Alicea v. Silva

271 F. Supp. 3d 370
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 26, 2017
DocketCivil Action No. 14-40059-TSH
StatusPublished

This text of 271 F. Supp. 3d 370 (Alicea v. Silva) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alicea v. Silva, 271 F. Supp. 3d 370 (D. Mass. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER

TIMOTHY HILLMAN, DISTRICT JUDGE

Background

Juan Pablo Alicea (“Alicea” or “Petitioner”) has filed a Petition Under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 For Writ Of Habeas Corpus By A Person In State Custody (Docket No. l)(“Petition”) against Steven Silva, Superintendent, Souza-Baranowski Correctional Cénter (“Respondent”)1. Petitioner was convicted in Massachusetts Superior Court of murder in the first degree and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on the first degree murder charge and 8-10 years on the assault and battery with a dangerous weapon charge, to - be served consecutively. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts (“SJO”) affirmed his conviction on April 12,2013. ;

Alicea asserts the following, ground for relief in his Petition:

Ground One: His Sixth Amendment Confrontation Right and/or his Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Right were violated when the trial judge refused to let him call a witness, who he maintains was the actual murderer, based on the witness’s invocation his Fifth Amendment privilege — the trial judge “secreted” evidence that established that the witness’s invocation of the Fifth Amendment privilege was “defective.”

Alicea has exhausted state-court remedies with respect to the single ground for relief asserted in his Petition. For the following reasons, the Petition is denied.

Facts2

The Underlying Crime

On the afternoon on May 15, 2002, at about 8 p.m., Larisa Andujar (“Andujar”), who was at the time a heroin user, woke up and injected three bags of heroin. She was with her boyfriend, Hylas Strange III (“Strange”). Strange received a telephone call from Alicea, who was a friend of both he and Andujar. Alicea told Strange that he had figured out that Sti-ange had not stolen a stereo from his sister, and he was no longer upset with him. Alicea, who was located at 833 Main Street in Worcester, invited Strange and Andujar over telling Strange that he was in possession of some heroin.

That same afternoon, Petra Moreno (“Moreno”) arrived at her apartment on the third floor of 833 Main Street to find signs of a break-in and two men, including Alicea, standing on the third-floor porch. Alicea identified himself as the brother of Moreno’s next-door neighbor and told Moreno that someone called “Gucci,” a nickname by which Strange was known, had broken into the neighbor’s apartment and probably had broken into Moreno’s apartment. Alicea told Moreno that they were “going to take care of it.”

After Strange’s telephone conversation with Alicea, Andujar’s mother drove Andu-jar and Strange to the corner of Main Street and Allen Street in Worcester. An-dujar and Strange walked to the parking lot of 833 Main Street, looked up, and saw Alicea standing on the third-floor porch with another person, Eliezer Herrera (“Herrera”). Alicea motioned for Andujar and Strange to climb the steps. When they reached the second-floor landing, Strange ascended the first two steps to the third floor in front of Andujar, and as Andujar looked down to take her first step, she heard a gunshot and looked up to see Alicea shooting at them. Strange jumped back off the steps, jumped in front of Andujar, pushed her to the side, took two steps, and then fell after another shot. Andujar looked up and saw Alicea smile, then frown, and run out of sight. Strange was lying on the porch; ■ nonresponsive, with his eyes open and blood pooling around his head. Strange sustained a total of four gunshot wounds, including a fatal wound to his head, and a bullet grazed Andujar’s right shoulder. Andujar then ran down the steps and up the hill to her mother’s vehicle.

About twenty minutes after Moreno spoke with Alicea- on the porch, she heard between three and five gunshots. Moreno ran outside and saw a body on the second-floor porch and then saw Andujar running along Allen Street. ■

Witness Claim of Fifth Amendment Privilege.

At a hearing on the parties’ pretrial motions on January 16, 2004, the judge reviewed the Commonwealth’s proposed application for a grant of immunity pursuant to Mass.Gen.L. ch. 233, § 20E, for Herrera, a proposed witness, whom Alicea argued was the shooter. The judge concluded that the hearing on the Commonwealth’s immunity application could not take place at that time because the prosecutor had not notified the Massachusetts Attorney General or other district attorneys of the application, as required by the statute. The judge decided instead to determine later that day whether the proposed witness had a valid basis for a claim of Fifth Amendment privilege, and to hear the full immunity application at a later point in time, after the Commonwealth had satisfied the notice requirements. During the hearing, counsel for Herrera, citing Commonwealth v. Martin, 423 Mass. 496, 668 N.E.2d 825 (1996), requested that a voir dire of Herrera be conducted in camera to assess his client’s claim of privilege. Over defense counsel’s objection to an in camera voir dire of “a potentially devastating witness like Mr. Herrera,” the judge conducted a closed hearing to determine whether Herrera would assert the Fifth Amendment if called to testify and whether such a claim of privilege would be valid. The judge excluded the defendant and defense counsel from the hearing, but permitted the prosecutor to remain.

At the end of the hearing, the judge found that Herrera had validly invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege “based on [the judge’s] understanding of Mr. Herrera’s involvement in the case ..., the facts and circumstances giving rise to a shooting and resulting in charges against [the defendant], and bearing in mind Mr. Herrera’s [unrelated] pending legal cases in the Worcester District Court....” The judge initially impounded the portion of the transcript containing the content of this hearing, but later made it available to the parties at the request of the defendant’s appellate counsel. Nothing in the record indicates that the Commonwealth pursued further an immunity application for Herrera; in any event, Herrera was not called as a witness.

Post-Trial Proceedings

Alicea filed a direct appeal from his conviction to the SJC in 2004. On February 26, 2010, while his appeal was still pending, Alicea filed a motion for new trial under Mass.R.Crim.P, 30(b) on the grounds that there was a fundamental denial of his confrontation clause rights under the Sixth Amendment and his Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Rights when the trial judge barred defense counsel from the hearing on whether to exclude the trial testimony of a witness, who he claimed to be the shooter, based on the witness’s invocation of his Fifth Amendment privilege. He also asserted that preventing him from calling the witness violated his right to present a complete defense.

The trial judge, denying the motion for new trial, found that it was not error to exclude defense counsel from the hearing and that Herrera had a valid Fifth Amendment claim. Moreover, the trial judge stated: “[c]ontrary to Alicea’s claim that he sought to call Herrera as a trial witness, ...

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Bluebook (online)
271 F. Supp. 3d 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alicea-v-silva-mad-2017.