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16-P-331 Appeals Court
COMMONWEALTH vs. JAVIER RIVERA.
No. 16-P-331.
Bristol. April 5, 2017. - July 17, 2017.
Present: Milkey, Sullivan, & Desmond, JJ.
Possession of Burglarious Instruments. Constitutional Law,
Identification. Due Process of Law, Identification.
Identification. Practice, Criminal, Required finding,
Motion to suppress, Argument by prosecutor.
Complaint received and sworn to in the Fall River Division
of the District Court Department on March 27, 2014.
A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by Kevin
J. Finnerty, J., and the case was tried before him.
Meghan K. Oreste for the defendant.
Robert P. Kidd, Assistant District Attorney, for the
Commonwealth.
SULLIVAN, J. The defendant, Javier Rivera, appeals from
his conviction of possession of a burglarious instrument, in
2
violation of G. L. c. 266, § 49.1 The defendant contends that
(1) the evidence was insufficient to show that he possessed a
burglarious instrument with intent to commit a crime, (2) the
showup procedure was unnecessarily suggestive, and (3) the
prosecutor argued facts not in evidence in his closing argument.
We affirm.
1. Sufficiency. Viewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to the Commonwealth, see Commonwealth v. Latimore, 378
Mass. 671, 676-677 (1979), a reasonable jury could find that on
the night of March 27, 2014, at around 1:45 A.M., a witness saw
two men across the street from his home. The street was
otherwise deserted.2 The men were standing in front of a
convenience store, wearing dark clothing.3 While one of the men
was banging on the door with a bar or a crowbar, the other was
standing facing the street and looking in both directions.
Periodically, both men walked away to check the street.
Eventually, they left and the witness called the police. When
an officer arrived, he noticed that the door to the convenience
1
The defendant was acquitted of breaking and entering in
the nighttime with the intent to commit a felony. See G. L.
c. 266, § 16.
2
A nearby hot dog stand remained open until the early
morning hours, but no witness testified to foot traffic on the
night in question.
3
There was no other description of the men's faces, skin
tone, age, race, or identifying characteristics.
3
store had been pried open at the bottom, and there was a
softball-sized hole in the door. Another officer, who also
arrived at the scene, drove around the immediate area with the
car windows open searching for two men who fit the witness's
description. After driving for approximately ten minutes he saw
two men in dark clothing about one-half mile from the store.
The officer also heard "somebody drop some kind of metallic
object, like a hard object fell on the ground" near the two men.4
The officer called for backup, drove past the men, parked
his car, and walked back towards them. He engaged them in
conversation. They were cooperative, and told the officer that
they were walking to St. Anne's hospital, which was nearby.
Other officers arrived and began to search the area; the
defendant seemed nervous while speaking to these officers. A
screwdriver was found in a public area some twenty to thirty
feet back from where the defendant and his companion stood
talking to the officer, in the location where the officer said
he heard a metal object fall. A subsequent search of the
defendant revealed a six-inch flashlight.
The two men were then driven to the convenience store.
During a showup procedure, which occurred some fifteen to twenty
minutes after the witness first saw two men, the witness told
4
Cars were parked along the street, and his view of the men
was partially obstructed by the cars.
4
police that the defendants' clothing was "definitely" the
clothing the witness saw the men wearing, and that they were
wearing the "exact same clothing." However, the witness also
said that he could not say exactly what they were wearing, and
that he did not see their faces. The police officers submitted
photographs from which the jury were asked to infer that the
screwdriver matched some of the pry marks left on the door.
"We review the denial of a motion for a required finding of
not guilty to determine whether the evidence, viewed in the
light most favorable to the Commonwealth, 'was sufficient to
persuade a rational jury beyond a reasonable doubt of the
existence of every element of the crime[s] charged.'"
Commonwealth v. Gomes, 475 Mass. 775, 781 (2016), quoting from
Commonwealth v. Lao, 443 Mass. 770, 779 (2005).
The Commonwealth's theory at trial was that the defendant
and his codefendant participated in a joint venture to break
into the convenience store using a bar or crowbar or the
screwdriver, or both. "A joint venture is established by proof
that two or more individuals 'knowingly participated in the
commission of the crime charged . . . with the intent required
for that offense.'" Commonwealth v. Winquist, 474 Mass. 517,
521 (2016), quoting from Commonwealth v. Bright, 463 Mass. 421,
5
435 (2012).5 We review the evidence in the light most favorable
to the Commonwealth, mindful that a joint venture "may be proved
by circumstantial evidence." Commonwealth v. Braley, 449 Mass.
