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Two Important decisions from the SJC and Appeals courts today

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With all of the focus on SCOTUS and the cell phone case, two real important decisions out of the SJC are going to be virtually ignored today. The first is truly a first. The SJC, the first high court (ie; supreme court) to hold that the 5A doesn't protect you from having to provide encryption keys. While the decision is narrow in scope, it's hard to see how they will not rule in the affirmative if they were faced with a set of facts where they did not have prior knowledge of what they would find. This case is Commonwealth v. Gelfgatt (SJC 11358).

Second is a knife case. That was from the Appeals court but it is a dangerous step showing that the court is likely to rubber stamp the stupidity coming out of NY and NJ where every folding knife is a switchblade unless it requires an iron pinch to open and every fixed blade is a dagger just because.

COMMONWEALTH vs. Jerome HIGGINS (13-P-924).

Suffolk. March 26, 2014. - June 25, 2014.

Dangerous Weapon. Evidence, Knife.

INDICTMENT found and returned in the Superior Court Department on October 27, 2009.

The case was tried before Thomas E. Connolly, J.

Jon R. Maddox for the defendant.

Zachary Hillman, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.

Present: Milkey, Brown, & Maldonado, JJ.

MILKEY, J.

Following a jury trial in Superior Court, the defendant was convicted of violating G.L. c. 269, § 10(b ), by carrying a dangerous weapon (a knife).
[FN1] Because we agree with the defendant that the evidence was insufficient to prove that his knife was of the type prohibited by the statute, we reverse the judgment and set aside the verdict.

Background. On September 5, 2009, Boston police officers, who were investigating a stabbing that had occurred earlier that day, arrested the defendant at his residence. After the arrest, the defendant acknowledged that he owned a knife, while denying that he had used the knife in any stabbing. The police "froze[ ]" the scene, obtained a search warrant, and retrieved the knife from the defendant's bedroom. The knife, which was admitted in evidence, is a folding knife that has a blade that locks into place. Further characteristics of the knife are reserved for later discussion.

For the stabbing, the defendant was charged with aggravated assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, G.L. c. 265, § 15A(c ). That charge was the centerpiece of the trial. Thus, for example, both closing arguments focused exclusively on whether it was the defendant who had stabbed the victim. The defendant was also charged with violating G.L. c. 269, § 10(b ), for carrying the knife on his person. The jury acquitted the defendant of the aggravated assault and battery charge, but convicted him of carrying a dangerous weapon.

Discussion. Section 10(b ) of G.L. c. 269 makes it illegal for anyone to carry certain kinds of knives. [FN2] See Commonwealth v. Miller, 22 Mass.App.Ct. 694 (1986); Commonwealth v. Garcia, 82 Mass.App.Ct. 239, 242- 249 (2012). The question before us is whether there was sufficient evidence that the defendant's knife fell within one of the designated categories outlawed by the statute. In determining the sufficiency of the evidence, we must of course consider "whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt." Commonwealth v. Latimore, 378 Mass. 671, 677 (1979) (citation omitted).

The Commonwealth makes no claim that the defendant's knife is a "stiletto," "dirk knife," or one of the other types of knives specifically referenced in the statute. Rather, the Commonwealth relies on catch-all statutory language that applies to "a device or case which enables a knife with a locking blade to be drawn at a locked position." [FN3] G.L. c. 269, § 10(b ). Thus, under the plain language of the relevant portion of the statute, a knife is not prohibited merely because it has a blade that locks into place. Cf. Commonwealth v. Wynton W., 459 Mass. 745, 755 n. 5 (2011) (presence of "a locking mechanism ... or any other individual feature[ ] is not dispositive of the question whether a knife is dangerous per se under the common law"). Instead, the Commonwealth would have to prove in addition that there was a "device or case" that allowed the blade to be drawn at a locked position. G.L. c. 269, § 10(b ). [FN4]

