Thе defendant appeals his convictions of murder in the first degree and armed assault with intent to murder. He claims error with respect to the following matters: (1) the exclusion of evidence which allegedly tended to implicate another person in the murder; (2) the exclusion of the defendant’s proffered explanation of a statement elicited from him on cross-examination; (3) the admission in evidence of statements made by the defendant to the police following his arrest; (4) the reading to the deliberating jury of the stenographer’s notes of the testimony of three prosecution witnesses; (5) the jury instructions on the elements of malice and intent; and (6) the admission of allegedly confidential communications between the defendant and a psychologist. In addition, the defendant asks this court to order a new trial or reduce the verdict pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E, on the grounds that there was improper argument by the prosecutor and that there was substantial evidence of the defendant’s mental impairment. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the judgments.
*395 The evidence at trial tended to show that at approximately 10:30 p.m., on February 14, 1976, the defendant entered the apartment of his girl friend, Emily Kincaid, found her in bed with another woman, and shot them both. Emily was killed, and the other woman, Donna Lucas, was seriously wounded. Donna Lucas testified at trial but could only give a general description of the assailant, who was apparently masked, and could not identify thе defendant. Among the witnesses for the Commonwealth was Charles St. Jean, a neighbor of the defendant. He testified that at 9 p.m., on February 14 the defendant came to St. Jean’s apartment and asked to borrow St. Jean’s .22 caliber derringer. The defendant took the gun and eight bullets, and before leaving fired one shot into the wall. The spent projectile recovered from the wall of St. Jean’s apartment had markings that were similar to those found on the projectiles recovered from Emily Kincaid’s body. St. Jean also testified that the following day the defendant came to his apartment with the gun looking “white and really jumpy,” and told him that “[h]e blew his girl friend away, and a guy that was with her in bed.” St. Jean then told the defendant to take the gun and the bullets and lеave. The gun was never recovered.
Mr. Paul Conley, an attorney who was employed as a staff psychologist at the Dimock Community Health Center, and who was an acquaintance of the defendant, also testified for the Commonwealth. 1 Mr. Conley testified that on the afternoon of February 15, 1976 (the day after the murder), the defendant telephoned him at his home and said that he was thinking of committing suicide by taking an overdose of drugs. When asked why he was planning to kill himself, the defendant indicated to Mr. Conley that he had found his girl friend in bed with another woman and that he had killed them both. At Mr. Conley’s suggestion, the defendant went that evening to Mr. Conley’s home to talk. *396 There the defendant again told Mr. Conley that he had shot his girl friend and another woman, and said that the shooting had occurred on the previous evening at 10:15 p.m. After they discussed the situation for several hours, the defendant returned to his apartment, and a few hours later he swallowed approximately seventy antihistamine pills. The following morning the defendant again called Mr. Conley, and Mr. Conley arranged to have the defendant go to the Harvard Community Health Center. From there he was transferred to Glenside Hospital for psychiatric treatment. A mental health worker at the hospital, John Schafer, testified that during the defendant’s stay at the hospital the defendant told him “he had killed his girl friend and her friend was a vegetable.” There was also testimony given by an emergency medical technician, Thomas Seeley, who acсompanied the defendant to Glenside Hospital. Seeley testified that, when the defendant was asked why he was going to the hospital, he replied, “I am going to beat it,” and that the defendant asked him whether if he “told a shrink that he had committed a crime, would the shrink in turn have to notify the police department.”
The defendant took the stand and denied that he had shot Emily Kincaid or Donna Lucas. He stated that on the evening of the murder, he went to a drugstore to look at magazines, took a walk, and went to bed. The next morning he went to Emily Kincaid’s apartment, saw the bodies of the two women, and left. He admitted to having a key to the apartment at the time. He testified that he then went to St. Jean’s apartment in order to borrow a gun to kill someone; however, he left without the gun. The defendant admitted talking to St. Jean, Mr. Conley, the emergency medical technician, and the mental health worker, but he denied making the admissions that they attributed to him.
1. Evidence Tending to Implicate Another Person in the Crime.
The defendant sought to have Paul Kincaid, who was Emily’s estranged husband at the time of the murder, testify as to certain telephone conversations between Paul and *397 Emily. Paul would have testified that Emily, on several occasions during the two or three weeks prior to the murder, telephoned Paul and stated that one O’Brien would not leave her apartment and was threatening her, and that she asked Paul to help her in ejecting him. The Commonwealth objected on the ground that the testimony was inadmissible as a husband-wife conversation, and the judge excluded it on that ground. See G. L. c. 233, § 20. Also excluded was Paul’s testimony that, when Sergeant Griffin, an investigating officer, told Paul of his wife’s murder, Paul stated that he would “take care of” O’Brien, and “get that son of a bitch.”
