Court Opinion

ID: 9917455
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-12 15:06:39.995467+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:03:04.980451
License: Public Domain

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22-P-710                                                  Appeals Court

                COMMONWEALTH     vs.   JEREMIAH WOODEN.

                              No. 22-P-710.

           Essex.        April 6, 2023. - January 12, 2023.

                Present:    Blake, Grant, & Smyth, JJ.

Assault by Means of a Dangerous Weapon. Assault and Battery on
     Certain Public Officers and Employees. Police Officer.
     Firearms. Resisting Arrest. License. Constitutional Law,
     Right to bear arms, Double jeopardy. Practice, Criminal,
     Double jeopardy, Duplicative convictions.

     Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
Department on May 11, 2016.

    The cases were tried before Hélène Kazanjian, J.

     Michael A. Waryasz for the defendant.
     Kathryn L. Janssen, Assistant District Attorney, for the
Commonwealth.

    BLAKE, J.       Following a jury trial in the Superior Court,

the defendant, Jeremiah Wooden, was convicted of two counts of

assault by means of a dangerous weapon, a firearm (ADW), assault

and battery on a police officer, carrying a firearm without a
                                                                      2

license as a level one armed career criminal under G. L. c. 269,

§ 10G (a),1 and resisting arrest.2   On appeal, the defendant

contends that the convictions of ADW are duplicative because the

offenses occurred during one continuous and uninterrupted

altercation and therefore, one of those convictions must be

vacated and the case remanded for resentencing.      As we are

unpersuaded by this argument, we affirm the ADW, assault and

battery on a police officer, and resisting arrest verdicts.      We

vacate the conviction and set aside the verdict on the charge of

carrying a firearm without a license as a level one armed career

criminal, pursuant to Commonwealth v. Guardado, 491 Mass. 666

(2023) (Guardado I), and Commonwealth v. Guardado, 493 Mass. 1

(2023) (Guardado II).   Accordingly, we remand for

reconsideration of the resentencing scheme.

     Background.   We recite the facts that the jury could have

found.3   At approximately 6 P.M. on April 14, 2016, Salem police

     1 After the defendant was found guilty of carrying a firearm
without a license, the defendant pleaded guilty to the level one
armed career criminal enhancement.

     2 The defendant was found not guilty of armed assault with
intent to murder and one count of ADW.

     3 Our review is hampered because the proceedings of the
third day of trial were not recorded. The parties filed a
stipulation pursuant to Mass. R. A. P. 8, as appearing in 481
Mass. 1611 (2019), but the parties have not provided us with the
trial judge's recollection of the proceedings on that date in
order to reconstruct the record more fully.
                                                                      3

officers Rafael Gonzalez and Brian St. Pierre were on patrol

when Gonzalez noticed a dark-colored sport utility vehicle (SUV)

being driven by the defendant.     Both Gonzalez and St. Pierre

were familiar with the defendant and knew that there was an

outstanding warrant for his arrest.     As the police cruiser

passed by the SUV, Gonzalez and the defendant looked at one

another.    The officers activated the cruiser's blue lights, and

the defendant pulled the SUV over on Fairfield Street.     The

officers pulled the cruiser behind the SUV, and Gonzalez saw the

defendant climb from the driver's seat into the rear passenger

seat.   Gonzalez approached the driver's side of the SUV, while

St. Pierre approached the passenger's side.     As St. Pierre

approached, the defendant got out of the SUV and stood on the

sidewalk.    St. Pierre walked toward the defendant, and the

defendant began to back up.     The defendant ignored St. Pierre's

instructions and attempted to flee.     At that point, Gonzalez

came around the front of the SUV and attempted to tackle the

defendant but was unsuccessful.

       St. Pierre ran after the defendant.   As the defendant cut

across the lawn of a home at 7 Fairfield Street, he began to

lose his footing.     The defendant turned down the driveway and

lost his footing even more, allowing St. Pierre to catch up with

him.    As St. Pierre tried to grab the defendant, a struggle

ensued.     St. Pierre told the defendant that he was under arrest,
                                                                      4

but the defendant continued to resist.    St. Pierre pushed the

defendant against a pickup truck in the driveway and tried to

grab the defendant by his shoulders.     The defendant was able to

get out of the zip-up sweatshirt that he was wearing, preventing

St. Pierre from gaining control of him.    St. Pierre became

"[a]lmost wedged in the corner" between the truck and the

garage.

