Sign Up for Vincent AI
Commonwealth v. Almeida
After a jury-waived trial in 2011, the defendant was found guilty of three counts of forcible rape of a child, indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of fourteen, witness intimidation, assault and battery, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon. The judge sentenced the defendant to fifteen to twenty years in prison, to be followed by ten years of probation.2 The judge also imposed several conditions of probation, including global positioning system (GPS) monitoring. The defendant moved to vacate the GPS monitoring condition in 2020. A different judge (motion judge) denied the motion, reasoning that the government's need for GPS monitoring of the defendant outweighed the invasion of the defendant's privacy. We affirm.
Discussion. We review a judge's decision on a motion to vacate a condition of probation for abuse of discretion. See Commonwealth v. Roderick, 490 Mass. 669, 673 (2022). "[A] judge's discretionary decision constitutes an abuse of discretion where we conclude the judge made a clear error of judgment in weighing the factors relevant to the decision, such that the decision falls outside the range of reasonable alternatives" (quotation and citation omitted). L.L. v. Commonwealth, 470 Mass. 169, 185 n.27 (2014).
The defendant claims the motion judge abused his discretion by not making an individualized determination of whether GPS monitoring was reasonable in the defendant's case, as required under Commonwealth v. Feliz, 481 Mass. 689 (2019). General Laws c. 265, § 47, requires that any person placed on probation for one of several enumerated sex offenses must wear a GPS monitor throughout the probation period. In Feliz, the Supreme Judicial Court held that art. 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights requires that judges applying § 47 "conduct a balancing test that weighs the Commonwealth's need to impose GPS monitoring against the privacy invasion occasioned by such monitoring." Feliz, supra at 691. In making this determination, "[c]ourts may consider a ‘constellation of factors,’ including, among others, the intrusiveness of the search; the defendant's particular circumstances, such as his or her criminal convictions, past probation violations, or risk of recidivism; and the probationary purposes, if any, for which the monitoring was imposed." Commonwealth v. Johnson, 481 Mass. 710, 719 (2019), quoting Feliz, supra at 701.
Here, the motion judge held a nonevidentiary hearing on the defendant's motion. The judge's memorandum of decision considered both the governmental interests at stake and the ways in which GPS monitoring invades a probationer's privacy. The judge considered the nature of the defendant's criminal convictions, which included forcible rape of a child in this...
Try vLex and Vincent AI for free
Start a free trialExperience vLex's unparalleled legal AI
Access millions of documents and let Vincent AI power your research, drafting, and document analysis — all in one platform.
Start Your 3-day Free Trial of vLex and Vincent AI, Your Precision-Engineered Legal Assistant
-
Access comprehensive legal content with no limitations across vLex's unparalleled global legal database
-
Build stronger arguments with verified citations and CERT citator that tracks case history and precedential strength
-
Transform your legal research from hours to minutes with Vincent AI's intelligent search and analysis capabilities
-
Elevate your practice by focusing your expertise where it matters most while Vincent handles the heavy lifting
Start Your 3-day Free Trial of vLex and Vincent AI, Your Precision-Engineered Legal Assistant
-
Access comprehensive legal content with no limitations across vLex's unparalleled global legal database
-
Build stronger arguments with verified citations and CERT citator that tracks case history and precedential strength
-
Transform your legal research from hours to minutes with Vincent AI's intelligent search and analysis capabilities
-
Elevate your practice by focusing your expertise where it matters most while Vincent handles the heavy lifting
Try vLex and Vincent AI for free
Start a free trialStart Your 3-day Free Trial of vLex and Vincent AI, Your Precision-Engineered Legal Assistant
-
Access comprehensive legal content with no limitations across vLex's unparalleled global legal database
-
Build stronger arguments with verified citations and CERT citator that tracks case history and precedential strength
-
Transform your legal research from hours to minutes with Vincent AI's intelligent search and analysis capabilities
-
Elevate your practice by focusing your expertise where it matters most while Vincent handles the heavy lifting
Start Your 3-day Free Trial of vLex and Vincent AI, Your Precision-Engineered Legal Assistant
-
Access comprehensive legal content with no limitations across vLex's unparalleled global legal database
-
Build stronger arguments with verified citations and CERT citator that tracks case history and precedential strength
-
Transform your legal research from hours to minutes with Vincent AI's intelligent search and analysis capabilities
-
Elevate your practice by focusing your expertise where it matters most while Vincent handles the heavy lifting