67 Mass. App. Ct. 531 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2006
After a jury trial in the Superior Court, the defendant was convicted of the charge of rape. On appeal, the defendant argues that (1) the evidence was insufficient to sustain the rape conviction on the ground of threat of bodily injury; (2) trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to certain evidence
Facts. We summarize the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, reserving further details for the discussion of specific issues. In 1995, the complainant was living in a single-family home in Centerville with her two children, a four year old son and a two year old daughter. She had lived there for less than one year. About two years earlier, the complainant had divorced her husband, the father of her children.
On Friday, January 13, 1995, the complainant awoke shortly after 5:00 a.m., as was her custom, to prepare for work and to get her children ready for day care. After showering, the complainant put on her bathrobe and began to apply her makeup as she sat on the edge of her bed. Her son entered the room and the complainant told him to go back to bed until he heard her hair dryer go off, a signal that the two had established to show that she was dressed and ready to turn her attention to him. A few minutes later, the complainant saw the door knob turning and, thinking it was her son again, got up and pushed the door closed. When she saw the handle turning a third time, the complainant became a little angry and went to the door and swung it open, prepared to reprimand her son.
Standing there was a black man, whom the complainant testified she had never seen before. She described him as being light skinned, about five feet, eight inches tall, with a small build, and wearing dark clothes. Because of his position at the
The man opened the complainant’s bathrobe and penetrated her vaginally with his penis. She asked him not to hurt her or her children. Hoping that he would stop, she also told him that she had less than one year to live because she had melanoma, a form of cancer. The man did not stop but moved his penis toward her face. The complainant turned her head to the side and said, “Please, don’t,” and he moved his penis downward and again penetrated her vagina.
The complainant then heard the intruder fumbling with the light switch, as though he was turning it off, and then she felt him begin to untie the blindfold. Because she still was afraid that he was going to hurt her or her children and that the risk of harm would increase if she saw his face, she asked him to leave on the blindfold. He took the blindfold off and the room was dark. As the man was getting dressed, he called the complainant by her first name and said, “You won’t say anything about this to anyone.” It was difficult for the complainant to hear when the man left her home, but after she was reasonably sure that he had left, she checked on the children and called her former husband and the police. Her former husband received the complainant’s telephone call at about 5:45 a.m.; she was screaming into the telephone that she had been raped. He described her voice as hysterical and frightened. He immediately drove to the complainant’s home, and arrived about fifteen minutes after receiving the telephone call. The police already were there. He found the complainant crying, distraught, and very shaken.
The police spoke to the complainant and checked the home for the point of entry of her assailant and any evidence of the crime. Roycroft saw and picked up a pair of men’s underwear off of the floor of the complainant’s bedroom. It first appeared to the complainant and to the police that the assailant may have possessed a key because they did not detect any sign of a forced entry and the deadbolt lock on the front door, which had been secured the night before, was unlocked and appeared undamaged. The complainant was sure she had locked the front door the night before because jewelry had been stolen from her home only six days earlier. The complainant was taken to the hospital by ambulance where she was examined and evidence was collected in a rape kit.
The complainant’s former husband remained behind to take care of the children. He inspected the home, looking for the way the assailant may have entered the house. In his daughter’s room he noticed some dirt on the bed that was directly underneath the window and what appeared to be a hand print or fingerprints on the outside of the window.
Once the likely point of entry was discovered, a police dog trained to track human scent was brought to the scene. The dog picked up a scent just below the window where the fingerprints had been recovered and followed it across the complainant’s backyard, through an opening in her back fence, and into the backyard of 241 Pine Street, the house directly behind the complainant’s home. The defendant lived there with his parents and his sister. His bedroom was on the second floor and had a view of the complainant’s home and her backyard.
The dog stopped at the side door of the defendant’s house, prompting the police to knock on the door. A woman answered the door and the police explained that there had been a breaking and entering about one hundred yards away, forty to sixty minutes earlier. They asked her permission to check the house for her safety. The woman acknowledged that there were other people in the house but would not identify them and refused entry to the police.
On January 19, 1995, six days after the rape, Detective Nancy Blanchard interviewed the defendant at the police station.
In February, 1995, the fingerprints from the window were submitted to a law enforcement computer database, without any matching results. The case lay dormant until July, 2001, when one Ricardo Daniels, who was in jail awaiting trial, sent a letter to the police informing them that he had some information about the defendant that he would be willing to exchange for
The theory of the defense was that the defendant had been acquainted with the complainant, had been havmg an affair with her, and that they had engaged in consensual intercourse in the early morning hours of January 13, 1995. The defendant testified that he lived in Ms parents’ home and met the complainant in the fall of 1994. They had engaged in consensual sexual intercourse on tMee separate occasions, including the morning of January 13. The defendant stated that the relationsMp had been a secret one at the request of the complainant because she did not want people to know that she was involved with a man who was fourteen years younger than her.
