Commonwealth v. Pagan

897 N.E.2d 1250, 73 Mass. App. Ct. 369, 2008 Mass. App. LEXIS 1223
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedDecember 18, 2008
DocketNo. 07-P-667
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 897 N.E.2d 1250 (Commonwealth v. Pagan) 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. Pagan, 897 N.E.2d 1250, 73 Mass. App. Ct. 369, 2008 Mass. App. LEXIS 1223 (Mass. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

McHugh, J.

The defendants, Juan Pagan and Luis Lopez, were each indicted on charges of trafficking in cocaine, G. L. c. 94C, § 32E(£>), within a school or park zone, G. L. c. 94C, § 32J, and conspiring to violate the controlled substance laws, G. L. c. 94C, § 40. Each defendant filed a motion to suppress approximately five ounces of “crack” cocaine police found during a warrantless search of their vehicle, arguing that the police lacked probable cause to conduct that search. After an evidentiary hearing, a judge allowed the motions.

The Commonwealth filed a motion to reconsider, which was denied. A single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court allowed the Commonwealth’s application for leave to appeal, see Mass. R.Crim.P. 15(a)(2), as appearing in 422 Mass. 1501 (1996), and 15(b)(1), as appearing in 422 Mass. 1502 (1996), and the case was entered here. On appeal, the Commonwealth claims that the judge applied the incorrect standard when ruling on the motion to reconsider and, in any event, factual “findings” he made after a hearing on that motion required denial of the defendants’ motions to suppress. For the reasons outlined below, we affirm.

1. Background. The Commonwealth’s principal witness at the suppression hearing was Officer Paul Barkyoumb of the Holyoke police department’s narcotics unit. Officer Barkyoumb testified that the investigation leading to the defendant’s arrest was triggered by information he received from a confidential informant. The informant, who, according to Officer Barkyoumb, had provided information resulting in several convictions for narcotics offenses, plus discovery of drugs and paraphernalia, told Officer Barkyoumb that an individual named “Shago” sold crack cocaine in the Springfield and Holyoke area, and offered to make telephone arrangements to buy some cocaine from him. Barkyoumb accepted the informant’s offer.

On July 18, 2005, following up on the offer, Officer Barkyoumb met with the informant in an unmarked police car near a Holyoke apartment complex and instructed him to call Shago to arrange the sale. The informant complied by telephoning Shago and ordering five ounces of crack cocaine. According to Barkyoumb, Shago agreed to deliver the cocaine and told the infor[371]*371mant to meet him in a nearby Holiday Inn parking lot where he would arrive an hour later driving a gray Acura Integra automobile. The informant agreed.

In direct and cross-examination, Officer Barkyoumb testified that, at his instruction, the informant told Shago in the same telephone conversation that he would be driving a white Mitsubishi Eclipse automobile to the meeting place. Later, when pressed by the motion judge, Officer Barkyoumb testified that the informant gave Shago information about the Eclipse in a later telephone call. In any event, the Eclipse information, according to Officer Barkyoumb, was a ruse, for the informant owned no such vehicle. Instead, Officer Barkyoumb testified, he had seen a white Eclipse in the Holiday Inn parking lot and had randomly selected it as a meeting point because it was parked in an area that allowed for good surveillance and other officers on his team were then watching it. He also testified that he knew the owner of the randomly selected Eclipse, who turned out to be a relative of a Holyoke reserve police officer.

At the appointed hour, Shago, later identified as Pagan, drove a gray Acura automobile into the Holiday Inn lot. Lopez was with him in the front seat. Pagan parked next to the Eclipse, got out of the car, and opened the Acura’s trunk. As he did, police officers moved in with guns drawn, surrounded him, and ordered Lopez out of the vehicle. In all, twenty-two officers from Holyoke, Agawam, the Hampden County narcotics task force, and the Hampden County gang task force participated in the arrest. These officers, according to Officer Barkyoumb, had been assembled in the fifty minutes between the time of the informant’s initial conversation with Shago and Shago’s arrival at the Holiday Inn.

Upon seeing the officers, Pagan dropped a cellular telephone and some money into the Acura’s trunk. A later search of the vehicle produced a shopping bag on the floor behind the front passenger seat containing four or five smaller individual bags of crack cocaine. Following their discovery of the cocaine, the officers arrested Lopez and Pagan, who were subsequently indicted for trafficking in cocaine, see G. L. c. 94C, § 32B(b), and related offenses.

[372]*372When asked at the hearing about the informant, Holyoke police Officer Barkyoumb said that he wanted to keep the identity confidential, although he acknowledged that the manner in which the sale was arranged necessarily meant that the defendants would know who the informant was. Officer Barkyoumb also testified, however, that the informant had told him that he did not care if Shago was able to identify him.

After completion of Officer Barkyoumb’s testimony, Holyoke police Officer Anthony Brach testified that, among other things, he, not Officer Barkyoumb, had selected the Eclipse as the meeting-point marker after he saw its driver park in the Holiday Inn parking lot. Although he did not know the driver’s identity, he testified that he selected the Eclipse as the marker because he saw the driver enter a nearby Friendly’s restaurant wearing a Friendly’s uniform and assumed that her car would remain parked in the lot for a long time.

After hearing all the testimony,2 the judge granted the defendants’ motions to suppress, explaining that inconsistencies and gaps in the Commonwealth’s case led him to conclude that the Commonwealth had not sustained its burden of showing a permissible basis for a warrantless search of the defendants’ vehicle. Chief among those inconsistencies, in the judge’s view, was Officer Barkyoumb’s testimony that although Shago had selected the Holiday Inn parking lot as the meeting point during the initial telephone call between Shago and the informant, Officer Barkyoumb had immediately instructed the informant to tell Shago to look for him in a white Eclipse because Officer Barkyoumb knew that the Eclipse was at that very moment in the parking lot under observation by other officers on his team. The judge thought that Shago’s selection of the parking lot and Officer Barkyoumb’s inability to see that lot from his location meant that Officer Barkyoumb could not possibly have known that the Eclipse was in the lot and that he could not possibly have had other officers there watching it. Officer Barkyoumb’s testimony on that point, along with other inconsistencies and gaps in the [373]*373evidence the judge recited,3 left him “unable to conclusively conclude, on the facts developed, that... an informant existed, [and] it necessarily follow[ed] that probable cause to search [the defendants’] vehicle was lacking.”

The Commonwealth filed a motion for reconsideration accompanied by an affidavit from Officer Barkyoumb. In the affidavit, he identified the informant as a person named Michael Melendez and supplied other details about the manner in which the Eclipse was selected, manifestly designed to rebut what the judge had found to be inconsistencies in the testimony he gave at the hearing. Officer Barkyoumb’s affidavit also placed much stronger emphasis on the need to keep Melendez’s identity confidential than he had expressed at the hearing. The Commonwealth also submitted an affidavit from Melendez who said that he had been in the Holyoke area on the day of the hearing but had been fearful for his safety.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
897 N.E.2d 1250, 73 Mass. App. Ct. 369, 2008 Mass. App. LEXIS 1223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-pagan-massappct-2008.