Commonwealth v. Kevin Porter

CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedApril 25, 2025
Docket24-P-526
StatusPublished

This text of Commonwealth v. Kevin Porter (Commonwealth v. Kevin Porter) 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. Kevin Porter, (Mass. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

APPEALS COURT

COMMONWEALTH vs. KEVIN PORTER

Docket: 24-P-526
Dates: December 16, 2024 – April 25, 2025
Present: Henry, Desmond, & Englander, JJ.
County: Middlesex
Keywords: Assault and Battery by Means of a Dangerous Weapon. Due Process of Law, Indictment placed on file, Sentence, Probation revocation, Notice, Vagueness of order. Evidence, Hearsay. Practice, Criminal, Indictment placed on file, Revocation of probation, Hearsay. Words, "Similar."

      Indictment found and returned in the Superior Court Department on August 28, 2008.

      A motion for sentencing on a plea of guilty to an indictment placed on file, filed on December 16, 2022, was heard by Shannon Frison, J.

      Catherine B. Sullivan Ledwidge for the defendant.

      Timothy Ferriter, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.

      ENGLANDER, J.  This case requires us to address the procedures and standards for removing criminal convictions from "the file."  In 2011 the defendant pleaded guilty to three charges, the most serious of which was manslaughter; at that time the defendant also pleaded guilty to assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury (ABDW-SBI).  As part of sentencing the ABDW-SBI conviction was placed on file; the defendant was told that conviction would be removed from the file if he committed a "similar infraction," prior to the termination of his probation.[1]

      In 2020, and again in 2022, the defendant was involved in incidents that resulted in criminal charges against him -- one in which he threatened two women in a sober home in New Hampshire, and another where he battered a fellow inmate in the Middlesex house of correction.  The Commonwealth thereafter moved to sentence the defendant on the filed ABDW-SBI charge from 2011.  The judge found that the defendant had committed a "similar offense," and the defendant was sentenced to eighteen months in prison on the ABDW-SBI charge.

      On appeal, the defendant challenges the judge's determination that he committed a "similar offense" to his underlying conviction, pointing out that ABDW-SBI contains distinct elements from the offenses for which he was charged in 2020 and 2022.  The defendant also argues that he was entitled to but did not receive due process protections similar to those provided in a probation violation hearing, and that the condition placed on the filing of his ABDW-SBI charge was unconstitutionally vague.

      As discussed below, we look to the process of probation violation hearings to provide the applicable standards here, where the Commonwealth moved to sentence the defendant on a filed case based on the violation of an express condition.  The judge followed the appropriate process in this case, however, and applied appropriate standards.  Furthermore, the judge did not err in determining that the defendant's conduct was within the scope of a "similar infraction" to his 2011 offense, and the condition was not unconstitutionally vague.  We affirm.

      Background.  In October of 2011, the defendant pleaded guilty in the Superior Court to manslaughter, assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon (ABDW).  The convictions stemmed from a confrontation in June of 2008, which began when the victim returned home to find the defendant and another man on his porch.  The victim demanded that the defendant leave, and the defendant refused.  The situation escalated into a fight.  The defendant began to leave, and the victim threw gravel at him.  The defendant then returned and struck the victim twice with a knife.  The victim died from his wounds.

      At the plea hearing, the Commonwealth and the defendant recommended that the judge place the conviction of ABDW-SBI on file.  The judge asked, "Could you tell me the circumstances under which a case if I place it on file would be removed from file and for what term?"  The prosecutor responded:

"I would be asking that it be placed on file for the same period of probation that the Commonwealth and defense would be requesting on the other, which is a period of 5 years' probation from and after [the sentence for manslaughter].

"I would suggest that the circumstances that would give rise to it being removed would be the commission of some similar offense."

The prosecutor then clarified that a similar offense would be "[s]imilar to the offense charged, assault and battery [by means of] a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury."

      The judge ultimately sentenced the defendant to nine to twelve years on count one, the manslaughter charge, and five years of probation thereafter on count three, the ABDW charge.  The judge placed count two, the ABDW-SBI conviction, on file, to which the defendant consented.  As to count two, the clerk stated:  "that may be pulled out of file and sentenced upon if a similar infraction occurs within the next five years or during your probationary period."

      The defendant's probation began in August of 2019.  On the morning of June 14, 2020, the police responded to a report of two women and one man fighting at a sober living facility in Nashua, New Hampshire.  The officers entered a hallway and found the women in a room with a damaged door; the women yelled, "he threatened us with a knife."[2]  The defendant then entered the hallway.  The officers seized him and retrieved a knife from his waistband.  They arrested the defendant.

      The women reported later that day that the defendant had stood outside of their room, singing songs and making sexual remarks to them, and repeatedly entered their room without asking.  His demeanor became more aggressive, and the women told him to leave their room and closed the door.  The defendant then kicked in the door and entered the room, yelling at them.  He lifted up his shirt to reveal a knife tucked in his waistband.  One of the women asked if the defendant would stab her, and the defendant responded that he would if necessary.

      As a result of this incident the defendant pleaded guilty to, among other crimes, reckless conduct with a deadly weapon for kicking in the door.  See N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 631:3, I ("A person is guilty of reckless conduct if he recklessly engages in conduct which places or may place another in danger of serious bodily injury"), and § 631:3, II ("Reckless conduct is a class B felony if the person uses a deadly weapon").  Other charges, including criminal threatening with a deadly weapon, N.H. Stat. Ann. § 631:4, were nol prossed.

      Subsequently, in August of 2022, while incarcerated at the Middlesex house of correction in Billerica, the defendant punched another inmate multiple times.  The other inmate suffered an injury to his face.  This incident was captured on videotape.  The defendant was charged in Lowell District Court with assault and battery.

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Commonwealth v. Kevin Porter, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-kevin-porter-massappct-2025.