Commonwealth v. Gazzola

17 Mass. L. Rptr. 308
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 2004
DocketNo. 0211098
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Mass. L. Rptr. 308 (Commonwealth v. Gazzola) 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. Gazzola, 17 Mass. L. Rptr. 308 (Mass. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Sanders, J.

In this case, seven defendants face criminal charges which include attempted extortion, criminal harassment, threats, conspiracy, and (as to one defendant) stalking. The defendants now move to dismiss the indictments against them on several [309]*309grounds. Their principal argument is that the evidence presented to the grand jury was insufficient to support the indictments against them. Commonwealth v. McCarthy, 385 Mass. 160, 163 (1982). In pressing their motions, all of the defendants contend that the Commonwealth is targeting behavior that is constitutionally protected.

In considering these Motions, the Court has read the grand jury minutes and reviewed all grand jury exhibits. Those exhibits include videotaped recordings of four street demonstrations in which the defendants are depicted. In addition to memoranda of law submitted by the parties, this Court has also reviewed an amicus curiae brief filed by the National Lawyers Guild. After careful consideration of all of these materials, this Court concludes that the Motions must be Allowed in substantial part.

Factual Background

The grand jury that returned the indictments against these defendants heard evidence on three different days.1 A substantial portion of that presentation pertained not so much to any specific acts committed by the named defendants but rather to activities of an organization called Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty, or “SHAC.” The group was originally formed in England in order to oppose animal testing by a British company called Huntingdon Life Sciences or “HLS.” SHAC’s avowed purpose is to put HLS out of business. In furtherance of that purpose, its members have engaged in criminal acts against HLS employees. In addition, SHAC has targeted businesses which provide services to HLS, and, using various tactics, has gone after employees of those businesses in an effort to pressure them into severing their ties with the British company. Those tactics include picketing, invading company offices, painting buildings with red paint, and publishing employee contact information on the SHAC website with a message encouraging people to send that employee a “present.”

In the spring of 2002, SHAC turned its attention to Robert Harper, who is a mid-level executive working for Marsh Incorporated in Boston (“Marsh”). Marsh provides insurance to HLS. On April 28, 2002, six people (none of them identified) appeared outside Harper’s home in the Back Bay where he lives with his wife and two-year-old son. The home is in a multi-level apartment building on Commonwealth Avenue in Boston. These six individuals held signs stating that “Marsh Insures Murderers” and “Marsh Kills Puppies.” They left after someone complained to them that they were disturbing the neighborhood. Subsequent to that, a report of the demonstration appeared on the SHAC website with the warning that “it was going to get worse for Robert Harper until Marsh severs their ties” with HLS. The website gave out Harper’s home phone number, address, and e-mail, and urged SHAC supporters to “Give Rob a call or send him a gift.”

Thereafter, the Harpers received hang up calls, and also got calls inquiring about a car for sale and concert tickets. It was discovered that Harper’s name and home telephone number appeared on fliers posted in Harvard Square regarding those items. In addition, the Harpers’ mail was rerouted to Arizona, and they received magazine subscriptions that they had not ordered. They also received inquiries from credit card companies which they had not contacted. On May 26, 2002 in the early morning hours, the Harpers were awakened by certain unidentified individuals using bullhorns. On Father’s Day weekend, several gallons of red paint were dumped on the front steps of the Harpers’ apartment building. Police had no names at this point to connect with any of these incidents. The most that could be said was that the perpetrators were supporters or members of the SHAC organization.

The first time that a specific defendant is connected to a particular activity relating to the indictments before this Court is in connection with a demonstration at the Harper home on June 29, 2002. The Court has viewed a videotape of that demonstration, which was taken by a private security company hired by the Harpers. On that date, defendants Kleinert, Smith, Doane, Lungarelli and Lotts chanted slogans and distributed fliers with Harper’s home telephone number and e-mail address on them. They shouted that “Rob Harper is a puppy killer” and held signs stating that “Marsh Insures Murderers.” In one chant (repeated many times in later demonstrations), the group yelled: “Stop the torture, Stop the pain; Rob Harper is to blame.” The next day, a report of the demonstration appeared on the SHAC website.

The June 29 demonstration was followed by other demonstrations occurring on July 2 through July 4, 2002 and again on August 9 through August 11, 2002. On two of those dates, the participants did not say anything but instead stood outside Harper’s apartment building with red candles, allowing the wax to drip onto the sidewalks. On the other dates, the participants held signs and engaged in group chants. Individuals in the group (chief among them defendant Kleinert) would occasionally shout statements directed at Harper. Defendant Gazzola, who first appeared at the August 9, 2002 demonstration and led many of the chants on that day, vowed that the group would continue to pursue Harper until his company severed its ties with HLS. She also alluded to the fact that Harper had red paint dumped at his doorstep and referred to other acts of harassment which had been directed against Marsh and HLS employees, asking “where were the police then?” These chants and statements are what form the primary basis for the Commonwealth’s case.

Apart from these demonstrations, the grand jury also heard the following. First, on July 17, 2002, a Superior Court judge issued a civil injunction (the “July 17 Order”) against SHAC and three of the named [310]*310defendants, Doane, Smith and Lungarelli. The July 17 Order prohibited them — and anyone “acting in concert” with them — from harassing or threatening the Harpers or any other Marsh employee and his or her family. The July 17 Order also required the defendants to stay at least fifty feet away from the Harpers and at least thirteen feet away from their property. Although the July 17 Order, together with the judge’s findings of fact, was presented to the grand juiy, grand jurors were specifically instructed not to read the fact findings. Therefore, that an order existed (without regard to why it was issued) was all that the grand jury was to consider.

Second, on August 17, 2002, defendants Lotts and Kleinert were stopped by police. Found in the course of a search of their motor vehicle were SHAC fliers, a bag of magazine subscription cards, a document entitled “20 Terror Tactics” which has appeared on SHAC’s website, and a computer disc which contained a document stating “Tell puppy killer Rob Harper what you think of him,” as well as other text which had appeared on the website. Many of the subscription cards had the name of John Spath, another Marsh executive which SHAC had targeted. A notebook found in the car listed the names and home addresses of attorneys who had brought the civil suit against SHAC; there were detailed instructions to their homes. Following this arrest, police conducted a search of Lotts’ apartment in Allston, Massachusetts. Kleinert, from New Jersey, had stated that he was staying at this apartment as well.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Mass. L. Rptr. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-gazzola-masssuperct-2004.