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revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound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
19-P-326 Appeals Court
COMMONWEALTH vs. JOHN YANG.
No. 19-P-326.
Worcester. May 11, 2020. - September 17, 2020.
Present: Massing, Shin, & Ditkoff, JJ.
Burning a Dwelling House. Malicious Explosion. Evidence,
Photograph, Hearsay, Identification. Identification.
Practice, Criminal, Identification of defendant in
courtroom.
Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
Department on October 24, 2013.
The cases were tried before Richard T. Tucker, J.
Andrew W. Piltser Cowan for the defendant.
Michelle R. King, Assistant District Attorney, for the
Commonwealth.
SHIN, J. A jury convicted the defendant of arson of a
dwelling, see G. L. c. 266, § 1, and malicious explosion, see
G. L. c. 266, § 102B. The key issue at trial was the identity
of the drug dealer known as "Chi," who recruited two men to set
fire to a house. On appeal the defendant argues that the judge
2
erred by admitting an in-court identification, hearsay evidence,
and lay opinion testimony. We agree and conclude that these
errors, taken together, created a substantial risk of a
miscarriage of justice. Therefore, we reverse.
Background. In the months preceding July 2013, Kyle
DeWispelaere and Joseph Brown frequently purchased drugs from a
dealer they knew only as "Chi."1 The men arranged transactions
with Chi via telephone and then typically went to an apartment
located on Forest Street in Fitchburg for the exchanges. They
understood that this apartment, which had a mailbox outside that
read "Yangs," was the home of Chi's brother. During the brief
transactions, DeWispelaere and Brown focused their attention on
the drugs and money exchanged rather than on Chi's appearance.
DeWispelaere described Chi as a five-foot, six-inch tall,2 stocky
Asian man, with a ponytail and otherwise mostly shaved head and
a dragon tattoo on his left arm. Brown described Chi as short
and Asian with tattoos. Although the two men often dealt with
Chi, they also purchased drugs from other dealers, including
Chi's nephew.
1 Both DeWispelaere and Brown testified under cooperation
agreements.
2 DeWispelaere acknowledged at trial that the defendant was
not this height.
3
When the men contacted Chi for drugs in early July 2013,
Chi stated that he did not have any to sell because his
roommate, Shaun Hibbard, stole his drugs, guns, and money. Chi,
seeking to retaliate, spoke to Brown about finding someone to
"firebomb" Hibbard's house. Brown discussed this with
DeWispelaere and, after negotiating with Chi, agreed to burn
Hibbard's house in exchange for one thousand dollars' worth of
heroin. A few nights later, Brown and DeWispelaere traveled to
Fitchburg with a third man and drove by the address provided by
Chi.3 Chi sent a text message to Brown, instructing him to
"[g]et it done, in flames." The men assembled Molotov
cocktails, which are glass containers filled with flammable
liquid, rags, and wicks, and then lit and threw them at the
house. Police stopped the three men in their car soon
thereafter.
Discussion. 1. In-court identification. In October 2013
police showed DeWispelaere eight photographs. Initially,
DeWispelaere did not select any of the photographs as depicting
the drug dealer he knew as Chi, but, when he looked a second
time, he selected a photograph of the defendant. He stated that
That address was home to Hibbard's estranged wife. The
3
wife testified that Hibbard had moved out and was living with a
roommate in a different apartment. The defendant's fingerprints
were later discovered at that apartment in Leominster.
4
he was "[eighty] percent sure" about his identification,
explaining that "[t]he hair appeared to be different than [he]
remembered it."4 At trial, however, when DeWispelaere was asked
to make an in-court identification, he unequivocally identified
the defendant as the man he knew as Chi. The defendant now
argues that DeWispelaere should not have been permitted to make
the in-court identification because his out-of-court
identification was equivocal.5 We agree.
If an eyewitness "made something less than an unequivocal
positive identification of the defendant" during an out-of-court
identification procedure, that witness may not make an in-court
identification without "good reason." Commonwealth v. Collins,
470 Mass. 255, 265 (2014). See Mass. G. Evid. § 1112(c)(2)(A)
(2020). An unequivocal positive identification occurs if the
witness "identifies the defendant as the perpetrator, such that
4 DeWispelaere testified that "the hair has a lot to do
with" how he perceives someone's appearance.
5 We reject the Commonwealth's assertion that the parties
stipulated to the in-court identification, as that is not borne
out by the record. The record does establish, however, that the
defendant did not preserve the issue. Although the defendant
filed a "motion to exclude in-court identification," his
arguments to the judge focused on Brown (who never made a
pretrial identification), and the defendant failed to object to
DeWispelaere's in-court identification during trial.
5
the statement of identification is clear and free from doubt."
