COMMONWEALTH vs. MARC ALDANA.
Worcester. March 7, 2017. - September 19, 2017.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
September 19, 2017
477 Mass. 790 (2017)
Present: GANTS, C.J., LENK, HINES, GAZIANO, LOWY, & BUDD, JJ.1
Destructive or Incendiary Device or Substance.
There was no merit to the Commonwealth‘s claim that a criminal defendant could have been found guilty under
INDICTMENTS found and returned in the Superior Court Department on December 20, 2013.
A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by Daniel M. Wrenn, J., and the cases were heard by Richard T. Tucker, J.
The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative transferred the case from the Appeals Court.
Ethan C. Stiles for the defendant.
Joseph A. Simmons, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
LENK, J. In the course of arresting the defendant at his apartment on a default warrant, Worcester police officers saw in his kitchen three bags containing unknown powders. One of the bags was labeled “aluminum powder” and another “red iron oxide,” and one bag was not labeled. An unidentified red-brown powder was1
The defendant thereafter was indicted on two charges of possession of the ingredients to make an incendiary device or substance with the intent to do so, in violation of
After a jury-waived trial in the Superior Court, the defendant was convicted of both charges under
To convict the defendant of a violation of
We conclude that the evidence introduced at trial was not sufficient to establish that the defendant was without lawful
1. Background.
After a hearing on the defendant‘s motion to suppress, a Superior Court judge denied the motion in a written decision containing comprehensive findings of fact. The defendant thereafter was tried, jury-waived, by a different Superior Court judge. All the individuals who had testified at the hearing on the motion to suppress — officers involved in the arrest and the building manager — testified to essentially the same facts at trial. In addition, testimony was introduced from another member of the Worcester police department, members of the State police bomb squad, a chemist and a State police evidence technician, two Worcester fire department lieutenants, and a defense expert in chemistry. In announcing his verdicts, the trial judge issued limited oral findings of fact and a brief explanation of his reasoning. We recite the facts the trial judge could have found, reserving some facts for later discussion.
a. Evidence at trial.
On October 15, 2013, officers of the Worcester police department went to the defendant‘s apartment to arrest him on a default warrant for a charge of disorderly conduct. Detective Sergeant Mark Richardson of the Worcester police department, and other Worcester police officers, entered the building and went to the door of the defendant‘s apartment. Richardson knocked on the door and announced the police presence several times without receiving a response. After the officers heard movement inside the apartment and the sounds of breaking glass, Richardson ordered one of them to force entry into the apartment.3
The defendant was arrested almost immediately upon the police entry. Through the kitchen doorway, officers could see an
Thereafter, Richardson contacted ATF, the State police, and the Worcester fire department; at some point, he conducted a “sweep” of the apartment. State police Trooper Eric Gahagan, a bomb squad technician, arrived and examined the three bags of powders. Based on the appearance of the substance, he suspected that the unlabeled bag contained thermite. He took three samples from each of the three bags of powder and placed them in glass vials. Gahagan also performed a “sweep” of the apartment for signs of other possibly dangerous materials, and any means for lighting thermite, and found none. He then took the samples back to the State police crime laboratory for testing. The remaining powders were placed in a plastic bin and transported to a Department of Public Works site to be destroyed by burning. Gahagan and an ATF agent mixed the three bags of powder together, at the site, and lit them remotely using a robot with an ignited road flare. The mixture burned for approximately five minutes before it consumed all the aluminum and burned itself out.
A State police chemist testified regarding the steps he took to determine whether the powders seized from the defendant‘s apartment were, indeed, thermite. First, he examined samples of each of the three powders under a microscope and confirmed that they were aluminum, red iron oxide, and a mixture of aluminum and red iron oxide. He then attempted to ignite the mixture with a Bunsen burner and was not able to do so; he did not attempt to ignite it with tools that burn at higher temperatures, such as a road flare or a magnesium strip.
The technical evidence concerning the properties of the various powders seized and their testing was essentially undisputed. Experts for both the Commonwealth and the defendant testified that thermite can be created by combining red iron oxide and aluminum powder, and that specific ratios are necessary for it to
Thermite is used in military operations to dispose of old equipment or to disable it in the field so that it does not fall into enemy hands, and in civilian operations for metal salvage. Thermite also is used for cutting metal, including steel; for welding or filling in damaged portions of railroad tracks; for spot welding; for cutting through locks to open doors and safes; and, because it is not extinguished by water, in underwater welding.5
The sole evidence as to the licensing and permitting requirements applicable to thermite was introduced through Lieutenant Robert Mansfield of the Worcester fire department. Mansfield testified that he was responsible for fire hazard identification, inspection, and suppression in Worcester. Through his testimony, the Commonwealth introduced, and sought judicial notice of, §§ 9, 12, and 13 of
Mansfield testified that the fire department‘s authority to regulate the storage of thermite was derived from
Mansfield testified on cross-examination, without reference to any applicable statute or regulation, that possession of aluminum powder or red iron oxide would require a permit if it were above “a certain amount” because they are an “inhalation hazard.”13 No permit was required for possession of aluminum oxide. He also agreed that, under
b. Trial proceedings.
