On April 30, 1969, the defendant was convicted in the Superior Court of murder in the first degree and of illegal possession of firearms. The jury recommended that the death penalty not be imposed and he was sentenced to imprisonment for life on the murder conviction. His convictions were affirmed by this court on December 7, 1971, in
Commonwealth
v.
DeChristoforo,
We hold that there was no error in the trial judge’s de *28 nial of the defendant’s motion for a new trial and that we should not grant any relief under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.
A. Summary of Prior Proceedings.
A brief summary of the many prior proceedings relating to this case may help to furnish some background to the present appeal. However, the evidence which was presented at the defendant’s trial and which resulted in his convictions in the Superior Court is already summarized in our opinion in Commonwealth v. DeChristoforo, supra at 532-534, and need not be repeated here.
1. After the defendant was convicted by the jury he filed a motion for a new trial based on a claim of newly discovered evidence and that motion was denied. It is of no further significance in the present appeal. The issues on which the defendant sought review by this court and which were decided in
2. As to the grand jury minutes we held (at 534-536) that under our case law at that time the defendant was required to show a “particularized need” for the minutes, that he had not made such a showing, and that the motions to inspect the minutes were therefore properly denied.
Commonwealth
v.
Doherty,
3. As to the alleged improper remarks to the jury by the prosecutor in his closing argument we held (at 536-539) that, although the remarks were improper, “[t]he judge acted properly within his discretion in denying a mistrial and in relying on curative instructions [to the jury] to erase the error.”
4. On January 12, 1972, the defendant filed a
second
motion for a new trial, and the motion was denied on May 26, 1972. This motion apparently was made pursuant to the language contained in the last sentence of par. 2 above which was quoted from our opinion of December 7, 1971, in
Commonwealth
v.
DeChristoforo,
5. At this point the defendant, instead of seeking appellate review of the denial of his second motion for a new trial, sought relief in the Federal courts. He filed a petition in the Ünited States District Court for the District of Massachusetts for a writ of habeas corpus contending that he had been denied a fair trial in the Superior Court because of the judge’s denial (a) of his motions for access *30 to the grand jury minutes and (b) of his motion for a mistrial based on the prosecutor’s improper remarks in final argument to the jury. As to the grand jury minutes the United States District Court judge denied relief on the ground that the defendant had not appealed from the trial judge’s denial of his second motion for a new trial (see par. 4 above) and therefore he “had not exhausted available state remedies”; and as to the prosecutor’s remarks he denied relief on the ground that the remarks “were not so prejudicial as to deprive the [defendant] of his constitutional right to a fair trial.” The petition was denied. DeChristoforo v. Donnelly, Misc. Civil No. 72-96-G (D. Mass. 1972).
The defendant appealed from the denial to the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit which reversed on the sole ground that certain of the prosecutor’s remarks in his closing argument were so prejudicial as to constitute a denial of due process.
DeChristoforo
v.
Donnelly,
Because of the United States District Court judge’s holding that the defendant “had not exhausted available state remedies” as to the grand jury minutes, the decisions of the Court of Appeals and of the Supreme Court were based solely on the issue of the prosecutor’s remarks in argument.
6. On August 26, 1974, the defendant filed in each case a third motion for a new trial, this time stating that it was “for the reason that justice may not have been done.” 2 G. L. c. 278, § 29, as amended by St. 1966, c. 301. The motion then states the following principal reasons why the *31 defendant thinks that “justice may not have been done”: (a) because he was not allowed to see Carr’s grand jury testimony, (b) because of the prosecutor’s alleged improper remarks in his final argument to the jury, and (c) because the defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree while his two codefendants were permitted to plead guilty to murder in the second degree with resulting differences in parole eligibility (G. L. c. 127, § 133A, as appearing in St. 1965, c. 766, § 1). The motion was heard on October 10 and 17,1974, and on January 6,1975, the judge filed a written decision stating his subsidiary and general findings, including a conclusion that “justice has been done,” and denying the motion “on all grounds.”