316, 320 (2007).
There is no question that the Commonwealth proved that two
men tried to break into the convenience store using a tool in
the early morning hours.6 Contrast Commonwealth v. Squires, 476
Mass. 703, 710-711 (2017). The question before the jury was
whether the Commonwealth had proven beyond a reasonable doubt
that the two men stopped on the street were the two men in
question. The generic description of dark clothing was, alone,
insufficient to prove that the defendant was one of the culprits
beyond a reasonable doubt. Cf. Commonwealth v. Cheek, 413 Mass.
492, 496 (1992); Commonwealth v. Warren, 475 Mass. 530, 535-536
(2016); Commonwealth v. Meneus, 476 Mass. 231, 237 (2017).
5
The Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
the defendant (1) possessed "an engine, machine, tool or
implement"; (2) "adapted and designed for cutting through,
forcing or breaking open a building"; (3) "in order to steal
therefrom money or property, or to commit any other crime"; (4)
"knowing the same to be adapted and designed for the purpose
aforesaid"; (5) "with intent to use or employ or allow the same
to be used or employed for such purpose." G. L. c. 266, § 49;
Commonwealth v. Squires, 476 Mass. 703, 708 (2017).
6
It matters not which man "jimmied" the door and which man
served as lookout. See Commonwealth v. Fuentes, 45 Mass. App.
Ct. 934, 935 (1998), quoting from Commonwealth v. Ward, 45 Mass.
App. Ct. 901, 902 (1998) ("[A] person who acts as a lookout
while others are engaged in a criminal enterprise can be
convicted on a joint enterprise theory.")
6
Given the vagueness of the description, neither the amount of
time that had passed, the distance from the scene, nor the
lateness of the hour add appreciably to the calculus on their
own or in combination, without more. Cf. Warren, supra; Meneus,
supra.
The screwdriver is the evidence upon which the jury also
must rely to link the defendant to the store.7 The jury were
permitted to infer from the photographs that the screwdriver fit
the marks on the door. The remaining question was whether the
screwdriver could be linked to the men. This presents an
admittedly close question, but we conclude that the jury were
permitted to draw that inference.
The officer testified that he heard somebody drop a
metallic object, and that the sound came from where the two men
were walking. It was 1:45 A.M., cold, and the officer saw no
one else on the street. The officer drove past, turned around,
and spoke to the men some twenty-five to thirty feet from where
he heard the metallic sound. Responding officers found the
screwdriver twenty-five to thirty feet away from where the
defendant was standing with the officer, in just the place the
officer said he heard something fall.
7
A screwdriver may be a burglarious tool, depending on its
use, the surrounding circumstances, or both. See Commonwealth
v. Jones, 355 Mass. 170, 176-177 (1969).
7
From this evidence the jury were permitted to infer that
one of the two men dropped the screwdriver. The defendant
argues that the evidence was insufficient because the officer
did not see either man dispose of the screwdriver. There was no
objection to the officer's testimony that he heard "somebody
drop some kind of metallic object." The testimony was therefore
admitted for all purposes, and the jury were entitled to give it
whatever probative weight they deemed appropriate.8 See Abraham
v. Woburn, 383 Mass. 724, 726 n.1 (1981); Commonwealth v.
Mercado, 456 Mass. 198, 208 n.21 (2010). See generally Mass. G.
Evid. § 103(a)(1)(2017).
The act of possessing and then disposing of the screwdriver
suffices to prove that "the defendant knowingly participated in
the commission of the crime charged . . . with the intent
required for that offense." Commonwealth v. Garcia, 470 Mass
24, 30-31 (2014), quoting from Commonwealth v. Norris, 462 Mass.
131, 138-139 (2012). Contrast Commonwealth v. Romero, 464 Mass.
648, 659 n.9 (2013). The jury could infer that one of the men
dropped the screwdriver in order to cover up their participation
in the attempted break-in. See Commonwealth v. Ronayne, 8 Mass.
App. Ct. 421, 424-425 (1979). This inference, coupled with the
fact that the jury were permitted to find that the screwdriver
8
It is unclear how the officer could have "heard" that the
metal object was dropped, not kicked, but this went to the
weight of the evidence.
8
fit the pry marks found on the door,9 the similarity in the
clothing, and the defendant's proximity to the scene, were
sufficient to sustain the Commonwealth's burden beyond a
reasonable doubt.10
2. Showup. The defendant contends that the out of court
showup resulted in an identification that should have been
suppressed, and that there was not good reason to conduct it.
