Commonwealth v. Biasiucci

806 N.E.2d 104, 60 Mass. App. Ct. 734, 2004 Mass. App. LEXIS 344
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedApril 1, 2004
DocketNo. 02-P-1092
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 806 N.E.2d 104 (Commonwealth v. Biasiucci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Biasiucci, 806 N.E.2d 104, 60 Mass. App. Ct. 734, 2004 Mass. App. LEXIS 344 (Mass. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

Upon jury-waived trial, the defendant John Biasiucci was convicted of the crimes of rape of a child (G. L. c. 265, § 23) and indecent assault and battery on a person aged fourteen years or over (G. L. c. 265, § 13H), committed on June 14, 2000. The defendant appeals from the judgments of conviction, contending, first, the judge erred in denying the defendant’s pretrial motion to dismiss the indictments for the prosecutor’s [735]*735alleged failure to disclose certain exculpatory information; second, defense counsel provided ineffective assistance at the trial by his failure to object to testimony received in alleged violation of the Miranda rule. We shall affirm the judgments.

Grand Jury: Exculpatory Evidence

1. The prosecution tendered one witness to the grand jury, Officer Robert Rossborough of the Plymouth police. Under questioning, Rossborough, relying largely on his incident report, testified in substance as follows. Late on June 14, 2000, the mother of Jennifer Davis1 telephoned the police station and in consequence Rossborough went to the Davises’2 house. The mother said she had overheard a telephone conversation in which Jennifer mentioned what had happened that night at the picnic ground on the pond off Bartlett Road, Plymouth. Haled before both parents, Jennifer said a man (the defendant) had touched her in an inappropriate way, fondling her breasts and touching her vaginal area. Rossborough took notes of the mother’s account of Jennifer’s statement and said he would enlist a detective who would follow the case. On getting back to the police station, Rossborough had a further call from the mother; she said the matter was more serious, Jennifer had spoken further about having been raped digitally.

Rossborough, now accompanied by Sergeant Almeida, returned to the Davises and interviewed Jennifer (aged fourteen). Jennifer said she, Matthew (aged fourteen), and his sister Malina (aged sixteen) were at the picnic ground, arriving, it seems, at 9 or 9:30 p.m. Michael (aged fifteen) was also there. Apparently drunk (or in process of drinking), Michael, cavorting about, took off his clothes and masturbated in the open; he grabbed Jennifer’s hand and tried to have her touch him, but she refused. As Michael was resuming his pants, the defendant (aged 24), Michael’s stepbrother, joined the group. He scolded Michael. He put his arms around the two girls and hugged them. Very soon the defendant took Jennifer aside. Continuing to embrace and hug her, he proceeded to invade her shirt and pants. He fondled her breasts and put his hand between her legs and finally [736]*736pushed his fingers into her vagina. Within minutes of the rape, Jennifer’s father (ignorant of the incident) called for her and they went home.

Concluding the interview with Jennifer, Rossborough and Almeida made their way to Michael’s home. The defendant, fitting the name John and description given by Jennifer, was present (he did not live there but was visiting). After some conversation, Rossborough told the defendant he was there to investigate a rape and indecent assault and battery. Satisfied now about the identity of this man as the actor at the pond, Rossborough placed him under arrest for the stated crimes. The defendant, possibly responding to the meaning he put on the word “rape,” said he was only at the picnic ground for five minutes and “couldn’t have done her.” After Miranda warnings, which he said he understood, the defendant said he was there maybe twenty minutes at most with the purpose of retrieving his brother Mike, who was the “asshole” of the occasion. He told Rossborough, “I wasn’t there long enough to fuck [her].” He said of himself that he was a nice guy but a third-degree black belt in karate who could give the officer trouble if he wanted to. He started to struggle as Rossborough handcuffed him and placed him in the police car. In fact he slipped out of a handcuff and had to be taken out of the car, rehandcuffed and put back in the car. On the way to the station, the defendant said again he was there but five minutes and knew the “little blonde” (Jennifer) had to get home, and she left right after he got there.

After booking at the station and second Miranda warnings, the defendant, asked several times3 whether he had touched either girl, didn’t say yes or no, just that he was there five minutes, tops. He ended by saying, “The little blonde jumped on my back like a piggyback ride, and that’s all that happened.”

2. Rossborough’s testimony as recounted above surely supplied the standard elements of an adequate presentation to a grand jury as understood in this Commonwealth — evidence identifying the accused and furnishing probable cause to believe that he or she had committed the crime to be charged. See [737]*737Commonwealth v. McCarthy, 385 Mass. 160, 163 (1982). The defendant contends, however, that the Commonwealth — more particularly the prosecutor in charge — withheld from the grand jury statements by Malina and Matthew (or related information) which, if presented, might have led the grand jury to decline to indict.

This exculpatory material if it existed could be found of record only in such parts of Rossborough’s incident report as he had not in effect reproduced in his grand jury testimony; or in a report by Detective Wayne Neal, of the Plymouth police, of his interviews with Malina and Matthew on June 15; or in an affidavit dated November 4, 2000, by the prosecutor of his interviews with Malina and Matthew on July 21, 2000.

Rossborough wrote in his incident report that Jennifer told him Matthew and Malina had seen Michael masturbating.

Detective Neal reported that Malina told him there was no drinking or anything inappropriate at the pond (specifically, no masturbation for exposure to herself or Jennifer); in fact it was “dark” at the time. Matthew said Michael had not masturbated; he was naked but used his hand to shield his penis from sight.

The prosecutor recorded Marina’s admission to him on July 21 that she had had a “physical encounter” with the defendant at the pond to which she consented until she terminated it.4 Matthew said he hadn’t seen anything happening between the defendant and his sister Marina. The prosecutor said Matthew recanted parts of what he told Detective Neal about Michael’s behavior.

3. All the defense could derive from the foregoing material, available to the prosecution but not presented to the grand jury, was protestations by Matthew and Marina that they had not seen evil — masturbation in public or misbehavior toward Jennifer — a negative observation which might serve to some degree of probability as proof that evil had not in fact occurred. The probability was subject to a discount because of a reasoned suspicion that the youthful speakers were shading the truth out of motives of self-protection or of reluctance to incriminate others.

[738]*738In any view of the case, nothing appears that could justify dismissal of an indictment. The judge refers to the leading case, Commonwealth v. O’Dell, 392 Mass. 445 (1984). The court says in O’Dell there is no requirement that a prosecutor present all available exculpatory evidence to the grand jury, id. at 4475; rather the court emphasizes a distinct duty not to compromise the integrity of the institution, as happened in O’Dell

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
806 N.E.2d 104, 60 Mass. App. Ct. 734, 2004 Mass. App. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-biasiucci-massappct-2004.