Commonwealth v. Campiti

668 N.E.2d 1308, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 43, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 762
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 7, 1996
DocketNo. 91-P-1037
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 668 N.E.2d 1308 (Commonwealth v. Campiti) 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. Campiti, 668 N.E.2d 1308, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 43, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 762 (Mass. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Armstrong, J.

The defendant, alleged to be one of the leaders of a drug importing and distribution business operating in the Springfield-Hartford area, appeals from convictions on five indictments for trafficking in cocaine in amounts exceeding 200 grams. He was sentenced to five terms of from ten to fifteen years in State prison, four consecutive and one concurrent. Although the convictions were in 1989, changes of counsel and proceedings on a motion for a new trial and other postconviction motions (he appeals also from their denial) delayed final assembly of the record until June, 1993. Extensive briefing delayed arguments for another year.

MOTION FOR A REQUIRED FINDING

We outline the facts, by which we mean the evidence most [45]*45favorable to the Commonwealth, in connection with the defendant’s motion for a required finding of not guilty on all of the indictments.

The Commonwealth’s evidence tended to show that the defendant was a major importer and distributor of cocaine in western Massachusetts and Connecticut. Based in Springfield, he would purchase cocaine by the kilogram, or multiple kilograms (kilos), in Florida from Joseph Fafone,1 transport it to the Springfield-Hartford area, and distribute it through several intermediaries, including Joseph Rego, Joseph Lab-riola, and Gary Westerman, who in turn sold cocaine to pushers.2 Two of the intermediaries, Rego and Labriola, testified as prosecution witnesses, and, on the basis of their testimony alone, the Commonwealth satisfied its burden. Rego testified that in June of 1986, he traveled with the defendant and Wes-terman to the Marina Bay Motel in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where the defendant purchased one kilo of cocaine. He gave the kilo to Westerman, instructed Westerman to return to Massachusetts, distribute it, and return to the motel as soon as possible with the proceeds. Westerman did so, returning three or four days later. He gave the proceeds to the defendant, who drove to Boca Raton (Fafone’s home) and returned with two kilos of cocaine. Westerman and Rego each concealed a kilo, broken down into one-ounce packets, in their clothing, and the three flew back to Bradley Field (in Connecticut) together. Rego transferred his kilo to the defendant in the airport, and Westerman’s girlfriend then drove the defendant and Westerman (who lived in Westfield) home.

Rego testified to a second occasion in September, 1986, when he and the defendant flew down to Fort Lauderdale. Rego, joined by his wife, stayed at the Marina Bay Motel. The defendant stayed at a “luxury condominium” on the “G[alt] Ocean Mile.” The defendant purchased one kilo of cocaine and brought it to the Marina Bay Motel, where, again, it was concealed in Rego’s clothing. They flew back together to Bradley Field, drove to Williams Street in Springfield, where the defendant kept a safe house, and divided the kilo into packets for sale. The defendant had the key to the Williams Street house.

In October, 1986, Rego drove to Fort Lauderdale with his [46]*46wife and her daughter, and checked into the Sealord Motel. The three took a sidetrip by plane to Orlando, going to Disney World, then flew back to the Sealord Motel. There they met the defendant. Rego drove with the defendant to Fafone’s condominium in Boca Raton, where the defendant obtained one kilogram of cocaine. This was placed under the back seat of Rego’s rental car, and Rego, his wife, and her daughter drove back to Massachusetts. On the defendant’s return to Massachusetts, Rego delivered the kilo to the defendant in a parking lot near a rotary in Agawam.

Joseph Labriola’s testimony furnished a basis for three additional instances wherein the defendant possessed cocaine in kilo quantities in Massachusetts. In one instance Labriola accompanied the defendant to Florida to purchase kilos from Fafone. Characteristically, the defendant had Labriola physically transport the purchase — two kilos — back to New England. Labriola took it to a Rocky Hill, Connecticut, stash house. There he and the owner of the house, DiPietro, at the defendant’s direction, cut one of the kilograms and distributed it in that area. Labriola transferred the other kilo to the defendant’s nephew at an inn on the Connecticut-Massachusetts border for delivery to the defendant. On another occasion the defendant had Labriola come to a stash house on Williams Street in Springfield to assist him in cutting a kilo into retail quantities.

On November 17, 1986, the day the police executed search warrants simultaneously at the defendant’s house in Agawam, Westerman’s house in Westfield, and the stash house on Williams Street in Springfield, one of the defendant’s associates, Sonny Pepe, was able to smuggle a kilo out of the Williams Street stash house (according to what the defendant later told Labriola) just ahead of the officers’ entry. Four hundred twelve grams of cocaine were recovered by the police from Westerman’s house. This quantity also, because in excess of two hundred grams, satisfied the terms of the indictments, so long as the jury found, as they could on the evidence, that the cocaine, although at Westerman’s house, was possessed by the defendant through Westerman as his agent; for possession can be shown through evidence not only of actual, in-hand, exclusive possession, but, “in the case of constructive possession, knowledge coupled with the ability and intention to exercise dominion and control.” Commonwealth v. Rosa, 17 [47]*47Mass. App. Ct. 495, 498 (1984), quoting from Commonwealth v. Deagle, 10 Mass. App. Ct. 563, 567 (1980). The testimony of Rego and Labriola established that the defendant made it a point to have the cocaine he purchased from Fafone in Florida transported to New England as much as possible in the actual possession of his agents, who did with it what he directed after they arrived. This tactic reduced his own risk of detection, but it could not lessen his criminal responsibility for possession because of the principal-agent relationship between him and those in actual possession of the drugs.3

In the evidence described so far, without more, the judge had ample reason to deny the motion for required findings on any or all the indictments.4

MATTER RELATING TO INDICTMENTS

The defendant argues that the grand jury which, on Janu[48]*48ary 30, 1987, returned the indictments on which the defendant was ultimately convicted (this is the “first” grand jury referred to in Commonwealth v. Westerman, 414 Mass, at 703) was unlawfully extended, and thus was without lawful authority to sit, after October 3, 1986. (Hence, the defendant argues, the indictments were invalid, and the motion to dismiss them should have been allowed.) The grand jury began sitting in July, 1986, and, by reason of G. L. c. 277, § 2C (establishing the term of the Hampden County grand jury at four months), was scheduled to expire October 3. A grand jury may be extended, however, on written motion by the district attorney, upon approval by the court. G. L. c. 277, § 1A, inserted by St. 1952, c. 494. The problem in this case is that the written notice, or motion, by the district attorney is date-stamped October 24, 1986.

We assume, as the parties do, that a motion for extension múst be filed during the life of the grand jury.5

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
668 N.E.2d 1308, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 43, 1996 Mass. App. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-campiti-massappct-1996.