See Commonwealth v. Crayton, 470 Mass. 228, 236 (2014). The
defendant carries the burden of proof to show "that the showup
was so unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable
mistaken identification as to deny [him] due process of law."
Commonwealth v. Amaral, 81 Mass. App. Ct. 143, 148 (2012),
quoting from Commonwealth v. Martin, 447 Mass. 274, 280 (2006).
"If the identification passes muster under this test, then it is
for the jury to decide what weight to give to the
identification." Ibid.
9
Whether there was a "match" was a proper subject of lay
opinion, thus permitting the jury to draw its own conclusion.
See Commonwealth v. Molina, 454 Mass. 232, 243-244 (2009). No
further foundation was required. See ibid. Here, the
prosecutor followed the procedure outlined in Molina, and did
not elicit any affirmative testimony from the officer regarding
a "match," leaving the ultimate conclusion to the jury, which
had the photographs and could make an independent assessment.
10
The defendant also argues that the evidence of intent to
use the screwdriver for burglarious purposes was insufficient.
The case was argued and submitted to the jury on the theory that
one of the men at the store and the defendant were one and the
same. The element of intent was established. See Squires, 476
Mass. at 710-711.
9
"Relevant to the good reason examination are the nature of
the crime involved and corresponding concerns for public safety;
the need for efficient police investigation in the immediate
aftermath of a crime; and the usefulness of prompt confirmation
of the accuracy of investigatory information, which, if in
error, will release the police quickly to follow another track."
Commonwealth v. Austin, 421 Mass. 357, 362 (1995). The officers
had good reason to conduct a show up in the immediate aftermath
of the crime, when the witness's memory was fresh and unclouded,
and the police still had the opportunity to pursue other avenues
if the witness did not identify the men or their clothing.
In addition, the witness identified the clothing, not the
men. We agree with the motion judge that the witness's
statement was not the result of an unnecessarily suggestive
showup procedure. See Commonwealth v. Powell, 72 Mass. App. Ct.
22, 26 (2008). "To the extent that the witness's identification
was of those articles as opposed to the defendant, there was an
absence of the 'extreme' circumstances required to render such
indirect proof of the defendant's guilt fundamentally unfair."
Ibid. See generally Amaral, supra at 149. Furthermore,
"[t]rial counsel had the opportunity to bring out the weaknesses
of the witness's identification on cross-examination." Powell,
supra at 26. "Any degree of suggestiveness went to the weight
of the identification, not its admissibility." Ibid.
10
3. Closing argument. The defendant contends that the
prosecutor referred to facts not in evidence during the closing
argument by claiming that the defendant had a crow bar, which he
disposed of when he fled the scene. There was no objection at
trial. We review these claims for error, and if there was
error, for a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. See
Commonwealth v. Randolph, 438 Mass. 290, 297 (2002).
There was no error in the prosecutor's reference to the
crow bar during closing arguments. The witness testified at
trial that he saw a man "hitting the door with . . . a pipe or a
crow bar." The prosecutor's statements were supported by the
record and he could therefore argue "the evidence and the fair
inferences which can be drawn from the evidence." Commonwealth
v. Braley, 449 Mass. 316, 329 (2007), quoting from Commonwealth
v. Hoffer, 375 Mass. 369, 378 (1978). That the men disposed of
the bar or crowbar was a fair inference that could be drawn from
the evidence. See Commonwealth v DeCicco, 44 Mass. App. Ct.
111, 118-119 (1998).
The prosecutor also argued that the men ran from the scene,
and disposed of the crow bar while they did so. There was
evidence that the men left the scene, but no evidence that the
men ran from the scene. It was error for the prosecutor to make
the argument to the jury. However, there was no substantial
risk of a miscarriage of justice. During the jury charge, the
11
trial judge informed the jury that closing arguments were not
evidence. Commonwealth v. Johnson, 463 Mass. 95, 114 (2012).
"These instructions, to which we presume the jury adhered, see
Commonwealth v. Amirault, [404 Mass. 221, 240 (1989)],
effectively neutralized any prejudice produced by the
prosecutor's [error]." Johnson, supra.
Judgment affirmed.
MILKEY, J. (dissenting). I agree with many of the majority
opinion's thoughtful conclusions, including its assessment that
whether the Commonwealth's evidence here was sufficient is a
close question. However, in the final analysis, I disagree that
the evidence, taken together with reasonable inferences drawn
therefrom, could add up to proof of the defendant's guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt. I therefore respectfully dissent.
