Commonwealth v. Silvelo ( 2020 )


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    SJC-12866
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   DERON N. SILVELO.
    Essex.     March 2, 2020.    -   October 14, 2020.
    Present:   Gants, C.J., Lenk, Gaziano, Lowy, Budd, Cypher,
    & Kafker, JJ.1
    Firearms. Motor Vehicle, Firearms. Constitutional Law, Search
    and seizure, Probable cause. Search and Seizure, Motor
    vehicle, Probable cause. Probable Cause. Practice,
    Criminal, Motion to suppress, Instructions to jury,
    Argument by prosecutor.
    Complaints received and sworn to in the Lawrence Division
    of the District Court Department on March 17, 2014, and December
    4, 2015.
    A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by Michael
    A. Uhlarik, J., and a motion for reconsideration was considered
    by him; and the case was tried before Holly V. Broadbent, J.
    After review by the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial
    Court granted leave to obtain further appellate review.
    Michelle A. Dame for the defendant.
    Catherine P. Sullivan, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    1 Chief Justice Gants participated in the deliberation on
    this case prior to his death.
    2
    LOWY, J.   The defendant was convicted by a jury of carrying
    a firearm without a license and possessing a loaded firearm.2
    His trial took place before our decision in Commonwealth v.
    Brown, 
    479 Mass. 600
    , 601 (2018), in which we concluded that in
    order to convict a defendant of unlawful possession of a loaded
    firearm, G. L. c. 269, § 10 (n), the Commonwealth has to prove
    that the defendant knew that the firearm was loaded.    Thus, the
    judge did not instruct the jury on this element of the crime.
    The Appeals Court affirmed the convictions, and we granted the
    defendant's application for further appellate review.    See
    Commonwealth v. Silvelo, 
    96 Mass. App. Ct. 85
    , 86-87 (2019).
    The defendant contends that (1) the motion judge erred in
    denying the defendant's motion to suppress the firearm;
    (2) there was insufficient evidence to sustain the conviction of
    possession of a loaded firearm; (3) the failure to instruct that
    jury that the defendant had to know that the firearm was loaded
    created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice on that
    2 On the first day of trial, the Commonwealth dismissed the
    indictment for possession of ammunition without an FID card.
    The defendant also faced a civil infraction for failing to wear
    a seat belt, pursuant to G. L. c. 90, § 13A, for which the trial
    judge found the defendant responsible; the charge was filed.
    The judge sentenced the defendant   to eighteen months
    imprisonment on the charge of carrying   a firearm without a
    license, and to two years of probation   on the charge of carrying
    a loaded firearm without a license, to   run from and after the
    completion of his prison sentence.
    3
    charge; and (4) the prosecutor's closing arguments contained
    misconduct that created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of
    justice.
    We affirm the motion judge's denial of the motion to
    suppress.    We also determine that the evidence was so
    overwhelming that we have no serious doubt that a rational jury
    could have concluded that the defendant knew that the revolver
    he possessed was loaded had the judge properly instructed them,
    and therefore, we affirm the conviction under G. L. c. 269,
    § 10 (n).    Commonwealth v. Lutskov, 
    480 Mass. 575
    , 581 (2018).
    1.      Background.   At around 11:15 P.M. on March 16, 2014, a
    State police trooper initiated a vehicle stop on a busy
    interstate highway due to an invalid inspection status.      Once
    the car stopped, the trooper approached from the passenger's
    side to avoid traffic.     While approaching, he observed at least
    four people in the back seat, including children or infants, and
    he noticed the defendant in the front passenger's seat
    attempting to fasten a seat belt.     Consequently, the trooper
    requested identification not only from the driver, but also from
    the defendant.
