MACKIE, COMMONWEALTH vs., 100 Mass. App. Ct. 78
MILKEY, J. A Superior Court jury found that the defendant was a "sexually dangerous person" (SDP) within the meaning of G. L. c. 123A, § 1. Accordingly, the trial judge entered an order committing him to the Massachusetts Treatment Center for an indefinite
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period. On appeal, the defendant principally challenges the Commonwealth's reliance on police reports and other documentary material that set forth allegations that he had committed various sexual offenses for which he never was convicted. The defendant repeatedly opposed the introduction of such evidence in a pretrial motion in limine and during the trial. The judge admitted the challenged evidence, relying in great part on our decision in Commonwealth v. Starkus, 69 Mass. App. Ct. 326 (2007). We agree with the defendant that, notwithstanding Starkus, the admission of some of the evidence was error, and that a new trial is warranted. We disagree with the defendant's separate argument that the Commonwealth's evidence was legally insufficient to support his adjudication as an SDP.
Background. 1. The 2003 indictments and 2006 plea bargain. In 2003, the defendant was indicted for ten sexual offenses involving a twelve year old boy whom the defendant recently had adopted. The litany of charges regarding the boy, to whom we refer by the pseudonym Cole, included rape of a child (two counts); rape (two counts); indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of fourteen (two counts); indecent assault and battery on a person aged fourteen or older (two counts); open and gross lewdness; and dissemination of matter harmful to a minor. The allegations that Cole had made were detailed in reports from the Shirley and Ayer police. [Note 1]
In 2006, the 2003 case was resolved through a plea agreement in which the defendant pleaded guilty only to two counts of assault and battery, which were treated as lesser included offenses of the indictments for indecent assault and battery of a person under the age of fourteen. [Note 2] The indictment for disseminating material harmful to a minor was dismissed, and the other indictments were placed on file without a change of plea. A transcript of the plea colloquy in that case was not admitted in evidence at the SDP trial and is not before us.
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2. The 2009 case. In 2009, a Superior Court jury convicted the defendant of two counts of rape of a child. The victim of those rapes was a thirteen year old boy to whom we refer by the pseudonym Allen. According to the police report regarding these incidents, the defendant had "groomed" Allen by purchasing him presents and showing him pornography, among other things. [Note 3] The police report also referenced evidence that the defendant during the same time period similarly had tried to groom an eleven year old boy to whom we refer by the pseudonym Brent. Allen and Brent knew each other, and the defendant sometimes met them together. The defendant was not charged with any sexual misconduct involving Brent.
3. The SDP trial. Near the conclusion of the defendant's prison sentence for the rapes of Allen, the Commonwealth petitioned to have him confined as an SDP. As required by G. L. c. 123A, § 13 (a), the defendant was examined by two qualified examiners (QEs). See Johnstone, petitioner, 453 Mass. 544, 547 (2009) (discussing role of QEs in SDP process). One of the QEs, Dr. Robert H. Joss, concluded that the defendant met the criteria to be classified as an SDP. At the trial, the Commonwealth called Dr. Joss as its principal witness. In proving the underlying facts, the Commonwealth relied principally on documentary evidence, such as the police reports relating to the incidents involving Cole, Allen, and Brent. The information contained in the police reports was also repeated in the QE report prepared by Dr. Joss, which separately was admitted as an exhibit. The Commonwealth called two additional witnesses, whose testimony amounted to fifteen total pages of transcript. [Note 4]
Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion in limine seeking to exclude the Commonwealth's evidence insofar as it provided evidence of sex offenses for which he never was convicted. The defendant especially focused on the material that laid out Cole's allegations. The judge denied this portion of the motion. In concluding that the documentary material regarding Cole was admissible, the judge expressly relied on our decision in Starkus.
