Commonwealth v. Val D'laurent - Probation Revoked for New Offenses
Summary
The Massachusetts Appeals Court affirmed an order revoking Val D'laurent's probation due to new criminal offenses and unknown whereabouts. The defendant had pleaded guilty to drug charges, carrying a weapon, and resisting arrest, receiving a suspended sentence with probation. He violated probation by failing to report and by being arrested on new charges.
What changed
The Massachusetts Appeals Court has affirmed a lower court's decision to revoke the probation of Val D'laurent. The revocation was based on findings that the defendant committed new criminal offenses and that his whereabouts were unknown, stemming from multiple drug charges, carrying a dangerous weapon, and resisting arrest convictions in 2022. The defendant's probation, which began in December 2022, was further complicated by outstanding warrants and the removal of his GPS ankle monitor.
This decision means the defendant will likely serve the remainder of his sentence. The court rejected the defendant's arguments regarding due process violations, improper reliance on inaccurate information, and failure to weigh sentencing factors. Compliance officers should note that probation revocation can occur due to new offenses and failure to maintain contact or adhere to monitoring requirements, leading to the imposition of the suspended portion of a sentence.
What to do next
- Review probation revocation procedures for compliance with due process standards.
- Ensure accurate record-keeping for probationer whereabouts and new offense reporting.
- Verify adherence to sentencing factor considerations in probation violation hearings.
Penalties
Probation revoked, likely resulting in the imposition of the suspended sentence.
Source document (simplified)
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March 23, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Commonwealth v. Val D'laurent.
Massachusetts Appeals Court
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: 24-P-1007
Precedential Status: Non-Precedential
Combined Opinion
NOTICE: Summary decisions issued by the Appeals Court pursuant to M.A.C. Rule
23.0, as appearing in 97 Mass. App. Ct. 1017 (2020) (formerly known as rule 1:28,
as amended by 73 Mass. App. Ct. 1001 [2009]), are primarily directed to the parties
and, therefore, may not fully address the facts of the case or the panel's
decisional rationale. Moreover, such decisions are not circulated to the entire
court and, therefore, represent only the views of the panel that decided the case.
A summary decision pursuant to rule 23.0 or rule 1:28 issued after February 25,
2008, may be cited for its persuasive value but, because of the limitations noted
above, not as binding precedent. See Chace v. Curran, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 258, 260
n.4 (2008).
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
APPEALS COURT
24-P-1007
COMMONWEALTH
vs.
VAL D'LAURENT.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 23.0
The defendant, Val D'Laurent, appeals from an order of a
District Court judge revoking his probation based on findings
that he committed new criminal offenses and his whereabouts were
unknown. The defendant contends that the judge violated his
right to due process, improperly relied on inaccurate
information, and failed to adequately weigh the relevant
sentencing factors. We affirm.
Background. In 2022, the defendant pleaded guilty to
multiple drug charges (including multiple charges of possession
with intent to distribute), carrying a dangerous weapon, and
resisting arrest. He was sentenced to concurrent split
sentences of two years in the house of correction, with six
months to serve, and the remaining eighteen months suspended for
one year with probation. The defendant was released on
probation on December 28, 2022. At the time of his release, he
had three outstanding felony warrants. Additional warrants
issued from Quincy District Court on December 29, 2022, and
Wareham District Court on January 23, 2023, because he cut off
his global positioning system (GPS) ankle monitor and his
whereabouts were unknown.
The probation department alleged that the defendant first
violated his probation by failing to report after his release
from incarceration. It further alleged that the defendant
violated his probation on January 29, 2023, when he was arrested
on new criminal charges. At a gas station in Middleboro, while
the defendant was a passenger in his girlfriend's car, a State
police trooper arrested him after determining he had outstanding
warrants for his arrest in Massachusetts and Maine. A
Middleboro police officer who was assisting the trooper saw what
appeared to be a firearm in an open bag in the car. The trooper
searched the vehicle and found a firearm, film strips labeled
suboxone, prescription bottles of buprenorphine and naloxone,
brass knuckles, and two double-edged switch blades. The
defendant was charged with two counts of subsequent offenses for
possession of a class B controlled substance, G. L. c. 94C,
§ 32A (d); two counts of subsequent offenses of carrying a
2
dangerous weapon, G. L. c. 269, § 10; and being a fugitive from
justice on a court warrant, G. L. c. 276, § 20A. The trooper
was later notified that foreign objects had been recovered from
the defendant's rectal area, including a plastic bag believed to
contain fentanyl, numerous bags believed to contain
methamphetamine, and numerous bags believed to contain cocaine
and heroin. The defendant was charged with five additional
counts related to the possession and trafficking of controlled
substances.
