Commonwealth v. Camerano

677 N.E.2d 678, 42 Mass. App. Ct. 363, 1997 Mass. App. LEXIS 57
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1997
DocketNo. 96-P-420
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 677 N.E.2d 678 (Commonwealth v. Camerano) 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. Camerano, 677 N.E.2d 678, 42 Mass. App. Ct. 363, 1997 Mass. App. LEXIS 57 (Mass. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

Kass, J.

In order to convict Antonio Camerano, the defendant, of conspiracy to possess marihuana with intent to distribute it (G. L. c. 94C, § 40), the Commonwealth was bound to prove that Camerano had agreed with his tenant, Robert Howell, to cultivate, cure, process, and sell marihuana. See Commonwealth v. Cook, 10 Mass. App. Ct. 668, 671 (1980). See also Attorney Gen. v. Tufts, 239 Mass. 458, 493 (1921); Commonwealth v. Nelson, 370 Mass. 192, 196 (1976); Commonwealth v. Pratt, 407 Mass. 647, 653-654 (1990); Commonwealth v. Nighelli, 13 Mass. App. Ct. 590, 593-594 & n.3 (1982), which collect Massachusetts authorities and general authorities.

After trial in the District Court, a jury of six returned a verdict of guilty. Camerano has appealed on the ground that [364]*364it was error not to have granted his motion for a required finding of not guilty. We decide that the. Commonwealth’s evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, did not establish participation by the defendant in an agreement and combination to accomplish a criminal purpose. We state the facts that the jury could have found at the close of all the evidence, when the motion for a required finding of not guilty, initially made upon completion of the prosecution’s case, was renewed by defense counsel. Mass.R.Crim.P. 25(a), 378 Mass. 896 (1979). See Commonwealth v. Phinney, 416 Mass. 364, 373-374 (1993); Commonwealth v. Vaughn, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 40, 42-45 (1986); Smith, Criminal Practice & Procedure § 1910 (2d ed. 1983 & Supp. 1996). We do not, of course, consider evidence contrary to that of the Commonwealth offered by the defendant, although we do consider evidence that the Commonwealth does not controvert and which fills in useful detail, namely how Camerano had met Howell and what monthly rent Camerano, as landlord, and Howell, as tenant, established. Cf. Commonwealth v. Kelley, 370 Mass. 147, 150 n.l (1976).

On September 13, 1993, members of the middle district regional drug task force, the National Guard marihuana counter drug operation team, and State police engaged in flyover surveillance by helicopter of Spencer and parts of West Boylston. After forty-five minutes in the air, they spotted a green-colored, roofless structure in which vegetation was growing. The structure was in a clearing at the end of a 200-foot unpaved driveway running off Redemption Rock Trail in Sterling. As soon as they returned to base, some of the officers applied themselves to the business of obtaining, and in due course obtained, a warrant to search the open structure, as well as a house, a house trailer, and a utility trailer that were in the clearing.

What the search party found was the residence of the defendant and his wife; some sixty feet behind it, the roofless structure that had attracted their interest; some one hundred feet behind that, a house trailer; and another one hundred feet behind the house trailer, a blue utility trailer. The Cam-erano property was in a pine woods. There were no neighbors within one hundred yards.

Such was the strength of the aroma wafting from the green structure that the search party officers, who had developed [365]*365educated noses for marihuana, sniffed it at a distance of sixty feet. Sylvia Camerano, the defendant’s wife,1 was home when the pohce arrived and denied knowledge of what was going on in the green enclosure. Also present when the pohce made their raid was Robert HoweU, a tenant of the Cameranos. For $200 a month, Howeh had arranged to rent land on which he pitched his house trailer and on which, some time after the initial rental arrangement, he built his garden enclosure. A plastic water hne ran on the ground from an outside tap on the Cameranos’ house to Howell’s trailer. A curled up hose lay outside that trailer.

One member of the search party, Michael Tartini, a Spencer pohce officer, described HoweU as sitting by his trailer, nursing a can of beer, when the pohce came on the scene. To Tartini’s announcement that he had a search warrant, Howeh responded, “Go ahead and search. I knew you were coming hours ago.” The other government witness, Robert Burke, a pohce detective from the town of Clinton, testified that How-eh emerged from his trailer as the search party moved in and that he was walking toward a white Cadillac when he, Burke, intercepted him. He described Howeh as denying any knowledge of marihuana and saying, when told that the pohce had a search warrant, “[G]o ahead. You won’t find nothing.”

Howeh’s garden enclosure was not a conventional greenhouse. The structure was twenty-eight feet wide, thirty feet long, and about eighteen feet high. The sides were of plywood nailed on a frame of two-by-fours and two-by-sixes. As noted, the structure was open to the sky. It had no windows and its single door was padlocked. That padlock the pohce pried off. Inside, they found 107 marihuana plants, twelve to fifteen feet high. Howeh later said the marihuana plants were his. Buried behind Howeh’s trailer, the pohce found five pounds of dried, cut, and packaged marihuana. In the trailer they found a food processor with marihuana residue, two scales, a box of gahon-sized zip-lock bags, and a small amount of cut and dried marihuana. The utility trailer belonged to Gary Pomer-low, a friend of Camerano, for whom Camerano occasionahy repaired trucks. Camerano had allowed Pomerlow to store the utility trader on the Camerano property. Pomerlow had introduced Camerano to Howeh. In the utility trader, the po[366]*366lice found a suitcase stuffed with eight pounds of marihuana, cut, dried, and packaged in approximately one-pound bags.

The task force searched the Camerano house thoroughly and turned up no drugs or drug paraphernalia, no key to the padlock of the green structure, nor anything else connected to drug use or distribution.

Conspiracy seldom occurs in a fishbowl; rather, the conspirators take pains to act secretively. Direct evidence of a conspiracy, therefore, is rarely available and, typically, the government must rely on circumstantial evidence. Iannelli v. United States, 420 U.S. 770, 777 n.l0 (1975). Commonwealth v. Nelson, 370 Mass. 192, 200-201 (1976). See Commonwealth v. Pratt, 407 Mass. 647, 654 (1990). The inferences that a jury may permissibly draw from the circumstantial evidence do not need to be inescapable; they need only be reasonable. Commonwealth v. Merola, 405 Mass. 529, 533 (1989). “The acts of different persons who are shown to have known each other, or to have been in communication with each other, directed towards the accomplishment of the same object, especially if by the same means or in the same manner, may be satisfactory proof of a conspiracy.” Commonwealth v. Smith, 163 Mass. 411, 418 (1895). Commonwealth v. Pratt, 407 Mass, at 653. Commonwealth v. Anselmo, 33 Mass. App. Ct. 602, 604 (1992).

No evidence, as we read it, permitted the juiy to find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Camerano had agreed with Howell to a marihuana growing and selling project. Nothing suggests that Camerano, when he rented to Howell, intended that Howell would raise marihuana or was aware of Howell’s plans so to do.

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Bluebook (online)
677 N.E.2d 678, 42 Mass. App. Ct. 363, 1997 Mass. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-camerano-massappct-1997.