After a jury trial, the defendant was convicted of the murder in the first degree of Junior R. Fernandez, assault with the intent to kill Francisco Rodriguez, and unlawfully carrying a firearm. The defendant appeals from these convictions, claiming error in: (1) the denial of his motion for a required finding of not guilty of each crime charged; (2) the denial of his motion to suppress the out-of-court and in-court identification of him by two witnesses; (3) the admission of a detective’s testimony concerning an out-of-court photographic identification of the defendant by Francisco Rodriguez; (4) the judge’s instructions to the jury concerning the burden of proof; and (5) the restriction of the defendant’s cross-examination of a Commonwealth witness. The defendant also argues (6) that the defendant was denied a fair trial by the prosecutor’s argument to the jury based on facts not in evidence. Lastly, the defendant requests that, in the event we reject his claims of error regarding the murder conviction, we exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E (1990 ed.), to order a new trial or reduce the verdict to a lesser degree of guilt.
We summarize the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth.
Commonwealth
v.
Cordle,
404 Mass.
Shortly before the killing, William Fernandez, Junior Fernandez’s brother and the owner of the vehicle in which Junior Fernandez was killed, had been summoned to testify at the trial of a person who had been accused of shooting another man in front of the Fernandez market in March, 1989. That trial was scheduled for late February, 1990, just a few days after the shooting of Junior Fernandez. William Fernandez intended to identify the assailant in that case.
There is no contention that the defendant lawfully carried a firearm. The defendant’s principal position as to that charge and the charge of assault with intent to kill Rodri
The critical question with respect to whether the evidence set forth above was sufficient to warrant a finding of the defendant’s guilt, as a joint venturer, of murder of Junior Fernandez in the first degree, “is whether the evidence . . . was sufficient to warrant findings that the defendant was present at the scene of the attack on [Junior Fernandez], that he knew of [the assailant’s] criminal intentions, and that by agreement he was willing and available to help [the assailant] if necessary. . . . For joint venturer criminal liability, the defendant’s knowledge requirement is satisfied by his or her knowledge that there is a substantial likelihood that the crime will be committed by the other person.” (Citations omitted.)
Commonwealth
v.
Walsh,
Before the trial, the defendant moved to suppress all out-of-court and in-court identifications of the defendant, claiming that the out-of-court identifications were made under circumstances that were unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistake, and that the in-court identifications had no independent source. After an evidentiary hearing, a judge denied the motion — erroneously, the defendant says. The evidence specifically sought to be suppressed consisted of out-of-court and in-court identifications by Rodriguez and Francisco Fernandez. We recite the material findings of the motion judge which, although challenged in part by the defendant, we are satisfied are supported by the evidence presented at the hearing. The motion judge found in material part as follows: Detective William C. Dwyer of the Boston police department’s homicide unit went to the scene of the shooting on the night it occurred, February 17, 1990. “He brought Rodriguez to the area police installation and showed him a book consisting of approximately 200 photographs of black males under 20 years of age. The photographs [were] arranged four to each side of a page, so that eight photographs may be observed when the book [was] open and two pages [were] displayed. Detective Dwyer never told Rodriguez which photographs to select arid did not call his attention to any particular photograph (s). He merely asked Rodriguez to go through the book carefully to see if he could find a photograph of the shooter or of the man who crossed the street with the shooter. . . . Rodriguez had just experienced the murder of his nephew, and had himself been the victim of an assault with a dangerous weapon. Consequently, he was extremely upset, nervous and fearful at the time. . . . When Rodriguez came to the defendant’s photograph, he became even more visibly shaken. He told Detective Dwyer that the shooter ‘looks like this guy here,’ referring to the defendant’s photograph, but said he could not be sure. . . . Detective Dwyer had information that members of the so-called Kings Gang were known to hang around Fernandez Market, and
The defendant argues that Rodriguez’s photographic identification of him on March 21, 1990, was unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to mistaken identification and that, therefore, that identification as well as Rodriguez’s in-court identification of the defendant should have been suppressed. We do not agree. We agree, of course, that if the photographic identification procedure was unnecessarily suggestive
The defendant also argues, for the first time on appeal, that an out-of-court photographic identification of the defendant, as well as an in-court identification, by Francisco Fernandez, should have been suppressed. That contention was not made in the Superior Court in the defendant’s memorandum in support of his motion to suppress or at the motion hearing and was not addressed by the motion judge. At the trial, the defendant did not argue that Fernandez’s out-of-court or in-court identification of the defendant was inadmissible. Therefore, at least as to the murder indictment,
1
we review the admission in evidence of that testimony under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, only to determine whether it created a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.
Common
There was evidence at trial that Francisco Fernandez was at the police station on March 21, 1990, when Rodriguez identified the defendant’s photograph. After Rodriguez selected the photograph, Francisco Fernandez asked to see it. Upon being shown the photograph, Fernandez stated that the person in the photograph was the person that Rodriguez had attempted to describe to the police on the night of the shooting. Fernandez testified at the trial that, when he saw the defendant’s photograph, he knew that that was the person that Rodriguez had attempted to describe on the night of the shooting and that the defendant was one of the persons Fernandez had seen on the porch before the shooting. In
Commonwealth
v.
Moynihan,
We turn now to the defendant’s argument that the trial judge erred by admitting Detective Dwyer’s testimony that, on February 18, 1990, while viewing the array of two hundred photographs, Rodriguez “stopped and he began shaking and with a finger on [the defendant’s] photo ... he said to me, it looks like him. I then asked him if it was him and he said, ‘I’m not sure,’ and he stopped there. He wouldn’t identify him.” Although this testimony was consistent with Dwyer’s and Rodriguez’s earlier testimony at the suppression hearing, it was not consistent with Rodriguez’s trial testimony. At the trial, Rodriguez testified differently from what he had said at the suppression hearing, that “that very night they showed me many photographs but I can’t say anything because I was too nervous and I couldn’t talk.” When asked if he had picked out a photograph, he replied, “Not that very
Next, the defendant argues that the judge’s instruction to the jury concerning the Commonwealth’s burden to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt was defective. Specifically, the defendant argues that the judge’s instruction that reasonable doubt “is that state of the case which after the entire comparison and consideration of all the evidence leaves the minds of the jurors in that condition that they cannot say they feel an abiding conviction to a moral certainty of the truth of the charge” was wrong because it “shift [ed] the burden of proof and redue[ed] the burden of proof required of the Commonwealth.” “The jury should not have to
compare
The defendant also argues that the trial judge erred by limiting the defendant’s cross-examination of a detective who arrested the defendant at a trailer park in North Carolina. Defense counsel sought to inquire of the detective as to the number of times the detective had visited the trailer park prior to the date of the defendant’s arrest. The prosecutor objected to the question on relevancy grounds, and the objection was sustained. There was no error.
We come to the defendant’s contention that the judge erred by denying his motion for a mistrial when the prosecutor allegedly argued facts of which there was no evidence. The arguments that the defendant asserts had no evidentiary support were that the defendant and his accomplice were waiting to “stalk, perhaps not Junior [Fernandez], perhaps William, but waiting.” The defendant argues that the jury was asked to speculate that William Fernandez was the per
“[P]rosecutors are entitled to marshal the evidence and suggest inferences that the jury may draw from it.”
Commonwealth
v.
Drayton,
We have reviewed the murder conviction pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E, and we are not persuaded that we should exercise our extraordinary power to order a new trial or reduce the verdict to a lesser degree of guilt. This case is not like others, in which we have exercised our powers, involving non-lethal confrontations that have senselessly and quickly escalated into killings,
Commonwealth
v.
Maskell,
Judgments affirmed.