The probation violation hearing was held in May 2023. The
trooper who arrested the defendant was unavailable to testify.
The probation department called a supervising probation officer,
who testified that the defendant was ordered to report to
probation upon release and failed to do so. The defendant's
whereabouts were unknown until he was identified by the trooper
at the Middleboro gas station. The probation department also
relied on the police report for the defendant's underlying
charges and the trooper's arrest report. Even though the
defendant objected to the admission of the reports as unreliable
hearsay, the judge admitted them in evidence, and the defendant
does not challenge that ruling on appeal.
The only witness called by the defense was the defendant's
girlfriend. She testified that on January 29, 2023, she was
driving the defendant to Boston so that he could meet a friend
3
who could help him to clear his warrant in Maine. The
girlfriend testified that the prescription drugs found in her
car belonged to a friend, although she was not sure about the
friend's last name, and that she had taken the brass knuckles
and knives from her son but did not know who owned them. She
testified that the defendant lived with her and that she did not
know where he obtained money and had never seen him with drugs,
but she also admitted her awareness that he had multiple
convictions for dealing drugs. She testified that she did not
ask the defendant about the removal of his GPS ankle monitor and
did not notice when it was no longer on him. The judge found
the girlfriend's testimony to be "totally incredible" and did
not credit it.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the judge found that the
defendant violated his probation "on all bases." The probation
department requested that the eighteen-month balance of the
defendant's sentence be imposed. The defense argued that the
defendant's circumstances warranted a lesser sentence because
this was his first drug offense and, given his addiction
problem, he should have been referred to drug court after his
guilty plea. The judge revoked the defendant's probation and
sentenced him to the balance of his sentence to be served
concurrently.
4
Discussion. "In general, probation violation hearings
follow a two-step process: the judge first determines if a
probation violation has occurred, and then decides how to
dispose of the matter." Commonwealth v. Al Saud, 459 Mass. 221,
226 (2011). After determining that a probationer has willfully
violated the terms of his probation, the judge "can either
revoke probation and sentence the defendant or, if appropriate,
modify the terms of his probation." Commonwealth v. Durling,
407 Mass. 108, 111 (1990). See Commonwealth v. Jarrett, 491
Mass. 437, 440 (2023). In determining the appropriate
disposition, the judge should carefully assess the goals of
"punishment, deterrence, protection of the public, and
rehabilitation." Commonwealth v. Goodwin, 414 Mass. 88, 92
(1993). A judge may consider "the circumstances of any crime
for which the probationer was placed on probation; the nature of
the probation violation; the occurrence of any previous
violations; and the impact of the underlying crime on any person
or community, as well as mitigating factors." Commonwealth v.
Eldred, 480 Mass. 90, 103 (2018), quoting Rule 8(d) of the
District/Municipal Court Rules for Probation Violation
Proceedings. See Commonwealth v. White, 436 Mass. 340, 343
(2002). "To ensure the proper administration of justice, judges
also attempt to get the fullest possible picture of the
defendant . . . including information concerning a defendant's
5
character, behavior, and propensity for rehabilitation"
(quotations and citations omitted). White, supra. We review a
judge's decision to revoke a defendant's probation and the
judge's underlying evidentiary rulings for an abuse of
discretion. See Commonwealth v. Rainey, 491 Mass. 632, 648
(2023); Jarrett, supra.
- Due Process. The defendant first contends that the
judge violated his right to due process by revoking his
probation based on his new, untried charges and not the offenses
for which he pleaded guilty in 2022, and by imposing a personal
bias against drug dealers. We disagree.
"A defendant who violates probation is not being punished
for violating a condition of probation, but rather the defendant
is essentially being sentenced anew on his [or her] underlying
conviction" (quotation and citation omitted). Eldred, 480 Mass.
at 97. Provided that the defendant is not punished "for an
untried criminal offense," Commonwealth v. Mills, 436 Mass. 387,
400 (2002), a sentencing judge has broad discretion to consider
"unresolved criminal charges against him, or other evidence of
criminal conduct by him for which there has been no conviction."
Goodwin, 414 Mass. at 92. See Commonwealth v. LeBlanc, 370
Mass. 217, 220-221 (1976). Accordingly, the judge acted within
his discretion in asking the defendant's girlfriend about his
new charges, as well as questions to clarify her testimony and
6
assess her credibility. See Commonwealth v. Hassey, 40 Mass.
App. Ct. 806, 810 (1996) ("Of course a trial judge may question
witnesses to clarify the evidence, eradicate inconsistencies,
avert possible perjury, and develop trustworthy testimony").
