COMMONWEALTH vs. JACQUELINE A. THURESON.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Middlesex
September 13, 1976. — November 23, 1976.
371 Mass. 387
Present: HENNESSEY, C.J., REARDON, QUIRICO, BRAUCHER, KAPLAN, & WILKINS, JJ.
Under this court‘s reasoning in Commonwealth v. 707 Main Corp., ante, 374 (1976), the provisions of
In proceedings under
In a criminal proceeding for knоwing dissemination of obscene material under
COMPLAINT received and sworn to in the Third District Court of Eastern Middlesex on October 21, 1974.
On appeal to the Superior Court the case was tried before Garbose, J., a District Court judge sitting under statutory authority.
The Suрreme Judicial Court granted a request for direct appellate review.
Charlotte Anne Perretta for the defendant.
Bonnie H. MacLeod-Griffin, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
HENNESSEY, C.J. The defendant was found guilty by а jury in the Superior Court after trial on a complaint that she violated
In September, 1974, a Cambridge police officer entered a bookstore advertising peep shows, observed six machine booths in the back of the store, apprоached the defendant at the front of the store for change with which to operate the machines, and deposited a quarter in one machine which thеn showed a brief film depicting explicit sexual conduct. Returning the next day with a search warrant, the officer questioned the defendant. She told him she had “a pretty good idea” what was in the machines but had never viewed them. When the defendant claimed she did not know for whom she worked, the officer arrested her. At trial, she testified thаt she had been hired two or three days before her arrest to act as cashier. In her few days of employment, she worked alone in the store and perfоrmed no tasks related to the peep show machines beyond making change. She had accepted this employment over the telephone from an acquaintance, because its flexible hours suited her needs as a mother. Although the defendant gave testimony on her understanding of “adult movies,” no evidence introduced indicated that she had ever viewed the contents of the peep show machines. The trial judge denied her motion for a directed verdict for insufficient evidence on knowledge. He also denied her motion to suppress the evidence seized in which she asserted that the search warrant was issued without probable cause and authorized a general search, and he denied her request for jury instructions on the type of knowledge necessary for criminal conviсtion under
The defendant contends first that
Our decision today in Commonwealth v. 707 Main Corp., ante, 374 (1976), disposes of the defendant‘s first contеntions. In that case we held that
However, in passing on the defendant‘s second contention we conclude that because the Commonwealth failed to meet its burden of proof on the issue of “knowing” dissemination as defined in
The prоsecution must prove that a defendant had knowledge of the contents of matter distributed in order constitutionally to convict a defendant of criminal dissemination of obscene materials, and may prove that knowledge by inference. Smith v. California, 361 U.S. 147, 153-154 (1959). The prosecution need not show that a defendant knew matter to be legally obscene in order to sustain its burden
The prosecution must produce evidence from which a jury could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had seen, or should have seen, or otherwise had knowledge of, the material‘s contents. In the present case such evidence was lacking. The defendant had worked in the bookstore fоr only a few days. Apparently no one called her attention to the contents of the machines at the back of the store. Her sole contact with them, a few days of changing money for their operation, was one of many tasks she had to perform. Although her statement that she had a “pretty good idea” of thе machines’ contents was of some significance, it does not lead reasonably to an inference that she had viewed or had reason to view, or otherwise had knowledge of, the contents. The reasonable inference from so few days’ employment, that she had neither the time nor a reason to view the machines’ contents, supports her testimony that she had not viewed the contents in fact. Thus, the prosecution failed to produce evidence sufficient to support a finding of her knowledge or reason to know of the films’ contents. The duration of her employment, absent concrete evidence of knowledge,
So ordered.
KAPLAN, J., concurring in the result, refers to his dissenting oрinion in Commonwealth v. 707 Main Corp., ante, 374, 386 (1976), decided this day.
