After a joint jury trial, the defendants, Michael Adams and Patrick Nerette, were each convicted of murder in the first degree, armed robbery, and unlawfully carrying a firearm. Each was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for the murder conviction, a second life term for the armed robbery conviction and from three to five years for the firearm conviction, all sentences to be served concurrently. In this appeal, both argue that the trial judge’s denial of their motions for severence and the admission of each other’s statements violated their right to confrontation guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. We agree, except that Adams’ conviction of unlawfully carrying a firearm may stand. Both defendants raise other points of error; we shall discuss only those likely to recur at retrial.
On March 13, 1990, the victim was killed by a single gunshot to her head while working as a clerk at a liquor store in the Dorchester section of Boston. A bystander saw Nerette, followed by Adams, run from the store. Police officers on patrol nearby saw Adams leave the store. When approached by the officers, Adams dropped a bag containing coins, and ran away. One of the officers saw a rifle protruding from Adams’ pant leg. After a chase, Adams was apprehended and arrested. The rifle was recovered from a sofa on the porch of a house into which Adams had run during the chase. Later that day, in the presence of his mother (Adams was seventeen years old at the time) and police officers, Adams gave a statement admitting his involvement in the incident. He identified Nerette as a participant. Two days later, Nerette was arrested and also gave the police a statement.
Contained in these statements is the only evidence presented at trial that describes the events leading to the victim’s death. In the basic outline of events, the statements interlock and corroborate one another. As to certain significant
In his statement, each defendant placed on the other blame for masterminding the robbery, providing the gun and the bullets, test-firing the gun, and shooting the victim. Each defendant described circumstances in which the other was the active participant and he, the reluctant follower. Both of these extrajudicial statements were played for the jury. 2 Because each defendant exercised his right not to testify at trial, the statements were not subject to cross-examination.
The judge erred when he admitted these statements over the defendants’ objections.
Bruton
v.
United States,
391 U.S.
We have stated repeatedly that: “According to
Bruton,
severance is constitutionally required where: a codefendant’s extrajudicial statements are offered in evidence at a joint trial; the statements are ‘clearly inadmissible’ as against the defendant; the codefendant does not testify; and, finally, there is a substantial possibility that, in determining the defendant’s guilt, the jury relied on the codefendant’s ‘powerfully incriminating extrajudicial statements’ notwithstanding any limiting instructions from the judge.”
Commonwealth
v.
Pontes,
The Commonwealth conceded at oral argument (and implicitly in its brief) that admission of the statements falls under the rubric of
Bruton,
and that the judge erred when he admitted them. Not disputing the basic error, the Commonwealth instead argues that reversal is not necessary because the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Cruz, supra
at 194. The test whether a
Bruton
error is harmless “is stringent, requiring reversal unless any ‘spillover’ resulting from imperfect interlock [of the confessions] ‘was without effect on the jury and did not contribute to the verdict.’ ”
Commonwealth
v.
Sinnott,
The Commonwealth contends that the error here was harmless because each confession, considered only against the defendant who made it, contained sufficient evidence from which the jury could infer the requisite elements of the crimes charged. The Commonwealth proceeded on a theory
Because each defendant’s confession portrays the other as the mastermind and triggerman and himself as a reluctant follower, it is difficult to imagine that one confession did not contribute to the verdicts against the other.
3
See
Commonwealth
v.
Cunningham,
We turn to the issues raised in this appeal that are likely to recur at retrial.
Nerette argues that the judge erred when he admitted a videotape of Nerette smiling into the camera just after his arrest. Nerette claims that the videotape was not relevant to any issue before the jury, and was introduced only to suggest that he lacked remorse. As such a suggestion, he contends, the videotape “was the functional equivalent of improper character evidence.” See
Commonwealth
v.
Harris,
Adams argues that the judge’s exclusion of certain testimony regarding his relationship with his mother prevented the jury from meaningfully considering the voluntariness of his confession as required by the “humane practice” rule. See
Commonwealth
v.
Tavares,
We agree with Adams that the jury should have been allowed to hear this evidence. The cases the Commonwealth relies on, where a parent’s presence was seen as a measure to protect the rights of a defendant (usually a juvenile), do not speak to circumstances where there is evidence that the presence of the parent is psychologically coercive and itself affects the voluntariness of the confession. See
Commonwealth
v.
Guyton,
The judgments of conviction are reversed, except Adams’ conviction of unlawfully carrying a firearm. The other verdicts are set aside, and the cases are remanded for retrial.
So ordered.
Notes
The “statements” are in the form of tape-recorded conversations between each defendant and the police. The recordings were played for the jury at trial. Prior to playing the tape, certain portions of the statements were redacted. The judge did not order redacted all references to the nondeclarant. Cf.
Richardson
v.
Marsh,
Adams argues in this appeal that the redactions unfairly altered the sense and meaning of his statement. Because the redactions were apparently designed to minimize prejudice to the nondeclarant, our ultimate conclusion that the statements ought not to have been admitted in a joint trial renders discussion of this point unnecessary as it is unlikely to recur at retrial.
The judge did instruct the jury to consider each confession only against its maker.
Bruton
v.
United States,
We except from this statement the verdict against Adams for unlawfully carrying a firearm. Eyewitness testimony and other significant evidence (rifle was recovered on the porch shortly after Adams had run there) showed that Adams carried the rifle. For this reason, we conclude that the Bruton error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt as to that indictment. See Commonwealth v. Sinnott, supra at 873 (Bruton error harmless where codefendant’s confession merely cumulative of eyewitness testimony of crucial acts).
We do not address separately the defendants’ arguments that severance was required because their defenses were mutually antagonistic and irreconcilable. See
Commonwealth
v.
Moran,
Adams does not contest the judge’s denial of this motion.
As with the Bruton error, this conclusion has no bearing on Adams’ conviction of unlawfully carrying a firearm. There was sufficient evidence beyond what was contained in the statements to support this conviction.
