Commonwealth v. Ubeira-Gonzalez , 87 Mass. App. Ct. 37 ( 2015 )


Menu:
  • NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal
    revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound
    volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical
    error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of
    Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1
    Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557-
    1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us
    13-P-1735                                           Appeals Court
    COMMONWEALTH    vs.   FRANCISCO L. UBEIRA-GONZALEZ.
    No. 13-P-1735.
    Hampden.        October 2, 2014. - January 22, 2015.
    Present:   Grasso, Kantrowitz, & Meade, JJ.
    Controlled Substances. Constitutional Law, Plea, Conduct of
    government agents. Due Process of Law, Plea. Evidence,
    Guilty plea. Practice, Criminal, Plea, Conduct of
    government agents, Assistance of counsel.
    Complaints received and sworn to in the Holyoke Division of
    the District Court Department on October 19 and November 4,
    2009.
    Motions for a new trial, filed on March 27, 2013, were
    heard by Philip A. Beattie, J.
    Jane Davidson Montori, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    Daniel J. Ciccariello for the defendant.
    MEADE, J.     In 2010, the defendant pleaded guilty to several
    crimes, including possession of a class A controlled substance
    2
    with the intent to distribute.1    In 2012, the defendant was
    charged in Federal court with distribution of a controlled
    substance.   Following his arraignment in Federal court, the
    defendant moved to withdraw his 2010 guilty pleas to his State
    convictions.   The defendant's motions were based on alleged
    misconduct by an assistant analyst at the State laboratory in
    Amherst (Amherst laboratory).     Without conducting an evidentiary
    hearing or making findings, the motion judge (who was also the
    plea judge) allowed the defendant's motions.       The Commonwealth
    appeals and claims the judge erred by allowing the motions.         We
    agree and reverse.
    1.   Background.   a.   Procedural history.    In October of
    2009, the defendant was charged with possession of a class A
    controlled substance (October case).     Less than one month later,
    in November of 2009, the defendant was again charged with
    possession of a class A controlled substance, possession with
    intent to distribute a class A controlled substance, resisting
    arrest, and assault and battery on a police officer (November
    case).    In February of 2010, the defendant pleaded guilty to the
    above charges, except for the possession of a class A controlled
    substance charge in the November case, which the Commonwealth
    dismissed.
    1
    The pleas were entered in two Holyoke District Court
    cases: docket no. 0917CR003063 and docket no. 0917CR003249.
    3
    In May of 2012, the defendant was charged in the United
    States District Court for the District of Massachusetts with
    distribution of a controlled substance.   In March of 2013, the
    defendant moved to withdraw his guilty pleas in the October and
    November cases.   In his affidavits in support of the motions,
    the defendant claimed that his guilty pleas were not made
    intelligently and voluntarily because he and his attorney were
    not aware of the alleged misconduct of Sonja Farak, an assistant
    analyst at the Amherst laboratory who analyzed the narcotics in
    the October case.   The defendant also claimed that he was not
    shown the certificate of drug analysis (drug certificate) in
    either case.   However, at the time of his guilty pleas, a drug
    analysis had yet to be performed on the narcotics from the
    November case and the defendant instead stipulated that the 206
    unanalyzed packets contained heroin.2   Nonetheless, in his
    affidavit in support of his motion for new trial in the November
    case, the defendant claimed "the analyst of the evidence in my
    case has engaged in material misconduct . . . and thus place[s]
    the validity of the evidence in my case in serious doubt."
    After a nonevidentiary hearing, the judge allowed each motion
    with an endorsement.
    2
    In his affidavits in support of the motions to withdraw
    his guilty pleas, the defendant claimed he "was advised that the
    Commonwealth had established beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    substance was heroin and that [he] should accept the plea
    recommendation."
    4
    b.   Crimes.   In the October case, the defendant was a
    passenger in a car that was stopped for a civil infraction.       He
    was not wearing a seat belt.    When the police officers
    ascertained the defendant's identity in order to issue him a
    citation, they discovered an outstanding warrant for his arrest.
    During an inventory of his possessions at the police station, an
    officer found four glassine bags of heroin in the defendant's
    sock.   As stated above, the heroin was analyzed at the Amherst
    laboratory on December 21, 2009, by Farak.
