The defendant was convicted of rape (two indictments), indecent assault and battery, drugging a person for unlawful sexual intercourse, distribution of cocaine, procuring liquor for a person under twenty-one years of age, and a drug violation in or near a school or park. He appealed, and the Appeals Court affirmed all but his conviction of drugging a person for unlawful sexual intercourse, which was vacated on the ground that an error in the jury instruction was prejudicial to the defendant. Commonwealth v. LeBlanc,
Facts and background. We present the essential facts the jury could have found, the details of which are set forth in Commonwealth v. LeBlanc, supra.
In 2004, the victim was an eighteen year old woman and a senior in high school. Through friends and family, shе had known the defendant, an approximately fifty year old attorney, since she was twelve years old. In the months before the incident, the victim, who weighed approximately 119 pounds, was drinking frequently and had used cocaine five or six times, including an incident in December, 2003, where the defendant provided the cocaine. Beginning in December, 2003, the defendant also had made sexual overtures to the victim, which she rebuffed, sometimes laughingly. Several times she explained to the defendant that she had a boy friend.
The events at the center of this case took place on February 1 and 2, 2004. The victim attended two “Super Bowl” parties on February 1, and consumed alcoholic drinks at both. The defendant was present at the second party. There, he and the victim ingested cocaine twice. The defendant expressed interest in dating the victim, but she declined. He invited the victim to his house for a party that same evening. Although the victim declined the invitation, she could not sleep because of her ingestion of
When she arrived, only the defendant was there. She consumed more alcohol, cocaine, and marijuana, all provided by the defendant. The victim testified that the pair stayed up all night talking. In the morning, the victim went to school, but she left twice, each time returning to the defendant’s house. During the first time she returned, she drank a beer and used cocaine. The second time she returned, she was “still . . . drunk and high.”
During this second visit, she drank more beer and ingested more cocaine. The defendant again made advances toward the victim that she rebuffed. The defendant served her wine, and the victim had threе to four glasses. Because of the cocaine, the victim was not hungry and had almost nothing to eat that day; the last food she had eaten was when she was at the first “Super Bowl” party the night before. Moreover, she consumed approximately twelve beers at the defendant’s house on February 2.
After the victim consumed the wine, the pair retreated to the defendant’s bedroom, where the defendant kept cоcaine. The victim testified that while in the bedroom she did not remember what happened, but she realized her “clothes came off” because the defendant was kissing her vagina. When she tried to move away, he told her to “do another fine” of cocaine, which she did. She stated that she sat back down on the bed and “remember[ed] being in [the defendant’s] bed [and] putting my clothes back on a few times, and then them coming off аgain.” She did not recall how they came off, but remembered putting them back on. The defendant also sucked on her breasts, and licked and touched her vagina and penetrated it with his finger. She testified that she told him, “No. We’re just friends.”
At approximately 9 p.m., three of the victim’s friends arrived at the defendant’s house, went up to the bedroom, knocked on the door, and told the victim she had to leave with them. Although the victim answered thаt she was coming, when she did not, one friend opened the door. The friends testified that the victim was dirty and her hair was in “knots” and messier than if she had just been sleeping. She smelled of alcohol, seemed to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol, was slurring her words, and “seemed like she didn’t know what was going on or why
The victim’s father testified that, when she arrived, she looked like a “zombie”; she was screaming and crying and unable to focus. He also noticed her “involuntary jaw movement” and that she could not speak. Indeed, the victim testified that for a day or so after she left the defendant’s house she could not eat because her mouth was sore from her chewing on her mouth and lips, something she did when she ingested cocaine. Her father brought her to a police station. The officer who interviewed her the evening of February 2 testified that she was intoxicated, crying, and upset. The victim had no clear memory of what she told this officer.
