Commonwealth v. Horne ( 2017 )


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    SJC-12068
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   CALVIN HORNE.
    Suffolk.       October 7, 2016. - January 10, 2017.
    Present:   Gants, C.J., Botsford, Lenk, Hines, Gaziano, Lowy, &
    Budd, JJ.
    Controlled Substances.   Evidence, Expert opinion, Relevancy and
    materiality.
    Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on October 4, 2012.
    The cases were tried before Linda E. Giles, J.
    After review by the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial
    Court granted leave to obtain further appellate review.
    Rebecca A. Jacobstein, Committee for Public Counsel
    Services, for the defendant.
    Justin Florence for Massachusetts Association of Criminal
    Defense Lawyers & others, amici curiae.
    Teresa K. Anderson, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    LENK, J.   The defendant was convicted by a Superior Court
    jury of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute.     The
    Appeals Court affirmed the conviction, see Commonwealth v.
    2
    Horne, 
    88 Mass. App. Ct. 1109
    (2015), and we granted the
    defendant's application for further appellate review.      The
    question before us is whether the admission in evidence of so-
    called "negative profiling" testimony, suggesting that the
    defendant did not look like a "crack" cocaine addict, gave rise
    to a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.     We conclude
    that it did.1
    1.   Background.   a.   The defendant's arrest.   We recite the
    relevant facts the jury could have found.     In the early morning
    hours of September 14, 2012, the defendant was stopped by police
    on Colonial Avenue in the Dorchester section of Boston for
    traffic violations.     The automobile that the defendant was
    driving was registered to a woman named Denise Barton.2     The
    officer who conducted the stop, Boston police Sergeant Thomas
    Brooks, determined that the defendant's driver's license had
    1
    We acknowledge the amicus brief submitted jointly by the
    Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the
    American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry, the American Society
    of Addiction Medicine, and the National Association of Social
    Workers.
    2
    The vehicle had been impounded in early August of 2012,
    when the vehicle's owner, Denise Barton, was arrested on charges
    of cocaine distribution. She had given the defendant a power of
    attorney to have the vehicle removed from the impound lot so it
    would not continue to accrue charges. Approximately two weeks
    before the events in question, the vehicle apparently was
    released from the impound lot to another individual, Robert
    Williams, who had a prior conviction of unlawful possession of a
    firearm. The record does not disclose how or when the defendant
    ultimately came into possession of the vehicle.
    3
    been suspended.   When Brooks, joined by Boston police Officer
    Pele James, attempted to arrest him, the defendant forcefully
    resisted.   With the assistance of three additional officers, the
    defendant was subdued and placed under arrest.
    Thereafter, the arresting officers found nearby a clear
    plastic bag containing twenty-six individually wrapped "rocks"
    of crack cocaine, totaling 3.87 grams.   The defendant apparently
    had kept the bag in his boot, which came off during the melee.
    Later that night, Boston police Officer David Lanteigne
    conducted an inventory search of the motor vehicle.   He found
    two cellular telephones and eighty-three dollars in cash in the
    center console of the automobile, another cellular telephone on
    the driver's seat, and a gun in the trunk.   He did not find any
    drug paraphernalia.
    The defendant was charged with seven offenses as a result
    of the stop,3 including several gun-related charges and one count
    of possession of a class B substance (cocaine) with the intent
    3
    The defendant was charged with unlawful possession of a
    firearm, G. L. c. 269, § 10 (h), as a subsequent offense, G. L.
    c. 269, § 10 (d); carrying a loaded firearm, G. L. c. 269,
    § 10 (n); unlawful possession of ammunition, G. L. c. 269,
    § 10 (h); two charges of assault and battery on a police
    officer, G. L. c. 265, § 13D; resisting arrest, G. L. c. 268,
    § 32B; and possession of a class B substance (cocaine) with the
    intent to distribute, G. L. c. 94C, § 32A (c), as a subsequent
    offense, in violation of G. L. c. 94C, § 32A (d). After the
    verdicts, the defendant pleaded guilty to the subsequent offense
    charge of possession of a class B substance (cocaine) with the
    intent to distribute.
