NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal
revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound
volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical
error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of
Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1
Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557-
1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us
16-P-1092 Appeals Court
COMMONWEALTH vs. VALDEIR AGUIAR DO NASCIMENTO.
No. 16-P-1092.
Nantucket. April 6, 2017. - June 7, 2017.
Present: Vuono, Wolohojian, & Carhart, JJ.1
Electronic Surveillance. Privacy. Statute, Construction.
Complaint received and sworn to in the jury session of the
Nantucket Division of the District Court Department on July 17,
2015.
The case was tried before Thomas S. Barrett, J.
Edward Crane for the defendant.
Catherine H. Robertson, Assistant District Attorney, for
the Commonwealth.
WOLOHOJIAN, J. We consider here whether G. L. c. 272,
§ 105, as amended by St. 2014, c. 43, in response to
Commonwealth v. Robertson, 467 Mass. 371 (2014), protects people
in public places. The defendant argues that, although the
1
Justice Carhart participated in the deliberation on this
case prior to his retirement.
2
Legislature clearly intended that the amended statute apply to
public places, it failed to effectuate its intent. We disagree,
and affirm the defendant's conviction.
The defendant was charged with, and convicted of, violating
G. L. c. 272, § 105, for using his cellphone to videotape
surreptitiously two teenage girls under their sundresses while
traveling on the ferry to Nantucket. The conduct took place on
July 12, 2015, more than a year after the Legislature had -- in
response to public outcry over the Robertson decision -- amended
the statute to add the following language, portions of which we
have highlighted because they are our focus here:
"Whoever wilfully photographs, videotapes or electronically
surveils, with the intent to secretly conduct or hide such
activity, the sexual or other intimate parts of a person
under or around the person's clothing to view or attempt to
view the person's sexual or other intimate parts when a
reasonable person would believe that the person's sexual or
other intimate parts would not be visible to the public,
and without the person's knowledge and consent, shall be
punished . . . "
G. L. c. 272, § 105(b).
"'Sexual or other intimate parts,' [are defined as] human
genitals, buttocks, pubic area or female breast below a
point immediately above the tip of the areola, whether
naked or covered by clothing or undergarments."
G. L. c. 272, § 105(a). In essence, the defendant argues that
because no reasonable person would believe his or her clothed
anatomy would not be visible in a public place, the statute must
be limited to non-public spaces.
3
The amended language came about, as we noted above, in
response to public reaction to Robertson, supra, in which the
Supreme Judicial Court reversed the conviction of a man who had
surreptitiously videotaped and photographed the clothed crotch
areas of women seated across from him on the MBTA trolley.
Robertson involved the earlier version of the statute, which
applied only to persons who were photographed when "nude or
partially nude." Id. at 375. Because the victims in that case
were neither nude nor partially nude, the Supreme Judicial Court
concluded that the defendant's conduct was not covered by the
statute. Ibid. Deciding as it did, the court did not reach
Robertson's additional argument that the statute did not apply
to conduct in public places.
Reaction to the Robertson decision was negative, swift, and
strong.2 The Legislature reacted immediately by amending the
statute to cover the type of conduct that had occurred in
Robertson; namely, the surreptitious photographing or
videotaping of a person's clothed private anatomy even when in
public.3 The defendant acknowledges that the Legislature clearly
2
See State House News Service, Senate Session, Thursday,
March 6, 2014; State House News Service, House Session,
Thursday, March 6, 2014.
3
See 2014 House Bill No. 3934, which became St. 2014,
c. 43.
4
intended to amend the statute to cover the conduct at issue
here.
What remains is to decide whether the statutory amendment
effectuates that legislative intent. We believe it does. On
its face, the amendment is unlimited as to location, referring
neither to public nor private spaces.4 Instead, the amended
statute applies "when a reasonable person would believe that the
person's sexual or other intimate parts would not be visible to
the public."5 The word "when" refers to a point in time and,
although location certainly is a factor to be considered in
assessing what an objectively reasonable expectation would be at
that particular moment, it is neither the only factor nor is it
necessarily dispositive. Likewise, a person's state of dress or
undress is a factor to be considered, but it too is not
4
By contrast, some analogous statutes in other states
explicitly state that they apply to both public and private
places. See Maryland Criminal Code § 3-902(c)(2) (statute
applies "regardless of whether the individual is in a public or
private place"); Nevada Revised Statutes 200.604(8)(e)(2)
(same); Oklahoma Stat. Ann. § 1171.C (same). However, such
language is not universal. Other states' statutes refer to
"place," "place and time," or "where." See Florida Statutes
Ann. § 810.145(c) ("place and time"); Kentucky Revised Statutes
Ann. § 531.090 (1)(b) ("in a place"); Louisiana Statutes Ann.
14:283(A)(1) ("where"); McKinney's Consolidated Laws of New York
Penal Law § 250-45(1) ("at a place and time"); Vermont Statutes
Ann. § 2605(a)(5) ("place").
5
By contrast, the earlier language (which remains in the
statute) prohibited conduct only "in such place and circumstance
[as a person] would have a reasonable expectation of privacy in
not being so photographed." G. L. c. 272, § 105(b).
5
dispositive. A person does not lose all reasonable expectation
of privacy in his or her covered "sexual or intimate parts"
simply by being in public. Instead, that expectation must be
measured against current mores, taking into account the totality
of the circumstances. So viewed, it is an "eminently
reasonable" proposition "that a woman, and in particular a woman
riding on a public trolley, has a reasonable expectation of
privacy in not having a stranger secretly take photographs up
her skirt." Robertson, supra at 380. The same is true for
teenage girls riding the ferry to Nantucket.
Judgment affirmed.