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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. Rupp,
Present: Duffly, Smith, & Mason, JJ.
Chauncey B. Wood for the defendant.
Christina E. Miller, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
MASON, J.
On February 17, 1998, a grand jury returned a
four-count indictment charging the defendant with possessing a firearm without
a license, second offense, G. L. c. 269, § 10(d); receiving a
firearm with a defaced identification number, G. L. c. 269,
§ 11C; unlawfully possessing ammunition, G. L. c. 269,
§ 10(h); and possessing marijuana, G. L. c. 94C, § 34.
Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion to suppress the firearm and other
evidence on the ground that, at the time they stopped him, the police did not
have reasonable suspicion to believe that he was engaging in criminal activity.
A Superior Court judge (motion judge) denied that motion after a hearing.
A jury trial was then held before a different Superior Court judge (trial judge).
The jury found the defendant guilty of possession of a firearm and the other
charged offenses and, following a separate bench trial, the trial judge found
the defendant guilty of the charge of unlawfully possessing a firearm, second
offense. The defendant was sentenced to a term of from five years to five years
and one day in the State prison on the conviction for possessing a firearm,
second offense, and to a concurrent term of two years in a house of correction
on the conviction for possessing ammunition. The remaining two convictions were
placed on file.
On appeal, the defendant claims that the motion judge erred in failing to
suppress the firearm evidence and that the trial judge erred in allowing in
evidence certain prejudicial hearsay testimony. He also claims that the
prosecutor effectively lowered the Commonwealth's burden of proof during his
closing argument and that he was entitled to a required finding of not guilty
on each of the firearm counts. We affirm the convictions.
The suppression hearing. We summarize the
findings of the motion judge, supplemented by uncontroverted testimony of
Officer Kenneth Israel and of the other arresting officers, upon which the
judge relied for his ruling.[2] See Commonwealth v. Willis, 415
On
At about
Officer Israel immediately drove to the
As Officer Israel was driving into the parking area, he and the other officers
observed a white Nissan Maxima bearing registration number 8476BG parked with
its trunk open. They also observed two black males standing at the rear of the
car.
Officer Israel pulled into the parking lot and stopped his car between the
driveway and the Maxima. He and the other officers got out and began to
approach the two males. As they were doing so, one of the males, later
identified as the defendant, bolted away after he or the other male had slammed
down the trunk of the car. Officers Singletary and Celester immediately ran
after the defendant, while Officer Israel apprehended the other male.
During the chase, Officer Celester saw the
defendant attempting to throw something from his pocket, and he radioed for
back-up help. Officer Singletary continued to run after the defendant and
ultimately caught up with him after he had run behind a building on
The officers brought the defendant back to the police station for booking.
During the booking, a small bag of marijuana was found inside one of the
defendant's shoes. Also, while officers were discussing among themselves that a
gun had been found at the scene, the defendant stated to the officers that
"I wasn't trying to sell the gun."
1. Suppression issues. In denying the defendant's suppression motion, the
motion judge reasoned that the police had not seized the defendant until after
he had begun his flight and that, at that time, the police had a reasonable
suspicion that the defendant had committed or was committing a crime.
The defendant contends that, for constitutional
purposes, he was in fact seized before he had begun his flight because there
was evidence that Officer Israel had stopped his car in such a way as to
effectively block the Maxima from leaving the parking lot and, further, that
Officer Israel had pulled out his gun and said, "Don't move" as he
was getting out of the car. The defendant further contends that, even if the
police had not seized him before he began his flight, they still did not have
reasonable suspicion after he had begun his flight that he had engaged or was
engaging in criminal activity.
"'In reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, we accept the judge's
subsidiary findings of fact absent clear error.' Commonwealth v. Yesilciman,
406
While Officer Israel testified at the suppression hearing that he had stopped
his car between the Maxima and the driveway leading into the parking lot, he
also stated that he had stopped his car about twenty feet from the Maxima. He
did not testify that he had even attempted to place his car in such a location
as to prevent the Maxima from leaving the parking area, let alone come close to
doing so.
Moreover, the only evidence at the suppression
hearing that Officer Israel had drawn his gun and ordered the defendant and his
companion not to move prior to the defendant's flight was the testimony of a
citizen, Tawana Albert Pringle, who, at the time, was living with the
defendant's companion in an apartment near where the incident occurred and who
claimed she was present during the incident. The judge was not required to and
did not credit this testimony, which was explicitly contradicted by the
testimony of Officer Israel, who stated that the defendant began fleeing
"spontaneously" at the time the officer was getting out of the car
and before he had pulled out his gun or said anything.
In view of the testimony of Officer Israel and the other officers at the
suppression hearing, we can discern no "clear error" in the motion
judge's factual finding that the police had made no show of authority before
the defendant commenced his flight. We further agree with his conclusion that
the police had not otherwise stopped or seized the defendant before he
commenced his flight.
We likewise reject the defendant's claim that,
even after he began his flight, the police did not have reasonable suspicion to
believe that he was engaging in criminal activity. While flight from the police
is not alone enough to justify a reasonable suspicion, it may be considered
with other factors.
The defendant's reliance on Commonwealth v.
