COMMONWEALTH vs. JAVAINE WATSON.
SJC-13850
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
July 9, 2026
Suffоlk. April 8, 2026. - July 9, 2026. Present: Budd, C.J., Gaziano, Kafker, Wendlandt, Georges, Dewar, & Wolohojian, JJ.
Homicide. Cellular Telephone. Evidence, Scientific test, Identification, Presumptions and burden of proof. Practice, Criminal, Postconviction relief, Presumptions and burden of proof. Evidence, Relevancy and materiality. Practice, Criminal, Discovery. Statute, Construction. Identification. Words, “Evidence.”
Indictment found and returned in the Superior Court Department on March 14, 2014.
Following review by this court, 487 Mass. 156 (2021), postconviction motions for scientific or forensic аnalysis, filed on May 1 and December 4, 2023, were heard by Michael J. Pineault, J.
A request for leave to appeal was allowed by Kafker, J., in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk.
Darcy Jordan, Assistant District Attorney (Ian Polumbaum, Assistant District Attorney, also present) for the Commonwealth.
Merritt Schnipper for the defendant.
M. Chris Fabricant, of New York, Claudia Leis Bolgen, Kevin S. Prussia, James M. Lyons, Kerry G. Matlack, Radha Natarajan, Katharine Naples-Mitchell, & Suma V. Nair, for Massachusetts
WENDLANDT, J.
The Commonwealth contends that the defendant, Javine Watson, was not entitled to discovery under the act because it narrowly permits scientific testing of “physical” evidence for biological material and the defendant requested digital forensic
Consistent with this broad, remedial mandate, we have recognized that the act permits postconviction testing of biological material for DNA evidence, as well as other forensic testing of clothing, shell casings, and ballistics for evidence other than DNA. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Jenks, 487 Mass. 1032, 1034-1036 (2021) (reversing denial of
Concluding that the act permits digital forensic analysis of a cell phone, and further concluding that the Superior Court judge did not err in determining that the defendant showed by a preponderance of the evidence that a reasonably effective attorney would have sought the requested discovery and that the anticipated analysis has the potential to unearth evidence that is material to the defendant‘s identification as the perpetrator of the crime in the underlying case, we affirm the judge‘s allowance of the defendant‘s
1. Background.
We present the relevant factual background from the trial record, reserving certain details for later discussion.2
The footage showed a man, inferably Robertson, firing a handgun about ten times into the front driver‘s side window of the victim‘s car before fleeing the scene in a getaway vehicle -- a red Lincoln MKX, which the prosecution asserted the defendant was driving.3 The victim subsequently climbed over to the passenger‘s side seat and rolled out of the passenger door onto the sidewalk.
Roughly forty seconds after the first shooting, a second person, inferably Denton, walked toward the victim and shot him four times. A third person, inferably Bonner, accompanied Denton and kicked the victim befоre leaving the scene.
About an hour after the murder, police officers discovered the Lincoln, unoccupied and with the engine running, near where two of the codefendants were arrested. Inside were keys to the
Digital forensic analysis of the defendant‘s 6426 number showed the codefendants’ contact information and numerous communications between the defendant‘s cell phone and the cоdefendants’ cell phones in the month preceding the murder, including multiple calls on the days before and on the night of the shooting. Listed in the defendant‘s cell phone was the contact information for a phone number ending in 8764 (8764 number), which was registered to Robertson‘s former girlfriend.4
Digital forensic analysis of the 8764 number revealed that in the month preceding the murder, the 8764 number had 203 contacts with the defendant‘s 6426 number and 312 contacts with the cell phone of a key witness –- Nadira Amoroso; the
Specifically, Amoroso testified that she had been dating the defendant at the time of the murder; that, prior to the murder, the defendant had asked to borrow the Lincoln, which she had rented; that she had seen the defendant at the nightclub near the site of the shooting on the night оf the murder;5 that the morning after the murder, the defendant told her that he had abandoned the vehicle in an unknown driveway, fearing that he was being followed; and that during her relationship with the defendant she contacted him on both the 6426 number and the 8764 number registered to Robertson‘s former girlfriend. At trial, defense counsel maintained that Amoroso was in a relationship with Robertson and that her testimony, including her assertion that she had loaned the Lincoln to the defendant, was fabricated to protect Robertson. To support this theory, counsel focused on Amoroso‘s assertion that during her relationship with the defendant she contacted him on the 8764 number registered to Robertson‘s former girlfriend; specifically, counsel highlighted
When confronted with this extensive call history with the 8764 number, Amoroso dismissed counsel‘s suggestion that she was speaking with Robertson rather than the defendant, testifying that she did not know Robertson at all and could not identify him in the court room. In closing, the prosecution also combatting the defendant‘s theory that the 8764 number belonged to Robertson, suggesting that the defendant and Robertson may have been “changing up” their cell phones and highlighting Amoroso‘s testimony, including her assertion that she contacted the defendant on the 8764 number and that the defendant had two cell phones. The jury convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree on theories of deliberate premeditation and extreme atrocity or cruеlty. The defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the grounds that “Amoroso perjured herself and that the government was well aware of that,” as she “had no relationship with [the defendant] whatsoever.” The trial judge denied the motion. In April 2021,
