Commonwealth v. Hart

914 N.E.2d 904, 455 Mass. 230, 2009 Mass. LEXIS 663
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 20, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 914 N.E.2d 904 (Commonwealth v. Hart) 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. Hart, 914 N.E.2d 904, 455 Mass. 230, 2009 Mass. LEXIS 663 (Mass. 2009).

Opinions

Gants, J.

On the evening of April 30, 2005, the defendant went to the home of Beother Billingslea. On encountering his former girl friend, Tangela Gibson, on the front porch, the defendant slashed her throat. When Billingslea came to Gibson’s aid, the defendant stabbed him to death. Based on these events, a jury in the Superior Court convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree of Billingslea on a theory of deliberate premeditation,1 assault and battery of Gibson by means of a dangerous weapon, and armed assault with intent to murder Gibson. Represented by new counsel on appeal, the defendant argues that a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice arose from the prosecutor’s improper impeachment of the defendant’s alibi witnesses with their pretrial silence, and from the admission of recorded telephone calls between the defendant and his sister while he was in jail to rebut the testimony of the alibi witnesses. We affirm the defendant’s convictions. We also discern no basis to grant relief under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, on the murder conviction.

Facts. The jury could have found the following facts from the evidence at trial. Gibson had known the defendant since she was a teenager. They started dating at the end of 2004; a few months later, Gibson moved into the defendant’s home on Holiday Street in the Dorchester section of Boston, where he lived with other members of his family.

Gibson had a long-standing cocaine problem.2 The defendant did not approve of Gibson’s use of cocaine, but preferred that, if she were to use drugs, she do so in the house rather than in the street.

A couple of times a week, Gibson visited her “old neighborhood.” The defendant did not like Gibson’s going to see her friends there, telling her that she did not need anyone but him. Gibson and the defendant argued about her use of drugs and [232]*232these visits, and the arguments occasionally became physical. The defendant had slapped, choked, and punched Gibson.

Gibson did not always have an exclusive relationship with the defendant. Michael Ferguson, a friend who lived in Quincy, would take her to dinner and to bars, and would give her money to buy drugs and cigarettes.3 The defendant was aware of, and did not like, Gibson’s relationship with Ferguson. The defendant saw Gibson with Ferguson in Dorchester on Valentine’s Day in 2005, asked Ferguson his name, and told Ferguson that Gibson was going with him.

On April 29, 2005, Gibson grew tired of the defendant beating her and broke up with him. At approximately 8 p.m. the next evening, she visited Billingslea, who was her friend, in his second-floor apartment in a three-story house on 9 Millet Street in Dorchester, about one-half mile from the defendant’s home. Billingslea shared the apartment with two roommates, Willie Haynes and Carl Lubanga.

Gibson had arranged to meet Ferguson at Billingslea’s apartment to get drunk and “high.” After Ferguson arrived one hour later,4 Gibson, Ferguson, Billingslea, and Billingslea’s friend Robin5 started drinking, smoking, and ingesting “crack” cocaine in Billingslea’s bedroom. Gibson and Robin had an argument, and Robin left. Shortly thereafter, sometime after 10:30 p.m., Ferguson left. Gibson went downstairs to make a telephone call to buy more drugs and to see if she could get a cigarette from Ferguson before he left. When she reached the porch, however, she did not see Ferguson, and the outside door of the house locked automatically behind her.

At approximately 11 p.m., while standing on the porch, Gibson saw the defendant come from the street and walk up the stairs of the porch. She was “kind of scared” when she saw him and tried to knock on the outside door and ring the doorbell. [233]*233The defendant pulled a knife from his pocket and slit her throat, slashing her from just below one ear to the middle of her neck. Gibson said, “Oh my God, you killed me,” to which the defendant replied, “Bitch, I’m sick of this,” or words to that effect. After Gibson fell to the porch floor, the defendant stabbed her in the lower part of her rib cage, her abdomen, and the back of her left thigh.

Billingslea came downstairs, opened the front door, and asked the defendant what he had done to Gibson. Gibson crawled inside and up the stairs, yelling for someone to call an ambulance. She heard the sound of “scuffling” feet downstairs.

Upstairs, Haynes tied a towel around Gibson’s neck. Gibson was frantic and crying, thinking she was going to die. She told Haynes that the defendant had stabbed her. At 11:06 p.m., at Haynes’ request, Lubanga dialed 911. After initiating the call, Lubanga put the telephone down and went downstairs to see if an ambulance was coming, and saw Billingslea lying on the stairs, unresponsive, with knife wounds in his chest and stomach. Haynes spoke again with the 911 operator. At the operator’s direction, he obtained information from Gibson, including her statement that the defendant had stabbed her and her description of what the defendant had been wearing (black pants and a light blue sweatshirt).

Police officers responded to 9 Millet Street. It had rained earlier, and the streets, sidewalks, and steps to the front porch were wet. Police found Billingslea on the hallway floor near the door to the front porch. Billingslea was transported to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead as a result of multiple stab wounds.6

The police officers went upstairs to Billingslea’s apartment and found Gibson, who was screaming and crying. Her hands were covered in blood and she had blood coming out of her neck. She was screaming, “I was stabbed. I’m not going to live. I’m bleeding to death.” One officer used his radio to request an ambulance; another used a towel around Gibson’s neck to try to [234]*234control the bleeding. Officer Dennis Medina asked who had done this to her, and Gibson replied that her former boy friend, the defendant, had stabbed her. She was able to tell police where the defendant lived and gave a description of the clothing he had worn. She also remarked that, when he stabbed her, the defendant said that he was not afraid to go back to jail. Gibson was taken to a nearby hospital and survived her injuries, even though the wound to her neck was deep and potentially fatal.

At Billingslea’s apartment, police found numerous bloodstains, including bloodstains on the front porch and first-floor hallway. Footwear impressions taken from bloodstains on the front porch matched impressions taken from footwear worn by Gibson and Billingslea, but not footwear worn by the defendant. A bloodstain on a shoe seized from the defendant was consistent with the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) profile of Gibson. A bloodstain on pants seized from the defendant was consistent with his own DNA profile and contained another blood source from which Gibson could not be included or excluded.

About one week after she had been stabbed, Gibson went to the defendant’s home on Holiday Street to collect her belongings. While she was there, the defendant called on the telephone. Gibson spoke with the defendant, and told him she still loved him; he told her that he loved her, too.

In June, the defendant’s mother or sister gave Gibson a birthday card and a letter from the defendant. In the birthday card, the defendant asked Gibson to look out for him. The defendant’s letter included the following:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
914 N.E.2d 904, 455 Mass. 230, 2009 Mass. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hart-mass-2009.