Commonwealth v. Dew, 478 Mass. 304, 315 (2017).6
Here, DeWispelaere should not have been permitted to make
an in-court identification because his prior identification was
not unequivocal. DeWispelaere's statement that he was "[eighty]
percent sure" was not one that was "clear and free from doubt."
Dew, 478 Mass. at 315. Also, it was only after DeWispelaere saw
the defendant's photograph a second time that he selected it.
In these circumstances we agree with the defendant that
DeWispelaere's out-of-court identification was not unequivocal.
Indeed, the Commonwealth does not argue otherwise in its brief.
Nor did good reason justify admission of the in-court
identification, and again the Commonwealth does not so argue.
Even where the witness was familiar with the defendant prior to
the commission of the crime, "good reason will not often exist
where a witness has earlier failed to make a positive
identification. In these circumstances, for an in-court showup
to be admissible, it would need to be justified by some other
'good reason' for permitting a suggestive identification
procedure, which usually would require a showing that the in-
court identification is more reliable than the witness's earlier
6 The trial judge did not have the benefit of the Dew
opinion.
6
failure to make a positive identification and that it poses
little risk of misidentification despite its suggestiveness."
Collins, 470 Mass. at 265. There is no basis here on which to
conclude that DeWispelaere's in-court identification was more
reliable than his equivocal out-of-court identification. This
is not a case, for instance, where DeWispelaere "only failed to
identify the defendant in the earlier identification procedure
because of fear or an unwillingness to cooperate with the police
at the time." Id. at 265 n.16. Moreover, the in-court
identification was highly "material to a determination of [the
defendant's] guilt or innocence" and did not "serv[e] merely to
inform the jury that 'the person sitting in the court room is
the person whose conduct is at issue.'" Dew, 478 Mass. at 313,
quoting Commonwealth v. Crayton, 470 Mass. 228, 242 (2014).
Thus, as no good reason existed for the in-court identification,
it should not have been admitted.
2. Hearsay. When police executed a search warrant at the
Forest Street apartment, they found a photograph that depicted a
partially clothed woman with a man resembling the defendant.
Below the photograph was an initialed note that read, "Chi --
keep it nasty." The defendant moved in limine to exclude the
photograph or, in the alternative, to redact the inscription,
arguing that the combination of the two constituted inadmissible
hearsay. The Commonwealth countered that the evidence was being
7
offered for the nonhearsay purpose of showing that the defendant
"held himself out to be Chi." In so arguing, the Commonwealth
asserted that the photograph was "a gift [the defendant] got
from a strip club" and that, inferably, the woman in the
photograph wrote the inscription. Over the defendant's
objection, the judge admitted the photograph unredacted, finding
that it was offered for the nonhearsay purpose of showing that
"[the defendant] held himself . . . out as Chi" and, in
particular, that the woman "knew [the defendant] as Chi." The
judge also appeared to find that the unredacted photograph was
admissible to show the defendant's connection to the apartment.
Absent an applicable exception, "the rule against hearsay
prohibits the admission of out-of-court statements offered to
prove the truth of the matter asserted." Commonwealth v.
Wardsworth, 482 Mass. 454, 462 (2019). Statements for hearsay
purposes include a person's oral or written assertions, as well
as "nonverbal conduct, if the person intended it as an
assertion." Mass. G. Evid. § 801(a) (2020). See Commonwealth
v. Baker, 20 Mass. App. Ct. 926, 928 n.3 (1985).
The defendant argues that the inscribed photograph was
offered to prove the truth of the implied assertion that the man
in the photograph, who appeared to be the defendant, was known
by the name Chi. We agree that the Commonwealth offered the
evidence for this purpose, as made clear by its arguments to the
8
judge and how it used the evidence at trial. When introducing
the photograph, the Commonwealth first asked the witness,
"[T]his appears to be a photograph with writing on the bottom
that says, 'Chi, keep it nasty,' with a signature?" The
Commonwealth then connected the inscription to the defendant by
asking, "Does that appear to be a photograph of John Yang?" It
drew the same connection in closing argument, suggesting that
the person who wrote the inscription gave the photograph to the
defendant as a gift:
"And more importantly, what did the police find inside 45
Forest Street? A photo of the defendant signed -- a gift,
if you would -- Chi, keep it nasty. And whatever theory
that was just advanced as to someone hopped in and signed
it, you all come into this courtroom with life experience
and common sense. And I'd ask you if that argument makes
any sense to any of you."
The Commonwealth concluded by arguing that "the photographs
. . . confirm" "[t]he identification of Chi as John Yang."
The plain import of the Commonwealth's argument was that
the jury should consider the photograph and inscription as
evidence that the defendant and Chi were one and the same.
