Commonwealth vs. Peter Chamberlin.
No. 12-P-1292.
Appellate Court of Massachusetts
December 5, 2014
86 Mass. App. Ct. 705 (2014)
Present: KANTROWITCZ, GRAINGER, & HANLON, JJ.
Bristol. September 9, 2014. - December 5, 2014. Further appellate review granted, 471 Mass. 1106 (2015).
A Superior Court judge properly denied a criminal defendant‘s pretrial motion to suppress cellular telephone records obtained from a cellular telephone service provider, where an administrative subpoena pursuant to
A Superior Court judge properly denied a criminal defendant‘s pretrial motion to suppress evidence seized in his residence following a no-knock entry authorized by a search warrant, where a threshold reappraisal by police to ensure the necessity of such an entry was not required under the circumstances (i.e., the violent nature of the crime and the threats the defendant uttered during its commission, the possibility of concealment or destruction of the articles enumerated in the warrant, and the loss of the element of surprise when the defendant‘s wife spotted the police prior to the entry). [710-711]
At the hearing on a criminal defendant‘s pretrial motion to suppress evidence seized in his residence following a no-knock entry authorized by a search warrant, there was no violation of the defendant‘s due process rights in the judge‘s exclusion of cumulative testimony. [711]
A Superior Court judge properly denied a criminal defendant‘s pretrial motion to suppress evidence seized from his residence that was not identified in the search warrant (i.e., his computer and printed copies of real estate listings that had been sent to him by electronic mail message), where, under the circumstances, the discovery of the listings in plain view was inadvertent and the evidence resulting frоm the computer was duplicative of the listings. [711-712]
At a criminal trial, there was no abuse of discretion in the admission of voice identification of the defendant by two witnesses, where, given the long association between the witnesses and the defendant, the one-on-one iden
INDICTMENTS found and returned in the Superior Court Department on November 21, 2007.
Pretrial motions to suppress evidence were heard by D. Lloyd Macdonald, J., and the cases were tried before Robert J. Kane, J.
Merritt Schnipper for the defendant.
Tara L. Blackman, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
GRAINGER, J. A jury of the Superior Court found the defendant guilty of armed robbery while masked,
1. Production of telephone records. The victim told the police that although the defendant was masked, his voice was recognizable as belonging to an individual who identified himself as “Marco” during several telephone calls that culminated in an evening appointment at the victim‘s office for the time of the robbery. The victim reported that the defendant spoke repeatedly during the robbery, making thrеats to the victim and referring to the victim‘s wife. In the course of investigating the robbery, Fall River police Detective Lawrence Ferreira examined the victim‘s phone, retrieving a voicemail message from “Marco.” After obtaining call records from the victim‘s cellular telephone carrier, Detective Ferreira linked the defendant to the only number on the call list that the victim did not recognize. Ferreira then contаcted the carrier, T-Mobile, and requested call records associated with that number. Ferreira informed the T-Mobile law enforcement relations officer, Ronald Witt, that the defendant‘s phone was being used to contact the victim‘s family and that the “suspect has threatened the victim‘s family with bodily harm.”1
a. General Laws c. 271, § 17B. The defendant asserts that the phone records produced by T-Mobile were obtained in violation of
First, we conclude that an administrative subpoena pursuant to
b. Stored Communications Act. Moreover, we discern no provision of the Federal Stored Communications Act (the act),
The motion judge found that a
While, as stated, the Commonwealth was not required to use a
c. Grand jury subpoena. Finally, while we conclude the Commonwealth was not required to use a
2. “No-knock” search warrant: reappraisal. The defendant asserts that evidence seized in his residence should have been suppressed because the police failed to conduct a threshold reappraisal to ensure the necessity of the no-knoсk entry authorized by the search warrant. We do not agree.