At the close of the Commonwealth‘s case, the judge denied the defendant‘s motion for required findings of not guilty. At the close of all the evidence, the judge found the defendant guilty of two counts of possession of the ingredients necessary to make a destructive or incendiary device or substance without lawful authority and with the intent to make such a device or substance, in violation of
The judge found that the evidence proved beyond a reasonable doubt that “the defendant was in possession of aluminum powder and red iron oxide,” and also in possession of “a mixture of these two substances.” The judge explained that the defendant‘s com-
The judge also found that, while the evidence showed that the mixture of the three bags combined by Gahagan and the ATF agent burned in a manner consistent with thermite, the evidence did not establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the mixture found in the defendant‘s kitchen would have been ignitable. He noted that, before investigators disposed of the seized powders, all three of them had been combined into a single mixture,14 and that the combination burned as thermite would burn. The judge determined that, because the act of combining the three bags might itself have created the proper ratio, this did not establish that the seized mixed powder would have burned in the same manner, if at all. He noted in this respect that the bags of powders had not been weighed and the ratio of materials in the mixed bag had not been determined.15
The defendant appealed, and we transferred the matter from the Appeals Court on our own motion.
2. Discussion.
On appeal, the defendant argues that it was error to deny his motion to suppress, the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions, and the convictions are duplicative. We agree that the evidence was insufficient to support the convictions and therefore do not address the defendant‘s other claims.
To convict a defendant of a violation of
We conclude that the evidence was not sufficient to establish that the defendant lacked lawful authority to possess or control the powders seized, either individually or combined as thermite.16 The Commonwealth offered evidence that thermite, operating as it does through heat and not explosion, is an inflammable or incendiary substance, rather than an explosive substance. The Commonwealth did not offer evidence, through any witness or otherwise, that the possession of thermite, or, as here, of its component parts, is subject to regulation as an inflammable or incendiary substance. Mansfield‘s testimony did not bridge the evidentiary gap.17 Because the trial evidence established that thermite is not an “explosive” but, rather, an “inflammable” or “incendiary” substance, the regulation as to explosives has no
a. Sufficiency of the evidence of absence of lawful authority.
In arguing that the evidence was not sufficient to support a conviction under
The defendant argues further that, even had
“Because the absence of lawful authority or justification is an element of each of the crimes charged, the Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that [the] defendant acted without lawful authority or justification.” Commonwealth v. Cabral, 443 Mass. 171, 179 (2005).
i. Applicable regulation.
All the regulations of which the judge was asked to take judicial notice, and all the testimony concerning the required permits and licensing, were applicable to explosives. The expert evidence at trial established that thermite is an “inflammable” or “incendiary” that operates through heat; it did not establish that thermite is an “explosive” as defined in
The Commonwealth argues in its brief that the judge could also have taken judicial notice, albeit implicitly, of the then regulation for the use and storage of inflammables,
The judge, as fact finder, was entitled to credit Mansfield‘s testimony that the defendant did not have a permit from the city of Worcester, a question of fact. That, however, does not answer the more fundamental question whether a permit was required in these circumstances. Such a determination is a question of law — the applicable regulation and the meaning of its terms — that a reviewing court considers de novo. See, e.g., Ivey v. Commissioner of Correction, 88 Mass. App. Ct. 18, 23 (2015).22 See also Town Fair Tire Ctrs., Inc. v. Commissioner of Revenue, 454 Mass. 601, 604-605 (2009).
ii. Whether a permit would have been required under 527 Code Mass. Regs. §§ 14.00 .
The judge did not explain his determination that the defendant lacked authority to possess thermite. Had
A. Inflammable solid.
As stated, had
Pursuant to
B. Exemptions for limited amounts.
Even if we were to assume that thermite is an inflammable solid, nothing at trial suggested that the weight of the powders in the defendant‘s kitchen exceeded the regulatory exemption for individuals possessing only limited amounts of an inflammable solid.26
As the fire safety regulations for using and storing both explosives and inflammable materials then contained exemptions for limited amounts of the explosives and inflammable materials that
There was no evidence at trial concerning the weight of any of the three bags, other than as to the labeled weights on two of the bags. Even assuming that the open labeled bags contained the five and two pounds of materials indicated on their labels, however, and the entire contents of the three bags of powder were combined, the resulting seven-pound mixture would appear to be far below the exempted weight of one hundred pounds for an inflammable solid. The Commonwealth did not prove that the powders, combined, exceeded the statutory exemption.
b. Pyrotechnics.
Finally, as the Commonwealth notes, the experts at trial agreed that, in chemical terms, thermite is also considered to be a “pyrotechnic compound” or “composition.” Based on this, the Commonwealth argues that the defendant could have been found guilty under
3. Conclusion.
Because the evidence at trial was not sufficient to establish every element of the Commonwealth‘s case, the defendant‘s convictions cannot stand. The defendant‘s convictions are vacated and set aside. The matter is remanded to the Superior Court for entry of required findings of not guilty.
So ordered.
