Commonwealth v. Thomas

50 N.E.3d 453, 89 Mass. App. Ct. 422, 2016 WL 3004599, 2016 Mass. App. LEXIS 58
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 26, 2016
DocketAC 13-P-666
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 N.E.3d 453 (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, 50 N.E.3d 453, 89 Mass. App. Ct. 422, 2016 WL 3004599, 2016 Mass. App. LEXIS 58 (Mass. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Meade, J.

After a jury-waived trial, the defendant was convicted of aggravated rape, and the judge found him not guilty of kidnapping and assault with intent to rape. On appeal, he claims that the judge erred when she excluded evidence of the victim’s prior convictions; his conviction for aggravated rape was improper because there was no aggravating circumstance; and the *423 judge abused her discretion when she denied his motion for a new trial without holding an evidentiary hearing. We affirm.

1. Background. The judge was entitled to find the following facts. Before the incident at issue, a friend had introduced the victim to the defendant, whom she knew as “Steve,” and the victim agreed to go with him to “hang out, party, chill, [and] smoke” “crack” cocaine. Their plans for that evening did not materialize. Several weeks later, the two again met on the street. The defendant asked the victim if she wanted to pick up where they left off, and also if she minded going to his house in Holyoke. The victim agreed and “jumped in [the defendant’s] car.”

The two traveled to an apartment complex “that had two levels, one lower one, and one up a little hill and top level apartments.” The victim had never been there before, but she identified a photograph of a “top left window” as “the window of [the defendant’s] room.” On cross-examination, the victim made it clear that she went to the defendant’s apartment voluntarily “to party,” that is, “smoke, get high and chill.” The two entered the apartment, and the defendant directed the victim down a long, dark hallway to a room at the end of the hall on the left. The defendant went into a bathroom on the right, and the victim walked into the indicated room. The room was not furnished, but there were two mattresses on the floor, a television on a stand, and “drug paraphernalia on the floor.”

The victim sat on the corner of one of the mattresses, and she could hear the defendant talking in the bathroom. She asked if he had said something, but he replied that he was just thinking out loud. The defendant then walked out of the bathroom, “completely naked.” At that point the victim had been in the apartment “[a]bout three minutes at the most.” The defendant asked her to take her clothes off and put on a sweater that he took from the closet. She took off her pants and sweater and shoes, put on the sweater the defendant gave her and sat back down on the bed.

The defendant sat next to her with his legs around her, and when she turned to look at him, “he just grabbed [her] real quick on [her] neck and started choking [her].” She could not breathe and “everything was turning black.” Struggling to speak, she told him to let her go, that she would do anything, and that he did not have to do that. Eventually, the defendant released her. She was shocked and shaking uncontrollably because she had been “attacked ... out of nowhere.” She asked him repeatedly why he had *424 done that to her and he said, “I want you to suck my penis.” He said that ‘“[she] was going to suck his penis the whole night, that he was going to freak the fuck out of [her] until the next day.”

The defendant grabbed the victim’s head and started pushing her, “shoving” her to perform oral sex on him. She pulled her head back and said that she needed some water, but he grabbed her head with both hands and forced his penis into her mouth “more than once.” She was afraid for her life, and “the second time, when he yanked [her] head back,” she said, “[W]e know the same people” and started naming names, “just to get to him on another level to break through that, finally actually like getting some time for this man not to hurt [her].”

When she asked for water a second time, he said no, and demanded oral sex for “three more minutes.” However, after a short period, she told him that she was about to throw up, and he told her he would get the water, “but don’t you dare move from there.”

As soon as the defendant turned his back and walked out of the room, the victim looked around “to find a way out to escape from him.” She concluded that the “only way out was the door where he walked through [to the kitchen to get the water] and the window.” She “got up, walked toward the window, and opened it.” The defendant came back into the room and grabbed her by the sweater and pulled her back. The victim said, “No, you are going to hurt me,” and she yanked the sweater off “and . . . fell off the window.” In answering the question “[W]hat happened when he was wrestling with you, what happened to you?” the victim responded, “That is when I fell, I jumped out my sweater and I fell ... out the window” onto the ground below. She identified a photograph of the window in the defendant’s apartment as “the window I jumped out the corner of.” On cross-examination, the victim clarified, “[I]f I could have jumped, I would have calculated the way I fall, I wouldn’t hurt myself that bad. But because he grabbed me, I fell without calculating so I hurt myself even more.”

After she fell, the victim lost consciousness, but she remembers that the defendant called from upstairs, saying “Come back up ... I am not going to hurt you.” Instead, she crawled across the parking lot toward another apartment house and started “ringing every, every, every single doorbell.” One man answered his door and called the police.

Holyoke police Officer Kristin Shattuck spoke to the victim, who was visibly shaken, upset, and crying, holding the right side *425 other arm. She had “a contusion to the top other right hand, and she also had dried blood coming from the hairline on the right side of her head going down to her temple area.” She was wearing only a T-shirt and socks, with no pants, and it was cold, ‘“about 29, 30 degrees that evening.” The victim told the officer that the defendant had forced her to perform oral sex.

In the area beneath the defendant’s window, the ‘“dirt was . . . freshly disturbed, being winter and everything. And there was dried blood right on the foundation right below the window where if somebody had fallen, they would have hit right on the corner there.... There was a bent screen that was right below the window, and that window was the only one in the apartment complex . . . that was missing a screen.”

The victim was hospitalized for more than a week. She sustained a concussion, a broken wrist, two broken vertebrae, a broken toe, and a cut on her leg from the screen. Hospital records revealed the presence of cocaine in her system, and she confirmed that she had smoked crack cocaine seven or eight hours before she met the defendant that day. In her opinion, there were no residual effects of the cocaine. ‘“[T]hat is an effect that lasts seconds, not hours.” She identified the defendant as the man who had assaulted her from a photographic array on the night of the incident and again, several times, during the trial.

2. Discussion, a. The rape-shield statute.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Gilbert
112 N.E.3d 1195 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Cooper
102 N.E.3d 426 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.E.3d 453, 89 Mass. App. Ct. 422, 2016 WL 3004599, 2016 Mass. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-thomas-massappct-2016.