    As the defendant reached for his identification, the
    trooper observed a black object, which he believed to be a
    weapon because of its size and color, fall out of the
    defendant's pocket between his seat and the center console.       The
    4
    trooper returned to his cruiser and discovered that the
    defendant had outstanding warrants.      Rather than act by himself
    on that information, the trooper requested backup.      When backup
    arrived, the trooper arrested the defendant on the warrants,
    handcuffed him, and placed him in the cruiser.      The trooper
    immediately searched the front passenger's seat area of the
    stopped car and found a revolver.     He flipped open the revolver
    portion and saw four of the chamber's five openings filled with
    ammunition.
    2.    Discussion.   a.   Motion to suppress.   The defendant
    appeals from the order denying his motion to suppress the
    firearm evidence as fruits of an unconstitutional automobile
    search.3   "In reviewing a ruling on a motion to suppress, we
    accept the judge's subsidiary findings of fact absent clear
    error but conduct an independent review of his ultimate findings
    and conclusions of law" (quotation and citation omitted).
    Commonwealth v. Perkins, 
    465 Mass. 600
    , 601 (2013), quoting
    Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    440 Mass. 642
    , 646 (2004).
    At the hearing on the motion, the trooper testified on
    direct examination that he saw a dark object he believed to be a
    firearm fall from the defendant's pocket.      On cross-examination,
    the trooper indicated that he was not one hundred percent sure
    3 The defendant's motion for reconsideration also was
    denied.
    5
    that it was a firearm.    He testified that he saw "[a] dark
    object that could resemble a weapon."    The motion judge credited
    the trooper's testimony and found that the trooper observed the
    "defendant remove[] what appeared to be a gun from his pants
    pocket.".   The motion judge determined that the trooper's
    concern for his own safety reasonably justified the protective
    sweep of a vehicle pursuant to Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 30
    (1968).
    Under the Fourth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution and art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of
    Rights, warrantless searches are presumptively "unreasonable
    . . . subject only to a few specifically established and well-
    delineated exceptions."     Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 338
    (2009), quoting Katz v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 357 (1967).
    See also 
    Perkins, 465 Mass. at 603
    .     Because the trooper had no
    search warrant, the Commonwealth bears the burden of
    establishing that the stop and frisk "exception[] to the warrant
    requirement" applies.4    Perkins, supra at 603.
    4 "In 'stop and frisk' cases, there is a two-step analysis:
    whether the initiation of the investigation by the police was
    permissible in the circumstances and whether the scope of the
    search was justified." Commonwealth v. Torres, 
    433 Mass. 669
    ,
    672 (2001). In his motion to suppress, the defendant argued
    that the first prong was not justified because the stop of the
    vehicle, the request for the defendant's identification, and his
    arrest were unconstitutional. He is no longer pursuing those
    contentions.
    6
    The "stop and frisk" exception to the warrant requirement
    permits a police officer without probable cause both to stop a
    vehicle, and to "conduct a limited [vehicle] search for weapons
    if . . . 'reasonably prudent'" people in the officer's position
    would justifiably fear for their safety or that of other
    persons.    Commonwealth v. Daniel, 
    464 Mass. 746
    , 752 (2013),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Silva, 
    366 Mass. 402
    , 406 (1974).    See
    Commonwealth v. Manha, 
    479 Mass. 44
    , 49 (2018) (Terry-type
    protective sweep may extend to limited search of automobile).
    The officer's fear must be grounded in "specific, articulable
    facts and reasonable inferences drawn therefrom" (citation
    omitted).   Commonwealth v. Edwards, 
    476 Mass. 341
    , 345 (2017).
    To determine reasonableness, we "balanc[e] the need to search
    . . . against the invasion which the search . . . entails"
    (citation omitted).    
    Silva, 366 Mass. at 405
    .
    Warrantless searches of vehicles are justified where an
    officer would reasonably fear that the defendant may possess a
    weapon or that there is a weapon in the vehicle.    See 
    Daniel, 464 Mass. at 752
    .   Even where the officers ask the defendant to
    get out of the vehicle, they may reasonably fear for their
    safety because any other occupant may access a weapon left
    behind by the defendant, or the defendant may access a weapon
    left behind upon returning to the vehicle.    See Commonwealth v.