    As St. Pierre tried to gain control of the defendant from

behind, the defendant reached into the right side of his pants

and pulled something out.   The defendant moved his left hand

over his right hand, and St. Pierre heard the defendant "push[]

the rack back on the slide of a gun."    The defendant "lowered

his center of gravity," at which time St. Pierre lost his grip

on the defendant and "clearly [saw a black handgun] pointed at

[his] left leg."   St. Pierre "tried to pick up [his] left leg

and almost put it behind [the defendant]" so that if the

defendant was "going to shoot [St. Pierre's leg], [the defendant

would] have to shoot himself."   St. Pierre lost his balance as

he tried to gain control of the defendant and the gun; he fell

to his knees between the pickup truck and garage.

    St. Pierre looked up and saw the defendant facing him from

less than one foot away, pointing the gun directly at him.      St.

Pierre sat back and put his hands up.    The defendant then

"stepped back a little bit, squared himself off, like three to
                                                                           5

four feet [away]" and "pointed [the gun] right at [St. Pierre]."

St. Pierre pleaded with the defendant not to shoot him.

However, the defendant fired a shot.        St. Pierre believed that

he had been shot (although he was not).       The defendant then told

St. Pierre to "give [him his] side arm."       St. Pierre had his

hands up as the defendant came closer to him.       The defendant

pulled at St. Pierre's service weapon as St. Pierre tried to

shield it with his elbow.    The defendant pulled at the butt of

St. Pierre's service weapon twice with enough force to move St.

Pierre's body.   Because St. Pierre's service weapon was locked

in the holster, the defendant was unable to gain possession of

it.   The defendant then turned and fled through a backyard.

Gonzalez and St. Pierre were unable to locate the defendant.           A

black handgun was found in the yard at 1 Fairfield Street.

      Discussion.   1.   ADW convictions.    The defendant argues

that his two convictions of ADW are duplicative, and thus

violate his constitutional right not to be twice placed in

jeopardy for the same offense.     He contends that the two

instances in which he pointed a firearm at St. Pierre were part

of a "single, brief, continuous and uninterrupted assault," and

therefore, only one conviction can stand.4       "Both the double

      4Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss
pursuant to Commonwealth v. McCarthy, 385 Mass. 160, 163 (1982),
wherein he argued that the indictments were duplicative. A
different judge denied the motion. The defendant does not argue
                                                                        6

jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States

Constitution and Massachusetts common law prohibit the

imposition of multiple punishments for the same offense."

Commonwealth v. Dykens, 473 Mass. 635, 638 (2016).     However,

multiple convictions of the same or cognate offenses are

permitted where they rest on separate and distinct acts.       See,

e.g., Commonwealth v. Gouse, 461 Mass. 787, 798-799 (2012),

abrogated on other grounds by Guardado I, 491 Mass. 666.       As the

defendant notes, we look to what "'unit of prosecution' the

Legislature intended as the punishable act for [ADW]."     Dykens,

supra at 640.   We also consider the continuous offense doctrine,

"which recognizes that certain criminal statutes are intended to

punish just once for a continuing course of conduct, rather than

for each and every discrete act comprising that course of

conduct" (citation omitted).   Id.   Here, the defendant was

indicted on three counts of ADW, and the prosecutor argued to

the jury that the defendant committed those three counts by

separately pointing the firearm at St. Pierre's leg,

chest/torso, and head.   The defendant was acquitted of the last

count.5

on appeal that the indictments should have been dismissed before
trial, and so we do not reach that issue.
     5 The Commonwealth contends that this means the jury viewed

the assault to the chest/torso and the assault to the head as a
single continuous act. That does not necessarily follow. In
                                                                      7

    The crime of ADW is codified at G. L. c. 265, § 15B (b).

This section, under which the defendant was indicted, does not

explicitly state the unit of prosecution that the Legislature

intended as the punishable act.     However, § 15B (b) is set forth

in G. L. c. 265, the entirety of which describes crimes against

the person and focuses on the prevention of violence and injury

to individuals.     Generally, when the intent of the Legislature

in enacting criminal statutes is aimed at protecting the safety

of individuals, the number of victims determines the unit of

prosecution.    See Commonwealth v. Wassilie, 482 Mass. 562, 569

(2019).   See also Commonwealth v. Davis, 88 Mass. App. Ct. 143,

146 (2015).    However, the prosecution of distinct assaults on

the same person during a single episode is not barred by this

principle.     See Gouse, 461 Mass. at 798-799; Commonwealth v.

Vick, 454 Mass. 418, 435 (2009).     In fact, as was the case here,

the same or cognate offenses may be prosecuted on the basis of

separate and distinct acts against the same victim during the

same attack.    See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Jackson, 80 Mass. App.

