Commonwealth v. Oppenheim

86 Mass. App. Ct. 359
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 2014
DocketAC 12-P-1673
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 86 Mass. App. Ct. 359 (Commonwealth v. Oppenheim) 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. Oppenheim, 86 Mass. App. Ct. 359 (Mass. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Sikora, J.

A Superior Court jury convicted the defendant, David Oppenheim, of five counts of rape of a child. See G. L. c. 265, § 23. He appeals upon multiple grounds, but argues principally that the trial judge should have instructed the jury that, before they could consider a confession contained in an instant message (IM) conversation, 2 the Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant authored the confession. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Background. 1. Commonwealth’s evidence. From the Commonwealth’s main witnesses, the jury heard the following evidence. We reserve certain details for discussion of the appellate issues. In 2002, the defendant and his wife founded a community theater enterprise entitled the Pioneer Arts Center of Easthampton (PACE or the center). As the center’s chief executive, the defendant directed musical theater and taught acting classes.

The victim, Ann Ross, 3 testified at length. She first attended PACE activities in the fall of 2004 at the age of thirteen. She remained actively involved at the center over the next four years. She first performed volunteer and intern chores, then took acting lessons, and ultimately assumed significant roles in musical productions.

In the fall of 2005, when she was fourteen years old, Ross accepted the defendant’s offer of private acting lessons. The classes usually took place in the defendant’s office or the theater. The defendant told Ross that, to improve her acting skill, she needed to experience physical sensations beyond the knowledge of her age group. He rubbed her arms and kissed her lips, face, and neck. He told her that she was “really talented,” that she was “going to go far[,] and that he was going to make sure that that happened.” He instructed her not to tell anybody about their *361 lessons because “society doesn’t understand what I’m doing here.”

Ross testified that the sexual activity intensified over the next two years. The defendant touched Ross “everywhere,” including her vagina; performed oral sex on her; engaged her in anal and vaginal sex; and directed her to perform oral sex on him. Ross had no prior experience in these activities. They occurred usually at the defendant’s office or home, or at the theater.

The Commonwealth’s second principal witness was Ryan DiMartino. 4 DiMartino had attended PACE’s musical theater training during the summers of 2005, 2006, and 2007, at fourteen, fifteen, and sixteen years of age. During those years DiMartino was known as Emily and lived as a female. In the course of the summers, DiMartino met, and developed an undisclosed romantic attraction toward, Ross. During those periods DiMartino observed Ross and the defendant often alone in close working proximity.

During the school year of 2007-2008, at age sixteen, DiMartino performed volunteer work at PACE. On Wednesday afternoons and evenings, DiMartino cleaned and prepared the theater for evening open microphone activities. The defendant would admit DiMartino to the locked theater. They began online chats in October. As of the end of 2007 and the beginning of 2008, the conversations between them became personal and then, according to DiMartino, “more flirtatious and sexual.”

During a Wednesday afternoon in early February of 2008, at the locked theater, the defendant kissed and caressed DiMartino. That conduct became a pattern during private Wednesday afternoon chores at the theater. The defendant proposed also that they engage in sexual relations.

On February 13, the defendant suggested to DiMartino that he (the defendant) open a new online account with a new online name to mask his identity against any suspicion of DiMartino’s parents or others about their IM traffic. The defendant and DiMartino changed the defendant’s IM identity to the name “Allie.”

On or about March 9, the defendant and DiMartino discussed, in person, DiMartino’s attraction to Ross. The defendant urged *362 DiMartino to pursue it. DiMartino asked the defendant whether any sexual activity “was happening between [Ross and him].” The defendant responded that they could “talk about it another time” because he “wasn’t sure if he trusted [DiMartino] enough to tell [him] everything.”

Late the following evening of March 10, the defendant opened an IM conversation with DiMartino about his (the defendant’s) relationship with Ross. In the course of the extended IM conversation, the defendant related in physical detail a first seduction of Ross at about age fourteen in the sound booth of the PACE theater and the accomplishment of both vaginal and anal penetration of her on that occasion. The IM related that the defendant had maintained a pattern of sexual intercourse with Ross through the time of her relationship with one boyfriend and into the beginning of her relationship with a successor (college) boyfriend.

Subsequently, on a Wednesday afternoon at the PACE theater, the defendant told DiMartino again that he (the defendant) on multiple occasions had engaged in vaginal and anal sex with Ross in the office and in the light booth of the PACE theater complex.

Carissa Dagenais was the Commonwealth’s third principal witness. From 2004 to late 2006, at ages fifteen to seventeen, she too performed volunteer work at PACE, and took an acting class from the defendant. She was familiar with Ross as another member of the acting class.

During her first year of college (2007-2008), Dagenais frequently stayed at the defendant’s house because she was “having a hard time at home.” In the summer of 2008, she asked the defendant why she no longer saw Ross at PACE. He answered that Ross and he had once had a “full-on sexual relationship,” that she “had started seeing someone else,” and that they had not enjoyed their collaboration in their last musical production.

In June of 2010, after publication of the charges against the defendant, he asked Dagenais to appear as a character witness on his behalf. She at first agreed. In July of 2010, she decided to report her information about the defendant’s relationship with Ross to the police. In a telephone conversation with the defendant, she informed him of that intention. He acknowledged the wrongfulness of his actions, but described the law and his potential punishment as unfair. He told her that her testimony would ruin his and his family’s lives.

The Commonwealth offered the testimony of two other former *363 PACE students as pattem-of-conduct evidence. Laura Berkeley 5 began an internship in the fall of 2003 at age seventeen. The defendant offered her private acting lessons and proposed the technique of accelerated “primitive” experiences for professional development. The tutorial resulted in sexual activity (fellatio, cunnilingus, and digital and vaginal intercourse) in the PACE office area, the “green room,” and the sound booth, and at the defendant’s home. Her internship concluded in the spring of 2004.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Mass. App. Ct. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-oppenheim-massappct-2014.