    Santiago, 
    53 Mass. App. Ct. 567
    , 571 (2002) (officer "not
    7
    required to risk becoming a victim upon the suspect's reentry
    into the vehicle").
    Although the trooper here had already arrested the
    defendant prior to the search, and the defendant could not
    return to the vehicle to access a weapon, the evidence
    nevertheless supports the motion judge's conclusion that a
    reasonable officer would continue to have safety concerns under
    the circumstances.     Contrast 
    Edwards, 476 Mass. at 349
    .   The
    trooper observed a weapon fall from the defendant's pocket when
    he first approached the vehicle.     See Commonwealth v. Robbins,
    
    407 Mass. 147
    , 152 (1990) (protective search of automobile
    justified because police saw wooden object consistent with
    weapon handle).     Given that other adults remained in the vehicle
    after the trooper arrested the defendant, the trooper's concern
    that the revolver "could [still] be used against" him was
    reasonable.
    Id. The search was
    therefore constitutionally
    permissible because a "reasonably prudent" trooper would not
    only have personal safety concerns, but also would appreciate
    that the other passengers might retrieve the weapon and harm the
    trooper, themselves, or others.     
    Daniel, 464 Mass. at 752
    ,
    quoting 
    Silva, 366 Mass. at 406
    .     See Commonwealth v. Graham, 
    78 Mass. App. Ct. 127
    , 129 (2010).5
    5 We note that other theories might justify the search of
    the defendant's vehicle, such as a search incident to arrest. A
    8
    b.   Erroneous jury instruction.   Because our decision in
    Brown relied upon statutory interpretation, we apply its rule
    retroactively.6   See Commonwealth v. Paul, 
    96 Mass. App. Ct. 263
    ,
    265-266 (2019).   Therefore, the trial judge's jury instruction
    omitted an essential element required to convict a defendant of
    violating G. L. c. 269, § 10 (n):    whether the defendant knew
    the gun he possessed was loaded.    Because the defendant did not
    object to the instruction, we determine whether the error
    created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice, which
    requires us to order a new trial if "we have a serious doubt
    whether the result of the trial might have been different had
    the error not been made" (quotations omitted).    Commonwealth v.
    Sherman, 
    481 Mass. 464
    , 475-476 (2019).7
    search of a vehicle is constitutional following a defendant's
    arrest, either to seize evidence of the offense for which the
    defendant was arrested or to remove weapons that the defendant
    might use to resist arrest or to escape. See G. L. c. 276, § 1.
    See also Commonwealth v. Perkins, 
    465 Mass. 600
    , 605 (2013),
    quoting Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    , 344 (2009). The trooper
    here had secured the defendant in the police cruiser at the time
    of the search, so we do not reach the issue whether the
    officer's justification to search for weapons incident to arrest
    under G. L. c. 276, § 1, dissipated when he waited for backup
    before making the arrest.
    6 The jury returned the guilty verdicts in the defendant's
    case more than one year before we released Brown.
    7 We have noted multiple times that "this standard is
    particularly well suited to a situation, such as here, where the
    elements of a crime are erroneously stated in the jury charge."
    Commonwealth v. Azar, 
    435 Mass. 675
    , 687 (2002), S.C., 
    444 Mass. 72
    (2005). See Commonwealth v. Amirault, 
    424 Mass. 618
    , 647
    9
    To assess whether a jury instruction omitting an essential
    element of a crime created a substantial risk of a miscarriage
    of justice, we evaluate the evidence as a whole to determine
    whether the evidence was "so overwhelming" that "there is no
    likelihood that the omitted instruction materially influenced
    the jury's verdict[]."8   
    Lutskov, 480 Mass. at 581
    .9   See
    Commonwealth v. Gabbidon, 
    398 Mass. 1
    , 5 (1986) ("no harm
    accrues to a defendant if an error does not relate to an issue
    actively contested at trial").   Cf. Commonwealth v. Gilbert, 
    447 Mass. 161
    , 173-174 (2006) (no substantial risk of miscarriage of
    justice where evidence required jury to find element omitted
    from instruction).
    n.21 (1997) ("This standard is well suited to these cases
    because, when the elements of a crime are incorrectly stated,
    there is a substantial risk that a person has been convicted for
    a course of conduct that is not criminal at all.").
