Lead Opinion
Fоllowing a jury trial, Rhonda Adjutant, a woman employed by an escort service, was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter for killing Stephen Whiting, a client of the service. In this appeal, Adjutant argues that evidence of Whiting’s violent reputation and past conduct, even though unknown to her at the time of the killing, should have been admitted at her trial because it was relevant to her claim that Whiting was the
After surveying the state of the law in jurisdictions throughout the country, we are persuaded that evidence of a victim’s prior violent conduct may be probative of whether the victim was the first aggressor where a claim of self-defense has been asserted and the identity of the first aggressor is in dispute.
In the present case, relying on language in past decisions of this court, see, e.g., Commonwealth v. Graham,
1. Background. The evidence at trial was as follows. Adjutant worked as an escort for Newbury Cosmopolitan International Escort Service (Newbury). In the early morning of September 25, 1999, Whiting telephoned Newbury and requested an escort. The Newbury dispatcher told Whiting that he could receive a full body massage and one hour of an escort’s company for $175. Whiting agreed to these terms, and arrangements were made for Adjutant to visit Whiting’s home in Revere. Shortly thereafter, Adjutant was dropped off there by a driver and the dispatcher’s boy friend (drivers). Whiting met her outside his building and accompanied her to his basement apartment.
Once inside, Whiting paid Adjutant, who then telephoned
There was conflicting testimony as to when the defendant and the victim armed themselves for their fatal confrontation. Adjutant testified that when she attempted to leave, Whiting pushed her onto his bed and retrieved a crowbar from the kitchen, at which point Adjutant picked up a knife that was lying on the bedside table, next to a plate of cocaine. The dispatcher, on the other hand, testified that while she was talking to Whiting, he said that Adjutant had a knife, and that when Adjutant then got back on the telephone with her, Adjutant said that Whiting was picking up a crowbar.
In any event, after arming himself, Whiting first slammed the crowbar on a counter and then swung it at Adjutant, striking her in the leg. She responded by nicking him in the face with the knife, drawing blood. Adjutant testified that she next tried to avert further confrontation by offering to begin again with a massage, but Whiting refused. Meanwhile, at Adjutant’s urging, the dispatcher alerted Adjutant’s drivers to return to Whiting’s apartment. At this point, Adjutant testified that she attempted to run toward the door, but Whiting tackled her. During the struggle, Adjutant stabbed Whiting in the shoulder with the knife and moved away. Whiting, however, continued to block Adjutant’s exit, while Adjutant screamed at him to stay back and threatened to cut him again if he came any closer.
Within minutes, Adjutant’s drivers returned to the scene,
Adjutant maintained at trial that all her actions were defensive and intended to help her escape the apartment. The jury’s main task was determining whether Adjutant acted in self-defense. That inquiry required the jury to weigh Adjutant’s credibility, as well as that of the dispatcher and the driver, and decide who moved first to attack the other during the last moments of the standoff. See Commonwealth v. Kendrick,
In her defense, Adjutant focused on Whiting’s intoxication and drug use that evening. The medical examiner testified at trial that Whiting had cocaine in his bloodstream, and that his blood alcohol level reflected his consumption of the equivalent of sixty ounces of beer or five ounces of whiskey. Two of Whiting’s neighbors testified that, earlier that evening, Whiting appeared intoxicated and had made unsuccessful sexual advances toward women near the apartment building. Adjutant testified that she became terrified when her initial blows to Whiting did not seem to faze him, apparently because of his drugged condition.
During the trial, Adjutant’s counsel sought to cross-examine
At the conclusion of the trial, the jury convicted Adjutant of voluntary manslaughter.
2. Discussion. In almost every American jurisdiction, evidence of a victim’s violent character may be admitted to support an accused’s claim of self-defense under two distinct theories. First, it may be admitted to prove that at the time of the assault the defendant was reasonably apprehensive fоr his safety, and used a degree of force that was reasonable in light of the victim’s violent tendencies. Because such evidence is relevant to the defendant’s state of mind (the subjective reasonableness of his apprehension and actions), a predicate to its admissibility is the defendant’s prior knowledge of it. Second, it may be admitted as tending to prove that the victim and not the defendant was likely to have been the “first aggressor,” where there is a dispute as to who initiated the attack. Under the first theory, the evidence is not admitted for the purpose of showing that the victim acted in conformance with his character for violence; under the second theory, it is.
