State v. Cianci

430 A.2d 756, 1981 R.I. LEXIS 1160
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 4, 1981
Docket79-488-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 430 A.2d 756 (State v. Cianci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cianci, 430 A.2d 756, 1981 R.I. LEXIS 1160 (R.I. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

MURRAY, Justice.

This is a criminal indictment charging the defendant, Robert C. Cianci (Cianci), with *758 assault with a dangerous weapon 1 and possession of a weapon without a license. 2 A Superior Court jury acquitted Cianci of the assault charge but returned a guilty verdict on the charge of possession of a weapon without a license. The defendant is now before us on an appeal from the judgment of conviction entered on that charge. We find no merit in the issues raised by the defendant and affirm the conviction below.

The details of the incident giving rise to the charges against defendant are somewhat in dispute. At defendant’s trial, Officer John Sivo (Sivo), a member of the Cran-ston police department, testified that while on duty on the evening of July 4, 1972, at approximately 11 p.m., he received a radio call requesting him to investigate a complaint by defendant that fireworks were being thrown at his house, located at 140 Madison Avenue in that city.

The radio dispatcher told Sivo that defendant did not wish to have the officer actually come to his house because he was entertaining some guests there at the time. Upon arriving at Madison Avenue, Sivo drove his police cruiser down the street past defendant’s house but did not observe any unusual activity there. Farther down the street, the officer conferred with a group of youths sitting on the back of a parked car; the youngsters advised him that the firework activity had indeed been taking place on the upper portion of the street near defendant’s home.

Sivo then backed the cruiser up the street to a location in front of defendant’s house, whereupon he met Ernest DiRocco, who was, at the time, visiting with defendant’s neighbors directly across the street from defendant’s house. Sivo was an acquaintance of DiRocco, both having previously attended Rhode Island Junior College. When Sivo asked DiRocco “what the problem was,” DiRocco said, “Well, Mr. Cianci is coming out of the house. He’ll explain the situation to you.” Sivo turned and observed defendant and his wife as they came out of the house and walked down the driveway toward him. Sivo described defendant as being in an “enraged state.” At this point, Sivo got out of the cruiser and stood on the sidewalk next to the car. The officer testified that as defendant approached him, defendant said, “If you can’t handle it, I will. I have a loaded gun and I’ll blow everybody’s head off." With that, defendant reached into the rear pocket of his pants and pulled out a .38 caliber revolver. He first began waving it in the officer’s face and then pointed it in the direction of DiRocco, who was standing on the sidewalk approximately three feet away from him. With the barrel of the pistol only three or four inches from his face, the officer was able to see that there were bullets in the gun’s chambers. The officer testified that defendant would alternately wave the gun in front of the officer’s face and then would motion with the gun to the neighbors located across the street or at his own house.

Sivo testified that he talked to defendant in an attempt to calm him down. He said that when defendant started to put the gun in the rear pocket of his pants, Sivo grabbed defendant by the arm and disarmed him. The officer placed him in the police cruiser and transported him to police headquarters.

At trial, defendant’s recollection of the events occurring on the evening of July 4 differed substantially from that of the prosecution’s witnesses. His version of the encounter with Officer Sivo was essentially corroborated by several witnesses who testified in his behalf. For the purposes of this appeal, however, it is not necessary for us to describe all of the occurrences in and around defendant’s home on that evening. Suffice it to say that defendant had very acrimonious relationships with the neighbors next to and across the street from him. The defendant testified at trial that previously on several occasions he had complained to the Cranston police about being harassed by his neighbors but had not got *759 ten any satisfactory resolution of the problem.

The defendant testified further that on the evening in question, his neighbors across the street not only had been throwing firecrackers at his house and at vehicles parked on his property, but also had been shouting profanities at the guests in his home, prompting him to request the assistance of the Cranston police department. In the interval between his call to police headquarters and the arrival of the police officer, defendant went out into his backyard to investigate a noise. While outside, he testified, he was shot in the hand by a missile from a pellet gun fired by someone behind a fence in the next yard. The defendant said he went inside and administered first aid to himself and then went into his bedroom, got a gun, and placed it in the rear pocket of his pants.

Very shortly thereafter one of defendant’s guests told him that a police officer had arrived outside. The defendant went outside and was walking down his driveway toward the street when he remembered that he had the gun in his pocket. Not wanting to leave the gun concealed, he took the gun out of his pocket and continued walking toward the officer with it in his hand. The defendant testified that as he continued to approach Officer Sivo he told the officer that he needed some assistance because it was “going to come to the point that [he was] going to end up getting [his own] head blown off.” The defendant said that at this time he was standing a short distance from the officer. He said that he did not point the gun at the officer but used the hand in which he was holding the gun to gesture while he was talking to him.

The defendant testified that he noticed that Sivo was staring at the weapon in defendant’s hand. The defendant then told the officer, “I can see that this weapon is bothering you. If it will make you feel any better, I’ll put it in my back pocket and let you take it.” Cianci said he replaced the weapon in the rear pocket of his pants and told the officer that he could remove it. When defendant turned away from the officer, he testified that he was attacked from behind by him and placed under arrest.

We note here that defendant admitted during the course of his testimony that he was in possession of the weapon while on the sidewalk outside his home, that the weapon was loaded, and that he did not have a Rhode Island license to possess the weapon.

A Providence County grand jury subsequently returned an indictment against defendant, charging him with assault with a dangerous weapon and with possession of a weapon without a license. As we indicated earlier, defendant was tried before a justice of the Superior Court sitting with a jury. The jury acquitted defendant on the assault charge but returned a guilty verdict on the charge of possession of a weapon without a license.

On appeal to this court, defendant raises several claims of error. To the extent necessary, the additional facts pertinent to this appeal will be discussed as they relate to the errors claimed by defendant.

I

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Bluebook (online)
430 A.2d 756, 1981 R.I. LEXIS 1160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cianci-ri-1981.