2. G. L. c. 278A motions.
In May 2023, the defendant filed a motion pursuant to
In December 2023, the defendant filed a second motion pursuant to
In April 2024, the motion judge, who was not the trial judge, concluded that the defendant had met the threshold showing required under
At the evidentiary hearing, the sole witness was the defendant‘s digital forensics expert. The expert testified that digital forensic analysis of a cell phone is a multistep process involving proper seizure of the physical device, overcoming password protection to decrypt cell phone content, and
Following the expert‘s testimony, in its posthearing memorandum, the Commonwealth conceded that “digital forensic analysis ([the defendant‘s expert‘s] field) is a type of forensic science” and that “digital forensics involves scientific expertise.” Nonetheless, relying on Commonwealth v. Cronin, 495 Mass. 170, 178-181 (2025), the Commonwealth argued that the cell phone data extraction sought by the defendant “falls outside the ‘forensic analysis’ contemplated by c. 278A” because an extraction report “can be generated by a layperson with basic training and read by anyone.”
In May 2025, the judge allowed the defendant‘s motions for forensic analysis of the five cell phones, concluding, inter
3. Discussion.
a. Standards of review.
“We review a question of statutory interpretation de novo.” Wade III, 475 Mass. at 60. Because the motion judge was not the trial judge, we also review de novo his rulings that the defendant satisfied
b. Scope of permissible “analysis.”
On appeal, the Commonwealth does not press precisely the same arguments it marshalled before the motion judge. Instead, it principally contends that the term “analysis” as used in the act is limited to “laboratory testing” of what it describes as “physical evidence,” which it further asserts is limited to “tangible evidence capable of being handled, preserved, consumed, degraded, or destroyed” during testing. At oral argument, the Commonwealth further clarified its position, contending that
In construing the plain lаnguage, “we must strive to give effect to each word . . . so that no part will be inoperative or superfluous” (citation omitted). Commonwealth v. Fleury, 489 Mass. 421, 427 (2022). And “[i]f the words used are not otherwise defined . . . , we afford them their plain and ordinary meaning.” Matter of E.C., 479 Mass. 113, 118 (2018).
Here, the Legislature defined the term “analysis” as “the process by which a forensic or scientific technique is applied
i. Forensic or scientific technique.
We need not dwell long on the question whether digital extraction of data on the sought cell phones, as described by the defendant‘s expert, involves the application of a “forensic or scientific technique” because the Commonwealth conceded that “digital forensic analysis” of the type contemplated by the defendant‘s expert is a type of “forensic science” involving “scientific expertise.” The Commonwealth presses the argument that, despite its concession, our decision in Cronin, 495 Mass. at 178-181, compels a contrary conclusion. We disagree.
In Cronin, 495 Mass. at 178-179, we concluded that a lay witness, such as a police officer trained in the proper use of a digital forensics tool, can testify to the steps he or she personally performed to obtain an extraction report using the tool. We did not consider the act, much less the question whether cell phone extraction involves application of forensic
ii. Evidence.
We next consider the Commonwealth‘s principal argument оn appeal -- that the requested digital
The sought cell phones and their digital contents, which include, inter alia, call logs, text message logs, location information, and information from cell phone applications, fall comfortably within the scope of “evidence.” See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Carleton, 497 Mass. 11, 27-28 (2026) (considering as evidence photographs retrieved using digital
The Commonwealth‘s argument that the “structure” of
Nor does the Commonwealth‘s construction of “evidence” find support in
position that DNA extracted from a physical item, such as a bloody sock, is any more “physical” than the data extracted from a cell phone. Cf. 1 M.R. Arkfeld, Electronic Discovery and Evidence § 2.5(F) (2025) (listing types of data stored on cell phones and external media storage devices, including call logs, pictures, and GPS location data); Withers, Electronically Stored Information: The December 2006 Amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 4 Nw. J. Tech. & Intell. Prop. 171, 174 (2006) (“electronically stored information is replicated on media in various physical locations“).
To the extent the Commonwealth‘s position is that the act is limited to testing for DNA or similar biological evidence, we disagree. The act contemplates the application of forensic or scientific techniques to “evidence or biological material” (emphasis added).
