On November 17 1989, the defendant was found guilty on three indictments charging rape of a single victim. See G. L. c. 265, § 22 (6) (1990 ed.). Approximately one year after sentencing, he filed a motion for a new trial on
*655
the ground that he had been denied effective assistance of counsel.
1
See Mass. R. Crim. P. 30 (b),
1. Facts. On the evidence admitted, the jury could have found the following facts. On the night of May 10, 1989, the victim met the defendant, a man whom she did not know, at a bar in the Marriott Hotel in Burlington. They talked for approximately two hours and exchanged pieces of paper on which they had written their names, addresses, and telephone numbers. The victim declined the defendant’s invitation to return home with him, but she accepted his offer to accompany her to her automobile. It was raining. The victim’s automobile was parked at some distance from the hotel entrance. The defendant, whose automobile was parked in. a fire lane near the entrance, offered her a ride to her automobile. She accepted.
Once in the defendant’s automobile, the defendant began to kiss the victim over her objection. She started to cry. She indicated that she wanted the defendant to stop. The defendant then forced her to submit to two acts of unnatural sexual intercourse and one act of sexual intercourse. The defendant used threatening language and made vulgar remarks with sexual epithets pertaining to the victim.
Following these acts, the defendant put his arm around the victim. She embraced him so as to retrieve from his pocket the piece of paper on which she had written her name, ad *656 dress, and telephone number. The victim left the automobile. She went to her vehicle. She did not enter the hotel to inform anyone of the defendant’s attack, but proceeded instead to drive away.
On her way home, the victim was stopped for driving in excess of the speed limit by Reading police Officer James Collins. Initially, she did not inform Officer Collins that she had been raped, but, after he returned to his cruiser (without giving her a citation), she called him back to her automobile and told him that a man had forced her to have sexual intercourse. The victim accompanied the officer to the Reading police station, where she made a statement describing the details of the attack. Officer Collins then took the victim to a hospital, where a nurse, Patricia Normandin, took information concerning the attack.
2.
Fresh complaint doctrine.
During the prosecution’s case-in-chief, Collins and Normandin testified that the victim told them that she had been raped; they testified not only to the fact of the complaints but also to the details. The defendant concedes on appeal that this testimony was admissible under the fresh complaint doctrine,
2
but, noting the concerns we raised in
Commonwealth
v.
Lavalley,
*657
Under the fresh complaint doctrine, an out-of-court complaint seasonably made by the victim after a sexual assault is admissible as part of the prosecution’s case-in-chief.
5
Evidence of the complaint is admissible only to corroborate the complainant’s testimony; it cannot be presented to establish the truth of the complaint itself.
6
In Massachusetts, unlike most jurisdictions, a witness may testify to the fact of a complaint and also to the details of the complaint.
7
See
Lavalley, supra
at 643;
Commonwealth
v.
Bailey,
In Lavalley, we expressed concern regarding the fresh complaint doctrine. We stated that we were “troubled by a rule which assumes that only those victims who complain of rape were actually raped, while those who remain silent somehow consented to the sexual assault.” See Lavalley, supra at 646 n.7. We strongly disagree with the notion that a rape victim naturally will complain of an attack soon after it occurs. It is not difficult to understand a rape victim’s reluctance to discuss with others, particularly strangers, the uncomfortably specific details of a sexual attack. Additionally, a victim must endure the “[s]uspicion and disbelief’ with *658 which society greets those who allege sexual assault. See generally Taylor, Rape and Women’s Credibility: Problems of Recantations and False Accusations Echoed in the Case of Cathleen Crowell Webb and Gary Dotson, 10 Harv. Women’s L.J. 59, 59 (1987). Not surprisingly, many rape victims choose not to complain at all. In short, lack of a fresh complaint in no way necessarily implies lack of rape.
Troubled as we are by a doctrine which has its origins in outmoded, and invalid, sexual myths, we need not embrace those views to recognize the unfortunate skepticism that exists as to the truth of allegations of rape where the victim is perceived as having remained silent. “Whatever may have been the historical origin of the fresh complaint doctrine, it should now be seen in relation to the common observation . . . that juries tend toward considerable and perhaps inordinate skepticism in rape cases, above all where there is a suggestion of willingness or acquiescence on the part of the victim” (footnote omitted). Bailey, supra at 394. Thus, we continue to perceive a need for the fresh complaint doctrine. We cannot ignore the societal tendency to disbelieve sexual assault victims and to presume that a rape victim will make a prompt complaint. See H. Kalven, Jr., & H. Zeisel, The American Jury 249-254 (1966). Accordingly, we conclude that fresh complaint evidence should remain admissible “on the ground that a victim’s failure to make prompt complaint might be viewed by the jury as inconsistent with the charge of sexual assault . . . and in the absence of evidence of complaint the jury might assume that none was made” (citation omitted). Bailey, supra at 392. This rationale does not assume that only those rape victims who do make a fresh complaint are credible; it simply allows rape victims who do complain promptly to eliminate any unwarranted skepticism arising from lack of evidence of a prompt complaint.
