Commonwealth v. Nelson

7 N.E.3d 1084, 468 Mass. 1, 2014 WL 1465578, 2014 Mass. LEXIS 214
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 17, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 7 N.E.3d 1084 (Commonwealth v. Nelson) 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. Nelson, 7 N.E.3d 1084, 468 Mass. 1, 2014 WL 1465578, 2014 Mass. LEXIS 214 (Mass. 2014).

Opinion

Ireland, C.J.

On January 26, 2010, a jury convicted the defendant, Larry Nelson, of murder in the first degree on a theory of extreme atrocity or cruelty. Represented by new counsel on appeal, the defendant argues error in the prosecutor’s closing argument and in the judge’s instructions to the jury. We affirm the defendant’s conviction and discern no basis to exercise our authority pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E.

1. Background. The jury could have found the following facts. On October 12, 2007, Boston police officers, responding to a telephone call made from a resident of the victim’s apart[3]*3ment building, discovered the victim’s body inside his apartment. The victim’s identity was not immediately ascertainable because his body was in a state of decomposition.1 The victim’s body was on the floor in the front hallway about five or six feet from the main entrance. He was on his left side with his head toward the front door. His shirt was soaked in blood. There was a pool of dried blood underneath him, gaping wounds to his neck and face, and reddish-brown stains on the walls of both sides of the hallway. Emergency medical technicians arrived and pronounced the victim dead. He was sixty-four years of age.

The victim had a total of twenty stab and incised wounds. He had six wounds to his head and neck, seven wounds to his torso area, and seven wounds on his upper extremities. The victim died as result of stab wounds to the head, neck, torso, and upper extremities, with perforations of the lung and subclavian artery, and associated hemorrhage. The medical examiner who conducted his autopsy expressed her opinion that the victim died within minutes from when his wounds were inflicted.

The victim and the defendant knew each other. They had met at the WAITT2 *house, a nonprofit organization in the Roxbury section of Boston that provides adult education. The defendant, who had graduated from the WAITT house, tutored the victim for some time. Because of some health issues, the victim, however, stopped attending classes.3 The victim was last seen at the WAITT house on August 3, 2007.

On Sunday, October 7,2007, in the early afternoon, the defendant went to the residence of a former girl friend, Leonice Depina, with whom he remained in close contact.4 *It was Depina’s birthday and he told her that he would return later with some food. The defendant did not return. Depina telephoned him, but he did not answer.

At 6:45 p.m. on October 7, the defendant’s friend and former [4]*4girl friend, Barbara Ywahu,5 received a voice mail message on her cellular telephone from the defendant.6 When Ywahu, who is a nurse, returned his telephone call, the defendant asked her to meet him at a subway station that was a couple of blocks from her home in the Jamaica Plain section of Boston. The defendant asked her to bring a needle and thread, some towels, and a shirt.

When Ywahu arrived, the defendant got out of her automobile,7 and she saw that the defendant’s right hand was wrapped in bloody rags. She observed that his hand had a “horrible cut.” She asked him what had happened and he stated, “Somebody owed me some money.” Although closer hospitals were nearby, the defendant asked that she drive him to Cambridge Hospital. The defendant changed his shirt and put the shirt that he had been wearing, along with the bloody rags that had been wrapped around his hand, into a plastic bag that he tossed into the back seat of the automobile. He moved a gym bag into the trunk of the automobile.

At the hospital, they parked and headed to the emergency room. The defendant instructed that, if anyone asked, Ywahu was to tell them that she had been shopping at the “Cambridge Galleria” and that he had telephoned her. He added that she should say she then picked him up on Cambridge Street.

When the defendant was being treated, a Cambridge police detective questioned Ywahu in a waiting room.8 She told the detective that the defendant was her friend and (as the defendant had instructed) that he had been shopping at the “Cambridge Galleria” and telephoned her to come pick him up. Ywahu told the detective that someone had tried to rob the defendant, that he was bleeding, and that she picked him up and brought him to the hospital.

[5]*5The defendant was transferred to Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston because he needed surgery. Ywahu followed him there. Cambridge police Detective John Boyle responded to the hospital at approximately 8:30 p.m. and spoke separately with Ywahu and the defendant. Ywahu told him the same story she had relayed to the detective in Cambridge. The defendant, however, gave a different story.

The defendant first stated that he had been coming out of a particular store in the “Twin City Plaza” when a light skinned Hispanic male in a dark hooded sweatshirt approached him, demanded money, and raised a knife. The defendant stated that he grabbed the knife and was hurt, and engaged in a struggle over the knife. The attacker fled when an automobile driving by beeped its horn. The defendant informed the detective that he did not believe his wound was serious, so he called his friend who was a nurse (Ywahu), who picked him up on Cambridge Street in Cambridge. The defendant gave Depina’s address as his own.

When Detective Boyle relayed his intention to “pull” surveillance footage from the store, the defendant said he had been on a sidewalk in front of the store. When Detective Boyle stated that he would be calling the Somerville police department for them to investigate, the defendant recalled that he had been stabbed across the street from the “Twin City Plaza.” As the conversation continued, the defendant changed the location of the alleged attack to a side street off of Cambridge Street. The defendant ended by stating that the attack had occurred in Somerville next to a brick apartment building. Detective Boyle photographed the defendant’s injury, then searched near all the possible locations of the defendant’s alleged attack and did not find any evidence of an attack. He concluded that the incident had not occurred in Cambridge and ended his investigation, passing on the information to the Somerville police department.

Before Ywahu left the hospital, the defendant instructed her to drive her automobile home, park it, and leave it in the driveway. The defendant told her not to look inside the gym bag that he had placed in the trunk. He asked her to discard the plastic bag with his bloody shirt and bloody rags in a Dumpster on her way home. The defendant headed into surgery at about midnight. Ywahu followed his instructions.

[6]*6There was evidence that, on October 7, calls from the defendant’s telephone were made at various times to the victim’s telephone.9 The defendant’s telephone was used to call the victim at 12:22 p.m., 2:40 p.m., and 5:08 p.m. The calls, respectively, lasted approximately two minutes, three minutes, and two minutes in duration. At 5:37 p.m., the victim’s telephone was used to contact the defendant, and the call lasted about six minutes. At 5:43 p.m., the defendant’s telephone made another call to the victim’s telephone that lasted about two minutes.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

STEVEN WAYLEIN
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2026
Commonwealth v. Alexis Gonzalez.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2025
Commonwealth v. Sajid S., a juvenile
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2024
Commonwealth v. Ridley
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2023
Commonwealth v. Lee
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2019
Commonwealth v. Ahern
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2019
Commonwealth v. Colon
121 N.E.3d 1157 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2019)
Commonwealth v. Collazo
116 N.E.3d 1203 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2019)
Commonwealth v. Pina
116 N.E.3d 575 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2019)
Commonwealth v. Peulic
103 N.E.3d 771 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Bell
103 N.E.3d 770 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Wood
102 N.E.3d 1031 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Zinov
102 N.E.3d 1031 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Fernandes
89 N.E.3d 1130 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Whitley
102 N.E.3d 429 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Garcia
102 N.E.3d 429 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Lopes
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2018
Commonwealth v. Howard
91 N.E.3d 1108 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2017)
Commonwealth v. Ryan
94 N.E.3d 439 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2017)
Commonwealth v. Mattei
90 Mass. App. Ct. 577 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 N.E.3d 1084, 468 Mass. 1, 2014 WL 1465578, 2014 Mass. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-nelson-mass-2014.