Commonwealth v. Bright

25 Mass. L. Rptr. 233
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 2008
DocketNo. 061014
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 Mass. L. Rptr. 233 (Commonwealth v. Bright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Bright, 25 Mass. L. Rptr. 233 (Mass. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Billings, Thomas P., J.

On September 11, 2008 I heard evidence on the defendant’s Motion to Suppress His Recorded Telephone Calls from Suffolk County Jail. For the reasons that follow, the motion is ALLOWED, on the terms specified in the Order below.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Based on the credible evidence, I find the following facts.

1. In the late hours of March 18 or the very early hours of March 19, 2006 Corey Davis was shot in Cambridge. He died of multiple gunshot wounds on March 19. The defendant (“Bright”) and a codefendant, Remel Ahart, are charged with his murder.

2. The grand jury heard evidence over nine days between May 4 and June 29, 2006. The grand jurors were recalled and returned indictments against Bright and Ahart in August 2006.

3. Meanwhile, on June 22, 2006, arrest warrants issued out of the Cambridge District Court for Bright and Ahart. On June 28 Bright, who had been out of state on personal business, surrendered himself to the warrant. Since that time or shortly thereafter, he has been held without bail in the custody of the Suffolk County Sheriff, in the Nashua Street Jail.

4. As part of the intake process at Nashua Street, Bright was interviewed on June 30 by a caseworker named Kendra Burke. The interview proceeded from a written Intake Questionnaire (Hearing Ex. 1), which Burke completed based on Bright’s oral answers to her questions. At the end of the interview, Bright signed the Questionnaire in Burke’s presence.

5. Among other answers, Bright responded that he could read and write.1 The Questionnaire also indicates, and I find, that Bright was provided with a copy of the Sheriffs Inmate Guide.

6. The Inmate Guide (Ex. 2) includes some rules concerning use of the inmate telephone system, with [234]*234the following advisory: “The Department records all inmate telephone conversations, except calls to attorneys and legal services organizations.”

7. When using the telephones,2 an inmate or detainee is first required to select between English and Spanish. Then, he is prompted to punch in a unique personal identification number (“PIN”). Then he is asked to state his name; this is recorded. The number is then dialed, the caller being advised to continue to hold. When the call connects, there is a warning that is audible to both the caller and the recipient. I listened to eleven of the recordings to ascertain what the warning consisted of,3 and heard five different variants, as follows.

A. “Hello, this is a collect call from [caller’s recorded name], an inmate from the Suffolk House of Correction. To accept charges, press _. To refuse charges, press_. This call is being recorded, and may be subject to monitoring. Thank you for using Evercom.”
B. “Hello, this is a collect call from [caller’s recorded name). This call is being recorded, and may be subject to monitoring. Thank you for using Ever-com.”
C. “Hello, this is a collect call from [caller’s recorded name], an inmate from the Suffolk County Jail. To proceed with this call, say Hello after pressing zero. This call is being recorded, and is subject to being monitored. If this is an attorney-client conversation, please hang up and call 617-961-6820. Once again, the phone call is being recorded. Thank you for using Evercom.”
D. “Hello, this is a collect call from [caller’s recorded name], an inmate from the Suffolk House of Correction. To accept charges, press _. To refuse charges, press_. This call is being recorded, and is subject to being monitored. If this is an attorney-client conversation, please hang up and call 617-961-6820. Once again, the phone call is being recorded. Thank you for using Evercom.”
E. “Hello, this is a collect call from [caller’s recorded name]. This call is being recorded, and is subject to being monitored. If this is an attorney-client conversation, please hang up and call 617-961-6820. Once again, the phone call is being recorded. Thank you for using Evercom.”4

After the warning, the parties begin their conversation.

8. The Nashua Street system is “populated” with a list of attorney telephone numbers. Initially, this list came from the “red book” (the Massachusetts Lawyers Diary and Manual). Since 2005 (i.e., for the entire time that Bright has been held), the list has been downloaded from the Board of Bar Overseers database. If the caller dials a number that the system recognizes as an attorney’s, the call is not recorded or monitored. There is no allegation and no evidence that any attorney-client calls were recorded in Bright’s case.

9. The Suffolk Sheriff has promulgated Policy S482, effective January 2000 and revised in June 2006. The revised policy (Ex. 3) covers various matters relating to telephone access, the mechanics of the assignment and use of PINs, how attorney-client calls are to be handled, and other matters. There is also the following:

VI. Access to and Retention of Recordings

1. The Sheriff or designee will authorize specific staff to listen to live and recorded inmate telephone conversations, excluding privileged attorney calls, for the purpose of maintaining the security, good order or discipline of the facility, and prevention of criminal activity within or outside of the facility.
2. Authorized staff will be trained on the operation of the listening workstation and the purposes for which it is to be used.
VII. Disclosure
1. Information obtained from inmate telephone calls can be disclosed only as reasonably necessary to promote legitimate operational standards, law enforcement or public safety purposes.
2. Copies of inmate phone call logs and recorded phone calls will be provided in response to legally issued subpoenas or court orders.]5]

10. Policy S482 was promulgated and implemented by the Sheriff on his/her own initiative, not at the direction or request of any prosecutorial authority. Calls are recorded, and are sometimes monitored, for reasons of institutional security and good order, not for investigation or evidence-gathering in pending criminal cases.

11. It was stipulated, and I find, that as far as the Sheriffs Department and the District Attorney’s office are or ever were aware, there is nothing on the recordings of Bright’s calls that suggests that Bright was a threat to the order or security of the jail, or was planning or participating in criminal activity within or outside the jail. Both sides agree, therefore, that paragraph VII. 1 of Policy S482 is not implicated in Bright’s case.

12. As of February 2007, no agent of the Commonwealth had any particularized knowledge that any of Bright’s recorded calls would contain material that was inculpatory, exculpatory, or otherwise relevant to the issues in the criminal case, or that indicated that Bright was a threat to the order or security of the jail, or was planning or participating in criminal activity within or outside the jail.

13. On February 5, 2007 a staff member of the Middlesex District Attorney’s office faxed a subpoena duces tecum (Ex. 7) to the Suffolk County Sheriffs Office, Keeper of Records.

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29 Mass. L. Rptr. 248 (Massachusetts Superior Court, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Mass. L. Rptr. 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bright-masssuperct-2008.