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SJC-10709
COMMONWEALTH vs. DEREK WOOLLAM.
Bristol. October 6, 2017. - December 13, 2017. Present: Gants, C.J., Gaziano, Budd, Cypher, & Kafker, JJ. Homicide. Constitutional Law, Grand jury, Assistance of counsel, Admissions and confessions, Voluntariness of
statement. Due Process of Law, Grand jury proceedings, Assistance of counsel. Grand Jury. Cellular Telephone. Evidence, Grand jury proceedings, Authentication, State of mind, Motive, Consciousness of guilt, Bias of government witness, Prior misconduct, Admissions and confessions, Voluntariness of statement. Witness, Bias. Practice, Criminal, Capital case, Grand jury proceedings, Assistance of counsel, Conduct of prosecutor, Admissions and confessions, Voluntariness of statement.
Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court Department on March 29, 2007, and April 17, 2008.
A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by Robert J. Kane, J.; the cases were tried before Barbara A. Dortch- Okara, J.; and a motion for a new trial, filed on May 29, 2013, was heard by Renee P. Dupuis, J.
David H. Mirsky (Joanne Petito also present) for the defendant.
Yul-mi Cho, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
BUDD, J. In February, 2009, a jury convicted the defendant, Derek Woollam, of murder in the first degree on a theory of deliberate premeditation in connection with the shooting death of John Oliveira in July, 2006. [1] In this appeal, the defendant asserts error in the unauthorized presence of police officers in the grand jury room during the presentation of witness testimony in support of the indictments against him, as well as the admission of certain evidence at trial due to ineffective assistance of counsel and prosecutorial misconduct. He also seeks relief under G. L. c. 278, § 33E. After full consideration of the record and the defendant's arguments, we affirm his convictions and the denial of his motion for a new trial, and we decline to grant extraordinary relief pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E.
Background. We summarize the evidence that the jury could have found, reserving certain details for discussion of specific issues.
1. The drug operation. In 2006, John Oliveira ran a large-scale drug operation out of a studio apartment in a duplex in Swansea. At the time of his death, he had two "employees": the defendant, who delivered marijuana to customers and collected the money; and Dylan Hodgate, who broke down the *3 larger quantities of marijuana and repackaged them into smaller bags. Oliveira's girl friend lived in the other apartment in the duplex.
Oliveira had several rules in connection with his drug business, all designed to protect the operation and minimize detection. For instance, the exterior doors were always to be kept locked, no others could be brought to the house, and one of the four of them was always to be present at the house. Further, the defendant, the girl friend, and Hodgate were prohibited from being under the influence of drugs.
In January or February of 2006, Oliveira's girl friend discovered that the defendant was using drugs, and began procuring pills from him. The defendant and Oliveira's girl friend agreed not to tell Oliveira about their use of pills. Over the course of several months, the relationship between Oliveira and the defendant deteriorated. Oliveira complained to his girl friend that the defendant was "never on time," was "a slacker," and "wasn't doing what he was supposed to do."
2. The shooting. On July 4, 2006, Oliveira discovered a text message from his girl friend on the defendant's cellular telephone (cellphone) asking the defendant for pills. Oliveira was very upset and told the defendant, "You broke the rules." When the defendant lied and said that the pills were likely for the girl friend's cousin, Oliveira said that he would speak to *4 the girl friend that night and would "let [the defendant ] know" after that. Oliveira sent a text message to his girl friend to let her know that he was "pissed," and that he would be coming by the apartment to discuss the matter, warning her "not [to] lie."
Later that night, although Oliveira and his girl friend had seemingly resolved the matter, he was still angry with the defendant. At approximately 12:15 A.M., Oliveira received a telephone call and told his girl friend that he was going to pick up Hodgate and would be right back. He never returned.
The last call made from Oliveira's cellphone was to Hodgate's cellphone at 1:28 A.M. At approximately 1:43 A.M., a Swansea police officer on routine patrol saw a black Mercury Sable (the make, model, and color of the defendant's automobile) pull out of the driveway of the house with two people inside.
The next morning, Oliveira's girl friend saw Oliveira's automobile in the driveway. The interior door to the studio apartment was locked, and there was no answer when she knocked. This was unusual because Hodgate was normally supposed to be there during the day. She was unable to reach Oliveira, the defendant, or Hodgate by telephone despite many attempts over the course of the day. When she returned later that afternoon, Oliveira's automobile was in the same spot. When she knocked on the studio apartment door, there was still no answer, and she *5 noticed that the television inside was abnormally loud. Eventually, she discovered that the exterior back door to the studio apartment was unlocked. When she entered, she found Oliveira's body lying in a pool of blood. He had been shot several times and was cold to the touch.