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The allegations that Cole and Brent made were conveyed to potential jurors even before the trial began, because the judge included them in the pretrial summary of the case that she provided to the jury venire. In fact, apparently drawing from the substance of the police reports, which had been repeated in Dr. Joss's QE report, the judge presented to the venire the allegations that Cole and Brent had made as unqualified statements of fact. [Note 5] During the trial itself, the judge admitted the police reports and other documentary evidence detailing Cole's and Brent's allegations over the defendant's repeated objections. [Note 6]
The defendant testified in his own behalf. He stated that during his 2006 plea colloquy, he did not admit to facts supporting any charge that he sexually assaulted Cole. Although the Commonwealth questions the defendant's credibility, it makes no claim that he admitted to the sexual nature of the assault and battery to which he pleaded guilty. As noted, the plea colloquy itself is not before us. On the current record, it appears that the defendant consistently has denied ever committing any sexual offense with respect to Cole, and admits only to having restrained Cole as a form of discipline. In his trial testimony, the defendant also denied that he had raped Allen even though a jury had convicted him of those charges.
In addition to his own testimony, the defendant called two experts to testify to why they believed that he did not meet the
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criteria of an SDP. One was the other QE who had examined the defendant, Dr. Gregg Anthony Belle. The other was Dr. Joseph J. Plaud, an independently retained forensic psychologist. At one point during cross-examination, the prosecutor had Dr. Belle confirm that in applying the actuarial model known as the "Static-99R" test to the defendant, Dr. Belle had assumed that the defendant had been charged with sex offenses against victims other than Allen.
Discussion. 1. Sufficiency. In order to prove that the defendant was an SDP, the Commonwealth had to establish, among other things, that he suffered from a "mental abnormality or personality disorder." G. L. c. 123A, § 1 (definition of "sexually dangerous person"). As laid out in the testimony and report of Dr. Joss, the Commonwealth's theory of the case was that the defendant suffered from the mental abnormality known as "pedophilic disorder." The defendant argues that the Commonwealth's proof on this issue was legally insufficient. For the following reasons, we disagree.
In assessing the legal sufficiency of the Commonwealth's evidence, we, of course, view the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, including by drawing all reasonable inferences in the Commonwealth's favor. See Commonwealth v. Latimore, 378 Mass. 671, 676-677 (1979). See also Souza, petitioner, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 162, 169 (2015) (applying Latimore test to SDP adjudication). In addition, we consider all the evidence that was admitted, "without regard to the propriety of [its] admission." Commonwealth v. Sepheus, 468 Mass. 160, 164 (2014), quoting Commonwealth v. Farnsworth, 76 Mass. App. Ct. 87, 98 (2010). The ultimate question is whether, based on the evidence viewed in the Commonwealth's favor, "any rational trier of fact could have found, beyond a reasonable doubt, the essential elements of sexual dangerousness as defined by G. L. c. 123A, § 1." Souza, supra, quoting Commonwealth v. Blake, 454 Mass. 267, 271 (2009) (Ireland, J., concurring).
Dr. Joss, the Commonwealth's expert, opined that the defendant met the diagnostic criteria for pedophilic disorder that are set forth in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed. 2013) (DSM-V). [Note 7] Such a diagnosis requires that an adult have "[o]ver a period of at
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least [six] months, recurrent, intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors involving sexual activity with a prepubescent child or children (generally age [thirteen] or younger)." The defendant argues that there was insufficient proof that he met the DSM-V criteria: in particular, that there was a lack of proof that any children he was sexually attracted to were prepubescent, and that any such attraction recurred over at least a six-month period.
As an initial matter, we note that in proving a mental abnormality or personality disorder, the Commonwealth need not satisfy the precise definitions set forth in the DSM, even where the Commonwealth's own expert expressly relied on those definitions. Compare Souza, 87 Mass. App. Ct. at 170, with id. at 176-177 (Milkey, J., dissenting). In any event, here the evidence was sufficient even if the Commonwealth were bound by the DSM-V definition. The Commonwealth presented evidence that in 2003, the defendant repeatedly raped his twelve year old son (Cole), and then, years later, raped a thirteen year old boy (Allen) and tried to groom (and to lure into his car) an eleven year old boy (Brent). Such evidence provided ample basis for a rational juror to conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant exhibited intense sexual urges toward prepubescent children that recurred over a period that lasted at least six months. To be sure, as the defendant points out, there was no evidence about the state of any of the victims' physical development to provide direct proof that they had not yet gone through puberty. However, where the children to whom a defendant is sexually attracted are thirteen years old or younger, evidence regarding the state of their physical development is unnecessary to establish pedophilia. See id. at 170-171. Thus, the Commonwealth's evidence was sufficient.