Rape and indecent assault and battery. The defendant acknowledged that he and the victim engaged in sexual activity, and there was no allegation that the defendant used force. At trial on the rape and indecent assault and battery charges, the Commonwealth bore the burden of proving, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the victim’s consumption of drugs and alcohol rendered her incapable of consenting to sexual contact with the defendant.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, there was ample evidence for the jury to conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the victim was so impaired as to be incapable of consenting. See Commonwealth v. Ellis,
On cross-examination, the victim agreed that in the “early evening” she performed “some degree of oral sex” on the defendant and that he did not “force” her. The defendant interprets her statement that there was no force to mean that she voluntarily performed oral sex and argues that it shows that she was capable
In Commonwealth v. Blache, supra at 597, this court held that “in order to sustаin a conviction on a theory of incapacity to consent, the Commonwealth must prove that the defendant knew or reasonably should have known that the complainant’s condition rendered her incapable of consenting.” Although the defendant acknowledges that our decision in Blache in 2008 explicitly stated that the new rule was not given retroactive effect, id.., and thus does not apply to him, he nevertheless argues that it would be unjust to hold the defendant accountable without such proof. We do not accept the defendant’s invitation to revisit our decision to apply the rule prospectively only.
The defendant next argues that the judge erred when he instructed the jury on incapacity to consent:
“[I]f by reason of sleep or intoxication due to alcohol, cocaine, or a combination of these factors, a person is unconscious, helpless, or so minimally conscious that she is incapable of consenting, an act of sexual intercourse occurring with that person while she is in that state is without her valid consent and rape. . . .
“However, the mere fact that someone consumes some alcohol and/or cocaine or exhibited some of the symptoms commonly associated with intoxication does not necessarilymean [she is] incapable of giving consent” (emphasis added).
Thе defendant takes issue only with the phrase “does not necessarily mean,” arguing that the adverb “necessarily” should have been "omitted. He argues that there is a substantial risk that the jury understood the instruction to mean that the “mere consumption of alcohol and/or cocaine or her exhibition of some symptoms of intoxication might mean that she is incapable of giving consent.” This argument is unavailing.
In his instruction, the judge added аn appropriate adverb, “necessarily,” which means “inevitably” or “unavoidably,” to modify “does not . . . mean.” Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 1510 (1993). The defendant’s construction, on the other hand, removes the auxiliary verb “does not” altogether, and substitutes the auxiliary verb “might,” which, as the past tense of the verb “may,” expresses possibility. Id. at 1396, 1432. We are not persuaded that the jury would have disregarded the phrase “does not” in the judge’s instruction and engaged in the strained interpretation the defendant proposes, which makes superfluous the critical words “does not.” See generally Commonwealth v. Auclair,
Furthermore, the judge’s instruction conforms to the requirements set forth in Commonwealth v. Urban,
Drugging for unlawful sexual intercourse. The defendant was convicted of drugging a person for the purpose of unlawful sexual intercourse, G. L. c. 272, § 3, which states, in relevant part:
“Whoever applies, administers to or causes to be takenby a person any drug, matter or thing with intent to stupefy or overpower such person so as to thereby enable any person to have sexual intercourse or unnatural sexual intercourse shall be punished . . . .”
The word “administer” is not defined in the statute, nor does there appear to be any appellate deсision addressing the issue.
“[The Commonwealth has] to prove that the defendant gave or provided a drug or substance to [the victim] either directly or by offering it to her and requesting her to take it. It’s not necessary for the Commonwealth to prove that the defendant directly put the drug or substance into her by injection, nor into her food or drink. Also, it is not necеssary for the Commonwealth to prove that the defendant forced her to consume it.” (Emphasis added.)
The defendant argues that the judge’s instruction, over his objection, that the Commonwealth had to prove only that the defendant “gave or provided” drugs to the victim was erroneous. Where a defendant objects to an instruction, the court must determine whether the instruction was error and review the instruction as a whole to determine whether it prejudiced the defendant. See Commonwealth v. Cruz,
In its analysis whether the instruction was erroneous, the Appeals Court first noted the familiar rule that where a word is undefined in the statute, we use its “usual and accepted meanings.” Commonwealth v. LeBIanc, supra at 629, quoting Commonwealth v. Robinson,
The court also concluded that, had the Legislature intended for the word “administer” to mean “provide,” it could have used those words, as it did in G. L. c. 138, § 34, which prohibits the sale or delivery of alcohol to a minor.