Massachusetts has long followed the evidentiary rule that permits the introduction of evidence of the victim’s violent character, if known to the defendant, as it bears on the defendant’s state of mind and the reasonableness of his actions in claiming to have acted in self-defense. See Commonwealth v. Edmonds,
Under Rules 404 and 405 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, all Federal courts now permit the introduction of evidence of the victim’s violent character to support a defendant’s self-
The basis of the overwhelming trend toward admitting some form of this evidence can be found in the view that evidence reflecting the victim’s propеnsity for violence has substantial probative value and will help the jury identify the first aggressor when the circumstances of the altercation are in dispute. People v. Lynch,
There can be no doubt that at least some of the proffered evidence in this case was relevant to Adjutant’s self-defense claim.
The Commonwealth argues that juries invariably will be distracted by information about the victim’s unrelated prior violence. We disagree. This court has previously approved the admission of evidence of a victim’s history of violence, when known to the defendant. Commonwealth v. Fontes,
“[T]he evidence of what happened here, as is often the case where self-defense is raised, is both incomplete and conflicting. Everything happened in an instant .... The witnesses could hardly analyze the scene in any great detail, or remember and describe it with precision. They could only form quick impressions. To decide what really occurred the jury needed all the available facts, including evidence of [the victim’s prior violence]. We hold that when the theory of self-defense is raised, the victim’s aggressive and violent character is relevant to show who was the aggressor, and the defendant may show it by appropriate evidence, regardless of when he learned of it.”
People v. Lynch,
Moreover, admission of evidence showing the victim’s prior violent acts on the first aggressor issue reflects the principle that “in criminal cases there is to be greater latitude in admitting exculpatory evidence than in determining whether prejudicial potentialities in proof offered to show guilt should result in its exclusion.” Matter of Robert S., 52 N.Y.2d 1046, 1053 (1981) (Fuchsberg, J., dissenting), citing 1 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 194 (3d ed. 1940) (criticizing New York rule excluding victim’s specific acts of violence to show propensity).
Notwithstanding our usual hesitation to allow the admission of character evidence to prove conduct, see P.J. Liacos, M.S. Brodin, & M. Avery, Evidence § 4.4.1, at 130 (7th ed. 1999),
The defendant urges the court to allow the admission of
The arguments against admitting specific violent acts include (1) the danger of ascribing character traits to a victim with proof of isolated incidents, (2) the worry that jurors will be invited to acquit the defendant on the improper ground that the victim deserved to die, (3) the potential for wasting time trying collateral questions surrounding the victim’s past conduct, (4) the unfair difficulty of rebuttal by the prosecution, and (5) the strategic imbalance that flows from the inability of prosecutors to introduce similar evidence of the defendant’s prior bad acts. See Chandler v. State,
While we acknowledge the validity of these concerns, we disagree that they require an unbending rule excluding all of the victim’s specific acts of violence when relevant to the identity of the first aggressor.
In general, “[Relevant evidence is admissible unless unduly prejudicial, and, ‘[i]n weighing the probative value of evidence against any prejudicial effect it might have on a jury, we afford trial judges great latitude and discretion ....’” Commonwealth v. Arroyo,
We are persuaded that the sound discretion of trial judges to exclude marginally relevant or grossly prejudicial evidence can prevent the undue exploration of collateral issues. See, e.g., State v. Miranda, supra at 114; State v. Baca,
For these reasons, where the identity of the first aggressor is in dispute and the victim has a history of violence, we hold that the trial judge has the discretion to admit evidence of specific acts of prior violent conduct that the victim is reasonably alleged to have initiated, to support the defendant’s claim of self-defense.
