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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. Brown,
Present: Lenk, Doerfer, & Cohen, JJ.
Indictment found and returned in the Superior Court
Department on
A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by Francis R. Fecteau, J., and the case was tried before James P.
Donohue, J.
Cindy Ellen Hill for the defendant.
Christopher P. Hodgens, Assistant District Attorney,
for the Commonwealth.
DOERFER, J.
The defendant was convicted under G. L. c. 94C,
§ 32E(b)(4), of trafficking in 200 grams or more
of cocaine. She claims on appeal that (1) her motion to suppress the cocaine
found in a shopping bag she was carrying was erroneously denied; (2) evidence
of her silence or ambiguous statements and conduct deemed equivalent to an
admission in response to police questioning was improperly admitted and
commented upon at trial; and (3) her motion to dismiss the indictment should
have been allowed on double jeopardy grounds. We affirm.
Motion to suppress the cocaine. Acting on a tip from a
confidential informant, the State police confronted the defendant after she had
entered a common hallway in the apartment building in which she was staying
with her stepbrother. The motion judge found,[1]
after a hearing on a motion to suppress, that there was probable cause to
arrest the defendant and that the search of the shopping bag at her feet was
incident to a lawful arrest. In brief summary, there was evidence that the
confidential informant had previously supplied reliable information to the
police leading to the purchase of drugs in a controlled buy.
As a basis of knowledge for the tip, there was evidence that the confidential
informant had overheard a person speaking on the telephone to the defendant
indicating that the defendant would be leaving New York City on a Giovanni
Express van, due to arrive in Worcester at about 7:30 P.M. with a large
quantity of drugs, and that she usually carried such drugs in a shopping bag.
The information given by the confidential informant was corroborated by police
observations. The police observed the van as it left the Massachusetts Turnpike
at the time predicted and followed it until it arrived at the apartment
building where the informant told the police the defendant would go and where
the police knew (from previous surveillance) the defendant would stay when in
Worcester. The defendant had a large shopping bag with her as she entered the
building. There she was confronted by the police in a basement hallway leading
to her stepbrother's apartment. The police confirmed her identity and the fact
that she had just arrived from
From these facts the judge was warranted in concluding that there was probable
cause to arrest the defendant at the time of the search and seizure. The
informant satisfied the Aguilar-Spinelli[2] test as to reliability and basis of
knowledge (see Commonwealth v.
Admissibility of evidence of statements, nonverbal conduct, and silence. When
the defendant was confronted by the police in the hallway of the apartment
building they asked her a series of questions. Evidence of the statements made
by the police to the effect that they had reason to believe that she possessed
drugs was excluded. However, the Commonwealth's witnesses were allowed to
testify as to certain responses made by the defendant to police when they asked
her if she had drugs.[3] Some of the
responses were verbal and others allegedly were by way of glances to the
shopping bag on the floor.
To the extent that the responses could be construed as silence, the trial judge
informed counsel that no such use could be made of the defendant's words or
actions.
Defense counsel elected to use the defendant's ambiguous responses and
apparently confused state of mind as a positive indication that, as she
claimed, she had no knowledge that the item she was carrying to her stepbrother
was a large quantity of cocaine. See note 4, infra. He pursued this tactic in
cross-examination of the Commonwealth's witnesses, in his examination of the
defendant, and in his closing argument. In these circumstances there was no
prejudicial error created by the presence of this evidence in the case. Commonwealth v.
The defendant also argues for the first time on appeal that her interrogation
was custodial, that she had not been given her Miranda warnings prior to being
questioned, and thus, that any and all of her responses[5] should have
been excluded.
