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Opinions of The and the Court of Appeals To be used in
conjunction with the CPS Criminal Procedure Textbook |
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CPS Commonwealth
Police Service, Inc. and the Law Office of Patrick Michael Rogers |
Commonwealth v. Andujar,
Hampden.
Present: Greenberg, Laurence, & Grasso, JJ.
The case was tried before William J. Boyle, J.
Jeanne M. Kaiser for the defendant.
Sidney E. Reavey, Assistant District Attorney, for
the Commonwealth.
GRASSO, J.
Admission of opinion testimony from a police
officer that the defendant had engaged in street level drug transactions and a
redirect examination of the officer that implicated the defendant's right to
remain silent are focal points of the defendant's appeal from convictions of
distribution of cocaine and distribution within 1,000 feet of a school zone. We
reverse the defendant's convictions because the error
in admission of the officer's opinion cannot be deemed nonprejudicial
when viewed together with the improper questions pertaining to the defendant's
silence.
Background. In the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth, we recite facts that the jury could have found. On
At approximately
After Rodriguez's arrest, Barkyoumb left his
surveillance location and returned to the police station. There, he quickly
enlisted the assistance of other officers in locating and arresting the
defendant. Prior to arresting the defendant, Barkyoumb
returned to the corner of Beach and Suffolk Streets and searched the tree for
the suspected stash of drugs. None was found. Nor were any drugs, drug
paraphernalia, or other accouterments of the drug trade found upon the defendant
at his arrest. Barkyoumb did find $375, in
denominations of five, ten, and twenty dollar bills, in the defendant's right
front pants pocket.
1. The expert opinion. Notwithstanding the clear admonition of Commonwealth v.
Woods, 419 Mass. 366, 374-375 (1995), and its progeny, see Commonwealth v.
Zavala, 52 Mass. App. Ct. 770, 775-776 (2001), on direct examination, the
prosecutor impermissibly asked, and the judge improperly admitted, over
objection, testimony that Barkyoumb believed the four
interactions that preceded the transaction with Rodriguez to be street level
narcotics transactions.[2] Common sense suggests that it would have been
obvious to the jury that Barkyoumb believed this to
be the case, otherwise the defendant would not have been arrested, indicted,
and put to trial. See Commonwealth v. Rivera, 425 Mass. 633, 646 n.13 (1997)
(drug sales unfortunately so common in present society that almost any witness
could draw inference that drug sales were occurring in described activities);
Commonwealth v. Tanner, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 576, 580 (1998) ("Even without
such testimony, the jury would have known that [the officer] believed that . . . the defendant had been involved in
drug sales"). Nevertheless, and the Commonwealth concedes, the case law has
placed beyond disputation that testimony of the kind received from Barkyoumb is an opinion as to the defendant's guilt that
intrudes impermissibly upon the jury's fact-finding function.
Because the defendant's objection preserved the point for appeal, we consider
the error under the prejudicial error standard of review.
The error, however, must be viewed together with the prosecutor's redirect
examination, discussed below, that inquired as to the defendant's failure to
offer an explanation for the large amount of cash found in his pocket upon his
arrest. No drugs, paraphernalia, or accouterments of the drug trade were found
on the defendant. Nor did police locate the supposed stash of drugs.
Rodriguez's whereabouts prior to, and for a brief period after, the transaction
were unknown. The area was one of high drug activity, and Rodriguez may have
brought the drugs to his interaction with the defendant or purchased them
unobserved afterwards.
In sum, the defendant's convictions were based entirely upon inference from Barkyoumb's observations, coupled with the discovery of
drugs in Rodriguez's pocket and cash in the defendant's. We cannot say with
fair assurance that the buttressing provided by the impermissible expert
opinion had no effect, or but slight effect, upon the jury.
2. Comment on the defendant's silence. The defendant maintains that his
convictions should be reversed because the prosecutor's redirect examination
commented impermissibly on the defendant's right to remain silent. We place the
problem in context.
The defense cross-examination of Barkyoumb.
Defense counsel's cross-examination of Barkyoumb
sought to create the innuendo that the money found on the defendant might have
been intended for rent and had its source in a social security check rather
than drug sales. Addressing the $375 found in the defendant's pocket upon his
arrest, defense counsel inquired:
Defense Counsel: "And would it be fair to
say that you have no personal knowledge of [the defendant's] financial
resources?"
Barkyoumb: "I
have none, no."
