Commonwealth v. Thomas

752 N.E.2d 835, 52 Mass. App. Ct. 286, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 797
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 16, 2001
DocketNo. 99-P-1470
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 752 N.E.2d 835 (Commonwealth v. Thomas) 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. Thomas, 752 N.E.2d 835, 52 Mass. App. Ct. 286, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 797 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

McHugh, J.

Claiming that the prosecutor’s closing argument improperly urged the jury to adopt a theory of guilt by association, the defendant appeals from his convictions of possession of a Class B substance (cocaine) with intent to distribute, G. L. c. 94C, § 32A(a), and possession of a Class B substance (same cocaine) in a school zone with intent to distribute. G. L. c. 94C, § 32J. We conclude that the trial judge’s instructions did not palliate the problem the argument created; therefore, we reverse the convictions and remand the matter for a new trial.

In her closing, the prosecutor urged the jury to draw inferences adverse to the defendant from his presence, along with [287]*287three other individuals, in an automobile where police found a digital scale and drugs other than those forming the basis for the charges against the defendant. That exhortation built upon evidence which made the Commonwealth’s case plausible but quite close when the material components are considered. In essence, the evidence was as follows: One evening in December, 1998, Boston police Detective Kevin McGill was on routine patrol with his partner, Robert Smith. While on patrol, McGill noticed the automobile in which the defendant was riding. Intuition borne of experience led McGill to seek information from the Registry of Motor Vehicles (registry) about the automobile’s registration. While the registry was processing McGill’s request, the officers followed the automobile as it proceeded to a nearby Burger King and watched as the occupants bought some hamburgers.

Shortly after the vehicle left the Burger King, the registry informed McGill that its license plates had been stolen.1 McGill consequently called for assistance and, together, the assembled officers stopped the automobile on Brunswick Street in the Rox-bury section of Boston.

After the stop, McGill, accompanied by another officer, approached the driver’s side of the vehicle while Smith approached the passenger side. The officers saw four people in the automobile: a male driver, a female in the front passenger seat, the defendant in the rear seat behind the driver, and a young girl approximately four years of age in the rear seat behind the female.

McGill, who was in plain clothes, identified himself to the driver as a police officer and asked for a license and registration. In virtually the same breath, McGill told all four occupants to “show [their] hands.” The defendant, the young girl, and the female all complied by raising their hands in the air. The driver, however, kept his hands down where McGill could not see them. Concerned for his safety and seeking to underscore the firmness of his request, McGill drew his service revolver and again told the driver to place his hands in plain view. The driver [288]*288not only failed once more to comply but began to push something under the front seat beneath him. As he did, the defendant and the other two passengers sat there, hands in the air.

Plainly unhappy with the driver’s response, McGill and another officer attempted to extricate him from the car. A struggle ensued. As the struggle progressed and the defendant sat watching with his hands in the air, another police officer at the scene, Lt. Gary French, took the defendant by the arm and escorted him from the automobile’s back seat to a nearby sidewalk. French, the defendant, and another officer then stood together on the sidewalk while the struggle between the driver and the officers wound down, the driver was arrested and police began a search of the automobile. That search quickly revealed a digital scale beneath the driver’s seat and an unstated quantity of “narcotics,” not otherwise described at trial, in some kind of a container located between the accelerator and the brake pedal.

After about fifteen minutes, McGill asked the defendant, who was still standing near French and the other officer, to come with him. The defendant complied.2 After the defendant left the sidewalk in McGill’s company, French looked down and saw a plastic bag containing eleven or twelve small tin-foil packages lying on the sidewalk in the spot where the defendant had been standing. Subsequent analysis showed that the packages contained a total of 2.4 grams of “crack” cocaine. That is the cocaine the defendant was charged with possessing.

At trial, Detective James Freeman, a Boston police officer whom the Commonwealth called as a narcotics expert, testified that the Brunswick Street area where the defendant was arrested was in an area where he had made “a hundred” arrests during the course of his career. The majority of those arrests were for drugs. He also testified that a “dime bag” is a package of cocaine containing an individual consumption unit having a value of ten dollars and that the plastic bag French found on the [289]*289sidewalk contained eleven or twelve “dime bags.”3 On cross-examination, he added that cocaine “addicts” typically bought one “dime bag” at a time.

When the prosecutor asked Freeman how one could distinguish between a buyer and a seller of narcotics, Freeman said, “You are going to look for packaging material, beepers, cell phones, scales, it is things that we consider tools of the business.” In response to the prosecutor’s next question, Freeman said that, based on his training and experience, the scale was “significant” because

“if you had a scale, you could weigh out what you would be packaging in the sale, what is going to be received to make sure that you don’t get beat by the guy that is selling it to you[,] to make sure [it’s] the right amount that you paid for.”

A scale, in other words, was useful both to buyers and to sellers.

That was the evidentiary backdrop for both closing arguments. In his argument, the defendant employed a two-pronged approach to urging the insufficiency of the Commonwealth’s evidence. First he argued that he had no relationship with, much less possession of, the drugs French testified he found on the sidewalk.4 Second, the defendant argued that, even if the jury were persuaded that the sidewalk narcotics were his, nothing connected him to, or showed he even knew of, the drugs and [290]*290scale in the automobile. As a result, he urged that nothing in the evidence was sufficient to persuade the jury beyond a reasonable doubt that the sidewalk narcotics were a sales inventory instead of a stash intended for his own personal use.

To advance his second prong, defense counsel began the closing portion of his argument by telling the jury, in essence, that the police had overcharged the defendant because of their view that “there is a bad guy in the front seat [and] we have to do something about it.” In context, there can be little doubt that the quoted portion of the argument attributed to police a belief that the driver was a “bad guy” as a foundation for defense counsel’s theory that the police had simply swept up the defendant in their effort to deal vigorously with the driver.

To the prosecutor, however, the words “bad guy” were an orchard ripe for the picking. She began her argument as follows:

“The Commonwealth does not disagree with defense counsel’s characterization of the bad guy sitting in the front seat of the car. I ask you all to remember though that the defendant was sitting in the same car.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. Caraballo
965 N.E.2d 194 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2012)
Commonwealth v. Hrabak
785 N.E.2d 410 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
752 N.E.2d 835, 52 Mass. App. Ct. 286, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-thomas-massappct-2001.