The Commonwealth sets forth several arguments that there was no error in the instruction, including that the gravamen of the statute is not the method by which the victim is drugged but rather the use of such drugs by the defendant to facilitate unlawful intercourse; that the word “administer” сan mean “provide” where, in common usage, the words “give” and “provide” are synonymous, and the word “give” is defined as “to administer”; that other jurisdictions have defined “administer” as to “give”; and that the statutory words “cause to be taken” are the equivalent of “give or provide.”
We are not persuaded and instead, for the reasons set forth by the Appeals Court, conclude that to violate the statute, a defendant must do something more than what occurred here, i.e., simply making alcohol and drugs available to the eighteen year old victim, who testified that she returned to the defendant’s house to consume more drugs and alcohol. The Commonwealth, in support of its argument that the gravamen of the statute is the defendant’s intent, points to the fact that the crime of drugging for unlawful sexual intercourse carries a (potentially) harsher sentence than does the crime of forcible rape.
We agree with the Appeals Court that the error was prejudicial because the instruction misinterpreted key words that “are the basis of criminal liability under the statute. In these circumstances, we cannot say with confidence that the error was unlikely to have affected the jury’s deliberations” on whether the defendant was guilty of drugging a person' for unlawful sexual intercourse. Commonwealth v. LeBlanc, supra at 630. See Commonwealth v. Flebotte,
The defendant also argues that evidence was insufficient to рrove he was guilty of drugging the victim for unlawful sexual intercourse. Given our interpretation of the statute, we agree that evidence that the defendant simply made alcohol and cocaine available for use by a willing eighteen year old is not sufficient to prove that the defendant drugged her for unlawful sexual
Conclusion. Concerning the limited portion of the appeal on which we granted further appellate review, the judgments of conviction on the indictments charging rape and the indictment charging indecent assault and battery are affirmed. The judgment of conviction on the indictment charging drugging a person for unlawful sexual intercourse is reversed, the verdict set aside, and judgment entered for the defendant. Becаuse the sentences on the defendant’s other convictions were to run concurrently with his sentence for drugging a person for unlawful sexual intercourse, the case is remanded for resentencing. See Commonwealth v. Talbot,
So ordered.
Notes
One police officer testified that he tried to interview the victim on the afternoon of February 3, but had to stop because the victim was tired, had a very hard time understanding what he was saying, and had difficulty speaking.
The two indictments charging rape were based on the defendant’s inserting his finger in the victim’s vagina and kissing and licking her vaginal area. The indictment charging indecent assault and battery was based on the defendant’s placing his mouth on her brеasts.
There was sufficient evidence that the defendant knew or should have known that the victim was not capable of consenting. He provided a dozen beers, wine, and cocaine that the victim consumed. The testimony of the victim’s friends, father, and the first police officer who interviewed her was evidence of her impaired condition. Moreover, the fact that each time the victim rebuffed the defendant’s sexual advances he told her to ingest more cocaine, after which she could not recall how her clothes “came off,” allows an inference that the defendant was aware of the effect of the drugs and alcohol on the victim.
In Commonwealth v. LeBIanc,
General Laws c. 138, § 34, uses the words “delivers,” “procures,” and “furnish,” and defines “furnish” as “to knowingly or intentionally supply, give or provide to or allow.”
Under G. L. c. 272, § 3, drugging for unlawful sexual intercourse imposes a punishment of from ten years to life, whereas forcible rape, G. L. c. 265, § 22 (b), imposes a punishment of up to twenty years.
The predecessor statute to G. L. c. 272, § 3, was enacted in 1886. St. 1886, c. 329, § 2. In 1998, the Legislature struck the 1978 version, St. 1978, c. 379, § 4, and increased the sentence to State prison from a maximum of three years to a minimum of ten years and eliminated alternative sentences of a maximum of two and one-half years in a house of correction, a fine of $1,000, or both. St. 1998, c. 232, § 3. The parties have not supplied any informative legislative history or suggested that any exists. At oral argument the Commonwealth represented that there was none, but pointed to the emergency preamble to the 1998 amendment, which states that the purpose of the statute is to “prevent forthwith drug induced rape and kidnapping.” St. 1998, c. 232.