The Commonwealth has never contended that the defendant's knife has a spring or other mechanism that--when activated--automatically sets the blade into a locked position. However, for the first time on appeal, it points out that there are "thumb studs" that protrude from either side of the knife's blade. According to the Commonwealth, those protrusions allow someone holding the knife in one hand to open the blade quickly into a locked position with a mere flick of his thumb. The Commonwealth maintains that, by serving that end, the thumb studs are prohibited "device that enable[ ] the blade to be drawn at a locked position." The Commonwealth further argues that knives equipped with thumb studs can be drawn into fighting mode as quickly as other "quick release" knives expressly prohibited by the statute (e.g., "stiletto" and "switch knife"), and that banning them furthers the recognized statutory purpose of prohibiting knives "primarily designed for stabbing human beings or for other unlawful objectives." Commonwealth v. Miller, 22 Mass.App.Ct. at 696.
[FN5]


The defendant counters that his knife is an ordinary hunting and camping knife of the sort available for purchase throughout the Commonwealth. [FN6] The import of that argument is that even if the knife can be opened with the ease the Commonwealth asserts, it was designed to serve many utilitarian purposes, and was not "primarily designed" for stabbing people. Ibid. Compare Commonwealth v. Garcia, 82 Mass.App.Ct. at 248-249 (concluding that a knife was prohibited under the statute in part because it had no apparent "alternative innocuous usage"). The defendant also argues that the Commonwealth's theory of the case cannot be correct, because it would make such ubiquitous knives per se illegal, thereby rendering thousands of Commonwealth knife owners unwitting criminals.

In the current appeal, we need not resolve whether "thumb studs" on the blade of a folding knife could be "device" outlawed by G.L. c. 269, § 10(b ). That is because even if the Commonwealth's interpretation of the statute is correct, there still would be insufficient trial evidence in the case before us. Although the Commonwealth presented evidence that the knife had a locking mechanism, the jury heard no testimony whatsoever about the ease with which the thumb studs allowed the blade to be opened into a locked position. To fill the gap, the Commonwealth now maintains that the jurors themselves could have reached a conclusion regarding such issues based on their own examination of the knife. To demonstrate what the jury saw, the Commonwealth requested that the actual knife be transported to us as part of the appellate record. We allowed the Commonwealth's motion, but this does not aid its case. As presented to the jury, the knife--in a closed position--was sealed in an evidence bag made of thick plastic suitable for containing "sharps." With the knife packaged in that manner, it simply would not have been possible for the jury to assess the ease with which the thumb studs allowed the knife to be opened, with its blade drawn into a locked position. In addition, in the absence of testimony, argument, or instruction regarding the ease with which the blade could be drawn, there was no apparent reason for the jury to attempt their own assessment of such issues. [FN7]

In sum, because the evidence was not sufficient to establish that the knife was equipped with a "device" that enabled its blade "to be drawn at a locked position," the defendant's conviction cannot stand. [FN8] G.L. c. 269, § 10(b ).

Judgment reversed.

Verdict set aside.

Judgment for the defendant.

FN1. Section 10(b ), as amended through St.1986, c. 581, § 1, provides in relevant part:

"Whoever ... carries on his person ... any stiletto, dagger or a device or case which enables a knife with a locking blade to be drawn at a locked position, any ballistic knife, or any knife with a detachable blade capable of being propelled by any mechanism, dirk knife, any knife having a double-edged blade, or a switch knife, or any knife having an automatic spring release device by which the blade is released from the handle, having a blade of over
one and one-half inches ... shall be punished by imprisonment."


FN2. The prohibition does not apply where permission to carry such a knife is "provided by law." G.L. c. 269, § 10(b ), as appearing in St.1974, c. 649, § 2. It is undisputed that no such exception applies here.


FN3. The jury instructions were based almost verbatim on this statutory language.


FN4. The defendant moved for a required finding of not guilty at the close of the Commonwealth's case, albeit on the ground that there was insufficient evidence that the defendant had carried the knife outside his home (a ground he has now abandoned). After the judge denied that motion and the jury rendered their verdict, the defendant asked the judge to vacate the verdict, arguing for the first time that the Commonwealth had produced insufficient evidence that the knife was subject to the statute. In denying the posttrial motion, the judge ruled that the knife's locking device was considered part of the handle, and that the handle itself was the "device or case" referred to in the statute. The Commonwealth makes no effort to defend this appeal on the grounds identified by the judge, and implicitly concedes that the mere presence of a locking mechanism is not enough to make the knife prohibited under the statute.


