When fire fighters in Revere responded to a fire in a second-floor apartment, they found the victim in his bed, partially burned and with fatal stab wounds. The defendant, sixteen years old at the time of the incident, was charged with arson and the victim’s murder. After transfer proceedings were conducted under G. L. c. 119, § 61, in the Chelsea District Court, the case went to trial before a jury in the Superior Court. The defendant was convicted of arson and second degree murder. On appeal, he challenges: (1) the decision to transfer him for trial as an adult; (2) the denial of his motion to suppress certain physical evidence; (3) the sufficiency of the evidence at trial to support the convictions; and (4) the fairness of the trial in light of the destruction by the Commonwealth of a piece of exculpatory evidence. We affirm the convictions.
1. The transfer decision. Before a juvenile may be transferred to the adult criminal justice system, G. L. c. 119, § 61, requires that a judge find, on clear and convincing evidence, after considering various enumerated factors, that the juvenile presents a significant danger to the public and is not amenable to rehabilitation. 1 The judge made subsidiary findings with respect to each of the enumerated factors and concluded:
“[T]hat the child presents a significant danger to the public as demonstrated by the nature of the offense charged and the child’s past record of delinquent behavior and, further, that he is not now amenable to rehabilitation as a juvenile.”
There was ample evidence to support the subsidiary findings. The issue is whether those findings warranted the judge, in the exercise of his discretion, see
Ward
v.
Commonwealth,
The defendant contends that the evidence presented at the transfer hearing, which began in 1988 and was completed on March 29, 1989, when the defendant was seventeen, required a finding that he was amenable to treatment as a juvenile. Two psychiatrists testified, both of whom were of the opinion that the defendant presented a danger to the public. With respect to amenability to treatment, the defendant relies in particular on the testimony of his treating psychiatrist at Winthrop Hospital, Dr. Adela Wilkeson. She diagnosed the defendant as having “mixed personality with depression, passive dependent and antisocial features.” Based upon his response to treatment at the hospital while these charges were pending, Dr. Wilkeson stated that she thought the defendant was amenable to treatment. She stated, however, that the treatment would certainly have to continue beyond the defendant’s eighteenth birthday, and probably beyond his twenty-first birthday. The defendant also relies on testimony from a probation officer that he had complied with at least some of the probation officer’s suggestions. And finally, the defendant relies on evidence from a mental health worker to the effect that counseling had been recommended for the defendant on many occasions in the past, but he had not been afforded the benefit of counseling.
Even if the evidence from Dr. Wilkeson might have warranted a conclusion that the defendant was amenable to treatment as a juvenile, the judge was not bound to accept it. See
Ward
v.
Commonwealth,
407 Mass, at 438;
Commonwealth
v.
Traylor,
2.
The motion to suppress.
Upon receiving information that the defendant had been with the victim a short time before he was found dead, the police went to the defendant’s house on the evening of the incident. They seized a knife which was visible in his pocket when he answered the door. At the officers’ request, the defendant and his father drove in their own automobile to the police station. With his father present, the defendant was questioned by several officers for about an hour. No Miranda warnings were given. In the course of the questioning, the officers requested, and were handed by the defendant, a gold chain and cash from his pocket. The police asked the defendant about the clothing that he had been wearing earlier. The defendant said that he was wearing the same clothes as the previous day. He stated, upon inquiry from the police, that he would be willing to
The seizure of the knife when the police first arrived at the defendant’s home was proper as a reasonable self-protection measure. The knife, in any event, was not tied to the murder. In the absence of Miranda warnings, the validity of any subsequent interrogation, or any warrantless seizures that flowed from the interrogation, depended, first, upon whether at the time they occurred the defendant had been deprived of his freedom of action in so significant a way that, although not formally under arrest, he was in “custody.” The judge found that he was not, and we would not disturb that finding unless it was clearly erroneous. In all the circumstances found by the judge, it was not clearly erroneous. See
Commonwealth
v.
Bryant,
The defendant contends, further, that, even if he was not in custody when his clothing, money, and gold chain were taken by the police, their warrantless seizure violated his Fourth Amendment rights under the United States Constitution. Whether one who hands his property over to the police
3.
Sufficiency of the evidence.
There was ample evidence to support the jury’s verdict on both charges. Among other things, it was established that the victim was alive in the early morning of the day of his death, that the defendant and the victim were together in the victim’s room until the defendant left the room, closed the door behind him, and began to engage in conversation with the victim’s mother in the kitchen. He gave the victim’s mother false information about his age and where he lived. He asked her for a ride to a nearby rapid-transit station, and she gave it to him, but she did not see where the defendant went after she dropped him off. She left the station to meet her daughter at around 11:30 A.M. The station was one-third of a mile from the victim’s
The thrust of the defense at trial was that it would have been impossible for the defendant to have returned to the victim’s house and set the fire in the short interval between being dropped off at the rapid-transit station and the start of the fire. Given the distances involved and his familiarity with the neighborhood, the defendant could have returned to the house within a few minutes. He could have left the front door unlocked as he followed the victim’s mother out, or he could have entered the apartment with the victim’s key. (The victim’s keys were missing when his body was discovered, and a key to the apartment was found in the grass in the yard behind the house some months after the incident.) The jury could have found, therefore, that it would not have been impossible for the defendant to have returned to the house and set the fire to avoid detection of the earlier homicide. The evidence of the defendant’s guilt was entirely circumstantial but, nevertheless, more than adequate to sustain the verdicts.
4.
The loss of the exculpatory evidence.
The police failed to preserve the defendant’s jogging jacket seized in a search authorized by a search warrant. After tests for blood and accelerants were conducted, the jacket apparently was destroyed. The tests were negative. The defendant contends
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
As appearing in St. 1990, c. 267, § 3, G. L. c. 119, § 61, now provides that if a child over the age of fourteen is charged with murder “there shall exist a rebuttable presumption that the child presents a significant danger to the public and ... is not amenable to rehabilitation within the juvenile justice system.” See
Commonwealth
v.
Wayne W.,
