Commonwealth v. Collins
Commonwealth v. Collins
Opinion of the Court
In July, 2016, after an eight-day trial, a Superior Court jury convicted the defendant of rape, assault and battery on a family or household member, malicious destruction of property under $ 250, two counts of witness intimidation, and criminal contempt. The victim was the defendant's girl friend. On the defendant's appeal, we affirm.
Background. We summarize the relevant trial testimony. On June 11, 2015, at approximately 6 A.M. , the victim received an angry telephone call from the defendant in which he demanded that she meet him before work that day. Because her workday began at 7:30 A.M. , the victim met the defendant at about 6:30 A.M. , and he proceeded to tell her that he was "in control" of their relationship and to place conditions on her job as a dog groomer. For the next several hours the defendant's fury escalated, and he interrupted the victim's work on several occasions with various demands. In the early afternoon, the defendant, who had met the victim after she finished work, got into the passenger seat of the victim's car and ordered her to drive to Bird Park in Walpole. The victim was very scared, wanted to go home, and was crying, but she did as the defendant said.
When they arrived at the park, the defendant directed the victim to park at the end of the parking lot, furthest from the street. The victim testified that the defendant then left the car to use heroin in the woods, and took the car keys with him. When he returned, the defendant proceeded to take off his shirt, recline the passenger seat, pull down his shorts and underwear, and pull the victim towards him, kissing and groping her while she cried. When the victim told him to stop, the defendant pointed to his penis and said "go on," indicating to her that he wanted oral sex. When the victim said she didn't want to do that, he "clenched his fist and ... said, you do what I tell you to do." The victim repeated that she did not want to, but the defendant stated that he was the one in control, and, again, pointed to his penis. The victim felt she "had to give him oral sex," and she then did so while choking and crying. The victim was "terrified."
Afterwards, the defendant "nodded off" with his shorts still at his ankles, so the victim grabbed her cellular telephone (cell phone), ran across the parking lot, and called 911. When she was about halfway across the parking lot, she saw that the defendant was chasing her. She ran across the street and was "screaming for help" to people as they drove by. The defendant caught up to her, came up behind her and grabbed her with two hands, one on her forearm and one on her "shoulder/neck area." He eventually grabbed her cell phone from her and fled. The victim's cell phone was subsequently recovered, in several pieces, in a wooded area near Bird Park.
Several cars pulled over in response to the incident, and four individuals testified at trial about witnessing various parts of the altercation. Multiple witnesses called 911, and the victim waited for the police in the car of one of the women who had pulled over. When the victim got into the woman's car, the victim "was hysterically crying, just saying [the defendant was] going to kill [her]."
After approximately twenty minutes,
The defendant was ultimately apprehended and arrested. At trial, the victim explained that, after the attack, she "still loved [the defendant], and [she] wanted answers," so she put money into his canteen account and answered twenty-three of his phone calls from jail.
Discussion. The defendant raises three issues on appeal, which we address in turn.
1. Expert testimony. Burns was the coexecutive director of an intimate partner abuse education program called Common Purpose, where he had worked since 1993. The Commonwealth called him to testify as to common behaviors of individuals involved in domestic violence and the "cycle of violence" generally. He was not asked to apply his expertise to the facts of this case.
"A trial judge has wide discretion to qualify an expert witness and to decide whether the witness's testimony should be admitted." Commonwealth v. Scesny,
The judge did not abuse his discretion in qualifying Burns as an expert and allowing him to testify as to the cycle of domestic violence. We have routinely affirmed trial judges' decisions to qualify as experts in domestic violence witnesses who, although not trained clinicians or authors of academic publications, were "adequately qualified ... to testify about the particular psychological dynamics of domestic abuse and [battered woman's syndrome]," based on their extensive work experience. See Goetzendanner,
To some extent, it appears that the defendant's complaint is not about the judge's qualification of Burns as an expert, but rather about the substance of Burns's testimony. For example, the defendant suggests that Burns's testimony that domestic violence occurring in public is "an indication that the normal social norms don't apply and it's more severe" could be taken to imply that other violence by the defendant predated this episode. However, the defendant did not object to any such statements at trial, and our review therefore is limited to whether any error caused a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. See Commonwealth v. Almele,
2. Spontaneous utterances. The defendant next asserts that Sergeant O'Connell's testimony as to what the victim told him after the incident was inadmissible hearsay that was admitted in error. We disagree.
The judge's determination that the victim's statements to Sergeant O'Connell were spontaneous utterances is given "great deference," and we review only for abuse of discretion. Commonwealth v. Smith,
Here, Sergeant O'Connell arrived at Bird Park -- the same location where the assault had taken place -- between fifteen and twenty-five minutes after the incident. When he arrived, the victim was "extremely upset," she was shaking and crying, and "her voice was shaking." When the eyewitness who had sheltered the victim in her car prior to the police arriving was asked whether the victim had "calm[ed] down" or "stay[ed] upset" in the time the witness was with the victim, the witness testified that "[the victim] stay[ed] upset" and "was just in hysterics." Further, the fact that the victim's statements to Sergeant O'Connell were in response to his questions does not preclude the statements from being spontaneous utterances. See Wilson,
3. Evidence of force. To prove a charge of rape, the Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant "compel[led] [the victim] to submit by force and against [her] will, or compel[led] [her] to submit by threat of bodily injury." G. L. c. 265, § 22 (b ). The victim testified that the defendant told her he was the one in control, demanded that she perform oral sex -- after she had repeatedly stated she did not want to -- and "clenched his fist" "fairly close" to her body.
Judgments affirmed.
The woman in whose car the victim waited testified that the police officer arrived twenty to twenty-five minutes later, but the sergeant testified that he arrived "[p]robably [fifteen] minutes maybe, tops" after the incident.
Portions of their phone conversations were admitted in evidence at trial. The victim also testified that she engaged in phone sex with the defendant.
In fact, Burns testified that, other than the names of the parties, which he was given in order to check for conflicts (there were none), he was unfamiliar with the underlying facts of this case.
The defendant points to testimony from the victim that the defendant's fist "wasn't up in [her] face," in contrast to Sergeant O'Connell's testimony that the victim told him the defendant's fist was "by her face." Putting aside the fact that we must consider the trial evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, see Commonwealth v. Latimore,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.