Court: Woman didn't mislead Boston cop when she swallowed a bag of heroin, because he watched her do it
The Supreme Judicial Court ruled today a woman who swallowed what appeared to be a bag of heroin in full view of a police officer shouldn't have been charged with "misleading a police officer" because he knew exactly where the bag was.
Police charged Josefa Tejeda with heroin possession and with misleading police on Oct. 8, 2014, alleging that on watching a man get arrested for possession of "a small plastic bag of a light brown powdery substance" at Roxbury and Washington streets in Dudley Square, she noticed he had dropped it, then rushed over, picked up the bag and swallowed it.
A Roxbury District Court judge dismissed the misleading-police charge; the Suffolk County District Attorney's office then appealed.
At issue for the state's highest court is the meaning of "mislead" under state law.
The justices said that while that law does not specifically define "mislead," they would use both federal evidence-tampering rules and a dictionary definition, and that those led them to the conclusion Tejeda did not mislead police
The court set out two requirements for trying somebody on the charge: One would be an attempt to make a "false statement," and the other would be that that statement then sent police off on what the ruling called "a wild goose chase."
The court allowed that swallowing the bag could be seen as an effort to interfere with police, a sort of non-verbal "false statement."
But, the court continued, because the woman swallowed the bag as police watched, she failed to send them off on a wild goose chase:
[A]lthough the defendant's swallowing of the plastic bag in full view of a police officer may have been an attempt to keep potential evidence away from the officer, it was not an attempt to create a false impression within that officer. This is so because she did not attempt to, nor did she, deceive the officer as to where the bag went. Second, the defendant's conduct did not lead officers astray or send them on a "wild goose chase." Paquette, 475 Mass. at 800. The officers knew exactly where to find the plastic bag if they were so inclined.
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Complete Tejeda ruling | 89.57 KB |
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Comments
Piling on the charges
Hoping to get something to stick.
This needs to be discouraged. I'm glad that the SJC is seeing to that discouragement.
impressive
My god, how big was this small bag? I can barely manage my daily multivitamin.
"The officers knew exactly
"The officers knew exactly where to find the plastic bag if they were so inclined."
That made me laugh out loud.
As one who generally supports increasing the rights
of prosecutors to appeal judges decisions, even I am shaking my head over this one. And I agree with anon, this practice of adding on additional niggling charges (like adding marked lanes violation to a OUI charge) is getting out of hand.
lmao
wow, seeing 'wild goose chase' in there a few times made me laugh
what a thing
Wild Turkey Chase
That goes the other way - wild turkey chases you!
Wild Turkey chaser
Helps the heroin go down
Legalize
all drugs. Sell them in a pharmacy. Whatever someone decides to put into their body is their business. Stop wasting law enforcement time and resources.