State v. Fischer

398 A.2d 402, 1979 Me. LEXIS 625
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 1, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 398 A.2d 402 (State v. Fischer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fischer, 398 A.2d 402, 1979 Me. LEXIS 625 (Me. 1979).

Opinion

WERNICK, Justice.

Indicted on December 7, 1977 for having committed, on September 1, 1977, a violation of 17 — A M.R.S.A. § 210 1 prohibiting Terrorizing, defendant Anthony Dale Fischer was tried before a jury in the Superior Court (Somerset County) on March 7-9, 1978. At the close of all the evidence defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal. The motion was denied, the case was submitted to the jury and the jury returned a verdict finding defendant guilty. After verdict, he moved for a new trial pursuant to Rule 33 M.R.Crim.P., which was denied. Defendant’s appeal from the judgment of conviction entered on the verdict posits for our review his claims that the presiding Justice erred in denying the motion for judgment of acquittal and the post verdict motion for a new trial.

We deny the appeal.

1. The Motion for Judgment of Acquittal.

The motion for judgment of acquittal raises the question of the sufficiency of the evidence, taken most favorably to the State, to support the conviction. On the evidence the following jury findings of fact were justified. In the early afternoon of September 1, 1977 an anonymous telephone call, the voice being that of a male person, was received by William J. O’Donnell at Radio Station WSKW in Skowhegan, Maine. O’Donnell was a disc jockey and part-time news announcer at the station. The call came on the station’s “request” line, and the caller stated the message, as O’Donnell described it in his testimony,

“that there was a simulated bomb in the Courthouse, and that unless all the prisoners of the Somerset County Jail were released, that a real bomb would go off.”

The message was stated twice within a period of approximately thirty seconds. O’Donnell immediately left his post at the “request” line in the station’s studio and went to the radio station’s office. There, he told his colleagues, most of whom were present on their lunch break, that he had just received a “bomb threat.” He told them to call the State Police. Michael Har-tung, the station’s news director, left the office and from the telephone in the station’s newsroom called the County Sheriff, William Wright.

*404 It had happened that shortly before he was called by Michael Hartung, the Sheriff had been handed a paper bag in which was a shoe box containing a battery wired to some wooden sticks. A janitor had found these items, in the form of a package, on a stairway inside the Courthouse. He had brought them to the office of Cynthia A. Pomerleau, the Clerk to the County Commissioners, and she in turn had taken them to the Sheriff’s office.

Approximately at the time he received Hartung’s phone call, the Sheriff was arranging for a secret search of the County Courthouse, the plan being to tell only department heads that a search was under way and to advise them that there was no cause for alarm; no mention was to be made to anyone that the search was for a bomb.

Defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant made, or was responsible for the making of, the telephone call to Mr. O’Donnell. The only evidence of defendant’s connection to the telephone call was that investigation of the package delivered to the Sheriff revealed one fingerprint on the paper bag and two fingerprints on the shoe box, each of these prints being defendant’s.

The State argues that the aggregate of the circumstances—that the fingerprints of defendant were on the package at the Courthouse which contained the false bomb and that the person telephoning O’Donnell knew of the existence of that false bomb and its location—establishes a sufficient common link between the placing of the bomb and the making of the telephone call to justify a conclusion that defendant was implicated in both the placing of the false bomb and the making of the telephone call.

Defendant disputes the State’s argument, contending that even if the State’s reasoning might be adequate to identify the person responsible for the telephone call as more probably than not the defendant, it cannot be sufficient to establish such identification beyond a reasonable doubt.

We disagree. True, as defendant points out, various steps in the circumstantial reasoning to identify the caller may involve doubts. For example, even though the fingerprints establish that defendant had handled the paper bag and shoe box containing the false bomb, another person might have taken possession of the bag and shoe box without (or even with) defendant’s knowledge, and such other person without defendant’s knowledge might have made the package for the false bomb and then placed it in the Courthouse. Another source of doubt could be that the person making the telephone call might have been either such other person (than defendant) who might have placed the false bomb, or someone totally unconnected with the planting of the false bomb who might by chance have heard about it and then acted entirely on his own to make the threatening phone call. If, at some point in its deliberations, the jury may have entertained such doubts that defendant was the person who made, or was responsible for, the telephone call, the jury did not act irrationally in arriving at an ultimate conclusion, as shown by the verdict, that in all the circumstances such doubts were fanciful, rather than realistic, and therefore were not reasonable doubts. As this Court said in State v. Silva, 153 Me. 89, 102, 134 A.2d 628, 634 (1957):

“The jury is not compelled, in its determination as to whether or not a reasonable doubt exists, to disregard all the probabilities and substitute therefor mere unlikely possibilities.”

The evidence was sufficient to justify a jury determination that there were no reasonable doubts that defendant was responsible for the telephone call to Mr. O’Donnell.

Addressing the essential element of the crime described in 17-A M.R.S.A. § 210 by the language “communicates . a threat”, defendant maintains that the telephone message to O’Donnell cannot be held to be a “threat”, as a basis to impose criminal liability, consistently with the constitutional guarantee of freedom of speech. Relying on State v. Sondergaard, Me., 316 *405 A.2d 367 (1974) defendant argues that the constitutional infirmity, here, is that no “special relationship” was shown to exist between O’Donnell and any person in the Courthouse who might be injured were a bomb to explode.

Defendant misconstrues the “special relationship” analysis in Sondergaard. Sonder-gaard recognized that the constitutional guarantee of free speech requires that a communication which is sought to be subjected to criminal sanction under the characterization of being a “threat” must generate the reasonable likelihood that it will give rise in some person to “alarm” or “fear . to his disquiet.” Id. at 369; see also State v. Porter, Me., 384 A.2d 429, 433 (1978). Sondergaard

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398 A.2d 402, 1979 Me. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fischer-me-1979.