7. At the hearing on the defendant’s third motion for a new trial the transcript of Carr’s grand jury testimony was marked as an exhibit and the Commonwealth for the first time furnished a copy of it to the defendant. The significance of this transcript is that it reveals a difference in the testimony which Carr gave before the grand jury from that which he gave at the defendant’s trial. Carr was one of the police officers who stopped the automobile in which the defendant was riding with his two codefendants and with the body of the murder victim. At that time and place the defendant Frank Oreto told the officers that his name was “Joseph Regó,” and the defendant gave them a name other than his true name. As to the victim one of the defendants said that he was “John Simeone from Boston,” who had been in a fight in Revere and whom they were taking to a hospital. The victim was in fact one Joseph F. Lanzi, and he was already dead.
At the defendant’s trial Carr testified that the defendant was the person who told the officers that the victim was “John Simeone.” The transcript of his testimony before the grand jury showed that he had testified there that it was Oreto who had given the wrong name for the victim. At the time of the trial the defendant had not been permitted to see Carr’s grand jury testimony and he was therefore not in a position to cross-examine him on this one difference between Carr’s grand jury testimony and *32 his trial testimony. The defendant contends that he was thus prejudiced in a manner and to an extent which compelled the judge, as matter of law, to grant him a new trial.
In denying the defendant’s third motion for a new trial the judge made the following finding concerning this point: “It is important to note here that Officer Carr, when he testified at a probable cause hearing committed the same inconsistency; that is to say, he attributed the use of the name ‘Johnny Simeone’ to Oreto, as he also had done before the grand jury. It is of paramount importance to note here that a transcript of this probable cause hearing testimony was available to the defendant at all times throughout the trial of the cause, and in fact was used exhaustively in cross-examination of Officer Carr, and that this particular inconsistency was pressed by counsel for the defendant in cross-examination at the trial____All other testimony of the witness Officer Carr before the grand jury, and at trial, appears to be consistent.” He found further that “[a]t the trial, counsel for the defendant DeChristoforo made full use of this inconsistency from the transcript of an earlier probable cause hearing in an attempt to impeach Officer Carr’s testimony at the trial.”
8. The judge made the following general findings based on his detailed subsidiary findings: “This Court finds beyond a reasonable doubt that no possible prejudice could attach to the defendant by virtue of the unavailability of the grand jury minutes prior to trial____In short, this Court finds beyond a reasonable doubt that there was nothing argued or introduced that would warrant the granting of a new trial in this case----I find that... justice has been done, and certainly this defendant has been afforded every opportunity to achieve a full evaluation of his case.”
B. Consideration of Issues Raised by Defendant.
1.
Grand jury testimony.
We are constrained to hold at the outset that this case is not properly before us on the merits of any issues relating to Carr’s grand jury testimony. In our opinion in
Commonwealth
v.
DeChristoforo,
*33
The defendant’s
third
motion for a new trial and the present appeal from its denial by the trial judge seems to have been intended in part to eliminate the ground on which the United States District Court judge refused to give relief as to the grand jury minutes, that ground being the failure of the defendant to exhaust his State court remedies by appealing from the denial of his
second
motion for a new trial. The fact that the failure to appeal from the denial of the earlier motion may now bar the defendant from obtaining relief by way of a writ of habeas corpus in the Federal courts does not entitle him as of right to an opportunity to relitigate the issue in the courts of this Commonwealth. For the purpose of this opinion we need not, and do not, concern ourselves with the implications of the decision in
Stone
v.
Powell,
Notwithstanding our holding that the defendant’s fail *34 ure to seek appellate review from the denial of his second motion for a new trial precludes him from review of the grand jury minutes issue on this, his third such motion, it may be appropriate, in view of the extended litigation in this case, to express our views on the merits of that issue as argued by the defendant.