FN5. In Commonwealth v. Miller, we concluded that the knife at issue in that case was not covered by the statute in part because "n contrast to other quick release knives enumerated by the statute, [the knife] does not open quickly or easily." Id. at 696. The specific statutory language on which the Commonwealth relies in the current case was added in the immediate wake of Miller. See St.1986, c. 581, § 1. The Commonwealth argues that the amendment was designed to ensure that a broad array of "quick draw" knives was outlawed.


FN6. According to a statement that the defendant made to police, he bought the knife in a downtown Boston store that sells "Kung Fu videos." There was no other trial evidence regarding the availability of such knives. In his posttrial motion, see note 4, supra, the defendant appended a number of documents purporting to show that such knives are broadly sold as hunting or camping knives.


FN7. We need not address the propriety of the jury's testing the knife in the manner the Commonwealth suggests.


FN8. We need not reach the defendant's other claims of error.
 
I don't read that…they found in favor of the defendant and reversed the verdict to NG. I do not think that the spirit of 269/10 is to make folding knives as stated in the case part of the statute. Does not mean that the DAs office in suffolk county didn't tee it up that way. He really got charged because he stabbed someone..he beat that rap…I think the jury wanted to convict him of something so they chose the lesser of two evils here. If you REALLY read 269/10 the language is real vague in some spots. Not a good chapter….a baton is not illegal per se UNLESS it is used in an assault ect ect ect. Ambiguous language is abound in the MGLs.
 
I don't read that…they found in favor of the defendant and reversed the verdict to NG. I do not think that the spirit of 269/10 is to make folding knives as stated in the case part of the statute. Does not mean that the DAs office in suffolk county didn't tee it up that way. He really got charged because he stabbed someone..he beat that rap…I think the jury wanted to convict him of something so they chose the lesser of two evils here. If you REALLY read 269/10 the language is real vague in some spots. Not a good chapter….a baton is not illegal per se UNLESS it is used in an assault ect ect ect. Ambiguous language is abound in the MGLs.

I realize that it's hard to see a case where they release the person as bad for the future, but they relied on the prosecutors screw up to not try and prove the elements of the crime to dismiss the case. But they provide a road map to future prosecutions that if you want to prove this, make sure you put up an expert who can open the knife with one hand. That pretty much takes out all but the most difficult to open knives.

It's this paragraph that concerns me.

In the current appeal, we need not resolve whether "thumb studs" on the blade of a folding knife could be "device" outlawed by G.L. c. 269, § 10(b ). That is because even if the Commonwealth's interpretation of the statute is correct, there still would be insufficient trial evidence in the case before us. Although the Commonwealth presented evidence that the knife had a locking mechanism, the jury heard no testimony whatsoever about the ease with which the thumb studs allowed the blade to be opened into a locked position. To fill the gap, the Commonwealth now maintains that the jurors themselves could have reached a conclusion regarding such issues based on their own examination of the knife. To demonstrate what the jury saw, the Commonwealth requested that the actual knife be transported to us as part of the appellate record. We allowed the Commonwealth's motion, but this does not aid its case. As presented to the jury, the knife--in a closed position--was sealed in an evidence bag made of thick plastic suitable for containing "sharps." With the knife packaged in that manner, it simply would not have been possible for the jury to assess the ease with which the thumb studs allowed the knife to be opened, with its blade drawn into a locked position. In addition, in the absence of testimony, argument, or instruction regarding the ease with which the blade could be drawn, there was no apparent reason for the jury to attempt their own assessment of such issues. [FN7]


The upshot of this is that had the prosecutors shown there was such a device (ie; thumb studs), then they may have been able to prevail.
 
I also don't understand. I carry a kershaw od2 and it has a "thumb lever" and this is the type of "device" that i was thinking of while reading this. It sounded like there is no evidence that supports that this knife can be drawn and deployed like a switch blade so conviction overturned. It also says that changing the law would make thousands of law abiding citizens criminals which is good to highlight in light of California and Connecticut retro banning magazines.
 
I also don't understand. I carry a kershaw od2 and it has a "thumb lever" and this is the type of "device" that i was thinking of while reading this. It sounded like there is no evidence that supports that this knife can be drawn and deployed like a switch blade so conviction overturned.

There was no evidence presented by the state about this, but had there been, they may have gotten the conviction to stick.


