Commonwealth v. Sullivan

CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 16, 2023
DocketSJC 13353
StatusPublished

This text of Commonwealth v. Sullivan (Commonwealth v. Sullivan) 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. Sullivan, (Mass. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1 Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557- 1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us

SJC-13353

COMMONWEALTH vs. JOSEPH SULLIVAN (and a companion case1).

Hampden. February 6, 2023. - May 16, 2023.

Present: Budd, C.J., Gaziano, Lowy, Cypher, Kafker, Wendlandt, & Georges, JJ.

Misleading a Police Officer. Grand Jury. Constitutional Law, Grand jury, Indictment.

Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court Department on August 5, 2019.

Motions to dismiss were heard by Mark D. Mason, J.

The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative transferred the cases from the Appeals Court.

Jared B. Cohen, Assistant Attorney General (Stephen J. Carley & Dean A. Mazzone, Assistant Attorneys General, also present) for the Commonwealth. Daniel D. Kelly for Joseph Sullivan. Edward B. Fogarty for Derrick Gentry-Mitchell.

1 Commonwealth vs. Derrick Gentry-Mitchell. 2

WENDLANDT, J. The allegations in this case center on an

alleged cover-up of an April 2015 altercation between off-duty

Springfield police department (SPD) officers and four Black men

(victims) near Nathan Bill's Bar & Restaurant in Springfield

(Nathan Bill's). The victims were injured, at least one

severely so; the Commonwealth contends that the off-duty

officers assaulted the victims following a verbal argument at

the bar. Investigations of the alleged misconduct of the off-

duty officers by local, State, and Federal authorities ensued;

but, the Commonwealth maintains, the investigators were hampered

by the false and misleading statements of responding SPD

officers, including the defendant Derrick Gentry-Mitchell, and

of other eyewitnesses, including the defendant Joseph Sullivan,

who co-owned Nathan Bill's. According to the Commonwealth, the

tangled web of deception by the defendants, and others, lasted

years and included misleading testimony before the grand jury.

This case presents the question whether, where the grand

jury were presented with numerous misleading statements made on

various dates spanning several years to different investigators,

an indictment charging a single count of misleading

investigators, in violation of G. L. c. 268, § 13B, is defective

under art. 12 of the Declaration of Rights of the Massachusetts

Constitution, insofar as it poses the possibility that the

defendants may be convicted of a felony for which the grand jury 3

did not indict. Because the indictments charge the essential

crime of willfully misleading investigators to impede the

investigation of the same underlying event -- the off-duty

police officers' alleged assault of the victim -- and because

the misleading statements constituted a continuing course of

conduct actuated by a single, continuing impulse or intent, or

general scheme to conceal that event, we conclude that the

indictments do not violate art. 12. Accordingly, we vacate the

motion judge's order dismissing the indictments.

1. Background. We recite the facts presented to the grand

jury in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, reserving

some details for subsequent discussion. See Commonwealth v.

Stirlacci, 483 Mass. 775, 780 (2020) ("An appellate court

reviews the evidence underlying a grand jury indictment in the

light most favorable to the Commonwealth").

a. Assault. According to the Commonwealth, on the evening

of April 7, 2015, and into the early morning of April 8, 2015,

several off-duty SPD officers gathered at Nathan Bill's. After

midnight, the officers argued with the victims. The defendant

Joseph Sullivan, a co-owner and manager of Nathan Bill's,

intervened and asked one of the victims to leave the bar.

Shortly after 1 A.M., SPD officers responded to a report of

a disturbance outside of Nathan Bill's. Among the responding

officers were the defendant Gentry-Mitchell and his partner, 4

Jeremy Rivas, who together were on patrol that night. When the

SPD officers arrived, the victims were standing in the bar's

parking lot, and other bar patrons and staff, including several

off-duty SPD officers, were standing outside the bar's entrance.

Sullivan spoke with some of the responding officers. Following

a brief interaction, the victims walked away from the bar, the

other bar patrons and staff went back inside Nathan Bill's, and

the responding SPD officers left the scene.

Approximately one hour later, SPD officers responded to a

911 call outside a convenience store located down the street

from Nathan Bill's. The responding SPD officers, including

Gentry-Mitchell and Rivas, found the same victims there that

they had seen earlier that evening outside of Nathan Bill's.

Two of the victims were lying on the ground. One was

unconscious. He had suffered a concussion, broken leg,

dislocated ankle, torn ligaments, bruised head, and split lip;

four of his teeth were knocked loose. The other victims were

bruised; one had been shocked by a "taser" or "stun gun."

One of the victims told responding SPD officers: "We just

got jumped by [the] guys from the bar. They just walked back to

the bar." An emergency medical technician (EMT) at the scene

later testified that, within earshot of the responding officers,

including presumably Gentry-Mitchell, the victims were loudly

"going on about how they just got into a bar fight and had just 5

gotten beaten up by off-duty police officers." One of the

victims later testified before the grand jury that the off-duty

officers involved in the assault had used a racial slur before

attacking the victims; the victims were Black men.

Rivas also testified before the grand jury. Rivas

confirmed that he learned while responding to the scene outside

the convenience store that the victims had been attacked by the

same individuals with whom the victims had argued at Nathan

Bill's, that off-duty officers were at the bar, and that the

attackers "could have been police officers."

Rivas also testified that he and Gentry-Mitchell

accompanied one victim back to the Nathan Bill's parking lot.

When they arrived, they saw John Sullivan, a co-owner of the

bar,2 and Jose Diaz, an off-duty SPD officer. According to

Rivas, Diaz appeared to be drunk and stated that he had lost his

keys; Rivas and Gentry-Mitchell helped Diaz search for the keys

while walking back toward the convenience store. Along the

walk, Diaz stated that he and "some of the guys" had been

involved in a fight outside of Nathan Bill's, and that he had

been "knocked out cold" by one of the "[B]lack guys." Gentry-

2 John Sullivan and the defendant Joseph Sullivan are not related, but they co-own and comanage Nathan Bill's. We refer to Joseph Sullivan as "Sullivan" in this opinion. 6

Mitchell was within ten feet of Diaz when Diaz made these

statements.

Rivas further testified that, later during their shift, he

and Gentry-Mitchell spoke about the evening's events. Rivas

relayed to Gentry-Mitchell that off-duty officers may have been

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