The defendant appeals from his conviction of murder in the second degree of Miguel A. Frometa. He raises numerous claims of error and seeks under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, a new trial or, alternatively, that we direct that the degree of guilt be reduced to manslaughter. There are no grounds for reversal of the conviction. The record does not warrant our ordering under § 33E either a new trial or a reduction in the degree of guilt.
Frometa was shot shortly after 5 p.m. on September 22, 1978, in La Bahia Restaurant in Lawrence. There was evidence that eаrlier in the day the defendant and the victim had had an argument at the restaurant. Thereafter the defendant obtained a shotgun, returned to the restaurant, confronted the victim, and, during a struggle, shot him. *283 The defendant fled and, on January 18, 1979, surrendered at an office of the FBI in San Francisco.
A Massachusetts State police detective lieutenant and a lieutenant in the Lawrence police department interviewed the defendant in San Francisco on January 31, 1979. We summarize a statement the defendant gave to these police offiсers. The defendant admitted having had an earlier altercation with the victim in the restaurant. He said that he then obtained a shotgun and returned to the restaurant with it. He never saw a gun in the victim’s hand. While he was pointing the gun at the victim, the victim jumped at him and the gun went off. The defendant sаid that after he shot the victim he ran out of the restaurant.
At the trial there was evidence that the defendant shot the victim, not during their struggle, but while the victim was crouched or lying on the floor of the restaurant several feet from the defendant. There was also evidence, thаt one Caba unsuccessfully tried to stop the defendant from using the gun. No weapon was found on or near the victim.
1. The defendant moved to suppress the statement he gave in San Francisco to the two Massachusetts police officers. The defendant argued thаt he only made this statement because FBI agents had not advised him of his Miranda rights when he turned himself in and, accordingly, he had made incriminating statements to them. He also claimed that the FBI agents assured him that he had nothing to worry about if he told the Massachusetts police what he had told the FBI agents. The judge, in denying the motion to suppress, simply disbelieved the defendant’s testimony that the FBI agents had acted improperly. We find no error in that conclusion.
Commonwealth
v.
Moon,
*284
2. After trial commеnced, the defendant moved to challenge the grand jury proceedings on the ground that the evidence presented to the grand jury was insufficient to justify the indictment. He claimed the evidence submitted to the grand jury was entirely hearsay and conclusions of the investigating offiсer. He also argued that the presentation prejudiced the grand jury against him. The motion to dismiss was not seasonably filed (see Mass. R. Crim. P. 13 [d] [2] [A],
There was no defect in the grand jury presentation requiring the indictment to be dismissed. A summary of the defendant’s statement made in San Francisco was before the jury and, standing alone, it went a long way (perhaps all the way) toward justifying the indictment. Hearsay alone would, in any event, support an indictment.
Commonwealth
v.
St. Pierre,
3. At the commencement of the second day of trial, before the testimony of the first witness for the prosecution had concluded, the defendant оffered to plead guilty to manslaughter. The prosecution agreed to the change of plea. The defendant then testified under oath before the judge. Among other things, he said he did not kill the victim, he did not point the gun at him, and he did not know how the shotgun went off.
Under Mass. R. Crim. P. 12 (a) (2),
There was no abuse of discretion in rejecting the plea. We say this even if, on the record, the judge could have been satisfied that there was a factual basis for the guilty plea. The fact that this judge had a practice of not accepting an Alford plea (a plea of guilty by one maintaining his innocence), while other judges might have accepted such a plea, provides the defendant with no appellate issue.
4. In support of his claim of self-defense, the defendant sought to introduce the testimony of two witnesses relating to the victim’s reputation for being quarrelsome and aggressive. The judge excluded the evidence. Where self-defense is raised as an issue, the defendant is entitled to offer evidence tending to show that the victim had a reputation of being violent or quarrelsome if the defendant knew of that reputation. See
Commonwealth
v.
Gibson,
5. The evidence did not require the judge to grant the defendant’s motion for a required finding of not guilty, presented at the close of the Commonwealth’s case and renewed at the close of all the evidence. The defendant’s statеment and the testimony of certain witnesses were sufficient to create a jury question. Indeed, the defendant grants this is so in his brief before us, but he argues that the testimony of certain witnesses was so incredible as to require a finding of not guilty. He argues that this incredible evidence should have been disregarded in its entirety in deciding his motion for a required finding of not guilty. However, the matter of credibility is not for the judge, except perhaps in an extreme situation. Thus, in passing on a motion for a required finding of not guilty, “issues of credibility [are] assumed to be resolved within reason for the Commonwealth.”
Commonwealth
v.
Medina,
6. Evidence that the defendant had spent the balance of one night at the residence of a female defense witness, after other guеsts had left a party at her residence, justified the prosecutor’s argument to the jury that they consider her relationship to the defendant in considering her testimony. See
Leone
v.
Doran,
7. The defendant has advanced numerous challenges to aspects of the judge’s charge to the jury. We consider first *287 those issues that have been properly preserved for appellate review and turn then to those questions that are before us only for our special consideration under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.
During the judge’s charge, a juror inquired if the jury were to have coрies of a portion of the charge which the judge had just read to thé jury. 2 The defendant had no objection to furnishing copies of that portion of the charge to the jury. He did object that the part of the charge on self-defense was in smaller print than was the balanсe of the charge given to the jury. The objection is insubstantial, particularly because the self-defense instruction was dramatized by being set forth in the margin of what was given to the jury.
The judge’s instructions on accident were adequate. There was no need to define an aсcident in the circumstances. He properly placed the burden on the Commonwealth to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that there was no accident. The defendant’s challenge to the charge in this respect is an insignificant semantic objeсtion. It does not matter whether a judge says that the Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that there was no accident or whether he says that the Commonwealth must disprove accident beyond a reasonable doubt. 3
We now consider asserted errors in the judge’s charge to which the defendant made no objection at trial, but we do so only under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to determine whether justice requires the reversal of the conviction. See
Commonwealth
v.
Cole,
8. We see no justification under § 33E for ordering a new trial or for reducing the degree of guilt to manslaughter. See
Commonwealth
v.
Jones,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Rule 404 of the Fed. R. Evid. allows the admission of “[ejvidence of a pertinent trait of character of the viсtim of the crime offered by an accused.”' Rule 404 of the Proposed Mass. R. Evid. (July, 1980) has no parallel provision, and, as the advisory committee’s notes indicate, the intention is to permit evidence of a victim’s reputation to be admitted, where the issue of self-defense is raised, only if the defendant has knowledge of the reputation.
We would endorse any reasonable procedure by which all or portions of a judge’s charge agreed to by the parties are made available in writing to a jury.
The defendant does not argue that the judge charged the jury that there was no accident. A portion of the charge (Tr. 898) could be so read as punctuated by the stenographer. The absence of any objection on this ground at trial or before us is persuasive that either there is a word omitted from the transcript or that the punctuation by the stenographer is inappropriate.
