In the present case, here on a reservation and report by a single justice of this court, we consider whether a judge in the Cambridge Division of the District Court Department (District Court) abused his discretion when he imposed a $5,000
1. Background. During the evening of October 19, 2007, a dispute arose on Quincy Street in Cambridge when the defendant, Ellen Frith, vociferously complained to Sheila McHugh Puopolo and her husband that their motor vehicle was blocking handicapped access to a bus stop. The following day, the defendant went to the Cambridge police department and reported that she had been assaulted by Puopolo. The report was taken by Officer Joseph M. Kelley and labeled “Incident Report #7008876.” Two days later, on October 21, Detective John Crowley spoke with Puopolo over the telephone about the dispute, after which he documented their conversation in a report dated October 31, 2007, and labeled “Incident Supplement #7008876-1.” As a result of the defendant’s report, Detective Crowley filed an application for a criminal complaint, alleging that Puopolo had committed assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon (an umbrella) and assault and battery on the defendant.
In the meantime, on October 26, 2007, Puopolo went to the Cambridge police department and reported that she had been assaulted by the defendant on October 19. The report was taken by Officer Alexander Colovos and labeled “Incident Report #7009093.” As a result of this report, Detective Kenneth Mui filed an application for a criminal complaint, alleging that the defendant had committed assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon (a shod foot) and assault and battery on Puopolo.
Following a single hearing on the two applications, a criminal complaint issued only against the defendant. A pretrial conference was held on January 15, 2008, at which time a Middlesex County assistant district attorney (ADA), who was not the appellate ADA, filed the Commonwealth’s notice of discovery
On February 12, 2008, a pretrial hearing was held at which the ADA and defense counsel signed a pretrial conference report stating that automatic discovery for the defense had been completed. A trial date was set for April 9, 2008. Later in the afternoon of February 12, defense counsel, in the absence of the ADA, asked that the case be recalled, informed the District Court judge that the birth dates of Puopolo’s husband and Officer Hieu Pham were not included in the discovery materials, and requested that sanctions be imposed against the Commonwealth. The judge declined to act on this oral request for sanctions and gave the Commonwealth two weeks to provide the birth dates to defense counsel. The Commonwealth immediately filed a supplemental notice of discovery setting forth the requested information.
The defendant filed a second motion for sanctions on May 14, 2008, alleging that the Commonwealth had committed prosecutorial misconduct when the ADA failed to conduct a “reasonable inquiry” as to the existence of Incident Supplement #7008876-1, as required by rule 14 (a) (3), and then falsely represented to the court in the certificate of compliance that he
On February 27, 2009, the Commonwealth filed a petition for extraordinary relief pursuant to G. L. c. 211, § 3, in the county court,
“When a party has provided all discovery required by this rule or by court order, it shall file with the court a Certificate of Compliance. The certificate shall state that, to the best of its knowledge and after reasonable inquiry, the party has disclosed and made available all items subject to discovery other than reports of experts, and shall identify each item provided. If further discovery is subsequently provided, a supplemental certificate shall be filed with the court identifying the additional items provided.” (Emphasis added.)
To the extent that a party fails to comply with its discovery obligations, sanctions may be imposed under rule 14 (c). Section (1) of rule 14 (c) states that “[fjor failure to comply with any discovery order issued or imposed pursuant to this rule, the court may make a further order for discovery, grant a continuance, or enter such other order as it deems just under the circumstances.”
“The purpose of mandatory discovery is to encourage full pretrial discovery, increase what will be discovered by both sides, and promote judicial efficiency.” Commonwealth v. Green,
3. Discussion. The Commonwealth contends that because there was no intentional misconduct by the ADA with respect to the prosecution’s discovery obligations, and because there was no prejudice to the defendant where defense counsel was in possession of the unproduced police report well before the trial date, the judge’s imposition of a $5,000 sanction was unwarranted and unjust. The Commonwealth does not challenge the fact that it was required to provide the defendant with Incident Supplement #7008876-1 pursuant to rule 14 (a) (1) (A). It merely characterizes the ADA’s failure to do so as an inadvertent mistake. In our view, the Commonwealth misconstrues the scope of its discovery obligation under rule 14.
