Commonwealth v. Gray

978 N.E.2d 543, 463 Mass. 731, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 1061
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 978 N.E.2d 543 (Commonwealth v. Gray) 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. Gray, 978 N.E.2d 543, 463 Mass. 731, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 1061 (Mass. 2012).

Opinion

Lenk, J.

A Superior Court jury convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree on a theory of deliberate premeditation, and of two firearms offenses. On appeal, the defendant claims error in a number of respects. Because we conclude that certain pivotal evidentiary rulings implicating identification were erroneous and not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, a new trial is required.

Introduction. The essential facts surrounding the shooting death of Herman Taylor are not in dispute. Around 5:30 p.m. on July 12, 2006, minutes after eighteen year old Taylor left his home in the Roxbury section of Boston, he was approached by a man wearing a hooded “Champion” sweatshirt (hoodie). They engaged in what appeared to bystanders to be an animated conversation, until the hooded figure, whose face was partially obscured, pulled out a gun and shot Taylor multiple times, chasing him and shooting as Taylor ran from him in a futile attempt to escape. The hooded figure then fled, and Christopher Jami-son, who had been in an automobile driving past, ran to the victim’s aid. Later that evening, without having identified his assailant, Taylor died of his wounds.

Bystanders provided little by way of description of the shooter, no useable forensic evidence was discovered, and the murder weapon was never found. Video surveillance cameras in the area showed the hooded figure, whose face was not visible, arriving a block away from the scene of the shooting in a white Nissan Maxima automobile with a missing hubcap, which dropped him off and drove away. The vehicle’s registration plates could not be discerned. Little progress was made in learning who murdered Taylor until, in March, 2007, police were provided information by Jamison, whom they were questioning in connection with a different matter. Jamison disclosed that he and several women had been driving past the shooting as it unfolded.

Approximately five months later, a grand jury were convened and heard testimony from, among others, Jamison; the women [733]*733who had been with him in the vehicle — his then girl friend Shagara Williams, who was driving, and her Mends Shumane Garvin and Danielle Canty; and the cousin of the owner of a white Nissan Maxima. The defendant was arrested on October 26, 2007. On December 5, 2007, the grand jury handed down indictments charging him with murder in the first degree, G. L. c. 265, § 1; possession of a firearm without a license, G. L. c. 269, § 10 (a); and possession of a loaded firearm, G. L. c. 269, § 10 (n).

The defendant grew up in the Bromley-Heath housing development, an area of Boston that the Heath Street gang claimed as its temtory. The location of the shooting, on Humboldt Avenue in the Roxbury section of Boston, was known as temtory belonging to the rival H-Block gang. During the year before the shooting, there had been fifty to sixty firearm “incidents,” including several homicides, in the combined H-Block and Heath Street areas. The Commonwealth’s theory at trial was that the defendant, as a member of the more than two-hundred-person Heath Street gang, mistakenly took Taylor to be a member of the approximately fifty-person H-Block gang and, as part of an ongoing feud between the two gangs, shot and killed him. To prove that this was the defendant’s motive for shooting Taylor, the Commonwealth introduced over objection extensive testimony about both gangs, prior incidents of violence in the vicinity of the shooting, the defendant’s purported membership in the Heath Street gang, and also evidence that Roosevelt Wilkins, the owner of a Nissan Maxima resembling that which transported the shooter, was a Heath Street member, a Mend of the defendant, and not at work on the day of the shooting.

To prove that it was the defendant and not another Heath Street gang member who shot Taylor, the Commonwealth relied on the identification of the shooter made by occupants of Williams’s vehicle while they were driving past. In addition to Williams’s statement that she recognized the defendant, there was testimony that Jamison, a member of H-Block, had identified the defendant as the shooter. Jamison himself was not available to testify at Mal, and his identification of the shooter was put before the jury through Williams’s testimony. Such testimony, however, was materially at odds with what Jamison [734]*734had said before the grand jury. The defendant was not permitted to introduce any portion of Jamison’s contrary grand jury testimony, including Jamison’s failure to select the defendant’s photograph from a photographic array shown to him before the grand jury. No other witnesses identified the defendant as the shooter. The defense was misidentification.

The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree on a theory of deliberate premeditation, and of both firearms offenses. On appeal, he claims error chiefly in five respects, challenging (1) key evidentiary rulings concerning identification and related testimony; (2) the admission of a rap music video (rap video) in which the defendant appeared; (3) the admission of police expert testimony on gangs and the expert’s description of the defendant as a gang member; (4) an adverse ruling during the defendant’s closing argument that precluded him from calling into question Jamison’s credibility and reliability; and (5) assorted improprieties in the Commonwealth’s use of grand jury and opinion testimony, as well as in its closing. He also requests that we exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to reduce the murder conviction to a lesser degree of guilt or, in the alternative, to grant him a new trial. Because we conclude that it was error to preclude the defendant from impeaching Williams’s testimony as to Jamison by introducing Jamison’s contrary grand jury testimony, to permit irrelevant and prejudicial identification testimony concerning certain photographs, and to allow admission of the prejudicial rap video, the convictions must be reversed.1

Background. 1. The grand jury proceedings. Because of its importance to the issues on appeal, we summarize relevant portions of the testimony given in connection with a grand jury investigation that began in September, 2007.2

Shagara Williams. Williams, then eighteen years old, was the [735]*735first percipient witness to testify. During her testimony on September 7, she said she was unable to identify either the victim or the shooter. As they were driving on Humboldt Avenue, with her behind the wheel, Jamison saw someone he recognized, seemed surprised, and said, “Yo. Let me out the car. There goes that nigger Lawz.”3 She replied, “Who’s that?” and Jami-son answered, “That nigger from Heath Street,” whom he also identified as “Lamory.” Although she had never seen him, she knew the name “Lamory” as someone from Heath Street. Williams did not see the shooting. As Jamison was getting out of the vehicle, the back seat passengers, Canty and Garvin, were “talking about the boy falling down or getting shot or something.”

Christopher Jamison. Jamison, then twenty-two years old, first testified before the grand jury on September 13, 2007. He telephoned Williams late in the afternoon of July 12, 2006, to pick him up and take him to the store. They were driving on Humboldt Avenue and he was in the front passenger seat, preparing marijuana for smoking, when Williams said, “[Tjhere go your mans right there.” He looked up, recognized Taylor, and saw the hooded figure, whom he did not recognize, standing on the sidewalk.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State of Tennessee v. Charlie Martinez
Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 2026
People v. Reaves
2025 NY Slip Op 05107 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2025)
State of Tennessee v. William Darnell Britton
Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 2025
Commonwealth v. James Souza
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2024
Larry Jean Hart v. the State of Texas
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2024
HART, LARRY JEAN v. the State of Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2024
Baker v. State
899 S.E.2d 139 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2024)
Commonwealth v. Shakespeare
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2023
Commonwealth v. Adrian Hinds.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2023
Commonwealth v. Powell
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2023
Commonwealth v. Correia
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2023
People v. Coneal
California Court of Appeal, 2019
Commonwealth v. Mienkowski
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2017
Commonwealth v. Bell
39 N.E.3d 1190 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2015)
Taylor Bell v. Itawamba County School Board
799 F.3d 379 (Fifth Circuit, 2015)
Commonwealth v. Kercado
32 Mass. L. Rptr. 284 (Massachusetts Superior Court, 2014)
Commonwealth v. Akara
988 N.E.2d 430 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
978 N.E.2d 543, 463 Mass. 731, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 1061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-gray-mass-2012.