The defendant was convicted by a jury in the Superior Court of armed robbery and attempted armed robbery of a Shell gas station in Dedham. He asserts that his convictions should be reversed because the judge erred in allowing the Commonwealth to introduce in evidence the prior recorded
1. Prior recorded testimony of a missing witness. Prior recorded testimony of a witness is admissible only if the party offering the testimony proves that the witness is “unavailable” to testify at the time of the trial and that the prior testimony is “reliable.” Commonwealth v. Bohannon,
“Unavailability” is established by demonstrating that the party offering the testimony made a good faith effort to obtain the witness’s presence at trial. Commonwealth v. Siegfriedt,
In this case, at a nonevidentiary hearing the judge determined that the Commonwealth had exercised a good faith effort to produce the witness, who was the sole identifying witness to the crimes charged and who was vital to the Commonwealth’s case. According to the prosecutor’s representations to the trial judge, those efforts consisted of the following: messages left on an answering machine at the last known address of the witness in the Commonwealth; repeated contact with the witness’s mother, who initially informed the prosecutor’s office that the witness had moved to a specified address in Kentucky with his girlfriend, furnished the name and address of the witness’s girlfriend’s sister in Kentucky, and eventually informed the prosecutor’s office that she had not heard from her son and did not know where he was; a fruitless computer check for an out-of-State license for the witness; prosecution calls to the Dedham police, who told them that they could not find the witness; a summons (which was returned) and a letter (which was not) mailed to the Kentucky address for the witness furnished by the witness’s mother; and a summons (which was returned) mailed
We are not persuaded as matter of law that those efforts by the Commonwealth were sufficient to warrant the judge to conclude that the Commonwealth had made a good faith effort to produce the witness. Although the Commonwealth does not have to exhaust every lead to meet its burden, substantial diligence is required. Commonwealth v. Ross,
The defendant also contends that the prior recorded testimony of the witness at the suppression hearing was not reliable because the motive for cross-examination of the witness at the suppression hearing would have differed from the motive at trial. The defendant asserts that at the suppression hearing he elicited testimony from the witness based on the charge that the
“Reliability” is determined in this case by whether the defendant had an adequate opportunity to cross-examine the witness at the suppression hearing so that the use of this testimony at trial is not fundamentally unfair. See Commonwealth v. Childs,
2. The statements made by the defendant upon his initial questioning and at the booking. The defendant contends that certain statements made by him to the police upon his detention and at his booking should not have been admitted because the judge failed to hold a hearing to determine if the defendant had waived his Miranda rights and if the statements were voluntary. The defendant also argues that the judge erred in failing to give a humane practice instruction.
During the direct examination of the lead police officer, the prosecutor asked the officer to relate the conversation that she had with the defendant at the time of his apprehension by the police. The defendant seasonably objected to the question stating that he had filed a motion to suppress those statements on the grounds that the defendant had not been given his Miranda warnings and that the statements were not voluntary. The defendant, however, never pressed the court, prior to trial, for a
From our review of the record, it does not appear that the voluntariness of those statements was a live issue at trial, and, thus, the judge’s failure to give a humane practice instruction was not error. See Commonwealth v. Benoit,
3. Motion to suppress the identification. The defendant argues that his motion to suppress the identification should have been allowed because the showup was unnecessarily suggestive. He bases this argument on the ground that the defendant was surrounded by police officers at the time of the showup and was asked to remove his shirt. The mere fact that the defendant was surrounded by police officers does not make the identification process unnecessarily suggestive. See Commonwealth v. Moffett,
The judgments are reversed, and the verdicts set aside. The case is remanded to the Superior Court for a new trial.
So ordered.
Notes
A police officer’s search for two material witnesses consisted of the following. For one witness, he contacted the witness’s brother-in-law, a California attorney, who told him that the witness had been living in California but had moved to Texas a few months earlier. The brother-in-law referred the officer
For the other witness, the officer checked the records of the DES, death records, and voting records in Massachusetts. The officer also spoke to local businessmen, a girlfriend, and other people who might have had contact with the witness. He also checked with the local police, the postal service, the probation department, the Registry of Motor Vehicles, and the local Social Security office.
A police officer testified that he visited the witness’s last known address, spoke to the witness’s former employer, checked with the post office, telephone company, Registry of Motor Vehicles, and two law enforcement data bases. The officer also spoke to the witness’s brother, father, and stepmother, all of whom had no recent contact with the witness and did not know where he could be located.
The Supreme Judicial Court stated it was a close question whether the witness was unavailable based on the Commonwealth’s efforts to locate the witness. Those efforts consisted of a police officer’s investigating three local addresses for the witness and contacting the post office, local police, the Registry of Motor Vehicles, the National Criminal Information Center, and a credit computer service for the witness’s address. The credit check revealed two addresses, one in South Carolina and one in Fort Myers, Florida. Through local information, the prosecutor was able to locate the witness’s father in Fort Myers. The witness’s father informed the prosecutor that his son was not living in Florida but was incarcerated in a Pennsylvania prison. Further investigation revealed that the witness was not incarcerated there. See supra at 416.
The Commonwealth tried to locate the witness, who had moved to Florida, through his parents. The efforts included contacting the witness’s mother who disclosed that she had last heard from her son when he called her from Virginia and told her he was heading west. The witness’s parents never heard from their son after that.
In upholding the trial judge’s finding of unavailability, we found it significant that the trial judge had made the same ruling in a previous trial of the defendant after the judge had been informed of the Commonwealth’s earlier efforts to locate the same witness.
