1.
Motion to suppress photographic identification
. "We recite the facts as found by the motion judge, supplemented by uncontroverted testimony" submitted during the evidentiary hearing on the motion to suppress.
Commonwealth
v.
Cordero
,
After the robbery, Leo Tang, one of the victims, told the police that the robber had followed him and his two friends from the Assembly Bar to his car across the street. Tang described the robber as a white male, approximately five feet, ten inches tall, scruffy looking, with facial hair, and wearing a hooded sweatshirt, gray shirt, and jeans. Tang had seen the man in the bar earlier that night, with a Budweiser
Once the police had the defendant's name, two officers went to his home and knocked on his front door but received no answer. They went toward the rear door, and, while walking along the right side of the house, they saw the defendant standing at the sink in the kitchen of the ground floor apartment. The officers then went back to the front door and knocked again. They knocked on the door without response for a lengthy period of time before the defendant finally answered. He was wearing only a pair of jeans and sneakers, and his face appeared to be freshly shaved, with cuts on his upper and lower lip that were actively bleeding.
At approximately 3 A.M. , police officers brought Tang, in a police cruiser, to the street outside the defendant's house for a showup identification procedure. Tang viewed the defendant, who was standing on the sidewalk, for five to ten minutes. Tang did
Later that day, Quincy Police Detective Ricky Wash created a computer-generated photo array, including the defendant's photo and six other photos of men with similar physical characteristics. 1 The photo identification procedure was administered by Detective Michael Ward, who was otherwise uninvolved in the investigation.
Tang viewed the photos one at a time, and, when he came to the second photo, he said it looked similar 2 to the robber, but he was having trouble making a positive identification because the robber had been wearing a hat and a hooded sweatshirt. At Ward's instruction, Tang went through the remaining photos. When he returned to the second photo, Ward put a piece of paper over the upper head of the person depicted and Tang covered the person's ears with his hands. Tang then wrote on the photo, at Ward's request, "I believe this is the suspect because he seems like an average white male. The chin structure with a little facial hair look similar. I couldn't see his head or ears because he wore a hat and hoodie at the time."
a.
Multiple identification procedures
. "For a motion to suppress a photographic identification to succeed, the defendant must show by a preponderance of the evidence that, in light of the totality of the circumstances, the procedures employed were so unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable misidentification as to deny the defendant due process
The defendant's primary argument is that the unsuccessful showup tainted the subsequent photo array procedure, rendering it impermissibly suggestive. The motion judge addressed this issue squarely and concluded that conducting a photo array procedure that included the defendant, after Tang had failed to identify him at the showup, "may not be ideal, but was warranted where the defendant had apparently altered his appearance since the time of the crime."
We agree with the motion judge. The evidence before him at the suppression hearing strongly suggested that the defendant had shaved immediately before he answered the door to his home in the early morning hours of April 18, 2013. In addition, Tang indicated at the showup that the reason he could not identify the defendant as the robber was the difference in the very feature that the defendant had apparently altered. Under these circumstances, it was appropriate for the police to conduct a second identification procedure.
Moreover, Massachusetts courts have "declined to adopt 'a per se exclusionary rule condemning as constitutionally infirm all subsequent identifications of a defendant by any witness who had previously failed to select the defendant.' "
Commonwealth
v.
Paszko
,
b. "
Cropping" of the photo
. Next, the defendant contends that the photo array was impermissibly suggestive because Ward and Tang covered the upper head and ears of the defendant's photograph only-and not the other six. The defendant's reliance on
Borgos
,
supra
, is, however, misplaced. There, in showing the same photographic array to three out of four witnesses, the administering officer covered the defendant's hair with a paper after an initial identification by the witness.
Id
. at 32-33,
The defendant argues that the initial identifications in Borgos , supra , were unequivocal, as compared to Tang's less certain initial selection of the defendant's photo-and, therefore, we should read Borgos as supporting his position. However, even if the defendant is correct that the witnesses in Borgos were somewhat less equivocal in their initial selection of the suspect's photo than Tang, that does not mean that the procedure used here was impermissibly suggestive. Nothing in Borgos is to the contrary.
First, the better view of the law existing at the time of the hearing on the motion to suppress is correctly reflected in the judge's ruling that he was not authorized to consider the reliability of Tang's identification once he had determined that police procedures were not unnecessarily suggestive. See
Commonwealth
v.
Cavitt
,
Second, to the extent that the motion judge in this case was authorized to consider reliability, any exercise of that authority is reviewable only for abuse of discretion and is not subject to the independent appellate review afforded a legal conclusion regarding constitutional rights. See
Johnson
,
2. Trial identification . The defendant argues that Sylva, the bar manager, should not have been permitted to identify the defendant in court at the trial because he had not previously participated in an out-of-court identification procedure. The suggestion that the police should have subjected Sylva to an out-of-court identification procedure is unreasonable, considering that Sylva's prior familiarity with the defendant was the source of the police officers' original identification of the defendant as a person of interest in the investigation.
The defendant is correct that the "good reason" requirement announced in
Crayton
,
For all of these reasons, we are satisfied that, the Commonwealth's identification evidence was properly admitted and was sufficient to support the jury's verdicts.
Judgments affirmed .
Notes
One of the photos was of a man with a darker complexion than the others. Wash also used an old booking photo of the defendant in the array, rather than a newer photo from the Registry of Motor Vehicles. The motion judge determined that the array was fairly composed and we defer to his judgment. See
Commonwealth
v.
Forte
,
The defendant attempts to make much of the fact that Detective Ward used the word "familiar" instead of "similar" in his testimony. Specifically, Ward testified, "When I turned over photo number 2, Mr. Tang looked at it and said that looks familiar and then, starting tapping his finger on the photo for several minutes." Tang's own testimony, however, was that photograph number 2 "looked like the guy." This testimony was sufficient to support the judge's finding.
"Where the defendant satisfies this burden, the out-of-court identification is per se excluded as a violation of the defendant's right to due process under art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights."
Commonwealth
v.
Walker
,
In
Carter
, decided a few months after the defendant's trial, the Supreme Judicial Court stated, "We discourage the use of repeated arrays containing a suspect's photograph, ... and the use of repeated arrays could make identification procedures unnecessarily suggestive if the police do not have good cause for the use of such procedure."
At oral argument, the defendant's attorney suggested that a photo array excluding the defendant's photo should have been shown to Tang in between the showup and the array containing the defendant's photo, in order to insulate the array procedure from the risk that Tang would remember the defendant from the showup and not from the crime. The motion judge considered this argument, but correctly stated that such a procedure was not constitutionally required. See
Commonwealth
v.
Martin
,
In
Forte
,
Tang also testified that he singled out the defendant's photo "[b]ecause it looked closest to it ... [t]he facial hair and the jaw structure."
In addition, the photo array was administered by a police officer who had no prior involvement in the case. See
Commonwealth
v.
Silva-Santiago
,
In
Johnson
, the court was not concerned with police procedures that might render an identification unnecessarily suggestive. There, relying on
Commonwealth
v.
Jones
,
In
Dew
,
The judge's decision to reach the issue was prescient. Just a few months after the defendant's trial, in a case involving multiple photographic arrays administered by police, the Supreme Judicial Court wrote: "Our conclusion that the identifications were not 'unnecessarily suggestive' does not end the inquiry. Even if otherwise admissible, a judge may suppress identification evidence if 'its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.' "
Carter
,
