After our decision in
Elder
v.
Commonwealth,
We summarize the facts. 2 The complainant was fourteen years old in early 1980, when the rapes occurred. At that time, and for the previous three or four years, the complainant lived with her divorced mother in the defendant’s home. The complainant’s mother and the defendant lived as husband and wife, although they were not married. The complainant’s older sister stayed in the house only on her vacations from a boarding school for slow learners.
At trial, the complainant stated that her sexual relations with the defendant began when she was eleven. The defendant frequently required her to submit to him before giving her permission to engage in various social activities. She stated, “[Ejvery time I turned around, I had to do it.” The complainant identified four specific dates on which she claimed to hаve had intercourse with the defendant, and for which he was indicted: February 19, February 20, February 22, and March 20, 1980. Her situation came to the *745 attention of the authorities when she wrote a letter to a teacher after attending a class on rape. Immediately thereafter, the complainant was placed in a foster home.
1. Entry of judgment after declaration of mistrial. At the end of the defendant’s bench trial, but prior to the entry of judgment and imposition of a sentence, the judge sentenced another defendant in an unrelated case. The district attorney responded to the sentence, which he felt was unduly mild, by publicly criticizing the judge for his leniency toward defendants. In a subsequent lobby conference, the judge invited the defendant, Elder, to move for a mistrial. After the defendant made that motion, the judge held a hearing. He ordered a mistrial and allowed a new trial, stating: “Given the present posture of the circumstances, cirсumstances created solely by the District Attorney, any decision of the Court will be perceived by some, perhaps many, as being suspect. While the Court knows that in so far as is humanly possible the decision reached would be a true judgment on the law and the evidence, it recognizes that two unnecessary results may obtain. They are the opening of an avenue of appeal should the judgment be in favor of the Commonwealth, and secоnd, perhaps more important, it will appear that even-handed justice has not been done. For the reasons stated, a declaration of mistrial is a manifest necessity.”
In response to the defendant’s motion to dismiss, another judge of the Superior Court made a number of findings, including one on the reason for the mistrial: “The public utterances [of the district attorney] were capable of causing a reasonable apprehension on the part of the trial judge that whatever his decision in the
Elder
case it could and perhaps would be seen by a significant number of people as having been influenced by the District Attorney’s statements.” The judge then denied the motion to dismiss, and the defendant sought relief in this court, claiming that a new trial was barred on double jeopardy grounds. We directed the trial judge to decide the case and to enter appropriate judg
*746
merits.
Elder
v.
Commonwealth,
The defendant now asserts that our decision to order entry of judgment in the case, rather than decide the double jeopardy question, as well as the judge’s compliance with our decision to enter a judgment, violates his due process and equal protection rights and the prohibition against double jeopardy, secured under the United States Constitution and arts. 1, 11, 12, and 29 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. 4 Obviously, we do not agree.
The defendant asserts that in Elder v. Commonwealth, supra, we should not have decided the propriety of the declaration of mistrial because it was not contested or briefed by either party. 5 However, we are not confined by the issues or theories advanced by the parties. We may decide cases on issues not raised by the parties. 6 In this case, our ruling on the decision to declare a mistrial was essential before we could reach the question whether a second trial was permitted.
The defendant also argues thаt we incorrectly decided his prior appeal. 7 See Elder v. Commonwealth, 385 Mass. *747 128, 133-135 (1982). We decline to reconsider that opinion. 8
The defendant appears to argue that the judge violated the prohibition against double jeopardy when he entered judgment.
9
The defendant contends that the judge’s original declaration of a mistrial ended his trial in such a manner that renewal of the proceedings in any way subjected him to double jeopardy. However, the defendant fails to support his view that entry of judgment aftеr declaration of a mistrial has been revoked subjects the defendant to double jeopardy.
Breed
v.
Jones,
We believe that, in this case, entry of judgment after a mistrial had been declared in the interim did not violate double jeopardy principles. Since the declaration of a mistrial did not terminate the prosecution in the defendant’s favor, and since the defendant had moved for a mistrial, the judge contemplated that principles of double jeopardy were not applicable. See
United States
v.
Scott,
The dеfendant also argues that our remand to the judge for entry of judgment was unconstitutional because a similar remand would have been impossible had he exercised his constitutional right to a trial by jury. According to the defendant, our decision burdens his choice of a bench trial over a jury trial and violates the equal protection principles of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and the parallel provision in the State Cоnstitution.
