In October, 2007, after the Supreme Judicial Court’s adoption of the first complaint doctrine in Commonwealth v. King,
At trial, the victims’ mother testified as the Commonwealth’s designated first complaint witness with respect to Alice; however, the Commonwealth offered no first complaint witness as to Betty. The defendant now claims that the following additional complaint evidence was admitted erroneously: (1) the testimony of the victims’ mother concerning Betty’s appearance and behavior immediately after returning from the defendant’s house; (2) the testimony of the investigating police officer about her interviews of the victims and the actions that she took in response; and (3) the testimony of Betty that, upon
1. The mother’s testimony concerning Betty’s demeanor was “neither inadmissible hearsay nor first complaint evidence,” and was properly admitted. Id. at 846.
2. As to the police officer’s testimony, there was no substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. From the outset, the defendant’s strategy was to attack the victims’ credibility by showing that their original accounts to the police investigator differed from the accounts the jury would hear at trial. In fact, the defendant had the officer under summons and required her presence at the trial. Compare id. at 851. In particular, the defendant sought to exploit a discrepancy as to which victim was the first to spend the night at the defendant’s house. The defendant contended that if, as the victims originally told the investigator, it was Betty who went there first, the victims’ complaints were totally improbable — because ten year old Alice would have been sent over after Betty had returned upset and crying that she had been sexually assaulted.
3. As to Betty’s testimony, defense counsel “opened the door” in opening argument, when he referred to descriptions of Betty’s behavior upon returning home from the defendant’s house, i.e., how she made “a big deal out of it, yelling and screaming her complaint” in the presence of other members of the family. That said, the process leading to the admission of Betty’s testimony about her conversations with her mother and sister bears further discussion. This testimony was elicited not by the prosecutor but, rather, as a result of questions submitted by the jury, under the practice permitted by Commonwealth v. Britto,
The problem with this rationale, however, is that where the Commonwealth, for whatever reason, was not introducing the testimony of the known first complaint witness and was not seeking to offer a substitute, evidence of Betty’s disclosure to two other witnesses could not be used for the first complaint purpose of showing that she had not remained silent. See generally Commonwealth v. King,
In any case, we think that satisfying the jury’s desire for more information ordinarily should not trump a party’s deliberate choice as to how most effectively to present its case while avoiding the possibility of error. If, for example, a cautious prosecutor has decided to forgo a line of inquiry that would be helpful to the Commonwealth, the more prudent course is not to permit the jury to venture where the prosecutor has feared to tread.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
The victims’ names are pseudonyms.
The defendant’s wife had been involved in an accident and needed help minding her two young children.
At trial, the Commonwealth’s witnesses testified that Alice was the first to go to the defendant’s house and that she did not tell anyone about the defendant’s attack upon her until three years later, when she disclosed it to her mother.
We have considered the defendant’s remaining contentions concerning the impartiality of the judge, the jurors’ alleged “rush to judgment,” and the judge’s comments at sentencing. Substantially for the reasons stated in the Commonwealth’s brief, they are without merit and require no discussion.