    8 Because we conclude that the Commonwealth presented
    evidence "so overwhelming" that "there was no likelihood that
    the omitted instruction materially influenced the jury's
    verdict[]," Commonwealth v. Lutskov, 
    480 Mass. 575
    , 581 (2018),
    we conclude that the Commonwealth necessarily presented
    sufficient evidence for a rational jury to convict the defendant
    of possessing a loaded firearm.
    9 We recognize that this formulation diverges from 
    Azar, 435 Mass. at 688
    , under which we analyzed whether the "evidence
    required the jury to [have found]" or to have "ineluctably
    inferred" that the Commonwealth carried its burden of proving
    the omitted element beyond a reasonable doubt. We do not intend
    this semantic difference in language to change the stringency of
    the standard announced in Azar with this formulation.
    10
    Without direct evidence that the defendant knew the gun was
    loaded, and with almost no discussion of the question at the
    hearing on the motion to suppress or at trial, we evaluate the
    circumstantial evidence, see 
    Brown, 479 Mass. at 608
    , to
    determine whether the evidence was "so overwhelming" that we
    have no serious doubt that a rational jury could have concluded
    the defendant knew the revolver he possessed was loaded.
    
    Lutskov, 480 Mass. at 581
    .   Although the standard is a high one,
    we do not dispense with common sense when evaluating the
    evidence.   See Commonwealth v. Russell, 
    439 Mass. 340
    , 351
    (2003) ("As the terminology implies, a 'substantial risk of a
    miscarriage of justice' refers to a risk that has some genuine
    substance to it.   That standard does not encompass an abstract,
    theoretical possibility of a miscarriage of justice, utterly
    divorced from the case as it was tried").
    The Commonwealth's case was strong.     The principal evidence
    presented by the Commonwealth was that the defendant had a
    loaded revolver in his pants pocket, which the trooper saw fall
    to the floor of the car.   Moreover, the Commonwealth entered the
    revolver in evidence, for the jury to view during deliberations.
    The jury therefore would have observed that the ammunition would
    have been clearly visible in the chamber given the revolver's
    configuration.   The revolver could hold five bullets in the
    cylinder, and it was loaded with four bullets when the trooper
    11
    seized it.   Even if one of the bullets was in the chamber, and
    therefore not visible in the cylinder, at least three bullets in
    the cylinder would have remained visible to the defendant.     See
    Commonwealth v. Jefferson, 
    461 Mass. 821
    , 828 n.7 (2012)
    (because "the firearm was a revolver located in a vehicle, a
    rational jury could infer that those who possessed the firearm
    knew that it was loaded with ammunition").   See also
    Commonwealth v. Resende, 
    94 Mass. App. Ct. 194
    , 200 (2018) (jury
    reasonably could have concluded that defendant would have
    checked to see if firearm was loaded before he put it in his
    waistband to infer defendant knew firearm loaded).   But see
    Commonwealth v. Grayson, 
    96 Mass. App. Ct. 748
    , 752-753 (2019)
    (inference from waistband evidence alone insufficient).
    Given that we had not decided Brown at the time of trial,
    it is understandable that the defendant did not argue that the
    Commonwealth failed to present any evidence that he knew the
    revolver was loaded.   The defendant's position at trial was that
    he never possessed the firearm that the officer testified fell
    out of the defendant's pocket.   Considering the mandatory
    minimum sentence the defendant was facing for carrying a
    firearm,10 it is unlikely in the extreme that the defendant would
    have challenged the Commonwealth's proof.
    10The mandatory minimum for possessing a firearm without a
    license is eighteen months. See G. L. c. 269, § 10 (a).