2. Admission of the disputed documentary evidence regarding Cole. Although the defendant raises a number of evidentiary issues, he principally challenges the introduction of the police reports that detail allegations that he committed sexual offenses for which he was not convicted, especially those allegations made by Cole. Before turning to how existing case law treats
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the admissibility of such material in the context of an SDP trial, we clarify the limited nature of what is in dispute.
In the ordinary criminal law context, disputes over the introduction of evidence that a defendant has committed prior uncharged (or otherwise unproved) offenses typically turn on whether this amounts to improper "bad acts" evidence. Such disputes commonly turn on whether the probative value of such evidence outweighs its potential for undue prejudice, typically the risk that a jury improperly would take such evidence as showing the defendant's propensity to commit such crimes. Compare Commonwealth v. Childs, 94 Mass. App. Ct. 67, 71-76 (2018), with id. at 76-81 (Singh, J., dissenting), and cases cited. In the context of an SDP trial, however, propensity is not forbidden territory; it is the very battlefield on which such cases are contested. The question is not whether the Commonwealth can rely on evidence of past sexual offenses that were never charged or proved, but on what specific evidence the Commonwealth may rely to prove that the defendant engaged in such offenses.
Indisputably, the Commonwealth was seeking to have the jury consider the allegations set forth in the challenged documents for their truth: namely, that the defendant had committed the bad acts that Cole had alleged. The evidence therefore constituted hearsay. [Note 8] The Commonwealth has not argued, much less demonstrated, that any common-law exceptions to the hearsay rule apply. However, the Legislature has enacted a special set of statutory exceptions to the hearsay rule that apply in SDP proceedings. See G. L. c. 123A, § 14 (c). Those exceptions effect "'a very radical departure' from ordinary evidentiary rules." Andrews, petitioner, 368 Mass. 468, 473 (1975), quoting Commonwealth v. McGruder, 348 Mass. 712, 715 (1965), cert. denied, 383 U.S. 972 (1966). Still, if otherwise inadmissible hearsay does not fall within the scope of the statutory exceptions, it remains inadmissible. See Commonwealth v. Markvart, 437 Mass. 331, 335 (2002) ("hearsay not otherwise admissible under the rules of evidence is inadmissible at the trial of a sexually dangerous person petition unless specifically
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made admissible by statute"). [Note 9]
For present purposes, the key specific statutory exception is the one that allows the introduction of "police reports relating to such person's prior sexual offenses." G. L. c. 123A, § 14 (c). We turn now to the rich body of cases interpreting the scope of that exemption.
In Markvart, 437 Mass. at 332, the court addressed whether the § 14 (c) exception applied to police reports detailing alleged sexual offenses with which the Commonwealth had charged the defendant and later nol prossed. The court held that such police reports did not qualify for admission under the statute. Id. at 336. It reasoned that "without a conviction or adjudication, the allegations in the nol prossed case materials are just that: allegations." Id. Police reports containing such allegations "do not constitute reports of 'prior sexual offenses[,]' [because] [t]o speak of a defendant's prior 'offenses' necessarily implies findings of guilt." Id.
Two years after Markvart, the Supreme Judicial Court was called on to "decide whether a police report concerning a prior sexual offense to which the defendant has pleaded guilty is admissible without redaction, when the same report also contains statements about an uncharged contemporaneous sexual assault." Commonwealth v. Given, 441 Mass. 741, 741-742, cert. denied, 543 U.S. 948 (2004). The court concluded that so long as the police report related to a sexual offense for which the defendant had been convicted, "the Legislature did not intend to limit the scope of information admissible under § 14 (c) to the mere fact of conviction or even the facts presented at a plea colloquy; rather, other information in police reports -- including any statements describing the defendant's conduct and the circumstances attendant to the offense
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-- is also admissible." Given, supra at 745. [Note 10] The court reasoned that "[t]he fact of conviction is a powerful independent indicator of the reliability of the statements" contained in the police report. Id. at 747-748. [Note 11]
Although the Given decision limits the Markvart decision's import and lies in some tension with it, the Supreme Judicial Court has not overruled Markvart. Instead, the court in Given described itself as faithful to how the court previously "construed the term 'offenses' in Commonwealth v. Markvart." Given, 441 Mass. at 744. We therefore remain bound by the holding in Markvart that police reports do not qualify for admission pursuant to § 14 (c) unless they relate to a sexual offense for which the defendant has been convicted.