Indeed, the Commonwealth offered no other reason for its
insistence on presenting the photograph and inscription
together. See Commonwealth v. Ashman, 430 Mass. 736, 742 n.5
(2000). As the Commonwealth acknowledges, "[t]he only issue at
trial was whether the defendant was the individual known as
'Chi' who enlisted DeWispelaere and Brown to firebomb Shaun
9
Hibbard's home." We therefore agree with the defendant that the
Commonwealth impermissibly used the evidence to prove the truth
of an implied assertion that the defendant was, in fact, Chi.7
See id. at 742-743 (witnesses' testimony that they contacted
police in response to telephone call from victim was hearsay
because inference was that victim told them that defendant
abused her); Commonwealth v. Sheline, 391 Mass. 279, 285-286
(1984) (averment in laboratory certificate that defendant was
"aka Howie Tuna" was hearsay); Commonwealth v. DeJesus, 87 Mass.
App. Ct. 198, 201-202 (2015) (police checkmarks on currency
photocopies were hearsay because offered to show that bills
matched those in defendant's pocket); Commonwealth v. Ramirez,
55 Mass. App. Ct. 224, 227-228 (2002) (business cards in
defendant's possession listing New York addresses were hearsay
because offered to show connection to New York); Commonwealth v.
Kirk, 39 Mass. App. Ct. 225, 228 (1995) ("Given that the
identity of the [victim's] 'boyfriend' was the live issue at the
trial, and that evidence that the defendant was the boyfriend
was essential for his conviction, the use of the [G. L. c. 209A]
affidavit to resolve the identification issue would mean that
7 Because the statement was not testimonial, however, we
reject the defendant's argument that admitting the evidence
violated his right to confrontation. See Commonwealth v.
Imbert, 479 Mass. 575, 580 (2018).
10
the affidavit would be used, impermissibly, for the truth of the
matter asserted therein").
While not disputing that it used the photograph and
inscription to prove that the defendant was the same person as
Chi, the Commonwealth argues that the evidence was nonetheless
offered for a nonhearsay purpose -- to show that "the defendant
held himself out as 'Chi.'" In so arguing, the Commonwealth
relies, as the trial judge did, on Commonwealth v. Koney, 421
Mass. 295 (1995). The charge at issue in Koney was operation of
a motor vehicle after revocation, which required the
Commonwealth to prove that the defendant received notice of the
revocation. See id. at 302-304. To that end, the Commonwealth
introduced revocation notices sent to one Roger A. Koney and a
copy of an identification card for Roger A. Koney that the
defendant produced to an officer. See id. at 302. The card
contained a photograph and the same address and identifying
information listed on the revocation notices. See id. The
court held that the card was not hearsay because the
Commonwealth did not offer it "to prove the defendant actually
was named Roger A. Koney and actually lived at" the identified
address, but for the more limited purpose of showing that he
held himself out as such. Id. at 303. This had probative value
because "[p]roper mailing of a letter is prima facie evidence of
receipt by the addressee." Id. at 303-304.
11
Koney is inapposite for several reasons. First, as
discussed above, the Commonwealth in this case offered the
evidence to show that the defendant was actually the person
known as Chi who ordered the firebombing. Second, unlike in
Koney, the photograph was not "produced by the defendant" and
therefore was not "reliable evidence from which the jury could
find that the defendant held himself out to be" Chi. Koney, 421
Mass. at 303. Third, and relatedly, here the suggestion that
the defendant held himself out as Chi necessarily depends on the
truth of the implied assertion -- that is, that the man in the
photograph was known to the declarant as Chi. Thus, because the
declarant's "credibility must be evaluated to determine the
probative force of this line of identification proof, the
hearsay rule applies." Kirk, 39 Mass. App. Ct. at 230.
We also reject the Commonwealth's contention that the
evidence was admissible to show the defendant's connection to
the Forest Street apartment. This purpose would have been
equally served by admitting the photograph without the
inscription, as the defendant had proposed. A photograph of the
defendant found in the apartment would alone have shown his
connection to it. See Sheline, 391 Mass. at 286 (statement that
defendant was "aka Howie Tuna" was "unnecessary to the integrity
of the [chemist's] certificate"). But the Commonwealth insisted
on presenting the photograph and inscription together, for the
12
stated purpose of showing that the defendant held himself out as
Chi. This was an impermissible use of the evidence to prove the
truth of the matter asserted.
3. Lay opinion. At trial a detective testified, without
objection, that the man depicted in the photograph appeared to
be the defendant. The defendant argues that this was improper
lay opinion testimony. Once again, we agree.
A lay witness may opine about the identity of a person
depicted in a photograph if the testimony "assist[s] the jurors
in making their own independent identification." Wardsworth,
482 Mass. at 475, quoting Commonwealth v. Pina, 481 Mass. 413,
429 (2019). See Mass. G. Evid. § 701 (2020). Such an opinion
is generally admissible, therefore, "if there is some basis for
concluding that the witness is more likely to correctly identify
the defendant from the photograph than is the jury."