An autopsy revealed that Oliveira had been shot four times. Two shots to the head were fatal: one bullet entered through the left cheek, and a second entered through the right forehead. The location and path of a third bullet, which entered the lower right side of his torso, was consistent with Oliveira having been shot while lying on his back. The fourth bullet grazed the back of his head.
3. The aftermath. Soon after Oliveira's girl friend discovered the body, the defendant arrived. Before the police were called, the defendant removed marijuana in large duffel bags from the studio apartment and left with them in his black four-door automobile.
Over the next few days, the defendant enlisted help from others to distribute the marijuana that came from the studio apartment, and to clear out a storage locker in his name containing guns and ammunition. He also removed the batteries and subscriber identity module (SIM) cards from his cellphones to avoid being tracked. He admitted to one of the people who assisted him, Michael Pacheco, that he killed the victim because *6 he believed that the victim was going to kill him after learning about the pills, and that Oliveira suspected that the defendant was having an affair with Oliveira's girl friend. One to two weeks later, the defendant and Pacheco went together to burn a bag containing the sneakers and clothes from the night of the shooting.
4. The defendant's case. The defendant, who testified at trial, denied killing the victim. He also attacked the credibility of the Commonwealth's witnesses and cast doubt on the thoroughness of the police investigation, as well as the conclusiveness of the physical evidence, noting that the Commonwealth did not produce incriminating fingerprint or deoxyribonucleic acid evidence. Finally, he also raised the possibility of a third-party culprit, which included Hodgate, Mexican drug dealers, and a tall, white male who hung around a local bar.
Discussion. The issues that the defendant raises in his direct appeal are the same ones he raised in his motion for a new trial. He argues that the presence of investigating police officers in the grand jury room during witness testimony resulted in structural error requiring the reversal of his convictions, and that it was ineffective assistance for his counsel to fail to move to dismiss the indictments. He further claims ineffective assistance in trial counsel's failure to *7 object to the admission of certain cellphone record evidence, failure to object to the admission of evidence of his bad character, and failure to rebut the false testimony of a cooperating witness. [2] Finally, the defendant claims that the admission of statements he made during an interview with police violated his Miranda rights. We examine each claim in turn.
1. Unauthorized police presence in the grand jury room. During the Commonwealth's presentation to the grand jury in support of indictments against the defendant, one or both of two police officers involved in the investigation were present in the grand jury room for most, if not all, of the witnesses' testimony. The defendant contends that the error, conceded by the Commonwealth, requires not only the vacatur of his convictions but also the dismissal of the indictments under the United States Constitution and the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights.
The presence of an unauthorized person before a grand jury
will void an indictment where a defendant challenges that
indictment prior to trial. See Commonwealth v. Holley, 476
Mass. 114, 119 (2016); Commonwealth v. Pezzano,
Here, as in Holley, the defendant has not demonstrated that
the presence of unauthorized parties in the grand jury room led
to a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice. Id. at
120. He has not alleged that the presence of the police
officers caused grand jury witnesses to feel "coerced or
intimidated." Id. Many of the witnesses before the grand jury
were also witnesses at trial, where they were subject to the
defendant's cross-examination, and none of the grand jury
testimony was admitted substantively at trial. Finally, the
petit jury convicted the defendant based on the standard of
beyond a reasonable doubt -- a much more stringent standard than
the probable cause standard required for an indictment. See
United States v. Mechanik,
2. Cellphone records. The defendant claims that his trial
counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the admission
of a variety of cellphone records, including records of call
metadata,
[3]
text messages, and a summary chart. The defendant
cannot show that his counsel's failure to object led to a
substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice because the
records were admissible. See Wright,
First, the cellphone call logs were introduced at trial to
show that the defendant did not make calls to the victim after
his death. These call logs constitute computer-generated
records. See Commonwealth v. Thissell,
Given that the call logs at issue do not present hearsay
concerns, their admissibility depends on whether those records
were properly authenticated. See Mass. G. Evid. § 901(a) (2017)
("[t]o satisfy the requirement of authenticating or identifying
an item of evidence, the proponent must produce evidence
sufficient to support a finding that the item is what the
proponent claims it is"). See also Thissell,
Second, the text messages, which were offered to show proof
of motive for the killing, were admissible under the state of
mind exception to the hearsay rule, which "calls for admission
of evidence of a murder victim's state of mind as proof of the
defendant's motive to kill the victim when . . . there also is
evidence that the defendant was aware of that state of mind at
the time of the crime and would be likely to respond to it."
