Commonwealth v. Richardson

94 N.E.3d 819, 479 Mass. 344
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 17, 2018
DocketSJC 12375
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 94 N.E.3d 819 (Commonwealth v. Richardson) 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. Richardson, 94 N.E.3d 819, 479 Mass. 344 (Mass. 2018).

Opinion

KAFKER, J.

*823 **345 The defendant, a medical marijuana patient, was arrested when police discovered twenty-two marijuana plants growing in his basement. After a jury trial, he was convicted of unlawful cultivation of marijuana and possession with intent to distribute marijuana. On appeal, he argues that (1) the criminal complaint and the search warrant lacked probable cause; (2) the jury instructions were in error; (3) the evidence was insufficient to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; and (4) the medical marijuana law's sixty-day supply limit is unconstitutionally vague as applied. For the reasons stated below, we reverse in part and affirm in part.

1. Background . The defendant, Joshua A. Richardson, was an unemployed tattoo artist living in Framingham at the time of his arrest. On July 2, 2013, he obtained a written certification from a qualifying physician that approved his use of medical marijuana to treat a number of medical conditions. The certification constituted a valid hardship cultivation registration permitting the defendant to grow up to ten ounces of marijuana every sixty days **346 for his personal, medical use. 1 Approximately two months later, on September 7, 2013, the defendant telephoned 911 to report a home invasion at his residence. The defendant told the 911 operator that three men had entered his home and "started beating the hell out of [him]."

Officer Wayne Jordan reported to the defendant's residence within a few minutes of receiving the dispatch. The defendant told Wayne that three men had broken into his house, one of whom had a gun. Approximately twenty officers arrived on scene, including a number of Framingham police vehicles; State police vehicles and canine units; a State police helicopter; and officers from surrounding towns. The police established a perimeter around the house to search for the home invaders. Framingham police Sergeant Michael Esposito assembled a team of officers to enter the defendant's home to determine whether the suspects were still inside. The team did not find anyone inside the house. However, Sergeant Esposito observed a pressure cooker and an autoclave 2 in the *824 kitchen. In a room on the first floor, Sergeant Esposito noticed "a fan and blower assembly with a hose feeding it air or taking air out." He observed a plastic container with aluminum trays with a brown leafy substance in them, which he described at trial as "some type of something growing in those trays." 3 He also found a blow torch and numerous plastic bags in the room.

Sergeant **347 Esposito learned from other officers on the team that they had found marijuana growing in the basement. At that point, Esposito ordered everyone out of the house and secured the premises. Once outside, Sergeant Esposito read the defendant the Miranda rights. The defendant indicated that he would not speak with police without his attorney present, and Esposito stopped asking him questions. However, the defendant then said, unprompted, that the police "only had the right to go in my house and look for ... the guys with the gun. I never gave you permission to look for drugs. This is fucked up." He indicated that he had a license to grow marijuana. At that point, the defendant was placed under arrest and searched. The police found $2,135 in cash in his pocket.

After the defendant was arrested, he was taken to the Framingham police station. He requested to speak with the detectives investigating his case. Detective Robert Lewis of the Framingham police department's narcotics unit brought the defendant into an interview room and read him the Miranda rights again. The defendant explained to the detective that he had recently been given a medical marijuana card and was growing marijuana under that registration, referring to the doctor's certification issued to him on July 2, 2013. On the morning of his arrest, he was in the basement pruning his marijuana plants when he heard a noise coming downstairs. He saw two individuals, one with a gun. He ran upstairs to the second-floor bedroom, and noticed a third man coming up the stairs toward him. He escaped the house and telephoned 911, using a cellular telephone borrowed from a passing bystander.

Pursuant to a search warrant, Framingham officers seized twenty-two plants ranging in height from one foot to three feet tall, fertilizer, pots, and soil from the basement. According to Officer Lewis, some of the plants were "in full bloom." 4 The plants were all located in the basement, in a tent designed for growing marijuana.

*825 The officers found two large five feet by three feet high intensity lights hanging over the marijuana plants, a ballast **348 system, 5 and other boxes of lights in the basement. There was a "fertilizer grow kit" in the basement as well, labeled, "Recipe for Success Starter Kit". In the room on the first floor that Sergeant Esposito had previously examined, they found a scale and plastic bags. 6 In the kitchen, they found fertilizer advertised for growing marijuana. Detective Lewis also testified that they found evidence of a tattoo business in the house, specifically a tattoo gun. However, he did not find any physical evidence that a home invasion had occurred or that anyone else had been in the house. Lewis further testified that the defendant's account of seeing a third man come up the stairs to the second floor was inconsistent with the layout of the house.

At trial, the defendant's former girl friend, who was dating and living with him at the time of his arrest, testified for the Commonwealth. The couple had known each other for fourteen months and had dated for eleven months when the defendant was arrested. When asked if the defendant was a regular marijuana user at the time of his arrest, she testified, "not that I noticed-maybe a couple times. I don't know what he did when I he [ sic ] was not around." She stated that he was not working at the time. She observed him leave the house from time to time but didn't know where he went. She worked five or six days per week, and when she came home the defendant was often sleeping, hidden in the back room on the first floor, or not home. She acknowledged that the defendant had tattoo equipment at the house, and that she saw him "do a couple of tattoos." She also testified that he was typically paid in cash by friends for giving them tattoos. In the whole time she dated the defendant, she could recall approximately six times that he said he was going to do work at a tattoo parlor. She did not know whether his tattoo equipment included the pressure cooker or autoclave found in the house.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.E.3d 819, 479 Mass. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-richardson-mass-2018.