Background. Viewed in the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth, the trial evidence was as follows.
At approximately 1:45 in the morning, a Newport, Rhode
Island police officer who lived in Fall River, awoke to the
sound of banging. He looked out his window to observe two men
in the process of trying to break into a convenience store
across the street from him. One of the men was striking the
right side of the store's front door (near its latch) using a
tool that the eyewitness described as "a crow bar or pipe or
something." The other man was acting as lookout. The
eyewitness could not see the men's faces, and he did not
describe their physical characteristics in any material way.1 He
was able to see the men's clothing, which he described as
1
The eyewitness did say that one of the men was "taller"
and the other man "shorter" (something that would be true almost
by definition). There was no evidence admitted about the
defendant's height, or that of the other man charged.
2
"dark." He provided no further detail -- before or during the
trial -- as to what the clothing looked like.
The eyewitness contacted the Fall River police as soon as
he began observing the incident, although the two men abandoned
their endeavor and walked away before a responding police
officer arrived at the scene. After learning from the
eyewitness that the men were wearing dark clothing, the officer
put out a bulletin for the two men. A different officer who had
heard the bulletin drove around the area looking for them. Some
ten minutes after that, and within twenty minutes of the
incident, that officer spotted the defendant and another man
walking along the street about one-half mile from the
convenience store. At that point, the men were walking toward
St. Anne's Hospital, which was approximately one hundred yards
away.
According to the officer, as he passed them in his cruiser,
he "heard somebody drop some kind of a metallic object, like a
hard object fell to the ground." This prompted him to stop the
men for further inquiry. The men told the police officer that
they were on their way to the hospital. A subsequent search of
the area turned up a screwdriver in the location where the
defendant and his companion had been walking when the officer
heard the sound. A six-inch flashlight was found on one of the
two men.
3
The police then brought the men back to the scene of the
incident for a showup identification procedure. The eyewitness
was placed in the rear of the cruiser, and the two men, in
handcuffs, were shown to him illuminated by spotlight.2 Because
of the limited nature of what he was able to observe during the
incident, the eyewitness addressed only the similarity of the
suspects' clothing to that of the men he previously had
observed. Specifically, he testified at trial that "I told [the
police] that the individuals that they had brought out were the
individuals that were -- were wearing the exact same clothing as
the individuals out front of the business." Over the
defendant's objection, a police officer was asked about what the
eyewitness said at the showup, and he testified that the
eyewitness said, "that's definitely the -- the clothing that the
suspects were wearing."
Just as the eyewitness provided no information about the
clothing worn by the two men he had observed during the incident
(other than it was "dark"), he provided no description of what
the two suspects shown to him were wearing. Nor did he offer
any explanation about how he discerned that this was "the exact
2
At the motion to suppress hearing, a police officer
described the manner in which the defendant was shown to the
eyewitness as follows: "I illuminated him with the take down
lights and the spotlight on my cruiser." The fact that the
defendant was handcuffed during the showup procedure came out
only at trial.
4
same clothing as" those he had observed earlier. The officer
who had initiated contact with the defendant provided a general
description of what the two suspects were wearing, stating "that
they had like, you know, like hooded sweatshirts on and jackets"
that "were dark colors, if they were black or navy blue, I'm not
certain." In his summation, the prosecutor characterized the
eyewitness's testimony as stating that the defendant and his
companion's clothing "exactly matched" the clothing that the
eyewitness had seen during the incident.
An officer described damage that he observed to the front
door of the convenience store. This included a softball-sized
hole that had been created near the handle to the door (the area
where the eyewitness had seen the men "working" the door).
There were also some stray marks that could be seen elsewhere on
the door. The jury were shown two close-up photographs of some
of the damage. Visible in these photographs is a portion of the
screwdriver found near the suspects (the head of the screwdriver
and some of its shaft), which the police had placed so that the
screwdriver's tip could be compared to two of the marks on the
door (as will be discussed in detail below). Based on what is
shown in the photographs, the prosecutor argued in his summation
that the screwdriver "matches perfectly with those pry marks
[o]n that door."
5
Discussion. The conviction here was for possession of a
burglarious tool. "Where, as here, the tools or instruments
possessed by the defendants are not by their nature burglarious,
the Commonwealth must establish proof of the defendants' intent
to use the tools or instruments for burglarious purposes."