    4
    to distribute, as a subsequent offense.   The jury acquitted the
    defendant of the firearms-related charges and convicted him of
    the other charges.
    b.    Challenged expert testimony.   The Commonwealth notified
    defense counsel in advance of trial that a Boston police officer
    would testify as an expert to "several aspects of street-level
    narcotics activity including, but not limited to:     common
    practices and activities of street-level drug dealers, the
    appearance, packing, and value of street narcotics, [and] the
    vernacular of illegal narcotics users and dealers."     At trial,
    Sergeant Detective William Feeney, a supervisor in the Boston
    police drug control unit, testified in keeping with the notice.
    In addition, Feeney testified as follows:
    Q.:   "And through your experience in observing and
    encountering . . . drug users, what are some of the
    characteristics that you've observed in [drug users],
    physical characteristics?"
    A.:   "Well, depending upon what type of drug they are
    addicted to they have different characteristics."
    Q.:   "Thank you, I'm going to ask a more specific question,
    if someone were addicted to crack cocaine what are
    some of the physical characteristics of a crack
    cocaine addict?"
    A.:   "Somebody that's a crack cocaine user that's been
    using for a time, most times their physical appearance
    will be changed from what they probably looked like at
    one point, to be very --"
    At that point, the defendant's counsel requested a sidebar
    conference at which she stated that "this [line of questioning]
    5
    is getting a little wonky for lack of a better term, what people
    look like when they are addicted to crack."   Her "understanding
    from notice from the Commonwealth" was that "[the prosecutor]
    said [that Feeney] was going to testify to drug distribution[,]
    not what a drug addict looks like."   The judge asked if counsel
    had received notice that Feeney was going to testify to signs of
    drug abuse and, when the defendant's counsel replied essentially
    in the affirmative, the judge remarked that "it's sort of common
    knowledge that crack addicts are going to exhibit certain
    physical signs and behavior," and allowed the line of
    questioning to continue.
    The following exchange then took place:
    Q.:    "Sergeant Detective Feeney can you please describe for
    the members of the jury the crack addicts as you've
    observed them and in some cases arrested them, what
    are some of the physical characteristics that you've
    noted?"
    A.:    "Well, the majority of them you will notice them to be
    somewhat unkempt, very thin, physical appearances seem
    to be deteriorating, sometimes they'll have rotted
    teeth or worn down teeth from constantly grinding
    their teeth based on the addiction that results from
    the crack use."
    The prosecutor then elicited testimony from Feeney concerning
    how much crack cocaine he typically would find when searching a
    crack cocaine user, the commonly used instruments of drug
    dealers, and the manner in which drug dealers generally package
    cocaine.   Feeney also testified, upon looking at a photograph of
    6
    the crack cocaine in this case, that the cocaine "could be
    [packaged in] some ten dollar bags and . . . twenty dollar
    bags," suggesting an intent to distribute.   At the end of his
    direct examination, Feeney testified that the packaging and
    amount of crack cocaine found near the defendant's boot, coupled
    with the eighty-three dollars, was consistent with an intent to
    distribute.
    In his closing argument, the prosecutor emphasized Feeney's
    testimony concerning the physical characteristics of crack
    cocaine addicts, stating:
    "How do you know he possessed [the crack cocaine] with
    the intent to distribute it, does he look like a drug
    addict? You saw the pictures of him, drug addicts,
    particularly crack cocaine addicts are skinny, they are
    thin, they have rotted teeth, they are drawn out. He's a
    big man, he's a big muscular man who gave it to Sergeant
    Brooks quite frankly and Officer [James], and they needed
    assistance to get him. He is not a drug addict; he
    possessed it with the intent to distribute it."
    The jury convicted the defendant of possession of a class B
    substance (cocaine) with intent to distribute.
    2.   Discussion.   On appeal, the defendant argues that it
    was error to allow Feeney to testify as to the typical physical
    characteristics of crack cocaine addicts, maintaining that such
    testimony was inadmissible negative profiling evidence.
    a.   Standard of review.   The "admission of [expert
    testimony] is largely within the discretion of the trial judge
    and he [or she] will be reversed only where the admission
    7
    constitutes an abuse of discretion or error of law."
    Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    410 Mass. 199
    , 202 (1991).     Where, as
    here, the objection was not preserved,4 we review the defendant's
    claim to "determine whether any error . . . created a
    substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice."   Commonwealth v.