Defense Counsel: "You don't know whether
he's employed or not, correct?"
Barkyoumb:
"No."
Defense Counsel: "And September 30, the
next day was October 1, correct?"
Barkyoumb:
"Yep."
Defense Counsel: "And that's the first of
the month, correct?"
Barkyoumb:
"Right."
Defense Counsel: "And normally when
somebody rents an apartment, that's when rent's due, correct?"
Barkyoumb: "I
guess, yes."
Defense Counsel: "So there's
many reasons why a person would have money on his possession, correct?"
[Here the prosecutor objected.][4]
Barkyoumb:
"Right."
Defense Counsel: "Right, so there's many different reasons."
Barkyoumb:
"Absolutely."
Defense Counsel: "And a lot of, and
ninety-nine point nine percent of those reasons would not be associated with
drugs, correct?"
. . .
Barkyoumb:
"Yes."
The prosecutor's redirect
examination. Without objection, the prosecutor's redirect examination of
Barkyoumb took the following tack:
Prosecutor: "[When you found the money on
the defendant,] did he offer you any explanation why he had so much cash on
him?"
Barkyoumb:
"No."
Prosecutor: "[D]id he say his rent was
due?"
Barkyoumb:
"No."
Prosecutor: "Did he say that he just got a
social security check from somewhere?"
Barkyoumb:
"No."
Prosecutor: "Did he offer you an
explanation to tell you why? Did he say he just cashed a paycheck?"
Barkyoumb:
"No."
Prosecutor: "He told you nothing at all
about why he had so much cash on him in numerous denominations?"
Barkyoumb:
"Nothing."
Such an inquiry should not have been undertaken
by the prosecutor or allowed by the trial judge.
We begin by emphasizing that this is not a situation involving when, or in what
circumstances, a defendant's prearrest, pre-Miranda
silence or equivocal admissions constitute implied or adoptive admissions or
constitute permissible subjects for cross-examination.
Here, the defendant made no statements when the police discovered the cash in
his pockets at his arrest.[7] The prosecutor's redirect examination
impermissibly suggested that the defendant had an obligation to make an
explanatory statement. Such a suggestion implicates directly the defendant's
core constitutional right to remain silent. The defendant had no obligation to
offer police an explanation for the money on his person. A defendant's silence
while under arrest and prior to receiving Miranda warnings cannot be used
against him.
That the prosecutor's questioning occurred on redirect examination is of no
consequence. Use of the defendant's postarrest
silence to impeach an exculpatory explanation offered by defense counsel on
cross-examination is prohibited.
We are mindful that the situation arose in the rough and tumble of trial.
However, the prosecutor had options other than eliciting a prohibited comment
upon defendant's silence. Upon the judge's overruling his objection during
cross-examination, the prosecutor might have requested a sidebar conference to
inquire whether there existed a good faith basis for defense counsel's
questions. Further, the prosecutor might have requested a contemporaneous
limiting instruction that the witness's negative answer was not to be taken as
evidence of the substantive truth of the proposition advanced. More obviously,
redirect examination might have emphasized that the defendant placed the money
received during each exchange in the same right front pocket in which the cash
was found.
Although defense counsel lodged no objection, the impermissible questioning
posed particularly grave risk. Impermissible comment upon a defendant's right
to remain silent is "so egregious that reversal is the norm, not the
exception." Commonwealth v. King,
Judgments reversed.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Rodriguez was out of sight of police for a short
period following his interaction with the defendant.
[2] Prosecutor:
"And based on your training and experience, what did you believe was
occurring?"
Barkyoumb: "Based upon my training and
experience, I believe they were street narcotic transactions taking
place."
[3] Barkyoumb's reference
to a "stash" appears to suffer from a similar deficiency.
[4] The prosecutor's general objection to the
question was overruled by the judge with no ensuing request by the prosecutor for
a sidebar or limiting instruction.
[5] We are unable to discern from the record whether
the defendant had received Miranda warnings at the time. The difference is
inconsequential.
[6] This is not a case where statements were made in
the defendant's presence prior to his arrest to which a reply from the
defendant would normally have been expected. See Commonwealth v. Haas, 373
Mass. 545, 560 (1977) (discussing defendant's silence in presence of person
making accusation concerning matters within defendant's knowledge which
defendant heard and understood and which it would have been natural for him to
deny).
[7] This is not a case where the defendant offered an
explanation at his arrest that differed from his testimony at trial.