A judge in the Superior Court allowed an attorney’s motion to withdraw and ruled that the defendant had forfeited court-appointed counsel and reported the propriety of his ruling to the Appeals Court. Mass. R. Crim. P. 34,
The defendant is charged in a five-count indictment charging him with mayhem, assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon (knife), assault with intent to rob while
For the next several months, Rubin engaged in a pretriál conference with the prosecutor, joined in the filing of a pretrial conference report, presented a number of pretrial discovery motions, and pressed a motion to suppress evidence allegedly seized during a warrantless search. This motion was heard and denied by another judge in the Superior Court.
On February 16, 1993, the defendant filed, pro se, a “motion to allow withdrawal of counsel.” In this motion he claimed an “irreconcilable” breakdown between himself and Rubin. He accused Rubin of failing to prepare the case prop-. erly. At the hearing on this motion on March 4, 1993, Rubin asserted that he was prepared and ready to defend the defendant. Some of the defendant’s accusations were blatantly false. Rubin was a veteran trial lawyer who had tried many serious cases before the reporting judge who found him “able, competent, honorable and conscientious.”
The reporting judge told the defendant that he had a right to defend himself but he “strongly advised that he not do so.” The defendant said that he had no desire to defend himself and accordingly the judge treated the pro se motion as a motion for the appointment of new counsel and denied it.
One week later the defendant refiled the same motion and the judge denied it again without a hearing. On the same day, the defendant filed another “motion to allow withdrawal of counsel” in which he charged that Rubin had not called two available witnesses in support of his motion to suppress evidence, that Rubin had told him that he believed that the defendant was guilty and that he was lying, and that Rubin had “intentionally sabotaged” his defense. This motion was neither supported by an affidavit nor was it otherwise verified. The judge denied this motion.
The judge found the defendant to be “an intelligent and articulate young man who is quite familiar with the criminal justice system. At the time of his arrest last August he was on parole from the State of Alaska under supervision of Massachusetts parole authorities. He had been convicted in Alaska of four counts of burglary and three counts of escape and had been sentenced to an aggregate term of [twenty-two] years.” He also has a long criminal record in Massachusetts extending back to 1976 when he was a juvenile.
The judge concluded that the defendant was “engaging in a tactic that is becoming all too frequent in the trial court . . . attempting to forestall his trial and disrupt the prosecution by forcing a last minute change of his court-appointed counsel [and] if he were allowed to succeed in obtaining a court-appointed replacement for Mr. Rubin, he would be attempting to force a withdrawal by that attorney before his case could be brought to trial.”
For these reasons, we affirm the judge’s allowance of Rubin’s motion to withdraw and his refusal to appoint new counsel.
So ordered.