What the Commonwealth fails to acknowledge is that, pursuant to rule 14 (a) (3), it had an obligation of “reasonable inquiry,” and that, in this case, none was made. See Commonwealth v. Martin, 427 Mass. 816, 823 (1998) (prosecution had duty of inquiry regarding existence of scientific tests conducted by Commonwealth’s crime laboratory, and discovery obligation not satisfied merely by turning over information contained in prosecutor’s own files). At the very least, even a cursory reading of Incident Report #7009093 would have informed the ADA that the defendant had reported an assault (Incident Report #7008876) to the Cambridge police department on October 20, 2007, and that further inquiry was in order. Notwithstanding the fact that the ADA here missed this reference, a prosecutor’s belief that no inquiry is necessary or required in the circumstances of a particular case, based only on the prosecutor’s assumption that he already has all of the items and information subject to discovery, does not comport with rule 14 (a) (3).
The language of rule 14 (a) (3) does not limit the duty of inquiry to instances where a prosecutor becomes aware that additional discoverable materials may exist. “Reasonableness” is the
That said, there is no evidence in the record to support the judge’s finding that the ADA’s representation in the certificate of compliance was “made in bad faith.” See Commonwealth v. Donovan,
Under rule 14 (c), a judge can impose a variety of sanctions on the Commonwealth for failure to comply with pretrial discovery rules.
The imposition of a punitive monetary sanction on counsel, not on the party that counsel represents, is permitted under Mass. R. Crim. P. 48,
The remedy for prosecutorial misconduct in a particular case should be tailored to the injury suffered. See Commonwealth v. Cronk,
As a final matter, contrary to the spirit of the Massachusetts
4. Conclusion. For all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the judge abused his discretion when he imposed a $5,000 sanction on the Commonwealth for failing to comply with its pretrial discovery obligations under rule 14. Accordingly, we remand the case to the county court for entry of a judgment vacating the order of the District Court.
So ordered.
Notes
It appears from the record that the Commonwealth never provided the defendant with a copy of Incident Report #7008876. However, at some point after October 31, 2007, the defendant obtained a copy of Incident Supplement #7008876-1, which she then gave to her attorney no later than lanuary 15, 2008. According to defense counsel, his client procured this report by appearing at a Cambridge police station and requesting it.
Both the prosecution and the defense have a continuing duty of disclosure with respect to items and information properly subject to discovery. Rule 14 (a) (4) of the Massachusetts Rules of Criminal Procedure, as appearing in
In the defendant’s view, Incident Supplement #7008876-1 was exculpatory evidence because it showed that Puopolo had made inconsistent statements about the dispute on October 19, and that Detective Crowley did not appear to believe her version of events.
The judge also concluded that the ADA violated Mass. R. Prof. C. 3.3 (a) (1),
In its petition, the Commonwealth stated that the judge imposed a $5,000 sanction because the Commonwealth omitted from its discovery materials the birth dates of two potential witnesses and a copy of Incident Supplement #7008876-1, thereby establishing that the Commonwealth failed to make “reasonable inquiry” concerning all items subject to discovery. We read the judge’s decision as imposing a $5,000 sanction only on the basis of the unproduced police report. Although the judge makes passing reference to the missing birth dates in his findings of fact, sanctions based on that oversight were considered and denied by a different District Court judge in an earlier proceeding.
The underlying criminal case has been stayed at the request of the defendant pending the resolution of the present matter.
Sanctions pursuant to Mass. R. Crim. P. 14 (c), as appearing in
Reasonable costs may be permitted under rule 14 (c) (1) as a remedial sanction for a discovery violation to ensure that a defendant receives a fair trial. See Commonwealth v. Carney, ante 418, 427-428 (2010). Here, the $5,000 sanction was the equivalent of a fine, not costs.
As a general matter, a judge may find a party to be in civil contempt by reason of the party’s failure to comply with a court order, and the judge may impose a continuing fine on the party to compel compliance with the order. See Commonwealth v. Rape Crisis Servs. of Greater Lowell, Inc.,
The following exchange occurred during the February 12, 2008, pretrial hearing:
Defense counsel: “Judge, I’m assuming that discovery is complete from the Commonwealth?”
ada: “Yes, I believe it is, Your Honor. Everything we’ve had, we’ve turned over.”
Defense counsel: “Well that’s not the question.”
ada: “Everything we know of in existence in this case has been turned over, Your Honor.”
Defense counsel: “And we include the police as well as —”
ada: “As far as I know Your Honor the police have provided us with all of the documentation that they have.”
Defense counsel: “And they’ve made the reasonable inquiry?”
The judge: Defense counsel: “I’m not going to make the Commonwealth go through the recitation. They’re making a representation that they’ve fulfilled their discovery obligations.” “Well Judge, its — We’ll see; that’s all I’m going to say right now.”
The judge: “Well it’s your obligation if you have a specific request that you don’t think has been complied with, this is the time to raise it.”
Defense counsel: “No, Judge, I’ll leave it just the way it is.”
