The defendant was found guilty by a jury of assault and battery, indecent assault and battery, and breaking and entering a dwelling house in the nighttime with the intent to commit a felony. See G. L. c. 265, § 13A, § 13H, and c. 266, § 15, respectively. On appeal, 1 he claims error in the trial judge’s denial of his motion to suppress his identification and in the jury instructions. We affirm.
I. Facts Relevant to the Motion.
The facts are drawn from the judge’s findings, which the defendant does not challenge, supplemented where appropriate by the evidence presented at the hearing on the motion to suppress. At about 12:45 a.m., July 25, 1983, Cambridge police Officers Sullivan and Walsh were on patrol duty when they received a radio call that a woman’s screams had been heard coming from the second floor of 67 Dana Street. Upon their arrival at that address, the officers went to the second floor, where they were met by the victim. She told the police that, shortly after she had gone to bed, she heard a noise, a light went on, and a man was standing in her bedroom. She struggled with him for several minutes, and he punched her in the groin and upper part of her body. 2 The victim was able to free herself from her assailant, run to her window, and scream.
Sullivan testified that the victim described her assailant as a dark-complexioned, white male with brown hair, about eighteen years old, five feet six inches tall, about 155 pounds, and wearing a dark jacket. The victim was taken to a hospital, and the officers resumed their patrol duty.
Two hours later, about 2:45 a.m., Sullivan and Walsh received a radio call that a suspicious person had been reported at the rear of a dwelling house at 1 Dana Street, approximately three blocks away from the earlier call at 67 Dana Street. This call was also heard by Officers Hall and Santos, who were first
When Sullivan and Walsh arrived at the scene, just moments after Hall and Santos, Sullivan observed that the man who had been apprehended by Hall was a dark-skinned white male of about 170 pounds, five feet ten inches tall, in his early twenties, and wearing a dark bluejacket. 3 Hall “patted down” the defendant and found a packet of what he believed to be marijuana. The defendant was arrested for possession of marijuana and peeping and spying. 4
In the meantime, based upon his observations of the defendant as he was being apprehended by Hall and Santos, Sullivan returned to 67 Dana Street to speak with the victim and learn if she would be able to identify her assailant. He picked her up at about 3:00 a.m., and called back to Hall who, with Santos and the defendant, had driven his cruiser to a nursing home parking lot across from 1 Dana Street. Upon learning that Sullivan was returning with the victim, Hall removed the
Sullivan, the victim, and a male companion, pulled up within minutes, got out of the cruiser, and walked towards the defendant. When the victim was about ten to fifteen feet from the defendant, she became upset, backed away, said that he was her assailant, covered her face with her hands, and turned to her companion. The officers pressed her, stating that she had to be one hundred percent certain. The victim responded that she was.
The judge concluded that, when Hall saw the defendant “peering into the window of a house in the early morning hours with his pants open and in disarray,” he had probable cause to arrest him. See
Commonwealth
v.
Gullick,
II. The Identification.
The defendant argues that, although his presence at the rear basement window in the early morning hours was sufficient to justify an investigatory stop of the type authorized under
Terry
v.
Ohio,
Whether a given set of facts is “sufficient in themselves to warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that an offense has been or is being committed,”
Commonwealth
v.
Hason,
Here the defendant was arrested, irrespective of the official designation of his acts, because he was standing at a rear, uncurtained, apartment window, at an early morning hour, with his trousers open, wearing no underwear, and his hands at his groin. Putting aside and disregarding “peeping and spying,” the offense of open and gross lewdness and lascivious behavior is a felony. See G. L. c. 272, .§ 16. 5 The judge correctly concluded that there was probable cause to arrest the defendant. 6
b.
The victim’s confrontation.
The one-on-one confrontation of the defendant by the victim was hot impermissibly suggestive. Although disfavored, such confrontations have been held to be permissible where, as here, they occur promptly after the crime. See
Commonwealth
v.
Barnett,
Even were we to conclude that the confrontation was impermissibly suggestive, we would not disturb the judge’s denial of the motion. All the indicia of reliability of the victim’s identification were satisfied. See
Manson
v.