It also says that changing the law would make thousands of law abiding citizens criminals which is good to highlight in light of California and Connecticut retro banning magazines.

No, it doesn't say that. It says the defense claims that, and leaves it out there without any further clarification. But that statement is not attributed to the court.
 
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I also don't understand. I carry a kershaw od2 and it has a "thumb lever" and this is the type of "device" that i was thinking of while reading this. It sounded like there is no evidence that supports that this knife can be drawn and deployed like a switch blade so conviction overturned. It also says that changing the law would make thousands of law abiding citizens criminals which is good to highlight in light of California and Connecticut retro banning magazines.

Terra's point is the decision says, 'there was no way for the jury to decide whether the thumb stud was a "device" because they couldn't test it and no one told them', which implies 'but if they did and the jury agreed that it was such a device, conviction would be upheld'.
 
Gotta agree with Terraformer, that judgement reads like a road map on how to convict next time.

In the current appeal, we need not resolve whether "thumb studs" on the blade of a folding knife could be "device" outlawed by G.L. c. 269, § 10(b ). That is because even if the Commonwealth's interpretation of the statute is correct, there still would be insufficient trial evidence in the case before us. Although the Commonwealth presented evidence that the knife had a locking mechanism, the jury heard no testimony whatsoever about the ease with which the thumb studs allowed the blade to be opened into a locked position. To fill the gap, the Commonwealth now maintains that the jurors themselves could have reached a conclusion regarding such issues based on their own examination of the knife. To demonstrate what the jury saw, the Commonwealth requested that the actual knife be transported to us as part of the appellate record. We allowed the Commonwealth's motion, but this does not aid its case. As presented to the jury, the knife--in a closed position--was sealed in an evidence bag made of thick plastic suitable for containing "sharps." With the knife packaged in that manner, it simply would not have been possible for the jury to assess the ease with which the thumb studs allowed the knife to be opened, with its blade drawn into a locked position. In addition, in the absence of testimony, argument, or instruction regarding the ease with which the blade could be drawn, there was no apparent reason for the jury to attempt their own assessment of such issues. [FN7]



Sounds like the court is saying that if the Commonwealth had showed the knife to the jury without a plastic bag, they were willing to assume the jury's ability to assess the knife as a dangerous weapon under C 269 S 10(b).
 
I agree with their decision to send it back down and vacate the conviction. The dumb thing is that anyone could think that thumb studs constitute such a device. Since the statute says "drawn" with the blade in the locked position, then it must require the blade to be open before the knife is taken out of or while the knife is being taken out of the pocket or holster that it is carried in, which would mean that a thumb stud couldn't be such a device and neither could the kershaw AO since you need to have them out of your pocket to deploy the blade.
 
The dumb thing is that anyone could think that thumb studs constitute such a device. Since the statute says "drawn" with the blade in the locked position, then it must require the blade to be open before the knife is taken out of or while the knife is being taken out of the pocket or holster that it is carried in, which would mean that a thumb stud couldn't be such a device and neither could the kershaw AO since you need to have them out of your pocket to deploy the blade.

This assumes that the defense attorney that the punk gang banger gets does a good job of illustrating this.
 
I don't think they've posted the decision on Ma vs. Gelfgatt yet - is it up anywhere?

I will say that after reading the first two briefs, the first thing that came to mind was "Don't talk to cops......"
 
I guess you have a point: if the DAs are willing to put it out there then that means they are trying. It IS Suffolk Cty after all…I still think the DA was grasping at a secondary charge due to the defendant being involved in a stabbing AND that it passed Grand Jury scrutiny (not that difficult in MA…I could get a ham sandwich indicted if I really wanted to) speaks volumes.

269/10 is such an arbitrary charge…you can walk into many a dojo across the Curruptwealth and charge them as most have nunchuckoo or the like hanging on the walls. It also speaks of double edged blades, slung (sling) shot, armbands with leather spikes….imagine going to a Judas Priest concert and locking up everyone under 269/10 for leather studded/spiked armbands?!? C'mon Mr. Halford…you are being charged with a felony.

Common sense should prevail…oops. THat was stupid to say...
 
