Prosecutors Cannot Manipulate Court Schedules to Punish Juveniles Longer

On April 11, 2022 Attorney Caroline Alpert convinced the Supreme Judicial Court to ban the prosecutorial practice of manipulating continuances past a juvenile’s eighteenth birthday for the sole purpose of obtaining more punishment. If a juvenile is sentenced while seventeen or younger, Massachusetts statutes prohibit punishing (“rehabilitating”) them beyond their eighteenth birthday. If sentenced after their eighteenth birthday, they can be committed to DYS until nineteen. Some Massachusetts prosecutors were moving to continue sentencing past the juvenile’s eighteenth birthday in order obtain longer commitments. The SJC prohibited this kind of manipulation, requiring prosecutors to prove by clear and convincing evidence at an evidentiary hearing that continued commitment is “necessary for the rehabilitation of the juvenile.” Read the opinion here.

Freedom! Bail Granted in First Degree Murder Case

Freedom! Bail Granted in First Degree Murder Case

Attorney Wood assisted by Attorney Ramos secured the release on bail today of their client who had been charged with first degree murder in the death of her wife. Attorney Wood convinced the Supreme Judicial Court to reverse her conviction (after two previous hung juries) due to the admission of junk science. Attorney Wood emphasized the weakness of the government’s case, our client’s impeccable conduct on bail during prior trials, and her broad support network. You can read more about the bail hearing here.

Amicus Brief: Pretextual Stops Enable Racist Policing

Attorney Wood on behalf of MACDL joined the powerful amicus coalition in Commonwealth v. Daveiga, including CPCS, the New England Innocence Project, the ACLU of Massachusetts, and the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Racial Justice. The brief argues our consistent position that pretextual stops enable racist policing.

The amicus brief urges the SJC to extend the reasoning of Commonwealth v. Long and to adopt Chief Justice Budd's reasoning in her concurring opinion to ban all pretextual traffic stops. Traffic stops have become the modern equivalent of the general warrant, granting police officers arbitrary power to stop virtually any driver they want. The brief marshalls the overwhelming evidence that police use this arbitrary power disproportionately to stop and investigate people of color - most of whom are innocent of any crime.

This case has an undisputed fact pattern that exemplifies the problem. Gang unit cops were looking for a specific car but did not have probable cause to arrest anyone. The target car committed a minor traffic violation - being double parked. They saw Daveiga, who they considered as sort of "usual suspect", in the back seat. They ordered the car to move.

But later, they decided to stop the car explicitly on the "pretext" of the prior minor double parking infraction, which they had already decided to excuse! Really, they wanted to investigate the hunch that Mr. Daveiga, a Black Cape Verdean passenger, was up to no good. The arresting officer had stopped him thirty times in the past. They ordered him out, searched and found a gun in the car.

Murder Conviction Reversed Due To Junk Science Expert Testimony

On September 27, 2021, a unanimous SJC reversed the first degree murder conviction and life sentence of Attorney Wood's client Cara Rintala in a 47 page decision. After two trials in which juries could not agree on a verdict, the prosecutor called a bench chemist at a paint company to offer "expert" testimony in a third trial that paint found on the victim's body had been poured intentionally just before police arrived at the crime scene. His opinion convinced the third jury to convict. On appeal, the SJC accepted Attorney Wood's argument, supported by the affidavit from a professor of material science and several amicus briefs, that this "expert" opinion was junk science that was not reliable because it did not follow the scientific method and should not have been admitted. The decision is a powerful precedent that trial judges must demand that prosecutors who offer expert opinion purportedly based on new science first demonstrate its reliability - using the scientific method - before permitting the jury to hear it.

Attorney Wood and his associate Melissa Ramos immediately filed a motion seeking Ms. Rintala's release while the Commonwealth decides whether to attempt to retry her a fourth time.

Landmark Ruling Banning Discrimination Against LGBTQ and Black Jurors

On August 16, 2021, Attorney Nathanson along with Attorney Jellison convinced the Supreme Judicial Court to issue a landmark ruling banning discrimination against LGBTQ and Black jurors in jury selection. Attorney Nathanson and Attorney Jellison convinced the SJC to go beyond its Goodridge gay marriage decision and rule that LGBTQ persons are part of a constitutionally protected class. Further, the SJC reversed our clients’ convictions because the trial judge failed to protect Black jurors from discrimination. The judge repeatedly ruled that there were enough Black jurors on the jury, so the prosecutor was not discriminating in striking other Black jurors. But in heavily minority communities like Boston, this is an open invitation to discrimination by allowing just enough Black jurors onto the jury and excluding all others, even if they are qualified. In a strong concurrence, SJC Justice Lowy argued that prosecutors should always have to explain their juror strikes if a defendant objects. A powerful and persuasive amicus brief was filed by GLAD, Black and Pink MA, and the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Racial Justice.

