A Superior Court judge dismissed an indictment which charged the defendant with armed robbery. Based upon a transcript of the Commonwealth’s presentment to the grand jury, the judge concluded that there was insufficient evidence to establish probable cause. Commonwealth v. McCarthy,
From the evidence presented to the grand jury, the relevant background can be summarized as follows: On March 17, 1999, at about 4:30 a.m., a woman, later identified as the defendant, entered the Store 24 located at 115 Main Street in Peabody. Michael Stanton, the sole clerk on duty, stood opposite her at a counter and asked how he could help her. She replied that she needed one hundred fifty dollars. Unflinchingly, he told her that
Two Peabody police officers rapidly responded to his call. After speaking with Stanton and obtaining a description of the getaway vehicle, they found it parked a short distance away. A check on the registration indicated that it belonged to the defendant. She was arrested on the street a short time later. One of the arresting officers, who had recognized her from high school, gave her Miranda warnings. The defendant eventually told him that she “was using cocaine” and gave that as a reason for her needing cash. Soon thereafter at a “show up,” Stanton identified the defendant as the robber and the vehicle as the same as the car driven by her on the occasion. At the time of her arrest, neither cash nor any weapon was found on her person.
So far as material, G. L. c. 265, § 17, provides “[wjhoever, being armed with a dangerous weapon, assaults another and robs, steals, or takes from his person money . . . which may be the subject of larceny shall be punished.” The statute, rather obviously, proscribes an aggravated form of common-law robbery and is to be distinguished by the aggravating factor of being armed with a dangerous weapon and not by the material elements comprising the crime of robbery. The standard definition of “dangerous weapon” includes those items that are by their nature capable of causing serious injury or death, but also includes those items that are used or displayed in such a way that they reasonably appear capable of causing serious injury or death. Commonwealth v. Tarrant, 367 Mass. 411, 416-417 (1975). Commonwealth v. Tevlin,
Obtaining an indictment under the statute here requires that the grand jury “[hear] sufficient evidence ... to establish the
Assuming a proper identification of the defendant by Stanton and some objectively menacing conduct undertaken with the intent to put Stanton in fear or apprehension to facilitate the theft, the question remains whether there was probable cause to believe that the defendant was armed with a dangerous weapon at the time of the robbery. Or as the defense has urged and the judge ruled, was there nothing presented to the grand jury that warrants the inference that the defendant had a gun?
In the Massachusetts decisions to date applying G. L. c. 265, § 17, armed robbery may be made out by proof that the defendant was in possession of a weapon in the course of a robbery but did not display or use it. See Commonwealth v. Chapman,
Here, what the defendant said, by itself, may not be sufficient for a petit jury to draw an inference that she, in fact, possessed a weapon. This aspect troubled the motion judge who concluded, on the basis of Commonwealth v. Howard,
A motion to dismiss an indictment based on evidentiary irregularities before a grand jury does not permit “a court [to] review the competency or sufficiency of the evidence.” Commonwealth v. O’Dell,
The order of the Superior Court is reversed, and the case is remanded to the Superior Court where the indictment is to be reinstated.
So ordered.
Notes
In Commonwealth v. Howard,
In an earlier case, Commonwealth v. Delgado,
In Commonwealth v. Powell,