The SJC, the first high court (ie; supreme court) to hold that the 5A doesn't protect you from having to provide encryption keys. While the decision is narrow in scope, it's hard to see how they will not rule in the affirmative if they were faced with a set of facts where they did not have prior knowledge of what they would find. This case is Commonwealth v. Gelfgatt (SJC 11358).

Am I reading this correct, it this means that we must unlock phones for the police?
 
Am I reading this correct, it this means that we must unlock phones for the police?

I think it applies to encrypted hard drives when there is a warrant to search them. In light of the SCOTUS decision today, I don't know if once they have a warrant the police can compel you to unlock a cell phone or a hard drive. No doubt, there will be more litigation around that.
 
There was no evidence presented by the state about this, but had there been, they may have gotten the conviction to stick.




No, it doesn't say that. It says the defense claims that, and leaves it out there without any further clarification. But that statement is not attributed to the court.

Understood.
I thought of things like a karambit that when removed from the pocket automatically deploy. How would one argue that knives like the od2 that aren't considered dangerous weapons because of blade length but still have "military assault features" like "thumb assist"?
 
Am I reading this correct, it this means that we must unlock phones for the police?

No. Especially on the side of the road. But there is a question on if there is a warrant. But if a warrant is in play, you should have a lawyer, right? [grin]
 
I also don't understand. I carry a kershaw od2 and it has a "thumb lever" and this is the type of "device" that i was thinking of while reading this. It sounded like there is no evidence that supports that this knife can be drawn and deployed like a switch blade so conviction overturned. It also says that changing the law would make thousands of law abiding citizens criminals which is good to highlight in light of California and Connecticut retro banning magazines.
I removed the thumb studs from my Cold Steel "Voyager" 4" lockblade folder. I found that I can flick the knife open just as quickly without it and the thumb studs only served to abrade he inside of the trouser pocket where I carry it. Glad the MA SJC finally made a smart decision. They have a long record of making rather stupid ones!
 
so a manual folding blade was designed for stabbing people and "other unlawful purposes"... where the **** do these retards come up with this shit????
 
Decisions like this are prime evidence of judges exceeding their judicial roles.

It is a tenant of judging under stare decisis that you resolve a case on the grounds that have the most minimal effect to current law. It was totally inappropriate for the court to engage in three paragraphs of dicta discussing thumb studs when they eventually decided it on failure of evidence grounds.
 
I'm having trouble following... Is a knife with a stud to push, or that can be opened by a wrist flick, illegal in MA or not? That is what I normally have.
 
With all of the focus on SCOTUS and the cell phone case, two real important decisions out of the SJC are going to be virtually ignored today. The first is truly a first. The SJC, the first high court (ie; supreme court) to hold that the 5A doesn't protect you from having to provide encryption keys. While the decision is narrow in scope, it's hard to see how they will not rule in the affirmative if they were faced with a set of facts where they did not have prior knowledge of what they would find. This case is Commonwealth v. Gelfgatt (SJC 11358).

Second is a knife case. That was from the Appeals court but it is a dangerous step showing that the court is likely to rubber stamp the stupidity coming out of NY and NJ where every folding knife is a switchblade unless it requires an iron pinch to open and every fixed blade is a dagger just because.
Link to source?
 
Link to source?

What source? If you mean for the decisions, I can't link to slip opinions at the SJC. You have to go there and get them yourself. The Gelfgatt decision is the SJC. The Higgins decision was short enough I could embed in the post. That was the appeals court.

- - - Updated - - -

I'm having trouble following... Is a knife with a stud to push, or that can be opened by a wrist flick, illegal in MA or not? That is what I normally have.

Your guess is as good as mine but it is sure starting to look that way.
 
I don't understand what's so dangerous about an "automatic" knife. I really, really don't get it. It's a few inches of sharpened metal either way...
 
Decisions like this are prime evidence of judges exceeding their judicial roles.

It is a tenant of judging under stare decisis that you resolve a case on the grounds that have the most minimal effect to current law. It was totally inappropriate for the court to engage in three paragraphs of dicta discussing thumb studs when they eventually decided it on failure of evidence grounds.

This x1000. The SJC goes out of their way to give hints to prosecutors about how to eff us over more in the future.
 
wow, i think half of my knives have "thumb studs". Did not know this was even an issue, but glad the judges had some common sense.
 
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