Massachusetts DAs can no longer hold armed robbers before trial — the state's highest court ruled it's not violent enough
LINK - https://www.massdailynews.com/2026/04/10/massachusetts-das-can-no-longer-hold-armed-robbers-before?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=mdn_tweet&utm_content=headline
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Friday, April 10, 2026
BOSTON — A Florida man walked into a Fall River bank last summer, handed the teller a note that said "I have a bomb," and walked out with $5,000. He got caught the same day with dye on his hands and stolen cash in his pocket. Open and shut.
But before his case was resolved, a legal question made it all the way to the state's highest court: could prosecutors hold him without bail as a danger to the public?
The Supreme Judicial Court said no. Armed robbery, the justices ruled on March 10, doesn't count as a violent enough crime to lock someone up before trial.
Read that again. Armed robbery. Not violent enough.
The bank job
Domingo Agostini, 41, of Port St. Lucie, Florida, walked into the Rockland Trust on Brayton Avenue in Fall River on August 18 and handed a teller a note scrawled on a paper bag: "I have a bomb." He demanded $20,000. The teller gave him about $5,000 — with a red dye pack tucked inside.
The pack exploded on his way out. Surveillance cameras caught him fleeing in a black Nissan Rogue with Florida plates. Providence police pulled him over before 2 p.m. — same clothes, red dye all over his hands, stolen money still on him.
He pleaded guilty in Fall River Superior Court on January 8 to armed robbery and making a bomb threat. Bristol County DA Thomas Quinn got him two to four years.
The ruling nobody talked about
Here's where it gets bad.
Under Massachusetts law, there's a tool called Section 58A that lets prosecutors ask a judge to hold someone for up to 120 days with no bail at all — no ankle monitor, no conditions, just locked up. It's the strongest card a DA can play to keep a dangerous person off the street before trial.
The SJC just took that card away for armed robbery.
The court's reasoning: armed robbery doesn't always involve physical force. Some armed robberies are just a note on a paper bag. So the crime doesn't automatically qualify under the part of the law that requires violence. The legal term is "minimal force." The street translation is: rob a bank, walk out of court the same day.
The SJC didn’t leave room for interpretation. From the ruling:
“We accordingly hold that armed robbery, G. L. c. 265, § 17, does not categorically contain an element of physical force or qualify as a predicate offense under G. L. c. 276, § 58A.”
That applies to all armed robbery — not just bomb threat cases. The court used a “categorical approach,” looking at the crime’s legal definition rather than the facts of any one case. Because armed robbery can be committed with minimal physical contact, the entire category is out. The justices even addressed the weapon, writing that there is a “material difference between the presence of a weapon, which produces a risk of violent force, and the actual or threatened use of such force.” Having a gun during a robbery isn’t enough. You have to use it.
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