Commonwealth v. Galipeau

101 N.E.3d 953, 93 Mass. App. Ct. 225
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 16, 2018
DocketAC 16-P-754
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 101 N.E.3d 953 (Commonwealth v. Galipeau) 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. Galipeau, 101 N.E.3d 953, 93 Mass. App. Ct. 225 (Mass. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

HANLON, J.

*226 After a jury trial, the defendant, Robert Galipeau, was convicted of armed robbery arising from the gunpoint theft of cash from three men at approximately 1 A.M. on April 18, 2013, immediately after the victims left the Assembly Bar in Quincy. The sole issue at trial was the identification of the robber. The defendant argues on appeal that his motion to suppress a photographic identification should have been allowed and that the trial judge improperly allowed an in-court identification. We affirm.

1. Motion to suppress photographic identification . "We recite the facts as found by the motion judge, supplemented by uncontroverted testimony" submitted during the evidentiary hearing on the motion to suppress. Commonwealth v. Cordero , 477 Mass. 237 , 238, 74 N.E.3d 1282 (2017). We accept all of the judge's factual findings, none of which is clearly erroneous. See Commonwealth v. Borgos , 464 Mass. 23 , 32, 979 N.E.2d 1095 (2012).

After the robbery, Leo Tang, one of the victims, told the police that the robber had followed him and his two friends from the Assembly Bar to his car across the street. Tang described the robber as a white male, approximately five feet, ten inches tall, scruffy looking, with facial hair, and wearing a hooded sweatshirt, gray shirt, and jeans. Tang had seen the man in the bar earlier that night, with a Budweiser *955 beer next to him. After the police received this information from Tang, an officer met with Robert Sylva, the bar manager, to view surveillance videotape. The videotape depicted a white man drinking a Budweiser at a table; he fit the description Tang had given. Sylva told the officer that the person drinking a Budweiser in the video was the defendant.

Once the police had the defendant's name, two officers went to his home and knocked on his front door but received no answer. They went toward the rear door, and, while walking along the right side of the house, they saw the defendant standing at the sink in the kitchen of the ground floor apartment. The officers then went back to the front door and knocked again. They knocked on the door without response for a lengthy period of time before the defendant finally answered. He was wearing only a pair of jeans and sneakers, and his face appeared to be freshly shaved, with cuts on his upper and lower lip that were actively bleeding.

At approximately 3 A.M. , police officers brought Tang, in a police cruiser, to the street outside the defendant's house for a showup identification procedure. Tang viewed the defendant, who was standing on the sidewalk, for five to ten minutes. Tang did *227 not identify the defendant as the robber at that time, saying that he could not be sure of an identification because the robber had been scruffier, with facial hair.

Later that day, Quincy Police Detective Ricky Wash created a computer-generated photo array, including the defendant's photo and six other photos of men with similar physical characteristics. 1 The photo identification procedure was administered by Detective Michael Ward, who was otherwise uninvolved in the investigation.

Tang viewed the photos one at a time, and, when he came to the second photo, he said it looked similar 2 to the robber, but he was having trouble making a positive identification because the robber had been wearing a hat and a hooded sweatshirt. At Ward's instruction, Tang went through the remaining photos. When he returned to the second photo, Ward put a piece of paper over the upper head of the person depicted and Tang covered the person's ears with his hands. Tang then wrote on the photo, at Ward's request, "I believe this is the suspect because he seems like an average white male. The chin structure with a little facial hair look similar. I couldn't see his head or ears because he wore a hat and hoodie at the time."

a. Multiple identification procedures . "For a motion to suppress a photographic identification to succeed, the defendant must show by a preponderance of the evidence that, in light of the totality of the circumstances, the procedures employed were so unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable misidentification as to deny the defendant due process *956 of law." 3 Commonwealth v. Borgos , 464 Mass. 23 , 32, 979 N.E.2d 1095 (2012), quoting from *228 Commonwealth v. Watson , 455 Mass. 246 , 250, 915 N.E.2d 1052 (2009). See Mass. G. Evid. § 1112(b)(1) (2017). In reviewing a decision on such a motion, we "review without deference the judge's application of the law to the facts as found." Commonwealth v. Johnson , 473 Mass. 594 , 602, 45 N.E.3d 83 (2016).

The defendant's primary argument is that the unsuccessful showup tainted the subsequent photo array procedure, rendering it impermissibly suggestive. The motion judge addressed this issue squarely and concluded that conducting a photo array procedure that included the defendant, after Tang had failed to identify him at the showup, "may not be ideal, but was warranted where the defendant had apparently altered his appearance since the time of the crime."

We agree with the motion judge. The evidence before him at the suppression hearing strongly suggested that the defendant had shaved immediately before he answered the door to his home in the early morning hours of April 18, 2013.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.E.3d 953, 93 Mass. App. Ct. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-galipeau-massappct-2018.