The defendant also testified that he went to the complainant’s home unexpectedly on the evemng of January 12 and told her he was going out in Boston and would not return until later. The complainant gave him a key so that when he returned, he could let Mmself into her home. When he returned at 2:00 a.m., using the key, he let himself m, and went to the complainant’s room where they engaged in consensual sex.
The defendant stated that on that occasion, he implored the complainant to “be open” about their relationsMp and to tell others about it. When the complainant disagreed, the defendant testified he had become angry and had tMeatened to tell the
The defendant further testified that the first time he learned that the complainant had stated that she had been raped was when he was questioned on January 19, 1995, by Detective Blanchard. The defendant denied at trial that he ever had talked about the complainant with Daniels or had told him that he had broken into the complainant’s home and had stolen jewelry.
We now discuss the issues raised by the defendant.
1. Sufficiency of the evidence. The crime of rape requires proof of “sexual intercourse with another compelled by force and against the [complainant’s] will or compelled by threat of bodily injury.” Commonwealth v. Sherry, 386 Mass. 682, 687 (1982), citing G. L. c. 265, § 22(a), (b). The judge instructed the jury on both theories and the jury returned a general verdict. In order to sustain the verdict in these circumstances, the evidence must be sufficient to sustain both theories of proof. See Commonwealth v. Plunkett, 422 Mass. 634, 635 (1996).
According to the defendant, the evidence was insufficient to show rape by threat of bodily harm and it is impossible to determine if the verdict was based on the wrong theory.
The term “threat,” as it appears in the rape statute, does not distinguish between implied or expressed threats, but only requires that the threat “engender[] fear ‘reasonable in the circumstances ... so that it was reasonable for [the complainant] not to resist.’ ” Commonwealth v. Sherry, 386 Mass. at 696. See Commonwealth v. Gittens, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 148, 153 (2002) (“The word ‘threat,’ without modification, has been held to encompass implied as well as express threats in interpretations of other statutes containing the word”).
Here, the complainant testified that when she opened her bedroom door and saw a man standing there, she was in “shock” as he covered her mouth with his hand and then her eyes with a blindfold and forced her onto the bed. As the man penetrated her the first time, the complainant testified that she was afraid he was going to hurt her or her children. She acted on this fear by asking her assailant not to harm her or her children, and in an attempt to persuade him to stop, she told him she had terminal cancer. Her fear continued, unabated, as evidenced by her plea not to remove her blindfold which she claimed she uttered in order to protect her life.
The assailant’s conduct of physically overpowering the complainant in her own bedroom and forcing her onto the bed implied a threat of bodily harm if she did not submit to his demands. The complainant clearly viewed the assailant’s conduct as threatening as shown by her pleas during the incident not to hurt her or her children and her continuing fear at the end of the incident when she indicated that she thought her life would be in danger if she saw her assailant’s face. Together, these facts demonstrate that the force the assailant used during the incident to obtain the complainant’s submission also conveyed an implied threat of bodily injury if she did not submit.
The defendant’s reliance on Commonwealth v. Eldridge, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 936, 937 (1990), for the contrary conclusion is
2. Denial of the defendant’s motion to suppress DNA evidence. The defendant filed a motion to suppress DNA evidence because, he alleged, his DNA was obtained improperly by the Barnstable police. A judge, not the trial judge, denied the motion, and the defendant claims error.
We summarize the facts found by the motion judge. After the police were informed that the defendant’s fingerprint matched the fingerprint on the window, the defendant was arrested by the Barnstable police on an arrest warrant for a charge of assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, a charge not related to this matter.
Two detectives decided to further the rape investigation and to obtain the defendant’s DNA in order to match it with the DNA taken from the 1995 vaginal swab. Over the next forty-five minutes, while the defendant was being interviewed about the assault and battery incident, he was provided with a meal, a soft drink, and a straw, and he smoked three cigarettes furnished
Once the defendant left, one of the detectives seized the straw and the cigarette butts and submitted them to the State police crime laboratory for testing. The DNA recovered from one of the cigarette butts matched the DNA recovered from the seminal fluid found on the 1995 vaginal swab. The motion judge ruled that the items seized by the police were abandoned by the defendant and that although the police used a ruse to obtain the items, it was not a violation of the defendant’s constitutional rights.