That brings us to our decision in Starkus, the case on which the trial judge principally relied in concluding that the 2003 police reports were admissible. At issue in Starkus, 69 Mass. App. Ct. at 328, was the admissibility of a police report that detailed the defendant's rape of a fourteen year old girl. There, as here, the defendant was originally charged with rape but pleaded guilty only to simple assault and battery. Id. at 328-329. One question presented on appeal was whether the police reports that set forth the rape allegations properly had been admitted pursuant to § 14 (c), on the ground that they related to a "sexual offense" for which the defendant had been convicted. Id. at 332. We held that the police reports were admissible under the statute even though the rape charges had been dismissed as part of the plea agreement. Id. at 332-333. We reasoned that the defendant "was able to negotiate a very favorable plea bargain, but that does not negate the underlying and undisputed fact that the incident involved the rape of a fourteen year old girl." [Note 12] Id. at 332.
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In a subsequent case, we clarified how the Starkus and Markvart decisions could be harmonized. See Commonwealth v. Torres, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 908, 909 (2015). In that case, we pointed out that the SDP statute defines "sexual offense" to include not only various enumerated offenses, but also a catch-all category of "any other offense, the facts of which, under the totality of the circumstances, manifest a sexual motivation or pattern of conduct or series of acts of sexually-motivated offenses." Id. at 909-910, quoting G. L. c. 123A, § 1 (definition of "sexual offense"). In Starkus, 69 Mass. App. Ct. at 332, even though the defendant had pleaded guilty only to simple assault and battery, the fact that the defendant had raped the victim was "undisputed"; indeed, the defendant there admitted to raping the victim, see id. at 331, 333. Thus, the totality of the circumstances in Starkus established the sexual nature of the assault and battery, and, accordingly, the assault and battery qualified as a "sexual offense" within the meaning of the SDP statute. We applied this reasoning in Torres, where we concluded that the defendant had been convicted of a sexual offense when he pleaded guilty to assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon where the underlying "acts were indisputably sexual in nature and motivation." [Note 13] Torres, supra at 909.
Given the similarities between Starkus and the case before us, the judge understandably accepted the Commonwealth's argument that Starkus was directly on point. However, there is one key difference between the cases. Unlike in Starkus or Torres, the defendant in this case disputed that the crime to which he pleaded guilty was sexual in nature. According to the record before us, in the face of the defendant's consistent denial of committing any sexual offenses against Cole, the Commonwealth agreed to permit the defendant to plead guilty to simple assault and battery, and not to pursue rape or other sexual assault charges. [Note 14] Because
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the sexual nature of the assault and battery offenses to which the defendant pleaded guilty was never proved, admitted, or otherwise established, the Commonwealth cannot show that the 2003 police reports setting forth Cole's allegations related to a sexual offense within the meaning of the statute. [Note 15] Cf. Commonwealth v. Perez, 100 Mass. App. Ct. 7, 14 (2021), quoting G. L. c. 269, § 10G (where offense to which defendant pleaded guilty was not categorically "violent crime" within meaning of armed career criminal act, "a transcript of the plea hearing or a related document, such as a plea agreement, will be the best evidence of what the defendant was 'convicted of'"). Therefore, under Markvart, the police reports here did not qualify for admission pursuant to G. L. c. 123A, § 14 (c). Because the reports plainly otherwise constituted inadmissible hearsay, the judge erred in admitting them. [Note 16]
As the Commonwealth concedes, the defendant preserved his claim that the 2003 police reports should not have been admitted. Accordingly, we can affirm the judgment only if we confidently can say that "the error did not influence the jury, or had but very slight effect" (citation omitted). Commonwealth v. George, 477 Mass. 331, 341 (2017). We cannot draw such a conclusion. While the defendant's rape convictions established his status as a sex offender, the Commonwealth still had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant met all the statutory criteria of an SDP. Two of the three experts who testified, including one of the Commonwealth's QEs, opined that the defendant was not an SDP. Viewing the evidence as a whole, we cannot reasonably say that the jury's verdict was not affected by their learning of Cole's
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detailed allegations that his father, the defendant, repeatedly had raped him when he was twelve years old. Contrast Starkus, 69 Mass. App. Ct. at 333 (where defendant admitted raping fourteen year old girl and other sexual misconduct, reversal of SDP judgment not required even if it was error to admit police report setting forth victim's allegations); Commonwealth v. Morales, 60 Mass. App. Ct. 728, 728-729, 732 (2004) (in appeal of SDP judgment based on trial counsel's failure to keep out certain evidence, reversal not required where "any reliance by [judge] on inadmissible evidence . . . was corroborative of the overwhelming and admissible evidence").