Notably, the Commonwealth was the forty-ninth State to enact legislation allowing for postconviction testing. See Wade II, 467 Mass. at 509 & n.15. In determining to permit postconviction analysis using forensic or scientific techniques applied tо “evidence” or “biological materials,” the Legislature chose to enact a broader remedial scheme rather than adopt the more limited enactments from other States, which expressly limited postconviction discovery to DNA testing of biological material.14 See id. at 509 (noting that Massachusetts, as forty-ninth State to enact postconviction testing law, “set[] a far
The Commonwealth posits that if digital forensic analysis of cell phones is permitted by the act, “every few weeks, [a] defendant would meet the requirements of
c. Allowance of motion. i. Reasonably effective counsel.
The Commonwealth next maintains that the defendant is not entitled to the requested analysis because he did not satisfy
The Commonwealth does not contest the motion judge‘s findings, which are amply supported by the record. The defendant‘s principal defense at trial was that Amoroso, who provided key testimony linking the defendant to planning the shooting, provided false testimony against the defendant to protect Robertson, with whom she was in a relationship. Examining the five cell phones, which were known to belong to Robertson in the months immediately before and immediately after the murder, to uncover information connecting Amorosо and Robertson and thus potentially undermine Amoroso‘s testimony that she did not know (or even recognize) Robertson, falls
Instead, the Commonwealth argues that the motion judge erred because
ii. Analysis material to identification.
The Commonwealth further maintains that the motion judge erred in concluding that the defendant satisfied
Here, records show hundreds of calls between the 8764 number -- the cell phone number registered to Robertson‘s fоrmer girlfriend, which Robertson had canceled following the murder and which plausibly was being used by Robertson -- and at least three women with whom Robertson had a relationship. Trial counsel relied on these records to mount the defendant‘s principal defense -- that Amoroso, the only witness to testify that the defendant knowingly participated in an advanced plan to kill the victim by borrowing the Lincoln, fabricated her testimony to protect Robertson. The requested discovery, which may reveal contacts between Robertson and Amoroso on his other cell phones in the months preceding and following the murder, thus has the potential to uncover communications between Robertson and Amoroso, see Clark, 472 Mass. at 135-136 (“Legislature‘s use of the word ‘potential’ in
Thus, contrary to the Commonwealth‘s contentions, the requested analysis would not provide “mere” impeachment evidence. Evidence that Amoroso and the defendant did not in fact have numerous telephone calls together would “challenge the Commonwealth‘s account of the sequence of events” -- namely, that the defendant was a full participant in the advanced planning of the murder, including by asking Amoroso if he could borrow the Lincoln, which the Commonwealth alleged the defendant used to bring Robertson to the location of the shooting and then assist Robertson in fleeing the scene. Ramos, 490 Mass. at 828. See Watson, 487 Mass. at 162 (“For murder in the first degree both under the theory of deliberate premeditation and under the theory of extreme atrocity or cruelty, to prove the defendant guilty as a joint venturer, the Commonwealth had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant knowingly participated in the commission of the crime charged, and that the defendant had
The Commonwealth claims that the discovery of communications between Amoroso and Robertson would not be “material” to identifying the defendant as required by the act because other evidence implicated him in the joint venture -- specifically, the presence of his fingerprints and personal belongings in the Lincoln, and the call logs showing numerous contacts between him and his codefendants in the month leading up to the murder and on the night of the murder. That other evidence may pose a challenge for the defendant to successfully move for a new trial, see Commonwealth v. Gaines, 494 Mass. 525, 539 (2024), but it does not govern his ability to access discovery under the act, which was intended to “provide increased and expeditious access to scientific or forensic testing,” “the results of which subsequently might suppоrt a motion for a new trial,” Wade II, 467 Mass. at 505, 509. See Ramos, 490 Mass. at 824 (“we have emphasized that defendants need not demonstrate that the requested testing could result in evidence that would justify a new trial“); Commonwealth v. Linton, 483 Mass. 227, 242 (2019) (“The requirements of
4. Conclusion.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the allowance of the defendant‘s motions for postconviction forensic analysis under
So ordered.
Notes
“(i) the requested analysis had not yet been developed at the time of the conviction;
“(ii) the results of the requested analysis were not admissible in the courts of the commonwealth at the time of the conviction;
“(iii) the moving party and the moving party‘s attorney were not aware of and did not have reason to be aware of the existence of the evidence or biological material at the time of the underlying case and conviction;
“(iv) the moving party‘s attorney in the underlying case was aware at the time of the conviction of the existence of the evidence or biological material, the results of the requested analysis were admissible as evidence in courts of the commonwealth, a reasonably effective attorney would have sought the analysis and either the moving party‘s attorney failed to seek the analysis or the judge denied the request; or
“(v) the evidence or biological material was otherwise unavailable at the time of the conviction.”