Commonwealth v. Tassinari,
Finally, the summary chart was admissible as an accurate
compilation of underlying records that had been admitted in
evidence. See Commonwealth v. Carnes,
3. Character evidence. The defendant argues that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to improper "bad character" evidence presented via Oliveira's girl friend, *12 who testified about the change in the defendant's demeanor when he was abusing pills:
Q.: "Now, did you notice some change in [the defendant's] behavior in the months prior to John Oliveira's death?" . . .
A.: "He seemed to have a different demeanor. I always knew Derek as being very laid back, very friendly, very polite, very respectful. After a little while of him using I noticed he seemed to be a little more aggressive, not as laid-back as he used to be. He wouldn't keep up with himself like he used to, he used to always look nice, kind of almost let himself go, for lack of better words. So it was definitely a change in his demeanor and appearance." Q.: "Okay. And what about in his behavior?" A.: "Yes, he had become more aggressive, a little more violent. He just -- he just -- he wasn't Derek, he wasn't the Derek I had met."
The defendant claims that trial counsel should have objected to the testimony that he became "more aggressive, a little more violent," and "wasn't the Derek [she] had met."
"It is well settled that the prosecution may not introduce
evidence that a defendant previously has misbehaved, indictably
or not, for the purposes of showing his bad character or
propensity to commit the crime charged, but such evidence may be
admissible if relevant for some other purpose." Commonwealth v.
Helfant,
The Commonwealth argues that the testimony regarding the
changes in the defendant once he began using drugs helped to
demonstrate his motive for the killing.
[5]
Upon review, we
conclude that the point that the defendant's appearance and
demeanor deteriorated over time was amply made without the
additional testimony that he had become "a little more violent,"
which, while relevant, was more prejudicial than probative.
[6]
See
Commonwealth v. Montrond,
150, 157 (2015).
a. Motive. The Commonwealth presented evidence that by the time Oliveira was killed, the relationship between Oliveira and the defendant had soured considerably. Oliveira, who was already unhappy with the defendant's work habits, learned that *14 the defendant was giving Oliveira's girl friend pills. The defendant knew that breaking this rule crossed a line and could cause him to lose his position in the drug dealing operation or worse. Oliveira's girl friend testified that the defendant told her that, if Oliveira ever found out that the defendant was using drugs, Oliveira would "kill" him. The defendant himself testified that he and Oliveira argued in the early evening of July 4 about the pills, and again later that night before Oliveira was killed. The Commonwealth posited that the defendant killed Oliveira because he wanted to avoid losing his position or other negative consequences, and because he was tired of following Oliveira's rules. The defendant's feelings were laid bare when, upon telling one witness that Oliveira was dead, he told her that he hoped Oliveira would "rot[] in hell."
b. Opportunity and means. The jury also could have found that the defendant had both the opportunity and the means to commit the crime. Oliveira was shot and killed in the studio apartment, and there were no signs of a break-in. Only three people had keys to that apartment where the marijuana was kept: Oliveira, the defendant, and Hodgate. The location of the studio apartment, which was used as a stash house, was secret. No one was allowed to be there except the three above-mentioned *15 men and Oliveira's girl friend. [7]
The defendant told a witness that he was at the studio apartment arguing with Oliveira sometime between midnight and 1 A.M. on July 5. His automobile was seen leaving the premises at 1:43 A.M. When Oliveira's girl friend attempted to enter the studio apartment from the common hallway of the duplex the next morning, she found it locked, despite the fact that the interior door was usually left unlocked. A witness who owned the business next door to the duplex observed a black four-door automobile parked in the driveway for a few minutes at approximately 1 P.M. When Oliveira's girl friend returned later in the afternoon, the volume on the television inside the studio apartment was turned up unusually high, and, while the interior door was still locked, the exterior door to the studio apartment had been left unlocked, which was unusual given the rules about securing the stash house location.