With respect to the conversations between Emily and Paul Kincaid, the defendant argues that the Commonwealth failed to show that the conversations were private, and that the burden of proving that a husband and wife conversation was private rests on the objecting party. Cf. K.B. Hughes, Evidence § 125, at 109 & n.33 (1961). We need not decide this issue, for even if we assume that the ground relied on by the judge was erroneous, we conclude that the evidence was not admissible for other reasons, stated below. It is the general rule that no error will be found when an incorrect specific objection is sustained, if some other proper ground for exclusion exists.
Rubin
v.
Arlington,
*398 The evidence of what Emily said to Paul on the telephone was inadmissible hearsay. The defendant does not call to our attention any exception to the hearsay rule that might apply here, and we find none. 3 The statements made by Emily to Paul were also excludable on relevanсy grounds for the same reasons that we discuss below in relation to Paul Kincaid’s statement to Sergeant Griffin.
The statements made by Paul Kincaid to Sergeant Griffin when he was told of his wife’s murder, that he would “take care of” O’Brien, were properly excluded as irrelevant and tending to mislead the jury.
4
The conclusion to be drawn from those statements, that Paul suspected O’Brien as the murderer, would have no tendency to prove that O’Brien was actually the murderer. See
Commonwealth
v.
Vitello,
The defendant argues that the exclusion of the evidence concerning O’Brien deprived him of the opportunity to
*399
present his defense, thereby denying him a fair trial. In support of this argument he cites various cases holding that a defendant may introduce evidence to show that another person committed the crime. E.g.,
Commonwealth
v.
Keizer,
2. The Defendant’s Explanation of His Testimony Elicited on Cross-examination.
On cross-examination the defendant testified that he told St. Jean that he wanted to borrow his gun to kill someone. When the prosecutor asked whom he had said he wanted to kill, the defendant answered “Tom O’Brien.” The defendant then admitted that he had never met O’Brien, and the prosecutor asked, “So you wanted to kill a person you had never met? Is that right?” The defendant answered, “That is correct.” On redirect the defendant attempted to *400 explain that he had said this to St. Jean because he had been told by Emily Kincaid that O’Brien had threatened her. The testimony was excluded, and the defendant’s rights were saved.
We agree with the defendant that he should have been permitted to explain his statement. It is well established that a witness may explain, modify, or correct damaging testimony that was elicited on cross-examination.
Commonwealth
v.
Ferreira,
Although we conclude that the exclusion of the defendant’s explanation offered on redirect examination was improper, we nevertheless think that in the circumstances the error was harmless. Because the judge had earlier excluded the evidence of O’Brien’s alleged involvement in the murder, the defendant’s testimony related to a subject that was wholly collateral to the issue then being tried. Compare Commonwealth v. Fatalo, supra; Commonwealth v. Smith, supra. The defendant’s testimony was also contradicted by St. Jean’s account of the conversation, and in general was not such as to inspire belief. Moreover, the evidence of the defendant’s guilt was substantial. We therefore conclude that any prejudice to the defendant arising from this error would not have affected the result.
*401 3. Statements Made to the Police Following the Arrest.
The defendant was arrested in his apartment on February 23, 1976. On the way to the police station he answered questions about his activities on the weekend of the murder. At trial he unsuccessfully sought to exclude this evidence.
The defendant first claims that his rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution were violated when the police failed to secure the presence of his attorney prior to questioning him after his arrest. The police had been in contact with the defendant’s attorney on two occasions in the week preceding the arrest, and on the earlier occasion (six days prior to the arrest), the attorney had told them that the defendant did not wish to speak to the police at that time.
The attorney’s statement to the police six days prior to the arrest cannot reasonably be construed to apply to the day of the arrest. If a suspect is not in custody, a refusal to speak to the police does not thereby insulate him from all police interrogation for the indefinite future. The record does not indicate that the attorney or the defendant asked that the attorney’s presence be secured at the time of the arrest. Compare
Escobedo
v.
Illinois,
*402
The defendant next contends that his statements to the police should have been suppressed because they were obtained in a manner contrary to the requirements of
Miranda
v.
