384 Mass. 799 | Mass. | 1981
Louis Greco, a codefendant of Henry Tameleo, see Commonwealth v. Tameleo, ante 368 (1981), was granted leave by a single justice of this court to appeal from an order of the Superior Court denying his motion for a new trial. He claims that the trial judge’s instructions to the jury (1) created a mandatory presumption of malice, shifting the burden of proof to the defendant, see Sandstrom v. Montana, 442 U.S. 510 (1979); (2) trivialized the jury’s duty through the use of personal decision-making examples in the definition of the reasonable doubt standard, see Commonwealth v. Ferreira, 373 Mass. 116 (1977); (3) shifted the burden of proof to the defendant to
For the reasons stated in Commonwealth v. Tameleo, supra, and Commonwealth v. Pisa, ante 362 (1981),
So ordered.
With the exception of the Sandstrom issue, all of the defendant’s claims of error could have been raised at least by the time of his third motion for a new trial (1978). “The repeated failures of counsel to raise the pointfs] suggest that [they were] not thought to be critical.” Commonwealth v. Grace, 381 Mass. 753, 760 (1980).