Commonwealth v. Jenkins

712 N.E.2d 1166, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 286, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 782
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1999
DocketNo. 98-P-162
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 712 N.E.2d 1166 (Commonwealth v. Jenkins) 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. Jenkins, 712 N.E.2d 1166, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 286, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 782 (Mass. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Greenberg, J.

Milford Jenkins; the defendant, appeals from his conviction of stalking in violation of a domestic protective order.1 At trial before a jury of six, the defendant timely moved for a required finding of not guilty. Mass.R.Crim.P. 25(a), 378 Mass. 896 (1979). On appeal, he argues that he was entitled to a required finding of not guilty because the Commonwealth proved two, not three, incidents of following as required to sustain a conviction for stalking.

“The evidence in the Commonwealth’s case would have warranted the jury in finding the following facts.” Commonwealth v. Merola, 405 Mass. 529, 533 (1989). On November 15, 1996, after a dispute earlier in the day the defendant, in violation of a [287]*287restraining order, went inside his wife’s home and slammed her head against a door frame. By the time she regained consciousness, she found the defendant had left the house. Because there was not enough time before she had to start her school van run, she did not call the police at that time.

Later that afternoon, as she was driving on Epsom Street in the Hyde Park area of Boston, she saw the defendant again. She passed his car on the way to her next stop, where another angry confrontation took place. This time, he shouted, “Everybody’s always doing this to [me],” as he followed her as she escorted a child to the entrance of the child’s house. By the time she rang the doorbell, he was back in his car, driving off. She got back in the van and drove off to complete her run. At the next stop, a day care home, the defendant reappeared, got out of his vehicle, pounded with his fists on her windows, and began yelling at her. He asked her to roll down her window and talk to him and said, “[B]efore this night is over, you’re going to talk to me.” Alarmed by his irrational conduct, she drove away. The defendant followed her briefly. As she pulled up in front of her next stop, the defendant drove up, pulling up to her bumper, and shouted, “You’re going to talk to me one way or the other.”

After dropping off the last passenger, she saw a police officer and pulled up behind his cruiser. The defendant appeared, drove past her, and took off in another direction. Escorted by the officer to the station, she made out a police report. That evening the defendant left her alone.

Two days later, on November 17, at about 10 a.m., she found her van ransacked at the garage where she had left it for repairs. The passenger seats were dislodged and papers were strewn everywhere. A letter from the defendant was inside. Upon reclaiming the van, she drove to her home and picked up two boys, the sons of her girlfriend, who were about to help their mother move furniture. As she drove several blocks to her home with the boys inside the van, she saw the defendant appear “out of nowhere.” He tailgated her van until she came to a red traffic light. The defendant jumped out of his vehicle and essentially repeated the performance of November 15. At one point, he punched the window with such vehemence that she thought it would shatter. She and her passengers were frightened by the defendant’s behavior. When the traffic light changed, she drove to the police station to report this latest incident.

Following this, she picked up her girlfriend and headed [288]*288toward home. The defendant turned up again — this time with his brother — talking to one of the complainant’s neighbors. She got out of her van and ran toward her house while the defendant shouted and yelled obscenities at her.

The defendant was arrested on November 18, 1996. The next day his wife went to court and persuaded a judge to modify the 209A order from a no abuse order to a “no contact” order. The defendant called her from the Nashua Street jail, where he was held pending trial. She refused to accept his calls, but his messages recorded on her answering machine included such threats as, “Don’t worry, you’re going to lose everything.” During the following three weeks, similar telephone calls to her home by the defendant contained the same threats.

On appeal, the defendant argues only that the Commonwealth did not prove the requisite number of incidents of following to support a conviction for stalking, but fails to note that, while the complaint appropriately charged under the then newly enacted amendment to G. L. c. 265, § 43,2 the judge, for the most part, charged under the prior version3 of the statute.4 The later version of the statute conflates the two separate types of stalking found in the earlier version, following and harassing,5 into one general definition and, in addition, requires that the Com[289]*289monwealth prove for all types of stalking and not only for harassing behavior (1) that the defendant engaged in a knowing pattern of conduct or series of acts over a period of time (added language emphasized); (2) that the conduct or acts must “seriously alarm[ ] or annoy[ ] [a] person”; and (3) “would cause a reasonable person to suffer substantial emotional distress.”6

The Legislature’s actions followed Commonwealth v. Kwiatkowski, 418 Mass. 543, 546-547 (1994), where the Supreme Judicial Court held that G. L. c. 265, § 43, as inserted by St. 1992, c. 31, was facially unconstitutional in regard to harassing behavior. Under the 1992 version of the statute, it was possible to interpret the crime of stalking as requiring “repetition of either a pattern of conduct or a series of acts,” rather than a “single pattern of conduct or single series of acts” in addition to the other elements of the crime. Ibid. At the same time, the court interpreted the statute prospectively and defined the crime of stalking based on conduct that harasses as follows: “A person shall be guilty of the crime of stalking if that person (1) wilfully and maliciously engages in a knowing pattern of conduct or series of acts over a period of time directed at a specific person which seriously alarms or annoys that person and would cause a reasonable person to suffer substantial emotional distress and (2) also makes a threat with the intent to place that person in imminent fear of death or bodily injury.” Id. at 547-548. The court further stated that “[a] pattern or a series in the context of th[e] statute would involve more than two incidents.” Id. at 548. In Commonwealth v. Martinez, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 408, 410 (1997), this court held that two or more incidents of “following” were required under the 1992 version of the statute to support a stalking conviction.

When the Legislature amended the statute in 1996, see note 2, supra, it adopted the language in Kwiatkowski, supra, and, as noted above, eliminated the distinction between harassing and following conduct.7 The Legislature appeared to recognize that [290]*290offenders subject their victims to a diverse range of offensive conduct that should not be pigeonholed into the separate categories of following and harassing. At the same time, by adopting the language set forth in Kwiatkowski, supra, the Legislature implicitly incorporated the court’s interpretation of stalking as requiring only one pattern of conduct or one series of acts but three separate incidents to sustain a conviction for stalking. Id. at 546.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
712 N.E.2d 1166, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 286, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-jenkins-massappct-1999.