Arizona,
Although the issue is a close one, we conclude that it was not error to admit the defendant’s statements in evidence. The defendant contends that his failure to respond to the question read to him from the Miranda card constitutes an expression of a desire to remain silent, and that the police did not scrupulously honor this desire when they proceeded to question him in the car. He correctly states the law that, when an individual has indicated a desire to remain silent or consult an attorney, any questioning must cease,
Miranda
v.
Arizona,
If it were determined that a wish to remain silent had been expressed, we might agree with the defendant that a violation of his Fifth Amendment rights would be demonstrated. Where a desire to remain silent was made known to the police, it is infrequent that a valid waiver of constitutional rights will be found when only a short interval existed between the time when a defendant asserted his right to terminate questioning and the time when interrogation was subsequently resumed.
7
In the instant case, however, where there was no indication that the defendant wanted not to be questioned, we think that the Commonwealth’s burden of proving a knowing and intelligent waiver of rights is somewhat lighter. To be sure, the burden remains a heavy one.
Miranda
v.
Arizona,
When the defendant was arrested, he did not appear to be intoxicated or upset. He asked to see the arrest warrants, and, when presented with them, he examined them. Most important, however, is the fact that in response to certain questions hе “took the Fifth Amendment” and refused to answer. Likewise, when asked if he wanted to take a polygraph test, the defendant responded that he first wanted to consult an attorney. We think that this selective assertion of Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights exhibits a knowing and intelligent decision to waive those rights as to the questions that he did answer. When an individual “takes the Fifth Amendment” as to certain questions and voluntarily answers other questions, the conclusion is almost inescapable that the answers are made with full knowledge of the right to remain silent. Similarly, the defendant’s refusal to take a polygraph test without first consulting an attorney suggests that he understood his right to the assistance of counsel. We conclude that, in the circumstances of this case, the Commonwеalth has met its burden of proving that the defendant “knowingly and intelligently waived his privilege against self-incrimination.” Miranda, supra.
4. The Reading of Testimony to the Jury.
After the jury had deliberated for some time, they requested to hear the testimony of three witnesses, St. Jean, Seeley, and Schafer, regarding the conversations that they had with the defendant. Over the objection of the defendant, the judge allowed the entire testimony of the three witnesses to be read to the jury. After the testimony was read, the judge cautioned the jury not to give that testimony any *405 added emphasis. 8 The defendant contends that it was error to allow the testimony to be read, on the ground that undue emphasis was placed on that part of the Commonwealth’s case.
The issue is one of first impression in this Commonwealth. In
Commonwealth
v.
Ricketson,
5. The Instructions to the Jury.
The defendant argues that the judge’s charge to the jury improperly shifted to the defendant the burden of proof with respect to the element of malice, contrary to the law as stated in
Sandstrom
v.
Montana,
In a number of recent cases we have confronted the issue whether a particular jury charge impermissibly shifted to the defendant the burden of disproving malice.
10
In the instant case, no objection was made at trial to the charge on malice. We address the defendant’s claim, however, pursuant to our broad powers under G. L. c. 278, § 33E. In other cases we have said that our expectations of the judge in charging the jury and of counsel in raising appropriate objections will differ depending on whether the constitu
*407
tional principles governing the issue were developed at the time thе charge was given.
Commonwealth
v.
Chasson,
The sole issue at trial was the identity of the murderer. “The record reveals ‘no issue of justification, mitigation, or lack of intent on the part of the perpetrator.’ ”
Commonwealth
v.
Pisa,
The defendant also claims that the jury charge on the intent element of thе indictment charging assault with intent to murder unconstitutionally shifted the burden of proof to him. However, as we have stated, the only issue seriously disputed by the parties was the identity of the assailant. The defendant cannot now argue error on the basis of a theory that was not presented at trial. Commonwealth v. Lee, supra at 512.
6. The Communications Between the Defendant and Mr. Conley.
Over the objection of the defendant, the judge allowed Mr. Conley to testify as to the conversations he had with the defendant on February 15 and 16, 1976. The defendant now claims that the testimony should have been excluded on the basis of G. L. c. 233, § 20B, or, alternatively, on the basis of 42 U.S.C. § 4582 (1976). We disagree.
