Commonwealth v. Foxworth

40 N.E.3d 1003, 473 Mass. 149
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 12, 2015
DocketSJC 10993
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 40 N.E.3d 1003 (Commonwealth v. Foxworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Foxworth, 40 N.E.3d 1003, 473 Mass. 149 (Mass. 2015).

Opinion

Spina, J.

The defendant was convicted of deliberately premeditated murder and conspiracy to commit murder. 1 On appeal he challenges (1) the denial of his motion to suppress statements he made to a jailhouse informant whom he alleged to be an agent of the Commonwealth; (2) the admission in evidence, allegedly in violation of the spousal disqualification rule, of statements his alleged coconspirator made to the coconspirator’s spouse; (3) the admission in evidence of his prior incarceration; (4) a statement by the prosecutor in closing argument that the defendant contends was improper comment on his right not to testify; and (5) the adequacy of the judge’s instruction concerning the jury’s consideration of the testimony of an immunized witness. The defendant also urges us to grant him a new trial pursuant to our powers under G. L. c. 278, § 33E. We affirm the convictions and decline to reduce the degree of guilt or order a new trial.

1. Background. The jury could have found the following facts. We reserve other details for discussion of the issues. On January 13, 2006, at approximately 7:45 a.m., the defendant shot the victim in the head shortly after the victim arrived at the parking garage at his place of employment in Newton, killing him. This was a contract killing in which the defendant was hired by James Brescia to kill the victim, who had been dating Brescia’s wife, *151 Stacey Rock. 2

The victim had dated Rock when they were in high school and in college, before she married Brescia. Their relationship ended in 1996. Rock and Brescia were married in 1998. Rock and the victim renewed their relationship in June, 2005. Brescia had been aware of their past relationship. He learned that they were seeing one another after he discovered a letter the victim wrote to Rock, and after he found the victim’s cellular telephone in Rock’s purse. On July 28, 2005, Brescia was served with divorce papers.

There were several confrontations between Brescia and the victim. At one point Brescia told his wife that if she and the victim ended up together, “it wouldn’t be good for [the victim’s] health,” he would not be the one to do it, and it would not be traceable to him. Brescia was ordered to vacate the marital home. That, together with the divorce proceedings, upset him greatly. On the day that the order to vacate the home issued, he moved into his mother’s home in Waltham and called the victim from a pay telephone.

Brescia had learned of the defendant through Nancy Campbell, a coworker of Brescia’s. Brescia learned through Campbell that the defendant had an extensive criminal record, that he had served time in prison, and that he had offered to beat Campbell’s husband when she had been embroiled in divorce proceedings. Brescia asked Campbell for the defendant’s contact information. He told her he wanted to hire the defendant to beat the victim. In early October, 2005, Brescia hired the defendant to beat the victim for $5,000. Brescia told the defendant he would communicate with him by pay telephone, to avoid being traced.

The defendant began surveillance of the victim on October 9, 2005, starting with his home in Framingham. On October 14, Brescia met the defendant and paid him $4,000. The defendant enlisted a friend, James O’Neil, to help him. O’Neil and the defendant conducted surveillance of the victim at his place of employment and at his home during November and December. Brescia visited the defendant at his home in Dracut on November 9 and 20. Brescia communicated by pay telephone with the defendant over thirty times in December.

After an upsetting visit with his wife and children on Thanksgiving Day, Brescia expressed to Campbell his anger and hatred *152 toward the victim. He said that if the victim were dead, he would be able to repair his relationship with his wife. He told Campbell that a beating would not suffice, and that he wanted the victim out of the picture. Brescia offered the defendant an additional $5,000 to kill the victim and entrusted that amount to a friend, Charles Merkle, to hold until Brescia needed it. He met with Merkle at some time in December and obtained $2,500. The defendant bought expensive gifts for Campbell’s children for Christmas, 2005. When Campbell mentioned this to Brescia, Brescia said, “[0]h, that’s where my money went.”

Brescia spent about two weeks with his wife and children over the Christmas holiday. He and his wife were intimate, but she remained set on divorce. He expressed his frustration to his wife’s sister, telling her he was “out of [his] mind” about being pushed away. Furious that the victim was making Brescia’s wife choose between them, Brescia repeated his frustration to his wife’s sister in electronic mail (e-mail) messages sent during the days before the murder. During this same period he communicated with the defendant by pay telephone six times. On January 11, 2006, Bres-cia sent an e-mail message to his wife’s sister, writing that his “heart [was] in [his] stomach” over the fact that the two weeks he spent with his wife over the holidays had “mean[t] nothing.” On January 12, Brescia telephoned the defendant. The call lasted four and one-half minutes. The victim was murdered the next morning.

The defendant was held in lieu of bail pending trial. At one point he shared a cell with an inmate who later informed against him. He confided in this inmate about the murder and admitted his involvement. He told the inmate that he could help the inmate make bail so that the inmate could do whatever it took to prevent Campbell from testifying against him. He also told the inmate about a map he had used that had the murder scene highlighted, which he wanted located before police discovered it.

2. Motion to suppress. The defendant argues that the judge erred in denying his motion to suppress statements he made to the inmate, whom he alleges was an agent of the Commonwealth at the time the statements were made. The defendant contends that the statements were admitted in evidence in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. To support his claim, the defendant relies upon the theory of “implicit” agency relationship and the conduct of the parties. Specifically, *153 the defendant relies on the inmate’s intention to benefit from providing information about the defendant to police, the Commonwealth’s orchestration of a reduction in a sentence the inmate received in the Superior Court in Barnstable County, the orchestration of a reduction in the inmate’s bail in a case in the Superior Court in Suffolk County, and the orchestration of a supplemental plea agreement in the United States District Court for the District of Maine in which Federal prosecutors agreed to bring to the attention of the Federal judge the inmate’s cooperation with the Middlesex County district attorney’s prosecution of the defendant for the purpose of forming a basis for a downward departure from the minimum sentence he was expected to serve.

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40 N.E.3d 1003, 473 Mass. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-foxworth-mass-2015.