    In the November case, the police approached and spoke to
    the defendant, who was standing on a Holyoke street corner.       A
    State trooper who was present recognized the defendant as
    someone with whom he had had "contact" several days earlier.          An
    inquiry to the warrants management system revealed an
    outstanding arrest warrant for the defendant.    When the trooper
    attempted to handcuff the defendant, the defendant struck the
    trooper in the face and attempted to flee.    A violent struggle
    ensued and continued until backup officers arrived and
    handcuffed the defendant.    After the defendant was transported
    to the police station, 206 packets of heroin were found on the
    seat of the police cruiser.    At booking, the police recovered
    $1,308 from the defendant.
    c.   Laboratory misconduct.    Attached to the Commonwealth's
    opposition to the defendant's motions were two police reports.
    5
    According to one report, on January 18, 2013, the State police
    began an investigation of the Amherst laboratory, which focused
    on Farak.     That investigation revealed Farak's mishandling of
    drug samples, improper storage of drug samples, and a belief
    that Farak had been removing narcotics from samples she had
    tested and replacing them with counterfeit substances.       We take
    judicial notice of the fact that on January 6, 2014, Farak
    pleaded guilty to four counts of theft of a controlled substance
    from an authorized dispensary, four counts of tampering with
    evidence, and two counts of possession of a controlled
    substance.3
    2.   Discussion.    "A plea of guilty and the ensuing
    conviction comprehend all of the factual and legal elements
    necessary to sustain a binding, final judgment of guilt and a
    lawful sentence."     United States v. Broce, 
    488 U.S. 563
    , 569
    (1989).   "A motion to withdraw a guilty plea is treated as a
    motion for a new trial under Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(b), as appearing
    in 
    435 Mass. 1501
    (2001)."     Commonwealth v. Furr, 
    454 Mass. 101
    ,
    106 (2009).     "A strong policy of finality limits the grant of
    new trial motions to exceptional situations, and such motions
    should not be allowed lightly."     Commonwealth v. Gordon, 
    82 Mass. App. Ct. 389
    , 394 (2012).     See Commonwealth v. Lopez, 426
    3
    We may take judicial notice of court records in related
    proceedings. Jarosz v. Palmer, 
    436 Mass. 526
    , 530 (2002). See
    Mass. G. Evid. § 201(b)(2) (2014).
    
    6 Mass. 657
    , 662-663 (1998).    Nonetheless, "[u]nder Mass.R.Crim.P.
    30(b), a judge may grant a motion for a new trial any time it
    appears that justice may not have been done.    A motion for a new
    trial is thus committed to the sound discretion of the judge."
    Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    467 Mass. 336
    , 344 (2014).     See
    Commonwealth v. Hunt, 
    73 Mass. App. Ct. 616
    , 619 (2009).
    Here, the Commonwealth claims the judge erred by granting
    the defendant's motions to withdraw his guilty pleas without
    holding an evidentiary hearing.    The Commonwealth further claims
    that the motions should have been denied without an evidentiary
    hearing where the defendant failed to demonstrate that any
    laboratory misconduct affected his two cases or that plea
    counsel was ineffective.     We agree with both claims.
    a.   Laboratory misconduct.    We begin by noting that the
    judge had the discretion to deny the motions based on the
    defendant's affidavits.    See Commonwealth v. Stewart, 
    383 Mass. 253
    , 257 (1981).   Indeed, "[t]he judge may rule on the issue or
    issues presented by such motion on the basis of the facts
    alleged in the affidavits without further hearing if no
    substantial issue is raised by the motion or affidavits."
    Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(c)(3), as appearing in 
    435 Mass. 1502
    (2001).
    However, as in Commonwealth v. 
    Gordon, supra
    , the judge in this
    case took the remarkable step of granting the motions without
    holding an evidentiary hearing.    Indeed "[a] judge's power to
    7
    grant such a motion on the papers is more circumscribed."     
    Ibid. If a judge
    is inclined to grant such a motion, he or she must
    first conclude that it raises a substantial issue which would
    necessitate an evidentiary hearing.4   See Commonwealth v.
    
    Stewart, supra
    .   See also Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(c)(3).   At the very
    least, "[h]olding an evidentiary hearing provides the
    Commonwealth the opportunity to challenge the evidence presented
    in the affidavits."   Commonwealth v. 