Grinkley, 44 Mass. App. Ct. 62 (1997), is misplaced. In that case, the police
had received an anonymous tip that a group of youths congregating in a public
recreational facility on a summer evening had a gun, but no information as to
which member of the group allegedly had the gun.
2. Admission of hearsay evidence. Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion
in limine to prevent any reference at trial to the substance of any 911 calls
or radio dispatches. The trial judge allowed the motion without prejudice,
stating that she would consider allowing the prosecutor to elicit a bland or
neutral description of the nature of the call, but not any information that the
person making the call had observed the sale of a gun.
Subsequently, during the trial, the trial judge agreed, over the defendant's
objection, that the prosecutor could elicit from a single witness that the
police had received a 911 call "involving a firearm." The prosecutor
thereafter elicited the following testimony from Officer Celester:
Q. "While you were on routine patrol,
officer, did you receive a radio transmission?"
A. "Yes, we did."
Q. "Did that radio transmission involve a
911 call?"
A. "Yes, it did."
Q. "What was the nature of that 911
call?"
A. "Regarding a firearm."
While the Supreme Judicial Court has permitted
the use of such testimony to explain the reasons for police action, it has also
noted that such testimony "carries a high probability of misuse, because a
witness may relate 'historical aspects of the case, replete with hearsay
statements in the form of complaints and reports,' even when not necessary to
show [the] state of police knowledge." Commonwealth v.
Each of these criteria was met in this case. Officer Celester had personal
knowledge of the dispatch relaying the 911 call and that this was the reason
the police had proceeded to the
Even if admission of Officer Celester's
testimony was error, it was harmless in this case. The Commonwealth's evidence
with respect to each of the firearms charges was strong and included not only
the defendant's precipitous flight, but also the subsequent discovery of the
handgun on a roof of a building within tossing range of where the defendant had
stopped. While the prosecutor referred to Officer Celester's testimony during
his closing argument, it was not to prove its truth, but only to explain why
the police were searching for a gun.[5] Contrast Commonwealth v.
Randall,
"Now, ladies and gentlemen, in this case
during the trial, you have heard some testimony about the nature of a 911 call
made to police officers. I instruct you that that testimony may not be used for
the truth of the statement attributed to the 911 caller, because that would be
hearsay. Rather, I admitted that evidence only for a limited purpose, that is
as a basis for the presence and the conduct of the police officers in the area
which they were describing."
Given the circumstances described above, this
instruction was sufficient to avert any prejudice to the defendant from
admission of Officer Celester's testimony regarding the 911 call.
3. Prosecutor's closing argument. During his closing argument, the prosecutor,
in urging that the jury could rely on circumstantial evidence in returning
their verdicts, stated, "[E]very day of your lives, believe it or not, you
use circumstantial evidence and draw inferences. You draw conclusions that you
believe to be proof beyond a reasonable doubt." The prosecutor then went
on to provide an example: the jurors might conclude beyond a reasonable doubt
that it had been raining by observing puddles all over the pavement after they
had been inside all day.
The defendant claims that this argument was improper because it effectively
lowered the Commonwealth's burden of proof. We agree that the prosecutor's
comments tended to trivialize the concept of reasonable doubt and, hence, were
improper.
4. Sufficiency of the evidence. The Commonwealth called as witnesses at trial
each of the officers who testified at the suppression hearing, and also James
Rattigan, the officer who found the gun on the roof of the building behind
which the defendant had run just before he was caught. It also called as an
expert witness Officer Mark Vickers of the Boston police department, who
testified that the serial number of the gun had been destroyed and appeared to
have been scratched out, and, further, that there were abrasions on the bottom
corner of the handle and also on the front muzzle of the gun which were
consistent with the gun having struck a hard surface, such as concrete.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, see, e.g., Commonwealth
v. Harris, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 481, 489 (1999), the evidence showed that the
defendant had fled from the scene as soon as the police had arrived, that he
had attempted to discard something from his pocket as he ran, that he
ultimately ran behind a twelve-foot high building and crouched down in a grassy
area, and that a loaded gun was subsequently found on the roof of that building.
The Commonwealth's evidence also showed that, after he was taken to the police
station, the defendant spontaneously exclaimed, "I wasn't trying to sell
the gun." The defendant's motion for a required finding of not guilty on
the firearms charges was properly denied. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Gilbert,
423
Judgments affirmed.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Also known as Clinton King.
[2] Two other officers participating in the
defendant's arrest, David Singletary and Lawrence Celester, also testified at
the suppression hearing. An acquaintance of the defendant, Tawana Albert
Pringle, testified at the hearing on his behalf.
[3] The tape of the 911
call indicated that the citizen had stated: "Yea, I'm
calling . . . there's someone who just bought a gun. They're
outside. The license plate of the car is 8476BG, it's a white Maxima. It's a
white Nissan Maxima. They just made a . . . gun deal in the car.
The address is
of the white Nissan talking in front of
[4] We reject the defendant's contention that Officer
Celester needed to have personal knowledge of the 911 call itself. There is
nothing in the court's decision in
[5] Specifically, the prosecutor argued: "First
of all, why was there even a search for the firearm? Well, when the officers
were in their car, they had a 911 call to respond to a specific location for a
report of an incident involving a firearm, so there's state of mind. The
officer's state of mind was, I'm responding to an incident involving a
firearm."