Commonwealth v. O'Neil

853 N.E.2d 576, 67 Mass. App. Ct. 284, 2006 Mass. App. LEXIS 944
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 7, 2006
DocketNo. 05-P-142
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 853 N.E.2d 576 (Commonwealth v. O'Neil) 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. O'Neil, 853 N.E.2d 576, 67 Mass. App. Ct. 284, 2006 Mass. App. LEXIS 944 (Mass. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Trainor, J.

The defendant, Dennis G. O’Neil, was indicted by a Hampshire County grand jury, charging him with one count of criminal harassment in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 43A(o). The defendant waived his right to a jury trial and proceeded to trial before a judge of the Superior Court. His motion for a required finding of not guilty at the close of the Commonwealth’s case [285]*285was denied, and he was found guilty at the conclusion of the trial.1

This case raises questions regarding the required state of mind for proving wilful and malicious conduct pursuant to G. L. c. 265, § 43A(a), and the requirements for proving substantial emotional distress pursuant to that same statute.

Facts. In August and September, 2002, the victim’s family home in Amherst received a number of collect telephone calls that were placed from the Hampshire County jail. In January, 2003, the family residence began receiving telephone calls from Bridgewater State Hospital. No one living at the residence knew anyone at either institution. Since none of these calls were accepted, the identity of the caller was not known to the victim’s family. However, it was later determined that the defendant was incarcerated at the Hampshire County jail in September, 2002, and at Bridgewater State Hospital in January, 2003.

Beginning in January, 2003, the victim and her family began receiving a series of letters from the defendant.2 There were a total of seven letters received by the victim’s family. The letters presumed a familiarity with the victim, but the victim testified that, other than attending the same high school, she had never had any social interaction with the defendant.

In the first letter, postmarked January 25, 2003, the defendant asked the victim to assist him by sending letters to certain unnamed persons and specifically asked that the victim contact a particular judge and let him know that she was concerned about the defendant. The letter ended with this disturbing and recurring sentiment: “Nobody understands what it will take to make you happy like I do. I know this letter is not very good, but in the future you will see how much I care about you.” The next letter was postmarked February 3, 2003. In that letter, the defendant apologized for the inappropriate content (“it was not [286]*286the most noble letter in the world”) of a letter the defendant had asked the victim to forward to a neighbor of his. The letter concluded with the defendant telling the victim that he had added her name to his telephone list and that he would call her house the following Monday.

The next letter addressed to the victim was postmarked April 22, 2003. The defendant’s obsessive tone and fabricated familiarity with the victim were becoming more apparent.3

“I know I’ve acted pretty inconsiderately towards you on a few different occasions now but I never meant to. I feel bad that I offered to buy you that shot of alcohol and I’m proud of the way you handled yourself. I’m never going to drink again or offer any alcohol to anyone. I know that you didn’t tell anybody that I was mean to you at the bar. I trust you to be responsible with information about me more than I trust anybody else. That’s why I’m asking you for your help. . . . The safest way to do that would be for you to come and visit me. I’d love to see you and you don’t have to hug me or anything.
“Like I said I don’t trust anybody like I trust you .... I know that you care more about doing what is right than anyone else does that’s why making sure you are safe is my first priority. ... I know right now you don’t have the greatest connections to the things you need and it’s frustrating to be stuck here where I can’t do much to help you out. Anything you do to help me out will be greatly appreciated. If you want to write me a letter to let me know how you feel that would be real nice.”

On April 23, 2003, while he was incarcerated at the Hampshire County jail, the defendant was served with a “no trespass” order concerning the victim’s home. The defendant was told at the time that he should have no contact with the persons listed in the order and that he should not attempt to contact them.

Nevertheless, the victim’s father received a letter postmarked May 10, 2003. In the letter, the defendant told the victim’s father that he appreciated the fact that the father was helping the victim because other than the father and the defendant there [287]*287were no other “people that will help her out unconditionally.” The defendant informed the father that he cared more about the victim

“than I care about anybody else and I care about her more than anybody else does. Since I’m going to be doing more to help her in the future than anybody else when somebody does something to hurt me they are hurting her as well. I’ll teach her skills that nobody else will skills that will make her feel more confident about herself. I know she cares more about doing the right thing than anybody else does that’s why I know she had no idea what kind of danger she will be putting me into if she goes through with the complaint when she filed it.... I won’t ask her to waste her time doing things that she won’t learn anything positive from like other people have and will. [The victim] is more complicated than anybody else I know and nobody understands her, what is best for her or how to keep her safe like I do. I hope you will help me to convince her to drop this complaint that’s what’s best for her, for me, for you, for everyone.”

The defendant told the victim, in a letter postmarked May 12, 2003, that he wanted her to help him get out of jail and not to do anything to keep him in it. He told her that he would not “bother” her in the future and that he did not mean to in the past. He then stated, “I still want to be friends with you. If anybody ever thinks about trying to bother you in the future I will handle defending you a lot more responsibly than the courts will.”

He again asked the victim to drop her complaint because he would not allow himself to be strip searched and would either be “beat up or sent to Bridgewater.”4 Despite the fact that this letter concluded with the defendant claiming that he was not “obsessed” with the victim and would make the best of the situation if she did not want to spend time with him, he prefaced that sentiment with the observation that “[i]n the long run I will have made your life easier than anybody else will because I will have bent less than anybody else will have. I’ll die for principal [sic] if I have to.”

[288]*288A month later, the victim received a long and rambling letter. In it, the defendant informed her that he thought “about [her] all day long it’s not like I forgot about you.” The defendant further commented that

“the less people know about someone’s plan’s for the future, where they might be and who they might be dealing with the stronger that person is and the better able they are to protect themselves and others. . . . The less people associate us together the better which is why I have hesitated for as long as I have to write you on my visitors list.”

Despite this observation, the defendant informed the victim that he wanted her to visit him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
853 N.E.2d 576, 67 Mass. App. Ct. 284, 2006 Mass. App. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-oneil-massappct-2006.