With respect to the usefulness of reputation evidence in the context of establishing who was the first aggressor, we are presently of a different view. While such evidence may be quite probative in evaluating a defendant’s subjective state of mind, and the reasonableness of the actions thereby taken to defend himself, it is far less reliable in the present context. Reputation evidence is often “opinion in disguise.” Advisory Committee’s Note, Fed. R. Evid. 405,
Jurisdictions that exclude the victim’s specific acts of violence and admit reputation evidence make that choice because reputation evidence is filtered, general in nature, with less potential to inflame or sidetrack the proceedings than evidence of the victim’s specific acts — in essence, because such evidence is less “convincing” and thus less controversial. See Advisory Committee’s Note, Fed. R. Evid. 405, supra (“When character is used circumstantially and hence occupies a lesser status in the case, proof may be only by reputation and opinion”); McCormick, Evidence § 186, at 650 (5th ed. 1999) (“As one moves from the specific to the general in this fashion, the pungency and persuasiveness of the evidence declines ... .”). Given our rationale for allowing the admission of prior acts of violent conduct initiated by the victim, we favor the admission of concrete and relevant evidence of specific acts over more general evidence of the victim’s reputation for violence. Evidence of specific acts also lends itself more readily to the necessary weighing of probative value against prejudicial effect in the factual context of particular cases.
While constrained by the trial judge’s sound discretion, the defendant’s ability to introduce evidence of the victim’s prior history as a violent aggressor should also be matched with safeguards for prosecutors. See, e.g., 1A J. Wigmore, Evidence § 63, at 1369-1373 (Tillers rev. ed. 1983); Chandler v. State,
Applying these rules to the proceedings in this case could have led to the introduction of some of the proffered evidence of Whiting’s prior acts of violence. “Nonconstitutional errors, preserved or resurrected below, are reviewed according to a nonprejudicial error standard.” Commonwealth v. Vinnie,
The judgment against the defendant is reversed, the verdict is set aside, and the case is remanded to the Superior Court for a new trial and further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
Indeed, such evidence may be the jury’s only means of assessing the likelihood of the defendant’s account of the incident in a homicide case.
Adjutant’s telephone was apparently on throughout the incident, and the dispatcher testified that she heard Adjutant say that Whiting was coming
A neighbor found Whiting’s dead body in the doorway of the apartment several hours later and summoned police.
In connection with Adjutant’s sentencing, evidence of three violent acts committed by Whiting while he wаs intoxicated and within three months of his death was presented to the court. In one of the instances, Whiting, while on cocaine, allegedly chased after his neighbor “like a raging bull” when confronted about vandalizing the common yard. In another, he allegedly threatened two neighbors with a butcher knife. And in the third, he allegedly threw boiling water on a friend with whom he was arguing. We leave it to the judge before whom the case will be retried to determine whether these or any other alleged violent acts of the victim are incidents which he likely initiated and are more probative than prejudicial.
According to the transcript of the in limine motion on this evidence, the defendant sought to show that Whiting was involved in a cocaine purchase at some point less than a year before he died in which he let his deader see that he had much more money than necessary for the transaction. The dealer returned later with another mom, both wearing masks and carrying a baseball bat and a pipe. They entered Whiting’s apartment and assaulted him, demanding his money. Whiting responded by attacking them with a crowbar, refusing to back down despite being completely outmatched. The assailants seized the money and left Whiting near death. Whiting eventuаlly filed a police report and gave grand jury testimony, detailing the combat.
Adjutant was indicted for murder in the second degree. After the jury returned their verdict of guilty on so much of the indictment as charged voluntary manslaughter, Adjutant was sentenced to a term of from nine to twelve years in State prison.
The Federal Rules of Evidence make an explicit exception to their general exclusion of character evidence as propensity evidence when “[ejvidence of a pertinent trait of character of the alleged victim of the crime [is] offered by an accused . . . .” Fed. R. Evid. 404(a)(2). The circuit courts of the United States Court of Appeal that have considered the issue are unanimous that Fed. R. Evid. 404(a)(2) allows the introduction of character evidence to show the victim’s violent propensity if the identity of the first aggressor is in dispute, regardless whether the defendant knew of the victim’s propensity for violence. See United States v. Emeron Taken Alive,
Both jurisdictions that have adopted the Federal Rules of Evidence and jurisdictions that have not affirm the admissibility of some form of character evidence to show the likelihood that the victim was the first aggressor. White v. State,
Delaware and South Carolina. See Del. Uniform R. Evid. 404(a)(2) (2005); S.C. R. Evid. 404(a)(2) (1995).