(a) Admittedly the grand jury transcript shows that Carr’s testimony at the trial differed from his testimony before the grand jury with respect to whether it was the defendant or Oreto who gave the officers a false name for the victim. However, the mere showing of that inconsistency does not, without more, entitle the defendant to a new trial. Nothing in our opinion in
Commonwealth
v.
DeChristoforo,
(b) The defendant argues that apart from any motion which he made to inspect the grand jury minutes and the judge’s alleged error in denying the motions, the failure of the prosecutor to inform the defendant of Carr’s grand jury testimony, in so far as it differed from his trial testimony, violated the defendant’s constitutional right to a fair trial within the holdings of
Brady
v.
Maryland,
(c) On June 24,1976, the Supreme Court of the United States announced its most recent decision on this general subject in
United States
v.
Agurs,
(d) This brings us to the point where we must now apply the tests, standards and rules quoted above from the
Agurs
decision to the situation presented to us in the present case. As stated in that decision (
(e) The defendant contends that his constitutional right to a fair trial was violated in another respect by the prosecutor’s failure to provide him with the transcript of Carr’s grand jury testimony. When the car in question was first stopped by police officers, Gagliardi was driving, the defendant was behind him in the left rear seat, the victim’s body was in the right front seat, and Oreto was in the right rear seat. The officers discovered an unfired derringer on the floor of the car behind the driver’s seat. At the trial the prosecutor argued that the jury could infer that the defendant had dropped the derringer to the floor of the car. The defendant now claims that the part of Carr’s grand jury testimony which is reproduced in the margin
3
was in some way exculpatory on that point and should have been
*38
given to him by the prosecutor at or before trial. We disagree. Carr’s statement to the grand jury was not exculpatory as to the derringer. It indicates that Carr had no personal knowledge whether the derringer “could have been slipped from the front to the back” of the car by Gagliardi. Carr would not have been permitted to engage in conjecture or speculation thereon at the trial. The judge correctly rejected this contention, and in doing so he quoted the following statement from
United States
v.
Keogh,
2.
Alleged improper remarks by prosecutor.
In our original decision in
Commonwealth
v.
DeChristoforo,
We have already concluded above that there was no error in the denial of a new trial in so far as any inconsistency in Carr’s testimony was concerned. This court and the United States Supreme Court have previously *39 concluded that there was no error in denying relief on the basis of the prosecutor’s remarks. In these circumstances, this is not a proper case in which to exercise our extraordinary powers under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, assuming the statute applies at this stage in the now prolonged litigation in this case.
3. Degree of the defendant’s guilt. Another ground on which the defendant now seeks relief from this court is that the defendant was convicted by a jury of murder in the first degree and was sentenced to life imprisonment without the benefit of consideration for release on parole, whereas the codefendants Oreto and Gagliardi, who he says “actually fired the shots which killed the victim... were permitted to plead to second degree murder, thereby making them eligible for parole in the future. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 127, § 133A.” The defendant is asking that we order a new trial on this ground in the exercise of our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E. The request is denied.
As a part of our decision in
Commonwealth
v.
DeChristoforo,
C. Conclusion and Order.
For all of the foregoing reasons, we hold that the denial of the defendant’s third motion for a new trial in each of the two cases involved in this appeal was not error.
Order denying motion for new trial affirmed in each case.
Notes
While we later changed the law on this subject by our decision in
Commonwealth
v.
Stewart,
The motion consisted of a single document which bears the numbers of both indictments, and we hereafter refer to such motion in the singular, without distinction as to the two indictments.
The part of Carr’s testimony on this point was the following: Counsel for the Commonwealth: “From the position of the Derringer, could it have been slipped under the front seat or around the front seat in any manner, assuming that Gagliardi was the man driving, indicating that he might have had control of that weapon?”
The witness: “Gagliardi: I suppose he could have.”
Counsel for the Commonwealth: “From the position of the gun it could have been slipped from the front to the back?”
The WITNESS: “Oh, I don’t know that. I don’t know.”
