Commonwealth v. Reaves

750 N.E.2d 464, 434 Mass. 383, 2001 Mass. LEXIS 338
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 21, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 750 N.E.2d 464 (Commonwealth v. Reaves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Reaves, 750 N.E.2d 464, 434 Mass. 383, 2001 Mass. LEXIS 338 (Mass. 2001).

Opinion

Sosman, J.

The defendant, Timothy Reaves, was convicted of murder in the first degree for the drive-by shooting of fourteen year old Daniel Correia.1 The jury specified that they convicted the defendant on a theory of joint venture.2 On appeal, the defendant claims that the judge erred in (1) allowing the Commonwealth to introduce statements of a coventurer; (2) denying his motion for a required finding of not guilty; (3) failing to clarify that malice for purposes of deliberately premeditated murder was limited to first prong malice; and (4) allowing the jury to continue deliberating after a jury poll found the jury’s original verdict was not unanimous. He also requests that we use our plenary power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to enter a finding of not guilty or to reduce the conviction to murder in the second degree. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the conviction and decline to exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.

1. Facts. Viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the evidence was as follows. At around 3 p.m. on April 15, 1994, the defendant and three companions (Scott Rose, Richard Hazard, and Michael Coull) came to Magnet Park in New Bedford to buy drugs. They approached Joseph Correia (the brother of the victim), and Rose asked Correia if he had a “bundle of dope [heroin].” Correia said that he did. However, when the defendant pulled out some money to proceed with the transaction, Correia snatched the money from the defendant’s hands and told him “there ain’t no drugs around here, you got beat for your money.”3

During this exchange, three of Correia’s companions came [385]*385over, one of whom (Landon Amum) was acquainted with the defendant. The defendant, apparently offended by Correia’s treatment, told Amum, “Tell this kid [Correia] who I am. I’m from the old school.” Other witnesses recalled more remarks in a similar vein (“Stop trying to play me.” “Tell them I’m not to be fucked with.” “I ain’t no joke”). One of Correia’s friends then advised Correia to give the defendant his money back, observing that the defendant was probably unaware of the efforts to end drag selling in the park. Correia handed the money back.

This gesture did not mollify the defendant. He pulled out more money and said, “If you want to beat me, beat me right.” The defendant then began arguing with another of Correia’s companions, Shane Amum. The argument ended abmptly when Shane Amum punched the defendant in the jaw, knocking him unconscious. The money flew out of the defendant’s hand, and was taken by the various onlookers.

Scott Rose then picked up the defendant, carried him to his car, and placed him in the back seat, still unconscious. Rose threatened, “We’ll be back to spray it up.” He was also heard asking the others, “Who got the strap [gun]?” Landon Amum testified that he saw the defendant “coming through” as the four prepared to leave. As they left, the men in the car, including the defendant, repeated the threat, “We’ll be back.”

Two hours later, the defendant, Rose, Coull, and Hazard arrived at the home of Patricia Chaney and William Watson in Taunton, some twenty-five miles away from Magnet Park. Chaney was home, and told the men that Watson would be returning shortly. When Watson arrived, Rose met him in the driveway and said, “I need a favor.” The defendant, whose face was still bloodied from the earlier blow, went to the bathroom to clean up. Rose and Watson proceeded into the parlor, at which point Rose told Watson, “I need one of your guns. All of my boys are packing and I don’t have one.” Rose also told Watson, “Don’t dis me in front of my friends.” Watson went to get the key to his gun cabinet. When Watson returned to the parlor, Hazard was there with Rose. Rose then explained to Watson that “one of his boys got in trouble in New Bedford [386]*386and he was going to straighten it out. Nobody does that to one of his boys.”4 Watson removed a shotgun and some shells from the gun cabinet and placed them on the couch. Hazard indicated that he was familiar with that type of gun and that he would know how to load and use it.

Patricia Chaney testified that the defendant and Coull soon joined the others in the parlor, and that all four men were in the parlor with William Watson for ten to fifteen minutes. At one point, Chaney went into the parlor to get her children.5 Rose, Hazard, Coull, and the defendant were all there. The gun and shells were lying on the couch. A short while later, she saw the four men emerge from the parlor with the gun. They concealed the weapon in a plastic trash bag and left the house carrying the concealed shotgun.

Around 7 p.m that evening, the defendant, Rose, Coull, and Hazard returned to Magnet Park in Rose’s car. Rose was driving. Hazard was in the front passenger seat with the shotgun. Coull was sitting behind the driver, and the defendant was sitting behind Hazard. The two in the front had bandanas pulled over their faces. The men in the back seat wore sunglasses and caps.

Many people were still outside in front of the housing development adjacent to the park, including Joseph Correia and the companions who had been with him during the confrontation earlier that afternoon. Correia was sitting on the hood of a parked car. His younger brother, Daniel Correia, was sitting on the trunk of the same car.

As Rose drove up the street toward Joseph Correia’s group, gunshots rang out from the car. Two weapons were firing, one out the front driver’s side window6 and another out the rear [387]*387driver’s side window.7 As Joseph Correia ducked behind the parked car, he was shot in the leg. Another shot hit Daniel Correia, who fell to the ground. Other shots were fired in the general direction of the housing development striking a car, a door, and windows as high as the third floor. Joseph and Daniel Correia were the only two people hit. Daniel died shortly thereafter of a single bullet wound through the heart.

The car carrying the gunmen sped from the scene, but was followed by a man on a motorcycle. Specific information about the car, including its whereabouts and direction, were soon relayed to the police. As police cars came into view of Rose’s vehicle, the driver in the car behind Rose saw a black object thrown out one of the passenger side windows. The witness later brought police back to the spot, where they retrieved a nine millimeter handgun. A ballistics expert opined that the bullet taken from Daniel Correia’s body had been fired from that same handgun.

Rose led police on a chase with speeds in excess of one hundred miles an hour, breaking through a police roadblock in Taunton. The chase ended when Rose’s vehicle crashed into another car. Hazard got out of the front passenger side and attempted to flee on foot. Rose was slumped over the steering wheel. Coull had been ejected part way out the rear driver’s side window. The defendant was in the rear passenger seat, having suffered a spinal fracture.8 As police came upon the accident scene immediately following the crash, an officer saw a shotgun thrown out a passenger side window. The shotgun was later identified as the one Rose had borrowed from William Watson earlier that evening.

2. Statements of a joint venturer. The defendant objected to [388]

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Bluebook (online)
750 N.E.2d 464, 434 Mass. 383, 2001 Mass. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-reaves-mass-2001.