Commonwealth v. Petetabella

26 Mass. L. Rptr. 463
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 2010
DocketNo. BRCR19641824418247
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Mass. L. Rptr. 463 (Commonwealth v. Petetabella) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Petetabella, 26 Mass. L. Rptr. 463 (Mass. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Macdonald, D. Lloyd, J.

Before the Court is the defendant John Petetabella’s amended motion for a new trial in connection with his 1964 conviction for first degree murder, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and five counts of armed robbery. The issues were extensively briefed, and a hearing was held. The Court DENIES the motion for the reasons that follow.

I. Pertinent Facts

On December 22, 1963, the defendant and Joseph Robideau (“Robideau”) robbed a Fall River grocery store at gunpoint. (Because the defendant testified at trial and admitted — -with exceptions to be noted — to the substance of the Commonwealth’s case, the factual recitation here is according to the defendant’s own account.) In the course of the robbery and after removing the female sales clerk’s wallet, the defendant pis[464]*464tol-whipped a man working behind the meat counter with such force that the defendant broke the protective guard of his pistol.

Following the robbery, Petetabella and Robideau joined several friends in a heavy night of drinking on the occasion of what was described as a bachelor party for his friend, Gerald Sousa (“Sousa”). During the course of the partying, the defendant suggested that they “hit" a bar before closing time, and at approximately 1:00 a.m. (on the 23rd), the defendant, Sousa1 and Robideau, robbed Padden’s Café in Fall River.

In the course of the robbery, the defendant forced the proprietor and a male patron into the kitchen area where they were ordered to lie face down on the floor. The defendant and Sousa removed the victims’wallets. The defendant then shot dead the proprietor. Sousa, who had his own gun drawn, shot at the patron as he lay on the ground, but the bullets missed.

While the defendant and Sousa were in the kitchen, Robideau held two female patrons at knife-point with the women kneeling on the ground. As the defendant and Sousa ran from the kitchen area, Sousa grabbed the pocket book of one of the females and took her wallet.

The defendant was arrested the next day in Providence. He made inculpatory statements to the arresting officers and, later, to the Fall River Police.2 He was thereafter indicted for the charges on which he went to trial.

At the trial, the defendant was identified by the victims in the store robbery and by the survivors of the café robbery and shooting. In addition, he was identified by a co-defendant who had been indicted as an accessory, but who — in mid-trial — agreed to testify for the prosecution. Further, as noted, the defendant himself testified and admitted to all the material facts of the Commonwealth’s case except with respect to the identity of the third participant in the café robbery and shooting. Robideau also testified as a witness for Sousa, and in the course of doing so, he corroborated the Commonwealth’s allegations as to his and the defendant’s roles in the crimes.

Both the defendant and Robideau pleaded the defense of insanity, and each had psychiatrists testify on their respective behalfs. The defendant’s psychiatrist testified that the defendant had a “sociopathic personality disturbance, anti-social personality” but that he “was not ill to the point of. . . requiring treatment or institutionalization.” He stated that the defendant “can intellectually distinguish [between right and wrong], but in my opinion, he is not capable of controlling his behavior.”

The Commonwealth’s expert, the medical director of MCI Bridgewater, diagnosed the defendant similarly, to wit, “sociopathic personality disorder, anti-social type,” but he testified that the defendant was “completely capable of making ... a distinction [between right and wrong].”

In his closing argument on behalf of the defendant, his counsel adopted Robideau’s counsel’s prior argument as to the incapacity of a person with a sociopathic personality to control his conduct. However, with the death penalty still extant in 1964, the main thrust of counsel’s closing was directed to the defendant’s age, to the bleak circumstances of the defendant’s upbringing and to the proposition that the defendant never had a chance in life and, therefore, did not deserve to die for his admitted crime:

This is the most important day in my client’s life. He will never get another chance to have a jury decide whether he shall live or die. Here is a man whose background [is] one of complete rejection from the time he was born and the doors were slammed in his face. [This] is a boy who celebrated his 21st birthday last week sitting in this courtroom charged with first degree murder . . . He doesn’t say that what he did was right. Nobody makes that claim at all. But I ask you to consider these things. And you, as society, are you going to make the final rejection and say, “You don’t belong here”?

The jury deliberated three hours before returning guilty verdicts against the defendant, Robideau and Sousa for first degree murder and the related assault and robbery charges. However, as to each defendant, the jury recommended that the sentence of death not be imposed.

The defendant did not appeal his conviction. There is no indication in the record whether Robideau appealed. Sousa did so, but the SJC affirmed his conviction. Commonwealth v. Sousa, 350 Mass. 581 (1966).

Petetabella filed this Motion for a New Trial along with an affidavit. In his affidavit, Petetabella avers that he wanted to appeal his 1964 conviction but his trial counsel informed him that he could not appeal because he had testified and admitted his guilt. In addition, as part of the hearing on the instant motion, the Court took evidence from the defendant. The defendant testified to certain matters occurring during the trial. With regard to his decision to take the stand, he said that he did so only after his and Robideau’s counsel strongly advised him and Robideau to do so as their only way to avoid “the chair.” The defendant stated that Sousa’s counsel opposed their testifying. With regard to the decision not to appeal, the defendant said that his lawyer told him that he “could not appeal” because of the fact that he admitted to the crime. The defendant stated that he wanted to appeal but he “accepted” his lawyer’s advice because he did not think that he had a choice.

The defendant also described that during the course of the trial he and his co-defendants were handcuffed and fitted with a “belly chain” and leg irons. An officer armed with a rifle stood guard by the defendants through the trial.

[465]*465The defendant further described that he and his co-defendants were separated from their attorneys by about 10 feet. He noted, however, that occasionally his attorney would come over to him to consult on particular issues.

The trial was held in hot weather in June and early July 1964. The defendant testified that the windows of the courtroom were open to reduce the heat, but that because heavy construction was underway nearby, the resulting noise prevented him and others in the courtroom from hearing some of the evidence. The judge was aware that the noise was interfering with testimony. The defendant said that the judge noted the problem during the course of the trial.

II. Discussion

Petetabella contends that he is entitled to a new trial because:

He was deprived of his right to a direct appeal of conviction due to ineffective assistance of counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Mass. L. Rptr. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-petetabella-masssuperct-2010.