3. Other issues. Although we need not reach the defendant's other claims of error to resolve the case before us, some merit discussion because they are likely to arise on retrial. The first involves whether the allegations regarding Brent needed to be redacted from the 2008 Clinton police report when that report was admitted pursuant to § 14 (c). Based on Given, we agree with the Commonwealth that no such redactions were necessary. The Clinton police report plainly was one related to prior sexual offenses for which the defendant was convicted (the rapes of Allen), and it therefore fell within the ambit of § 14 (c). The fact that it included some contemporaneous allegations for which the defendant was not charged, including with respect to an additional victim, does not require that redactions be made. [Note 17] See Given, 441 Mass. at 748.
We also are unpersuaded by the defendant's argument that it was error to admit his unredacted probation records, which included records of charges for which he was not convicted. [Note 18] That issue is controlled by our decision in Commonwealth v. Mazzarino, 81 Mass. App. Ct. 358, 368-369 (2012), and the unredacted probation records were admissible.
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In the case before us, the judge admitted not only the probation records, but also the actual indictments alleging the defendant's abuse of Cole. Whether the admission of such indictments was proper was not at issue in Mazzarino. However, because neither side has briefed this issue, we decline to resolve it here. [Note 19]
One final issue remains. In determining whether the defendant was an SDP, Dr. Belle in part used the actuarial model known as the Static-99R test. In applying that model, Dr. Belle considered past sexual offenses for which the defendant was not convicted, such as those involving Cole. Unsurprisingly, when he called Dr. Belle at trial, defense counsel did not ask Dr. Belle about such allegations. On cross-examination, the prosecutor also did not ask Dr. Belle about the details of those allegations. Instead, he touched on the issue by eliciting that Dr. Belle had reviewed the police reports related to Cole's allegations and factored them into his assessment, including during the administration of the Static-99R model. At one point, Dr. Belle addressed the unproved nature of the allegations as follows: "So just because it didn't lead to a conviction doesn't mean that I discounted it, but certainly mindful that, that, you know, there could have been, there were allegations that didn't ultimately lead to a conviction."
The defendant argues that the prosecutor's cross-examination of Dr. Belle improperly "highlight[ed]" the unproved allegations that Cole had made. In response, the Commonwealth not only argues that there was no error, but also suggests -- based on language in Markvart -- that because it was cross-examining the defendant's witness, it had free rein to inquire about the substance of Cole's allegations. See Markvart, 437 Mass. at 338 (stating that details of basis for QE's report "may be elicited during cross-examination, but the decision whether to [elicit those details] is a strategic one left to the opposing party" [citation omitted]). The defendant counters that the quoted language from Markvart was not intended to apply to cross-examination of the defendant's experts, particularly where the expert was one of the QEs that the Commonwealth had engaged to examine him. As the defendant sees it, the Commonwealth's reading of Markvart "force[s] respondents" to make an unfair choice between "either not calling a [QE] who determines he is not sexually dangerous to testify . . . or calling the [QE] to testify and being forced to watch the Commonwealth
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elicit information that the Commonwealth would never be allowed to elicit during direct examination of its own [QE] witness."
For present purposes, it suffices to say that the prosecutor's questioning of Dr. Belle regarding the basis of his opinion was sufficiently limited as not to run afoul of the boundaries drawn in the cases. We decline the Commonwealth's invitation to opine on whether the prosecutor could have delved deeper into Cole's allegations when he cross-examined Dr. Belle, and we leave resolution of the disputed language in Markvart to another day.
Conclusion. We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support the defendant's adjudication as an SDP. Nevertheless, for the reasons detailed above, we vacate the judgment and set aside the verdict, and remand this case to the Superior Court.
So ordered.