    Zimmerman, 
    441 Mass. 146
    , 150 (2004).5
    b.   Admissibility of negative profiling evidence.    Twenty-
    five years ago, we determined in Commonwealth v. Day, 
    409 Mass. 719
    , 723 (1991), that profiling testimony is inadmissible.     In
    that case, we addressed whether there was error in the admission
    of an expert witness's testimony concerning the typical child
    4
    Counsel's statement that Feeney's testimony was "getting a
    little wonky" was not the functional equivalent of an objection,
    nor did her discussion at sidebar suggest that any incipient
    challenge would rest upon the impropriety of profiling evidence.
    Counsel instead seemed focused on whether proper notice of the
    testimony had been given. Moreover, counsel did not object to
    the prosecutor's closing argument recounting the profiling
    evidence now at issue.
    5
    The Commonwealth also argues that, in any event, the
    admission of the profiling evidence could not have caused a
    substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice because the
    defendant's trial counsel presented a defense of absence of
    evidence of possession rather than lack of intent to distribute.
    The record, however, indicates that, while trial counsel
    maintained that the defendant did not possess the drugs, she
    also challenged the Commonwealth's evidence that he intended to
    distribute narcotics. She cross-examined Feeney on the type of
    activity he typically witnessed when surveilling and arresting
    drug dealers, and attempted to distinguish the defendant's
    circumstances. She also argued in her closing that because the
    cellular telephones in the vehicle the defendant was driving
    were not ringing and the officers had not seen the defendant
    making stops, "[t]here is no evidence that [the defendant] was
    distributing drugs that night."
    8
    abuser.   
    Id. The expert's
    so-called "child battering profile"
    consisted of his view of several typical characteristics
    associated with child abusers.      
    Id. at 722.
       By introducing this
    evidence, the prosecutor intended to demonstrate that the
    defendant matched the profile.     We concluded that the expert's
    profiling testimony was both irrelevant and prejudicial to the
    defendant.      
    Id. at 723.
    In determining that the profiling evidence was irrelevant,
    we noted that a "criminal trial is by its very nature an
    individualized adjudication of a defendant's guilt or legal
    innocence."     
    Id. "[T]he mere
    fact that a defendant fits the
    profile does not tend to prove that a particular defendant"
    committed a particular offense.      
    Id. Additionally, the
    use of
    such evidence invites a jury to conclude that because an expert
    identifies an accused as fitting a particular profile, "it is
    more likely than not that [the accused] committed the crime"
    (citation omitted).      
    Id. at 723-724.
      In light of this, "[t]he
    use of criminal profiles as substantive evidence of guilt is
    inherently prejudicial to the defendant."         
    Id. at 723.
    The inadmissibility of profiling evidence consistently has
    been upheld in the intervening years.      See, e.g., Commonwealth
    v. Federico, 
    425 Mass. 844
    , 850 (1997) ("expert may not provide
    profiles or testify as to the typical attributes or
    characteristics of the perpetrators of child abuse");
    9
    Commonwealth v. Coates, 
    89 Mass. App. Ct. 728
    , 735-737 (2016)
    (sex abuser profile inadmissible); Commonwealth v. Poitras, 
    55 Mass. App. Ct. 691
    , 694 (2002) (admission of child abuser
    profile erroneous); Commonwealth v. LaCaprucia, 41 Mass. App.
    Ct. 496, 501-502 (1996) (prosecutor's remarks suggesting
    defendant sexually abused his children because he fit mold of
    abuser improper).6
    The Commonwealth's effort to distinguish the challenged
    evidence from that held inadmissible in Day and its progeny is
    unavailing.   At trial in this case, the Commonwealth attempted
    to prove that since the defendant did not match the physical
    characteristics of a drug addict, he must be a drug dealer.     On
    appeal, the Commonwealth maintains that this use of profiling
    evidence was permissible because it did not explicitly compare
    the defendant to the profile of a drug dealer.   Contrary to the
    Commonwealth's assertion, however, such so-called negative
    profiling evidence -- where the goal is to demonstrate that a
    person does not fit a particular profile -- falls squarely
    6
    We note that the general bar against profiling evidence
    does not apply to instances where a medical expert testifies to
    the typical physical symptoms present in victims of a particular
    crime. See Commonwealth v. LeFave, 
    407 Mass. 927
    , 930-931
    (1990) (pediatric gynecologist's testimony concerning physical
    damage to genitalia common in sexually abused children
    admissible). See also Commonwealth v. Dockham, 
    405 Mass. 618
    ,
    628-630 (1989) (expert testimony concerning general
    characteristics of abused child admissible).
