441 Mass. 257 | Mass. | 2004
Lead Opinion
After a jury trial, the defendant was convicted of two counts of rape and of two counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of fourteen years. The victims were his children. A divided panel of the Appeals Court affirmed the convictions. Commonwealth v. Pelosi, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 390 (2002). We granted the defendant’s application for further appellate review.
The principal issue we consider is whether the motion judge made an adequate determination of privilege under the protocol set forth in Commonwealth v. Bishop, 416 Mass. 169 (1993) (Bishop), when she denied the defendant’s motion for the production of the victims’ Department of Social Services (department) and Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (MSPCC) counselling records. We conclude that the motion judge erroneously bypassed stage 1 of the Bishop protocol when she made no determination whether a proper privilege had been asserted and applied to the records sought, and instead proceeded to find that the defendant had not met the relevancy requirements applicable to stage 2 of the protocol. We therefore remand the case to the Superior Court for a further hearing to determine whether the records sought were in fact privileged.
1. Background. The background of this case is described in
At a pretrial motion hearing held on October 30, 1996, the defendant sought production of all records in the custody of the department and MSPCC regarding the two alleged victims.
The purpose of the Bishop protocol is the achievement of a proper balancing of defendants’ constitutional right to examine and present all evidence relevant to their defense and society’s interests (expressed in the form of statutory privileges) in maintaining confidential relationships. See Bishop, supra at 176. Because it is premised on a balancing of these competing interests, Bishop a priori requires the claim and identification of a privilege. Id. at 181. See note 3, supra. See also Fuller, supra at 224-226 (discussing importance of privilege at stake). Without a claim of privilege, the basis for denying a defendant access to records that may contain information relevant to his defense may not exist. We therefore have made clear that a judge cannot bypass the initial privilege analysis on which the Bishop procedure depends, see Commonwealth v. Oliveira, 438 Mass.
In this case, there was no apparent claim of privilege by either the holder of the privilege or any of the providers of the counselling services, and the judge made no finding of what, if any, privilege applied to the records. The Commonwealth’s assertion at the motion hearing that “most of” the records were probably protected by the social worker privilege as set forth in G. L. c. 112, § 135B, is inadequate to fill this gap. To begin with, the social worker privilege is not one that the Commonwealth can assert.
The Commonwealth argues that a finding that the social worker privilege applied to the records can be inferred in the motion judge’s ruling. This is not supported by the record. The
Finally, the Commonwealth contends that, regardless of privilege, the defendant’s proffer failed to surmount the relevance threshold necessary for the production of records generally, and that the judge therefore properly denied the defendant’s motion on that ground.
Therefore, we remand the case to the Superior Court for a further hearing at which the judge must determine whether a privilege applies to any of the records at issue.
So ordered.
We acknowledge the amicus briefs filed by the Committee for Public Counsel Services, the American Civil Liberties Union, and the Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers; the Victim Rights Law Center; the Massachusetts Bar Association; the National Crime Victim Law Institute, the
In support of the motion, the defendant’s attorney submitted an affidavit based on her review of videotaped statements by the victims, grand jury testimony, deposition testimony of the defendant’s wife, and written reports of the victims’ somewhat differing statements provided to her by the prosecutor in discovery. In the affidavit the attorney asserted that the context in which the children interacted with the Department of Social Services (department) and the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (MSPCC) — after the defendant and his wife had separated before their divorce, while the children were living with the wife — indicated that their accusations of sexual abuse might be unreliable, and specifically alleged that the accusations may have been motivated by animosity between the defendant and his wife during their divorce, that they arose “in response to repeated and somewhat leading questions,” and that the department and MSPCC records might therefore contain “evidence of coaching or inconsistent statements.”
