Commonwealth v. Tirado

842 N.E.2d 980, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 571, 2006 Mass. App. LEXIS 201
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 2006
DocketNo. 04-P-894
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 842 N.E.2d 980 (Commonwealth v. Tirado) 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. Tirado, 842 N.E.2d 980, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 571, 2006 Mass. App. LEXIS 201 (Mass. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Cowin, J.

A jury convicted the defendant, Robert Tirado, of murder in the second degree. On appeal, he contends that the judge erred in denying his request for a self-defense instruction. We conclude that there was no view of the evidence that could have created a reasonable doubt on the part of the jury that the defendant acted in self-defense, and that therefore a self-defense instruction was not warranted. Accordingly, we affirm.

1. Material facts and testimony. The jury could permissibly have found the following. On February 15, 2001, the defendant spent the evening at his home in New Bedford drinking with his friends Ryan Marshall, Jonathan Torres, Rebecca Rose, Heather Lawrence, Orlando Badillo, Lionel Rodriguez and Dennis Smith. Around 2:00 a.m. on February 16, 2001, Badillo, Rod[572]*572riguez and Smith left the defendant’s home. The defendant, Marshall, Torres, Lawrence and Rose left shortly thereafter and walked to the apartment of Donna Medeiros, Marshall’s mother, at 86 Bluefield Street, New Bedford. When they arrived, they found that Medeiros had returned from an evening at Marshall’s Pub and was hosting an “after-party.” Medeiros’s friends Liz Cardona, David Amaral, Tonio Ramos, Kevin Rose and George Carpenter, a group older than the defendant and his friends, were present at the after-party. Both groups continued drinking at Medeiros’s apartment.

At some point during the after-party, a confrontation between the defendant and George Carpenter escalated, moved outside, stopped, then resumed several yards down Bluefield Street. While arguing with the defendant, Carpenter was attacked by the defendant’s friends Badillo, Smith and Rodriguez. The defendant took part in this attack by kicking Carpenter as he lay on the ground. Carpenter died from his injuries. While the various witnesses agree to these basic facts about the altercation, their accounts of the details that led to the encounter in which Carpenter died differ significantly. We summarize this testimony in the light most favorable to the defendant as follows.

The defendant testified that shortly after he was introduced to Carpenter at the party, Carpenter began calling him names such as “thug,” “punk” and “hoodlum.” When the defendant told Carpenter to leave him alone, Carpenter patted him on the head and said, “You’ll be okay, son.” The defendant told Carpenter not to touch him; Carpenter replied that he could touch the defendant if he wanted to, and the defendant and Carpenter then agreed to “take this outside.”

The defendant testified further that once outside, Carpenter wrapped a belt around his right hand and hit the defendant in the eye. The defendant attempted to fight back, but Carpenter’s friends, who had accompanied him, stepped between the two and held the defendant back. The defendant claimed that one of Carpenter’s friends, David Amaral, had a tire iron in his hand, “like he was going to do something with it.” Because he was scared, and because it was four men against one, the defendant called Badillo on his cellular telephone and asked him to “come down here.” After the defendant called Badillo, Carpenter, still [573]*573calling the defendant names, got in his car and drove away. The defendant then returned to Medeiros’s apartment.

The defendant testified that while he was inside the apartment, James Pierce came in the front door and told him that Carpenter had come back to fight him. The defendant went outside and found Carpenter on Bluefield Street, apparently waiting for him. The two yelled at each other while several of Carpenter’s friends, who had been helping to change a tire on Carpenter’s automobile, stood by. Amaral held a tire iron, but did not approach the defendant with it.

While the defendant and Carpenter argued, two cars arrived. Several individuals, including the defendant’s friends Badillo, Rodriguez and Smith, jumped out of the cars and attacked Carpenter. They knocked Carpenter to the ground and beat him. While Carpenter was lying on the ground, the defendant kicked him once, backed away, and then ran. He testified that during the entire altercation, he believed that the older men were drunk and he was “scared for [his] life.”

Other witnesses from the party corroborated the defendant’s assertion that he and Carpenter had argued before Carpenter was attacked, but gave varying accounts of the sequence of events. Rebecca Rose testified that she had been upstairs at the party, and that when she came downstairs and went outside, she observed the defendant kicking Carpenter, who was on the ground. Carpenter was a big man and was drunk. Some of Carpenter’s friends, i.e., Amaral, Ramos and Kevin Rose, were also outside. As he was kicking Carpenter, the defendant was on his cellular telephone. A few minutes later, she observed two cars pull up. Badillo, Rodriguez and Smith exited the cars and joined the defendant in kicking Carpenter.

David Amaral testified that he left the party after the defendant and Carpenter, and that he did not see them fighting there. When he drove up the street, however, he observed Carpenter and the defendant arguing in front of Carpenter’s car. Ramos and Kevin Rose were with Carpenter. Amaral stopped and was helping Ramos to change Carpenter’s tire when several cars pulled up and the occupants attacked Carpenter. Amaral did not approach with the tire iron. Instead, when the fight began, [574]*574he ran to his mother’s house to call 911. He did not observe the defendant’s actions during the fight.

Tonio Ramos likewise observed no physical altercation at the party, but did state that he left with Carpenter when Carpenter and the defendant argued. Ramos and Carpenter drove up the street in Carpenter’s car and stopped to change a tire. As they were changing the tire, a sport utility vehicle (SUV) pulled up. At the same time, Ramos observed the defendant and two of his friends approaching Carpenter. The occupants of the SUV, joined by the defendant and his friends, began beating Carpenter. Ramos observed the defendant kick Carpenter in the ribs.

Carpenter’s friend Kevin Rose testified that he observed the defendant and Carpenter arguing outside of the party, and that he and some others held the defendant back from Carpenter. As Carpenter got in his car to drive away, Rose saw the defendant stab Carpenter’s tire with a knife. Rose testified that he walked down the street by the side of Carpenter’s car as Carpenter drove up Bluefield Street. As Carpenter’s tire was being changed, Rose saw an SUV pull up. Several men got out and beat Carpenter. Rose observed the defendant join with the occupants of the SUV, trying to punch Carpenter and subsequently kicking him. He also testified that Carpenter was drunk and a “big guy,” and that he was “hot” at the defendant.

At the conclusion of all of the testimony, the defendant requested that the jury be instructed on self-defense, but the judge declined. The defendant renewed his objection immediately following the judge’s charge.

2. Discussion. When any view of the evidence suggests that a defendant may have acted in self-defense, “the defendant is entitled to a[] [jury] instruction which places on the Commonwealth the burden of disproving . . . self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt.” Commonwealth v. Reed, 427 Mass. 100, 102 (1998), quoting from Commonwealth v. Maguire, 375 Mass. 768, 772 (1978). Evidence of self-defense is sufficient “if any view of the evidence would support a reasonable doubt as to whether the prerequisites of self-defense were present.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
842 N.E.2d 980, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 571, 2006 Mass. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-tirado-massappct-2006.