Commonwealth v. Peck

86 Mass. App. Ct. 34
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJuly 16, 2014
DocketAC 12-P-0132
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 86 Mass. App. Ct. 34 (Commonwealth v. Peck) 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. Peck, 86 Mass. App. Ct. 34 (Mass. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Agnes, J.

At trial, the defendant, Melissa Peck, testified as the *35 only witness for the defense and denied the allegations that she and her former husband had engaged in an automobile insurance fraud. 1 On cross-examination, over objection, the judge permitted the prosecutor to ask her a series of questions about prior incriminating statements she allegedly made to a former boyfriend after the date of the alleged offenses, despite the fact that the judge was aware that the Commonwealth did not have admissible evidence from another witness that the statements had been made. It was error to permit this type of cross-examination of the defendant, which improperly impeached the witness by insinuation, and unfairly “cast on the other side (here the defendant-witness) a burden somehow to fend against it.” Commonwealth v. Delrio, 22 Mass. App. Ct. 712, 721 (1986). Because we determine that the improper cross-examination was prejudicial, we must reverse the convictions. 2

Background. The jury could have found that on July 14, 2008, the defendant parked her car on North Street in front of the Berkshire Medical Center (BMC) in Pittsfield. While she was inside the BMC, Pittsfield parking authority Officer Thomas Siok checked the license plate numbers of the cars parked on North Street and discovered that the defendant’s vehicle had several unpaid parking tickets. Siok followed parking authority protocol and attached a “boot” to the defendant’s car. This device is designed to prevent a vehicle from being moved until the appropriate authority unlocks and removes it. 3

The defendant got a ride to city hall to pay the parking tickets. There, she learned that the total amount she owed was more than she expected, and that she could not pay with a personal check. The defendant was told that unless the unpaid tickets were paid within three days, the city would tow and impound her car.

*36 The defendant returned to the car after her trip to city hall. John Tart, her former husband, was at that location. A surveillance video played for the jury reveals the defendant and Tart near the car. She is seen removing a child’s car seat from the car while Tart walks over to the booted wheel. The video also reveals the defendant walking over and standing next to Tart for approximately twenty seconds as he crouches down near the booted wheel. The defendant then walks away from the car, and about thirty seconds later, Tart is seen entering the car and driving away.

The next day, Pittsfield police Sergeant Mark Lenihan received a call from the Pittsfield parking authority inquiring about the defendant’s booted car; both the car and the boot were missing. Sergeant Lenihan visited the defendant at her home to ask about the location of her car. 4 The defendant told Sergeant Lenihan that she had last seen the car parked on North Street with a parking boot attached to it, and had no knowledge of what had happened thereafter. She indicated she had left one set of keys to the vehicle in the glove box. 5 The defendant completed the paperwork necessary to make a stolen car report while Sergeant Linehan was present. 6

On July 19, 2008, the defendant’s car was located in a State forest. The windows of the car were smashed, the tires were slashed, there was collision damage, there were beer bottles in the car, and the ignition was damaged with exposed wires. However, there was testimony that the vandalism and ignition damage were not consistent with theft. The jury heard testimony from a forensic mechanic and saw photographs of the vehicle’s appearance when it was recovered. The jury could have found that the vehicle was made to look like it had been stolen.

The defendant was interviewed by the insurer’s fraud investigator in August, 2008. At that time, she said she had both sets of keys to her vehicle in her physical possession. She also said that *37 she spoke to Tart the day after she was interviewed by Sergeant Linehan and told him that he had to file a claim with the insurer so she could qualify for reimbursement for the cost of renting another vehicle. The insurer denied the defendant’s insurance claim and reported the case to the insurance fraud bureau of Massachusetts (fraud bureau) for investigation.

In May, 2009, the defendant was interviewed by a senior investigator with the fraud bureau. She told the investigator that she had done nothing wrong and gave him an exculpatory account of the events on the day in question. The investigator played for her the video surveillance tape, which showed that less than one minute after the defendant walked away from the vehicle, it was driven away by Tart. The investigator asked her several times to identify the male shown in the video. She refused, telling him that “she can’t say and she won’t say,” and that it was his “job to figure out who that male was.” The defendant was interviewed again by the investigator in July, 2009, at the Pittsfield police station. The defendant was advised of her Miranda rights and agreed to speak to the police and the investigator. Her statements were identical to those she made during the previous interview.

Discussion. 1. Improper cross-examination. On cross-examination, the prosecutor established that the defendant’s former boyfriend, Junior Sanchez, drove her and her daughter to the interview with the investigator in May, 2009. There was an objection prior to any questions being asked about a conversation between the defendant and Sanchez on that occasion. During an unrecorded sidebar conversation, 7 the judge ruled that because the prosecutor had a report in which Sanchez told the police and the *38 fraud bureau that the defendant had confessed to her involvement in the insurance fraud scheme with Tart, there was a good faith basis for the prosecutor to inquire of the defendant about the conversation even though Sanchez was not present to testify. Accordingly, the prosecutor asked the defendant five questions about the conversation she reportedly had with Sanchez. These questions are set forth below in the margin. 8 Sanchez did not appear or give testimony at trial. The report of his interview was not offered as an exhibit or marked for identification although the prosecutor showed it to the judge at sidebar.

Massachusetts evidence law prohibits “an attorney, through cross-examination of a witness, [from] communicating] an impression by innuendo that he or she possesses as yet undisclosed information, with no good faith basis for doing so.” Commonwealth v. Johnston, 467 Mass. 674, 699 (2014), citing Commonwealth v. Christian, 430 Mass. 552, 561 (2000), overruled on other grounds by Commonwealth v. Paulding, 438 Mass. 1 (2002). In

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Bluebook (online)
86 Mass. App. Ct. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-peck-massappct-2014.