Commonwealth v. Wadlington

4 N.E.3d 296, 467 Mass. 192, 2014 WL 553146, 2014 Mass. LEXIS 27
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 4 N.E.3d 296 (Commonwealth v. Wadlington) 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. Wadlington, 4 N.E.3d 296, 467 Mass. 192, 2014 WL 553146, 2014 Mass. LEXIS 27 (Mass. 2014).

Opinion

Gants, J.

A Superior Court jury convicted the defendant of the murder in the first degree of Rudolph Santos (victim) on the theories of deliberate premeditation, extreme atrocity or cruelty, and felony-murder, in violation of G. L. c. 265, § l.1 The defendant raises eight issues on appeal, claiming that (1) the motion judge erred in not suppressing all of the defendant’s statements made during a prearrest interview at the house of correction where the defendant was being held; (2) the prosecutor failed timely to provide exculpatory evidence regarding a recanted statement made by William Fields, who was a joint venturer and key Commonwealth witness; (3) the fruits of a search of the defendant’s girl friend’s home should have been suppressed where the affidavit in support of the search warrant included information provided by Fields that Fields later recanted; (4) it was reversible error to allow the Commonwealth’s fingerprint expert to testify that a latent fingerprint was made by the defendant, and to bolster her credibility by testifying that she “would never want to put an innocent person in jail”; (5) the trial judge erred in denying the defendant’s motion for a [194]*194required finding of not guilty as to the armed robbery charge where the Commonwealth failed to present sufficient evidence that property was taken; (6) the defendant’s conviction of armed robbery must be vacated because the indictment identified two victims and the trial judge failed to instruct the jury that they must unanimously agree as to who was the victim; (7) a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice arose from the prosecutor’s improper statements during opening statement and closing argument; and (8) the defendant’s conviction of felony-murder must be vacated because the judge failed to instruct the jury that they must unanimously agree on the predicate felony, and because the judge relieved the prosecution of its burden of proving a necessary element by instructing the jury that the crimes of armed robbery and home invasion are “inherently dangerous to human life as a matter of law.”2 For the reasons detailed below, we affirm the defendant’s convictions and the denial of his motion for new trial, and after a complete review of the record, we decline to exercise our plenary authority under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to order a new trial or to reduce the murder conviction to a lesser degree of guilt.

Background. We briefly summarize the evidence supporting the convictions, reserving certain details for our discussion of the alleged errors.

A few days before Christmas in 2005, Shannon Almeida was outside her home in New Bedford with Fields and Leslie Cole when the defendant (whom she knew only as “Blue”) approached. She introduced the defendant to Fields and Cole because she knew that they were looking for a gun and that the defendant had one. On the evening of December 24, the defendant, Fields, and Cole, while at Almeida’s home, devised a plan to rob a drug dealer’s home. The men drove to Brockton, where the defendant retrieved a sawed-off rifle and some ammunition from an apartment, and returned to New Bedford, where they stopped at another house to obtain dark clothes to wear during [195]*195the robbery. After returning to Almeida’s home, they decided to “get this done” and traveled in Cole’s automobile to an apartment in New Bedford where they knew drugs were sold.

On that Christmas eve night, Christopher Busby was at home in that apartment with the victim, who was his friend. Shortly before midnight, the defendant, Fields, and Cole approached the back door of the apartment, with the defendant carrying the firearm. The defendant knocked on the door, and when Busby asked him to identify himself, the defendant said that he was “Ed” and that they had “served him [one-]half hour ago.” Busby said he did not recognize the name and told the defendant to step outside to the side window so he could see his face; the defendant handed the firearm to Cole and complied with the request. When the defendant knocked on the door again, Busby said he did not recognize him and was not selling any drugs. However, a few seconds later, Busby cracked open the door to see if “Ed” was still there, and when he did, the door was forced open and the three men rushed inside.

Cole wrestled with Busby and stabbed him with a knife, while Fields hit Busby with a steel pipe. The defendant fought with the victim. Shortly after the fighting began, Fields fled the scene, returned to Cole’s automobile, drove to a nearby house where he knew the occupants, and told one of them to call the police because he heard gunshots.3 Fields then drove the automobile back to where the three men had left it and fled on foot. Meanwhile, Busby was stabbed several times with a knife before collapsing and passing out. When he regained consciousness, he heard men demanding that the victim give them the keys to the cellar, where the drugs had been hidden. Busby retrieved his samurai sword and swung at the attackers, wounding Cole in the leg. The fight moved into Busby’s bedroom, where Busby collapsed on his bed. Although Busby was unable to move, he was able to hear that the victim had surrendered the keys to the cellar. He then heard someone go down the cellar stairs and [196]*196come back upstairs to ask, “Where is it? Where is it?” Busby then heard someone say, “It’s only a .22,” followed by a gunshot.

Shortly before 1 a.m., New Bedford police Officer Barry Pacheco and Sergeant Francisco Rodrigues arrived at the scene and found the victim, who showed no signs of life, and Busby, who was lying on his bed covered in blood. A black sheath to a sword was lying next to Busby on the bed. Paramedics arrived shortly thereafter and found the victim dead, with a gunshot wound to the head, and Busby on his bed suffering from multiple puncture wounds.4

Later that night, Fields saw Cole with a bloody cloth wrapped around his leg. Two days later, Fields and Cole drove to the beach and threw a samurai sword and the clothes Cole had worn during the assault into the ocean.

Sergeant Kerri Gilpin of the State police processed the crime scene for fingerprint evidence. She cut out a piece of the cellar wall that had a “red-brown stain” that had tested presumptively positive for blood and found on it a latent impression of a partial palm print. She compared that latent palm print with the known palm print of the defendant and testified that, “in [her] opinion, the latent and the known print were made by the same donor.”

Amy Joy, a chemist at the State police crime laboratory, generated a deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) profile from a swab taken from a “red-brown drop” on the cellar stairs, and compared it with the known DNA profile of the defendant. She found that the DNA profile of the defendant “was consistent” with the DNA profile found on the cellar stairs, and that the probability of a randomly selected individual having that DNA profile is one in 3.782 quintillion of the African-American population.5 Joy also compared the defendant’s known DNA profile to the DNA profile on a swab taken from a red-brown stain on the interior rear driver’s side door of Cole’s automobile, and found them “consistent”; the probability of a randomly selected African-American having that same DNA profile is one in 3.782 quintillion.

[197]*197During the defendant’s interview on January 12, 2006, with State Trooper William R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 N.E.3d 296, 467 Mass. 192, 2014 WL 553146, 2014 Mass. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-wadlington-mass-2014.