Finally, there was evidence that the defendant had access to firearms. He asked one acquaintance to remove the firearms from a storage unit in his name. The defendant told an acquaintance that he owned two nine millimeter firearms. *16 Investigators recovered from the scene of the shooting nine millimeter bullet casings and both a bullet and two casings from a .22 caliber handgun.
c. Consciousness of guilt. The Commonwealth also presented evidence to show the defendant's consciousness of guilt.
The defendant's behavior indicated that he knew that Oliveira was dead well before he claimed to have discovered the body. The defendant testified that he discovered Oliveira's body at approximately 3:15 P.M. on July 5. Despite this, the defendant did not attempt to telephone Oliveira after 1:28 A.M., even after Oliveira's brother telephoned the defendant looking for Oliveira. Nor did the defendant answer calls from Oliveira's girl friend that day.
Once Oliveira's body was discovered, the defendant's primary concern was moving the marijuana and firearms and disabling his telephones so that he could not be located.
Finally, the defendant told different stories to different parties in the aftermath of the shooting, including, but not limited to, telling Oliveira's girl friend that he did not know what happened and telling another associate that he and Oliveira got into an altercation with two men at a club in Providence, Rhode Island, in which shots were fired, and that Oliveira never *17 came home. [8]
d. The admission of guilt and other incriminating evidence. Perhaps the strongest evidence of the defendant's guilt was Pacheco's corroborated testimony that the defendant confessed to the killing. The defendant told Pacheco that he shot Oliveira in the head, and again in the chest because Oliveira would not die. This account was corroborated by the testimony of the medical examiner who testified that (1) Oliveira was shot both in the head and in the torso; (2) the shot in the torso was consistent with Oliveira lying on his back at the time; and (3) when a person is shot in the head, he or she would lose consciousness but might have involuntary movement of the extremities, consistent with the defendant's account of how the victim "wouldn't die."
Further, Pacheco's testimony that the defendant burned items he wore on the night of the shooting was corroborated by the fact that, months later, investigators found the burned remains of sneakers and a zipper fly and, separately, a weathered gasoline can in the areas indicated by Pacheco.
In addition, the defendant knew or appeared to know information that only one who was present during the shooting would know. This included the fact that Oliveira was shot in *18 the back of the head, which was a detail that the medical examiner was able to ascertain only upon shaving Oliveira's head in preparation for the autopsy. The defendant also indicated to two people that he thought that two different types of firearms were used in the shooting, including a nine millimeter and a higher-powered firearm, based on the size of the bullet holes. The medical examiner was not able to conclude that two different caliber firearms were used merely by examining the body; however, he recovered a small caliber projectile consistent with a bullet from a .22 caliber firearm from Oliveira's head, and two projectiles consistent with a nine millimeter firearm from underneath and beside Oliveira's body.
Given the significant evidence of guilt, we conclude that
the admission in evidence of the testimony of Oliveira's girl
friend that the defendant had become "a little more violent" did
not cause a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.
[9]
See Wright,
4. Cooperating witness testimony. One of the
Commonwealth's witnesses, Pacheco, testified that the defendant
admitted to shooting Oliveira. During cross-examination,
*19
Pacheco testified that he had pleaded guilty to thirteen
criminal charges when, in fact, all but one had been dismissed
or placed on file, and the remaining one had been continued
without a finding. The defendant blames both his counsel and
the prosecutor for this error, and argues that ineffective
assistance and prosecutorial misconduct in failing to correct
the record cost him a fair trial. We review both aspects of the
defendant's claim for a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage
of justice, Commonwealth v. Burgos,
A criminal defendant has a right "to reasonable cross-
examination of a witness for the purpose of showing bias,
particularly where that witness may have a motivation to seek
favor with the government." Commonwealth v. Haywood, 377 Mass.
755, 760 (1979), quoting Commonwealth v. Dougan,
First, it is important to note that there was no quid pro
quo agreement involving open cases.
[10]
The consideration Pacheco
*20
received on his then-open criminal cases was in exchange for his
testimony in an unrelated drug case. On cross-examination, the
defendant's trial counsel outlined each of Pacheco's thirteen
charges and elicited from Pacheco that he was guilty of each
one. The fact that Pacheco mistakenly testified that he pleaded
guilty rather than having all but one of the charges dismissed
or placed on file was unlikely materially to affect the jury's
evaluation whether he had reason "to seek favor with the
government." See Haywood,
Nor was there prosecutorial misconduct. This was not a
situation in which the prosecution allowed a witness to lie
outright, or withheld information about an arrangement from the
defense. See Burgos,
5. Statements to law enforcement. The defendant claims statements he made during an interview with law enforcement were improperly admitted at trial, violating his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights.
