Commonwealth v. Rubio

540 N.E.2d 189, 27 Mass. App. Ct. 506, 1989 Mass. App. LEXIS 368
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 28, 1989
Docket88-P-914
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 540 N.E.2d 189 (Commonwealth v. Rubio) 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. Rubio, 540 N.E.2d 189, 27 Mass. App. Ct. 506, 1989 Mass. App. LEXIS 368 (Mass. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Greaney, C.J.

A jury in the Superior Court found the defendant guilty of trafficking in cocaine. We conclude that a statement of the defendant, admitted in evidence at the trial over objection, was obtained by the police in violation of the defendant’s rights under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). Consequently, there must be a new trial. The admissibility of a second statement will need to be decided at a voir dire preceding retrial.

The Commonwealth presented the following evidence. About 3:40 p.m. on June 26, 1987, six members of a police drug task force, led by Sergeant Paul J. Regan and Lieutenant James Jajuga of the State police, executed a search warrant for the first-floor apartment at 41 Cross Street in Lawrence. The warrant authorized the police to search for cocaine and related drug implements, and it described the apartment’s occupant as an “[ujnknown Latino Male 5'6", 165 pounds, approximately 29-31, short hair, medium complexion, medium build.” The officers knocked on the door of the apartment and received no response. After hearing noises from inside, they entered. A radio was on and no one was at home.

The apartment contained four rooms. In the living room, the officers seized notebooks and papers containing figures. One of the notebooks had the defendant’s name in it. A search of the kitchen uncovered a strainer and four plastic bags next to it. From a room without any furniture, the police seized an Ohaus triple-beam scale. This room also contained a postcard dated June 17, 1987, from a cablevision company addressed to the defendant at 41 Cross Street. The postcard confirmed an appointment with the defendant on June 19, 1987. An envelope, containing a birth certificate for one Tammy Nunez and some photographs, was also seized.

In the bedroom closet, the officers found a man’s jacket with a bag of “white rocky powder” in the pocket. The powder was determined to be 21.24 grams of cocaine. From the same closet, the officers seized a white pocketbook containing three bags of “white rocky substance” which was later found to be *508 179.83 grams of cocaine. Additionally, the bedroom contained a Western Union money transfer application dated June 19 in the defendant’s name.

While the officers were conducting the search, two Hispanic men knocked on the door of the apartment and were admitted. Both individuals were questioned, and both stated that they did not live in the apartment. A weapon was seized from one of the individuals, and he was placed under arrest. The other man was also detained.

Shortly thereafter, the defendant, accompanied by another Hispanic male, opened the apartment door with keys in his hand. The defendant identified himself to the police and admitted that he lived in the apartment. Lieutenant Jajuga brought him to a chair in the kitchen where he was shown the search warrant and the cocaine found in the jacket pocket. The defendant was placed under arrest. Sergeant Regan next produced the cocaine in the pocketbook and showed it to the defendant. Upon seeing the cocaine the defendant stated: “It’s mine. My . . . girlfriend Tammy had nothing to do with it.” The defendant was advised of his Miranda rights in English and acknowledged that he understood his rights. The defendant also signed a “Miranda card” in Spanish. Regan then “asked him [the defendant] once again” whether the cocaine was his. The defendant responded by stating once again: “It was mine. It is not my girlfriend’s.” 1 While this occurred, the defendant was surrounded by several officers.

The defendant’s testimony at trial about the incident was materially different. The defendant testified that he had never been to the apartment before. When he first entered the apartment he was immediately grabbed and frisked by the officers, *509 shown the weapon which had been taken earlier and asked: “What is this [weapon]? How do you explain this?” The defendant stated that when he told the officer that he did not know what the officer was talking about he was “grabbed” and “push[ed]” down into a chair in the kitchen, called a “liar” and a “little punk,” and told to “shut up.” The defendant stated that Sergeant Regan then produced the pocketbook containing the cocaine and asked: “How [do] you explain this?” The defendant indicated that he did not know what the officers were talking about. He was then “grabbed" and had his face pushed. One of the officers purportedly told the defendant: “This is yours. This stuff here is yours. Don’t lie to me.” The defendant responded by telling the officer to “remove your hands off my body. I don’t have to answer to you any question.” The defendant also testified that “Regan just stood there holding the pocketbook. Like he tried to put it in my face, tried to get words out of me, scaring me. But I was in the service and I was not scared or whatever the conversation was. The only thing I didn’t want was the police to hurt me because I didn’t have anything to do with anything or if I say what they didn’t like, so I kept my mouth shut.” The defendant’s testimony concluded with further denials of living in the apartment or knowing anything about the cocaine in either the jacket or the pocketbook.

1. The matter of the defendant’s first admission about the cocaine in the pocketbook came up in the testimony of Sergeant Regan. Regan was asked by the prosecutor what the defendant had said when he was confronted with this cocaine. The defendant’s trial counsel 2 objected on the ground that the defendant “ha[d] not been advised of his rights” when he had become “a focus of [the] investigation.” The defendant’s trial counsel then asked the judge for a voir dire on whether the defendant had made the statement knowingly, that is, with knowledge and understanding of his Miranda rights. 3 The judge overruled *510 the objection and denied the request for a voir dire, commenting that “[tjhis is [not] a custodial interrogation. He doesn’t have to be advised [of his rights].”

The judge’s ruling was based on the state of the case then before him. The prosecutor had made a short opening statement which outlined the Commonwealth’s expected proof in very general terms but which contained no mention of any admissions by. the defendant. Sergeant Regan had been called as the Commonwealth’s first witness and had given brief testimony in direct examination about the execution of the search warrant, what had been seized, and the defendant’s arrival at the apartment. Regan’s testimony did not disclose that the defendant had identified himself as living in the apartment or that he had been placed under arrest shortly after his entry. Up to the point of the objection by the defendant’s trial counsel, Regan’s testimony left unclear what connection the defendant had with the apartment and the drugs and drug paraphernalia that had been seized. Based on the prosecutor’s opening statement and the testimony of Sergeant Regan, the judge might have thought that, at the time the defendant appeared in the apartment, the police had no clear picture of his involvement and, as a result, that the police were still operating at an investigatory stage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
540 N.E.2d 189, 27 Mass. App. Ct. 506, 1989 Mass. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-rubio-massappct-1989.