The defendant, Thomas J. O’Day, III, was found guilty of possession of an infernal machine in violation of G. L. c. 266, § 102A.
1. Motion to Suppress. On November 6, 1997, the State police executed a search warrant at the defendant’s residence at 10 Hunt Street in Brockton, and they seized 1.64 grams of cocaine, a revolver, and a grenade simulator. The search warrant was issued based on the affidavit of John Brooks, a State trooper experienced in controlled substance investigations. The affidavit recites information supplied by a confidential informant and by State troopers who participated in surveillance of the defendant. The defendant concedes that the affidavit contained “substantial information” concerning the presence of drugs at DJ’s Pub in Brockton where the defendant worked as a doorman, but claims there was no probable cause to believe that drugs were located at his home.
We note that the motion judge made findings of fact. However, our inquiry as to the sufficiency of the search warrant application always begins and ends with the “four comers of the affidavit.” Commonwealth v. Villella,
a. Facts. From a confidential informant, State Trooper John Brooks learned of a cocaine-selling operation at DJ’s Pub on South Main Street in Brockton. The informant had purchased powdered and “crack” cocaine from sellers at the pub during the previous year. According to the informant, the sales were made face-to-face in remote areas of the bar primarily during the evening, and the sellers kept the cocaine “on their person.” The infоrmant described one of the sellers as “Tommy,” a doorman at DJ’s Pub who also supplied young males with cocaine for distribution. “Tommy” was known to Trooper Brooks as the defendant, who resided at 10 Hunt Street in Brockton. Brooks also was aware that the defendant had “a lengthy record,” which included thirty-two arraignments and on three occasions charges of unlawful possession of a firearm.
Based on this information, Brooks, with three other State troopers, conducted a series of surveillances. The first surveillance was of DJ’s Pub on the evening of September 27, 1997. The defendant arrived in a truck registered to his girl friend and walked into the bar. Two men immediately approached him. Before the defendant’s arrival, these two men had been pacing back and forth anxiously, looking out the front door, and were the only people in the bar who were not drinking. After a brief conversation, the defendant and these two men walked into the men’s room together. A short time later, the defendant’s
A second surveillance took place on the evening of October 9, 1997. At approximately 7 p.m., Brooks and four other State troopers set up surveillance of the defendant’s residence at 10 Hunt Street. Sevеral vehicles were parked in front of the residence and in his driveway. Brooks observed “other” visitors arrive and depart from the defendant’s residence after a “brief stay.” Based on his experience, Brooks determined this behavior was consistent with narcotics distribution. The defendant was seen leaving his residence and departing in his truck at 8:13 p.m. Mobile surveillance followed the truck from the residence to DJ’s Pub. At approximately 8:15 p.m., the defendant entered the bar, where interior surveillance had already been established. An anxious male immediately greeted the defendant, and the two sat at a table while exchanging something under it. At least four times on this evening, Brooks observed the defendant leave the bar and speak briefly on a cellular telephone as he looked up and down Main Street. At one time during the surveillance, the troopers observed the defendant leave the bar and enter the truck. An unknown male also left the bar and approached the truck. The man stood for two minutes at the open passenger side door of the truck, then closed the door and returned to the bar. Trooper Brooks believed that this activity was “consistent with the manner in which narcotics [sales] are transacted.” The defendant then participated in a series of exchanges beneath a table in the bar with several individuals. The confidential
A third surveillance of DJ’s Pub and the defendant’s residence occurred on November 1, 1997. State troopers observed the same pattern of visitors to the defendant’s residence as on the previous occasion: “several vehicles that arrived and departed . . . after a brief stay.” The defendant departed his residence at 8:04 p.m. and drove directly to DJ’s Pub. Surveillance within the bar established that the defendant went into the men’s room several times with a different male, each visit of short duration. The confidential informant engaged in a third controlled buy of cocaine from the defendant. Again, the defendant spoke on his cellular telephone in brief conversations outside the bar. At one point, he went to his truck, reached insidе the passenger door, and immediately returned to the bar.
Brooks learned that electrical service for the defendant’s residence was in his girl friend’s name. Based on years of investigative experience, Brooks was aware that “individuals who are involved in illegal activity frequently deploy others to register their vehicles and establish essential utilities [in order to] conceal [their] identity, place of residence, and to frustrate the efforts by law enforcement.” The trooper’s description of the defendant’s house stated that signs warning “Bewarе of Dog” and “Prohibita el Paso” were affixed to the doors of the residence.
The judge denied the motion to suppress, concluding, as do we, that based on the information in the affidavit, there was probable cause for the magistrate to believe that the defendant’s residence was “connected to the ongoing drug activity,” and that the confidential informant’s reliability had been established.
b. Probable cause. “The Fourth Amendment [to the United States Constitution] and art. 14 [of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights] do not define ‘probable cause’ . . . .” Commonwealth v. Cefalo,
The information in the affidavit satisfied both prongs of the Aguilar-Spinelli test. See Commonwealth v. Upton, supra at 374, citing Spinelli v. United States,
The affidavit also established the informant’s veracity. The officers knew the identity of the informant and his “whereabouts.” Commonwealth v. Alfonso A., supra at 375
We are convinced, as was the motion judge, that the independent police corroboration supplied the additional “color” to establish probable cause to search the defendant’s residence. Commonwealth v. Saleh,
“The nexus may be found in ‘the type of crime, the nature of the missing items, the extent of the suspect’s opportunity for concealment, and normal inferences as to where a criminal would be likely to hide’ ” the drugs he sells. Commonwealth v. Cinelli,
The cases on which the defendant relies to argue that probable cause was deficient are not persuasive because they involve situations in which those types of inferences could not reasonably be drawn. Some, for example, lack any detail linking the defendant’s residence to drug activity: Commonwealth v. Gauthier,
We conclude that the motion judge properly denied the motion to suppress the evidence seized during the execution of the search warrant.
