Commonwealth v. Kastner

920 N.E.2d 79, 76 Mass. App. Ct. 131, 2010 Mass. App. LEXIS 70
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 2010
DocketNo. 08-P-2009
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 920 N.E.2d 79 (Commonwealth v. Kastner) 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. Kastner, 920 N.E.2d 79, 76 Mass. App. Ct. 131, 2010 Mass. App. LEXIS 70 (Mass. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Dreben, J.

Convicted of two counts of aggravated rape, two counts of intimidation of a witness,1 and of kidnapping, the defendant claims the judge erred in (1) denying the defendant’s motion to suppress recordings of telephone conversations he had when he was at the Berkshire County house of correction (HOC); (2) admitting two spontaneous utterances of the victim contrary to the policy underlying first complaint testimony as set forth in Commonwealth v. King, 445 Mass. 217 (2005), cert, denied, 546 U.S. 1216 (2006); (3) admitting irrelevant and prejudicial evidence of a brown stain; (4) failing properly to answer a jury’s question regarding kidnapping that affected both the kidnapping and aggravated rape convictions; and (5) permitting duplicative convictions of aggravated rape. Because of the judge’s failure to answer the jury’s question properly, we remand for further proceedings on the kidnapping and aggravated rape convictions. We affirm the intimidation of a witness convictions.

1. Facts. The jury were warranted in finding the following. On April 1, 2007, the victim, then sixteen years old, having run away from her parents’ home and from the custody of the Department of Social Services (DSS),2 was living in Pittsfield with her sister. That night, she and a group of people (William Litchfield, Frank Underhill, Ryan Provenzano, Eric Daigle, and the defendant) were in her sister’s apartment watching television, sniffing cocaine, and smoking marijuana.3 The defendant was drinking liquor. He left about 11:00 p.m., but returned between 3:30 and 4:00 a.m. Without saying a word, the defendant walked through the living room where the victim and Underhill were lying on a futon watching television and went into the sister’s bedroom where the sister and her boyfriend (Provenzano) were sleeping. Litchfield was sleeping on a sofa.

About ten minutes later, the victim heard a knock on the front door of the apartment. Apparently the defendant had left [133]*133the apartment through a closet in the sister’s bedroom in which there was a door leading to an adjoining apartment that was vacant. When the victim answered the knock, the defendant was at the door; he grabbed her by the arm and pushed her into the kitchen of the adjacent vacant apartment. She tried to pull away. When asked at trial if she shouted, she answered, “Nothing would come out. I was scared.”

Once in the kitchen of the other apartment, the defendant, over the victim’s objection, began kissing her, rubbed her vagina, and then pushed her into another room which was bare except for a brown carpet and some cable wire hanging out of the wall. There, he pulled down her pants, had vaginal intercourse, turned her over onto her stomach, put his penis in her anus, turned her around, and again had vaginal intercourse. He then left.

Although the anal penetration was very painful, she did not scream. Part of the time he had his hand over her mouth. She claimed she bled quite a lot and that there was blood and excrement on the floor in the room with the carpet.

After waiting a few minutes to be sure that the defendant had left, the victim returned to her sister’s apartment. She asked Daigle to leave and then locked the door. She broke down, was on her knees, and started to cry. Underhill asked her what happened. At first she did not tell him, but after about five minutes she told him, but did not give him all the details. They both woke up Litchfield and she told both of them what had happened.4 At their urging, she woke up her sister, a certified nurse’s assistant. Her sister called the police.5 Additional facts will be set forth in connection with our discussion of the issues.

2. Motion to suppress. Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion to suppress recorded conversations he had with his sister and another person during the month of June, 2007 at HOC. These conversations were relevant to the second intimidation of a witness charge, see note 1, supra, and to the defendant’s [134]*134claim of alibi. After a hearing on the motion to suppress, the judge made findings of fact which, as supplemented by minor, uncontested details in the record, included the following. A Berkshire County grand jury indicted the defendant on May 23, 2007. The defendant pleaded not guilty on May 30, 2007 at the Pittsfield court complex. Litchfield was there on the same day. On the next day, May 31, 2007, Litchfield wrote to the district attorney’s office asking that his statements to the grand jury be “thrown away” because they were based on hearsay and because he had been threatened for giving them.

Unable to post bail, the defendant was held at the HOC. Through the orientation handbook, recordings played on the telephones used by inmates, and signs above the telephones, the defendant knew at the time he made telephone calls from the HOC that the policy of the institution was to monitor and record inmates’ conversations except for calls to counsel and clergy.

On June 7, 2007, Litchfield repeated his account of threats to Detective Dale Eason of the Pittsfield police department, who was working for the district attorney. Litchfield told Eason that his life had been threatened. Eason informed Captain Dale New-berry at the HOC of the threat, and Newberry responded that the defendant in a June 1, 2007 recorded conversation to his sister indicated that he knew of the statements given by “Kid Frankie” and Litchfield.6

Eason then requested copies of the recordings of the defendant’s telephone calls for the month of June, 2007, and HOC staff complied. As a result of Eason’s investigation, the grand jury indicted the defendant on a second charge of witness intimidation. The motion judge found that the recorded phone call of June 1, 2007, although not presented to the grand jury, was relevant to that indictment.

On April 23, 2008, a day after the prosecution learned that the defendant intended to call his sister as an alibi witness, [135]*135Eason informed the district attorney that in one of the defendant’s recorded June, 2007 telephone calls, the defendant said that he had been in Holyoke on the night of the incident, a statement that weakened his alibi. That same day, the district attorney informed defense counsel of the tapes and, on April 25, gave counsel disks of the recordings.7

From 2001 to February, 2008, the HOC had in place a written procedure concerning disclosure of information about inmates’ recorded telephone calls to outside law enforcement officers. That procedure permitted disclosure without request “only as reasonably necessary to promote legitimate operational standards, law enforcement or public safety purposes.” It provided that in cases where a request was made by outside law enforcement to obtain information, a written request for monitoring had to be made; past recordings would only be released though a subpoena; and monitoring or listening by outside law enforcement agencies would be allowed only through an authorized search warrant.

The judge found that the release of the tapes to Eason in 2007 “plainly violated the subpoena requirement in place at that time under the written HOC procedures.” Nevertheless, he found that this violation did not render the evidence inadmissible. At trial, the tapes were admitted over the defendant’s objection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
920 N.E.2d 79, 76 Mass. App. Ct. 131, 2010 Mass. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-kastner-massappct-2010.