Court Opinion

ID: 9953990
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-25 14:07:33.084838+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:12:57.841531
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

                                                  23-P-95

                                  COMMONWEALTH

                                       vs.

                                 KAMAL GARAMI.

               MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 23.0

       Convicted by a District Court jury of assault and battery

 on a family or household member, G. L. c. 265, § 13M (a), and

 indecent assault and battery, G. L. c. 265, § 13H, the defendant

 appeals.    He argues that the judge erred in precluding a police

 officer from testifying to the defendant's out-of-court

 statement and contends for the first time on appeal that the

 prosecutor's closing argument unfairly exploited the exclusion

 of that statement and improperly appealed to sympathy.               We are

 troubled by the prosecutor's exploitation of the exclusion of

 the defendant's statement, which was at the Commonwealth's

 request.    Even so, we discern no substantial risk of a

 miscarriage of justice and thus we affirm.

       Background.     Based on the evidence at trial, the jury could

 have found as follows.       When the victim was thirty-six years old
and had known the defendant for about a month, she married him

in an arranged marriage.   A religious ceremony took place in

Algeria and was not legally binding.    The defendant was twenty-

five years the victim's senior and she was financially dependent

on him.   In December 2018, the victim moved to the United States

to live with the defendant.    At first they stayed in hotels or

slept in the defendant's truck.    In February 2019, they moved

into an apartment in Revere.

      At 4:10 A.M. on February 28, 2019, the defendant arrived

home and went into the bedroom where the victim was asleep.     The

defendant tried to have sex with the victim, but she told him

no.   The defendant grabbed the victim by her breasts, back, and

buttocks.   When the victim got out of bed and went to the living

room, the defendant followed her and hit her in the head,

causing her head to strike the wall.    The defendant pushed the

victim out the apartment door.    At 4:25 A.M., the victim

telephoned the police.

      Police arrived and spoke to the victim in the lobby of the

apartment building.   She was distraught and frantic, the area

under her eye was swollen, and there was blood coming from her

nose.   The victim was subsequently transported to the hospital,

where examination revealed scratches and bruises on her breasts,

back, and buttocks.

                                  2
     Meanwhile, two officers knocked on the apartment door.      The

defendant answered and said that he had been asleep.

     The defense theory was that the victim fabricated the

crimes and the defendant was at the Revere police station when

the victim said they occurred.    The defendant presented

testimony of Officer Bryan Brenes that at around the time of

these events, the defendant came into the Revere police station

and made a report to Officer Brenes.    Officer Brenes initially

testified that the defendant came into the station at

"[a]pproximately 4 A.M." and was there until 4:15 A.M.; on

cross-examination, he agreed that the defendant made the report

at 3:45 A.M.; on redirect, he testified that the defendant left

at about 4 A.M.    The home where the defendant and the victim

lived was about a mile away from the police station.    In

closing, defense counsel argued that the jury should believe the

evidence placing the defendant at the police station at the time

when the victim said he hit her, and that the victim's arranged

marriage was "a lot of motive for reasons to ensure that she can

stay" in the United States.

     Discussion.   1.   Exclusion of defendant's statement to

police.   The Commonwealth moved in limine to exclude Officer

Brenes's testimony that the defendant reported on February 28

that six days earlier the victim's brothers had telephoned him

                                  3
and threatened to kill him. 1   At the hearing on the motion, the

defendant argued that his statement to Officer Brenes was

admissible not for its truth but to prove the victim's state of

mind because it "precipitate[d]" her 911 call and showed her

bias because the defendant was "somewhere else" at the time when

the victim alleged he hit her. 2   The prosecutor argued that the

defendant's statement to Officer Brenes was hearsay and was not

admissible to show the victim's motive to fabricate.    The judge

admitted Officer Brenes's testimony that the defendant came to

the police station and made a report, but excluded the officer's

testimony about what the defendant said. 3

     On appeal, the defendant argues that his statement to

Officer Brenes that the victim's brothers had threatened him was

admissible to show the victim's "state of mind, bias, and motive

1 The defendant has included in the record appendix copies of
police reports that do not seem to have been included in the
trial court record. We focus on the offers of proof as to the
testimony that were made by the Commonwealth in the motion in
limine and by the defendant at the hearing.
2 At the hearing, the defendant also argued that his statement to

Officer Brenes was admissible to prove the defendant's state of
mind that he wanted to end his relationship with the victim.
The defendant does not make that argument on appeal, and so we
do not reach it.
3 A few minutes after the defendant left the police station,

Officer Brenes heard a radio broadcast mentioning the
defendant's address and radioed other police officers, "Heads
up, the man that lives at that address was just recently here
filing a threats report, so she may be saying this to cause
trouble." The judge also excluded Officer Brenes's testimony
regarding that statement. The parties do not raise the issue on
appeal, so we do not reach it.

                                   4
to fabricate."   He contends that the jury could have inferred

that the victim would have learned from her brothers of their

threats to the defendant and of the defendant's intent to end

their relationship, which would have given her a motive to

fabricate.   However, on cross-examination, the victim denied

that there was any "disagreement or break-up" between her and

the defendant at the time of these events.    And the defendant

did not seek to cross-examine her about what she knew about her

brothers' communications with the defendant, nor did he call any

other witness, such as one of the brothers, to testify on that

subject.   Contrast Commonwealth v. Joyce, 382 Mass. 222, 229

(1981) (defendant should have been permitted to cross-examine

rape complainant about past prostitution arrests to show bias).

