Commonwealth v. Norris

967 N.E.2d 113, 462 Mass. 131, 2012 WL 1537929, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 351
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 4, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 967 N.E.2d 113 (Commonwealth v. Norris) 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. Norris, 967 N.E.2d 113, 462 Mass. 131, 2012 WL 1537929, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 351 (Mass. 2012).

Opinion

Botsford, J.

The defendants, Walter Norris and Valentino Facey, were convicted of murder in the first degree, as well as related crimes; the murder convictions were based on theories of deliberate premeditation and extreme atrocity or cruelty.2 The charges concerned the shooting death of Bernard Johnson in the parking lot of a Somerville apartment building. In their appeals, Facey contends that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his murder conviction as a joint venturer; both defendants argue that the jury should have been instructed on defense of another; and Norris claims he was entitled to a jury instruction that one of the elements of possession of a firearm is the lack of a license. We affirm the defendants’ convictions and decline to exercise our power to grant relief under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.

1. Background, a. Commonwealth’s evidence. We recite the facts as the jury could have found them at trial, reserving other facts for later discussion. On the night of August 29, 2006, Desire Pires arrived at her cousin Shaline Lavita’s apartment in Somerville around 8 p.m. When Pires arrived, Lavita and her friend Tessa Ortiz were there.

About two weeks earlier, Lavita and Ortiz had met the defendant Facey and another man, Tawan Dottin, while driving through Central Square in Cambridge, and had exchanged telephone numbers with them. On the night of August 29, Lavita and Ortiz received telephone calls from Facey and Dottin around 10:30 p.m. asking if the two men could come to Lavita’s apartment. The women agreed. Because Facey and Dottin had said they needed a ride, Ortiz and Lavita then drove in Ortiz’s car to Cambridge to pick them up. When Ortiz arrived, five or six men, including Facey and Dottin as well as Norris, approached Ortiz’s car. The women asked Facey why there were so many men there and who the men were. Facey responded that they were his “boys” or his “crew.” After some discussion, Ortiz [133]*133agreed to, and did, take all the men back to Lavita’s apartment in Somerville, although two trips were required.

Around 11:15 p.m., Pires drove from Lavita’s apartment to the airport and picked up the victim. He was wearing gold earrings, a long gold chain with a religious medallion, a watch, a bracelet, and two rings. In his mouth, he also had a removable tooth cover made of gold. As Pires was driving away from the airport with Johnson, he pulled out a ring, proposed to Pires, and put the ring on her finger. Pires then drove back to Lavita’s apartment and parked in the parking lot at the rear of the apartment building around 12:30 a.m. She saw Lavita and some men she did not recognize on the porch of Lavita’s apartment, which was on the third floor of the building. Pires and Johnson walked up the stairs into the apartment, Pires showed off her ring, and she and Johnson stayed in the kitchen talking for about twenty to thirty minutes. Ortiz joined them when she returned to the apartment. Facey, Norris, and Justin Hollis, another of the men who had come to the apartment with Facey, were on the porch for at least part of the time, although Facey spent some minutes in the kitchen with Pires and Johnson, as Facey and Pires knew each other. There were no problems or altercations among the people at the apartment up to this point.

Eventually, Pires and Johnson prepared to leave to go to a hotel in Somerville. Just before Pires was about to walk down the outside stairs to the parking lot, Facey stepped in front of her from the porch and walked down the stairs ahead of her. Facey held the front of his pants, in the waistband area, with one hand as he went down the steps. He stopped at the bottom of the stairs; Pires and Johnson kept walking. Facey then walked past them and told Johnson to “run your chain,” which Pires interpreted to mean, “I’m going to take your chain from you.”

Pires, who was in front, turned around when she heard this and saw Facey and Johnson holding on to Johnson’s gold chain and “tussling” over it. She did not see anyone with a gun at this point. As the men struggled, they moved from the sidewalk into the parking lot between two cars; Pires followed them, urging Facey to stop. Facey was behind Johnson, reaching over his back, as the men continued to fight over the chain. Facey repeat[134]*134edly told Johnson to “give him his shit back.”3 Pires then saw Johnson with a gun in his hand but she did not know where it came from. She had not seen Johnson with a gun on the drive back from the airport or in Lavita’s apartment. She had not brought a gun that night or given a gun to Johnson, and he had not asked her to bring one.

Facey yelled up to his friends on the porch to “come help me.” Norris and Hollis ran down the stairs. Norris ran straight toward Facey and Johnson, who were standing between two parked cars, holding a gun in his hand and pointing it at them. He stopped within a few feet of the pair. Pires, standing between Norris and Johnson, told Norris not to shoot and tried to keep him from getting involved in the altercation. Hollis ran around one of the cars in the parking lot and told Facey to stop fighting with Johnson.

Facey and Johnson continued to struggle, with Johnson leaning forward holding the gun in his left hand, trying to keep Facey, who was still behind him, from getting the gun. Johnson was right handed. Keeping the gun pointed to the ground, Johnson said, “Get back.” He used his right hand to pull back and then release the slide mechanism on the top of the gun, which either loads or unloads a firearm.

Facey then let go of Johnson and “took a few steps back.” At that point, Pires was standing between a car and blue van. Norris was on her right side; Facey was to her left. Pires was facing toward Johnson, who had his back to the blue van.

Without pointing his gun at anyone, Johnson said, “I can’t believe you just tried to rob me.” At that moment, Norris fired his gun six times and Johnson fell to the ground. Johnson sustained gunshot wounds to his head, right lower back, right buttock, left buttock, left elbow, and right wrist. The bullet to his head entered behind his left ear and exited behind his right ear. The wound would have been fatal in and of itself and would [135]*135cause death immediately or within seconds. The bullet that entered Johnson’s right lower back traveled upward from back to front, through his kidney, liver, and lung, and lodged in his right armpit. This wound also would have been independently fatal, but would take longer to cause death than the wound to the head. The wounds to the buttocks both traveled from back to front.

After shooting Johnson, Norris hit Pires in the face and eye with his gun and ran away. Facey walked over to Johnson as he lay motionless on the ground and kicked him in the face. Pires pushed Facey away and told him to stop, and Facey ran.

Pires contacted the police from her cellular telephone. Officer Louis Remigio of the Somerville police department was the first to respond to the scene. Johnson lay on his side in a fetal position, bleeding profusely from the head. He had no vital signs. Johnson also had abrasions on his nose, upper lip, lower lip, and forehead area. An ambulance took Johnson and Pires to Cambridge Hospital, where Johnson was declared dead at 2 a.m. Pires received thirteen stitches for the wound to her eye.

Meanwhile, at approximately 1 a.m., Officer Carlos Melo heard a dispatch on his radio regarding shots fired near Merriam Street, adjacent to his location.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
967 N.E.2d 113, 462 Mass. 131, 2012 WL 1537929, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-norris-mass-2012.