Court Opinion

ID: 9925922
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-23 15:06:21.189811+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:50.104210
License: Public Domain

NOTICE: Summary decisions issued by the Appeals Court pursuant to M.A.C. Rule
23.0, as appearing in 97 Mass. App. Ct. 1017 (2020) (formerly known as rule 1:28,
as amended by 73 Mass. App. Ct. 1001 [2009]), are primarily directed to the parties
and, therefore, may not fully address the facts of the case or the panel's
decisional rationale. Moreover, such decisions are not circulated to the entire
court and, therefore, represent only the views of the panel that decided the case.
A summary decision pursuant to rule 23.0 or rule 1:28 issued after February 25,
2008, may be cited for its persuasive value but, because of the limitations noted
above, not as binding precedent. See Chace v. Curran, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 258, 260
n.4 (2008).

                       COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS

                                 APPEALS COURT

                                                  21-P-482

                                  COMMONWEALTH

                                       vs.

                                CHARLES DAVIS.

               MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 23.0

       The defendant appeals from his convictions, after a jury

 trial, of assault and battery on a household member, G. L.

 c. 265, § 13M, and kidnapping, G. L. c. 265, § 26.              He raises

 one argument on appeal, namely that the prosecutor misstated the

 evidence in closing argument, resulting in a substantial risk of

 a miscarriage of justice.        We affirm.

       The charges arose from two incidents involving the same

 victim, with whom the defendant had been in a dating

 relationship.     The first incident occurred on October 1, 2014,

 and resulted in the charges for which the defendant was

 convicted.     The second incident occurred on July 13, 2015, and

 resulted in charges of assault and battery by means of a

 dangerous weapon, G. L. c. 265, § 15A (b), kidnapping, G. L.

 c. 265, § 26, assault and battery on a family or household
member, G. L. c. 265, § 13M (a), threat to commit a crime, G. L.

c. 275, § 2, and witness intimidation, G. L. c. 268, § 13B.     The

defendant was acquitted of all charges relating to the second

incident.

     Based on the victim's testimony, the evidence permitted the

jury to find the following.   The defendant and the victim met in

2013 and started to date the following year.    The victim decided

to end the relationship after the defendant became controlling

and possessive in September 2014.    On October 1, 2014, the

defendant was supposed to pick the victim up from work to take

her home.   The pickup did not take place as arranged, and the

victim ended up walking home.   Right before she arrived home,

the victim received a phone call from the defendant, who accused

her of having sex with someone else.    When the victim arrived in

the parking lot of the apartment complex where she lived, the

defendant drove into the lot, ran up to her, pulled her

backwards by her jacket, dragged her by her hair along the

ground, and picked her up and threw her into the car headfirst,

where she hit her head against the dashboard.    The victim

screamed during these events.   The defendant then drove away

with the victim in the car, repeatedly accusing her of cheating

on him, eventually stopped the car and digitally raped her, and

then drove her back to her apartment.    When the police arrived,

the defendant told the victim that he was going to tell the

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police that he had been helping her because she had a diabetic

cramp.

     Two other residents of the apartment complex testified to

their own observations of the events.   The first, Natasha

Gaudette, testified that around 9 P.M. on October 1, 2014, she

heard someone calling "help" multiple times and letting out a

"blood-curdling scream."    Gaudette looked out the window of her

apartment, which overlooked the parking lot, and saw somebody

shoving a very small woman or child, who was screaming, into the

back passenger seat of a boxy shaped car.   Gaudette described

that the perpetrator scooped up the very small person, folded

the person in half, and shoved the person into the car.   The

perpetrator then slammed the door shut, jumped into the car, and

"skidded out of the parking lot, like, on two wheels.   There was

a squeal."

     The second neighbor, Joanna Finiello, testified that she

heard a woman screaming "help me" and "stop" in the parking lot.

She saw a male figure with the passenger's side door of a car

open "pummeling a woman that was screaming, fist, fist, fist."

The woman was screaming for her life.   The man slammed the car

door shut and drove away.   Finiello called 911 when the car

returned to the parking lot about ten minutes later and reported

that the perpetrator had returned to the complex.

                                  3
     The defendant argues that, in closing argument, the

prosecutor mischaracterized the testimony of Gaudette by stating

that Gaudette had identified the defendant as the perpetrator of

the assault and kidnapping in the parking lot.   The defendant

points specifically to the following passage of the prosecutor's

closing:

     "So, to judge [the victim's] credibility what do you have
     that corroborates her credibility? Well, I suggest you
     have Natasha Gaudette, and Joanne Finiello. . . . What did
     they tell you? From two people that knew nobody in this
     case, bloodcurdling screams for help, screaming for their
     life, someone being hit, and then being picked up and
     thrown in a car, Natasha Gaudette actually describing how
     the defendant picked [the victim] up, exactly the way [the
     victim] told you that he picked her up, and describing the
     car parked . . . ." (Emphasis added.)

It is certainly true that Gaudette did not identify the

defendant (who was unknown to her) as the person who picked the

victim up and threw her in the car.   But the prosecutor did not

suggest she had.   Instead, the prosecutor's statement focused on

Gaudette's description of how the victim was picked up and

thrown into the car rather than on the identity of the person

who performed those acts.   We are buttressed in our view that

the jury would have understood the prosecutor's statement as one

describing acts rather than identity by the fact that identity

was not seriously at issue in this case; indeed, defense counsel

acknowledged that the defendant and victim had an intimate

relationship, and that the defendant was at the victim's

                                 4
apartment when the police arrived and that he told them that the

victim had suffered a diabetic attack.    This was not a case

about identification, but rather about whether the events

described by the victim occurred at all.    See, e.g.,

Commonwealth v. Cheng Sun, 490 Mass. 196, 217 (2022), quoting

Commonwealth v. Wilkerson, 486 Mass. 159, 180 (2020) ("We

examine [all] the challenged statements 'in the context of the

entire closing, the jury instructions, and the evidence

introduced at trial'").

     Even were we to assume that the prosecutor stretched the

point, we see no substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice

stemming from it.    See Commonwealth v. Pearce, 427 Mass. 642,

646 (1998) (unobjected-to misstatement of fact in closing

argument to be reviewed for substantial risk of miscarriage of

justice).    The judge instructed the jury that statements in

closing argument were not evidence, and that it was up to the

jury to decide whether and to what degree to credit the

testimony of the witnesses.    As we have already noted, the

defendant did not object, and the alleged misstatement went to a

tangential matter that was not a contested issue in the case.

See Commonwealth v. Kozec, 399 Mass. 514, 517-518 (1987)

(listing various factors that may be considered in assessing

whether substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice created by

argument).    Finally, the jury were clearly not swept away by the

                                  5
prosecutor's statement because they acquitted the defendant of

most of the charges against him.

                                       Judgments affirmed.

                                       By the Court (Wolohojian,
                                         Milkey & D'Angelo, JJ. 1),

                                       Assistant Clerk

Entered:    January 23, 2024.

1   The panelists are listed in order of seniority.

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