     In those circumstances, Officer Brenes's testimony about

what the defendant said the victim's brothers said was multiple

level hearsay.   It "was inadmissible hearsay, because the

defendant made the statement outside the court room, the

defendant was not subject to cross-examination regarding the

statement, the statement was intended to prove the truth of the

matter asserted, and the defendant, not an adverse party, was

offering the statement in evidence." 4   Commonwealth v. McCowen,

4 Contrary to the defendant's argument, the fact that during
deliberations the jurors asked, "Are we able to view the police
report from the [d]efendant? 3:45 A.M." did not render
admissible the hearsay in that report.

                                 5
458 Mass. 461, 485 (2010).    See Commonwealth v. Steeves, 490

Mass. 270, 277 (2022); Mass. G. Evid. § 801 (2023).

     2.   Prosecutor's closing argument.   The defendant argues

that in closing the prosecutor unfairly exploited the exclusion

of the defendant's statement to Officer Brenes and improperly

appealed to sympathy.   The defendant did not object at trial,

and so we review the closing argument to determine if it

contained error, and, if so, if the error gave rise to a

substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.    See Commonwealth

v. Kozubal, 488 Mass. 575, 590 (2021), cert. denied, 142 S. Ct.

2723 (2022).   "A substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice

exists if we have serious doubt whether the result of the trial

might have been different had the error not been made."

Commonwealth v. Schoener, 491 Mass. 706, 722 (2023).

     In closing, the prosecutor argued, "Now, I would suggest to

you that the [d]efendant went to the Revere Police Department in

advance, knowing that when he came home that night, he might

have to choose violence, because that's what he did.      Planned it

[in] advance, all right."    The argument was improper.   After

having successfully excluded from evidence the defendant's

statement about why he went to the police station, the

prosecutor improperly argued that the jurors should infer that

the reason he went there was because he was planning to "choose

violence."   We are troubled by the prosecutor's argument.    "A

                                  6
prosecutor is barred from referring in closing argument to

matter that has been excluded from evidence . . . and a

prosecutor should also refrain from inviting an inference from

the jury about the same excluded subject matter" (quotation,

citation, and alteration omitted).       Commonwealth v. Lopez, 474

Mass. 690, 699 (2016).   Further, "counsel may not, in closing,

exploit the absence of evidence that had been excluded at h[er]

request. . . .   Such exploitation of absent, excluded evidence

is fundamentally unfair and reprehensible" (quotation, citation,

and alteration omitted).   Commonwealth v. Demetrius D., 94 Mass.

App. Ct. 12, 20-21 (2018).

     However, in the circumstances of this case, we conclude

that the improper argument did not give rise to a substantial

risk of a miscarriage of justice.       The victim's testimony that

the defendant grabbed her by her breasts, back, and buttocks and

hit her in the head was corroborated by her distraught demeanor

and by evidence of her injuries, including swelling under her

eye, blood coming from her nose, and scratches and bruises on

her breasts, back, and buttocks.       The theory of the defense

focused on when, not why, the defendant was at the police

station.   Defense counsel argued that the credible timeline

placed the defendant there until sometime after 4 A.M.       In

response, the prosecutor properly argued that the credible

timeline placed the defendant at the police station shortly

                                   7
before 4 A.M., and the defendant was not credible when he told a

responding officer shortly after 4 A.M. that he had just been

sleeping.    In those circumstances, the prosecutor's improper

argument about why the defendant was at the police station does

not give us a "serious doubt" that the verdict would have been

different had the error not been made, Schoener, 491 Mass. at

722.    Moreover, the error was mitigated by the judge's

instructions that closing arguments were not evidence, the

jurors' memories of the evidence controlled, and the jurors

should draw no adverse inference against the defendant because

he did not testify.

       As to the defendant's contention that the prosecutor

improperly appealed to sympathy by referring in closing to the

victim's testimony about her living situation, we discern no

substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.    From the victim's

testimony that her marriage to the defendant was arranged,

defense counsel argued that she had "a lot of motive" to

fabricate the crimes.    From that same testimony and from the

victim's testimony that the arranged marriage was not legally

recognized, the defendant was twenty-five years her senior, and

she was financially dependent on him, the prosecutor briefly

argued that the defendant was "taking advantage" of the victim

and had "entitlement" over her.    See Commonwealth v. Hall, 66

Mass. App. Ct. 390, 397 (2006) (prosecutor's references to

                                  8
victim's age relevant to her "willingness to obey" defendant,

not to evoke sympathy).    Cf. Commonwealth v. Sun, 490 Mass. 196,

212 (2022) (prosecutor's lengthy description of murder victim's

good character not substantial likelihood of miscarriage of

justice).    We discern no substantial risk of a miscarriage of

justice.

                                      Judgments affirmed.

                                      By the Court (Rubin,
                                        Ditkoff & Grant, JJ. 5),

                                      Assistant Clerk

Entered:    March 25, 2024.

5   The panelists are listed in order of seniority.

                                  9