Ct. 528, 530 (2011) (defendant committed two separate acts when

he punched victim in body and stomach and kicked her in legs).

    As mentioned above, the record before us does not contain

the transcript of the discussion of the motions for required

any event, nothing in our decision turns on this argument, and
therefore, we do not address it.
                                                                     8

findings.   As a result, we do not have the benefit of the

reasoning of the trial judge as to whether a rational juror

could have concluded that the evidence, in the light most

favorable to the Commonwealth, supported two convictions of ADW.

See Commonwealth v. Latimore, 378 Mass. 671, 677-678 (1979).

Nor did the defendant move after trial, pursuant to Mass. R.

Crim. P. 25 (b) (2), as amended, 420 Mass. 1502 (1995), for a

judgment notwithstanding the verdict on one of the ADW

convictions.   Had he done so, the trial judge would have been

required to "determine whether separate and distinct acts

support[ed]" both ADW convictions.     Commonwealth v. Suero, 465

Mass. 215, 222 (2013).    In these circumstances, we focus on the

incomplete record before us, which includes the transcript of

St. Pierre's testimony and the parties' stipulation as to what

occurred on the last day of trial.

    We conclude that the jury had before it sufficient evidence

to find that the defendant committed two separate and distinct

acts of ADW.   The first occurred when St. Pierre chased the

defendant, a struggle ensued, the defendant pulled a handgun

from his pants, and the defendant "push[ed] the rack back on the

slide of [the] gun."     As St. Pierre tried to grab the defendant

from behind, the defendant "lowered his center of gravity" and

St. Pierre saw the gun pointed at his left leg.     This

constellation of facts formed the basis for the first ADW
                                                                    9

conviction.   See Commonwealth v. Buttimer, 482 Mass. 754, 767

(2019) (outlining elements of ADW).

     The jury could have found that the second ADW, although

occurring close in time to the first, was a separate and

distinct act, and not a continuous, uninterrupted assault.

After St. Pierre lost his balance and fell to his knees, he

looked up and saw the defendant facing him and pointing a gun

directly at him.    Unlike the first assault, where the defendant

and St. Pierre were in a struggle, the defendant was now in a

position of power as he stood over St. Pierre, who was on his

knees.   The defendant then "stepped back a little bit, squared

himself off, like three to four feet [away]" and "pointed [the

gun] right at [St. Pierre]."    St. Pierre pleaded with the

defendant not to shoot him; nonetheless, the defendant fired a

shot.    The defendant demanded that St. Pierre give him his

service weapon.    The defendant pulled at the butt of St.

Pierre's weapon as the officer tried to shield it.6    Once St.

Pierre was on the ground and in an inferior physical position to

the defendant, the defendant had the time to contemplate his

next steps.   When the struggle between the two ended with St.

Pierre on the ground, the defendant could have fled.    He did

     6 The prosecutor highlighted which acts constituted each
charge of ADW in his closing argument.
                                                                     10

not.       Rather, the defendant aimed the gun at St. Pierre, as St.

Pierre begged the defendant not to shoot him.      St. Pierre's

pleas went unanswered as the defendant fired a shot and then

tried to steal St. Pierre's service weapon.      There was a

demonstrable "break" in the chain of events once the defendant

was in a superior physical position to St. Pierre.      These facts

formed the basis for the second ADW conviction.7      See, e.g.,

Jackson, 80 Mass. App. Ct. at 530.       Put another way, this

evidence demonstrates that the jury could have found that the

second assault was not part of a continuous offense, but rather

was an independent course of conduct.      See Vick, 454 Mass. at

435 n.16, citing Commonwealth v. Maldonado, 429 Mass. 502, 509

(1999) (whether defendant's actions constitute separate and

distinct acts or single crime is question of fact for jury).

       Once the first assault occurred, the defendant was faced

with a decision known as the proverbial "fork in the road."         See

Hanna v. United States, 666 A.2d 845, 853 (D.C. 1995) (if during

commission of crime, defendant "realize[s] that he [or she] has

       During deliberations, the jury asked a question about the
       7

facts to be applied to each charge. This portion of the
proceedings was not transcribed. The parties agreed that the
trial judge instructed the jury that they must be "specific" on
each charge connecting it to each act as alleged. The defendant
does not argue that the jury were not instructed that the
convictions had to be based on separate acts, see Commonwealth
v. Kelly, 470 Mass. 682, 701-702 (2015), and so we do not reach
that issue.
                                                                   11

come to a fork in the road, and nevertheless decides to invade a

different interest, then his [or her] successive intentions make

him [or her] subject to cumulative punishment, and he [or she]

must be treated as accepting that risk, whether in fact he [or

she] knows of it or not" [citation omitted]).    In Commonwealth

v. Horne, 466 Mass. 440 (2013), the Supreme Judicial Court held

that an individual commits one single violation of G. L. c. 269,

§ 10 (a), when he possesses a rifle outside of his home for an

uninterrupted period, but that a second violation occurs when he

returns to his home and then goes back outside with the rifle.

