Commonwealth v. Petras

529 N.E.2d 404, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 483, 1988 Mass. App. LEXIS 612
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1988
Docket87-1146
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 529 N.E.2d 404 (Commonwealth v. Petras) 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. Petras, 529 N.E.2d 404, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 483, 1988 Mass. App. LEXIS 612 (Mass. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Greaney, C.J.

A Superior Court judge dismissed with prejudice indictments which charged each of three defendants (William D. Petras, William Marrocco, and Charles Camirand) with aggravated rape and indecent assault and battery. The judge concluded that the ultimate sanction was necessary because the prosecutor, after being warned once before by another *484 judge, failed to bring to the grand jury’s attention an inconsistent statement made by the victim at the probable cause hearing on the cases. The Commonwealth has appealed. We reverse the orders.

The eighteen year old victim’s (we shall call her Carol) testimony of the incident and other relevant background information can be summarized as follows. Carol had been acquainted with the defendant Camirand. Camirand invited Carol and her girlfriend (also eighteen) to go out with him on the evening of August 2, 1985. Camirand, accompanied by the defendants Petras and Marrocco, picked up the two women in a van. The back of the van was equipped with a bar, two captain’s chairs, two “beanbag” chairs, and a mattress. The group went to a lounge in Newburyport, where the men drank heavily. When the group left the lounge, the three men appeared to Carol to be intoxicated.

Camirand, the van’s driver, ignored the young women’s requests to be taken home, and he eventually drove the van down a deserted road. He took Carol’s friend outside the van to talk to her, leaving Carol alone in the back of the van with Petras and Marrocco. According to Carol, Petras and Marrocco “jumped” on the mattress on which she was sitting. Marrocco positioned himself “up towards [her chest],” while Petras was down “towards [her] legs.” Marrocco began kissing Carol and pulling off her shirt and bra. She pushed him away and pleaded with him to stop. Marrocco held her down, began to kiss her breasts, and attempted to force his penis into her mouth. While Marrocco restrained Carol, Petras unbuttoned and pulled off her jeans and underpants. Petras placed his fingers and then his tongue into Carol’s vagina. He then inserted his penis into her vagina.

The attack stopped when Carol’s girlfriend returned to the van. The group left in the van. The women were upset. Camirand drove Marrocco home and then stopped the van again. He then went into the back of the van and asked Carol to “give him some satisfaction.” The two women fled the van and ran into some nearby woods. They eventually reached the security office of a factory and called the police. Carol was *485 taken to the Wilmington police station and then to the Lahey Clinic, where she was examined by a physician. While at the clinic, Carol wrote out and signed for a policewoman a description of the incident.

In her written statement for the police, Carol referred to Petras as the one who had “tried” to have sexual intercourse with her. Later in the same statement, she identified Petras as the “one who had intercourse with her.” The hospital record contained an entry that noted “? of penetration” and further stated (under the heading “clinical notes”) that “the patient thinks no vaginal penetration.”

We next summarize the procedural history of the case. Carol testified about the incident along the lines outlined above at a lengthy probable cause hearing in a District Court. She was cross-examined by counsel for each of the three defendants and was impeached with the information in her police statement and the hospital record. At this hearing, she indicated that Marrocco, while holding her down, had tried to insert his penis into her mouth but was unsuccessful, as she had “shut her mouth” and turned her head away. In cross-examination by Marrocco’s counsel, she further testified as set forth in the margin. 2 At the close of the probable cause hearing the prosecutor indicated to the District Court judge that the Commonwealth was proceeding against Marrocco solely on a joint venture theory. 3

*486 The prosecutor secured indictments against the three men from a grand jury based on Carol’s testimony of the incident. Petras moved to dismiss the indictments against him due to the failure of the prosecutor to advise the grand jury of the information (quoted above) contained in Carol’s written statement to the police and in the hospital record. After a hearing, a Superior Court judge (not the judge whose order led to this appeal) allowed Petras’ motion and dismissed the indictments against him without prejudice. The judge reasoned, based on the decided cases as he viewed them, that the grand jury should have been apprised of the inconsistencies, which, he concluded, might have affected their decision to indict Petras.

The prosecutor decided not to appeal from the dismissal because of the time that the appeal would have taken and because reindictment had been permitted. He entered nolle prosequis on the indictments against Marrocco and Camirand and went before another grand jury with Carol to secure new indictments against all three defendants. Carol’s testimony before the second grand jury repeated her testimony at the previous proceedings, except with respect to Marrocco’s conduct. Specifically, she testified, as set forth below, that Marrocco had in fact forced his penis into her mouth. 4 Despite this addition to her testimony, the prosecutor did not allude to Carol’s probable cause testimony about Marrocco’s attempt to penetrate her. See note 2, supra. However, the prosecutor did bring out the inconsistencies concerning the actions of Petras thought material by the first judge. Based on Carol’s testimony, the second grand jury voted the indictments at issue.

The three defendants next moved to dismiss the second round of indictments on the ground that the integrity of the grand *487 jury had been impaired because the prosecutor (a) had not sufficiently cured the deficiencies described by the first judge and (b) had improperly withheld Carol’s testimony at the probable cause hearing that Marrocco had not violated her. 5

After a hearing, a second Superior Court judge dismissed the indictments charging each defendant with aggravated rape and indecent assault and battery. The judge essentially concluded that the defendants had demonstrated that the integrity of the second grand jury had been compromised. The judge deemed the new fact pertaining to Marrocco, as testified to by Carol before the second grand jury, when left unbalanced by her inconsistent testimony at the probable cause hearing, a significant distortion caused by the prosecutor’s intentional withholding of exculpatory evidence. The judge further concluded that the failure to inform the grand jury of this inconsistency, considered with the fact that Petras’ indictments had already been dismissed once, called for dismissal with prejudice of the aggravated rape and indecent assault charges against all defendants as the only appropriate sanction. 6 We do not agree with these conclusions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
529 N.E.2d 404, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 483, 1988 Mass. App. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-petras-massappct-1988.