Nor did the judge abuse his discretion by failing to give
adequate consideration to the underlying charges to which the
defendant pleaded guilty. See Goodwin, 414 Mass. at 92. The
record shows that the judge was familiar with those charges, and
he specifically reviewed the police report on those charges and
the tender of plea form after defense counsel represented that
the defendant had previously "asked to be in the Drug Court
program." The judge ultimately revoked the defendant's
probation and required him to serve the balance of his original
sentence -- "a remedial sanction arising from the sentence
imposed for the earlier offense." Commonwealth v. Holmgren, 421
Mass. 224, 227 n.1 (1995). See Commonwealth v. Doucette, 81
Mass. App. Ct. 740, 744-745 (2012).
We are also not persuaded by the defendant's argument that
the judge's comments during his sentencing deliberation suggest
that he inappropriately based his decision on a personal bias
against drug dealers. We acknowledge some of the judge's
statements at the hearing, including that "I feel like at this
point in my career I know a drug dealer when I see a drug
dealer," might be perceived, when stripped of context, as less
7
than impartial and therefore should be avoided. Nevertheless,
while a judge "must be ever vigilant to make certain that his
personal and private beliefs do not interfere with his judicial
role," Mills, 436 Mass. at 401, a judge may "freely place on
record his sentencing philosophy and particularized sentencing
rationale." Commonwealth v. White, 48 Mass. App. Ct. 658, 664
(2000). In response to defense counsel's argument regarding the
defendant's supposed interest in a drug court program, the judge
explained why he believed that program was inappropriate given
the defendant's record and apparent continuing activity as a
drug dealer. In relevant part, the judge stated that "[t]here's
no way that I'm putting a drug dealer in a Drug Court," because
"[t]he last thing you want to do is put somebody who sells drugs
in with people who are trying to kick it." As the judge's
reasoning was particularized to the defendant's case and
supported by the record, the defendant's right to due process
was not violated, and resentencing is not warranted. See id.
- Evidentiary issues. The defendant asserts that, in
revoking his probation and imposing the balance of his sentence,
the judge improperly relied on the mistaken belief that the
defendant was found with narcotics secreted in his anal cavity
on multiple occasions, including in connection with the offenses
to which he had pleaded guilty. See Commonwealth v. Plasse, 481
Mass. 199, 206 (2019) (judge may not "rely on inaccurate or
8
misleading information in sentencing"). At the hearing, in
response to the defendant's expressed interest in participating
in drug court as an addict, the judge stated that he doesn't
"know too many people that are, you know, street users that are
sticking mini bags up their butt repeatedly." The judge also
stated that the defendant "had drugs in his anal cavity on the
offense for which he is now on probation" and "didn't even make
it a month" without "drugs in his anus." Defense counsel did
not object to the judge's statements at the hearing or seek to
clarify the record. Although the judge's statements were
imprecise, we are not convinced, as the defendant now contends,
that they necessarily indicate a belief that the defendant had
secreted narcotics in his rectal area on a prior occasion,
rather than in connection with the arrest that led to the
probation revocation hearing. In any event, the judge did not
act outside his discretion in considering this evidence of
criminal conduct as a factor in determining the appropriate
disposition for the defendant's violation of his probation. See
Goodwin, 414 Mass. at 92.
- Sentencing. Lastly, the defendant contends that the
judge failed to adequately balance the "competing
considerations" in deciding to impose the full balance of his
sentence. See Plasse, 481 Mass. at 199-200, quoting
Commonwealth v. Rodriguez, 461 Mass. 256, 259 (2012). He argues
9
that the judge abused his discretion by incorrectly assuming
that the defendant had the opportunity to receive rehabilitative
services but did not take advantage of them. The judge found
that the defendant "was given plenty of opportunity to do the
right thing with his life when he was on probation . . . and was
being given services," but he "chose to cut that bracelet off
and continue to engage in drug activity." The defendant "had
drugs in his anal cavity on the offense for which he is now on
probation" and "admitted to . . . distribut[ing] those drugs."
The judge further noted that this was not the first time the
defendant violated his probation, and, this time, he "didn't
even make it a month." As for the defendant's claim that he had
sought to participate in drug court on the underlying offenses,
the judge found that the defendant instead "wanted to get out of
jail" and recommended the very sentence that the first judge
imposed. Thus, rather than ignoring the defendant's "argument
that no one's . . . offered him any treatment," the record shows
that the judge considered that argument and rejected it. See
Eldred, 480 Mass. at 103-104 (judge not required to accept
defendant's presentation of mitigating circumstances). We
discern no abuse of discretion in how the judge assessed the
10
defendant's interest in drug treatment and rehabilitation or his
decision to impose the balance of his sentence.
Order revoking probation
affirmed.
By the Court (Sacks,
Hodgens & Toone, JJ.1),
Clerk
Entered: March 23, 2026.
1 The panelists are listed in order of seniority.
11
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