Commonwealth v. Cortes

24 Mass. L. Rptr. 172
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJune 5, 2008
DocketNo. 071365
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Mass. L. Rptr. 172 (Commonwealth v. Cortes) 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. Cortes, 24 Mass. L. Rptr. 172 (Mass. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Lu, John T., J.

INTRODUCTION

The defendant, Christian Cortes (Cortes), moves to suppress a sweatshirt found in an apartment, along with bullets and a firearm found in a pocket of the sweatshirt, claiming that the seizure of the sweatshirt was based on an unlawful entry into the apartment and the unlawful arrest of Cortes.

Finding that police had probable cause to arrest Cortes for assault and battery before their entry into the apartment, that their entry was lawful because they had consent to enter the apartment, that the search of the apartment and the rear common staircase was a lawful protective sweep, and that the search of the sweatshirt was a proper search incident to a lawful arrest, the court denies the motion to suppress the fruits of the warrantless search.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Based on the evidence presented and reasonable inferences from the evidence, the court finds the following facts.

1. On March 19, 2007, Worcester police, including Officer Ronald Remillard (Remillard) received a radio call to respond to 17 Etna Street due to a report of a fight and a stabbing.

2. Remillard went to that address and saw Louis Rivera (Rivera) in a common hallway next to his apartment on the second floor.

3. Rivera was bleeding from a puncture wound to his chest but would not provide any information about who stabbed him.

4. Remillard and Detective Mike Mulvey (Mulvey) spoke with Rivera’s mother, Elizabeth or Lisbeth Rivera, who told them what had happened.

5. She said that Rivera was inside the apartment with her and there was a knock at the door.

6. Rivera answered the door and went into the hallway with the person at the door.

7. She heard a fight, went into the hall and saw several Hispanic men on top of Rivera, punching him.

8. She tried to help Rivera but one of the men punched her in the face with a closed fist.

9. She recognized the two men because they had attacked Rivera before and the Worcester police had been involved in the investigation of the attack.

10. Mulvey had investigated the earlier fight, which took place in about 2004, and he constructed a photo array for her to view.

11. She picked out photos of Cortes, Kenneth Cortes and Joseph Velez (Velez).

12. Police searched their master card record keeping system, located an address, 1 Vernon Terrace, for Cortes and determined that Cortes was a registered sex offender.

13. Two witnesses, Mejia and Pham, said that immediately after the attack, two Hispanic males wearing black sweatshirts got in a tan four-door Nissan Maxima and spoke in Spanish to the driver.

14. Pham and Mejia gave police the license plate number: 37WI79.

15. The men were in a hurry and tried to get in the car while it was moving.

16. One of the men said, “Did you get him?” Another responded, “Yeah, yeah. Let’s go.”

17. The Maxima went down one street and reversed direction to avoid police cruisers responding to the stabbing.

18. Police, including Remillard, went to 1 Vernon Terrace, where they saw a tan four-door Nissan Max-ima with a license plate that differed by one digit from the plate number given by Mejia and Pham.

19. 1 Vernon Terrace is less than half a mile from 17 Etna Street.

20. It was snowing but there was no snow on the car and the hood was warm to the touch.

21. Police followed footprints in the freshly fallen snow to the front door of 1 Vernon Terrace.

22. 1 Vernon Terrace is a triple-decker with common areas at the front and back of the apartments.

23. While standing in the driveway, police saw, through an open window of the first-floor apartment, four Hispanic men shouting and arguing in Spanish.

24. Some of the men wore black hooded sweatshirts and one wore a gray hooded sweatshirt.

25. They generally fit the description that police had received.

[173]*17326. One of the officers’ radios was set to a high volume and a loud transmission alarmed the men, who looked down at police.

27. The men closed the windows and blinds and shut off all the lights.

28. Police radioed for help but there was a delay of five to ten minutes in the arrival of help because of a shift change and snowy road conditions.

29. After other officers arrived, Remillard, along with two other uniformed officers, went to the first-floor apartment front door and Remillard knocked.

30. Due to safety concerns, including concerns arising from knowledge that the men may have participated in a stabbing, the earlier attack and the possible involvement of a sex offender, Officer Daniel Dowd (Dowd) and other officers went up the back steps.

31. Janie Home (Horne), a resident, opened the first-floor, front apartment door and Remillard asked to come in, explaining that they were investigating an assault and had seen the argument in the house.

32. She opened the door further and let police in.

33. The three police officers entered the apartment and conducted a search for the suspects.

34. Police found Orlando Vega and Velez in the apartment.

35. Police recognized the men as two of the four they had seen arguing minutes earlier.

36. The officers that went up the back steps eventually reached the third floor.

37. Dowd shined his flashlight around the third-floor common area.

38. He saw Kenneth Cortes, the defendant’s brother, attempting to hide behind an old washing machine or dryer.

39. Dowd told him to come out and to keep his hands where he could see them.

40. Kenneth Cortes looked like he had been in a fight; he had scratches on his face and neck and his hair was matted.

41. Other police officers, including Sean O’Connor (O’Connor), were with Dowd.

42. One of the officers aimed his flashlight into a partially open closet door and saw Cortes.

43. Police told Cortes to come out.

44. Police escorted Cortes and his brother down to the first-floor apartment.

45. Police believed that the Cortes brothers were the third and fourth men that they had seen arguing.

46. One of the officers told Remillard where they had found Cortes and his brother.

47. Remillard and another officer went up to the third-floor common area and looked around that area.

48. Remillard saw a blood-spattered T-shirt where Kenneth Cortes had been hiding.

49. Remillard left the bloody T-shirt, without touching it, for collection by crime scene technicians and returned to the first floor.

50. Sometime between the discovery of the Cortes brothers hiding on the third floor and their arrest, police asked them their names and they gave their true names.2

51. Police immediately understood that the Cortes brothers and Velez were the men that Elizabeth Rivera had identified.

52. Police arrested Cortes and his brother.

53.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Mass. L. Rptr. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-cortes-masssuperct-2008.