Commonwealth v. Moniz

87 Mass. App. Ct. 532
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 17, 2015
DocketAC 11-P-954
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 Mass. App. Ct. 532 (Commonwealth v. Moniz) 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. Moniz, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 532 (Mass. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Massing, J.

The defendant, convicted of eight counts of sex offenses committed against his adopted son when the boy was between the ages of fourteen and eighteen years old, appeals from the three convictions based on his conduct after the victim turned sixteen, one for rape in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 22(b), and two for assault with intent to rape in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 24, *533 claiming insufficiency of the evidence. 1 He also appeals from the denial of his motion for a new trial alleging that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move to suppress the defendant’s postindictment admissions to a person he asserts was acting in a law enforcement capacity. We affirm.

Background. The victim was born in August, 1978. The defendant met the victim after he entered into a romantic relationship with the victim’s mother. In 1988, the victim’s family began living with the defendant in Enfield, New Hampshire. In April, 1989, the defendant married the victim’s mother and adopted the victim.

The first sexual incident occurred when the defendant arranged to sleep alone with the victim in a cabin the defendant had built in the middle of the woods, approximately 200 yards from the house in Enfield. The defendant touched the victim’s genitals over his clothing for a couple of minutes before they went to bed. The victim asked the defendant what he was doing, and the defendant told him, “[T]his is what all good friends do.” The defendant would “do the same thing” at the print shop that the defendant and the victim’s mother owned, where the victim sometimes worked.

The defendant took the victim into the cabin once or twice a week, mostly on the weekends, and more frequently during the summertime. Over time, the defendant began touching the victim’s genitals under his clothing. The defendant would arrange to stay home alone with the victim while the victim’s mother went out shopping for two to three hours at a time. He performed fellatio on the victim numerous times, asked the victim to reciprocate, and told the victim that the victim was gay. The victim refused the defendant’s requests for fellatio but was afraid he could not otherwise protect himself from the defendant.

The victim asked the defendant at least once in New Hampshire, “[W]hy he was doing that, why didn’t he just love my mother and leave me alone?” The defendant convinced him that nobody would believe him if he reported their sexual encounters, and that it was better for his family if he would submit to the defendant’s sexual demands. As a result, the sexual episodes continued as the family relocated from New Hampshire to Rhode

*534 Island to Massachusetts.

The family moved to Waltham in 1993. The victim, then a sophomore in high school, was five feet, ten inches tall, and weighed 185 pounds. Even as a teenager, “it seemed easier” to the victim to remain silent and submit to the defendant’s sexual demands. The defendant would “pitch a fit” when the victim resisted his advances. He threw several tantrums that quickly escalated from screaming to physical violence, “trashing” the victim’s bedroom, and smashing walls. The defendant would eavesdrop on the victim’s telephone conversations and become upset that the victim was spending time with females, making the victim feel “like [he] was splitting the family apart.” The victim “didn’t want to create problems within the family,” and he “felt it was easier just to not say anything.”

The defendant attempted to have anal sex with the victim on two separate occasions, once when the victim was around fourteen years old, and once after the victim’s sixteenth birthday. Both times, the victim had been trying to take a shower in the bathroom after the defendant had performed fellatio on him when the defendant approached the victim from behind and “rubbed his penis on [the victim’s] butt.” The victim moved away and asked the defendant what he was doing. The defendant said nothing in response and eventually left him alone in the bathroom.

The defendant continued to sexually assault the victim after he turned sixteen years old in the same general manner as in the earlier sexual episodes. The episodes stopped when the victim turned eighteen and moved into his grandparents’ home in Lexington. The victim’s mother testified that the defendant became depressed in the victim’s absence, and a few months later, in November, 1996, the defendant attempted to commit suicide.

The defendant moved to Alaska in January, 1997, and the victim finally told his mother that the defendant had been sexually abusing him for years. Approximately four years later, the victim learned that the defendant was dating a woman in Alaska who had a four year old son. Fearing that the defendant would sexually abuse the son, the victim reported the defendant to the police.

In 2004, the defendant was arrested in Alaska and indicted in Massachusetts. As a condition of bail, the Alaska court appointed the mother of the defendant’s new girl friend to serve as the defendant’s third-party custodian. 2 During the two- to three-week *535 period of the defendant’s pretrial release in Alaska, he made a series of admissions to his custodian regarding his sexual assaults on the victim. He told her that “he did it”; that he “hurt the child . . . , but he doesn’t think it was hurting him”; and that “everything he did helped that child.”

Discussion. 1. Constructive force. The defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to prove that he used force to accomplish the sexual assaults after the victim reached the age of sixteen. To support a conviction of rape under G. L. c. 265, § 22(b), the Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had sexual intercourse by force or threat of force and against the will of the victim. However, the Commonwealth need not prove that the defendant used physical force. Commonwealth v. Caracciola, 409 Mass. 648, 651 (1991). Constructive force may be shown by “proof that the victim was afraid or that she submitted to the defendant because his conduct intimidated her.” Commonwealth v. Newcomb, 80 Mass. App. Ct. 519, 521 (2011) (Newcomb). In cases such as this, where sexual assaults that began when the victim was a child continue past the child’s sixteenth birthday, constructive force may be shown by “a prior pattern of repeated sexual assaults by the defendant upon the victim when she was a child, combined with the victim’s statement that the assaults always happened the same way.” Id. at 524.

For example, in Commonwealth v. Wallace, 76 Mass. App. Ct. 411, 413-414, 417-418 (2010) (Wallace), where the defendant’s sexual assaults on the victim began when the victim was eleven and continued until he turned eighteen, evidence of “the history of their relationship and the defendant’s predatory behavior” was sufficient to support the rape conviction.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Mass. App. Ct. 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-moniz-massappct-2015.