State v. Johns,
“The relevance threshold for the admission of evidence is low.” Commonwealth v. Arroyo,
We note that evidence of Whiting’s prior use of a crowbar to defend himself, see note 5, supra, is one part of Adjutant’s proffer that may not meet the criteria that we have set forth in this opinion for evidence admissible on the first aggressor issue.
Another example of this principle is the right of criminal defendants to introduce evidence of relevant traits of their own character to create a reasonable doubt of guilt. Commonwealth v. Walker,
The root of this hesitation is not grounded in concern about the evidence’s relevance, but in its potential for prejudice. That potential is especially acute in a criminal case, where safeguards are necessary to ensure that the jury do not convict a defendant for his past malevolence or for conduct unrelated to the crime with which he has been charged. For example:
“It is well settled that the prosecution may not introduce evidence that a defendant previously has misbehaved, indictably or not, for the purposes of showing his bad character or propensity to commit the crime charged, but such evidence may be admissible if relevant for some other purpose. . . . Such evidence can be highly prejudicial to the defendant, and therefore must be excluded unless it comes within one of the permitted uses, such as to show a common scheme, pattern of operation, absence of accident or mistake, identity, intent, or motive.” (Citations omitted.)
Commonwealth v. Helfant,
Rules 404 and 405 of the Federal Rules of Evidence and similar State rules permit the defendant to introduce reputation and opinion evidence, but not specific acts of violence, to prove the victim’s violent character. See, e.g., United States v. Keiser,
Although the dissent is correct to point out that the current rule of exclusion is tempered by the range of evidence about victims some defendants may introduce in support of self-defense claims, a defendant like Adjutant, who did not know of the victim’s history of aggression, has no “ample opportunity to examine [the] victim’s past” and does face an “unbending rule” of exclusion. Post at 674.
We find particularly unpersuasive the suggestion that juries cannot be trusted with evidence about the victim’s prior acts of violence. Cf. Commonwealth v. Fontes,
The dissent asserts that judicial discretion here amounts to “little more than a falsе hope” because trial judges will only rarely “risk reversal in order to exclude specific act evidence.” Post at 677. To the contrary, decisions of
We need not decide in this case whether the Commonwealth may introduce evidence of prior violent incidents initiated by the defendant once the defendant has done so with respect to the victim, for the purpose of proving who was the first aggressor. We note that Fed. R. Evid. 404(a)(1) was amended in 2000, opening the door to the admission of such evidence once the accused attacks the character of the victim for this purpose, making clear that the accused cannot simultaneously attack the alleged victim’s character and yet remain shielded from the disclosure of equally relevant evidence concerning his own same character trait.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). The court today holds that a “victim’s prior violent conduct may be probative in determining whether the victim was the first aggressor where a claim of self-defense has been asserted and the identity of the first aggressor is in dispute.”