Commonwealth v. Vacher, 469 Mass. 425, 441 (2014), quoting
Commonwealth v. Pleas, 49 Mass. App. Ct. 321, 326 (2000). Here,
the evidence did not show that the detective had "any special
familiarity with the defendant that the jury lacked" that would
assist them in identifying the man in the photograph as the
defendant.8 Vacher, supra at 442. See Wardsworth, supra at 476
The Commonwealth points to evidence that the defendant's
8
appearance had changed since the time of his arrest. Although
the defendant's stepbrother testified that the defendant
appeared "chubbier" in a photograph taken around the time of his
13
(improper for officers to testify about identity of person in
surveillance video recording where they had no "special insight"
into defendant's appearance). The detective was not in a better
position than the jury to make the identification, and so his
lay opinion testimony should not have been admitted.
4. Substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. Although
the defendant preserved the hearsay issue, he did not object to
either the in-court identification or the lay opinion testimony.
We need not decide whether any error individually requires
reversal of the convictions, however, because we conclude that
the errors, taken together, created a substantial risk of a
miscarriage of justice. See Commonwealth v. Dwyer, 448 Mass.
122, 138 (2006); Commonwealth v. Cancel, 394 Mass. 567, 576
(1985).
All three errors went to the heart of the case:
identification. See Commonwealth v. Mazzone, 55 Mass. App. Ct.
345, 353 (2002) (reversing where "errors all concern[ed]
evidence implicating credibility in a trial in which credibility
was the only real issue"). DeWispelaere's unequivocal in-court
identification was strong direct evidence that the defendant was
arrest, the detective did not testify to this, nor was there
evidence that the detective had known the defendant for a long
time. See Wardsworth, 482 Mass. at 475-476. Cf. Commonwealth
v. Vitello, 376 Mass. 426, 458-460 & n.29 (1978).
14
the drug dealer known as Chi and was not cumulative. And in
closing, the Commonwealth emphasized the unequivocal nature of
the in-court identification to minimize DeWispelaere's
equivocation during the out-of-court identification, arguing,
"When Kyle DeWispelaere took the stand, was he [eighty] percent
sure that was the man sitting right there? No." Especially in
light of the Commonwealth's argument, there is a substantial
risk that the jury gave more weight to the suggestive in-court
identification, which carried with it an "inflated level of
confidence[,] . . . than to the nonsuggestive pretrial
identification that yielded something less than a positive
identification." Collins, 470 Mass. at 264.
Likewise, the Commonwealth highlighted the "Chi -- keep it
nasty" inscription when it introduced the hearsay evidence and
relied on the evidence in closing to argue that the defendant
was the same person as Chi. Given the Commonwealth's
presentation, the absence of a limiting instruction, and that
identity was the only contested issue at trial, there is a
substantial risk that the jury considered the evidence for the
truth of the assertion that the man in the photograph (whom they
could have found to be the defendant) was Chi. See Wardsworth,
482 Mass. at 463; Commonwealth v. Randall, 50 Mass. App. Ct. 26,
28 (2000). And the improper lay opinion testimony added to the
prejudice caused by the hearsay error because, although the jury
15
were able to inspect the photograph for themselves, the
detective's opinion brought with it a "greater imprint of
authority." Wardsworth, supra at 477, quoting Pina, 481 Mass.
at 430.
The Commonwealth's case without the improperly admitted
evidence was not so overwhelming as to overcome the prejudicial
effect of the combined errors. See Commonwealth v. Alphas, 430
Mass. 8, 13 n.6 (1999). The Commonwealth's case included
evidence that the defendant's brother lived at the Forest Street
apartment. The defendant's fingerprints were also found at the
apartment in Leominster where Hibbard was living, and Chi told
DeWispelaere and Brown that Hibbard was his roommate. In
addition, DeWispelaere chose the defendant's photograph from the
photo array and testified that Chi had a dragon tattoo on his
left arm; photographs of the defendant's tattoos confirmed that
he had one of a dragon on his arm. To counter this evidence,
however, the defendant offered evidence about the prevalence of
dragon tattoos among Asian males and presented an alibi defense
through the testimony of his stepbrother. His stepbrother's
testimony was partially corroborated by documentary evidence
and, if believed, showed that the defendant was in Wisconsin
during the summer when Chi sold drugs to DeWispelaere and Brown
and recruited them to firebomb the house.
16
Reviewing the case as a whole, "we have a serious doubt
whether the result of the trial might have been different" had
the three errors not occurred. Commonwealth v. Dirgo, 474 Mass.
1012, 1016 (2016), quoting Commonwealth v. Azar, 435 Mass. 675,
687 (2002), S.C., 444 Mass. 72 (2005). Because the errors went
to the only contested issue, we conclude that their cumulative
effect created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.
The defendant is therefore entitled to a new trial.
Judgments reversed.
Verdicts set aside.