Aftеr an altercation at a Revere bar, the defendant revisited the scene with a gun looking for two of the participants in the fight. One of them, the victim, John Maragni, crossed the street towards the defendant’s vеhicle. Observers heard a loud noise and then saw the victim col
In his appeal, he claims error in the exclusion of statements made by him to a Denver police officеr following his arrest and in the failure of the jury to reconvene prior to commencing deliberations in violation of Mass. R. Crim. P. 20(e)(2),
1. Statements in Denver. After a voir dire, Sergeant Hildebrant of the Denver police department, a witness fоr the Commonwealth, gave the following testimony at trial. Alerted by a detective from the Revere police department that the defendant was wanted for first degree murder and that his woman companiоn had requested money to be sent to Denver, Hildebrant and other members of the Denver police force found and arrested the defendant. He offered no resistance and, although he originally gave a different name, when asked if he was Lawrence Hearn, he acknowledged that he was. He was taken to the homicide unit at police headquarters where Hildebrant, after making a call to Revеre police, gave the defendant his Miranda warnings. The defendant stated that he understood them and, asked whether he wanted to make a statement, said that he did. He signed a form acknowledging that he understood his rights and also signed another part of the form indicating that he wished to make a statement. Hildebrant then had a discussion with the defendant about what had happened in Revere, and the defendant later participated in a videotape interview pertaining to the incident. No portion of the statement or the videotape was offered in evidence.
The substance of the statement had been elicited at the voir dire prior tо Hildebrant’s trial testimony. The defendant had told Hildebrant that there had been an altercation at a bar, a white man had made racial remarks, and the defendant had been “beat up” and thrown to the floor. After the bartender helped him out, he went to his ex-wife’s home, obtained a gun and drove back to the bar. As one of the persons involved in the incident approached his car, he held the gun up to scare him. At that point, his foot slipped off the clutch, the car lurched and the gun went off. He then went to his woman friend’s house, and they left the Commonwealth, going first to Florida, then to Chicago and Nebraska, and, ultimately, tо Denver.
As indicated earlier, the Commonwealth objected to the admission of the statement on hearsay grounds. See Commonwealth v. Stewart,
After reviewing the officer’s testimony that had been heard by the jury, the judge found that no part of the statement was in evidence, and there were no “words used that might have characterized the statement.” On this basis, she ruled
There was no error in the exclusion. The doctrine of verbal completeness, as explаined in Commonwealth v. Watson,
Moreover, the jury were not likely to infer that the excluded statement was inculpatory. This case is to be contrasted with Commonwealth v. Riveiro,
Another argument made by the defendant on appeal is that the statement was admissible as a declaration against penal interest. This argument was not raised at trial and we examine the exclusion only to see if there was a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. We conclude there was no error, let alone such a risk.
The difficulty with the defendant’s argument is that the statement does not meet the requirements expressed in Rule 804(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Evidence (1985), the substance of which was adopted for Massachusetts in Common
At least two of the requirements were not met.
In addition, there are not corroborating сircumstances indicating that the statement was trustworthy. The only evidence that the gun went off accidentally was the defendant’s second version of the events given to his woman companion. The first version, which was told to her before he left Revere, was that he had been jumped by some men at a bar, that he left, obtained a gun and returned, and that he had shot one of them in the “face or head.” Only later did he tell hеr that the shooting was an accident. This second version is not the trustworthy corroboration required by the rule governing admissibility.
The defendant’s due process claims based on Chambers v. Mississippi,
2. Instructions on malice. The defendant’s pro se argument that the charge improperly created a presumption relieving the Commonwealth of its burden of рroof as to malice is not borne out by the record. Moreover, there was no objection to the instruction. The discussion of malice, when considered in the context of the charge as a wholе, particularly the discussion of manslaughter, did not create a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. See Commonwealth v. Libby,
In any event, the evidence that after the altercation, the defendant was heard to say that “I’ll be back,” that he went to his ex-mother-in-law’s house to get a gun, that he returned looking for the two men with whom he had fought, and that when one of them approached his car he was shot, leads us to conсlude that the error, if any, was harmless; the verdict would have been the same even if the judge’s instruction could be viewed as creating a presumption. See Yates v. Evatt, 111 S. Ct. 1884, 1893-1894 (1991). Contrary to the defendant’s claim, it is correct to instruct that malice does not require a showing of ill will. See Commonwealth v. Hodge, (No. 2),
3. Failure of the jury to reconvene in courtroom. After instructing the jury, the judge, noting that they had had a long day, permitted them to go home for the night. She failed to instruct them to reconvene in the courtroom, sеe Mass.R.Crim.P. 20(e)(2),
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
The defendant was also convicted оf unlawfully carrying a firearm.
The prosecutor explained that he wanted Hildebrant’s testimony to set forth the circumstances of the arrest, cf. Commonwealth v. Perez,
We need not consider whether a defendant who chooses not to testify is unavailable. See United States v. Evans,
That provision reads as follows:
“(2) After Submission of the Cause. Unless the jurors have been sequestered for the duration of the trial, the judge after the final submission of the case, may order that the jurors be permitted to*713 separate for a definite time to be fixed by the judge and then reconvene in the courtroom before retiring for consideration of their verdict.”