    Gordon, supra
    at 395.    See
    Commonwealth v. Almonte, 
    84 Mass. App. Ct. 735
    , 738 (2014),
    quoting from Reporters' Notes to Rule 30(c)(3), Mass. Ann. Laws
    Court Rules, Rules of Criminal Procedure, at 1662 (LexisNexis
    2013-2014) (when a substantial issue arises, "the established
    'better practice' has been to conduct an evidentiary hearing").
    Furthermore, the defendant "bears the burden of proof on a
    motion for a new trial," Commonwealth v. Marinho, 
    464 Mass. 115
    ,
    123 (2013), and it is the defendant's burden to prove facts that
    are "neither agreed upon nor apparent on the face of the
    record."   Commonwealth v. Comita, 
    441 Mass. 86
    , 93 (2004),
    quoting from Commonwealth v. Bernier, 
    359 Mass. 13
    , 15 (1971).
    See Commonwealth v. Wheeler, 
    52 Mass. App. Ct. 631
    , 637 (2001)
    4
    We do not hold that a motion for new trial may never be
    granted without an evidentiary hearing. If the substantial
    issue raised by the motion is solely a question of law based on
    undisputed facts, an evidentiary hearing may not be necessary.
    Commonwealth v. 
    Gordon, supra
    at 395. But if the motion does
    not raise a substantial issue, neither holding an evidentiary
    hearing nor granting relief is appropriate.
    8
    ("The defendant has the burden of producing a credible reason to
    reverse the final decision, arrived at after trial or plea, that
    outweighs the risk of prejudice to the Commonwealth").
    When a defendant pleads guilty, "two constitutional
    requirements are necessary to assure that a counseled plea is
    valid:   the defendant's choice must be voluntary and
    intelligent."    Commonwealth v. 
    Hunt, 73 Mass. App. Ct. at 619
    .
    See Tollett v. Henderson, 
    411 U.S. 258
    , 267 (1973); Bousley v.
    United States, 
    523 U.S. 614
    , 618 (1998).    Here, the defendant
    did not take issue with his plea colloquies, his understanding
    of the nature of the charges, or the consequences of the pleas.
    Rather, he claimed that his guilty pleas were not intelligent
    and voluntary due to Farak's alleged malfeasance, which came to
    light in 2013.
    The only support for the defendant's motions to withdraw
    his guilty pleas were his own self-serving affidavits.    In those
    affidavits, the defendant claimed he was not shown the drug
    certificates by his counsel.    He also averred that his counsel
    advised him that the identity of the substances (as an element
    of the crime) was not in doubt, and that the substances had been
    established to be heroin.    The defendant's motions were not
    accompanied by any drug certificate.    However, the
    Commonwealth's opposition did provide a certificate for the
    October case, which revealed the assistant analyst to be Farak.
    9
    The defendant submitted nothing relative to the analysis of the
    substance in the November case.
    In this posture, there was no support for any claimed
    laboratory misconduct involving the defendant's November case
    for possession with intent to distribute a class A controlled
    substance.   Indeed, there is no evidence that the 206 packets
    had even been analyzed before the defendant stipulated that they
    contained heroin when he pleaded guilty.    That guilty plea was
    more than a mere admission.   See Brady v. United States, 
    397 U.S. 742
    , 748 (1970).   See also Boykin v. Alabama, 
    395 U.S. 238
    ,
    242 n.4 (1969) ("A plea of guilty is more than a voluntary
    confession made in open court.    It also serves as a stipulation
    that no proof by the prosecution need be advanced . . . .     It
    supplies both evidence and verdict, ending controversy"
    [citation omitted]).    Thus, there was no evidence of
    governmental misconduct involving the November case which could
    have created a substantial issue for the judge to address.5     See
    5
    In his November case, the defendant also pleaded guilty to
    resisting arrest (the lead count in the complaint) and assault
    and battery on a police officer. Even though the defendant's
    motion, affidavit, and supporting memorandum of law for the
    November case made no claim relative to the invalidity of those
    pleas, the judge granted a new trial on those convictions as
    well. Having not been raised in his motion for new trial, any
    argument relative to those convictions should have been viewed
    as waived. See Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(c)(2), as appearing in 
    435 Mass. 1501
    (2001). Moreover, the defendant has also made no
    argument in his brief to this court or at oral argument as to
    how Farak's misconduct tainted those convictions. To the extent
    10
    Commonwealth v. 
