A Norfolk County grand jury indicted the defendant for assault with intent to rape.
1
Prior to trial, the defendant moved to dismiss the indictments because the
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grand jurors had not heard any evidence that he had been involved in criminal activity. The trial judge denied the motion. After trial to a jury, the defendant was convicted. He was sentenced to a term of twenty years at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Concord. Execution of the sentence was stayed by a single justice of the Appeals Court. See
Commonwealth
v.
Allen,
The sole issue is whether the trial judge should have dismissed an indictment which was unsupported by any evidence of acts of criminality by the defendant. The defendant claims that in these circumstances the denial of his motion to dismiss the indictments was erroneous. We agree. We reverse and order that the indictment on the charge of assault with intent to rape be dismissed.
We summarize the facts. Although the defendant requested copies of the grand jury minutes, the Commonwealth did not furnish them until the day of the trial. After receiving the minutes, the defendant immediately moved to dismiss the indictments, because the grand jury heard no evidence that he had engaged in criminal activity. 2
The minutes revealed that during a party to which the victim, his sister, the defendant, and a friend had been invited, one William Maloney 3 tried to rape the victim. The grand jury minutes further revealed that after the victim escaped from Maloney, the victim’s sister entered the house in which the party was being held and recognized the defendant among those present.
In arguing that the indictment should be dismissed, the defendant does not dispute that generally a “court will not
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inquire into the competency or sufficiency of the evidence before the grand jury.”
Commonwealth
v.
Robinson,
We see no material difference between this case and
Con-nor
v.
Commonwealth, supra.
In
Connor,
the absence of any evidence identifying the defendant as the person whom the grand jury intended to indict was sufficient to justify the dismissal of the indictment. We believe that the grand jury’s failure to hear any evidence of criminal activity by the defendant justifies dismissal of this indictment. We, therefore, hold that at the very least the grand jury must hear sufficient evidence to establish the identity of the accused,
Connor
v.
Commonwealth, supra,
and probable cause to arrest him,
Lataille
v.
District Court of E. Hampden,
The judge recognized that the grand jury did not have before it any evidence of criminality by the defendant. However, he ruled that the grand jury did hear sufficient evidence to indict the defendant as Maloney’s accomplice. But “mere presence at the commission of the wrongful act
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and even failure to take affirmative steps to prevent it do not render a person liable as a participant.”
Commonwealth
v.
Benders,
In this case, the grand jury had no evidence before it that the defendant commanded, counseled, or encouraged Maloney to assault the victim or even that he was present at the assault. Since the indictment was not supported by evidence that the defendant was Maloney’s accomplice, the defendant’s motion to dismiss should have been allowed. 7
The judgment of the Superior Court is reversed, the verdict is set aside, and the case is remanded to the Superior Court where the indictment is to be dismissed. 8
So ordered.
Notes
The defendant was also indicted for assault and battery. The defendant was convicted on this charge, but the indictment was placed on file with the defendant’s consent. Thus, there is no issue before us as to the propriety of this conviction. “Absent exceptional circumstances, we do not consider appeals on assignment of error on indictments placed on file [with the defendant’s consent] since no appeal may come before us until after judgment, which in criminal cases is the sentence.”
Commonwealth
v.
Delgado,
The defendant did not have the benefit of a probable cause hearing because the prosecutor proceeded directly to the grand jury. See Mass. R. Crim. P. 3 (e),
Maloney was a codefendant. He pleaded guilty to the crime at the time of trial.
The grand jurors heard only hearsay from an investigating officer whose testimony was based on what the victim and the victim’s sister had told him. We stress that sound policy dictates a preference for the use of competent testimony before grand juries.
Commonwealth
v.
St. Pierre,
“[T]here is a ‘large difference’ between probable cause to arrest [or search] and probable cause to bind over, ‘and therefore a like difference in the quanta and modes of proof . . . .’
Brinegar
v.
United States,
[
“The right of individual citizens to be secure from an open and public accusation of crime and from the trouble, expense and anxiety of public trial, before a probable cause is established by the presentment and indictment of a grand jury, in case of high offences, is justly regarded as one of the securities to the innocent against hasty, malicious and oppressive public prosecutions . . . .”
Jones
v.
Robbins,
The defendant raises two other issues on appeal. Since we have held that the indictment must be dismissed, we do not discuss the other two issues. Suffice it to say, we perceive no error.
Although the defendant was given leave to file a supplemental brief on the issue whether the guaranty against double jeopardy would prevent retrial, he chose not to do so. Therefore, we do not reach this issue. See
Burks
v.
United States,