Commonwealth v. Squires, 476 Mass. 703, 708 (2017). Here, the
Commonwealth sought to prove such intent through demonstrating
that the defendant and his companion were the same two men who
had attempted to break into the convenience store earlier that
night. As confirmed by the prosecutor's closing argument, the
prime evidence on which the Commonwealth relied to link the
defendant to the crime scene was that the suspects' clothing
"exactly matched" the clothing that the eyewitness had seen
during the attempted break in, and that the screwdriver found
near the defendant "matches perfectly with" the damage to the
door of the store. For the reasons that follow, the seeming
certitude offered by claims of such "matches" wilts under
scrutiny. Before turning to whether the inculpatory evidence,
as a whole, could support a guilty verdict beyond a reasonable
doubt, I address the key individual pieces of such evidence.
1. Evidence linking the defendant to the crime scene. a.
Proximity of place and time. For reasons that the majority
opinion well explains, the fact that, ten to twenty minutes
after the incident at the convenience store, the defendant and
6
another were spotted walking along a street one-half mile away
is of negligible evidentiary moment. See Commonwealth v.
Warren, 475 Mass. 530, 536-538 (2016); Commonwealth v. Meneus,
476 Mass. 231, 237 (2017). I add only one point. The fact that
when the defendant and his companion were stopped, the two men
were observed walking toward St. Anne's Hospital, which was a
short distance away, is something that can be considered in
assessing the sufficiency of the evidence. See Commonwealth v.
Oyewole, 470 Mass. 1015, 1017 (2014) (in assessing the
sufficiency of the evidence, reviewing courts can take into
account uncontested evidence that cuts against a defendant's
guilt).3
b. Similarity of clothing. The defendant maintains that
the eyewitness's statement about the clothing he and his
companion were wearing should have been excluded because it was
the product of an overly suggestive identification procedure.
Although the procedure used here does give me some pause (a
showup during which the men were presented to the eyewitness
wearing handcuffs and put under a spotlight), I agree with the
majority that the use of such a procedure passes muster under
3
The issue in Oyewole had to do with the sufficiency of the
proof that that defendant had been notified that his driver's
license had been suspended. In concluding that the evidence of
this was insufficient, the court found it significant that the
defendant was in possession of his license when police stopped
him.
7
existing case law. See Commonwealth v. Crayton, 470 Mass 228,
236 (2014); Commonwealth v. Amaral, 81 Mass. App. Ct. 143, 148
(2012).
In my view, there are two more fundamental problems with
the eyewitness's testimony. First, his stated conclusion that
the clothing was "exactly the same" amounts to an improper lay
opinion. See Commonwealth v. Molina, 454 Mass. 232, 243 (2009)
("Lay witnesses are allowed to testify only to facts that they
observed and may not give an opinion on those facts"). Second,
the eyewitness was allowed to opine that the men were wearing
"the exact same clothing" even though an evidentiary foundation
for such an opinion was never supplied.4 As a result, the jury
heard facially powerful identification evidence without their
being given any means of evaluating the witness's basis for
drawing his conclusion.5
4
The eyewitness had surveillance cameras installed at his
home, and a video showing the two men attempting to break into
the store was shown to the jury. No useful information about
what the men or their clothing looked like can be gleaned from
the video. Accordingly, the video, at a minimum, provides no
affirmative support for the eyewitness's ability to make
detailed observations about the clothing the men were wearing.
5
The problem was compounded by the manner in which the
prosecutor previewed the evidence in his opening statement.
Without objection, he used the misleading shorthand that the
eyewitness was "able to identify these two individuals by their
clothing that they were wearing." The prosecutor made that
statement even though -- relying on Crayton, supra -- the judge
had ruled on a pretrial motion to suppress that the eyewitness
"was unable to identify [the defendant] the night of the
8
Of course, even if such testimony should have been
excluded, we are to consider it when assessing the sufficiency
of the evidence "without regard to the propriety of [its]
admission." Commonwealth v. Sepheus, 468 Mass. 160, 164 (2014),
quoting from Commonwealth v. Farnsworth, 76 Mass. App. Ct. 87,
98 (2010). However, this does not mean that the competency of
such evidence is beside the point. As we recently said, "any
unobjected-to statement admitted at trial is only worth what it
is worth." Commonwealth v. Drapaniotis, 89 Mass. App. Ct. 267,
274 (2016) (unobjected-to hearsay testimony that gun salesman
had represented a firearm worked held insufficient to prove its
operability).6
incident and he would not be permitted to identify the
[d]efendant at trial." In any event, there is a subtle but
important distinction between a witness's, on one hand,
commenting on the similarity of a defendant's clothing to that
of a perpetrator, and, on the other, "identifying a defendant"
by his clothing. As the case before us illustrates, although
the case law draws a doctrinal distinction between
identifications of people and identifications of inanimate
objects, see Commonwealth v. Thomas, 476 Mass. 451, 464-468
(2017), and cases cited, the boundary between those types of
identifications can be quite blurred in practice.