    Gordon, 82 Mass. App. Ct. at 395-396
    , quoting
    from Reporters' Notes to Rule 30(c)(3), Mass. Ann. Laws Court
    Rules, Rules of Criminal Procedure, at 1641 (2011-2012) ("In
    determining whether the motion raises a substantial issue which
    merits an evidentiary hearing, the judge should look not only at
    the seriousness of the issue asserted, but also to the adequacy
    of the defendant's showing").
    The October case stands on a different footing because
    Farak was the assistant analyst for the possession of heroin
    charge.    But that fact alone does not end the matter.   To
    evaluate the propriety of the judge granting the motion in the
    October case, we utilize the United States Court of Appeals for
    the First Circuit's analysis in Ferrara v. United States, 
    456 F.3d 278
    , 290 (1st Cir. 2006), which has been adopted by the
    Supreme Judicial Court in Commonwealth v. 
    Scott, 467 Mass. at 346
    .
    "Under the Ferrara analysis, the defendant first must show
    that egregious government misconduct preceded the entry of his
    the claims are not waived, we are at a loss, especially without
    findings from the judge, to conjure any justification for the
    grant of a new trial on these convictions. Allowing a motion
    for new trial without making findings runs afoul of
    Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(b), which states that the judge "shall make
    such findings of fact as are necessary to resolve the
    defendant's allegations of error of law" (emphasis supplied).
    See Commonwealth v. 
    Almonte, 84 Mass. App. Ct. at 739
    . In
    contrast, a one-word ruling labors "under suspicion of
    arbitrariness." 
    Id. at 740.
                                                                         11
    guilty plea and that it is the sort of conduct that implicates
    the defendant's due process rights."     
    Id. at 347.
      See Ferrara
    v. United States, supra at 290, 291.    This requires more than a
    defendant simply misjudging the Commonwealth's case, but rather
    he must show that his "guilty plea was preceded by 'particularly
    pernicious' government misconduct that was the source of the
    defendant's misapprehension of some aspect of his case."
    Commonwealth v. Scott, supra at 347, quoting from Ferrara v.
    United States, supra at 291.
    There can be no question that Farak's removal of narcotics
    from samples she had tested and replacing them with counterfeit
    substances constituted "egregious misconduct" by the government.
    Although Farak's motives and the scale of her misconduct on this
    record differed from that of Annie Dookhan's in the Hinton
    laboratory cases, see Commonwealth v. Scott, supra at 337 & n.3,
    Farak's conduct nonetheless caused damage to the criminal
    justice process.    Also, like Dookhan, Farak was a government
    agent.    See 
    id. at 348-350.
      But the similarities end there.
    Under the first prong of the Ferrara analysis, a defendant "must
    demonstrate that the misconduct occurred in his case."      
    Id. at 350.
       In other words, "a defendant seeking to vacate a guilty
    plea under Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(b), on the ground that government
    misconduct rendered the plea involuntary, . . . is required to
    12
    show a nexus between the government misconduct and the
    defendant's own case."   
    Id. at 351.6
    Here, the defendant offered no evidence indicating that
    Farak's misconduct occurred before the defendant's guilty plea.
    The only evidence on this point appears in a police report
    appended to the Commonwealth's memorandum in opposition to the
    defendant's motion, and it indicates that Farak's misconduct
    occurred in 2013 -- more than three years after Farak analyzed
    the heroin in the defendant's case.     In other words, under the
    Ferrara analysis, the defendant failed to make the preliminary
    showing that the "egregious government misconduct preceded the
    entry of his guilty plea."    Commonwealth v. 
    Scott, 467 Mass. at 347
    (emphasis supplied).7    The defendant's claim that the
    Commonwealth failed to provide the judge with any evidence that
    6
    In Commonwealth v. 
    Scott, 467 Mass. at 352
    , for cases
    where Dookhan was the analyst, the Supreme Judicial Court
    created a "conclusive presumption that egregious government
    misconduct occurred in the defendant's case." The court
    emphasized that the rule was "sui generis." 
    Id. at 353.
    In
    cases where Dookhan was not the analyst, the defendant is not
    relieved of his burden to establish each element of the Ferrara
    analysis. See 
    id. at 354.