The defendant does not argue that the inclusion of the no-knock provision in the warrant was itself improper, and such an argument would be unavailing under the circumstances we have already recited relating to the violent nature of the crime and the threats uttered during its commission. See note 7, supra. Rather, the argument made to the motion judge and pressed on appeal is that a reappraisal is required in all cases, and that the failure to engage in one renders the search invalid. Our case law does not apply such a categorical rule. Commonwealth v. Scalise, 387 Mass. 413 (1982), on which the defendant relies, is a case in point: “We recognize that the facts existing at the time the warrant is issued may no longer exist at the time the warrant is executed. In those instances, the officers would be required to knock and announce their purрose.” (Emphasis added.) Id. at 421. Reappraisal is not a formalistic exercise mandated in all circumstances — it is a recognition that the provisions of a warrant are conditioned on the continued existence of the sworn facts justifying the abrogation of constitutional rights until the warrant is executed.8
Circumstances commonly justifying a failure to knock were present here. In the context of the all-important consideration of officer safety, we refer again to the violent nature of the crime and the demonstrated disregard for life shown by the suspect.9 With reference to preservation of evidence, the articles enumerated in
The defendant argues that because the police were spotted by the defendant‘s wife prior to entry, and then engaged in conversation with her, a reappraisal was mandated. The loss of the element of surprise, however, is a factor that justifies a prompt unannounced entry, rather than the contrary. Commonwealth v. Benlien, 27 Mass. App. Ct. 834, 836-837 (1989), and cases cited therein. As several police witnesses pointed out in testimony at the suppression hearing, the entry team was faced with the possibility that the defendant had been alerted by his wife to the police presence, and that she was seeking to delay their access at his behest.10
The defendant also asserts a violation of his due process rights because the motion judge did not allow him to compel the testimony of three additional members of the police entry team after three officers had already testified. The defendant has failed to specify the relevant issue that the additional testimony would cover, or to make a proffer of the evidence he was anticipating.11 The Commonwealth stipulated to the affidavit provided by the defendant‘s wife for purposes of determining whether additional witnesses were needed and whether the warrant was properly exeсuted. The motion judge was well within his discretion in ruling that additional witnesses would not be called. See Commonwealth v. Carroll, 439 Mass. 547, 552-553 (2003) (trial judge‘s discretion to exclude cumulative testimony).
3. Plain view exception to the warrant requirement: inadvertence. During their search of the defendant‘s home the police seized the defendant‘s computer containing, among other evidence, Fall River real estate listings that had been sent by electronic mail message (e-mail) to the defendant after he feigned interest in purchasing property so that he could gain entrance to
We do not agree with the defendant that the police had probable cause to anticipate finding printed real estate listings at his residence. They were informed by the victim that e-mail messages containing requested real estate listings had been sent to the defendant. The evidence on which the policе investigation was based led to the conclusion that the defendant had no genuine interest in Fall River real estate. He requested the listings merely as a pretense to gain access to the office he planned to rob. The police had no reason to anticipate that the defendant would print and retain listings of seven different properties in which he had no interest, and that these would be kept at his residence.
“The anticipation of finding some additional contraband or other evidence of criminality is not the same as having probable cause to believe that specific items of evidence will be present at the location to be searched. Such generalized anticipation undoubtedly exists in conjunction with almost every search, and to conclude that its presence negates inadvertence would stretch thаt requirement beyond its intent and limited purpose.” Commonwealth v. Balicki, 436 Mass. 1, 14 (2002).
Under these circumstances we do not need to address the seizure of the computer. Even were we to agree with the defendant‘s argument, we would be hard pressed to deem the resulting evidence prejudicial. The real estate listings found on the computer are duplicative of the printouts, which were in plain sight and not subject to the inadvertence exception. To the extent that the defendant claims that other evidence was seized in error, we discern no prejudice in light of the overall strength of the Commonwealth‘s case involving, as it did, eyewitness voice and facial identification, phone records, real estate listings, and the defendant‘s incriminating statements.
4. Voice identifications. Finally, the defendant complains that the trial judge improperly admitted the voice identification of the defendant by two witnesses. Thе gravamen of this assertion is that the procedures used were one-on-one rather than including
This complaint overlooks the long associаtion between the witnesses and the defendant,12 a factor that renders these alleged defects nonsuggestive. Suggestiveness is typically an issue when the police are seeking an identification from a witness who has had a single, perhaps brief, exposure to a suspect. In such a case a prompt opportunity to make an identification under neutral conditions provides assurance that the result is not unduly influenced by еxtraneous factors such as a deteriorated memory and a perception of undisclosed additional police knowledge. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Leaster, 395 Mass. 96, 102-104 (1985) (discussing factors creating suggestiveness in a show-up identification). In reviewing a claim that a voice identification was unduly suggestive we look to a totality of the circumstances. See Commonwealth v. Saunders, 50 Mass. App. Ct. 865, 874 (2001), S.C., 435 Mass. 691 (2002) (discussing circumstances of voice identification in the context of five-prong test set forth in Commonwealth v. Marini, 375 Mass. 510, 516-517 [1978]). See generally Mass. G. Evid. § 901(b)(5) (2014).
“In the discretion of a trial judge, a voice identification may be considered by a jury as long as the witness expresses some basic familiarity with the voice he or she claims to identify.” Commonwealth v. Mezzanotti, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 522, 527 (1988). We conclude under these circumstances that the judge did not abuse his discretion.13
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Section 17B was subsequently amended in 2008. See St. 2008, c. 205, § 3. That revised versiоn is not applicable here; the differences are not material to our analysis.“Whenever the attorney general or a district attorney has reasonable grounds for belief that the service of a common carrier . . . is being or may be used for an unlawful purpose he may, acting within his jurisdiction, demand all the records in the possession of such common carrier relating to any such service. Such common carrier shall forthwith deliver to the attorney general or district attorney all the records so demanded.” (Emphasis supplied.)
