Commonwealth v. Santana

988 N.E.2d 825, 465 Mass. 270, 2013 WL 2302900, 2013 Mass. LEXIS 349
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 29, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 988 N.E.2d 825 (Commonwealth v. Santana) 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. Santana, 988 N.E.2d 825, 465 Mass. 270, 2013 WL 2302900, 2013 Mass. LEXIS 349 (Mass. 2013).

Opinion

Lenk, J.

In February, 2001, a Superior Court jury convicted the defendant on two indictments charging murder in the first degree on theories of deliberate premeditation, extreme atrocity or cruelty, and felony-murder. The jury also found the defendant guilty of armed assault with intent to murder, armed robbery, assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, armed [272]*272home invasion, and possession of a firearm without a license.1 The defendant appeals from his convictions and from the denial of his motion for a new trial.

The defendant claims that the admission of his oral and written statements to police on January 12 and January 24, 2000, violated his rights under the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, and that the statements should have been suppressed; that the prosecutor’s failure timely to disclose that a key witness had been unable to identify the defendant at voir dire violated his right to due process and mandates a new trial; and that the admission of evidence obtained by Massachusetts police based on a pawn ticket that had been seized by New Jersey police after the defendant’s arrest in that State violated his rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights and requires a new trial.

We reject the defendant’s claims, and, after review of the entire record pursuant to our responsibility under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, decline to exercise our power to reduce the defendant’s murder convictions to a lesser degree of guilt or to order a new trial.

Facts. We summarize the facts the jury could have found, reserving some details for discussion in connection with the specific issues raised.

Gregory Cautela, Sr.,2 and his friend, Abraham Candelario, were found shot to death in Gregory Sr.’s apartment in Holyoke on January 3, 2000. They had been sitting on sofas in the living room playing a PlayStation video game when they were shot in the head at close range;3 the game controllers were still in their hands when they were found, but the cover of the game system connected to the television was open and the game was missing. The bodies were discovered by Gregory Sr.’s seven year old [273]*273stepson, Edrike Roman, when he returned home from school. Edrike also found his four year old brother, Gregory Cantela, Jr., covered with blood, but conscious and crying, on the living room floor. Gregory Jr. had been in his bedroom watching a movie when he was shot in the neck and chest.4 *He called out for his father, who did not respond, and then rolled and dragged himself to the living room, where he saw his father apparently asleep. Gregory Jr. told Edrike that his father’s friend “Rev,” who had come over earlier and had been watching Gregory Sr. and Candelario play a video game, shot him.

Edrike picked up Gregory Jr. and carried him into the hallway, but could not carry him any further. He asked his friend Louie, who had been waiting to play with him after school and who was in the hallway outside the apartment, to get Louie’s mother, Maritza Mattei. While Mattei was attempting to comfort Gregory Jr. until medical help arrived, Gregory Jr. told her, “My father’s friend shot my father, and he shot my father’s friend, and he hit me in the face with the gun;” Mattei said the friend’s name sounded like “Riv.”5 When paramedics arrived, within a few minutes of Mattei’s 911 call, Gregory Jr. begged paramedics, “Don’t let him shoot me again.” When asked, “Who did this to you?” he replied either that “Rev” or “Reb” had shot him.6

As Gregory Jr. was being transported to a hospital, the boys’ mother, Elizabeth Garcia, telephoned from work; she had tried to reach Gregory Sr., whom she usually spoke with at lunchtime, several times that afternoon, but no one had answered. Edrike asked her to come home right away because Gregory Sr. and Candelario were dead and Gregory Jr. had been injured. He told Garcia that Gregory Jr. said that “Rev” shot him. When Garcia arrived home, she told police that “Rev” was a friend of her husband, and that she had known “Rev” for about five years. [274]*274She went to the police station where she identified a photograph of the defendant as the person she knew as “Rev,” and drove with police to several locations where “Rev” might be found.

Gregory Jr. suffered multiple wounds to his neck and chest as a result of a single gunshot. On the day after the shooting, a State trooper and a Holyoke police officer spoke with Gregory Jr. at the hospital; he told the officers that “Rev” shot him. The officers spoke with Gregory Jr. again on January 20, 2000, at another hospital where he had been transferred for rehabilitation. He identified a photograph of the defendant as the person who shot him, circled the photograph, and wrote his name on it.

The day after, the shooting, Garcia asked police about a gold chain that she had given Gregory Sr. as a birthday gift and that he wore every day; he had been wearing it when she left for work on the morning of the shooting. The chain was missing from her apartment and had not been returned with Gregory Sr.’s effects. Garcia described its distinctive “Cuban link” style and, on January 20, drew a picture of the chain, which police were unable to locate.

On the afternoon of the shooting, the defendant had planned to meet his sister Angelica Cruz outside a restaurant, and then to go shopping at a local mall; they had agreed to meet at 1:30 p.m., but the defendant was twenty minutes late.7 When they met, the defendant asked Cruz, who was with her young son, if she knew anyone in the area because he needed to use a bathroom. Cruz brought him to a friend’s house, where the defendant spent approximately fifteen minutes in the bathroom, then used it twice more before he and Cruz left. At the mall, the defendant bought Nike brand sneakers, put them on, and threw away the boots he had been wearing. He bought toys for Cruz’s son, clothing for his daughter, picture frames for Cruz, and a black, “puffy” coat for himself, paying in cash. While they were in the toy store, the defendant gave Cruz two used PlayStation video games. The defendant, Cruz, and her son ate in the food court and took pictures of themselves in a photo booth. [275]*275They then took a bus home, stopping en route to shop for groceries.

The defendant was unemployed at the time, had been using cocaine extensively in the previous weeks, and owed his drug connection several thousand dollars; because of the outstanding debt, the “connect” was refusing to supply the defendant with any more drugs. A few days before the shooting, the defendant had tried to sell a video game system to one of his friends for $500, saying he needed the money for a lawyer. In late December, the defendant and two acquaintances had seen Gregory Sr., who was believed by a number of his friends and acquaintances to be selling drugs, in his apartment with a large quantity of cash. Gregory Sr. was known generally to have cash readily available.

When Cruz and the defendant returned home, their mother told Cruz that the police had been looking for the defendant, and that he had to leave.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
988 N.E.2d 825, 465 Mass. 270, 2013 WL 2302900, 2013 Mass. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-santana-mass-2013.