Commonwealth v. Beneche

933 N.E.2d 951, 458 Mass. 61, 2010 Mass. LEXIS 676
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 2010
DocketSJC-10292
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 933 N.E.2d 951 (Commonwealth v. Beneche) 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. Beneche, 933 N.E.2d 951, 458 Mass. 61, 2010 Mass. LEXIS 676 (Mass. 2010).

Opinion

Cordy, J.

On May 23, 2004, the police found the body of Kayla Ravenell in the Great Pond Reservoir in Braintree. The body of her two year old son was found the following morning; he had been suffocated to death, put in a trash bag, and then thrown out a window. The defendant, Jims Beneche, who was Ravenell’s former boy friend and the father of the two year old, was indicted for the murders, as was his then current girl friend, Jessica Deane. Beneche was tried separately, and a Superior Court jury found him guilty as a joint venturer of murder in the first degree on both indictments, on theories of deliberate premeditation and extreme atrocity or cruelty. 1

On appeal Beneche argues that (1) the evidence was insufficient to support the verdicts; (2) his right to silence was violated by the admission of testimony that, inter alia, he was unresponsive to police allegations that he threw his son out the window; (3) the trial judge erred in instructing the jury that Deane had been convicted of the two murders; (4) the judge erroneously instructed the jury that the defendant was present at the scene of the crime; (5) the judge erred in failing to conduct a voir dire to determine *63 whether one of the jurors had been sleeping during the trial; and (6) his counsel was ineffective for, among other things, failing to object to evidence of Beneche’s “prior bad acts.” Beneche additionally requests that we reverse the murder convictions and grant him a new trial or reduce the verdicts based on our authority bestowed by G. L. c. 278, § 33E. For the reasons set out below, we affirm both convictions of murder in the first degree and discern no basis to exercise our powers under that statute.

1. Background. We summarize the evidence as the jury could have found it, focusing on the facts relevant to the defendant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, and reserving certain facts for later discussion.

a. History of defendant’s relationships with Ravenell and Deane. Beneche and Ravenell began dating while in high school during the fall of 1999. Their relationship continued for several years and on February 22, 2002, the couple’s child was born. Although Beneche and Ravenell remained together after the child was bom, and he took responsibility for being the child’s father, the relationship soon began to deteriorate and ended during the summer of 2002. Later that year, Beneche began dating Deane.

Approximately one year after Deane and Beneche began dating, Deane moved into the apartment at 824B Border Street in the Shore Plaza apartment complex in the East Boston section of Boston that Beneche shared with his mother and brother. According to close friends, Beneche and Deane loved each other, were “very happy together,” were together every day, and exhibited many personal displays of affection. Deane wrote several love letters to Beneche, which he kept in his top dresser drawer, expressing, “I will prove my love to you. You’re my everything . . . I’m willing to die for you. I would do anything for you, no matter what it was. I’d kill someone for you. I would still do it just because you asked me to.” The couple planned to move into their own apartment, and they told friends that they were married.

As Beneche’s relationship with Deane grew more serious, his relationship with Ravenell became more tumultuous. Although electronic mail messages (e-mails) between him and Ravenell suggest that the two were still close, their relationship also *64 turned hostile and became a source of problems in Beneche’s life. In January, 2003, a judge ordered Beneche to pay child support in the amount of fifty-seven dollars per week. Because he failed to do so, his wages were garnished and funds were deducted from his income tax refunds. While he was out of work he received multiple letters from the Department of Revenue informing him that he was in arrears and assessing penalties. At the time of the killings, Beneche owed Ravenell over $3,000 in child support. As one neighbor and friend testified, Beneche expressed his anger that Ravenell “nagged him all the time” about the child and that he was “sick” of paying child support.

On July 20, 2003, Ravenell went to the East Boston police station with her child. She was crying and the right side of her face was swollen. Ravenell claimed that she had asked Beneche for money, and that he became angry and struck her. He then threw twelve dollars at her and called her a “bitch.” 2 Beneche was subsequently arrested; the charges against him for this incident were ultimately dropped. Beneche complained to friends that Ravenell had him arrested.

On September 3, 2003, police officers responded to a “domestic violence” call at Ravenell’s apartment at 3 Monadnock Street in the Dorchester section of Boston. Beneche and Ravenell had been arguing over money, and each claimed to have been hit by the other. Beneche was angered further by this and other incidents involving the police.

Additionally, Beneche’s continued contact with Ravenell (when he visited his son at her apartment) caused him problems in his relationship with Deane. After Beneche returned from visiting his son, he often engaged in heated arguments with Deane, who wanted him to have nothing to do with Ravenell and his child. Deane was jealous of Ravenell and the child, and according to a friend, “wished them death.” Deane frequently told her friends and others how much she hated Ravenell. She was upset that Beneche had a child with Ravenell because she wanted to have his first son. In an undated letter to a friend, which was found in Beneche’s apartment after the murders, *65 Deane wrote, referring to Ravenell: “I’m doing that shit for that bitch, I’m plotting everything right now so there ain’t no one gets caught up. The bitch is finally done for.” Despite Deane’s protestations, Beneche continued to visit his son and spent Easter with Ravenell’s family. However, he became increasingly angry at Ravenell, often coming home from visits with his son so angry that he would punch a wall. He began questioning whether he was the child’s father.

Deane also made numerous harassing and threatening telephone calls to Ravenell from Beneche’s telephone. Beneche was aware of these calls and they were witnessed by several of their friends. In January, 2004, after Ravenell complained to the police that she had received threats from a female voice coming from Beneche’s number and had heard his voice in the background, the police began an investigation. When questioned by the police, and later under oath at a clerk’s hearing, Beneche denied that he had a girl friend and that a female had called from his telephone. Not only did he lie to protect Deane, but Beneche alleged that he was the “true victim” and filed for a protective order against Ravenell.

During the week before the murders, the conflict between Beneche and Ravenell intensified. Ravenell sent Beneche an e-mail on May 18, 2004, that in harsh terms and profanity criticized the defendant for giving her a sexually transmitted disease, and for being jobless, useless, and a bad father who owed child support. Among other things, she told him, “Do everyone a favor, jump in front of a bus or just kill yourself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
933 N.E.2d 951, 458 Mass. 61, 2010 Mass. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-beneche-mass-2010.