On February 4, 2008, a jury convicted the defendant, Hassaun Harris, of murder in the first degree on the theory of deliberate premeditation. Represented by new counsel on appeal, the defendant argues error in (1) the admission of evidence; (2) the prosecutor’s closing argument, and (3) the judge’s instructions to the jury. The defendant also seeks relief
1. Facts. As an initial matter, the defendant admitted that he had stabbed and killed the victim during an argument. The main issue at trial was whether the defendant had acted in self-defense.
a. The Commonwealth’s case. We summarize the facts the jury could have found, reserving certain details for discussion in conjunction with specific issues raised. After a long relationship that developed into dating and cohabitation, the defendant and Tanetta Williams ended their relationship in March or May of 2006. After the breakup, however, Williams kept in contact with the defendant because she helped take care of his son. She also continued to manage the defendant’s finances and was a “payee” for payments he received due to an illness.
Shortly after 9 p.m. on October 12, 2006, Williams and the victim,
Sometime after 9:30 p.m. the defendant entered the restaurant through the front door and went over to Williams and the victim. The witness accounts of what next occurred vary.
Korey Maurice Lungelow had been working on the grill when he saw the defendant enter the restaurant. He saw the defendant approach and say something to Williams, but he could not hear what was said. The victim stood up and reached with one hand toward his back pocket. The defendant said, “Let’s go outside” and “Let’s shoot the fair one,” which Lungelow understood to mean having a “fair fight with fists.” Lungelow injected, saying, “You can’t do that in here.” The defendant headed to the front door. He turned around and “charged” the victim. The victim moved back and Lungelow’s view was obscured. He next saw the defendant “tackle” the victim. Again, the men went out of sight. Lungelow heard a male voice yell. He never saw either man again.
Another employee, Theresa Hazard, had been outside on a break when the defendant came into the restaurant. From her truck, she saw the defendant attacking the victim. The victim was running away from the defendant. As the men came out of the side door of the restaurant, the victim had his hands on the upper body of the defendant. The defendant was making movements with his right hand, as if he had something in his hand. Hazard testified that it looked like the defendant made contact with the victim in the back. She saw the victim grab his stomach and slouch down. The men came apart. The victim went behind her truck and headed toward another building. The defendant yelled to Williams, “I told you, I told you, how are you going to sit there and talk about me.” Williams did not respond. The defendant jumped into an automobile and drove off. Williams got into an automobile.
Williams got up and placed herself between the defendant and the victim. She asked the defendant to leave and the victim to be quiet. The men continued their banter about fighting. The defendant, followed by the victim, headed to the side door. Williams walked away. The men “positioned themselves like they were going to fight.” Each made a gesture toward their pockets.
A short distance later, Williams saw the victim running across the street. He was holding his chest and appeared to be having a difficult time breathing. He stumbled inside a nearby restaurant.
Inside the restaurant, the victim said, “I’ve been stabbed.” He rested on a counter and then fell backwards, hitting his head on the floor. One of the patrons rushed to help the victim. He found a faint pulse, but the victim was not responding. The patron’s wife telephoned 911. Williams ran into the restaurant and was hysterical. The victim was transported to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
The victim suffered two stab wounds, one to his left front shoulder and one to his chest, and a cut to his abdomen. He died as a result of the stab wound to the chest with penetration of the heart.
When police first questioned Williams about the victim’s injuries, she lied about what had occurred and said she and the victim had not been to the restaurant that evening. Although she
Eventually, on November 2, 2006, the police apprehended and arrested the defendant. He was staying at the apartment of a female friend. During his booking, he asked a police officer whether his friend was going to “get in trouble,” and added, “She doesn’t know what I did.”* ***
b. The defendant’s case. The defendant testified. He maintained that, at the time of the stabbing, he and Williams were still a “couple” and lived together. He had never met the victim, but knew that the victim had called the apartment for Williams.
The victim repeatedly asked the defendant whether he wanted to fight. As he did, the victim moved his right hand to his back pocket or under his shirt. The victim threatened to shoot the defendant. The defendant said, “Whoa, hold on.” Williams stood up between the two men and pushed the victim back. The defendant, having observed the size of the victim and believing the victim’s threat and that he indeed did have a gun, felt scared and believed the victim “was going to do something to [him].”
By the side door, the victim kept asking the defendant whether he wanted to fight. The defendant replied, “We could fight, but we don’t have to do nothing else. If you want to fight, we can fight.” The victim insisted on going outside. The defendant refused. Then, the victim swung at the defendant. The defendant rushed at the victim and unsuccessfully attempted to pick him up. The victim punched the defendant twice in the head. After, the victim, with both of his hands, grabbed the defendant by the throat. He also kicked the defendant, used a racist slur, and said, “Wait until we get outside.” The defendant had no memory of taking out his fishing knife and stabbing the victim with it. He recalls that the tussle moved outside and that, once they were outside, the victim ran one way, and he (the defendant) drove off in his automobile in the opposite direction. He was nervous and shaken up. His fishing knife was gone.
The defendant’s trial counsel argued that the defendant properly acted in self-defense and that the jury should return a verdict of not guilty. The judge instructed the jury on (1) murder in the first degree based on the theory of deliberate premeditation; (2) murder in the second degree (including all three prongs of malice); and (3) voluntary manslaughter on the basis of heat of passion on reasonable provocation, heat of passion induced by sudden combat, and the use of excessive force in self-defense. She also instructed on self-defense as a complete defense.
