Commonwealth v. Cameron

871 N.E.2d 1096, 69 Mass. App. Ct. 741, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 904
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 17, 2007
DocketNo. 05-P-59
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 871 N.E.2d 1096 (Commonwealth v. Cameron) 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. Cameron, 871 N.E.2d 1096, 69 Mass. App. Ct. 741, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 904 (Mass. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Graham, J.

The defendant was convicted by a Superior Court [742]*742jury of two counts of rape. G. L. c. 265, § 22(b). On appeal from those convictions and the order denying his motion for a new trial, the defendant contends that his trial counsel was ineffective, and that the trial judge improperly barred him from cross-examining the victim regarding specific instances of her recent sexual conduct and improperly admitted evidence of his absence from the Commonwealth as consciousness of guilt. In addition, he argues that newly discovered evidence casts real doubt on his convictions. We affirm.

The evidence at trial. We set out the basic facts that could have been found by the jury, reserving some details for discussion in our consideration of the defendant’s several claims. In September of 1999, the victim and her boyfriend, Robert Lan-phear, lived in separate apartments in the same building in Pittsfield. Lanphear was forced to vacate his apartment to begin serving a jail sentence, and the victim agreed to keep an eye on his apartment and check it from time to time.

On September 13, 1999, the victim, who is deaf, went to Lanphear’s apartment to retrieve the key, which had reportedly been left on a hook in the kitchen by Lanphear’s sister. When the victim arrived at the apartment, the door was open. She entered the apartment and saw the defendant. The victim expected the defendant to be there since he had agreed to take possession of the apartment in Lanphear’s absence. She had met the defendant earlier, in August of 1999, but had no relationship with him other than exchanging greetings in passing. The victim asked the defendant where the key was and the defendant appeared to understand what she was referring to. The victim smelled alcohol on the defendant’s breath. When she did not get a response from the defendant, the victim went into the kitchen to retrieve the key but was unable to locate it.

The victim asked the defendant several times where the key was, and the defendant became angry and replied, “I don’t know where the key is.” Upset with the defendant’s answer, the victim told the defendant, “Fine, I’m going to tell [Lanphear] what’s happening here.” She then left the apartment, but returned immediately after recalling that Lanphear had asked her to pick up photographs of his children that were in the apartment and bring them to him at the prison.

[743]*743As the victim retrieved the photographs, the defendant grabbed her from behind, threw her to the floor, and then dragged her to a large La-Z-Boy chair. There, he pushed her head to the chair, pulled down her pants, and forced his penis into her vagina, and then into her rectum. The assault lasted approximately two to five minutes.

After the defendant left the apartment, the victim put on her clothes and returned to her apartment. Although the victim’s roommate was present in the apartment, the victim did not tell her that she had been sexually assaulted, nor did she report the rape to the police. Two days later, the victim told her roommate about the incident and then, accompanied by her roommate, went to the Pittsfield police station and reported the rape to Detective Thomas Bowler.1 Bowler began his investigation of the incident that day. As part of the investigation, Bowler collected clothing, including the underpants worn by the victim on the date of the assault. The victim reported that the underpants had been washed one week earlier and had been worn twice — on the day of the assault and two or three days prior to the assault. She further reported that the underpants had not been washed after September 13, 1999, the date of the incident.

Bowler also took pictures of bruises on the victim’s back and rug bums on her knees and suggested that she see a doctor. The victim agreed to be seen by a doctor, but waited until September 20, 1999, a full week after the assault, before seeing Dr. Mark Liponis, an emergency room physician at the Berkshire Medical Center. She informed Dr. Liponis that she had been thrown to the floor and dragged across the carpeted floor of her boyfriend’s apartment and then raped vaginally and anally. She complained of both vaginal and rectal pain, and complained of a small mg bum on her left leg.

Dr. Liponis described in his notes a six-centimeter scratch on the victim’s left leg and small bmises on her left shin. He also noted there were “no external signs of trauma,” but opined that unless the assault was extremely traumatic it was unlikely for there to be trauma one week after the incident. The rape kit and [744]*744the clothing collected from the victim were sent to the Massachusetts State crime laboratory where a chemist assigned to the case detected seminal residue on the crotch of the underwear. This evidence was sent for deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing to a private laboratory. The test results from the victim’s underwear indicated the presence of DNA from at least two males. A primary sample excluded the defendant as the donor of the sample. A secondary sample neither included nor excluded the defendant as the donor.

The defendant, meanwhile, had been arrested by the police on September 15, 1999. He was released on bail on April 7, 2000, on condition that he report to probation weekly and keep probation notified of his address. However, on April 24, 2000, the defendant violated his conditions of release. According to the defendant, he went first to a shelter in Connecticut, then to a psychiatric facility in Minnesota, and in November, 2000, to Key West, Florida, where he visited each winter. It was in Key West that the defendant was arrested in November of 2001 pursuant to an outstanding warrant. On November 9, 2001, he was returned to the Commonwealth’s custody.

Rape-shield statute. The defendant contends that the trial judge erred in denying his written motion to permit inquiry of the victim regarding her “prior sexual acts.” At the hearing on his motion, the defendant argued that evidence that another person might have been the source of the secondary semen sample bore on the victim’s motive to fabricate the charges. The following colloquy transpired:

Trial counsel: “There may be a motive on her part to fabricate a charge against [the defendant].”
The court: “What would that be? I don’t understand.”
Trial counsel: “Well, Judge, I don’t know. It’s — it is probably anything related to human nature but it could very well be that she was embarrassed, maybe word would have gotten back to her boyfriend in jail that she had some form of sexual relations with someone else and maybe, in a way, to cover this up.
“I’m saying maybe because I don’t really know but I [745]*745would suggest to you that there may be a motive to fabricate and this may very well be relevant to explore and to determine whether that exists.
“Well, Judge, as best as I can at this point, without knowing exactly what certain witnesses are going to testify to, let’s just say and let’s just assume that her boyfriend is in jail, he’s been in jail for a month, and let’s just assume she did have sex with somebody, not [the defendant] but with somebody else, and in an effort to hide that, in an effort to prevent her boyfriend from being upset at her, she comes up with this story that it was [the defendant] and, you know, the rest follows after that.

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Related

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893 N.E.2d 73 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
871 N.E.2d 1096, 69 Mass. App. Ct. 741, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-cameron-massappct-2007.