In support for this proposition, the defendant cites
United States
v.
Jenkins,
*749 If a jury had been the trier of fact, the judge could have requested a verdict before declaring a mistrial. Judgment could later have been entered on the verdict if his determination of a mistrial proved incorrect. Cf. United States v. Jenkins, supra, overruled on other grounds, United States v. Scott, supra (judgment entered on a verdict of guilty, after appellate court reversed judgment of acquittal notwithstanding the verdict, does not constitute double jeopardy). We therefore reject the defendant’s challenges to our decision in Elder v. Commonwealth, supra.
2.
Evidence of bias.
Relying on
Commonwealth
v.
Joyce,
*750 At trial, the judge permitted the defendant to introduce evidence of hostility between the complainant and the defendant, which increased when the defendant took steps to terminate the complainant’s relationship with her boyfriend. The defendant stated that over time the complainant became hostile to his orders and directions concerning the hours she kept. She would pout, go to her room and slam the door, and refuse to speak. The complainant stated that the defеndant “hollered” at her and punished her, and that she was afraid of him.
The defendant also stated that the complainant became angry and resentful towards him on March 18, 1980, when he discarded a jacket she had brought home from school, not realizing that she had received it from her boyfriend. On March 21, 1980, the defendant attempted to separate the complainant from the boyfriend, telling them both that she was too young for boys. A final dispute between them occurred when the defendant refused to allow the complainant to attend a rock concert on March 23, 1980, because she was too young. The complainant admitted that the defendant’s actions angered her.
The judge permitted the defendant to test the complainant’s hostility and bias against the defendant by reason of his interference with her relationship with her boyfriend. Evidence of bias was fully elicited through direct and cross-examination of the complainant, as well as through testimony of the defendant. Thus, the defendant was able to argue to the trier of fact that the witness was biased on the record he established, without introducing evidence of prior sexual history. Cf.
State
v.
DeLawder,
Since the defendant was able to establish bias without the proffered evidence, this case differs markedly from
Commonwealth
v.
Joyce, supra; Davis
v.
Alaska,
The judge properly limited the scope of the evidence after adequate exposurе on the issue of bias, and he gave proper attention to “the important policies underlying the rape-shield statute,” as well as the confrontation clause.
Commonwealth
v.
Joyce,
3. Evidence of nonvirginity. The defendant also asserts that, pursuant to a statutory exception to the rape shield law and to his confrontation rights, the judge should have permitted introduction of the complainant’s prior sexual history to counteract evidence of the complainant’s non-virginity.
Evidence of lack of virginity was initially presented by the prosecution, which called a doctor who had examined the complainant shortly after she had made her statement to the authorities. He stated that his physical examination re *752 vealed that she had had sexual intercourse, but that he could not determine whether she had engaged in more than one sexual act. 13
On cross-examination, defense counsel asked the doctor if the complainant had claimed “never to have been involved in any other sexual act with any other individual” and, over the Commonwealth’s objection, the judge permittеd the doctor to state that the complainant denied such experience with anyone other than the defendant. At the close of the doctor’s evidence, the prosecution moved to admit the hospital report, which included the doctor’s report containing the complainant’s statement to the doctor denying sexual relationships with persons other than the defendant. The defendant did not object to this aspeсt of the hospital report.
Thereafter, the defendant attempted to introduce evidence concerning the complainant’s prior sexual history with other men to counteract this evidence. The defendant claimed that the circumstantial effect of the evidence of nonvirginity, combined with the complainant’s statement in the medical record, required introduction of the complainant’s prior sexual history. The judge deniеd the defendant’s request. He said, “[T]he fact that there is penetration is something that does not in any way point the finger to your defendant as the one doing it.” The judge further observed that the complainant’s sexual history clearly was not relevant to charges of statutory rape because a defendant is not entitled to exoneration if he had sexual relations with a complainant under the age of consent even if others also hаve had sexual relations with that person. See
People
v.