Amicus Brief Against Pretextual Stops

On behalf of MACDL, Attorney Wood co-authored an amicus brief challenging racist pretextual stops in Commonwealth v. Garner. Joining the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Racial Justice, the Committee for Public Counsel Services, and the New England Innocence Project, the brief argues that the routinely degrading practice of pretextual stops must be abolished. This case, dealing with a person who was repeatedly stopped by the same police officer for minor offenses, shows how pretextual stops and justifications for the inevitable searches that follow depend on racist assumptions of dangerousness, subjective police conclusions, and inferential leaps sold to courts as police “training and experience.” That kind of junk evidence in the service of an oppressive, racist practice must be banned from our courts.

SJC Agrees Defendants May Insist on In-Person Hearings

In a landmark ruling, the Supreme Judicial Court held that defendants may, in many circumstances, insist on in-person hearings rather than be forced to conduct a hearing via Zoom. In so ruling the SJC agreed with arguments made jointly by Attorney Wood for MACDL, along with the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice and the Boston Bar Association. Requiring Zoom hearings has a disparate impact on poor people and people of color: they tend to do worse in such hearings and they have worse access to broadband internet necessary for such hearings. For a more detailed description, you can read the Boston Bar Association’s press release here.

Amicus Brief Against Racist Gang Databases

Attorney Wood recently consulted on and was a signatory (as MACDL’s representative) to an amicus brief in Commonwealth v. Sweeting-Bailey. This brief by a coalition of civil rights groups explains why gang databases are artificial racist constructs and unreliable indicators of criminal behavior. Therefore, the fact that someone has been placed in a gang database should not be a basis for reasonable suspicion that he or she has committed a crime. Read the brief here.

ABA Interview: Opposition to Forced Zoom Hearings

Attorney Wood was recently interviewed by the American Bar Association's Judicial Division Record about MACDL's support for a defendant who opposed being forced to waive his constitutional right to an in-person suppression hearing. Read the article here. The case, Commonwealth v. Vasquez Diaz, is currently pending in the SJC. Read the brief here.

Wrongful Amateur Athletic Accusation Unsubstantiated

Recently, Attorney Jellison successfully defended a juvenile in disciplinary proceedings initiated by an amateur athletic organization. The juvenile was not involved in any misconduct, and Attorney Jellison's careful investigation revealed ample exculpatory evidence and the misunderstanding that resulted in accusation of her client. Because of this careful work, Attorney Jellison was able to end the proceedings without the need for a stressful evidentiary hearing for her young client.

Racial Justice Litigation

Every attorney at Wood & Nathanson is motivated to advance racial justice. It is a central focus of what we do. We thought we would take a moment to outline some of our work in this area. We have brought litigation challenging racism in traffic stops, stop and frisk, jury selection and the school to prison pipeline. Racism pervades the criminal justice system and we will not stop challenging it.

"Comply with DYS" Not a Valid Probation Condition

On February 24, 2021, Attorney Alpert convinced the Appeals Court to vacate her client’s probation violation in Commonwealth v. Quigley Q. for failing to “comply with DYS requirements and conditions of liberty.” This condition of the juvenile’s probation violated art. 30 (separation of powers). Probation is a judiciary power and it may not be delegated to the executive branch (here, DYS). Instead of specifying terms of probation, the condition left the juvenile subject to the whims of DYS. Further, when a juvenile (or an adult) is in jeopardy of losing their liberty, they are entitled to know exactly what actions will cause the loss of liberty. These concerns equally apply to pre-trial conditions of bail. Although unpublished, this is a significant win because this unconstitutional condition of probation is commonly imposed in juvenile courts across Massachusetts.

"Zoom" Hearings Violate Constitutional Rights

On November 20, 2020, Attorney Wood on behalf of MACDL - along with Katherine Naples-Mitchell of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice and Meredith Shih of the Boston Bar Association - filed a joint amicus brief arguing that forcing defendants to have suppression hearings heard over “Zoom” will disparately harm people of color. Zoom hearings disproportionately limit access to these public hearings that determine whether police have engaged in unconstitutional conduct in cases that are disproportionately brought against people of color.

No "Dead Time": Convictionless Time in Jail Deserves Credit

On November 13, 2020, Attorney Wood and a team from Foley Hoag including Attorney Christopher Hart filed an amicus brief urging the SJC to hold that defendants who were jailed but whose convictions were invalid should be allowed to ask judges to credit that time in jail against another conviction. This is particularly true for defendants convicted in the infamous Massachusetts drug lab scandals. The principle is simple: the government took more of someone’s life than it was entitled to, that should count for something if the person is validly punished later.

