Commonwealth v. Ronald Boyer

812 N.E.2d 1235, 61 Mass. App. Ct. 582, 2004 Mass. App. LEXIS 900
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 9, 2004
DocketNo. 02-P-1241
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 812 N.E.2d 1235 (Commonwealth v. Ronald Boyer) 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. Ronald Boyer, 812 N.E.2d 1235, 61 Mass. App. Ct. 582, 2004 Mass. App. LEXIS 900 (Mass. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Greenberg, J.

Can the Commonwealth sustain its burden of proving that the defendant is a sexually dangerous person in a G. L. c. 123A proceeding, solely by relying on an expert’s opinion submitted at an earlier probable cause hearing and recanted at trial? We hold that it may not.1

The defendant timely moved for a directed verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. We examine the record for evidence from which a reasonable inference could be drawn [583]*583in favor of the Commonwealth, without weighing that evidence. See Forlano v. Hughes, 393 Mass. 502, 504 (1984); Roddy & McNulty Ins. Agency, Inc. v. A.A. Proctor & Co., 16 Mass. App. Ct. 525, 530 (1983).

When, on August 23, 2000, the district attorney for Bristol County filed a petition to temporarily commit the defendant to the Massachusetts Treatment Center (treatment center) as a sexually dangerous person, see G. L. c. 123A, §§ 2, 12(6), about one month remained to be served on his three-year sentence. The defendant had been sentenced on September 22, 1998, after pleading guilty to five counts of indecent assault and battery on his two stepchildren.2 The offenses occurred in 1997. The children, a thirteen year old boy and a twelve year old girl, alleged that the defendant had engaged them in acts of mutual masturbation, digital rape, and other inappropriate sexual behaviors. The matters were reported to the Department of Social Services (DSS), which in turn notified the Swansea police department.

At the time he committed the crimes, the defendant was employed by a private security company. He was a veteran of the Navy and a member of the Navy Reserves. He also had been employed as a warehouse worker. At thirty-nine years of age, he had been married to his wife, the children’s biological mother, for about six years. Most of his life had been spent in Swansea. Other than the instant offenses, he had no serious criminal history. He claimed to have been sexually assaulted at the age of thirteen by two Boy Scout leaders.

About four months after his imprisonment at M.C.I., Concord, he was transferred to the treatment center. While participating in the treatment center’s programs, the defendant’s evaluations ranged from “fair to poor.” Even so, with the exception of a single disciplinary report for lying to correctional staff, his course of incarceration and treatment were incident free.

In his petition to commit the defendant as a sexually danger-[584]*584pus person, the district attorney reiterated some of the details of the underlying offenses involving the defendant’s stepchildren and claimed that the defendant “ha[d] not yet (as of December 1999) progressed to Stage IV of the [Sexual Offender Training Program].” At the time the petition was filed, it was based on the defendant’s plea of guilty to five counts of indecent assault and battery involving his stepchildren and the expectation that additional evidence of his sexual dangerousness would be provided. Contained in the petition was a prayer seeking an examination by two qualified examiners pursuant to the statute.

Prior to the probable cause hearing required by § 12(c) of the statute,3 the district attorney retained Dr. Paul Zeizel to conduct a preliminary evaluation of the defendant. Zeizel was a licensed psychologist, qualified under the statute, but his examination was not one that follows after a finding of probable cause under § 13(a) of the statute.

On November 10, 2000, Zeizel met with the defendant at the treatment center. After Zeizel warned the defendant that anything the defendant told him would not be privileged or confidential, see Commonwealth v. Lamb, 365 Mass. 265, 269-270 (1974), the defendant, on advice of counsel, chose not to speak with Zeizel. Consequently, Zeizel’s seven-page report, dated November 27, 2000, was based only on his review of records provided by the district attorney’s office. Those records included the instant petition, a Swansea police report dated [585]*585December 11, 1997, a child abuse and neglect report dated November 19, 1997, a correctional department classification form prepared on December 17, 1999, and records procured from the Massachusetts criminal history systems board dated March 23, 2000.

Relying on what he candidly described as “nominal” information, the sum and substance of Zeizel’s report was that the defendant had symptoms consistent with pedophilia and that he “remains a sexually dangerous person.” In January of 2001, based on that report, a judge of the Superior Court found probable cause to believe that the defendant was sexually dangerous and temporarily committed him to the treatment center for examination and diagnosis pursuant to G. L. c. 123A, § 13(a). During the ensuing sixty-day commitment, the defendant was examined and interviewed by two qualified examiners, Dr. Niklos Tomich and Dr. Michael J. Murphy. In lengthy and detailed reports filed with the court, they each concluded, but for different reasons, that the defendant was not a sexually dangerous person under the statute.

Tomich opined that the defendant exhibits symptoms of pedophilia, as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, but that his treatment and rehabilitation had progressed to the point where there was no behavioral problem that would require confinement to a secure facility. He emphasized the defendant’s positive relationship with his wife and family and the fact that upon his release, DSS would provide “a safe and orderly transition of [the defendant] back in the household” prior to any reunification with his family.

Murphy did not think that the defendant’s profile met the criteria for a diagnosis of pedophilia because his offenses involved pubescent children and were confined to his two stepchildren. He saw the defendant’s profile as “primarily consistent with incest type of finding” and revealing “no predilection for deviant sexual arousal.”

On April 27, 2001, a jury trial commenced. Another Superior Court judge presided at the trial. Tomich and Murphy were called by the Commonwealth to testify in their capacity as qualified examiners. They adhered to their written reports that, in their respective opinions, the defendant was not a sexually [586]*586dangerous person. In addition, the Commonwealth called Zeizel as an expert witness. Over the defendant’s objection, the written report that he had prepared on November 27, 2000, was admitted into evidence. However, in his testimony, Zeizel recanted the opinion that the defendant remained sexually dangerous and agreed with Tomich and Murphy that the defendant failed to meet the criteria for indefinite commitment to the treatment center. Zeizel still adhered to his diagnosis of pedophilia but, as a result of interviews with the defendant and his wife, did not think it likely that he would reoffend with the children.4 He also believed the defendant’s wife (the children’s biological mother) that the defendant had not digitally penetrated either child. The defendant had also provided Zeizel with some sex offender treatment reports that reenforced his changed opinion. These factors, along with becoming cognizant of the conditions of the defendant’s probation, led Zeizel to conclude that the defendant was not sexually dangerous as of the time of the jury trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
812 N.E.2d 1235, 61 Mass. App. Ct. 582, 2004 Mass. App. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-ronald-boyer-massappct-2004.