The evidence most favorable to the Commonwealth established that, in the late afternoon of June 26,
The defendant was charged with two counts of motor vehicle homicide. G. L. c. 90, § 24G(b). In a jury trial, he was found not guilty of motor vehicle homicide, but he was convicted of one count of the lesser-included offense set out in G. L. c. 90, § 24(2)(a), reckless operation of a motor vehicle or, alternatively, operating negligently so as to endanger the lives or safety of the public. This appeal followed.
The defendant claims that under G. L. c. 90, § 24(2)(a), “operat[ing] a motor vehicle recklessly” and operating a motor vehicle “negligently so that the lives or safety of the public might be endangered” are separate, distinct grounds for prosecution. On that basis, the defendant claims the judge erred in not requiring unanimity upon which theory the jury based their conviction.
We disagree. A juror finding the defendant’s operation of his motor vehicle to be reckless implicitly must also have found his operation to be negligent so as to endanger the lives or safety of the public, because only a finding of ordinary negligence is required under the statute. See Commonwealth v. Rand,
Additionally, the defendant claims that the judge’s instruction defining “reckless conduct” was in error. He argued that the words “likelihood of substantial harm,” used by the judge in the charge, were not equivalent to the requested instruction of “risk of serious bodily injury or death.”
However, we need not determine whether the phrase “likelihood of substantial harm” is the equivalent of the requested instruction. The instruction on reckless conduct conveyed to the jury that to convict on the basis of reckless operation, they were required to find a heightened level of fault substantially in excess of ordinary negligence. Since only a finding of ordinary negligence was required to convict under the statute, the instruction could not have prejudiced the defendant.
Furthermore, the defendant claims that there was insufficient evidence from which the Commonwealth could establish that he operated the vehicle recklessly or negligently so as to endanger the lives or safety of the public.
The jury could have found the following: the defendant accelerated his truck to a rate of fifty-seven miles per hour as he approached the intersection
We find no merit to the defendant’s remaining argument that it was an error for the judge to have excluded his grand jury testimony. The defendant, having made himself “unavailable” at trial by invoking his privilege under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution against self-incrimination, could not claim his prior testimony was excepted from the hearsay rule. See Commonwealth v. Trigones,
We are inclined to follow the view proffered by several of the Federal Circuit Courts of Appeal that a defendant cannot “create[] his own unavailability by invoking his [Fjifth [Ajmendment privilege against self-incrimination.” United States v. Kimball,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the Commonwealth’s evidence concerning the two other elements of G. L. c. 90, § 24(2)(a), that the defendant was operating the vehicle and did so on a public way. It is also unnecessary to address whether the evidence supported a finding of recklessness since, as the cited cases hold, negligence suffices under the statute.
The posted speed limit was thirty miles per hour.
