Commonwealth v. Sauve

27 Mass. L. Rptr. 479
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedNovember 4, 2010
DocketNo. 200901828L
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 479 (Commonwealth v. Sauve) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Sauve, 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 479 (Mass. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Feeley, Timothy Q., J.

In this case, the Commonwealth filed a petition pursuant to G.L.c. 123A, §§1 et seq., alleging that the respondent Donald Sauve (“Sauve”) is a sexually dangerous person. After an earlier judicial finding of probable cause, Sauve waived in writing his right to a jury trial [D. 15], and the matter was tried to the court without a jury on August 25, 26, and 30, 2010. At the conclusion of all the evidence, the court reserved on Sauve’s oral motion for directed verdict. Post-trial briefs were requested by the court and filed by both parties. Closing arguments and arguments on Sauve’s motion for direct verdict [D. 22] were held on October 25, 2010.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Sauve is a fifly-three-year-old man, bom in Salem, Massachusetts. He remains in contact with his mother and two brothers. He has no contact with his father, who was divorced from Sauve’s mother when Sauve was nine years old. Sauve was married from 1984 to 2007, but has no children. He remains in contact with his former wife. Sauve dropped out of school while in the tenth grade, after behavior problems, truancy issues, and poor academic performance. Sauve served in the National Guard from 1975 to 1981, and earned his GED in 1992. Substance abuse was present during his teens and early twenties, but does not appear to have been a significant problem in his later years. He has largely worked as a machinist since 1978, once working for the same employer for six to seven years.

Sauve’s criminal record is noteworthy for the number of non-contact sexual offenses for which he has been convicted. Starting in 1986, when he was twenly-nine, Sauve has been convicted of “open and gross” and/or “indecent exposure” eight times. Every one of [480]*480his open and gross convictions (seven in number) involved exposing his genitals and masturbating in front of one or more unsuspecting female persons.1 His most recent open and gross conviction was on February 25, 2005. He has been incarcerated on that charge, another earlier conviction, and a subsequent probation violation much of the time since early 2005. His latest release date was scheduled for March 25, 2010, but this proceeding was commenced before that date, and since that time Sauve has been in custody as a result of this case.

Starting with Sauve’s most recent sexual offense conviction, and working backwards, the record before the court reflects the following.

1. January 7, 2005, Sauve was convicted in Essex Superior Court of two counts of open and gross. He was sentenced to two and one-half years in the house of correction, followed by five years of probation. After serving his house of correction sentence, Sauve was violated on his probation and sentenced to two to three years in state prison.2 He was serving his state prison sentence when the SDP petition was filed in this case. A police report [Ex. 3] discloses the date of offense as July 26, 2004, with events occurring at a public beach in Marblehead, MA. Two female witnesses (ages 47 and 56) reported that Sauve exposed his penis to them, with his pants down, and masturbated in their view. Both women were reported to be shocked and upset. Sauve was on probation out of Essex Superior Court at the time on a prior conviction for open and gross.
2. On February 25, 2005, Sauve was convicted in Brighton District Court for open and gross and indecent exposure. He was sentenced to two years, and a six-month concurrent sentence, in the house of correction (both concurrent to the Essex Superior Court sentence). A police report [Ex. 5] discloses that the offenses occurred on July 23, 2004 (three days before the Marblehead offenses), on a bike path in the area of the Northeastern Universiiy boathouse. Sauve was on probation at the time out of Essex Superior Court. Police found Sauve sitting on a bench in his underwear, with his pants in his motor vehicle. Sauve admitted he was “jerking off.” A witness reported that she observed Sauve masturbating two nights in a row as she was on the river in a canoe.
3. On October 24, 2000, Sauve was convicted in Essex Superior Court of two counts of open and gross and one count of indecent exposure. He was sentenced to two years in the house of correction, followed by three years of probation. A police report [Ex. 6] discloses that the offenses occurred on August 9, 2000, at the Beach Club in Swampscott, MA. Two female club employees, both eighteen years old, reported that Sauve stood in the entrance to the men’s locker room, naked, waved a towel to get their attention, and masturbated. Sauve was on probation out of Middlesex Superior Court at the time, on an earlier open and gross conviction.
4. On December 14, 1999, Sauve was convicted in Middlesex Superior Court of open and gross. He received a five-year sentence of probation, was violated on October 24, 2000, and committed for an undisclosed period of time. The conduct appears to have occurred, based on the arraignment date in Malden District Court, on or about March 30, 1999. No police report is in evidence.
5. On August 12, 1992, Sauve was convicted of open and gross and indecent exposure in the Peabody Jury of Six Session. He received a sentence of one year in the house of correction, suspended for two years, on each charge, concurrent with each other. The conduct appears to have occurred, based on the arraignment date in Lynn District Court, on or about July 17, 1991. No police report is in evidence.
6. On March 18, 1991, Sauve was convicted in the Peabody Jury of Six Session of open and gross. He received a one-year house of correction sentence, suspended for three years, which was later turned into a committed sentence upon a violation of probation. According to a police report [Ex. 7], the conduct occurred on October 10, 1990. A female witness (age 67) flagged down a police cruiser and reported that a man (Sauve) was exposing and masturbating himself at the end of the beach.
7. On October 28, 1988, Sauve was convicted of open and gross in Salem District Court, and received a sixty-day sentence, suspended for two years. No police report is in evidence.
8. On August 14, 1987, Sauve was convicted of indecent exposure and received a one-year probationary sentence in the Salem Jury of Six Session. The conduct appears to have occurred, based on the arraignment date in Lynn District Court, on or about July 9, 1986. A later police report [Ex. 7], reflects that this offense occurred at Back Beach in Marblehead, where Sauve’s October 1990 offenses occurred. He received a one-year probationary sentence. No police report of this incident is in evidence.

None of the victims in the above case are reported to have been children. The youngest appear to have been the two eighteen-year-old females employed at the Beach Club. [¶3 above.] In his interview by one of the qualified examiners, Sauve estimated that he had been arrested ten times for exhibitionism, but that he had exposed himself twenty to thirty times beginning at the age of thirteen. [Ex. 11, p. 14.] Sauve, in a report to a qualified examiner, claimed that his youngest victim was sixteen, but that he did not know it at the time. [Ex. 11, p. 14.]

Sauve’s criminal record, beyond the above sex offenses, is fairly unremarkable. His 2000 and 2005 [481]*481Essex Superior Court open and gross convictions include possession of marijuana convictions as well.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Mass. L. Rptr. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-sauve-masssuperct-2010.