Opinions and Memorandum of Judgments (MOJs)

Last Updated : 02/11/2026

About Opinions and MOJs

Opinions

The court publishes opinions in cases to provide guidance to both the litigants and the trial court or agency, and the public. Published opinions may create new law, or interpret ambiguous statutes, clarify certain rules or concepts, or otherwise be of general interest. These decisions are published in print and on the DCCA website. They are binding precedent, which means they can be cited as supporting authority in other cases.

MOJs

The court issues Memorandum Opinion and Judgments (MOJs) in cases where the decision applies established legal principles. The decisions are issued by the panel (per curiam), not under the name of an individual judge. They are not published, and except as permitted by DC App. R. 28(g), they may not be cited as supporting authority in other cases. For that reason, the court only lists online the names and case numbers of MOJs that have been issued. If a party or other interested person believes that a specific MOJ should be published, the party or interested person may file a motion to publish no later than 30 days after the MOJ issues.

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Appeal Number Case Date Disposition Judge
98-AA-509 Washington Post v. DOES Oct 21, 1999 Affirmed
98-CF-687 Jenkins v. US Oct 21, 1999 Affirmed
97-CO-1387, 97-CO-1464 Johnson v. U.s. Oct 21, 1999 Affirmed
97-CF-1086 Boggerson v. US Oct 21, 1999 Affirmed
96-CM-962 Matthews v. US Oct 21, 1999 Affirmed
96-CF-448 Frazier v. US Oct 21, 1999 Affirmed
98-CO-1473 Jabbar K. Pope v. US Oct 21, 1999
98-CV-405 Alonzo Perry v. Gallaudet University. Oct 21, 1999
93-CF-312, 98-CO-697 Bittle v. US Oct 19, 1999 Affirmed
97-CV-1284 DC Police Dept. v. Blackwell Oct 19, 1999 Affirmed

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