Whether the defendant's interrogation was custodial depends on a number of
factors.[6]
Thus, the motion judge's ruling that the officers had probable cause to arrest
the defendant, even augmented by an inference that
they intended to arrest her before she had completed making statements or
engaging in testimonial conduct, does not establish as matter of law that her
interrogation was custodial. The record reveals that there was conflicting
evidence relating to the Bryant factors. At trial the defendant described her
encounter with the police in terms that would support a conclusion that her
interrogation was custodial. The police witnesses gave a different account.[8] A trier of
fact, if the issue had been raised, could have reached either result on the
evidence, and the issue cannot be determined as matter of law without factual
findings. "The determination of the weight and credibility of the
testimony is the function and responsibility of the judge who saw and heard the
witnesses, and not of this court." Commonwealth v. Moon,
380
In any event, the failure of the defendant to raise the Miranda issue in the
trial court is consistent with her tactical approach at trial in which she
sought to employ her statements and conduct as positive evidence of her lack of
knowledge about the contents of the package she was carrying.
Double jeopardy after mistrial. At a trial on this
indictment commenced earlier the same day the Commonwealth made references in
its opening to certain evidence that was inadmissible hearsay. On motion of the
defendant a mistrial was declared. Although the trial judge admonished the
assistant district attorney, he found as a fact that the prosecutor had not
procured a mistrial through bad faith or overreaching. In substance, the
prosecutor claimed that he (mistakenly) believed he could mention the hearsay
in question, which he believed would be admissible as setting the stage under
Commonwealth v. Rosario, 430 Mass. 505, 509 (1999). The character of the
conduct leading to a mistrial is a question of fact for the trial judge, and
the record supports the judge's finding on this matter. See our recent
discussion in Commonwealth v. Curtis, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 636 (2002). Having made
this finding, the trial judge was correct in denying the defendant's motion to
dismiss based upon a claim of double jeopardy. Donavan
v. Commonwealth, 426
Judgment affirmed.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] The motion judge did not make detailed findings.
He ruled from the bench that the confidential informant was reliable based on
previous information given by the informant and that there was a basis of
knowledge from an overheard telephone call. He ruled in the alternative that
there were exigent circumstances justifying the seizure of the cocaine. These
findings are contained in a two-page transcript of his oral findings.
[2] Aguilar v.
[3] Defense counsel's objection at trial was to
statements by the police that they had reason to believe that the defendant
possessed drugs (and to her silence). This objection was sustained. Evidence
that the police asked her if she had drugs in the bag was admitted without
objection.
[4] The Commonwealth in closing forcefully pointed to
the implausibility of the theory that she did not know about the presence of
over $90,000 worth of cocaine in her shopping bag, given her testimony that she
was asked by a friend of the family in New York to carry a plastic bag (which
was closed by a knot tied at the top) to her stepbrother.
[5] At trial the police referred to the conduct of
the defendant in looking down at her shopping bag when they asked her if she
had drugs. This evidence of her "conduct [was] offered to show [her] state
of mind [and was] testimonial." Commonwealth v. Conkey,
430
[6] The issue of whether her interrogation was
custodial was not explored either on the motion to suppress or at trial. In
assessing whether there was a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice we
have examined the evidence in the entire record, whether produced at the
hearing on the motion to suppress or at trial.
[7] The Supreme Judicial Court has "recently
clarified that, in applying the second [ ] factor [set forth in Commonwealth v.
Bryant, 390 Mass. 729, 737 (1983)], the undisclosed subjective belief of the
interrogator as to whether the person interviewed is a suspect is immaterial;
rather, courts must look to whether a reasonable person in the position of the
person being questioned would not feel free to leave the place of questioning.
Commonwealth v. Morse, 427
[8] Even their statement to her that they believed
she was in possession of drugs does not imply as matter of law that she
regarded her situation as custodial. In Commonwealth v. Morse, supra at 125
n.6, the authorities were reviewed in these terms: "[i]n
Beckwith v. United States, 425 U.S. 341, 346-347 (1976), quoting United States
v. Caiello, 420 F.2d 471, 473 (2d Cir. 1969), cert.
denied, 397 U.S. 1039 (1970), the Court stated that '[i]t
was the compulsive aspect of custodial interrogation, and not the strength or
content of the government's suspicions at the time the questioning was
conducted, which led the court to impose the Miranda requirements with regard
to custodial questioning.'" Also, the undisputed fact that the police
subjectively intended to arrest her does not establish as matter of law that
she understood or believed that she was not free to leave.