It has long been the rule in the Commonwealth that “evidence of a person’s character is not admissible to prove that [that person] acted in conformity with that character on a particular occasion.” P.J. Liacos, M.S. Brodin, & M. Avery, Massachusetts Evidence § 4.4.1, at 130 (7th ed. 1999) (Liacos). Seе Commonwealth v. Baker,
As an initial matter, I am troubled by the premise underlying the court’s decision: that a victim’s violent character (as evidenced through prior violent acts) is sufficiently probative of his or her action on a particular occasion to justify its admission. See ante at 658-660. Although authorities have acknowledged that character evidence may be probative of a person’s behavior, see, e.g., Liacos, supra at § 4.4.1, at 131; 1A J. Wigmore, Evidence, § 57, at 1180-1181, 1211, 1366-1367 (Tillers rev. ed. 1983), I believe we should be hesitant to admit such evidence in the manner proposed by the court today. That “[t]he relevance threshold for the admission of evidence is low,” see ante at 657 n.11, quoting Commonwealth v. Arroyo,
A guiding principle of our legal system is that we try cases and controversies, not people or their characters. Because we understand that good people sometimes do bad things, that bad people do not always do bad things, and that circumstances greatly influence behavior, it follows that, with certain well-defined exceptions, a person’s prior actions, no matter how vile, should not be considered in judging their action at any other particular time. Commonwealth v. Stone, supra (“It does not follow that, because the defendant committed a similar offence on another occasion, he committed the crime for which he is being tried. . . . [I]t is not fair that a defendant in the course of a trial should be called upon to defend himself against accusations not set forth in the indictment”). See Maillet v. ATF-Davidson Co.,
Putting aside my doubts about the relevancy of the prior act evidence, I reject the idea that, in weighing the dubious probative value of such evidence against the risk of prejudice, we ought to adopt such evidence against one party and not the other. Although some scholars take the position that character evidence about victims, as opposed to defendants, poses few risks, see 1A J. Wigmore, supra at § 63.1, at 1382, I believe our well-settled rejection of character evidence should be applied with equal force to both defendants and victims. Prior acts of violence, possibly occurring years earlier and involving different parties, are no more probative or less damaging because they are committed by a victim rather than a defendant. If we accept, as we have historically, that a defendant’s prior behavior is insufficiently predictive of her actions years later to outweigh the potential for prejudice, it follows that a victim’s prior acts are also inappropriate for consideration. Conversely, if character evidence is, as the court proclaims today, highly relevant as to victims, it must be similarly so for defendants.
The court limits this newly admissible type of character evidence to prior violent acts initiated by a victim. See ante at 650. This does little to resolve the underlying deficiency of this type of character evidence. I do not believe that a single past act in which a victim was the aggressor is probative on the first aggressor issue. If the act must have been initiated by the victim to be relevant, why must it not involve similar circumstances to be meaningful? Why not the use of the same weapon, for example? Even accepting, arguendo, the court’s premise that prior acts of violence are sufficiently relevant to outweigh any risk of prejudice, a victim would have had to engage in a pat
Even if we assume that such prior acts are sufficiently probative of future behavior, today’s rule would be fair only if victims were equally able to explore defendants’ violent histories. Instead of creating an even-handed approach, the court today constructs a one-sided rule that is prejudicial to victims. In cases involving two parties with violent pasts (not uncommon in murders and assaults), defendants may now introduce evidence of the victims’ violent histories, while the Commonwealth will remain powerless to introduce similar evidence concerning defendants. See Commonwealth v. Helfant,
Hoping to neutralize this imbalance, the court notes (one would presume favorably) that Fed. R. Evid. 404(a)(1) now allows the Commonwealth to respond to victim character evidence with evidence of a defendant’s violent character. See ante at 666 n.19. Admittedly, the Federal approach, if adopted by the Commonwealth, would resolve the imbalance cited above.
Today’s decision will have other undesirable consequences. First, the admission of character evidence against victims will unduly prejudice juries against victims with violent pasts. See Liacos, supra at § 4.4.1, at 131 (rule against use of character evidence for propensity purposes premised on “high risk that such evidence will have a prejudicial impact on the jury and will result in a decision motivated by something other than the particular facts of the incident before the court”). Our new rule unreasonably invites the fact finder to evaluate the relative worth of a deceased victim without logical basis.
Second, today’s ruling will result in jury distraction and confusion, contribute to judicial delay, and increase litigation costs for the Commonwealth and the defense. Fact finders considering this newly permitted character evidence will be asked to wade through multiple incidents of violence (perhaps having to weigh conflicting evidence concerning several such incidents) before turning to the basis of the prosecution. See Commonwealth v. Fontes,
The court acknowledges some of these concerns in passing but concludes they do not “require an unbending rule excluding all of the victim’s specific acts of violence when relevant to the
The primary reason of the court for adopting this new rule of evidence is that it wishes to follow the “overwhelming trend” of other jurisdictions toward admitting character evidence of the victim. See ante at 654-657. Yet while purporting to adopt the modem “trend” and its rationale, the court adopts an approach that differs significantly from that trend, rendering its primary rationale unpersuasive. The trend in other jurisdictions, with which obviously I disagree, is to admit testimony of the victim’s reputation as proof relevant to who may have been the first aggressor, regardless of whether that reputation was known to the defendant at the time of the incident in question. See ante at 654-655 & n.8, and cases cited. However, the court does not follow this trend. Rather, it adopts a novel approach of excluding reputation evidence оffered for the purpose of proving the first aggressor, but allowing the admission of evidence of
The court cites forty-five jurisdictions that have held “some form of [victim character] evidence is properly admissible on the first aggressor issue (emphasis added).” Ante at 655. However, of these forty-five jurisdictions, none has taken the approach crafted by the court today (admission of specific act evidence, unknown to the defendant, to prove first aggression by the victim). To the contrary, the majority of jurisdictions cited by the court that have considered the issue of victim character evidence do not permit the use of specific act evidence unknown to the defendant to prove who was the first aggressor, but instead permit only reputation or opinion evidence to show a victim’s violent character.