6
It often has been said that "it is for the jury to
determine what weight to give" particular evidence."
Commonwealth v. Moquette, 439 Mass. 697, 703 (2003). However,
that truism does not mean that appellate judges are required to
blind ourselves to profound deficiencies in the admitted
evidence when we carry out our role of reviewing what reasonable
inferences rational jurors could draw from that evidence, and
whether such inferences are enough to support a verdict of
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Thus, the presence of some
evidence supporting a defendant's guilt does not end the
9
The principal inference that the jury could draw from the
testimony about the clothing was that the suspects brought
before the eyewitness and the men he had observed earlier were
wearing dark hooded sweatshirts and jackets. By itself, this
provided negligible import. See Commonwealth v. Cheek, 413
Mass. 492, 496 (1992) (statement that perpetrator, like
defendant, was wearing three-quarter length black down goose
jacket did not supply police even with reasonable suspicion to
make investigative stop, absent evidence that jacket was unusual
or distinctive). Cf. Commonwealth v. Bresilla, 470 Mass. 422,
425, 429-431 (2015) (rejecting challenge to showup procedures
through which numerous eyewitnesses identified distinctive
"light brown leather jacket with fur collar and fur cuffs" as
jacket shooter was wearing). The additional information the
jury were told -- that the eyewitness had concluded that the two
sets of clothing looked identical for reasons he never explained
-- added incremental value at best.
sufficiency analysis. Rather, as the Supreme Judicial Court has
recently reaffirmed, "[m]ore than slight evidence must support
each essential element, and 'a conviction may not rest upon the
piling of inference upon inference or conjecture and
speculation.'" Commonwealth v. Grassie, 476 Mass. 202, 207
(2017), quoting from Commonwealth v. Reaves, 434 Mass. 383, 390
(2001). See Sepheus, supra at 167-168 (appellate court
conducting sufficiency analysis examining force of inferences
that can be drawn from admitted evidence and absence of
evidence).
10
c. Evidence linking the screwdriver found near where the
defendant was walking to the crime scene. The eyewitness never
stated that the two men at the convenience store were using, or
otherwise possessed a screwdriver. In fact, his description of
the tool that he observed them using suggests that it was not a
screwdriver.7 Nevertheless, the Commonwealth suggested it had
conclusive forensic proof to match the screwdriver to the damage
caused at crime scene. Like the proof that the clothing
provided an exact match, the evidence linking the screwdriver to
the crime scene amounts to far less than first appears.
The screwdriver itself was not introduced in evidence,
although, as noted, a small portion of it is shown in the two
photographs that were taken of some of the damage to the front
door of the convenience store. From all that is shown in these
photographs, it appears to be an ordinary flat-head screwdriver.
Nothing in the photographs, or the trial testimony, indicates
that it has any distinctive features.8
7
Strictly speaking, the phrase "a crow bar or pipe or
something" is broad enough to encompass a screwdriver. Notably,
the Commonwealth never took the position that the tool that the
eyewitness observed was the screwdriver later found. To the
contrary, the prosecutor argued that the men had both a crow bar
and the screwdriver, and that they must have discarded the crow
bar before they were stopped by the police.
8
One witness made a single, passing reference to it as "a
long screwdriver." No scale is indicated in the close-up
photographs that show parts of the door and screwdriver.
11
One of the two photographs shows a small lateral gash in
the metal covering of the door. A rational juror could have
concluded that the gash to the metal was a pry mark that someone
had caused using an implement such as a pry bar, a chisel, or,
indeed, a screwdriver. In that photograph, the screwdriver
found near where the defendant was walking is being held up to
the surface of the door, with its tip inserted into the gash.
The tip appears to fit snugly there, and it is based presumably
on that happenstance that the prosecutor argued to the jury that
the screwdriver "matches perfectly with those pry marks [o]n
that door."9 For the reasons set forth below, the exactitude
claimed by the prosecutor is unsupported by the evidence. Yet,
the "superficial plausibility of the prosecutor's argument
[linking the defendant to the crime] masked its profound flaws."