    10
    within the scope of the profiling evidence we have long
    prohibited.
    The rationale for this was explained recently in 
    Coates, 89 Mass. App. Ct. at 735
    , where the Appeals Court concluded that a
    defendant's proffer of expert testimony showing that he did not
    match the profile of a sex abuser had been properly excluded at
    trial.7      The Appeals Court cogently observed that "[i]mplicit in
    the defendant's assertion that he [did] not match a criminal
    profile is the assumption that such a profile would be probative
    if introduced to prove that someone who matched the profile
    would be more likely to have committed the crimes."       
    Id. at 734.
    As the court noted, if the profile would be irrelevant to
    establish the defendant's guilt under Day, it also was
    irrelevant when introduced for any other purpose.       
    Id. at 734-
    737.       As the mirror image of the prototypical profiling evidence
    dealt with in Day, such negative profiling evidence serves the
    same impermissible end.       It is an attempt to convince the jury
    to determine a defendant's guilt by comparing him or her to
    stereotypes rather than by individualized adjudication.       Such
    evidence is inadmissible.
    7
    In an unpublished memorandum and order, see Commonwealth
    v. Correa, 
    74 Mass. App. Ct. 1122
    (2009), a panel of the Appeals
    Court concluded that the Commonwealth's use of expert testimony
    "about the stereotypical cocaine addict" in order to establish
    that the defendant was a drug dealer, as here, was inadmissible
    because it constituted improper "profiling testimony."
    11
    Given the well-established proscription against the use of
    profiling evidence, the admission of Feeney's testimony
    concerning the physical characteristics of crack cocaine addicts
    was error.   Moreover, as we stated in 
    Day, 409 Mass. at 723
    , the
    use of such evidence was "inherently prejudicial" to the
    defendant.
    c.    Materiality of the error.   An "error creates a
    substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice unless we are
    persuaded that it did not 'materially influence[]' the guilty
    verdict" (citation omitted).    Commonwealth v. Alphas, 
    430 Mass. 8
    , 13 (1999).   In applying this standard, we analyze the
    potential impact of the error on the verdict, Commonwealth v.
    Randolph, 
    438 Mass. 290
    , 299 (2002), and review the record to
    determine the strength of the Commonwealth's case, absent the
    improper evidence, Commonwealth v. Kilburn, 
    438 Mass. 356
    , 362
    (2003).   An error may be said to have materially influenced the
    verdict only if we are left with "a serious doubt [as to]
    whether the result of the trial might have been different had
    the error not been made" (citation omitted).    Commonwealth v.
    Azar, 
    435 Mass. 675
    , 687 (2002).
    We may assume that Feeney's testimony was inherently
    prejudicial to the defendant.   The impact of the testimony was
    magnified by the prosecutor's closing argument, in which the
    profiling testimony was presented as a key factor in
    12
    demonstrating that the defendant intended to distribute the
    cocaine.   The first thing the jury heard as to why the defendant
    did not possess the cocaine for personal use but intended to
    distribute it was that his physical appearance showed that he
    was not a drug addict.   The prosecutor stated, "How do you know
    he possessed [the cocaine] with the intent to distribute it,
    does he look like a drug addict?"   The prosecutor then continued
    to emphasize the profiling evidence, contrasting the defendant's
    size, strength, and physical appearance, with the "drawn out"
    appearance of a typical "skinny" crack cocaine addict with
    "rotted teeth."
    The deceptively intuitive appeal of this entreaty provided
    it with a "superficial plausibility . . . [that] masked its
    profound flaws."   Commonwealth v. Ferreira, 
    460 Mass. 781
    , 788
    (2011), quoting Commonwealth v. Ferreira, 
    77 Mass. App. Ct. 675
    ,
    685 n.6 (2010) (Milkey, J., dissenting).   While the prosecutor
    went on to argue the impact of other items of evidence, the
    simplest and most direct evidence, from the standpoint of the
    jury, sat a few feet away from them at the defense table.     We
    think it unlikely that the profiling evidence was only of minor
    significance to the jury.
