Case Name: Commonwealth vs. Robert D. Loder
Court: Massachusetts Appeals Court
Jurisdiction: Massachusetts
Decision Date: 1976-07-27
Citations: 4 Mass. App. Ct. 832
Docket Number: 
Parties: Commonwealth vs. Robert D. Loder.
Judges: 
Reporter: Massachusetts Appeals Court Reports
Volume: 4
Pages: 832–833

Head Matter:
Commonwealth vs. Robert D. Loder.
July 27, 1976.

Opinion:
The defendant appeals under G. L. c. 278, § 33A-33G, from convictions, after a jury trial, of rape, armed robbery and burglary, and the commission of an unnatural and lascivious act. He claims error in the denial in part, after a voir dire, of his motion to suppress in-court and out-of-court identifications by the victims, a young man and woman. At the time of the crimes the victims were occupying the bedroom of an apartment of the young woman. Two men entered and assaulted them during a period of one and one-half to two hours. The only light in the room came from a street light opposite the window and lights from the park across the street. These dimly illuminated the room. In the course of the episode the young man, despite being nearsighted, was able to view both assailants for a total period of ten minutes. For one minute, the face of the individual, later identified by the victims as the defendant, was only several inches distant from his eyes. The young woman was assaulted by the defendant for approximately thirty minutes. During that time her face was within inches of his face. Later that day the young man selected the defendant's photograph from an array of more than one hundred photographs shown him by the police and the young woman separately selected the defendant's photograph from six to ten photographs shown to her by the police. Two of these were of the defendant. Following these photographic identifications the young woman was told by the police, and she then informed the young man, that they were familiar with the defendant and regarded him as dangerous. In the early evening of the following day, the young woman spotted her assailants outside her mother's apartment. She alerted the police and accompanied them to a nearby park where the defendant was arrested. About two weeks later the young man identified the defendant at a preliminary hearing in a District Court as the latter sat in the dock with three other individuals. The only identification suppressed by the judge was made by the young woman in the District Court at about the same time that she observed the defendant handcuffed to an officer. Although the judge found her identification on that occasion to have had an independent source, her observations of the defendant at the time she was assaulted, the identification was suppressed presumably for the reason that in the circumstances it was unnecessarily suggestive. See Commonwealth v. Hogg, ante, 225, 227 (1976). The facts that two photographs of the defendant were inadvertently included among the assortment from which the young woman made her selection (see Commonwealth v. Geraway, 355 Mass. 433, 439-440 [1969]) and that both she and the young man learned, after they had identified the defendant by photograph, that the police regarded him as dangerous — were insufficient reasons for the suppression of the photographic and succeeding identifications. On the day that these crimes were committed and prior to their photographic identifications of the defendant, the victims gave a detailed description of their assailants to the police. The inclusion of two photographs of the defendant among those shown to the young woman was not impermissibly suggestive per se. See Commonwealth v. Kostka, 370 Mass. 516, 523-524 (1976); United States v. Cooper, 472 F.2d 64, 65-66 (5th Cir. 1973). The evidence warranted the judge's finding in support of his refusal to suppress the photographic and other pre-trial identifications of the defendant by the victims (see Commonwealth v. Murphy, 362 Mass. 542, 547 [1972]) and the admission of their identifications of the defendant at trial. Furthermore, the judge found that "the experience they suffered... their opportunity to observe . their capacity to note and memorize the features of their assailants, is convincing evidence of the independent and untainted quality of their identification... I find their identification to be based solely on what they observed of the defendant at the time he assaulted them." Commonwealth v. Robinson, 355 Mass. 620, 622 (1969). Commonwealth v. Frank, 357 Mass. 250, 254 (1970). Commonwealth v. Flaherty, 1 Mass. App. Ct. 282, 287-288 (1973). Commonwealth v. Kennedy, 3 Mass. App. Ct. 218, 221, n.4 (1975). Commonwealth v. Underwood, 3 Mass. App. Ct. 522, 534-535 (1975). See also Neil v. Biggers, 409 U.S. 188, 200-201 (1972).
The case was submitted on briefs.
Daniel F. Toomey for the defendant.
Bonnie H. MacLeod-Griffin, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
Judgments affirmed.