There is no merit to the defendant’s initial claim that he had an expectation of privacy in the cigarette butts and that the police required a warrant to seize them. The defendant had no expectation of privacy in cigarette butts that he voluntarily abandoned as trash. See Commonwealth v. Pratt, 407 Mass. 647, 660 (1990) (the defendant “abandoned his privacy interests in his garbage through the placement of his trash bags at the curb for collection”); Commonwealth v. Rice, 441 Mass. 291, 295-296 (2004) (any rights the inmate may have enjoyed in his T-shirt or his bed sheets were abandoned “when he surrendered [the T-shirt] for a replacement” and the sheets for laundering). Thus, no warrant to seize the cigarette butts was required.
Similarly unavailing is the defendant’s contention that the evidence must be suppressed because it was the product of an illegal ruse. Regardless of whether we agree with the motion judge’s conclusion that the police engaged in a ruse, the police did not engage in misconduct. “The police have been permitted to employ a ruse [even] to gain entry into a [person’s] home in certain situations.” Commonwealth v. Villar, 40 Mass. App. Ct. 742, 745 (1996). Here, the defendant was offered a meal and invited to smoke several cigarettes. He accepted the meal and the cigarettes, and abandoned what remained when he finished. There was no evidence of coercion. Under the circumstances, the ruse, if it was one, was proper.
The defendant’s claim that the evidence should have been suppressed because it was seized during a pretextual search is
The defendant’s motion to suppress properly was denied.
3. Prosecutor’s cross-examination and closing argument. On appeal, the defendant argues for the first time that the prosecutor’s cross-examination of the defendant and her closing argument challenged the defendant’s right to prepare for, and be present at, his trial, citing Commonwealth v. Person, 400 Mass. 136, 139-142 (1987), and also the defendant’s right to postar-rest silence, citing Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610, 618 (1976).
a. The Person issue. During the cross-examination of the defendant, the prosecutor obtained an acknowledgment from him that, prior to trial, the defendant had reviewed the discovery material that defense counsel had received from the Commonwealth. Those materials included the complainant’s statements in the police reports, the DNA results, and, in essence, all of the facts of the Commonwealth’s case. There was no objection to the line of questions. The prosecutor did not make any mention in her closing argument that the defendant was aware of the Commonwealth’s case prior to trial.
The defendant claims that the prosecutor’s questions concerning the defendant’s knowledge of the Commonwealth’s case, knowledge that he had obtained prior to trial, was error because it challenged the defendant’s right to prepare for trial. In Commonwealth v. Person, supra, the court granted a new trial because the prosecutor in his closing argument told the jury that the defendant, who had not made a statement prior to trial, sat through the presentation of the Commonwealth’s evidence at
Here, the prosecutor’s line of questioning focused on the defendant’s knowledge of the Commonwealth’s evidence that he had obtained prior to trial, not knowledge that the defendant gained by his presence at trial and by listening to the Commonwealth’s witnesses. Contrast id. at 138-139. Clearly, the defendant’s trial strategy was not formed after listening to the Commonwealth’s evidence.
It is fundamental, however, that a defendant has a right to prepare for trial; such preparation may include material furnished by the Commonwealth as required by Mass.R.Crim.P. 14(a)(1), as appearing in 442 Mass. 1518 (2004), including statements of Commonwealth witnesses, Mass.R.Crim.P. 14(a)(1)(A)(vii), and expert opinion evidence, Mass.R.Crim.P. 14(a)(1)(A)(vi). We think it is error for a prosecutor to invite the jury to draw the inference that the defendant had used his access to the Commonwealth’s evidence before trial to conform his testimony falsely to fit the evidence against him. Commonwealth v. Jones, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 254, 256-257 (1998).
Prosecutor: “Well, in 2001, you were arrested for rape, true?”
Defendant: “That is true.”
Prosecutor: “And these charges have been pending ever since?”
Defendant: “Exactly.”
Prosecutor: “And at no time have you reached out to anyone from the Barnstable police department to explain your side of the story, that it’s all a big misunderstanding?”
Defendant: “No, I figured I would come to trial and do that.”
The prosecutor, in her closing argument, again without objection, stated:
“And in 2001, when the defendant was finally charged with this offense, why didn’t he go to the Barnstable police and explain his version of the events? That this was an old spurned lover who had filed a report years before and certainly she wouldn’t want to go forward since they now hadn’t seen each other in years and certainly any animosity she may have had for him in 1995 had waned. But yet he didn’t.”
On appeal, the defendant contends that the remarks violated his right to pretrial silence and trivialized his defense. He cites Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. at 616-618, in support of his argument.