    The Commonwealth's remaining evidence, while clearly
    sufficient to support the conviction, was not overwhelming.        As
    proof that the defendant possessed the crack cocaine with the
    13
    intent to distribute it, there was also evidence of (1) eighty-
    three dollars found in the central console of the vehicle that
    the defendant was driving; (2) three cellular telephones, two
    found in the central console of the vehicle and one found on the
    driver's seat; and (3) twenty-six individual packets of crack
    cocaine packaged in what Feeney testified could be ten- and
    twenty-dollar bags that had been found near the defendant's
    boot.   We consider each in turn.
    While large amounts of cash can be probative of an intent
    to distribute, eighty-three dollars in cash would at best give
    rise to a weak inference.    See Commonwealth v. Sepheus, 
    468 Mass. 160
    , 166 (2014) (cash in amount of $312 not particularly
    large sum for purposes of demonstrating intent to distribute
    narcotics).    As to the cellular telephones, while a defendant's
    possession of multiple cellular telephones may be probative of
    an intent to distribute, see, e.g., Commonwealth v. Dancy, 
    75 Mass. App. Ct. 175
    , 178 (2009), it is far from clear whether all
    three cellular telephones found in the vehicle belonged to the
    defendant.    The defendant contended at trial that two of the
    cellular telephones, both of which were located in the central
    console of the automobile, belonged to others.    The vehicle that
    the defendant was driving, owned by Barton, had apparently
    recently been driven by Williams.    See note 2, supra.   The
    14
    Commonwealth did not present any evidence demonstrating that the
    defendant used the cellular telephones.8
    The Commonwealth's strongest evidence concerns the crack
    cocaine found on the street and inferably belonging to the
    defendant.   The drugs were packaged in twenty-six individual
    bags, which Feeney testified could have had a street value of
    ten to twenty dollars each.   While the drugs packaged as they
    were could be probative of an intent to distribute, see, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Martin, 
    48 Mass. App. Ct. 391
    , 392-393 (1999)
    (possession of 2.04 grams of cocaine in eighteen "dime" sized
    bags probative of intent to distribute), the weight of the
    cocaine, 3.87 grams, is also consistent with personal use.    See,
    e.g., Commonwealth v. Roman, 
    414 Mass. 642
    , 646-647 (1993)
    (possession of 25.6 grams of cocaine, without more, not enough
    to prove distribution).
    The Commonwealth's admissible evidence, taken as a whole,
    was certainly sufficient to support the defendant's conviction.
    See Commonwealth v. Latimore, 
    378 Mass. 671
    , 676-677 (1979)
    (sufficiency of evidence determined based on whether evidence in
    light most favorable to Commonwealth supports conviction).
    Nonetheless, the case against the defendant on the drug charge
    8
    We also are mindful that the jury acquitted the defendant
    of the firearms-related charges despite the presence of a gun in
    the trunk of the vehicle that he was driving. This suggests
    that the jury did not accept the Commonwealth's argument that
    all of the items in the vehicle belonged to the defendant.
    15
    was not overwhelming.    See Commonwealth v. Little, 
    453 Mass. 766
    , 775 (2009) (where prosecution's case not
    overwhelming, error gave rise to substantial risk of miscarriage
    of justice).   Given this, along with the inherently prejudicial
    impact of the error, magnified by the use of long-proscribed
    profiling evidence in the Commonwealth's closing, we are left
    with "a serious doubt [as to] whether the result of the trial
    might have been different had the error not been made" (citation
    omitted).   
    Azar, 435 Mass. at 687
    .   Accordingly, we conclude
    that the error created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of
    justice.
    3.     Conclusion.   The judgment is vacated and set aside.
    The matter is remanded to the Superior Court for further
    proceedings consistent with this decision.
    So ordered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: SJC 12068

Judges: Gants, Botsford, Lenk, Hines, Gaziano, Lowy, Budd

Filed Date: 1/10/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024