Commonwealth v. Richard Dilworth

CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 2024
DocketSJC-13547
StatusPublished

This text of Commonwealth v. Richard Dilworth (Commonwealth v. Richard Dilworth) 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. Richard Dilworth, (Mass. 2024).

Opinion

SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT

COMMONWEALTH vs. RICHARD DILWORTH

Docket: SJC-13547
Dates: May 6, 2024 - September 6, 2024
Present: Budd, C.J., Gaziano, Kafker, Wendlandt, Georges, Dewar, & Wolohojian, JJ.
County: Suffolk
Keywords: Social Media. Electronic Surveillance. Constitutional Law, Equal protection of laws. Selective Prosecution. Evidence, Selective prosecution, Disclosure of evidence, Profile, Statistics. Practice, Criminal, Disclosure of identity of informer, Disclosure of identity of surveillance location, Dismissal. Firearms.

            Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court Department on June 12 and 14, 2018.

            A pretrial motion for discovery was heard by Peter B. Krupp, J., and a motion to dismiss was heard by Robert L. Ullmann, J.

            The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for direct appellate review.

            Caitlin Fitzgerald, Assistant District Attorney (Elisabeth Martino, Assistant District Attorney, also present) for the Commonwealth.

            Joshua Raisler Cohn, Committee for Public Counsel Services (Matthew Spurlock, Committee for Public Counsel Services, also present) for the defendant.

            Maithreyi Nandagopalan, of New Mexico, Isabel Burlingame, Jessica J. Lewis, & Mason A. Kortz, for Michael G. Bennett & others, amici curiae, submitted a brief.

            Luke Ryan, Molly R. Strehorn, Melissa Celli, Joshua M. Daniels, & Katharine Naples-Mitchell, for Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers & another, amici curiae, submitted a brief.

            GAZIANO, J.  We address in this appeal whether a Superior Court judge abused his discretion in dismissing with prejudice indictments charging unlawful possession of a firearm and related offenses to sanction the Commonwealth for its refusal to comply with a discovery order.  The discovery dispute arises from the defendant's three-year effort to obtain information relating to the Boston police department's undercover monitoring of social media accounts on Snapchat belonging to suspected gang members.  Discovery was relevant and material, the defendant contended, to challenge a discriminatory investigatory practice on equal protection grounds.  At issue is a discovery order, dated June 24, 2021, that required the Commonwealth to disclose "the user icons or bitmojis, and other user names" used by police to infiltrate and monitor Snapchat social media accounts.  A judge determined that this information would "persuasively and visually" demonstrate the racial compositions of individuals targeted for Snapchat monitoring. 

            Relying on the governmental interests protected by the surveillance location and confidential informant privileges, the Commonwealth and Boston police department (BPD) refused to comply with the order.  The Commonwealth argued also that social media surveillance was not a type of police investigatory practice subject to equal protection scrutiny under Commonwealth v. Long, 485 Mass. 711, 724-725 (2020), and Commonwealth v. Lora, 451 Mass. 425, 436-438 (2008).  A judge granted the defendant's motion to dismiss with prejudice, finding that the defendant was prejudiced by the government's deliberate refusal to produce court-ordered discovery.  The Commonwealth appealed, and we granted its application for direct appellate review.  Discerning no abuse of discretion, we affirm.[1] 

            1.  Background.  In October 2017, a BPD officer assigned to the youth violence strike force (YVSF or gang unit) submitted a "friend" request through the Snapchat social media application to follow an account with the username "youngrick44."[2]  The officer did not identify himself as a police officer, and he did not use either the name or photograph of anyone known to the defendant.  The defendant, as "youngrick44," accepted the request and unknowingly became "friends" with the gang unit.  In view of his Snapchat friends, the defendant posted seven video recordings (videos) brandishing what appeared to be a firearm.  

            On January 11, 2018, YVSF officers viewed an eighth Snapchat video of the defendant in possession of a firearm.  Police then located the defendant seated in a sport utility vehicle (SUV) parked behind his residence.  After removing the defendant from the SUV, officers found a .40 caliber Smith and Wesson pistol loaded with twenty-six rounds tucked into his waistband. 

            While released on bail for the January 2018 gun offense, the defendant was again spotted on a Snapchat video on May 11, 2018, in possession of what appeared to be a firearm.  Hours later, officers tracked the defendant to a location outside his residence.  A pat frisk resulted in the seizure of a loaded nine millimeter Ruger handgun with an obliterated serial number equipped with a large capacity magazine.  In June 2018, a grand jury returned indictments charging the defendant with two counts of unlawful possession of a firearm and related firearm offenses.[3] 

            From 2018 to 2021, the defendant filed three discovery motions seeking to develop a factual basis for an equal protection challenge to the BPD's use of undercover social media monitoring.  First, on October 31, 2018, the defendant moved for "selective prosecution" discovery of information concerning the alleged discriminatory use of "'Snapchat' as an investigatory tool."  More particularly, the defendant sought police reports generated by the BPD from June 1, 2016, to October 1, 2018, "for investigations that involve the use of 'Snapchat' social media monitoring."  The discovery request excluded investigations "where the police have not yet arrested and charged the suspect" and proposed a protective order limiting the sharing of any information gleaned from the reports beyond statistical data about the race of targeted individuals. 

            In support, the defendant submitted an affidavit from his attorney stating that counsel had conducted an "informal survey" of the defense bar responsible for roughly one-quarter of cases prosecuted in Suffolk County.  The questions included, "if lawyers had 'Snapchat' cases, what the race of the defendant was, and whether the defendant was the person being targeted by the investigation."  Counsel received responses identifying twenty such cases; of those cases, seventeen defendants (eighty-five percent) were Black and three (fifteen percent) were Hispanic. 

            A Superior Court judge allowed the defendant's motion for selective enforcement discovery limited to police reports referencing the use of Snapchat as an investigatory tool for a one-year time period between August 1, 2017, and July 31, 2018.  The order, issued on January 18, 2019, excepted ongoing investigations and investigations related to human trafficking, murder, and sexual assault.  Recognizing that the reduction of gun violence in Boston is an important law enforcement priority and that undercover social media monitoring is "a valuable law enforcement tool," the judge nonetheless found that the defendant made an initial statistical showing of racial disparity under the then-existing Lora framework.  See Lora, 451 Mass. at 436-437.

            The Commonwealth sought interlocutory review under G. L.

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Commonwealth v. Richard Dilworth, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-richard-dilworth-mass-2024.