Commonwealth v. Allard

711 N.E.2d 156, 429 Mass. 756, 1999 Mass. LEXIS 368
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 21, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 711 N.E.2d 156 (Commonwealth v. Allard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Allard, 711 N.E.2d 156, 429 Mass. 756, 1999 Mass. LEXIS 368 (Mass. 1999).

Opinion

Lynch, J.

On April 5, 1995, a jury convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree based on deliberate premeditation and extreme atrocity or cruelty. The defendant now appeals, challenging the judge’s jury instructions. Because he did not object to the judge’s instructions below, we review them to determine whether there was a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice. See G. L. c. 278, § 33E.1 We affirm the conviction and decline to exercise our statutory power to reduce or to vacate the defendant’s conviction under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.

We summarize the evidence in the light most favorable to the [757]*757Commonwealth. The defendant and the victim’s former girl friend, Kerrie Smallwood, were engaged to be married on August 20, 1994. A week before the wedding was to occur, however, she terminated their engagement and resumed her relationship with the victim. After this abrupt breakup, the defendant threatened to kill the victim. At the defendant’s request his friend, Daniel Hiersche, telephoned the victim pretending to be a manager with the Milton Bradley Company, and scheduled a nonexistent job interview for the following Saturday morning, August 20.2 Smallwood and another witness corroborated the victim’s receiving this telephone call.

On August 19, the victim drove Smallwood, her son, and two other women to Smallwood’s apartment. The defendant, who lived in the neighborhood, approached the automobile, greeted the victim, and offered to show him the route to Milton Bradley. The victim accepted the offer and they followed the defendant to the building, where the defendant suggested that he park in the rear.

Later that evening, two other women accompanied Hiersche and another man to the defendant’s apartment. Hiersche and the defendant showed the women a twelve-inch metal “dumbbell” bar and “brass knuckles.” They passed the bar around and discussed a plan to confront the victim when he showed up for the nonexistent interview the following morning.

On August 20, the victim left for the interview. His friends never saw him again. Although the defendant had plans to go grocery shopping with Smallwood that day, he did not arrive home until sometime between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. He told her that he had gone hiking with two friends, and that he had to drive them home. Several hours later when the defendant returned and drove Smallwood to her friend Tammy’s house, Tammy asked where he had been. The defendant replied that he had gone rock climbing. Tammy expressed surprise that he had gone rock climbing in jeans, sneakers, and a T-shirt without getting dirty or sunburned despite his previously demonstrated sensitivity to the sun.

. The next day, the defendant told Hiersche he had killed the [758]*758victim, after meeting him at Milton Bradley. The defendant said he distracted the victim and then hit him three times in the head with the metal bar. He then put the victim into the automobile and drove around for several hours, waiting for him to lose consciousness. Eventually he went to a wooded area known as Wolf Swamp. When he got out of the automobile, the victim tried to protect himself by locking the doors, whereupon the defendant smashed the window, dragged him into the woods, and beat him until he stopped moving.

On August 21, the defendant brought Hiersche to the woods and showed him the body. He dragged the body further into the woods and covered it with a section of discarded fence and a blanket. The two then moved the victim’s automobile to an “urban area” thirty to forty-five minutes away from the crime scene.

As time progressed and the victim had not turned up, his friends became increasingly concerned. The defendant made suspicious statements to friends, including asking Tammy to help him influence Smallwood to be his girl friend again if the victim did not return “in say two weeks.” The defendant later speculated, “I wonder if they find [the victim’s automobile] like in someplace in Connecticut or something if it would be brought back here to Massachusetts and the police here would handle it?”3 When Tammy asked what he was talking about, he responded, “Well, what if they find [the victim] before and he was a minor or something, before he was an adult, would it be a minor’s case or an adult’s case?” The defendant also admitted to the victim’s father that he had stalked the victim while dressed in black and wearing a mask.

The defendant told friends that he had seen the victim with “some girl” in a blue Pontiac Sunbird automobile with Vermont registration plates, and that he had chased the automobile for over one hour before his automobile overheated, forcing him to give up the pursuit. The defendant visited the victim’s father and claimed that, after the chase, the blue Pontiac Sunbird automobile had followed him for hours and its driver had attacked him at a telephone booth as he tried to call for help by holding a knife to his throat and telling him that “people had better stop looking for [the victim] or I’m going to come back and kill you.”

[759]*759Four days after the victim’s disappearance, the defendant brought Hiersche and another friend to the victim’s automobile. They moved it again and abandoned it. The police discovered the automobile the following day, with the smashed window and heavy bloodstains in the interior. On August 31, officers spoke with Hiersche, who led them to the body. Hiersche had initially lied to police about his involvement in the killing, but eventually entered into a cooperation agreement with the police and, according to the defendant, pleaded guilty to being an accessory before the fact to murder in the first degree. At trial, the medical examiner testified that there were a number of fractures on the victim’s skull consistent with the multiple blows to the head, as well as considerable loss of blood. The defendant claimed that Hiersche murdered the victim.

The defendant argues that the judge (1) defined reasonable doubt in a manner that confused the jury as to the Commonwealth’s burden of proof; (2) should not have instructed the jury that their function was to search for the truth; and (3) improperly shifted the burden of proof by suggesting that the jury had to convict Unless they found a reasonable doubt. Because the defendant did not raise arguments one and three at trial, we review those claims to determine whether the jury instructions created a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice and conclude that there was no such likelihood. Commonwealth v. Pucillo, 427 Mass. 108, 115 (1998), citing Commonwealth v. Wright, 411 Mass. 678, 681 (1992). We conclude that error alleged in claim two was, in any event, not prejudicial. The defendant also urges us to exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to reduce or to set aside the verdict. We decline to do so and affirm the conviction.

1. Propriety of reasonable doubt instruction. The defendant first argues that the judge’s charge on reasonable doubt was improper. The judge’s charge, set out in the margin,4 is almost identical to the instruction given by the same judge in another [760]*760case of murder in the first degree that we have upheld on appeal, Commonwealth v. Watkins, 425 Mass. 830, 836-839 & n.9 (1997). In that case, we reasoned:

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Bluebook (online)
711 N.E.2d 156, 429 Mass. 756, 1999 Mass. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-allard-mass-1999.