Commonwealth v. Salyer

996 N.E.2d 488, 84 Mass. App. Ct. 346, 2013 Mass. App. LEXIS 154
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 4, 2013
DocketNo. 12-P-128
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 996 N.E.2d 488 (Commonwealth v. Salyer) 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. Salyer, 996 N.E.2d 488, 84 Mass. App. Ct. 346, 2013 Mass. App. LEXIS 154 (Mass. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Agnes, J.

Following a trial by jury, the defendant, Angelina Salyer, was found guilty of making a false report of a crime in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 13A, and criminal harassment in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 43A(o). We conclude that because her attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel in failing to object and move to strike certain inadmissible evidence, there must be a new trial on the charge of criminal harassment.

Background. The jury could have found that beginning in 2001, the defendant and Richard Dicato were involved in a relationship and had two children together. At the end of their relationship, a dispute arose over custody of the children. A bitterly contested custody case ensued in the Probate Court and was ongoing in the fall of 2008. At some point in 2007, the defendant married Jeffrey Salyer (Jeffrey). During 2008, Jeffrey and the defendant lived in a home on Mason Road in Townsend. They remained married to each other at the time of the trial in the present case. Jeffrey frequently served as a babysitter for the defendant’s two children. In the fall of 2008, the defendant’s daughter accused Jeffrey of molesting her. Although the allegations were not supported and Jeffrey was promptly cleared, the Probate Court changed the schedule for the defendant’s visits with her children, who were living with Dicato. Prior to the accusations against Jeffrey, the defendant had had the right to unsupervised visits with her children twice a week, including whole weekends; after the allegations, she was only permitted to visit with her children one day per week, the visits had to be supervised, and Jeffrey could not be present.

1. Evidence related to the false report of a crime charge. On the evening of Saturday, November 22, 2008, the defendant and her mother went to the Townsend police department. The defendant told Officer Kimberly Mattson that she had received a threatening electronic mail message (e-mail) that day from her former boyfriend, Dicato. She gave Officer Mattson a printout of the e-mail message and signed a statement. She told Officer Mattson that she was in fear for her safety. This alleged e-mail, which was admitted in evidence at trial, is from a Yahoo! e-mail [348]*348address: “rdl977@yahoo.com” (hereafter, rdl977).1 In her statement, the defendant told the police that she knew that the e-mail was from Dicato because “[t]his is his normal e-mail we have used for years.” However, Dicato testified that for more than ten years he had used a different Yahoo! e-mail address, namely, “rdl977us@yahoo.com” (hereafter, rdl977us). He told the jury that he had never used the address rdl977 and did not send the threatening e-mail. A business record from Yahoo! relating to e-mail address rdl977us was received in evidence without objection. This record indicated that e-mail address rdl977us was registered by “Mr. Richard Dicato” (including a specific residential address in Fitchburg), correctly identified his tattoo business (“Flesh by Design”) and the business address, included home and business telephone numbers, and was accompanied by Internet log-in activity for that e-mail address from August 1, 2008, through November 26, 2008, as well as from June 9, 2009, to June 7, 2010. The Commonwealth also offered a Yahoo! business record for the e-mail address (rdl977) on the printout provided to Officer Mattson by the defendant and alleged by her to be from Dicato. This e-mail address was registered by an individual in Crawfordsville, Indiana, who has no apparent connection to this case. This record also indicates that no one has ever logged in to the Internet using this address.

[349]*3492. Evidence related to the criminal harassment charge. Dicato testified that he has owned a tattoo business known as “Flesh by Design” since 2007. He had a “page” on the social networking (or “social media”2) Web site MySpace for his business. In October, 2008, shortly after the allegations of child abuse against Jeffrey surfaced and during the time the defendant and Dicato were engaged in the custody dispute in the Probate Court, Dicato received a message through a different MySpace page purporting to be the MySpace page for his business and titled “Flesh by Design is dirty.” The message alleged that his business did poor tattoo work and stated that if Dicato were ever seen again, “they [unspecified] would either beat [him] up or kill [him].” Dicato called the police after he received this communication. An investigation followed. The police questioned the defendant, who denied any involvement. This threatening MySpace message was not itself offered as an exhibit and is not part of the record. Over repeated objections, Dicato and Townsend police Detective Gilbert testified extensively about the contents of this message. In particular, Detective Gilbert testified that based on information contained in this threatening MySpace message, records were subpoenaed from MySpace. These records contained an identification (ID) number that the police were able to “trace, and it came back that it was a Com-cast [Internet service provider] account . . . .” The MySpace record was admitted in evidence over the defendant’s objection. It refers to a user ID number (422885246) associated with an account in the name of “John” (first name) and “John” (last name) with a Fitchburg address, a particular Internet Protocol (IP) address,3 and an e-mail address of “tattoo_freak78@yahoo. com.” From Detective Gilbert’s testimony the jury could infer that this MySpace record was a link in a chain of evidence tying the threatening MySpace message received by Dicato to the [350]*350defendant.4 Defense counsel moved to exclude the MySpace record on the ground that the Commonwealth failed to link the threatening MySpace page to the defendant. The court ruled that the Commonwealth should have the opportunity to supply the missing foundation evidence through the testimony of later witnesses. There is no documentary evidence in this case that links this user ID number (422885246) to the defendant.

The jury also heard that later in October, some clients notified Dicato of messages on MySpace from alleged customers of his business on what appeared to be a facsimile of Dicato’s “Flesh by Design” page. He testified that in all he found seventeen pages of these MySpace messages that were disparaging of him and his tattoo business. Dicato printed them and showed them to the police. As he had never received a complaint from a customer and in view of the ongoing custody case, he felt “weird,” experienced stress, and could not sleep. At trial, he produced nine of these MySpace messages consisting of a total of twelve sheets each appearing to have originated from a different IP address.

The defense filed a pretrial motion in limine to exclude this evidence and objected when it was offered at trial. The judge admitted the twelve pages of disparaging MySpace pages and messages in evidence de bene based on the Commonwealth’s representation that the testimony of Jeffrey would provide the missing link connecting this evidence to the defendant.5

In his testimony, Jeffrey, the defendant’s husband, denied [351]*351responsibility for any of the MySpace messages concerning Dicato or his business and the threatening e-mail allegedly sent to the defendant.6 Jeffrey also testified, without objection, to several private conversations he had had with the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
996 N.E.2d 488, 84 Mass. App. Ct. 346, 2013 Mass. App. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-salyer-massappct-2013.