Commonwealth v. Desrosier

778 N.E.2d 1, 56 Mass. App. Ct. 348, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1333
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 1, 2002
DocketNo. 01-P-169
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 778 N.E.2d 1 (Commonwealth v. Desrosier) 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. Desrosier, 778 N.E.2d 1, 56 Mass. App. Ct. 348, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1333 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Cohen, J.

On February 5, 1991, the defendant, then under indictment for murder in the first degree, pleaded guilty to a charge of murder in the second degree in connection with the death of Karen Barriere. His plea was accepted by a judge of the Superior Court, after a colloquy in which the defendant stated that he had no reason to doubt that the crime occurred in the manner described by the prosecutor, even though he had no independent recollection of the killing because he had blacked out from alcohol consumption.

[349]*349Approximately five years after he pleaded guilty, the defendant, acting pro se, filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea. Following the appointment of counsel and assorted procedural steps, on November 7, 2000, a different judge (the plea judge having retired) allowed the defendant’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea, on the ground that the defendant had not been properly informed of the elements of the charges against him, either by the judge who accepted the plea or by defense counsel. Before us is the Commonwealth’s appeal from that order. We reverse the order allowing the defendant’s motion.

1. The plea hearing. We begin by summarizing, in some detail, what transpired at the plea hearing. The judge began the colloquy by advising the defendant of the rights he would be waiving by tendering a plea of guilty. The defendant, a twenty-three year old high school graduate, acknowledged that he understood that he was waiving those rights, denied ever having received psychological treatment or being under the influence of any medication or substance that would impair his judgment that day, and stated that no one was forcing him to plead guilty.

After being told by the judge that the sentence for murder in the second degree was prescribed by statute, the defendant confirmed that he had discussed the sentencing consequences of his plea with his attorney, including the difference between the sentences for murder in the first and second degrees with respect to parole eligibility. He also confirmed that he and his lawyer had discussed the evidence that the Commonwealth would use if there were a trial and that he had “gone over with [his] lawyer the defenses [he] could raise and the other things [he] could do if [he] had a trial.” He affirmed that he and his lawyer had discussed “the pros and cons of having a trial, as opposed to entering a plea of guilty,” and that he was satisfied with his lawyer.

In response to the judge’s request, the prosecutor then recited at length the evidence upon which the Commonwealth would rely if the case went to trial. In the late afternoon of April 16, 1990, the defendant and another man, Timothy Mosher, met two young women, a juvenile and the victim, Karen Barriere, in downtown Worcester. The foursome pooled their money and purchased two large bottles of beer and one-half gallon of [350]*350vodka. They then climbed up to the roof of Union Station, an abandoned railroad depot, where they consumed all of the beer and much of the vodka.

The four split into couples, with Mosher and the juvenile moving to a different area of the roof where they could not see or hear the defendant and Barriere. After a while, Mosher came back to check on the defendant and Barriere. The second time he did so, the defendant told him, “Don’t come near here.” Mosher approached anyway and saw Barriere, lying unclad, with her upper torso and face engulfed in flames. Mosher noticed that Barriere’s chest was heaving up and down “as if in convulsions.”

Mosher screamed, “Richard, what the fuck?” The defendant replied, “She’s dead. She wouldn’t fuck me, so I killed her. I have done this once before. Don’t rat on me. Don’t fuck me or you’re fucked.” Mosher turned away and fled. He took the juvenile home without telling her what he had witnessed and unsuccessfully attempted to call two Worcester police officers of his acquaintance.

Mosher then telephoned his girlfriend, who came by to pick him up. They encountered two police officers and informed them of what happened. Mosher brought the officers to the scene, where they found Barriere’s body on the lower level of the roof. The body had been thrown from an opening in the roof’s upper level to a concrete area, nineteen feet below.

At about the same time, Jason Robinson, an acquaintance of the defendant, was waiting for a bus across from Worcester city hall when he saw the defendant. Robinson asked the defendant how he was, to which the defendant responded, “not too good.” Robinson noticed that the defendant’s hands and denim jacket were covered with blood and asked him if he had been in a fight. The defendant replied, “I killed somebody.” Robinson asked whether the defendant had disposed of the body. The defendant answered, “I burnt her. I burnt her. I burnt her.” He added that he was going to a bar and that he “just had to tell somebody, but don’t you fuck me. Don’t you fuck me.”

The defendant next visited an apartment up the street, where he met Ralph Mayotte and Louis Rome. Mayotte saw reddish smudges on the defendant’s hands, jacket and trousers, and as[351]*351sumed that the marks were paint. He also saw what he thought was soot on the defendant’s clothing. The defendant was carrying a large bottle of liquor, either vodka or gin, that was one-third full. The defendant kept rubbing his hands together, saying, “I have blood on my hands, and it’s not mine.” The defendant then told Mayotte that he had “just killed someone.” The defendant asked Rome if he, the defendant, could use the bathroom to wash away the blood and also asked if Rome had any “grass” so he could “get high.” The defendant, “very cold, without any emotion,” again said that he had just killed someone.

Within three hours of the murder, the police spoke with the defendant. He denied killing Barriere, explaining that he and the others had left her on the roof. He also stated that he had no idea how his clothing came to be covered with blood. After obtaining the defendant’s consent, the police took the defendant’s clothes and had them tested. The laboratory reported that the blood on the clothes was not his and that there was a ninety-four percent probability that it was Barriere’s. Scrapings taken from beneath the defendant’s fingernails tested positive for the presence of human blood.

An autopsy of Barriere revealed that she had a blood alcohol reading of .20. The medical examiner determined that she died as a result of blunt trauma, thermal injury to her head and neck, and smoke inhalation. Barriere’s facial features were burned beyond recognition. Her identity was confirmed through her fingerprints.

After hearing this recital by the prosecutor, the defendant was questioned further by the judge. The defendant acknowledged that he had heard this evidence before at the probable cause hearing and that he understood that this proof would be available to be used if there were a trial of the case. The judge then asked the defendant, “What recollection do you presently have of the events of this night?” The defendant answered, “None.” The judge probed further: “You do realize that during the course of that night you did make statements to witnesses in which you described various aspects of what occurred?” The defendant asked the judge to repeat the question. The judge asked, “Do you know that during that night you made the statements that [352]

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Desrosier v. Bissonnette
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Bluebook (online)
778 N.E.2d 1, 56 Mass. App. Ct. 348, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-desrosier-massappct-2002.