See id. at 452.    After the first crime was committed, the

defendant in Horne was faced with a "fork in the road" decision

-- rather than remain in his home, he left his home with a

rifle, thereby committing a second crime.

    Here, each ADW conviction was based on a discrete set of

facts.    After the first assault, the circumstances during which

the assault occurred abruptly changed with St. Pierre on the

ground with his hands in the air; the hand-to-hand struggle had

ended.    With the opportunity to reflect and make a choice, the

defendant did not run.    Instead, he committed a second assault

and attempted to steal St. Pierre's gun, a demonstration of

proactive conduct unrelated to his initial flight from the

police.   As a result, the defendant's convictions are not

duplicative.   See Commonwealth v. Tracey, 50 Mass. App. Ct. 435,
                                                                      12

443 (2000) (where defendant shot victim in arm and thirty

seconds later fired two more shots, two convictions, one for

each respective attack, affirmed).8    Cf. Orla O. v. Patience P.,

100 Mass. App. Ct. 126, 129 (2021) (one continuous event over

brief period of time failed to satisfy threshold of three

separate acts of harassment within meaning of G. L. c. 258E).

Additionally, although the proximity in time, manner, and place

of the defendant's conduct is relevant, those factors are not

dispositive.     See Dykens, 473 Mass. at 644.   Here, the assaults

occurred close in time, with the same weapon, but we do not read

G. L. c. 15B (b) to "reward [the defendant's] persistence."

Dykens, supra.

     2.   Firearm conviction.    After trial in this case, the

Supreme Judicial Court held in Guardado I, 491 Mass. at 686-693,

     8 The defendant's reliance on Davis, 88 Mass. App. Ct. 143,
is misplaced. There, in a brief episode, the defendants robbed
a clerk of money from the till and her necklace. See id. at
144. Because the acts were "part of one seamless" criminal
episode, we concluded that there was one robbery, not two. Id.
at 147-148. Unlike in Davis, here, there was a break in the
action, which afforded the defendant the opportunity to make a
choice; he chose to commit a second ADW. Similarly,
Commonwealth v. Traylor, 472 Mass. 260 (2015), is
distinguishable. There, the Supreme Judicial Court held that
"to sustain multiple convictions [of wantonly or recklessly
permitting bodily injury to a child], the Commonwealth must
establish either separate and discrete instances in which a
defendant engaged in the proscribed conduct, or that multiple
victims were harmed as a result of a defendant's conduct." Id.
at 273. Here, there were separate and discrete instances in
which the defendant engaged in the proscribed conduct, ADW.
                                                                  13

that the absence of licensure is an element of the offenses of

unlawful possession of a firearm and unlawful possession of a

loaded firearm.    In Guardado II, 493 Mass. at 7-12, the court

held that, although the Commonwealth presented insufficient

evidence of absence of licensure at the original trial, the

prohibition against double jeopardy did not bar a retrial.

     After the issuance of Guardado II, the parties filed a

joint status report in which they stated that based on the

Guardado decisions, the defendant's firearm conviction must be

vacated.    The Commonwealth, relying on Guardado II, asks that

the case be remanded for a new trial on the firearm conviction.

The defendant contends that Guardado II was wrongly decided, and

that State and Federal double jeopardy principles should bar a

retrial.9   On our independent review, we agree with the

Commonwealth that Guardado II is controlling.   We therefore

vacate the conviction of carrying a firearm without a license as

a level one armed career criminal, with the Commonwealth

remaining free to retry the defendant if it so chooses.    See

Guardado II, 493 Mass. at 12.

     Conclusion.    The judgment of conviction of carrying a

firearm without a license as a level one armed career criminal

     9 The defendant acknowledges that Guardado II requires that
his firearm conviction be vacated and remanded for a new trial.
He asks that we note his objection, and that he reserves his
right to argue that double jeopardy bars retrial in the future.
                                                               14

is vacated and the verdict is set aside.   On the remaining

charges of ADW, assault and battery on a police officer, and

resisting arrest, the verdicts are affirmed, and the case is

remanded to the Superior Court for reconsideration of the

sentencing scheme.

                                   So ordered.