Amicus: SJC Should Hear Full Appeal in Potential Wrongful Conviction

Attorney Wood - in his role as MACDL Amicus Committee co-chair - was proud to support the powerful amicus efforts of the New England Innocence Project, Boston College Innocence Program, The Exoneration Project, in Commonwealth v. Valle. The groups filed a joint amicus letter with the Supreme Judicial Court. Mr. Valle was convicted entirely on uncorroborated eyewitness identification testimony. Mr. Valle had an alibi. The case presents many of the factors identified in scientific research as risk factors for an erroneous identification. But his attorney never presented expert testimony on this research, relying only on jury instructions to educate the jury. The case appears to be a true miscarriage of justice. And yet, the Appeals Court not only rejected Mr. Valle’s appeal by viewing each error in isolation, but did so in an unpublished opinion and without even allowing his attorney, Jessica LaClair, to present oral argument. Read the amicus letter here.

The Road to Commonwealth v. Long

Following up on our recent post, Attorney Wood recently wrote a longer piece describing the litigation the led to the SJC’s recent decision in Commonwealth v. Long, which lessened the burden for defendants moving to suppress due to racial profiling or “Driving While Black.” You can read the full article at the MACDL website here.

Landmark Ruling Against Racial Profiling

MACDL, whose amicus committee is co-chaired by Attorney Wood, released a statement on September 17, 2020 lauding the SJC’s decision in Commonwealth v. Long, adopting much of a MACDL argument, that was a major step forward for racial justice on the roadways of Massachusetts. The MACDL amicus committee formed a coalition with NEIP, LCR and CHHIRJ that filed an amicus brief urging the Court to prohibit racial profiling in traffic stops. amicus arguing that the Lora equal protection standard for demonstrating that automobile stops are motivated by race was unworkable and should be replaced with a "but for" test - essentially banning pretextual stops. The Court unanimously adopted the MACDL view that the Lora test is unworkable and replaced it with a more flexible totality of the circumstances test in which the question is whether the totality of the circumstances demonstrate that the officers' decision to stop the defendant was motivated by race. Moreover, two members of the Court (Lenk & Budd) agreed with MACDL that the better solution is to ban pretextual stops altogether. The attorneys at Wood & Nathanson have been focused on changing the law regarding racial profiling for years. In Long, Attorney Wood helped put together the MACDL team that drafted its powerful amicus brief. And prior to Long, Attorney Malm was counsel in Commonwealth v. Buckley, which appears to have convinced the SJC to take the problem of pretextual stops more seriously. [click to read full post]

Juveniles Should Be Entitled to Credit for Time Spent in Pre-Trial Detention

On September 9, 2020, Attorney Jellison appeared in the first day of SJC Zoom arguments asking the Court to affirm a juvenile court's order granting her client credit for the time he spent in pretrial detention against the confined portion of his DYS commitment. Attorney Jellison's client spent 6 months in pretrial detention. Adults receive credit for the time they spend in correctional facilities pretrial against custodial sentences. For juveniles, however, this time is dead time. DYS does not use all of its rehabilitative tools in pretrial detention, and the time is not deducted from post-adjudication confinement. Confinement in a jail-like setting is profoundly damaging to youths' well-being. And pretrial detention burdens the exercise of important pre-trial and trial rights. Further, the youth most likely to be held pretrial and suffer these harms are the Commonwealth's most vulnerable: Black, Hispanic and/or Latino, and multi-system youth. Hopefully the SJC will see the policy against pretrial detention credit as unfair and take steps to provide credit to youth.

Emails Reveal New Evidence of Misconduct at Hinton Drug Laboratory

This week, the Boston Globe reported on a series of cases that Wood & Nathanson attorney Christopher Post has been working on for the past several years, along with parallel litigation by Attorney James McKenna. New information proves that misconduct at the Hinton Drug Lab was wider than previously known. This information came to light because of Attorney Post’s relentless push both to obtain the internal emails of the Office of the Inspector General (‘OIG’) and then his fight to make them public. Read the emails here.

Danya Fullerton Joins Wood & Nathanson

We are excited to announce that Danya Fullerton has joined Wood & Nathanson. Attorney Fullerton has experience in matters ranging from assault and battery and operating under the influence to assisting in high-profile cases such as the defense of James “Whitey” Bulger and Tarek Mehanna. She also helped win the leading Massachusetts case of Commonwealth v. White, in which the Supreme Judicial Court limited the search of cell phones and text messages.