    12
    Rather, the defendant argued that he did not know that the
    revolver was in the vehicle because the previous owner of the
    car, from whom the defendant's mother had purchased the car a
    week before the arrest, must have left the revolver under the
    passenger seat.   However, the defendant's mother also testified
    that she inspected the car closely before purchasing it and that
    she kept it very clean.   The jury credited the trooper's
    testimony in finding that the defendant possessed the firearm.
    It is therefore difficult to imagine a rational jury, using
    their common sense, finding that the defendant carried the
    revolver, but that he did not know it was loaded.    The omitted
    essential element of knowledge that the firearm was loaded did
    not create a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.        See
    
    Lutskov, 480 Mass. at 581
    .
    d.   Prosecutor's closing arguments.    Finally, the defendant
    contends that errors in the prosecutor's closing argument, to
    which the defendant did not object at trial, collectively
    created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.     See
    Commonwealth v. Kozec, 
    399 Mass. 514
    , 518 n.8 (1987).     We
    evaluate the closing arguments as a whole, in light of the
    strength of the evidence presented at trial, to determine
    whether we have a serious doubt that any discovered errors would
    have led to a different outcome at trial.   See Commonwealth v.
    Cole, 
    473 Mass. 317
    , 333 (2015), overruled on another ground,
    13
    Commonwealth v. Wardsworth, 
    482 Mass. 454
    (2019).    Although we
    conclude that there was no error, following closely the reasons
    stated in the Appeals Court decision, see Silvelo, 96 Mass. App.
    Ct. at 91-93, we take this opportunity to remind prosecutors to
    avoid improper vouching.
    During closing, the prosecutor deployed the pronoun "we"
    when arguing that the trooper acted properly in deescalating the
    situation instead of immediately arresting the defendant upon
    observing what the trooper presumed to be a gun fall from the
    defendant's pocket.   The prosecutor stated:   "We don't know what
    would have happened if [the trooper] would have removed [the
    defendant] when [the trooper] first sees that firearm.    We don't
    know that.   What we do know is what he saw, what he did, and
    we're here as a result of it, on a deescalated situation."      The
    defendant alleges that by using the pronoun "we," the prosecutor
    improperly aligned himself with the jury.
    "A prosecutor's position is a delicate one.     The prosecutor
    must be free to argue that such a witness is credible, but may
    not explicitly or implicitly vouch to the jury that he or she
    knows that the witness's testimony is true."   Commonwealth v.
    Ciampa, 
    406 Mass. 257
    , 265 (1989).   Improper vouching includes
    suggestions that the prosecutor has personal knowledge of the
    veracity of a witness's testimony or knowledge about the case
    independent of the evidence before the jury.   See
    id. See also 14
    Commonwealth v. Carney, 
    472 Mass. 252
    , 258 (2015).    When it
    comes to the use of a first person pronoun, "it is preferable
    that counsel avoid arguing in a form that seeks to engage the
    jury with him or her personally," but the "[m]ere[] us[e of] a
    first person pronoun does not interject personal belief into a
    statement" (quotations and citation omitted).    Commonwealth v.
    Jenkins, 
    458 Mass. 791
    , 797 (2011).     We remind prosecutors that
    arguments that suggest that the jury should be on the side of
    the government, instead of being judges of the facts and
    impartial arbiters of the application of the burden of proof,
    interferes with the equality of all parties before the bar of
    justice.
    Notwithstanding our caution against the use of "we," we
    conclude that the prosecutor here did not intend to align
    himself with the jury or to vouch improperly for the trooper's
    credibility.    The prosecutor merely summarized what the trooper,
    not the prosecutor, knew to be true, and responded to the
    defendant's closing, which repeatedly questioned the trooper's
    credibility because he did not react immediately to seeing what
    he presumed to be a gun fall from the defendant's pocket.       There
    was no error.
    3.     Conclusion.   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the
    defendant's convictions of carrying a firearm without a license
    and of possessing a loaded firearm.
    15
    So ordered.