Commonwealth v. Murray

27 Mass. L. Rptr. 367
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedApril 12, 2010
DocketNo. 20031756
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 367 (Commonwealth v. Murray) 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. Murray, 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 367 (Mass. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Hamlin, Sandra L., J.

On January 27, 2005, a Middlesex jury found the defendant, Eric Murray (“Murray”) guilty of first degree murder on the grounds of deliberately premeditated malice aforethought, G.L.c. 265, §1, and possession of a firearm, G.L.c. 269, § 10(a). This court (Hamlin, J.) sentenced Murray to life without parole on the murder conviction, and to one year and a day on the firearm conviction, with the latter sentence running concurrently with the former. Murray argues that he is entitled to a new trial because the Commonwealth failed to disclose to Murray exculpatory gang-related information known to the Fra-mingham police at the time of trial. He asserts prosecutorial misconduct and seeks retroactive application of the common-law rule of evidence set forth in Commonwealth v. Adjutant, 443 Mass. 649 (2003). He also argues the court erred in denying his motion to suppress (Brassard, J.) and in denying certain jury instruction requests (Hamlin, J.).

Although it is unlikely that the Commonwealth was aware of the exculpatory evidence on which Murray bases his new-trial request, the evidence was known to the police participating in Murray’s case. As a result, Murray had a due process right to its disclosure. On this basis only, Murray’s motion for new trial is ALLOWED.

BACKGROUND

The facts, as presented at trial, are as follows.

Murray shot Joseph McDaniel (“victim”) on the night of October 7, 2003, in Framingham, Massachusetts. Eyewitnesses to the shooting who testified at Murray’s trial were Jerome Jones (“Jones”), Randy Lopez (“Lopez”),1 Hector Perez (“Perez”), Anthony Campbell (“Campbell”), Richard Jamal Waters (“Waters”), and Dammond Bonner (“Bonner”).

During the day on October 7, the victim went to Boston with Waters and Paul Pervis (“Pervis”); while there, the victim made some purchases at a jewelry store. They met up with Jones, who drove with them back to Framingham. They dropped off Waters at his house in Framingham, then Jones, Pervis, and the victim went to the Beaver Park apartment complex (“Beaver Park”) in Framingham and hung out outside.

Murray and Lopez, along with a pit bull, also went to Beaver Park around that same time. Jones testified that Murray and the victim began “messing around” but he was not certain if the two men were serious or just joking, Transcript, Vol. IV, at 85, 86; he later testified that they were arguing about “somebody’s wanting to rob [Murray].” Transcript, Vol. IV,2 at 123. Lopez testified that Murray asked the victim if the victim and KST were going to rob Murray; the victim did not respond, “[a]nd then they started like kind of arguing and yelling.” Transcript, Vol. VI, at 105. There was physical contact between Murray and the victim,3 and the pit bull began barking and growling. The victim left in a car, then Jones, Lopez, Pervis, and Murray smoked marijuana together.

Campbell was in his car with his cousin James Salvi (“Salvi”) when Salvi received a call on his cell phone from the victim asking to be picked up in Framingham. Around eight that evening, they picked up the victim as well as Waters. They drove to Kendall Street where they parked the car in a parking lot and joined some people they knew at a common gathering place on the street in front of a house located at 116 Kendall Street. Those present included Franklin Porter (“Porter”) and Emmanuel Osamwonyi (“Osamwonyi”). Bonner and his girlfriend, Diana Paul (“Paul”), were also already at Kendall Street, and Salvi left with them to run an errand.

Meanwhile, Murray drove himself, Jones, Lopez, and Pervis to Kendall Street. On the way there, according to Jones, Murray stopped his car to speak to someone in another car, and Murray learned that the victim was looking for him; he stopped his car a second time to purchase drugs. Once they parked on Kendall Street, at approximately 9:00 p.m., Murray, Jones, Lopez, and Pervis walked down the street. By the time they arrived, there were at least five people already congregating in the area around 116 Kendall Street.

The victim was walking down Kendall Street to purchase cigarettes at a nearby store when Campbell heard someone say “something like there they are or here they come,” then Murray walked towards the victim with Lopez behind him. Transcript, Vol. IV, at 166. Once the victim and Murray were facing each other in the street, the victim made a movement with his arms.4 Jones heard the victim say, “Let’s have a one-on-one or something”!;] Transcript, Vol. IV, at 143; Lopez heard one of the people behind the victim say, “You trying to bring it to my man? You wanna get popped?” Transcript, Vol. VI, at 168. Murray pulled out a gun from his hoodie, shot the victim,5 then he and Lopez ran to their car, in the direction from which they had come. Perez observed Murray put something in his trunk before Murray and Lopez drove away; Lopez testified that the trunk opened, but he did not see Murray place anything inside, and Murray had the gun in the front seat with them as they drove away.

Upon being shot, the victim fell to the ground, and Campbell and Waters ran to him. Bonner, Paul, and Salvi returned to Kendall Street, stopping the car when [369]*369Porter flagged them down. A group, including Salvi, Waters, and Bonner, helped Campbell put the victim in the passenger seat of Campbell’s car. They drove to the hospital, with Bonner and Paul in a separate car in front of them. The police chased them, and stopped them once both cars reached the hospital. The victim, who sustained three gunshot wounds,6 was declared dead at the hospital.

After leaving Kendall Street, Murray drove himself and Lopez to Rhode Island where they spent the night. While in Rhode Island, they put the gun, wrapped in a blue rag, in a hole between two fences in the backyard of Lopez’s brother’s house.

The following morning, October 8, 2003, Murray and Lopez drove to Murray’s girlfriend’s house in Framingham. A Framingham police detective stopped Murray and Lopez, who were in a gray Ford Taurus with New Jersey license plates, as they left Murray’s girlfriend’s house.7 Massachusetts State Troopers, including Trooper Richard Mahoney (“Mahoney”), then arrived at the scene. Murray was arrested and his car seized.

Police later recovered from the Kendall Street crime scene a knife, four .25 caliber cartridge cases,8 one spent projectile, four cigarette butts, ajuice bottle, and two bats, although it appeared that the bats had not been left there recently; they recovered two projectiles from the victim’s body. The gun, a .25 caliber Colt, was recovered on October 8, 2003, in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, wrapped in a light blue hand towel and located in a hole between two fences; it was later identified as having fired the recovered cartridge cases and projectiles.

II. Mentions of KST at Trial

On cross-examination of Campbell, defense counsel asked if he knew of the KST gang. Campbell replied that KST was not a gang but a group of friends; Campbell testified that he himself was a member but that Murray was not. On cross-examination of Theodore Hers (“Piers”), a Framingham police detective, defense counsel asked him if he was familiar with KST, and who its members were. The court permitted defense counsel to use the word “group” to describe KST, rather than “gang.”9

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Bluebook (online)
27 Mass. L. Rptr. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-murray-masssuperct-2010.