2. Admission of evidence. Over the defendant’s objection, a 911 recording of the victim was admitted in evidence and played to the jury. The recording was short. In it, the victim three times
“We entrust questions of relevancy and prejudicial effect to the sound discretion of the trial judge, whose determinations we will not disturb except for ‘palpable error.’ ” Commonwealth v. Carey,
3. Prosecutor’s closing argument. The defendant suggests that the prosecutor improperly attempted to evoke sympathy from the jury by playing, during his closing argument, the 911 recording of the victim stating three times he had been stabbed. Because the defendant objected to the closing on this ground, we review to determine whether “substantial rights were . . . affected.” Commonwealth v. Simpson,
As has been stated, the recording properly had been admitted in evidence, and the jurors were free to listen to it during their deliberations as a trial exhibit. See Commonwealth v. Freiberg,
4. Self-defense instructions, a. As an initial matter, contrary to the Commonwealth’s contention, the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the defendant, see Commonwealth v. Harrington,
Here, based on his own testimony, the defendant believed that the victim possessed a gun and was going to shoot him. This belief derived not only from a gesture by the victim, see Commonwealth v. Wallace,
b. In instructing the jury on self-defense, the judge’s instruction, with one exception, mirrored the self-defense instruction set forth in the Model Jury Instructions on Homicide 55-58 (1999).
“A person who provokes or initiates an assault ordinarily*434 cannot claim the right of self-defense unless he withdraws in good faith from the conflict and announces his intention to retire. Those are obviously factual questions for you to determine.”
At the end of the charge, the defendant objected to this portion of the instruction. The objection was overruled. The defendant argues on appeal that this portion of the charge incorrectly conveyed that the right to self-defense would be lost to a person who provokes by speech as opposed to violence or threats of violence. The effect of the instruction, he contends, was to remove his sole defense from the jury’s consideration and relieve the Commonwealth of its burden of proving one of the elements of murder, namely, an unlawful killing. We review for prejudicial error. Commonwealth v. Vuthy Seng,
Where there is evidence of self-defense, the burden is on the Commonwealth to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant did not act in self-defense. Commonwealth v. Rodriguez,
We next take up the defendant’s suggestion that the challenged instruction incorrectly conveyed that the right to self-defense would be lost to a person who provokes by speech as opposed to provoking by violence or by threats of violence. It is a settled rule of law that, “[i]n general, self-defense is unavailable to the person who initiates the fray,” Commonwealth v. Carrion,
Although the language in the challenged instruction appears in many of our decisions, it is potentially overbroad because it does not define what constitutes provocation of the type that results in the forfeiture of a self-defense claim. Of concern to the defendant is that the language does not differentiate between verbal and physical provocation. The lack of any distinction, however, is inconsequential in this case. The restaurant manager did not see what had caused the groan she heard, presumably from the victim. When the defendant entered the store, the manager did overhear him make an insulting remark to Williams about the victim (“Is this this nigger you was talking shit to me about?”), but not a statement or threat of violence to the victim, and the manager thereafter saw both men, not just the defendant, make “reaching gestures.” Before the victim was stabbed, Lungelow overheard the defendant suggest that he and
Consequently, based on the evidence of this case, no prejudice can be said to have arisen from the failure of the challenged instruction to differentiate between verbal and physical provocation in the context of who was the initial aggressor.
5. Review pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E. We have examined the record and discern no basis to exercise our authority pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to set aside or reduce the verdict of murder in the first degree.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The victim was a large man, weighing about 265 pounds and was six feet, one inch tail. In contrast, the defendant was approximately between five feet, seven inches and five feet, eight inches and weighed about 230 pounds.
One employee, Theresa Hazard, testified that she overheard Williams speaking on a cellular telephone and arguing with the person to whom she was speaking. The restaurant manager, during her cross-examination, however, did not dispute that she had testified before the grand jury that, when Williams was speaking on her cellular telephone, she spoke in a regular tone.
There were several surveillance cameras in the restaurant, and the footage, which did not display a sharp image, was admitted in evidence. Not all cameras were focused on the area where the incident transpired. In the footage that recorded images of the defendant and the victim, physical obstructions prevented a continuous view of the incident.
What the gesture was is not discernable from the record. Williams’s testimony on the matter was: “[The victim] did his pockets like that,” and “[The defendant] did his pockets like that.”
After these statements were admitted, the judge gave a limiting instruction that it is the Commonwealth’s burden to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant made the statements and made them voluntarily, freely, and rationally.
According to the defendant, Williams assured him that the victim’s telephone calls were work related. The defendant returned the victim’s telephone call, only to get connected to an answering service. At some point, the victim telephoned the defendant and laughed and told him to stay out of his business. The defendant did not recall receiving a fifteen-minute telephone call from the victim three days before the stabbing.
The defendant’s stepfather testified on his behalf. He recalled that the defendant had fishing rods and tackle boxes and had used a pocket knife in 2006.
The defendant does not challenge the judge’s ruling that the victim’s hearsay statements on the recording were admissible as dying declarations and excited utterances.
The medical examiner’s internal examination discovered evidence of this stab wound.
The Commonwealth contends that the judge omitted a portion of the self-
The rule of law permits an exception: “[T]he right of self-defense ordinarily cannot be claimed by a person who provokes or initiates an assault unless that person withdraws in good faith from the conflict and announces his intention to retire” (emphasis added). Commonwealth v. Maguire,
In future cases, when a first aggressor or initial aggressor instruction is given in the context of self-defense we advise that the judge make clear that conduct involving only the use of nonthreatening words will not be sufficient to qualify a defendant as a first aggressor. So that no burden shifts to the defendant to prove justification of the exercise of force in self-defense, see Commonwealth v. Harrington,