Commonwealth v. Ferreira, 460 Mass. 781, 788 (2011), quoting
9
No witness testified to the match; it was solely the
prosecutor who spoke to the issue in his closing. As a result,
the defendant had no opportunity to challenge the foundation for
the assertion that the screwdriver "perfectly matched" some of
the damage to the door, or to test that assertion through cross-
examination. Cf. Commonwealth v. Ferreira, 460 Mass. 781, 786-
787 (2011) (finding error in prosecutor's raising probability
argument related to witness identification in his closing
argument, in part based on need to have such claim established
through witness testimony). Indeed, given that, by
Massachusetts tradition, the prosecutor's closing went last, the
defendant did not even have an opportunity to respond to the
"perfectly matches" claim in his own closing argument.
12
from Commonwealth v. Ferreira, 77 Mass. App. Ct. 675, 685 n.6
(2010) (Milkey, J. dissenting).10
The screwdriver, like other ordinary flat-head
screwdrivers, has a tapered head, with the narrowest point being
the very end (that is, where the tip is designed to meet a
screw). As a matter of simple geometry, so long as their tips
were not wider than the gash, screwdrivers of various sizes
readily could appear to fit snugly into the gash (and thus seem
to "match[] perfectly"). Thus, all that the staged photo of the
screwdriver inserted into the gash really shows is that the
10
The Supreme Judicial Court on many occasions has
recognized the power of claims that evidence linked to a
defendant "matches" evidence of the crime, and it has taken
appropriate steps to limit how such claims are presented to a
jury. Thus, for example, a ballistics expert may express his
opinion that a bullet was fired by a particular gun "to a
reasonable degree of ballistics certainty" if the expert is able
to "identif[y] sufficient individual characteristic toolmarks"
supporting such a match, but the expert may not use phrasing
that connotes a higher degree of certitude. Commonwealth v.
Pytou Heang, 458 Mass. 827, 848-849 (2011). See generally Mass.
G. Evid. § 702 note, at 153 (2017) (reviewing case law regarding
expert opinions that are "empirically based but subjective in
nature"). Where statistical analysis is available to set forth
the significance of a purported match, that analysis must
accompany the opinion. See Commonwealth v. Mattei, 455 Mass.
840, 850 (2010), quoting from Commonwealth v. Curnin, 409 Mass.
218, 222 n.7 (1991) ("[I]n a criminal trial we will 'not permit
the admission of test results showing a DNA match [a positive
result] without telling the jury anything about the likelihood
of that match occurring'"). As has been explained, "[e]vidence
of a match based on correctly used testing systems is of little
or no value without reliable evidence indicating the
significance of the match." Commonwealth v. Rosier, 425 Mass.
807, 813 (1997).
13
screwdriver could not be ruled out as a potential source of that
damage.
The other photo reinforces this point. That photo plainly
shows that the end of the tip of the screwdriver is appreciably
smaller than the lateral indentation that appears there (which
was in what appears to be a wooden portion of the door or door
frame). It is, of course, still entirely possible that the
screwdriver was used to make that mark, even though it could not
fairly be characterized as a "perfect match." Taken together,
the two photos demonstrate that the existence of a perfect match
between the implement and the damage it allegedly caused is
neither necessary nor sufficient to prove that it caused such
damage.
In addition, there was no testimony from the proprietor of
the store or anyone else as to when the gash was made. Nor is
there anything in the photographs that suggests that this damage
was fresh. The absence of any evidence regarding the state of
the door prior to the incident, at a minimum, substantially
reduces any inculpatory value provided by the evidence linking
the screwdriver to the crime scene.11 See Commonwealth v.
11
To address that point at trial, the prosecutor argued
that the jury could conclude that the damage to the door must
have just occurred because no reasonable store proprietor would
leave such damage unaddressed. That argument has a great deal
of force with regard to the softball-size hole in the door by
its handle, the very area where the eyewitness observed one of
14
Renaud, 81 Mass. App. Ct. 261, 264 (2012) (presence of
defendant's electronic banking card at crime scene "cannot allow
a factfinder to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the
owner of that card was in possession of it during the commission
of a crime"). Cf. Commonwealth v. French, 476 Mass. 1023, 1024
(2017), quoting from Commonwealth v. Fazzino, 27 Mass. App. Ct.
485, 487 (1989) (evidence held insufficient where defendant's
fingerprint found near window at scene of break-in was only
evidence linking him to crime, and there was no proof "which
reasonably excludes the hypothesis that the fingerprint[] w[as]
impressed at a time other than when the crime was being
committed").