A defendant's exercise of his or her constitutional right
to the assistance of counsel imposes on the police a duty to
ensure that the defendant's right "to cut off questioning [is]
scrupulously honored." Commonwealth v. Torres,
A person is in custody whenever he is "deprived of his
freedom of action in any significant way" (citation omitted).
Groome,
"(1) the place of the interrogation; (2) whether the officers have conveyed to the person being questioned any belief or opinion that that person is a suspect; (3) the nature of the interrogation, including whether the interview was aggressive or, instead, informal and influenced in its contours by the person being interviewed; and (4) whether, at the time the incriminating statement was made, the person was free to end the interview by leaving the locus of the interrogation or by asking the interrogator to leave, as evidenced by whether the interview terminated with an arrest."
Groome, supra at 211-212.
Here, three of the four factors militate in favor of the
defendant not being subjected to a custodial interrogation.
Throughout the interview, which was investigatory rather than
accusatory, the officers did not suggest to the defendant that
he was a suspect. The officers did not tell him that the police
had any incriminating evidence against him, or even that he was
*24
under suspicion. See Brum,
Although the interview took place at the police station, a
location that could be considered coercive, Commonwealth v.
Bookman,
(2001). See Brum,
We agree with the motion judge that the defendant was not
in custody during the questioning, and thus, the question
whether the investigators scrupulously honored his invocation of
his right to counsel goes to voluntariness, an issue which the
defendant waived at trial and did not attempt to resurrect in
his motion for a new trial or his appeal.
[11]
At any rate, in
*25
reviewing the totality of the circumstances, we agree with the
motion judge's assessment that the defendant's statements were
voluntary. See Commonwealth v. Mandile,
6. Review under G. L. c. 278, § 33E. We have reviewed the briefs and the entire record and discern no reason to reduce the degree of guilt or grant a new trial pursuant to our powers under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.
Judgment affirmed.
Order denying motion for a
new trial affirmed.
voluntarily to be admissible. Commonwealth v. Brady, 380 Mass.
44, 48 (1980). "A statement is voluntary if it is the product
of a 'rational intellect' and a 'free will,' and not induced by
physical or psychological coercion." Commonwealth v. LeBlanc,
Notes
[1] Derek Woollam was also convicted of trafficking in a controlled substance.
[2] The defendant additionally claims that it was prosecutorial misconduct for the prosecutor to allow the cooperating witness to testify falsely.
[3] "Metadata" refers to information about telephone calls other than the actual content of the calls, such as the numbers of the callers and the times and dates of calls placed and received.
[4] The messages stated in part: "I will be by later. Make sure you dont leave cause i have to talk to you. And i want you to answer my questions truthfully"; "Do not lie to me when we talk"; and "I am pissed."
[5] The testimony about the defendant's change in appearance and demeanor once he started to abuse pills provided a potential explanation for why his drug dealing performance slipped and the corresponding deterioration of his relationship with Oliveira.
[6] We see nothing wrong with the testimony that the defendant was "more aggressive" and "wasn't the Derek [she] had met."
[7] Although the defendant pressed the theory of a third-party culprit throughout the trial, the odds of a third-party culprit other than Hodgate knowing about the location of, and being able to access, the studio apartment to shoot Oliveira are negligible. Hodgate was tried and acquitted of the killing in 2011.
[8] Although clearly not dispositive, the defendant did not attend either Oliveira's wake or funeral despite claiming Oliveira was his "best friend."
[9] The prosecutor repeated the "bad character" testimony in his closing argument by stating that the defendant had "become violent." However, the prosecutor did not argue that the defendant killed Oliveira because he had become violent. Instead, he raised it in connection with the defendant's motive. It was by no means a principal point of his argument, and he did not dwell on it.
[10] After Pacheco's grand jury testimony, the Commonwealth relocated him to an undisclosed address and paid his rent for a period of time as a result of a credible threat in connection with his cooperation in this case. In exchange for the relocation benefits, Pacheco agreed that, if called, he would testify truthfully at any future hearings or trial.
[11] Regardless of whether an individual is determined to have been in custody, his or her statements must have been made
