Trigones v. Bissonnette

CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 2002
Docket00-2504
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of Trigones v. Bissonnette (Trigones v. Bissonnette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trigones v. Bissonnette, (1st Cir. 2002).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit ____________________ No. 00-2504

THEODORE TRIGONES,

Petitioner, Appellant, v. LYNN BISSONNETTE, SUPERINTENDENT, NORTH CENTRAL CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION, Respondent, Appellee.

____________________ APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS [Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge] ____________________ Before Lynch, Circuit Judge, Bownes and Magill,* Senior Circuit Judges.

____________________

Judith Farris Bowman for appellant. William J. Meade, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Thomas F. Reilly, Attorney General, was on brief for appellee. ____________________

July 10, 2002 ____________________

* Of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation. LYNCH, Circuit Judge. This is a habeas corpus case

involving a state prisoner and raising Confrontation Clause

questions. The district court denied habeas relief; we find the

question closer, but affirm the denial of relief because the state

court decision affirming petitioner's murder conviction cannot be

said to be an unreasonable application of clearly established

federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court.

I.

On July 1, 1983, a thirteen-year-old babysitter, Erica

Forestiere, was stabbed to death between 12:30 a.m. and 2:30 a.m. while her two young charges slept upstairs. In 1984, a state court jury convicted Theodore J. Trigones of the crime, finding him guilty of first degree murder. He was sentenced to life

imprisonment without parole. Trigones's defense at trial was that the father of the children, Leo Trzcinski Jr., intending to kill his estranged wife,

had mistakenly killed Forestiere, the babysitter. Trigones testified that, on the night of the murder, he went to the Trzcinski residence, where he encountered Trzcinski sitting near the already dead babysitter.

Later that night, Trigones spoke with his stepfather,

Roland Weed. At a pretrial hearing on Trigones's motion to

suppress, Weed testified that Trigones, in the early morning hours

following the murder, had said "I've done something terrible" or "I

did something terrible." At that same hearing, Weed also testified

that he understood Trigones to say "I killed someone," and that

-2- Trigones said something like "[t]here's a lot of hate in me" and

"if it wasn't her it would have been somebody else."

The only purpose of this pretrial hearing was to determine whether Trigones's statements to Weed were voluntary and

products of a rational intellect, given Trigones's contemporaneous

drug and alcohol ingestion.1 The trial court found the statements voluntary and admissible.

Trigones was denied the opportunity to confront Weed at

trial. An edited version of the transcript of Weed's suppression

hearing testimony was read to the jury, over Trigones's objection,

when Weed exercised his Fifth Amendment rights by refusing to

testify at trial. Trigones sought interlocutory relief on the

question of the admissibility of the Weed testimony and lost. At trial, Trigones testified and pointed the finger at

Trzcinski. Trigones also attempted to counter Weed's statement.

He testified that what he had said to Weed was not that he, Trigones, had killed someone, but that it was Trzcinski who had

killed someone, although, in the conversation with Weed, Trigones

did not name Trzcinski as the killer. Trigones testified that he

had told Weed that there is a lot of hate in him, meaning

1 Although the federal constitutional prohibition against coerced statements does not cover private citizens' conduct, Colorado v. Connelly, 479 U.S. 157, 166 (1986), "[u]nder Massachusetts law, statements extracted by private citizens, even absent governmental involvement, are subject to suppression under the involuntariness standard," P.J. Liacos et al., Handbook of Massachusetts Evidence § 9.3, at 591 (7th ed. 1999) (citing Commonwealth v. Mahnke, 368 Mass. 662, 335 N.E.2d 660, 672 (1975)). We understand Trigones's suppression hearing argument to have focused more on whether his inculpatory statements were products of a rational intellect.

-3- Trzcinski, and that, if it wasn't her (the babysitter), he, again

meaning Trzcinski, would have killed someone else. Trzcinski also

testified and provided a version of the facts which, if credited, exculpated him. The jury had the opportunity to hear from both

Trigones and Trzcinski and to evaluate which witness to believe and

who was the killer. Weed's testimony, read into evidence at trial, was an

important element of the Commonwealth's case. Trigones's alleged

confession, as recounted by Weed, was a significant part of the

evidence tending to show that Trigones, rather than Trzcinski,

committed the murder. Indeed, as the federal district court that

heard this habeas petition noted, "Weed's testimony recounting

[Trigones's] alleged confession was likely some of the most damning evidence." Trigones v. Hall, 115 F. Supp. 2d 158, 171 (D. Mass.

2000). The differences between Trigones's version of his statement

to Weed and Weed's version of Trigones's statement make all the difference, according to Trigones, because Trigones's version is an

admission only to being an accessory after the fact, whereas Weed's version is an admission that Trigones committed the murder himself.

The jury convicted Trigones, and the Supreme Judicial

Court of Massachusetts ("SJC") affirmed the jury's verdict on

appeal, Commonwealth v. Trigones, 397 Mass. 633, 492 N.E.2d 1146

(1986). The SJC rejected Trigones's argument that, under the

Confrontation Clause, the court should not have admitted Weed's

statement. Id. at 1150. It concluded that, under Ohio v. Roberts,

448 U.S. 56 (1980), the testimony was admissible because Weed was

-4- unavailable2 to testify at trial and his suppression hearing

testimony bore adequate indicia of reliability. Trigones, 492

N.E.2d at 1149-50. In 1991 Trigones filed a new trial motion based on

ineffective assistance of counsel. The trial court initially

denied the motion without a hearing. A single justice of the SJC then denied Trigones's motion for leave to appeal the denial, but

remanded to the trial court for an evidentiary hearing because the

justice could not make the requisite ineffective assistance of

counsel determination on the record as it existed at the time. The

trial court held an evidentiary hearing at which Trigones's trial

counsel testified. After this hearing, the trial court again

denied the motion and a single justice of the SJC then denied Trigones's motion for leave to appeal. Trigones next filed an

unsuccessful action in the SJC for a declaration that it was

unconstitutional to deny him the right to appeal from the denial of the new trial motion. Trigones v. Attorney Gen., 420 Mass. 859,

652 N.E.2d 893 (1995).

In 1997, some thirteen years after his conviction,

Trigones sought federal habeas corpus relief. He argues that the

admission into evidence of the transcript of Weed's testimony

denied him his rights under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth

Amendment to cross-examine Weed at trial. The district court

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