Moreover, we shall continue to hold admissible both the fact and the details of a fresh complaint. When a witness is limited to testifying only that the victim made a complaint, the jury must rely on that witness’s interpretation of the victim’s statements. In our view, the better approach remains *659 one which allows a jury to make their own interpretation based on the details of the statements. “By allowing admissibility of all details, the [doctrine gives] the factfinder the maximum amount of information with which to assess the credibility of the . . . complaint evidence as well as the overall credibility of the victim.” Graham, The Cry of Rape: The Prompt Complaint Doctrine and the Federal Rules of Evidence, 19 Willamette L. Rev. 489, 511 (1983) (proposing such an amendment to the Federal Rules of Evidence). See generally Bailey, supra at 395. 8
In
Lavalley
we also expressed concern that repetitive testimony from several witnesses regarding the details of the complaint may lend undue credibility to the complainant’s testimony. See
Lavalley, supra
at 646 (concern that jury will treat details of complaint as substantive, rather than corroborative, evidence). See also
Cole
v.
State,
3.
Denial of motion for a new trial without hearing.
The defendant filed a motion for a new trial, accompanied by two affidavits, arguing that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. See Mass. R. Crim. P. 30 (b). The judge declined to hold a hearing and summarily denied the motion. The defendant appeals from the judge’s refusal to grant him a hearing. “The judge may rule on the issue or issues presented by [a] motion [for a new trial] on the basis of the facts alleged in the affidavits without further hearing if no substantial issue is raised by the motion or affidavits.” Mass. R. Crim. P. 30 (c) (3),
In order to prove ineffective assistance of counsel, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance fell “measurably below that which might be expected from an ordinary fallible lawyer,” and that this performance “likely deprived the defendant of an otherwise available, substantial ground of defence.”
Commonwealth
v.
Saferian,
The defendant has raised a substantial issue with regard to both elements of the
Saferian
test. If the defendant’s sworn allegations are true, his counsel failed to pursue adequately a consent defense, which was the only realistic defense in light of the strong evidence that the defendant and the complainant did have sexual intercourse on May 10, 1989. See
Commonwealth
v.
Haggerty,
While the defendant has raised a substantial issue, he has not yet proved that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. We remand the defendant’s motion for an evidentiary hearing, at which the defendant may present his own testimony and that of others who he believes should have been called as trial witnesses. See
Commonwealth
v.
Rosado,
4. Conclusion. We affirm the defendant’s convictions. We vacate the judge’s ruling on the motion for a new trial, and *663 we remand the motion to the Superior Court for an evidentiary hearing.
So ordered.
Notes
On February 27, 1990, the defendant was sentenced to three concurrent prison terms of from ten years to twenty years, three years to be served and the balance suspended. His motion for a new trial was entered on the docket on May 6, 1991.
The defendant does not argue that the complaints were insufficiently fresh. The victim made both of her statements within a few hours of the attack.
Our concerns focused primarily on the use of the Massachusetts rule allowing evidence beyond the fact of a fresh complaint, namely, the use of the details of the complaint, so as to pile on evidence which might “create [a] risk that the jury will use the details of the fresh complaints as substantive evidence that the crime actually occurred.”
Commonwealth
v.
Lavalley,
We note that in Lavalley, supra at 642, 646, there were five fresh complaint witnesses and a videotape recording of the victim’s statement of complaint to the police. There was no such “piling on” of that nature in this case.
The defendant did not object to the testimony of the two fresh complaint witnesses at trial. At the time of his trial, the fresh complaint doctrine was well established (we had not yet raised the concerns expressed in *657 Lavalley), and there was little question concerning the testimony’s admissibility. See note 2, supra. However, both parties now have briefed the issue fully, and we choose to reexamine the doctrine.
The complainant need not have been impeached, nor must the complaint have been a spontaneous utterance. See
Commonwealth
v.
Sherry,
“Corroborative testimony has been described as ‘testimony which tends to strengthen, confirm or make more certain the testimony of another witness.’”
Commonwealth
v.
Gardner,
The rule in the majority of jurisdictions is that, when the complainant has not been impeached and when the complaint is not a spontaneous utterance, see note 8,
infra,
only the fact of the complaint is admissible during the prosecution’s case-in-chief. For a list of cases from other jurisdictions, see
Lavalley, supra
at 643 n.4. Among the States with rules similar to our own are Connecticut, see
State
v.
Pollitt,
While a majority of States allow only the facts, and not the details, of a fresh complaint to be admitted in evidence during the prosecution’s case, many of these States’ evidentiary rules allow the admission of the details on other grounds. Many jurisdictions that claim to admit only the fact of the complaint also admit enough details to reveal the nature of the complaint. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Campbell,
It should be noted that, under our rule, only those details to which the victim has testified generally at trial are admissible as corroboration by way of evidence of a prior fresh complaint.
Commonwealth
v.
Kirouac,
The judge in this case gave both timely and correct limiting instructions to the jury.
The defendant argues that he was deprived of his rights under both the State and Federal Constitutions. We need only evaluate trial counsel’s performance under the State constitutional standards set forth in
Saferian,
