Commonwealth v. Beliard

819 N.E.2d 556, 443 Mass. 79, 2004 Mass. LEXIS 759
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 17, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 819 N.E.2d 556 (Commonwealth v. Beliard) 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. Beliard, 819 N.E.2d 556, 443 Mass. 79, 2004 Mass. LEXIS 759 (Mass. 2004).

Opinion

Greaney, J.

Based on a shooting that occurred in the early morning hours of September 7, 1996, in the Mattapan section of Boston, a jury convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree (as a joint venturer) on the theories of deliberate premeditation and extreme atrocity or cruelty; unlawful possession of a firearm; and unlawful possession of ammunition. The jury acquitted the defendant of a second charge of unlawful possession of ammunition that was based on his alleged possession, after the murder, of a single round of ammunition seized pursuant to the search warrant he challenges in this appeal. The defendant was tried with Luidgi Denis, who was acquitted by the jury of all charges.1 A judge, who was not the trial judge, denied the defendant’s motion for a new trial which claimed that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to challenge the admission of the Commonwealth’s ballistics evidence concerning “bunter tool marks” made on discharged cartridge casings.2 Represented by new counsel on appeal, the defendant argues: (1) his motion to suppress evidence seized from his residence should have been allowed; (2) error in the prosecutor’s opening statement; (3) error in the admission in evidence of the guilty pleas of one of his brothers to an earlier armed home invasion and shooting; (4) that his trial counsel furnished him with constitutionally ineffective representation by eliciting an incriminating statement from a witness; and (5) his motion for a new trial was improperly denied. We affirm the defendant’s convictions and discern no basis to exercise our authority under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.

The jury could have found the following. On September 3, 1996, the defendant’s brother, who was known as Bobby Be[81]*81liard (Bobby),3 asked Serge St. Fort, who was working at a pizza shop in Mattapan, to “hold onto” his bicycle for a while. When Bobby had not returned by the end of St. Fort’s shift, St. Fort passed the bicycle on to Alexis Paul with instructions to return it to Bobby. Paul gave the bicycle to the victim, Rico Green, who sold it and refused to reimburse Bobby.

Upset over the theft, the defendant stated that he wanted a confrontation, and that Rico’s “gonna have to pay for it.” The defendant considered whether to engage in a fight with the victim and his friends, or whether to “take them off the block” by shooting them. On the evening of September 4, a fight over the bicycle took place between the defendant and some of his friends, and the victim and his friends. During the fight, the defendant was struck (not by the victim, but by one of his friends) and suffered a black eye.

Following the fight, the defendant told St. Fort, “We have a plan,” and “We gonna go after these guys tonight.” The defendant also stated that he wanted to retaliate and shoot somebody. The defendant made telephone calls in an attempt to obtain a gun or guns and ammunition.

Somewhere after 3 a.m., on September 7, 1996, two men approached the victim while he was out walking his dog and repeatedly shot him. The men ran away. The victim died as the result of multiple gunshot wounds, three to his head, one to his chest, one to his upper back, and four to his upper and lower extremities. The gunshot to his chest would have severely impaired his breathing.

Later in the morning of September 7, Paul, who was a friend of both the victim and the defendant and codefendant, visited the defendant. In the basement of the defendant’s house, Paul observed a “sawed off shotgun,” “a nine millimeter and a .25 caliber,” and “a box of shells for each gun on the floor.” The defendant told Paul that he shot the victim three times in the head. The defendant stated that “they” were after “the kid on the bike first,” but he had left by the time they approached him. The next person they saw was the victim.

On another occasion in the defendant’s basement, the [82]*82codefendant told Paul that he “got body shots” and that he (the codefendant) was mad that he did not “get the guy on the bike.” The codefendant asked Paul to help him take a nine millimeter gun apart. With a drill, the codefendant attempted to “drill out” the serial numbers on the nine millimeter gun, and picked up a .25 caliber gun, stating that he would “go drill” that gun at home.

After the killing, the defendant warned St. Fort to “[b]e careful” and to “watch [his] back.” In his friend Omar Lopez’s presence, the defendant said the words “execution style” to Bobby. He also asked Lopez if Lopez had spoken with police, and told Lopez that he did not have to tell them anything, that the police did not need to know anything, and that he (the defendant) believed Alex Knights, another friend of the defendant and a relative of Lopez, was snitching on him.

From the scene of the shooting, police recovered ballistics evidence, including seven .25 caliber discharged cartridge casings, and two spent .25 caliber bullet fragments. Of the seven .25 caliber discharged cartridge casings, five were head stamped “RP” and two were head stamped “CCI.” A head stamp is a manufacturer’s mark. For example, RP is the mark of the manufacturer Remington Peters.4 In addition, two nine millimeter discharged cartridge casings, each bearing a foreign head stamp, and one spent nine millimeter bullet fragment were recovered. During an authorized search of the defendant’s home on January 18, 1997, police seized a .25 caliber bullet, head stamped RP, from a small blue plastic bag. No weapon or weapons were recovered.

Detective Thomas L. Matthews of the Boston police department, an expert on ballistics evidence, testified that, based on distinct markings that are left by a gun on each casing, his examination of such markings revealed that the seven .25 caliber discharged cartridge casings all came from the same gun, a .25 caliber semiautomatic handgun. He concluded that the other handgun used in the killing was a nine millimeter.

The Commonwealth introduced evidence that the defendant’s brother Belius had pleaded guilty to an armed home invasion [83]*83and a shooting that occurred on January 23, 1996. Ballistics evidence recovered in that crime included eight discharged cartridge casings and one bullet (no gun was recovered). Over the defendant’s objection, Detective Matthews testified that, of those eight discharged cartridge casings, five were fired from one firearm, while three were fired from a different firearm. The five discharged cartridge casings were all .25 caliber cartridge casings that bore the head stamp CCI. Detective Matthews indicated that he had compared the .25 caliber discharged cartridge casings recovered from the January 23, 1996, home invasion with the .25 caliber discharged cartridge casings recovered from the victim’s shooting, and concluded that the discharged casings had been fired from the same gun.

The Commonwealth also introduced testimony from a ballistician employed by the Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Ronald Dodson. Dodson conducted a manufacturer’s mark examination on some of the ballistics evidence recovered from the January 23, 1996, home invasion and from the victim’s shooting. He explained that a manufacturer’s mark, which is imprinted on a bullet’s shell casing, is created by a bunter tool. The bunter tool stamps the manufacturer’s mark, such as “RP,” or “CCI,” onto the head stamp of a cartridge casing and, at the same time, punches a hole.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
819 N.E.2d 556, 443 Mass. 79, 2004 Mass. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-beliard-mass-2004.