General Laws c. 233, § 20B, grants to a “patient” the privilege of preventing a witness from disclosing any communications made between himself and his “psychotherapist.” A “рsychotherapist” is defined under the statute as “a person licensed to practice medicine who devotes a substantial portion of his time to the practice of psychiatry or a person who is licensed as a psychologist by the board of registration of psychologists; provided that such person has a doctoral degree in the field of psychology.” G. L. c. 233, § 20B, as amended by St. 1977, c. 817. Mr. Conley was not
*409
licensed to practice psychiatry or psychology, nor did he have a doctoral degree in either field. Although he was educated in the field of psychology, and was employed at the Dimock Community Health Center as a staff psychologist, this is not sufficient to qualify him as a “psychotherapist” within the meaning of G. L. c. 233, § 20B. The patient-psychotherapist privilege has never been recognized at common law.
Commonwealth
v.
Gordon,
The defendant nevertheless argues that Mr. Conley was an agent for a psychiatrist who worked at the center. However, § 20B provides that a patient may prevent a witness from disclosing “any communication, wherever made,
between said patient and a psychotherapist
relative to the diagnosis or treatment of the patient’s mental or emotional condition” (emphasis supplied). The statute defines “patient” as “a person who, during the course of diagnosis or treatment, communicates
with
a psychotherapist” (emphasis supplied). We agree with the reasoning of the Appeals Court in
Commonwealth
v.
Clemons,
The defendant also alleges that the disclosure of his communications violated Federal law, 42 U.S.C. § 4582 (1976). See also 21 U.S.C. § 1175 (1976). Those provisions create a limited confidentiality for records of the “identity, diagnosis, prognosis, or treatment of any patient” which are maintained in connection with the performance of any alcohol or drug abuse program regulated or assisted by the Federal government. 21 U.S.C. § 1175(a) (1976) (relating to programs for drug abuse). 42 U.S.C. § 4582(a) (1976) (relating to programs for alcohol abuse). It was stipulated at trial that the Dimock Center, which employed Mr. Conley, was federally funded and therefore subject to the Federal regulations interpreting these laws. 12
The regulations promulgated pursuant to §§ 1175 and 4582 define “patient” as “any individual (whether referred to as a patient, client, or otherwise) who has applied for or been given diagnosis or treatment for drug abuse оr alcohol abuse . . . .” 42 C.F.R. § 2.11(i) (1981). The facts of this case indicate that the defendant was not a “patient” at the center when he made the incriminating statements to Mr. Conley. Although there was some suggestion that the defendant had problems with alcohol, he never participated in any program at the Dimock Center, and there is no showing that prior to the conversations he ever received treatment at the center with respect to alcohol or drug related problems. The defendant became acquainted with Mr. Conley as a student at a course taught by Mr. Conley at Middlesex Community College, which does not appear to have any affiliation with the Dimock Center. The defendant called Mr. Conley at his home, and was subsequently admitted to the Harvard Community Health Center and *411 later to the Glenside Hospital. Although Mr. Conley testified that the Dimock Center was closed when the defendant called and that otherwise he would have asked the defendant to come to the Dimock Center for psychiatric evaluation, we do not consider Mr. Conley’s intentions to be material. If anyone’s intentions here are material, they are the defendant’s, and the record does not disclose any intent on his part to become a patient at the Dimock Center. The defendant’s stated purpose in calling Mr. Conley was to ask if the beneficiary of a life insurance policy could obtain benefits if the death was caused by suicide. In short, it appears that when the defendant called Mr. Conley in search of psychiatric help, he was calling him as a teacher and an acquaintance, not as an employee of the Dimock Center. 13
7. Review Pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E.
The defendant asks this court to exercise its broad powers of review under § 33E to grant a new trial or reduce the verdict to murder in the second degree. See
Commonwealth
v.
Tavares,
No objection was made to the allegedly improper portion of the prosecutor’s argument. Our inquiry is therefore limited to determining whether the statements, when viewed against the background of the entire case, were so prejudicial as to result in a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.
Commonwealth
v.
Valliere,
The evidence of the defendant’s mental impairment was also not such as to warrant the exercise of our § 33E powers. 15 The defendant did not claim any lack of criminal responsibility. He did not offer expert testimony as to his mental condition at the time of the murder. What testimony there was on the subject related to his mental condition after *413 the murder, and even that evidence fell far short of suggesting that he was incapable of deliberate premeditation. 16 Upon reviewing the entire case pursuant to our duty under § 33E, we conclude that it would be inappropriate to order a new trial or reduce the verdict.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Mr. Conley was admitted to the Bar after the events to which he testified and prior to the time of trial.
McGivern
v.
Steele,
No effort was made at trial to qualify the statements as spontaneous exclamations, or even as present sense imрressions (the latter not having been recognized in Massachusetts law). The statutory exception for statements of deceased persons does not apply to criminal cases.
