 133. It
was in that vein that the Court said that the trier of fact could disbelieve the defendant’s
testimony and consider it “as affirmative evidence of guilt” that the defendant was lying to
conceal his guilt. Id. at 134. Morris did not rely on such a negative inference alone to uphold
the conviction. Indeed, consistent with the rule in Foster, our appellate courts have repeatedly
held that the Commonwealth cannot prove the defendant’s guilt based solely on the inference
that the defendant might have been disbelieved when he denied an essential element of the
crime.10
10
See, e.g., Tarpley v. Commonwealth, 261 Va. 251, 256-57 (2001) (“The trial court . . .
was entitled to disbelieve Tarpley’s assertion that he did not intend to ‘steal’ the car when he
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***
The reader will be forgiven for thinking that Ross should have been held in contempt for
causing the “melee” here, ante at 5, not Meadows. I would “hold that the evidence was
insufficient to establish that” Meadows “intended ‘to obstruct or interrupt the administration of
justice.’” Singleton, 278 Va. at 551 (quoting then-Code § 18.2-456(1)). I see no evidence, taken
in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, showing any act by Meadows that was
“calculated to embarrass, hinder, or obstruct the court in the administration of justice.” Carter,
2 Va. App. at 396. “In the absence of such intent, . . . the evidence is insufficient to sustain [the]
conviction[] for criminal contempt . . . .” Singleton, 278 Va. at 551.
I would reverse the judgment, vacate the conviction, and dismiss the charge.
drove it away from the scene of the fight. However, the trial court’s rejection of that testimony
does not provide a factual basis for establishing beyond a reasonable doubt that Tarpley intended
to deprive Bruce of his car permanently, rather than temporarily.”); Burrows v. Commonwealth,
224 Va. 317, 319 (1982) (“The Commonwealth argues the trier of fact was free to draw
inferences of guilt from the facts that Burrows fled the scene and that he gave a statement to the
police denying he knew where King William County was. However, the defendant explained his
conduct, and these facts are not inconsistent with his innocence.”); Tucker v. Commonwealth, 18
Va. App. 141, 144 (1994) (“Although it was within the province of the jury to assess the
credibility of appellant’s testimony, the mere conclusion that appellant had lied to conceal his
guilt was insufficient to provide a basis for inferring that he had the requisite knowledge . . . .”).
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