Commonwealth v. Dineen

872 N.E.2d 785, 70 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 948
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 30, 2007
DocketNo. 06-P-267
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 872 N.E.2d 785 (Commonwealth v. Dineen) 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. Dineen, 872 N.E.2d 785, 70 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 948 (Mass. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Berry, J.

This appeal involves a rape indictment returned under G. L. c. 265, § 24A,1 which places venue for prosecution, and for punishment upon conviction, either in the county where a rape was committed or in the point of origin county, if the victim is conveyed from that origin county to another county “in connection with the alleged commission of [the] crime.” In effect, the statute sets dual venue for cases where there has been a conveyance of, in other words, a transportation of, the victim across county lines, so that either county may be the venue for prosecution.

In this case, the defendant was indicted by a Hampshire County grand juiy and convicted by a Hampshire County petit jury of the offense of statutory rape, that is, the rape of a child under sixteen years of age.2 More particularly stated, the rape, prosecution, and [3]*3conviction were predicated on the defendant’s sexual intercourse with his biological daughter, who was fifteen years of age.

The question presented is whether, under G. L. c. 265, § 24A, venue for the indictment and prosecution of the defendant properly lay in Hampshire County, wherein there were precedent events that were followed by the defendant’s conveyance of the victim from the origin Hampshire County to the destination Hampden County (specifically the city of Springfield), wherein the final substantive act of statutory rape was perpetrated. This question of the applicability of dual venue under G. L. c. 265, § 24A, in turn, involves analysis of the statutory terms requiring that the “convey[anee]” of the victim from one county to another be “in connection with” the commission of the crime, in this case, statutory rape.3

The setting of venue for criminal prosecutions is, in the main, a matter of legislative discretion, so long as the legislative venue design is not in conflict with art. 13 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. See Opinion of the Justices, 372 Mass. 883, 897 (1977). See also part 3, infra. The legislative prerogative to confer dual venue for prosecutions in cases where there is a cross-county conveyance “in connection with the commission of the alleged crime,” G. L. c. 265, § 24A, is “consistent with the public interest” and in “the interests of justice.” Ibid.

Given its legislative purposes, we do not read G. L. c. 265, § 24A, as bound by the narrow circumference the defendant would draw about it, i.e., that the law would require the Commonwealth to prove that a defendant’s conveyance of a victim from county to county is undertaken with an intent or plan, preexisting at the time of crossing from the origin county, to commit the rape in the destination county where the conveyance ends. “[A] statute must be interpreted according to the intent of the Legislature ascertained from all its words construed by the ordinary and approved usage of the language, considered in con[4]*4nection with the cause of its enactment, the mischief or imperfection to be remedied and the main object to be accomplished.” Commonwealth v. Hinds, 437 Mass. 54, 63 (2002), cert. denied, 537 U.S. 1205 (2003), quoting from Commonwealth v. Smith, 431 Mass. 417, 421 (2000). We read G. L. c. 265, § 24A, as having a quite clearly defined legislative intent to confer dual venue in both counties where the evidence proves an act of conveyance of the victim by the defendant from a point of origin county to a destination county, and the § 24A specified crime, here rape of a child, in the destination county has a relation to, association with, or connective link to the county from which the conveyance originated. See part 3, infra.

In this case, as we further address in greater factual detail in parts 1 and 2, infra, given that the defendant picked up the victim at her house in Hampshire County on the day of the rape and engaged in the deliberate act of conveying her away from Hampshire County to his house in Hampden County, and given a prior pattern of serial sexualized contact, as the defendant repeatedly transported the victim back and forth between Hampshire and Hampden Counties in connection with acts of sexual exploitation, there was a direct connective link between the conveyance and the ensuing rape. The prosecution of the statutory rape charge in Hampshire County, therefore, firmly fit within the definitional framework of G. L. c. 265, § 24A. Accordingly, venue for prosecution properly lay in either Hampshire or Hampden County, and the defendant’s challenge to his rape conviction on the ground of lack of venue fails.4

1. Factual background. We summarize the trial evidence. On February, 7, 2002, the victim, who was then fifteen years old, and the defendant, her biological father, were reunited (the defendant and the victim’s mother had parted ways when the victim was a few months old, and he had seen the victim only once since then, when she was four). After this meeting, the victim and the defendant began seeing each other. Over the next few months, the frequency of times when the defendant was [5]*5with the victim increased to as many as four or five times per week. The defendant and the victim went out to eat and to the movies, and the defendant took the victim to construction sites where he was working. The defendant, who lived in Springfield (in Hampden County) would pick up the victim from her home. At the time of the statutory rape, the victim was living in Northampton (in Hampshire County).

Over time, the encounters between the defendant and the victim not only became sexually charged, but escalated to greater levels of sexuality. On one occasion, early on in the chronology of sexual encounters, the defendant and the victim were at her house, while her mother was at work. The two were lying in bed, and the defendant massaged the victim’s head, as he had done on other occasions, the victim said, to help her relax. However, during this encounter, the defendant also began touching the victim’s neck and breasts. The next day, the defendant asked if what he had done was okay. The victim responded that it was, and that she loved him. A similar incident of fondling of the victim’s breasts occurred at the defendant’s house — again, reflecting the defendant’s pattern and the deliberate nature of his acts in moving the victim back and forth between her house and his house, spanning both counties as venues for his sexual exploitation.

2. The conveyance and the rape. It is against this preexisting pattern of sexualized meetings and touchings that we turn to the day of the rape. Sometime shortly after March, 2002, in the late afternoon, the defendant picked the victim up at her Northampton home. The two stayed together throughout the day and evening and, then, between 3:00 a.m. and 4:00 a.m., the defendant drove the victim to his house in Springfield. The defendant’s act of picking up the victim in Hampshire County and driving her to the his home in Hampden County followed a course of conduct in which the defendant had, on several other occasions, navigated the victim between the two counties and engaged in sexual encounters with her in both counties.

On the particular night the rape occurred, following the conveyance of the victim from Hampshire to Hampden County and the arrival at the defendant’s house, the defendant had sexual intercourse with the victim on a couch in his living room. After [6]*6this act of statutory rape of a child (see note 2, supra),

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
872 N.E.2d 785, 70 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-dineen-massappct-2007.