Commonwealth v. McDonald

967 N.E.2d 1101, 462 Mass. 236, 2012 WL 1735881, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 361
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 18, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 967 N.E.2d 1101 (Commonwealth v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. McDonald, 967 N.E.2d 1101, 462 Mass. 236, 2012 WL 1735881, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 361 (Mass. 2012).

Opinion

Duffly, J.

A complaint for criminal harassment issued against the defendant in the District Court, alleging that on May 15, 2009, he wilfully and maliciously engaged in a knowing pattern of conduct or series of acts in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 43A (a). Following a jury-waived trial, a District Court judge found the defendant guilty. In an unpublished memorandum and order issued pursuant to its rule 1:28, the Appeals Court affirmed the conviction. Commonwealth v. McDonald, 78 Mass. App. Ct. 1122 (2011). We granted the defendant’s application for further appellate review. The defendant contends that the [237]*237Commonwealth’s evidence was insufficient to establish each element of the crime of criminal harassment. We agree.

Background and prior proceedings. We recite the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth. The complainant had become concerned after being informed by others that a man in a white truck was driving down the street where she and her family lived. On May 6, 2009, at about 4 p.m., a neighbor, who lived in a house across the street from the complainant, saw a man, later identified as the defendant, sitting in a parked white truck in front of her own house. He was looking in the direction of the complainant’s home and holding a camera. As the neighbor walked out of her house and down her driveway, she saw the defendant raise the camera up; her dog barked and the defendant looked in the neighbor’s direction and then drove away. The neighbor had, prior to that day, twice observed a white truck on that street. The next day, at 4 p.m., the neighbor was at an intersection down the street from her house when she observed the defendant driving toward her from the direction of her house and was able to write down the registration plate number of his truck. That evening, she informed the complainant and her husband of her observations. The following day, the complainant and her husband went separately to the police station to report the defendant’s actions, providing the registration plate number.

On May 8, after speaking with the complainant’s husband, Officer Todd Bazarewsky of the Middleborough police department used the registration plate information to locate the defendant. He went to the defendant’s workplace and informed him that unnamed “residents near or around” the complainant’s address had observed him in the area several times at about the time the school bus was dropping off children. Bazarewsky explained that because the residents were afraid, it would be “a very good idea” for the defendant to avoid the area and not contact the residents. Bazarewsky also told the defendant he could drive on that street if he wanted to and that he, Bazarewsky, could do nothing to stop him. The defendant told Bazarewsky that he had been taking photographs in the area, was apologetic, and said the residents would not see him again.

On May 11, just before 4 p.m., the complainant was at the end of her driveway waiting for the school bus when she noticed a [238]*238white truck passing by. She had not previously seen the vehicle but recognized the registration plate number as that provided to her by her neighbor. After the children were dropped off, and while the complainant was still at the end of her driveway, she observed the white truck passing by again, in the same direction as before, but a little slower than “normal”; the driver was looking to his left toward her house. At trial, the complainant identified the defendant as the driver of the vehicle. The next day, May 12, the scenario was repeated: the defendant drove past in his white truck at approximately ten minutes before 4 p.m. as the complainant sat on a wall at the end of her driveway, and about ten minutes later, he drove by again. The defendant was looking in the direction of her house as he drove; he was not going fast and did not appear to have anything in his hands. These events caused the complainant to become very upset, and she telephoned her husband.

On May 13, again a few minutes before 4 p.m., the complainant was driving home from work when she saw the school bus stopped at the bus stop immediately before her stop, about one-quarter mile from her house. The defendant’s truck was close to the bus that the children were disembarking. The defendant was walking from the tailgate of his truck toward the driver’s side. The complainant felt afraid because she was unsure of the defendant’s intentions in stopping there; she drove past the parked truck to her home.

On May 15, a family friend, whose children were friends of the complainant’s three children, and who was aware of her concerns, followed the school bus to the complainant’s street and pulled into the complainant’s driveway, where she was standing. The children had just gotten off the bus. The defendant drove by and the friend saw the defendant “stare at” the complainant. The friend attempted to follow the defendant but lost him and returned to the complainant’s residence. Within ten minutes, the defendant drove by again, in the same direction as before; the friend saw him “staring at the house again.” The complainant yelled “Hey, what do you think you’re doing?” and the defendant stopped his truck. The friend approached and asked the defendant what he was doing; the defendant said he was “just taking pictures of dogs.” The complainant also approached the [239]*239truck. The defendant, addressing the complainant, stated that he was sorry to bother her, repeated that he was just taking photographs of her dogs, and said that he was going to write her a letter including the photographs. The complainant’s friend told the defendant that if he saw the defendant on the street again, the defendant would “have a problem.” The defendant said, “Okay,” and drove off. The complainant, who was “hysterical” and crying, contacted the police.

Officer Ronald Costa of the Middleborough police department met with the complainant at her house; after speaking with the complainant, Costa issued a no trespass order, signed by the complainant. He delivered the order to the defendant on the same day and told the defendant that he was to stay away from the complainant’s residence. Costa then applied for a warrant for the defendant’s arrest.

A school bus driver who drove on a regular route along the complainant’s street corroborated the evidence of the defendant’s pattern of driving down the street and then proceeding in a loop that took him back onto the street, at or around 4 p.m. When she dropped off the complainant’s children at 4 p.m., one of their parents, usually the complainant, was waiting at the bus stop. On an almost daily basis since the beginning of the school year, the school bus driver had seen the defendant driving a white truck in the direction opposite that which the bus was traveling, apparently turning onto another street, making a loop, and passing her again. She thought “nothing of it” and told no one of her observations until the end of May, 2009, when, responding to a question from the complainant, the school bus driver said that “for quite a while” she had noticed a white truck passing her twice a day as she drove down the complainant’s street.1

The defendant’s motion for a required finding of not guilty [240]*240was denied.2 He was found guilty of criminal harassment and sentenced to one year of probation, with specific conditions that he stay away from the complainant, her family, and her street, and that he take no photographs of dogs.

Discussion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
967 N.E.2d 1101, 462 Mass. 236, 2012 WL 1735881, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mcdonald-mass-2012.