Commonwealth
v.
Gallo,
The evidence was excluded on a general objection made by the Commonwealth. The defendant at trial did not rely on any particular theory of admissibility, and on appeal he now contends that the evidence was admissible to prove the state of mind of Paul Kincaid, or, in the alternative, that the evidence was admissible as a spontaneous exclamation. In light of our holding, we need not address these arguments. See
H.E. Fletcher Co.
v.
Commonwealth,
The defendant testified on voir dire that he had requested to see his attorney immediately after he was given the Miranda warning. Although the trial judge did not make any findings of fact, the defendant in his brief states the facts, as to this event, according to the version given by the police, and we accept that version as true.
There was also evidence that the defendant had been drinking beer on the afternoon of the arrest. Sergeant Griffin, however, did not recall that he had observed any sign of intoxication on the defendant, and the defendant’s testimony did not tend to refute this. The evidence is thus insufficient to support a finding that the defendant’s mental capacity was impaired at the time of the arrest.
The testimony of Sergeant Angelo LaMоnica, who gave the defendant the Miranda warning, suggests that the question, “do you wish to talk to us now,” was recited from the standardized card without the expectation of a reply.
E.g.,
Edwards
v.
Arizona,
The judge instructed the jury as follows: “[The court reporter] has read back to you those portions of the testimony requested by you. Of course, it’s your recollection of what was said on the witness stand when the witnesses were present that would warrant your attention, and that you will not give any added emphasis because I have allowed this examination and cross examination to be read back to you, because it is the most recent thing you’ve heard. You will, of course, consider in your deliberations all of the evidence that you feel is warranted in your opinions, and you will give that evidence which you heard such weight as you feel is warranted in your deliberations.”
Because we do not reach the merits of the defendant’s constitutional claim here, it is unnecessary to reproduce in full the judge’s charge to the jury on the element of malice. Ordinarily, though, “ [a] jury charge must be considered as a whole, not by bits and pieces.”
Commonwealth
v.
Gibson,
Commonwealth
v.
Drayton, ante
39, 53 (1982).
Commonwealth
v.
Palmer, ante
35 (1982).
Commonwealth
v.
Bradshaw,
Rule 503 (a) of the Proposed Massachusetts Rules of Evidence might well produce a different result in this case, inasmuch as it defines “psychotherapist” as “ (i) a person authorized to practice medicine in any state or nation, or reasonably believed by the patient so to be, while engaged in the diagnosis or treatment of a mental or emotional condition, including alcohol or drug addiction, or (ii) a person licensed or certified in any category as a psychologist or social worker under the laws of any state or nation, or reasonably believed by the patient so to be, while similarly engaged” (emphasis supplied).
The record does not indicate whether the Dimock Community Health Center was subject to both of the Federal statutes or to only one of them. This makes no difference, however, since the statutes are similar in all material respects, and are both interpreted by the same set of regulations. 42 C.F.R. §§ 2.1 - 2.67-1 (1981).
There was evidence that, at the time of thе arrest, the defendant told the police that “Paul [Conley] was a good friend and a teacher and he went [to Conley’s home] to discuss radios and insurance.”
Donna Lucas had testified that her assailant wore a green Army-type jacket. The defendant on cross-examination stated that he wore a Navy pea coat on the day after the murder, but subsequently admitted to owning an olive-colored Army jacket. The prosecutor in his argument to the jury stated: “I asked him on cross examination . . . ‘Do you have such a jacket?’ ‘Yes, I have.’ Then he tried to cover it up by saying that he had a pea coat . . . .” Although the chronology of the testimony as stated by the prosecutor differed from the actual chronology аt trial, the prosecutor’s version was no more damaging than a correct statement of the evidence would have been. This suggests that the prosecutor’s error was unintentional. The defendant also argues that the inference that there was a “cover-up” was unfair. Although the inference is at best a weak one, we do not find it to be unfair. See generally
Commonwealth
v.
Earltop,
Similar arguments based on
Commonwealth
v.
Gould,
The evidence of mental impairment consisted primarily of the defendant’s unsuccessful attempt at suicide by swallowing seventy antihistamine pills, and his subsequent suicidal thoughts while at the Glenside Hospital. The defendant himself, however, states that his suicidal thoughts were most likely a reaction to Emily’s murder. We must therefore reject his assertion that this evidence is indicative of a state of mental impairment existing at the time of the murder.