The defendant’s reliance on Doyle is misplaced. In that decision, the United States Supreme Court held, id. at 617-618, that the due process clause forbids the use by the prosecution of a defendant’s post-Miranda silence for the purpose of impeaching an exculpatory story advanced at trial by a defendant. The Court reasoned that the defendant’s “[sjilence in the wake of [Miranda]
Here, there was no evidence that the defendant, either before or after his arrest, was given Miranda warnings and elected to remain silent. Absent proof of such facts, Doyle simply has no application to this matter.
Our analysis does not stop here. Long before Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966), was decided, it was held that a defendant who is in custody has a right to remain silent. Commonwealth v. Kenney, 12 Met. 235, 237-238 (1847). The rule that a defendant has a constitutional right to remain silent at his arrest and while in custody is “so fundamental as to require little elaboration.” Commonwealth v. Bennett, 2 Mass. App. Ct. 575, 578-579 (1974), citing Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. See Commonwealth v. Mahdi, 388 Mass. 679, 694-695 & n.15 (1983); Commonwealth v. Adams, 434 Mass. 805, 811 (2001); Commonwealth v. Andujar, 57 Mass. App. Ct. 529, 536 (2003). “Impermissible comment upon a defendant’s right to remain silent is ‘so egregious that reversal is the norm, not the exception.’ ” Id. at 537, quoting from Commonwealth v. King, 34 Mass. App. Ct. 466, 469 (1993).
Here, it is clear from the questions asked of the defendant on cross-examination, and from remarks in closing argument, that the prosecutor was urging the jury to discredit the defendant’s testimony because he did not seek out the police prior to trial to report his exculpatory version of the incident. This was error.
Because there was no objection to either the cross-examination or the closing argument, we consider whether the error created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. See Commonwealth v. Kozec, 399 Mass. 514, 518 n.8 (1987). A substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice exists “if we have a serious doubt whether the result of the trial might have been different had the error not been made.” Commonwealth v. Acevedo, 446 Mass. 435, 450 (2006), quoting from Commonwealth v. LeFave, 430 Mass. 169, 174 (1999).
Here, the impermissible questions and comments went directly to the heart of the defendant’s defense, i.e., that his version of events, and not the complainant’s, should be believed.
Conclusion. We recognize that no defendant is entitled to a perfect trial, but we also recognize that every defendant is entitled to a fair trial. Commonwealth v. Lodge, 431 Mass. 461, 476 (2000). Here, the egregious conduct of the prosecutor deprived the defendant of a fair trial.
Judgment reversed.
Verdict set aside.
Remanded for a new trial.
Appellate counsel for the Commonwealth and for the defendant were not trial counsel in this matter.
The son and the daughter slept in bedrooms that adjoined the complainant’s bedroom.
After returning from the hospital, the complainant moved out of the house and never returned.
At that time, there was also a crib in the room, away from the window, where the complainant’s daughter slept.
Although the jury was not informed of this fact, it is clear from a discussion at sidebar that the defendant was under arrest for an unrelated incident at the time of the interview.
At trial, Daniels testified that sometime around the time of the rape, he was with the defendant in the defendant’s bedroom. The defendant told him that he had broken into the house behind his mother’s home and had stolen some jewelry. He showed the jewelry to Daniels. The defendant also told Daniels that a “very pretty woman” lived in the house.
The manner by which the police obtained the defendant’s DNA is discussed later in this opinion.
Daniels testified in rebuttal and repeated the testimony he had given as part of the Commonwealth’s case.
The complainant also testified as a rebuttal witness and denied that she ever had engaged in consensual sexual intercourse with the defendant. She also stated she did not have any knowledge of marijuana allegedly being stored in her bulkhead or any knowledge that the defendant, whom she did not know, claimed to have been selling marijuana from her home.
The defendant, in his brief, impliedly conceded that the evidence was sufficient to prove rape by force.
For example, defense counsel’s opening statement, given prior to the start of the Commonwealth’s case, outlined the aspects of the trial strategy, i.e., that the intercourse was consensual. In addition, a stipulation was read to the jury, at the start of the trial, that stated that the defendant admitted that he had engaged in sexual intercourse with the complainant on January 13, 1995, but his defense would be that the complainant consented.
A question from the jury — “At any time since the alleged rape could [the complainant] have dropped the charges?” — shows that they were focused on the improper portion of the testimony. See Commonwealth v. Acevedo, 446 Mass. 435, 450 (2006) (jury question indicated their focus on mitigating factors; ineffective assistance to fail to request provocation instruction). The judge answered the question by telling the jury it was an improper consideration.
The judge did tell the jury, “So as judges of the facts in this case, listen to what tile lawyers have to say in their final arguments.”
To the extent we do not discuss arguments made by the defendant, they “have not been overlooked. We find nothing in them that requires discussion.” Commonwealth v. Domenski, 332 Mass. 66, 78 (1954).