Source: http://crimlaw.blogspot.com/2014/04/
Timestamp: 2019-04-26 02:06:28+00:00

Document:
The breakdown of this year's cases is here.
The breakdowns of the last several years can be found here.
If someone is involved involved in a crime they are a principal, accessory, or conspirator. So, I thought I'd spend a little time explaining what each is and how they differ from one another. However, in order to keep it simple, I will avoid dealing with too many of the statutory variances.
§ 18.2-18 - In the case of every felony, every principal in the second degree and every accessory before the fact may be indicted, tried, convicted and punished in all respects as if a principal in the first degree.
§ 18.2-19 - In the case of every felony, every accessory after the fact shall be guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor; provided, however, no person in the relation of husband or wife, parent or grandparent, child or grandchild, brother or sister, by consanguinity or affinity, or servant to the offender, who, after the commission of a felony, shall aid or assist a principal felon or accessory before the fact to avoid or escape from prosecution or punishment, shall be deemed an accessory after the fact.
§ 18.2-21 - An accessory, either before or after the fact, may, whether the principal felon be convicted or not, or be amenable to justice or not, be indicted, tried, convicted and punished in the county or corporation in which he became accessory, or in which the principal felon might be indicted. Any such accessory before the fact may be indicted either with such principal or separately.
§ 18.2-22 - If any person shall conspire, confederate or combine with another, either within or without this Commonwealth, to commit a felony within this Commonwealth, or if he shall so conspire, confederate or combine with another within this Commonwealth to commit a felony either within or without this Commonwealth, he shall be guilty of a felony which shall be punishable as follows . . . [various grades of felony punishments].
As you can see, Virginia does not statutorily define any of these various ways of participating in a crime. While we can infer there are two types of principals (1st and 2d degree), two type of accessories (before and after the fact), and one type of conspirator, the statutes provide little guidance outside of punishment and charging. So, as in much of Virginia law, we have to look to the cases for actual definitions.
A principal in the first degree is an active mover in the crime. Johnson v. Commonwealth, 220 Va. 146 (1977). He's the one who shoplifts steak from the Mega-Mart or runs into the bank carrying a shotgun.
A principal in the second degree is someone who procures, encourages, countenances, or approves the criminal act. McMorris v. Commonwealth, 276 Va. 500 (2008). He is guilty as a principal in the second degree if he is guilty of some overt act done knowingly in furtherance of the commission of the crime, or if he shared in the criminal intent of the principal committing the crime. Id. This is the look out man or getaway driver.
An accessory before the fact is the same as a principal in the second degree except that the person is not present when the crime is actually performed. Sutton v. Commonwealth, 228 Va. 654 (1985). This is the guy who provides plans to the bank, but is in Idaho on the day the robbery takes place.
Under the common law an indictment was required to plead specifically if a defendant were to be convicted as a principal in the second degree or as an accessory before the fact. However, § 18.2-18 changed that so that an indictment which alleges participation as a principal in the first degree is sufficient if the defendant instead turns out to be a principal in the second degree or an accessory before the fact. Id.
Accessory after the fact has three elements: (1) The felony must be completed. (2) The accused, at the time he assists or comforts the felon, must have notice, direct or implied, that the felon committed the crime. (3) Third, the accused must receive, relieve, comfort, or assist the felon. Commonwealth v. Dalton, 259 Va. 249 (2000). Of course, § 18.2-19 exempts close family members and servants from punishment if they violate this law.
A conspirator is one of at least two people who agree to commit a crime. The crime does not have to succeed and there does not even need to be an act in furtherance of the conspiracy. When the agreement is reached the conspiracy is committed. Although each conspirator must agree on the same objective, a conspirator is not required to know all the details of the conspiracy, the identity of the other conspirators, the part each member of the conspiracy is to play, or how the spoils of the conspiracy are to be divided. James v. Commonwealth, 53 VaApp 671 (2009).
In most cases, a conspirator is also a principal or accessory. However, because conspiracy requires a meeting of the minds, but no actual act in furtherance, one could be a conspirator without getting far enough along to become a principal or accessory. For instance, Mr. Pink and Mr. White meet randomly at Subway one day. Each recognizes the other from a previous robbery they committed. They sit to eat lunch together and while eating agree to rob the bank next door. However, before they can even leave their table, the off duty deputy who was eating lunch at the next table and heard them agree to rob the bank arrests them. Mr. Pink and Mr. White are clearly conspirators, but it is hard to argue they are principals or accessories because they were stopped before they could undertake any actual act.
The purpose of this statute was to limit prosecutions even when double jeopardy does not apply. It limits the prosecution to an act rather than to a crime. See Owens v. Commonwealth, 129 Va 757 (1921)(stating that this statute was meant to prevent cases such as Arrington v. Commonwealth, 87 Va 96 (1890)(two separate prosecutions for the same act under different statutes)). However, the Virginia courts have both pulled the teeth out of this statute and neutered it.
To begin with, the courts have ruled that this statute does not apply if one of the crimes is a common law crime - and we all know that Virginia criminal law is replete with common law crimes. See Blythe v. Commonwealth, 222 Va. 722 (1981). While this is a technically correct reading of the statute, it clearly falls well outside its intent.