Fritts,
*753 The defendant argues that he should have been able to admit evidence of the complainant’s prior sexual history to counteract the evidence of nonvirginity under the exception to the rape shield law permitting admission of “evidence of recent conduct of the victim alleged to be the cause of any physical feature, characteristic, or condition оf the victim.” G. L. c. 233, § 21B. We do not agree. In this case, the judge viewed lack of virginity as a condition, and conducted an in camera hearing on its admissibility, as required by G. L. c. 233, § 21B. The judge found, after balancing the interests of the defendant with the purposes of the rape shield law, that the evidence was not sufficiently probative to outweigh the policy of the statute to protect persons “so that they are not hesitant to come forward and complain of rape.”
We add that lack of virginity is not a “condition” under G. L. c. 233, § 21B, except in limited circumstances. See
Commonwealth
v.
McKay,
The defendant also contends that to satisfy his confrontation rights evidence of the prior sexual conduct of the complainant should have been admitted to neutralize any
*754
incriminating inference that could be drawn from the fact of her nonvirginity, and particularly from her statement that she had engaged in sеxual relations only with the defendant. We do not agree. The prosecution did not rely on the complainant’s statement to prove its case. Further, it was the defendant who initially elicited from the doctor the complainant’s statement, and who now claims that the statement greatly compounds the effect of the nonvirginity evidence. It was not an abuse of discretion for the judge to force the defendant to live with the complainаnt’s statement, which the defendant brought out. Since the defendant elicited the statement on cross-examination, he cannot now complain of its prejudicial effect. See
Commonwealth
v.
Ladetto,
We conclude that the judge did not err in excluding the defendant’s offеr of proof of prior specific acts of the complainant on the issue of bias or to counteract evidence of nonvirginity.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
The defendant was indicted on four separate claims of rape. Each indictment alleged a different date. The defendant was found not guilty on two indictments. On the two remaining indictments, the defendant was sentenced to two and a half years in a house of correction, the two sentences to run concurrently. A single justice of the Appeals Court granted a stay of execution of sentence pending this appeal.
Additional facts are presented in our discussion of the substantive issues.
Other facts concerning the procedural background of this case are detailed in Elder v. Commonwealth, supra.
Although we have no express provision against prior jeopardy in the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, it is a part of the common law and statutory lаw of the Commonwealth.
Commonwealth
v.
Vanetzian,
The defendant contends that the decision of the mistrial issue and the subsequent remand “functioned as a penalty wrought upon Mr. Elder for the exercise of his right to pretrial review of his double jeopardy claim.” See
Abney
v.
United States,
Generally, we do not consider issues not addressed by the parties. Massachusetts Rule-of Appellate Procedure 16 (a) (4), as amended,
In our consideration of the defendant’s claim, we analyzed his arguments under a “manifest necessity” standard. Elder v. Commonwealth, supra at 133-134. Ry using this standard, we gave the defendant’s argu *747 ments even greater consideration than he was entitled to under Federal law. When a defendant requests the mistrial, his interests are routinely given less weight than they are under the manifest necessity standard.
The defendant cites no cases which induce us to alter our decision. This is not a case in which the judge or the jurors were prejudiced by publicity about the particular case or defendant. See
Sheppard
v.
Maxwell,
The defendant further argues that he was deprived of his due process right to a judgment entered at the conclusion of his trial. See U.S. Const, amend. XIV; arts. 1, 11, 12, and 29 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. Wе fail to see how the defendant could have been harmed by the time lag between the end of his trial and the entry of judgment. The defendant offers no legal authority to support his claim. His failure adequately to address the issue constitutes a waiver. See Mass. R. A. P. 16 (a) (4), supra.
Contrary to the defendant’s offer of proof, the defendant stated that the complainant did not become more hostile after he found her on that occasion. Furthermorе, the defense counsel conceded that an inference that blood on the nightgown could have been due to a rupture of the hymen was “quite conjectural.”
This case contains no allegations that the defendant threatened to expose the complainant’s other sexual relations, see
State
v.
Jalo,
Even before the enactment of the rape-shield law, specific instances of sexual conduct between the victim and persons other than the defendant were inadmissible.
Commonwealth
v.
Joyce,
The doctor stated that “[o]nce the vagina is opened and stretched out, it’s impossible to say whether this is a repeated problem having occurred over and over again or has occurred just one time . . . [and in this case there were] signs of significant penetration.”
Consent is not a defense to a charge of statutory rape. See G. L. c. 265, § 23;
Commonwealth
v.
Ellis,
See
Commonwealth
v.
McKay,