The court thus cites no authority for adopting its approach of admitting “concrete and relevant evidence of specific acts [of violence initiated by a victim but not] more general evidence of the victim’s reputation for violence.”
The court attempts to rein in its new rule through judicial discretion. See ante at 663 (“sound discretion of trial judges to exclude marginally relevant or grossly prejudicial evidence can prevent the undue exploration of collateral issues”). However, the court’s hope that judges will exercise their discretion to exclude specific act evidence after today’s sea change in our rules of evidence is unrealistic. Judges are no longer able to rule the evidence per se inadmissible, theoretically leaving open for “discretion” the issues of relevancy and probative value versus prejudice. But the court has already made these determinations as well for judges, in effect leaving little discretion tо be exercised by judges who do not wish to contradict this court’s holdings. For the court has concluded that this specific act evidence is relevant, ante at 657, has “substantial probative value,” ante at 656, and that the risk of prejudice to the defendant is the “greater danger,” ante at 658. While the court’s reliance on judicial discretion sounds reasonable, it offers little more than a false hope. On the rare occasions when trial judges risk reversal in order to exclude specific act evidence, the inadequate guidance provided to judges by the court today, see ante at 662-664, is certain to lead to inconsistent application of the new rule, protracted proceedings, and lengthy appeals. Because our deferential standards of review require us to uphold judges’ evidentiary decisions absent abuses of discretion, see, e.g., Commonwealth v. Arroyo,
Contrary to the court’s intentions, today’s endorsement of
Although today’s rule applies only where “the identity of the first aggressor is in dispute,” ante at 664, it would not be surprising if, after today, we find an increasing number of trials where defendants assert such disputes.
The court downplays the vast differences between the “known” evidence currently admitted under Commonwealth v. Fontes,
Presumably aware of these risks, the court encourages judges to “mitigate the dangers of prejudice and confusion inherent in introducing evidence of the victim’s specific acts of violence by delineating the precise purpose for which the evidence is offered.” Ante at 664. I do not believe limiting instructions will be adequate on this subject.
In a recent decision, we determined that a third-party suspect’s history of sexual aggression was relevant to a theory that he, rather than the defendant, may have assaulted and killed the victim. See Commonwealth v. Conkey, ante 60, 66-70 (2004). The evidence deemed relevant in the Conkey case is wholly distinct from the evidence at issue here. There the evidence was probative of whether the defendant, as opposed to someone else, committed the crime. The trial judge had excluded the evidence on relevance grounds. In reversing, we found the evidence was relevant and did not change any evidentiary rules to do so. Here, the court must change our common-law rules of evidence in order to admit the evidence in question.
See, e.g., Higginbotham v. State,
See, e.g., Brooks v. State,
See, e.g., State v. Smith,
See, e.g., People v. Wright,
I do not read the court’s decision as altering our traditional law permitting admission of evidence of a victim’s reputation where it is known to a defendant claiming self-defense. See Commonwealth v. Edmonds,
In critiquing the court’s decision to allow the admission of specific act evidence while prohibiting reputation evidence, I do not wish to suggest my approval of reputation evidence to prove the identity of the first aggressor where such reputation was unknown to the defendant. I find both forms of character evidence equally lacking in probative value where unknown to the defendant. Instead, my point is that the approach taken by the court today comports with neither logic nor any modem trend.
