Joel Javier v. Joann Lynds

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 3, 2026
Docket1:24-cv-12663
StatusUnknown

This text of Joel Javier v. Joann Lynds (Joel Javier v. Joann Lynds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joel Javier v. Joann Lynds, (D. Mass. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

* JOEL JAVIER, * * Petitioner, * * v. * * Civil Action No. 24-cv-12663-ADB JOANN LYNDS, * * Respondent. * * * *

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BURROUGHS, D.J.

Petitioner Joel Javier (“Javier”) is currently serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole following his conviction for first-degree murder in violation of Massachusetts General Laws ch. 265, § 1. Javier was convicted for his role in the shooting death of Robert Gonzalez on January 10, 2009, in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Presently pending before this Court is Javier’s petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, [ECF No. 2]. For the following reasons, the petition is DENIED. I. BACKGROUND A. Facts The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (“SJC”) provided the following account of the facts, see Commonwealth v. Javier, 114 N.E.3d 945, 948–53 (Mass. 2019), which the Court presumes to be correct, see Jewett v. Brady, 634 F.3d 67, 70 (1st Cir. 2011). a. Background. The Commonwealth’s theory at trial was that the defendant and his friends planned and carried out the shooting in retaliation for a fight in which the victim punched out the defendant’s tooth. The dispute between the victim and the defendant that led to the fight arose over an unpaid debt that the victim owed Cauris Gonzalez, the defendant’s then girl friend, for a Honda Civic hatchback automobile that he had purchased from her in the summer of 2008. By January of 2009, he had paid most of the cost of the vehicle, but still owed Cauris one hundred dollars. Although the victim had not paid the full purchase price for the Honda Civic, by January 2009, he had sold it and had used the proceeds to purchase a Dodge Caravan minivan.

b. Evening before and day of the shooting. At approximately 6 P.M. on January 9, 2009, Cauris telephoned the victim and asked him to pay her the remaining one hundred dollars for the Honda Civic she had sold him. The victim said that he did not have the money. Using his own cellular telephone, the defendant then called the victim and got into an argument with him when the defendant asked him to pay Cauris and the victim said that he was not going to give the defendant any money.

Sometime between 7 or 8 P.M. that evening, the defendant and Cauris went to a party that was being hosted by several of the defendant’s friends at their house on Essex Street. At around 11 P.M., the defendant, Cauris, and the defendant’s friend Yoshio Stackerman left to get some food at a nearby fast food restaurant. They were expected to return to the party but did not; there was no evidence to establish where they went after leaving the house on Essex Street, until approximately 2 A.M. on January 10, 2009.

At that point, the defendant and Cauris were waiting in the drive-through lane at the same fast food restaurant. Cauris was driving her mother’s Dodge Caravan minivan, and the defendant was standing next to the vehicle. Stackerman was not with them. The victim and three friends drove past the restaurant, in the victim’s Dodge Caravan. When the victim saw the defendant and Cauris, he began yelling through the window of his vehicle, and the defendant began yelling back about the money the victim owed Cauris. Immediately before the victim and his friends reached the restaurant, the victim, who seemed very angry, had been yelling at someone on his cellular telephone. Call logs from the victim’s and the defendant’s cellular telephones showed three calls between those two numbers at approximately the same time, one at 2:12 A.M. and two at approximately 2:17 A.M.

The victim and his friends got out of his Dodge Caravan; the friends stood near the vehicle, about twenty to thirty feet away, and the victim headed toward the defendant. The defendant then pulled out a knife and “waved it around,” but did not lunge toward anyone. Both men were yelling and “screaming.” . . . The 2 victim, who was much larger and taller than the defendant, responded, “I don’t want to hit you,” then punched the defendant in the mouth, knocking out one of his teeth. The defendant spit out his tooth and began spitting blood toward the victim. One of the victim’s friends picked up the tooth and “started showing it like it was funny.”

The victim began to walk back toward his minivan, and the defendant followed, “screaming.” The defendant then threw his cellular telephone at the victim. The telephone missed the victim, and broke when it hit the ground. The defendant was still yelling at the victim when Cauris drove up in her mother’s minivan and told the defendant to get in. As the defendant was stepping into the minivan, he said to the victim, “Fuck you. It’s not going to stay like this.” The defendant and Cauris drove off, leaving the broken cellular telephone on the ground. Each returned to their parents’ houses, from where they spent the night talking to each other on the telephone.

At around noon that day, the defendant and Cauris went to a pharmacy to get medication for the defendant’s mouth, which was swollen but no longer bleeding; Cauris was driving her mother’s minivan. In the early afternoon of January 10, 2009, the victim and three of his friends drove to the defendant’s parents’ house. The defendant and Cauris returned from their trip to the pharmacy at approximately the same time. Cauris got out of her minivan and walked up to the front door while the defendant drove away. When the defendant’s mother answered, she saw a man she did not know -- the victim -- standing across the street, near a minivan. He told her that he had the defendant’s tooth and would sell it to her for “a thousand bucks.” He then entered his minivan and drove away; the defendant, who had been watching from a distance, returned to the house. Sometime between 3:30 and 4 P.M., the defendant and Cauris drove his mother to work in Cauris’s mother’s minivan.

The Commonwealth relied extensively on telephone records and [cell site location information (“CSLI”)] as circumstantial evidence of the location of the defendant, Cauris, and the defendant’s friends in the hours before the shooting, and to show that all five had participated in planning the shooting, then stopped calling each other during the fifteen minutes immediately prior to the shooting, which occurred shortly before 6 P.M.

Call records and testimony were also introduced concerning calls on the day of the shooting between Cauris and her brother’s then girl friend, Ashley Calisto, who had had surgery approximately one week earlier. Telephone records showed that Cauris’s telephone number called Calisto’s telephone number at 1:40 P.M.; Cauris told police she had called to ask if she and the defendant could come by to visit Calisto that evening. Telephone records also indicated that Cauris’s telephone called Calisto’s telephone number again at approximately 5:45 P.M. Calisto testified to receiving a call from Cauris at around that time.

3 Eight calls were made during the afternoon between the telephone numbers being used by the defendant and Cauris, Stackerman, Castro, and Wyatt; these telephone numbers also made calls to other numbers. No calls were made from any of the four numbers between about 5:45 P.M. and 6:01 P.M. Minutes after the shooting, at 6:01 P.M., Cauris’s telephone called Castro’s telephone number twice. Also at 6:01 P.M., Castro called for a taxicab and asked to be picked up at a location approximately two blocks from the scene of the shooting, while Cauris’s telephone called Calisto’s telephone three times shortly after the shooting, between 6:02 and 6:06 P.M.

Calisto testified that the defendant and Cauris arrived at her house at “6:15/6:10/6:20-ish.” Calisto had just had surgery and Cauris had spoken with Calisto earlier that day to plan a visit.

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Joel Javier v. Joann Lynds, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joel-javier-v-joann-lynds-mad-2026.