The defendant appeals from an order denying his motion seeking to vacate his conviction on a charge of conspiracy to violate drug laws, entered as part of a plea agreement, based on a claim that it is duplicative of his conviction on a charge of distribution of cocaine. We affirm the order, as the two charges are neither legally nor, on the recitation of facts supporting the guilty pleas in the present case, factually duplicative.
Duplicative convictions violate the double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. “The traditional rule in Massachusetts, as embodied in Morey v. Commonwealth,
A conspiracy charge nonetheless may be duplicative of the substantive offense if, in the circumstances of a particular case, both are in actuality the same offense. See Commonwealth v. D'Amour, 428 Mass, at 747-749 (“entire crime of conspiracy is subsumed by the crime of accessory before the fact to murder on a hiring theory”). The defendant contends that the present case presents such circumstances, since (he asserts) the recitation of facts furnished by the Commonwealth in support of his guilty pleas described no agreement other than as implied by the defendant’s participation in the sale of cocaine that was the basis for the distribution charge. In summary form, those facts include the following. On April 1, 2009, an informant working with the Berkshire County drug task force who had infiltrated the “Joe Davis narcotics distribution ring” contacted one Wisdom Ellerbee to request a purchase of cocaine. Ellerbee indicated that he had cocaine for sale and designated a place for the informant to meet him and complete the sale. The informant went to the designated location, and a vehicle arrived. Ellerbee was the driver of the vehicle, and the defendant was the front passenger. Ellerbee handed a bag of cocaine to the informant. After some discussion concerning the weight of the cocaine and its cost, the informant handed the bag to the defendant, whereupon the defendant removed some cocaine from the bag and handed it back to the informant. The informant then handed money to the defendant as payment for the cocaine. The transaction was recorded on audio and videotape, using a recording device worn by the informant.
According to the defendant, the present case resembles the circumstances in Commonwealth v. Cook,
In the present case, by contrast, the evidence recited at the plea hearing tends to imply the existence of an agreement between the defendant and Ellerbee, formed prior to the sale itself, to travel to the designated meeting place in order
The order denying the defendant’s motion to vacate his conviction on the charge of conspiracy is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
Of course, “[p]roof of a conspiracy may rest entirely or mainly on circumstantial evidence.” Commonwealth v. Cook, supra at 671.
Because the facts contained in the record allow us to dispose of the defendant’s claim without further evidentiary inquiry, we need not consider or address the question left unanswered in Commonwealth v. Negron,