Nonetheless, we are left with an interesting question here. What of the hybrid statutes? Virginia has all sorts of statutes which add elements to common law crimes. Most prominent among these (at least in number of times charged) is probably felony larceny which is created under various statutes that add a particular aggravating element. 18.2-95 includes the elements of value ($200+) or an item (firearm); 18.2-104 makes prior convictions an aggravating element; 18.2-97 makes stealing a dog or certain farm animals an aggravating element. It seems that either under a legislative intent analysis or the application of the rule of lenity (construing the statute strictly against the Commonwealth) the inclusion of these hybrid laws would be called for.
Older cases seem to assume this statute barred concurrent prosecutions for different crimes rising from the same act and it was evenly specifically held to be so for a very short period of time. Lash v. Commonwealth, 13 VaApp 251 (1991). However, this was almost immediately overruled by the Court of Appeals sitting en banc in Hall v. Commonwealth, 14 VaApp 892 (1992). The Hall interpretation was later adopted by the Virginia Supreme Court. See Phillip v. Commonwealth, 257 Va 548 (1999). Now the rule seems to be that if a second criminal charge is instituted at a point before conviction on the first they are not consecutive prosecutions because they both existed at the same time. See Phillips, supra (misdemeanor offenses tried in same hearing as the felony preliminary hearing in general district court do not keep the felonies from being pursued in circuit court), Schwartz v. Commonwealth, 41 VaApp 61 (2003)(a finding of delinquency on misdemeanor petitions in juvenile and domestic court during a transfer hearing does not bar prosecution of the felonies which are transferred to circuit court), Doss v. Commonwealth, 1995 VaApp No. 2003-93-3 (U) (warrants taken simultaneously, but tried in different courts do not violate the statute), and Phillips v. Commonwealth, 27 VaApp 674 (1998)( charges taken at different times, but heard in one hearing do not violate the statute). You'll note that all those cases, except the unpublished Doss, require a simultaneous hearing at some point. This leaves a question in my mind as to whether simultaneous prosecutions which occur at the same time before different courts violate the statute. My brain keeps telling me I've seen a case that says 'no', but I can't find it. Even without a case directly on point, as the "simultaneous hearing" is not part of the statute, but a creation of the courts, I strongly suspect that if a warrant based on a single act was still pending in the general district court the prosecution could simultaneously indict the defendant in circuit court at any time prior to the resolution of the charge in general district court. Anyway, the concurrent prosecution exception is also supported by a close reading of the statute and at least superficially supported by a reading of the facts in Arrington, which dealt with a subsequent prosecution based on a same act.
However, the coup de grace here comes from the cases which engage in fact parsing. Fact parsing entirely neutralizes this statute by making acts the exact same things as elements. In so doing, it makes the statute nothing more than the same protections that a defendant would get from the 5th Amendment. "The test of whether there are separate acts sustaining several offenses is whether the same evidence is required to sustain them." Jefferson v. Commonwealth, 43 VaApp 361 (2004).
To sustain Jefferson's earlier conviction of carrying a concealed handgun, in violation of Code 18.2-308, the Commonwealth had to prove that Jefferson carried a handgun "about his person, hidden from common observation," without legal authorization to do so. That conviction did not require proof that Jefferson was a convicted felon. Conversely, to establish Jefferson's guilt in this case of violating Code 18.2-308.2, the Commonwealth had to prove that he had previously "been convicted of a felony" and that he "knowingly and intentionally possessed or transported any firearm." The Commonwealth was not required to prove that the handgun in Jefferson's possession was concealed. Hence, while possession of the handgun was conduct common to the prosecution of both statutory offenses, the attendant acts and legal disabilities necessary to sustain the two prosecutions were decidedly different.
Even the court recognizes that it is not dealing with acts when it upheld both convictions. It was dealing with different legal disabilities. In these cases the courts are engaging in a rather thin facade. They are calling elements "facts" and reducing this statute to nothing more than a restatement of the 5th Amendment's Blockburger test. Fact parsing is unsupportable by the text of the statute and rips the guts right out of it. Under fact parsing the statute is basically reduced to one simple statement: You can't prosecute two crimes, one of which is a lesser included in the other, in subsequent prosecutions.
In the first instance, defendant admittedly was unlawfully operating a vehicle [act] while his privileges were in suspension [status]. In contrast, the subject prosecution resulted from such operation [same act] after he had been adjudicated an habitual offender [different status]. While driving was conduct common and necessary to each offense, the legal disability upon defendant that attended and was integral to the respective acts was significantly different. Thus, the "same evidence" would not produce a conviction for both offenses. Accordingly, the disparate "nature" of the acts saves the instant prosecution from the reach of Code 19.2-294.
The "same act" involved in this case was the breaking of the doors of the places broken into.
In this case, proof that the appellant damaged two doors and a window in entering these three establishments did not require proof of statutory burglary. Likewise, proof that he had entered these premises during the nighttime to commit larceny did not require proof that he had damaged them in achieving entry.
I. At least one element of each crime is set in a statute. This could be anything from an entirely statutory law such as DUI to something which just has one element set by statute such as grand larceny (value or certain items).
II. One crime is charged subsequent to the completion of the prosecution of the other charge.
III. They both contain the same act.
C. There is a single time frame.
There have been some rumors and I've been denying them for the last few weeks because I thought the new job was supposed to be a secret until at least September. However, it's now been published in a local paper so here's a link to the pdf copy the Post Investigator sent me. I can't link directly to their site because it is behind a pay wall.
I'll try to get back on the blog later today with more details. I'm posting this from a lexus tablet while I wait to do a special prosecution in the next county over (poaching/spotlighting charge). Six people have asked me about this since last night so I thought I'd best put something up.
More details later . . .

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