Commonwealth v. Lang

27 Mass. L. Rptr. 600
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 2011
DocketNo. 200510311
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 600 (Commonwealth v. Lang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Lang, 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 600 (Mass. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Neel, Stephen E., J.

On November 1, 2010, the Court ordered an evidentiary hearing on the defendant’s motion for new trial on the basis of his allegation that the courtroom was closed during im-panelment, in violation of his Sixth Amendment right to a public trial. On January 10, 2011, the Court received evidence as follows: recorded interviews of three of the court officers present during the impanelment which took place on November 27 and 28, 2006, presented by agreement; live testimony by Jennifer Kelley, defendant’s sister, and by Robert Sheketoff, Esq., defendant’s counsel at trial; transcripts of the impanelment portion of the trial; and other exhibits. For the reasons stated below, the motion will be denied.

FINDINGS OF FACT

On the basis of the credible evidence, and inferences reasonably drawn therefrom, the Court finds as follows.

I. The Impanelment Process

On November 27, 2006, approximately 70-80 prospective jurors were brought into Suffolk Superior Court, Courtroom 914, which had seating capacity in the public gallery section for about fifty. The venire were ready and impanelment began at 10:15 a.m. Tr. 1-4. The Court stated to the venire at the outset: “I apologize to those of you who are standing up. We have almost, but not quite, enough seats for everyone.” Tr. 1-7.

The Court’s statement suggests that, in addition to the seats in the gallery, prospective jurors were also seated in the jury box and in other seats within the well of the courtroom, and that a number of prospective jurors were still required to stand. The Court continued: “Fairly shortly we will have seats opening up or we’ll be able to provide a place for you to sit down.” Id. That statement suggests that the Court expected not only that seats would become available in the normal process as prospective jurors were excused, but also that alternate space, in another, empty courtroom was or would become available to hold a portion of the venire.

That is in fact what happened: as reflected at Tr. 1-26-27, following the conclusion of the Court’s general questions to the venire and before individual voir dire began, the Court directed Court Officer Richard Linehan to take the twenty prospective jurors at the end of the jury list to “a room just very close to this room.” Id. at 1-26. The Court did so “so that everybody can have a place to sit.” Id. Impanelment continued [601]*601until 4:30 p.m., by which time eight jurors were in the jury box. Tr. 2-23.1

The next morning, the Court greeted a new group of prospective jurors. The record does not reflect the number of prospective jurors in the courtroom. However, the Court did not apologize to the venire for a lack of seating, as it had the first day. See Tr. 2-6. Nor, at the end of the general questions to the venire and before individual voir dire began, did the Court direct any portion of the venire to be taken to another courtroom to allow sufficient seating for all. Tr. 2-23. Impanelment was completed by about 12:30 p.m. the next day. Tr. 2-138.

The Court finds that, on the first day of impanelment, there was no room in the courtroom, initially, for any persons besides prospective jurors; that, at some point or points during that day, there were more seats available than prospective jurors. The Court finds that, on the second day of impanelment, there may have been extra seats from the outset, and certainly were at some point that morning before im-panelment was completed at 12:30 p.m.

II. Jennifer Kelley

Ms. Kelley is defendant’s sister. She attended the trial daily, and was present in the courtroom on the first day of impanelment, just before court officers began bringing panels of prospective jurors into the courtroom. As Kelley states in her affidavit, Ex. 4, Court Officer Richard Lineman stated that she and her party2 would have to leave the room “because all the seats were required for the people who were going to be jurors.” Defendant and his attorney, Robert Sheketoff, were present; Attorney Sheketoff heard the officer’s statement, and repeated it to Kelley. When she asked if she and her party could remain “because we were a little afraid of the other people waiting outside,” Off. Linehan told her that “we had to leave so there would be room for the people who had to be there.” Id.

At the hearing, Kelley testified that Off. Linehan stated that the courtroom was “closed” for jury selection, and that she and her party had to leave. The Court finds that her statement in her affidavit, quoted above, is the accurate version of what happened.

As noted, the impanelment took place in Courtroom 914. Upon leaving that courtroom, one enters a large foyer; straight ahead are doors into Courtroom 916; to the right are double doors leading out to the hallway, which in turn leads, through double doors, to the central, public elevator lobby. When one enters the hallway from the foyer, there are benches to the left and right.

Kelley and her party left the courtroom as instructed by Off. Linehan, walked to the hallway outside, and sat on a bench there. From that bench Kelley was able to see, at the end of the hall to the right, groups of prospective jurors being led by court officers into the courtroom through a side door at that location.

Kelley sat on that bench, or otherwise waited in the hallway, for the two days of impanelment. She did not again ask any court officer, during impanelment, whether there were any available seats, nor did she ever look in the courtroom to see whether seats had become available for her as impanelment progressed. No court officer (other than Off. Linehan, prior to impanelment) spoke to her or her party during im-panelment about whether they might enter the courtroom. Kelley did not observe, and there were not, any signs on the entrance door to Courtroom 914 barring the public, or any officers at the door preventing entrance by the public. At no time while court was in session was the entrance to the courtroom locked.

Prior to trial, the Court allowed defendant’s motion for permission to have family members bring clothes to court for defendant to wear during trial. Kelley or her mother brought such clothes each morning, and gave them to Off. Linehan or another court officer.

Kelley discussed with defendant, before and during trial, their concerns about the large number of law enforcement personnel who were likely to attend the trial (the victim, Richard Dever, had been a deputy with the Suffolk County Sheriffs Department). She also discussed with defendant, during trial, the fact that she and her party had been asked to leave the courtroom just before prospective jurors were first brought to the courtroom.

In January 2009, Kelley discussed with her mother a telephone conversation which her mother reported having had with defendant. Debbie Lang informed her daughter that defendant had telephoned her from prison that month, and had said that a friend of his in prison had been granted a new trial because the public was excluded from jury selection in his case.3 Debbie Lang reported that defendant had encouraged her and Kelly to provide affidavits saying that they were similarly excluded. Kelley subsequently discussed the same with defendant. She and her mother signed the affidavits supporting this motion the following July.

III. Attorney Robert Sheketoff

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Bluebook (online)
27 Mass. L. Rptr. 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-lang-masssuperct-2011.