2. Motion to dismiss. The defendant argues that the judge erred in denying his motion to dismiss the indictment for possession of an infernal machine.
“When potentially exculpatory evidence is lost or destroyed, the culpability of the government will be weighed along with the materiality of the evidence and the potential prejudice to the defendant.” Commonwealth v. Olszewski,
“When reviewing the denial of a motion to dismiss based on the Cоmmonwealth’s alleged [destruction] of exculpatory evidence, we accept the judge’s subsidiary findings in the absence of clear error” and “will not disturb the judge’s decision except for a clear abuse of discretion.” Commonwealth v. Cintron,
In regard to the Commonwealth’s culpability, the judge did not find “an unacceptable degree of culpability on the part of the police.” On hearing expert testimony from both sidеs, the judge determined that the State police had a “rational, good faith concern” concerning the safety of the grenade simulator.
A grenade simulator is a device employed by the military to simulate the noise and effects of a real grenade. The Commonwealth’s expert, Trooper William P. Qualls,
Although the Commonwealth’s destruction was intentional, the judge found that it was not done in bad faith. The police were confronted with the need to balance protection of the public and of themselves from injury against the preservation of evidence for use at trial.
It was not error for the judge to conclude that the defendant had failed to satisfy his burden to demonstrate prejudice to him by the destruction of the device. The defendant has not shown a “ ‘reasonable possibility, based on concrete evidence rather than fertile imagination,’ that access to the [material] would have produced evidence favorable to his cause.” Commonwealth v. Willie,
Finally, the defendant argues that the “judge did not apply the proper test” for determining whether the destroyed evidence was exculpatory. The Appeals Court decision the defendant cites uses the same standard we recited above: “When the evidence no longer exists and the defendant has made a specific request for it, the defendant need only show a reasonable possibility that the evidence was exculpatory. Put another way, the defendant is entitled to relief pursuant to the more favorable standard; whether аccess to the destroyed or lost evidence ‘might have’ affected the verdict” (emphasis added). Commonwealth v. White,
3. Conclusion. Both the motion to suppress and the motion to dismiss were properly denied.
So ordered.
Notes
The defendant was acquitted of possession of a firearm without an identification card and unlawful possession of a controlled substance.
Because of its holding on the motion to suppress, the Appeals Court never reached the claim of error concerning thе motion to dismiss. Commonwealth v. O’Day,
The defendant’s claims are made under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights.
The affidavit contained no information regarding the narcotics experience or training of Trooper Lavoie, nor did it even state that his “training and experience” are in narcotics. However, reading the affidavit in a commonsense manner, Commonwealth v. Cinelli,
“We review the contested search in light of the mоre stringent standards of art. 14, with the understanding that, if these standards are met, so too are those of the Fourth Amendment.” Commonwealth v. Byfield,
The defendant contends that there are other, innocent explanations for this pattern of visitors. The fact that there may be other explanations for the activities observed by the police does not negate the proposition that the described activity is, in the opinion of experienced drug investigators, consistent with drug selling and may be considered in the probable cause equation. See Commonwealth v. Welch,
The defendant argues that a man described by the confidential informant as “Poppy” lived in an apartment above the bar and, based on the defendant’s frequent contact with him at the bar, followed once by Poppy’s going upstairs (as described in the affidavit), may have been the defendant’s drug source. Even though that may be so, the affidavit still provided probable cause for the magistrate to believe, from all the facts therein, that the defendant stored or sold drugs at home and brought them to DJ’s Pub in his truck.
The defendant maintains that this was not a fact relied on by Trooper Brooks in his affidavit. However, Brooks listed the presence of the signs in the affidavit’s description of the residence. Therefore, this was an additional fact on which the magistrate reasonably could rely to infer that there was something in the house or some activity in the house the defendant sought to protect from unwanted visitors. See Commonwealth v. Cefalo,
General Laws c. 266, § 102A, criminalizes the possession of or having “under his control” an “infernal machine or a similar instrument, contrivance or device .... The term ‘infernal machine’ . . . include[s] any device for endangering life or doing unusual damage to property, or both, by fire or, explosion, whether or not contrived to ignite or explode automatically and whether or not disguised so as to appear harmless.”
The motion judge found that the defendant failеd to establish the materiality of the evidence. We take this to mean that the judge determined that the defendant had not shown that it would be exculpatory, and hence would not be material in that sense.
At the time of the hearing, Qualls had been a State trooper for six years, a member of the State police bomb squad for two years, and was certified by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, and the Drug Enforcement Administration. Qualls served in the army for eleven years, two active and nine in the reserves, аnd has dealt with explosives as a drill sergeant. Qualls graduated from a five-week intensive program from the “one school in the country that teaches bomb technicians for law enforcement.”
The defendant argues that the State police’s concern for safety is diminished by the fact that the grenade simulator was stored for four days after its seizure before it was finally destroyed. Trooper Qualls testified at the motion hearing that the fact that the grenade simulator was stored for four days before it was destroyed was “actually a mistake . . . due to ignorаnce on some law enforcement parts in dealing with a device such as this.” The importance of public safety is too great to blame the Commonwealth solely because the proper procedures were taken far later than they should have been.
As the judge noted, the substantive criminal statute grants the Commissioner of Public Safety broad authority over the seized infernal machine. G. L. c. 266, § 102A (“Notice of the seizure of any such machine, instrument, contrivance or device shall be sent forthwith to the commissioner of public safety and the article seized shall be subject to his order”).