         7
    The defendant also claims the revelation of Farak's
    misconduct constituted newly discovered evidence. While this
    may be true, it did not cast any real doubt on the justice of
    the defendant's conviction where he failed to show Farak's
    misconduct occurred in his case. See Commonwealth v. Pike, 
    431 Mass. 212
    , 218 (2000) ("A defendant seeking a new trial on the
    basis of newly discovered evidence must establish both that the
    evidence is newly discovered and that it casts real doubt on the
    justice of the conviction").
    13
    Farak's misconduct did not precede the defendant's guilty pleas
    misperceives the burden of proof.     It is the defendant who bears
    the burden of proof on a motion for new trial.     See Commonwealth
    v. 
    Marinho, 464 Mass. at 123
    .   See also Commonwealth v. Chatman,
    
    466 Mass. 327
    , 333 (2013) ("The defendant has the burden of
    proving facts upon which he relies in support of his motion for
    a new trial").   Due to the defendant's failure to sustain his
    burden of proof, his claim fails under the first prong of the
    Ferrara analysis.   Given this result, we need not address the
    second prong of the Ferrara analysis.8
    b.   Assistance of counsel.    The Commonwealth also claims
    that the defendant failed to sustain his burden of proving that
    8
    Under the second prong of the Ferrara analysis, a
    defendant must demonstrate a reasonable probability that he
    would not have pleaded guilty had he known of the government's
    misconduct. Commonwealth v. 
    Scott, 467 Mass. at 354-355
    . See
    Ferrara v. United 
    States, 456 F.3d at 290
    , 294. It is
    significant that the defendant did not aver this in his
    affidavit; an averment the Supreme Judicial Court has described
    as a "minimum" for establishing prejudice. Commonwealth v.
    Scott, supra at 356. We further note the favorable disposition
    the defendant received. In the November case, the defendant was
    sentenced to one year in the house of correction on each
    conviction: resisting arrest, assault and battery on a police
    officer, and possession of a class A controlled substance with
    the intent to distribute. In the October case, the defendant
    was sentenced to sixty days in the house of correction on his
    conviction of possession of a class A controlled substance. All
    sentences were to be served concurrently. In addition, the
    defendant was given credit for the 111 days during which he was
    held for trial. With this disposition in mind, under the second
    prong, the defendant would have had to "convince the court that
    a decision to reject the plea bargain would have been rational
    under the circumstances." Ibid., quoting from Commonwealth v.
    Clarke, 
    460 Mass. 30
    , 47 (2011).
    14
    plea counsel was ineffective.   Specifically, the defendant
    claimed that counsel faltered by allowing him to plead guilty
    without having a drug certificate in the November case.
    Ineffective assistance of counsel requires "behavior of
    counsel falling measurably below that which might be expected
    from an ordinary fallible lawyer," which "likely deprived the
    defendant of an otherwise available, substantial ground of
    defen[s]e."   Commonwealth v. Saferian, 
    366 Mass. 89
    , 96 (1974).
    The defendant must demonstrate that "better work might have
    accomplished something material for the defense."   Commonwealth
    v. Satterfield, 
    373 Mass. 109
    , 115 (1977).
    The defendant's motion and affidavit did not provide any
    evidence, or even suggest, that at the time he pleaded guilty,
    his attorney was aware of any misconduct at the Amherst
    laboratory.   In fact, Farak's misconduct did not come to light
    until several years after the defendant pleaded guilty.     Because
    we must evaluate counsel's conduct based on what was known at
    the time,9 see Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 689
    (1984), we cannot say that his attorney's choice to proceed with
    the pleas based on what he knew (even without a drug analyst's
    certificate) called into question his performance on an
    actionable level.   Indeed, it is not as if the defendant was
    9
    The defendant's motions were not supported with an
    affidavit from his attorney.
    15
    without personal knowledge of the contents of the 206 packets at
    issue.    As such, the defendant's claim fails to establish the
    first prong of the Saferian test, and we need go no further.10
    Orders granting motions for
    new trial reversed.
    10
    Relative to prejudice, we note only that the Ferrara
    "reasonable probability" standard "mirrors our formulation of
    the test for prejudice in cases in which a defendant claims that
    counsel's ineffective assistance induced the defendant to plead
    guilty." Commonwealth v. 
    Scott, 467 Mass. at 356
    . This, as
    stated above, includes at a minimum the defendant's averment
    (absent here) that he would not have pleaded guilty had he known
    of the misconduct at issue. See note 8, supra.