Brathwaite,
III. The Jury Instructions.
The defendant claims that two errors infect the judge’s instructions to the jury: (1) that the instructions on the crime of indecent assault and battery were so vague that the jury were free to base a conviction on conduct not contemplated by c. 265, § 13H, see
Commonwealth
v.
Brattman,
a.
Indecent assault and battery.
The jury were charged on the elements of an indecent assault and battery as a lesser included offense within the indictment charging the defendant
“An indecent assault and battery is essentially an act or series of acts which are fundamentally offensive to contemporary moral values. No particular definition is given by the statute for what constitutes the crime of indecent assault and battery. It has often been said, however, that it is behavior which the common sense of society would regard as immodest, immoral and improper.
“Thus, in order to prove indecent assault and battery, the Commonwealth must therefore prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed an intentional unprivileged and indecent touching of the victim.”
The defendant constructs the following argument. If “indecent” assault and battery is to have any meaning, it must be construed as involving a “sexual touching.” Cf.
Commonwealth
v.
Burke,
In the course of their deliberations, the jury asked the judge several questions,
8
all of which indicate that they had focused upon the victim’s testimony that the defendant had inserted
We will not attempt to analyze the jury’s reasoning in reaching their verdicts. The sole question before us is whether they were correctly instructed. There is no error in the judge’s statement of the law, and a limit to the type of conduct which could be found to be “indecent” was furnished by the evidence of the defendant’s “particular acts,”
Commonwealth
v.
Brattman,
b. Coercion. On March 23, 1984, the court convened at 9:30 a.m. After a lobby conference, the judge instructed the jury. In the course of the day, the jury sent several questions to the judge. Deliberations ended at 8:10 p.m., to be resumed the next day at 9:30 a.m.
In the course of their deliberations the next morning, the jurors sent their final question to the judge. See note 7,
supra.
The judge concluded that “they are splitting hairs” and that the questions demonstrated that “they are at an impasse.” She answered the question and then gave a supplementary charge in accordance with
Commonwealth
v.
Tuey,
For substantially the same reasons as those set out in paragraph 1(a) of
Commonwealth
v.
Connors,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
The defendant does not appeal from his conviction on the indictment charging him with assault and battery.
At trial, the victim testified that the man also “jammed two to three fingers into” her vagina.
A police booking sheet was marked for identification at the suppression hearing. The description of the defendant appearing on the booking sheet reflects that he is a black male with black hair, five feet, eleven inches tall, was then 160 pounds and twenty-three years of age, and was wearing a dark blue sweat jacket with yellow stripes on the sleeves.
By way of an addendum to the Commonwealth’s brief, we are informed that peeping and spying is a violation of Cambridge City Ordinance § 13-7, which provides: “No person other than an officer of the law acting in the performance of his legal duty shall enter upon the premises of any person with the intention of peeping into a dwelling or spying upon any person therein.” The defendant filed a motion to strike the addendum, and for reasons to be discussed infra, that motion is allowed.
The defendant argues that at the hearing on the motion to suppress no evidence was adduced to show whether anyone in the apartment, or elsewhere, had observed the defendant’s condition. “To convict a defendant of open and gross lewdness and lascivious behavior, the Commonwealth must prove that the conduct is committed in ‘such a way as to produce alarm’ or shock.”
Commonwealth
v.
Fitta,
We need not consider the search of the defendant and the seizure of marijuana. Those questions are irrelevant to the validity of the defendant’s arrest. See
Commonwealth
v.
Weiss,
This instruction, because of questions by the jury during their deliberations, was given three times. Each time the defendant lodged an objection couched in terms of the unconstitutional vagueness of § 13H, a claim related to but somewhat different from that now argued. The Commonwealth does not argue that the defendant did not take a proper objection for the argument now being made, and we will construe the defendant’s objection based on “vagueness” in the broad sense. Therefore, we do not hold the defendant to the more strict standard of review. See
Commonwealth
v.
Freeman,
“Does the state have the obligation to prove that the defendant intended
“Does rape entail anything more than lack of consent and penetration?”
“For the elements of indecent assault and battery to be satisfied, does the state need to prove that the intent of the assault was indecent; or is a finding on our part that the assault was intended and the assault is indecent sufficient?”
