Commonwealth v. Mejia

961 N.E.2d 72, 461 Mass. 384, 2012 WL 171728, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 15
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 961 N.E.2d 72 (Commonwealth v. Mejia) 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. Mejia, 961 N.E.2d 72, 461 Mass. 384, 2012 WL 171728, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 15 (Mass. 2012).

Opinion

Ireland, C.J.

The defendant was convicted on three indictments charging murder in the first degree of the victims, a mother and her two daughters, on theories of deliberate premeditation and extreme atrocity or cruelty. On appeal, the defendant argues that the judge erred in allowing the Commonwealth to present [385]*385evidence of the defendant’s demeanor, in denying his motion for a required finding of not guilty, and in denying his motion for a mistrial because an unsigned note he had handwritten in Spanish was erroneously sent to the jury room. He also asks that we exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to reduce the verdicts to murder in the second degree. Because there is no merit to the defendant’s claims of error and we discern no reason to exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, we affirm his convictions.

Facts. We present the essential facts that the jury were warranted in finding, reserving certain details for our discussion of the issues raised.

On Wednesday, December 12, 2007, the decomposing bodies of the mother and her two daughters were found concealed in their fifth-floor apartment at 94 Pearl Street in Springfield, where they had lived with the defendant, who was the husband of the mother and the girls’ stepfather. The usually neat apartment was in disarray, particularly one bedroom. There was no sign of forced entry or robbery. The victims were bound with rope. The medical examiner testified that their bodies all showed “decomposition of a significant degree” and estimated that the mother had been deceased for at least four to five days.

The mother had multiple stab wounds, her throat was slashed to the spine, and she had blunt force trauma to the head. She died of blood loss and blunt force injury. Her body was found under various items in a bedroom closet. Her head was wrapped in a plastic bag and there was a gag in her mouth.

The older daughter, who was nine years old, had died of manual strangulation. Her body was under blankets and other items on a bed in the room where her mother was found. The mattress of the bed had been turned over, concealing a large blood saturation stain that matched the location of a blood stain on a comforter discovered in a trash bag located in the closet where the mother’s body was found. The mother’s blood was spattered on the wall, on the floor near the head of the bed, on an iron located near broken panes from a window, and on the window frame itself. Two knives were found in the bedroom, one under the “covers” on the bed and the other by the closet door.

The younger daughter, who was six years old, died of asphyxia [386]*386caused by a pair of tights being forced into her throat. Her body was under some blankets in a closet in another bedroom.

In addition to evidence of concealing the bodies and bloodstained mattress and comforter, there was evidence that someone had attempted to clean up the crime scene. Three bleach bottles and a mop were in the bathroom. The mop and the handle to the shower tested positive for blood.

There were no usable fingerprints found. However, various testing for deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) revealed that the defendant matched the minor DNA profile on the ropes from the older daughter’s wrists, as well as the “handler” DNA from the bruises on her neck.

The events leading up to the discovery of the bodies were as follows. The defendant worked at a location near the apartment building. On Wednesday, December 5, 2007, he left work at 6:31 a.m., some thirty minutes after he began, because he was ill. He never returned.

Migdalia Rivera, the mother’s sister, testified that she and her sister spoke on the telephone at least once every day. The last time she spoke to her sister was on Friday, December 7, at 4 p.m. Her telephone calls after that time went unanswered. Rivera became so concerned about her sister that she went to the apartment on Monday and, receiving no response to her knocks, asked a neighbor whether she had seen the victims. Neither the mother nor her daughters was seen after Friday by neighbors in the apartment building.

Another witness attended the same church as the victims and would pick them up in the church’s van to take them to services. She testified that she spoke to the mother on Wednesday, December 5, but her attempts to reach the mother by telephone on Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday about attending Sunday services went unanswered. The victims did not attend the 2 p.m. service.

On Saturday and Sunday, December 8 and 9, two residents of the apartment building saw the defendant inside and outside of the building, acting strangely. He was outside on Saturday for a time, dressed inappropriately for the cold weather, with a white shirt wrapped around his right hand. At some point another tenant let him inside. He approached the front door to his apart[387]*387ment, appeared to search for his keys, but never entered the apartment. Instead, he was seen standing near his front door for several hours.

On Sunday, he was outside on the back porches to the fourth and fifth floors of the apartment building, still inappropriately dressed and shaking from the cold, talking to himself, and attempting to enter a vacant apartment in the building. He was seen eating food from trash bags, including a banana peel. He knocked on the back door to his apartment and tried to open it. He sat outside the window of one tenant’s apartment, repeatedly tapped on the window, and called the older daughter’s name. He also tried to open another tenant’s back door and peered in one of the windows to her apartment. She telephoned police, who arrived at approximately 11:40 p.m.

Because the defendant was dressed inappropriately and shivering from the cold, he was put in a police cruiser, where he remained until he was taken to a hospital. One officer looked in the cruiser and saw the defendant pantomiming that he was eating food from an imaginary plate. The officer telephoned for an ambulance.

The defendant told another officer that he had attended church with his wife that day until noon after which they had had a fight.1 He stated that she had “kicked him out” of their apartment and that he had had no time to take clothing.

Officers went to the defendant’s apartment and knocked on the front door several times. There was no answer. No one tried to open the door. However, an officer noticed a “shirt and fleece-type jacket” near the door that he brought down to the defendant, who immediately put them on. When the ambulance arrived, the officers convinced the defendant to go to a hospital to be treated for exposure. The defendant got into the ambulance and while the attendants were questioning him, he stated that he had not been taking his antipsychotic medication for approximately twenty days.

On Wednesday, December 12, because Rivera was still concerned about her sister, she and her boy friend returned to the apartment. There was an odor in the hall. They tried the door; it [388]*388was unlocked. The boy friend entered the apartment where he discovered the older daughter’s body. A neighbor telephoned 911.

After the bodies were discovered, the defendant was arrested later that evening at a hospital.2 He had small cuts and abrasions on the two middle fingers of his left hand and on the palm, index finger, and thumb of his right hand. A red-brown stain on the toenail of his right foot tested positive for blood.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
961 N.E.2d 72, 461 Mass. 384, 2012 WL 171728, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mejia-mass-2012.