Commonwealth v. Jackmon

822 N.E.2d 754, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 47, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 155
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 2005
DocketNo. 02-P-760
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 822 N.E.2d 754 (Commonwealth v. Jackmon) 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. Jackmon, 822 N.E.2d 754, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 47, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 155 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Gelinas, J.

The defendant, Kevin E. Jackmon, appeals from [48]*48his convictions for murder in the second degree; two counts of assault by means of a dangerous weapon1; unlawful possession of a firearm; two counts of kidnapping; armed robbery while masked; use of a firearm while committing a felony; and fourteen counts of stealing by confining or putting in fear. The defendant alleges (1) that the trial judge improperly denied his motion to suppress; (2) that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object to the jury instructions on felony murder; and (3) that when sentencing, the judge erroneously considered crimes of which the defendant had been acquitted and that resentencing is consequently required. After briefly rehearsing the facts, we consider each claim in turn.

Facts. On April 26, 1998, Jackmon and his accomplice, Demarco Traynum, entered a McDonald’s restaurant in New Bedford and forced more than a dozen employees and customers, at gunpoint, into a small back office of the restaurant. They directed one McDonald’s employee to bind the hands of some of the individuals held in the office and forced the assistant manager and another employee to empty the contents of the safe and the cash registers into a canvas sack. The robbery was interrupted by the arrival of two police officers, and a shootout ensued. In the course of the confrontation, Jackmon accidentally shot and killed Traynum. Subsequently, Jackmon seized two women, one of whom was six months pregnant, and escaped from the scene of the crime while holding the two women in headlocks and firing at the police. Jackmon later left the two women in a hotel in New York City and fled to North Carolina, where he was arrested nearly two months later after his photograph was aired on the television program “America’s Most Wanted.”

Motion to suppress. On June 25, 1998, a North Carolina magistrate issued a search warrant authorizing a search of 3033 Boone Trail, Raleigh, North Carolina, for the purpose of serving a Federal arrest warrant for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution on Kevin Jackmon.2 The detective who applied for the search [49]*49warrant, a Raleigh police officer, submitted a sworn affidavit,3 on which the magistrate relied, to establish probable cause for the issuance of the search warrant. With the search warrant and the ar[50]*50rest warrant in hand, the Federal Bureau of Investigation agents and police searched 3033 Boone Trail in North Carolina. They found and arrested Jackmon and seized a forty-caliber Ruger. pistol, a black pistol magazine loaded with ten forty-caliber rounds of ammunition, a box containing thirty-four rounds of forty-caliber ammunition, a North Carolina driver’s license for Kevin E. Jackmon, a black metal device used to reload pistol magazines, and other documents belonging to Jackmon. The forty-caliber Ruger handgun fired the shot that killed the victim. Massachusetts renditioned and indicted. Jackmon alleged, in a motion to suppress, that the affidavit did not establish the requisite probable cause when gouged by the “totality of the circumstances” analysis required under North Carolina law.4 Jackmon also alleges that the court should have required the af[51]*51fidavit to meet a higher standard of reliability since the affidavit was based on information provided by an anonymous informant. A judge in the Superior Court denied Jackmon’s motion to suppress.5 We affirm.

North Carolina law requires that “ ‘great deference should be paid a magistrate’s determination of probable cause,’ [although] this deference does not translate into an abdication of the court’s responsibility to review the magistrate’s determination.” State v. Beam, 91 N.C. App. 629, 631 (1988), rev’d, 325 N.C. 217 (1989), quoting from State v. Arrington, 311 N.C. 633, 638 (1984). “[Reviewing courts ‘should not conduct a de nova review of the evidence to determine whether probable cause existed at the time the warrant was issued.’ ” Ellis v. White, 156 N.C. App. 16, 26 (2003), quoting from State v. Ledbetter, 120 [52]*52N.C. App. 117, 121-122 (1995). The North Carolina Court of Appeals has observed that “an arrest warrant issued by an independent judicial official is entitled to more deference than an individual law enforcement officer’s assessment of the grounds for probable cause.” State v. Whitehead, 42 N.C. App. 506, 511 (1979).6 Although the officer had as his ultimate purpose the arrest of Jackmon, the application here was not for an arrest warrant, but for a warrant to search certain premises for Jackmon’s person, as there was already an arrest warrant in effect.7 Without concluding that the law with respect to search warrants, as opposed to that of arrest warrants, differs, we consider North Carolina’s law with respect to search warrants.8

In order to meet the probable cause standard for a search warrant in North Carolina, there must be “reasonable grounds to believe that the proposed search will reveal the presence of the objects sought upon the premises to be searched and that those objects will aid in the apprehension or conviction of the offender.” State v. Marshall, 94 N.C. App. 20, 26 (1989).

The North Carolina General Statutes require that applications for search warrants “be supported by one or more affidavits particularly setting forth the facts and circumstances establishing probable cause to believe that the items are in the places or in the possession of the individuals to be searched.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-244(3) (2004). The information must be sufficient to support an “independent judgment” on the part of the magistrate that probable cause exists. State v. Harvey, 281 N.C. [53]*531, 6 (1972). There is no probable cause unless the facts in the affidavit are such that a “reasonably discreet and prudent person would rely upon them.” State v. Arrington, 311 N.C. at 636.

The affidavit presented to the magistrate “may be based on hearsay information and need not reflect the direct personal observations of the affiant.” State v. McKinnon, 306 N.C. 288, 293 (1982), quoting from State v. Campbell, 282 N.C. 125, 129 (1972). However, hearsay information must meet a certain minimum level of reliability. Whereas Massachusetts requires that informant information meet both prongs of the United States Supreme Court Aguilar-Spinelli9 test, which directs that the affiant indicate the basis of the informant’s knowledge and comment on the informant’s reliability, North Carolina uses the “totality of the circumstances” test articulated in Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213 (1983), to assess whether or not the information provided is sufficiently rehable to support probable cause.

The totality of the circumstances analysis requires that the magistrate “make a practical, commonsense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit before him, including the ‘veracity’ and ‘basis of knowledge’ of the persons supplying hearsay information, there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.” Illinois v. Gates,

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Bluebook (online)
822 N.E.2d 754, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 47, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-jackmon-massappct-2005.