We set forth the judge’s written decision:
“The defendant here is accused of molesting [the children] and asks this court to order production of [department] and counselling records generated since the children ‘disclosed’ the alleged abuse. Certain of the children’s confidential psychiatric records have already been provided to defense counsel including the medical records prepared by the psychiatrist to whom the children originally made their disclosures. This prior disclosure of records suggests that concerns as to the confidentiality of the records requested have less urgency than the
To summarize, Commonwealth v. Bishop, supra, requires that, “[i]f the complainant or the keeper of the target records refuses to produce [them] because of a statutory privilege,” the judge shall “decide whether the records are privileged,” and in so doing “shall reduce his or her decision, and the reasons therefor, to writing, with specific reference to the privilege or privileges claimed and found, if any” (stage 1). Id. at 181. On a finding of privilege, the defendant must demonstrate that the records are “likely to be relevant.” Id. at 182. If the defendant meets this burden, the judge will review the records in camera (stage 2). Id. at 182. The judge must then allow counsel access to the records he or she has determined are relevant for examination (stage 3). Id. at 182. Finally, if after examination of the documents, the defendant makes a sufficient showing of need, the records may be disclosed to the trier of fact (stages 4 and 5). Id. at 182-183.
Citing Pare v. Commonwealth, 420 Mass. 216, 218 (1995), the Appeals Court suggests that the Commonwealth’s ability to protect privileged records means that it may assert privilege in the first place. Commonwealth v. Pelosi, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 390, 394 (2002). See Pare v. Commonwealth, supra. This is not correct. There is a substantive difference between protecting records with respect to which a third party already has claimed a privilege and claiming a privilege on behalf of a third party. The ability to do the former neither requires nor suggests the ability to do the latter. See generally Commonwealth v. Oliveira, 438 Mass. 325, 337 n.13 (2002) (Oliveira).
The Appeals Court cited G. L. c. 112, §§ 135A and 135B, in reference to the social worker privilege. Commonwealth v. Pelosi, supra at 395. We note that § 135A addresses social workers’ general duty of confidentiality; the testimonial privilege that would be considered under the Bishop protocol is that set forth in § 135B. The social worker testimonial privilege is not self-executing. See Oliveira, supra at 330-331.
On appeal, the Commonwealth cites Commonwealth v. Wanis, 426 Mass. 639, 644-645 (1998), to support its argument that a defendant seeking “private but not privileged information [must make] a higher showing than mere relevance.” In that case, we required a defendant seeking certain records from the internal affairs division of a police department to show a “specific, good faith reason for believing that the information is relevant to a material issue in the criminal proceedings.” Id. We predicated this requirement on our recognition that an “internal affairs division investigation of police misconduct often requires the cooperation of people . . . who may be reluctant to provide information against a police officer,” and that the higher relevance threshold therefore would aid in “presenting] the integrity of the investigation.” Id. at 645. The Wanis case does not sweep as broadly as the Commonwealth suggests.
If the judge finds that an applicable privilege has been asserted, she also must determine whether it has been waived through the voluntary disclosure of other similar counselling records — an issue raised but not decided by the judge at the pretrial hearing and in her written ruling on the defendant’s motion, and disputed by members of the Appeals Court panel. See Commonwealth v. Pelosi, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 390, 395-398 (2002); id. at 407-411 (Brown, J„ dissenting).
The defendant additionally argues that the judge erroneously instructed the jury regarding the proper use of fresh complaint evidence, and that the Commonwealth committed various improprieties in closing argument, thus requiring us to reverse his convictions. Like the Appeals Court, Commonwealth v. Pelosi, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 390, 403 (2002), we conclude that these arguments are without merit.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring, with whom Sosman, J., joins). On the assumption that the Bishop-Fuller protocol (see Commonwealth v. Bishop, 416 Mass. 169, 181 [1993]; Commonwealth v. Fuller, 423 Mass. 216, 226 [1996]) continues to have any vitality, I concur with the result reached by the court. However, I adhere, as previously, to the view expressed by Justice Sosman, Commonwealth v. Sheehan, 435 Mass. 183, 194 (2001) (Sosman, J., concurring), that the protocol governing access to these types of records is “both unduly cumbersome and constitutionally flawed.”