2. Evidence that the defendant possessed and sought to
discard a screwdriver. As noted, the officer who spotted the
defendant and his companion walking toward St. Anne's Hospital
testified that he "heard somebody drop some kind of a metallic
object, like a hard object fell on the ground." The officer had
not seen the men carrying anything before this, and it is, of
course, impossible for one -- by ears alone -- to "hear[]
the men repeatedly striking the door. It has minimal, if any,
force with regard to the small gash in the metal covering to the
door that was found in a different location (near the bottom
corner of the door). Moreover, the chance that the gash there
was made at a different time is strengthened by testimony from
the eyewitness that he frequently had to call the local police
to respond to all the crime he observed outside his window.
15
somebody drop" something.12 Nor did the officer explain why he
believed the men must have "drop[ped] some kind of metallic
object," as opposed, say, to having kicked it. Nevertheless,
because we are bound in this context to view the evidence in the
light most favorable to the Commonwealth, I accept that rational
jurors could have inferred that the sound the officer heard was
that of the men dropping the screwdriver found at the spot where
they had been walking.
I further accept that the dropping of the screwdriver could
be taken as some evidence of consciousness of guilt, that is,
that the defendant and his companion had possessed the
screwdriver with a nefarious intent. At the same time, the
force of such an inference is hardly as compelling as the
majority opinion suggests, especially when it is stripped of the
untenable claim that the screwdriver matches perfectly with the
crime scene. The tenuousness of any claim of consciousness of
guilt is illustrated by viewing such an argument in its full
context. Under the Commonwealth's theory of the case, the men
had both a crow bar and a screwdriver at the store, and they
discarded the crow bar once they left the scene in order to hide
evidence linking them to the crime. Then, having initially
decided to retain possession of the screwdriver, the men
12
The lack of an objection to such testimony does not
require us to accept it at face value. See Drapaniotis, 89
Mass. App. Ct. at 274.
16
realized their error in doing so at the very instant that the
officer drove by them. As a result, they at that moment
discarded the screwdriver in a manner that the officer could
hear from inside his car.
Without any significant evidence linking the defendant or
the screwdriver to the crime scene, the question then is whether
the mere discarding of the screwdriver was enough to establish
the defendant's intent to use it, an ordinary household item,
for burglarious purposes. In my view, relying on the discarding
of the screwdriver to demonstrate such intent comes at least
close to violating the principle that juries may not convict a
defendant based on consciousness of guilt alone. See
Commonwealth v. Toney, 385 Mass. 575, 585 (1982).
3. Evidence as a whole. Of course, a reviewing court in
the end must consider the totality of incriminatory evidence
taken together, not view individual pieces in isolation. "As
Justice Holmes observed long ago, '[e]vidence which would be
colorless if it stood alone may get a new complexion from other
facts which are proved, and in turn may corroborate the
conclusion which would be drawn from the other facts.'"
Commonwealth v. Norman, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 344, 347 (2015),
quoting from Commonwealth v. Mulrey, 170 Mass. 103, 110 (1898).
Here, the jury heard evidence that: a) the defendant and
another man were found walking one-half mile from the site where
17
two men had been observed ten or twenty minutes earlier pounding
the door of a store with "a crow bar or pipe or something," b)
the sets of men wore dark hooded sweatshirts and jackets that an
eyewitness opined -- without explanation -- was the "exact same
clothing," c) the two suspects dropped a screwdriver as they
were passed by a police officer and were then found in
possession of a flashlight, and d) the screwdriver that the men
dropped could not be ruled out as the source of certain marks on
the door that may or may not have been made that night. Taking
this evidence as a whole, I agree that a rational juror could
conclude that the defendant and his companion likely were the
same two men that the eyewitness had observed at the scene, and
therefore that the defendant likely had been in possession of a
tool that he intended to use for burglarious purposes.
However, the real question we face is whether a rational
juror could take such evidence as proof of the defendant's guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt, that is, proof that supplied "an
abiding conviction, to a moral certainty, of the truth of the
charge." Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush. 295, 320 (1850). In
my view, given how thin the Commonwealth's proof actually was,
the answer to that question is "no." The Commonwealth's case
ultimately rests on only "slight evidence" and "upon the piling
of inference upon inference or conjecture and speculation." See
18
Commonwealth v. Grassie, 476 Mass. 202, 207 (2017), quoting from
Commonwealth v. Reaves, 434 Mass. 383, 390 (2001).