24 Mass. App. Ct. 142 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1987
Paradiso was indicted for the rape and murder, on August 12, 1979, of Marie B. Iannuzzi (the victim). On July 21, 1984, Paradiso was found guilty of second-degree murder and of assault with intent to rape. From his life sentence on the murder conviction and from his consecutive sentence of eighteen to twenty years on the other conviction, Paradiso appealed. The judge denied a motion for a new trial in February, 1986, and subsequently denied a motion to reconsider. An appeal from those denials is also before us. The appeals have been consolidated.
On Saturday, August 11, 1979, the victim had gone to a wedding reception. There she and her “boyfriend,” David Doyle, had an argument. He went home. She then went to a party at the house of the bridegroom’s family, which Paradiso also attended. The victim drank at that party. Later a witness saw her drinking at a bar in East Boston about 11 p.m. and also sometime after that the witness saw her there talking with Paradiso. Another witness saw the victim leave with Paradiso. The victim’s body was discovered on Sunday, August 12, at the edge of a tidal river in Saugus. An autopsy revealed that she had suffered some bruises, that intact sperm remained in her vagina and that she probably had died in the early morning of the twelfth.
Even prior to the indictments suspicion was directed to Paradiso. The latter (and his “girlfriend,” Candace Weyant) each told a story (but see note 2, infra) to the police essentially that Weyant had driven the victim from the party to. the East Boston bar, that Weyant then had returned to the party, that later she, Paradiso, and the victim all had been at the bar at the same time, that the victim left the bar finally about the
1. Paradise’s present counsel’s brief raises as its principal contention that Paradiso was denied the effective assistance of trial counsel. See Commonwealth v. Saferian, 366 Mass. 89, 96-99 (1974); Commonwealth v. Fuller, 394 Mass. 251, 255-261 (1985). A brief filed by Paradiso also discusses this issue.
(a) Paradiso’s present counsel first contends that trial counsel should have prevented the introduction in evidence of incriminating statements made by Paradiso to one Robert Bond in late 1982, while both were being held at Charles Street jail. Bond was then awaiting trial for a wholly unrelated murder and was convicted of second-degree murder while Paradiso was still at the jail, a conviction later reversed. See Commonwealth v. Bond, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 396, S.C. 391 Mass. 1103 (1984). At the time of Paradiso’s trial in 1984, Bond was awaiting retrial. Bond and Paradiso had known each other in 1975 when they had been serving sentences for earlier convictios at M.C.I., Cedar Junction. Bond testified that, after his conviction on December 13, 1982, he had numerous conversations at Charles Street jail with Paradiso in which Paradiso admitted the murder of the victim and of another woman and told Bond a story which varied in important respects from the account given by both Paradiso and Weyant to the police, already described above. Bond’s different account is summarized in the margin.
In Commonwealth v. Festa, 388 Mass. 513, 516 (1983), and in Commonwealth v. Boutwell, 21 Mass. App. Ct. 201, 207-209 (1985), it was held that the failure of an attorney to file a particular motion or motions involves no violation of the Saferian standard (366 Mass. at 96) where the record does not disclose any basis for filing such a motion. We think that is the situation in the present case. Defense counsel could have had no reasonable expectation of suppressing or excluding Bond’s testimony.
(b) Despite contentions to the contrary for Paradiso, his trial counsel did attempt (by a pretrial motion) to suppress the testimony of Ralph A. Pisa about an admission made to Pisa by Paradiso, principally on the ground that the admission was subject to an attorney-client privilege. We conclude that what was done did not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.
Paradiso and Pisa had met while each of them was serving a sentence at M.C.I., Norfolk, in September, 1976. At that time, they had many conversations. Pisa, who had for himself and others become somewhat proficient in criminal law matters (see Commonwealth v. Pisa, 372 Mass. 590, cert. denied, 434 U.S. 869 [1977]; Pisa v. Commonwealth, 378 Mass. 724 [1979]; Commonwealth v. Pisa, 384 Mass. 362 [1981]), prepared some motions for Paradiso (about 1976) in connection with an appeal from a conviction for which Paradiso was then confined. Pisa, himself, had been represented in at least one of his appeals by a lawyer, Mr. John Cavicchi, for whom, in other cases, Pisa had done some research and brief writing for compensation. Pisa had referred to Mr. Cavicchi other inmates who were looking for a lawyer, but for this Mr. Cavicchi did not pay him. It was stated at the motion hearing in March, 1984, that Mr. Cavicchi had represented Pisa for seven years and had been attorney for Paradiso in the early stages of the investigation of this murder, but had never entered an appearance for Paradiso after his arraignment.
Paradiso, when he left, asked Pisa to go to the door with him to look at his truck. At the door, Paradiso asked Pisa for help with respect “to an indictment that he was going to receive” in the victim’s case. Paradiso said “that he had short money” and wanted Pisa’s help in getting Mr. Cavicchi to represent him. Pisa replied, “You’d have to peddle . . . a lot of fish to get a good attorney.” Paradiso answered, “This is no joke. I killed the Iannuzzi broad, and I’m in serious trouble and I need representation .... It’s an easy case, and there’s no witnesses .... [I]t should be simple to handle.” Pisa said he “would do what [he] could.” In January, 1980, Paradiso called Pisa (by then back in confinement serving his sentence) to tell him that he had consumed a “few drinks” on Christmas Eve. He reminded Pisa that while in jail he “had a family out there” and “should keep his mouth shut” about the Iannuzzi case.
Pisa’s testimony at trial in July, 1984, was very much the same as his pretrial testimony (summarized by the judge, see
(c) It is argued that the prosecutor’s summation included remarks which went beyond “acceptable argument.” There was no objection by defense trial counsel to the prosecutor’s argument beyond a statement during the post argument bench conference, where defense trial counsel said, “I certainly find no fault with my brother’s argument. . . . [Wjhile I’m agreeing with . . . [the prosecutor] that the . . . [victim’s] family is entitled to justice . . ., I have seen instructions where ... a dispassionate
The assistant district attorney’s summation largely was devoted to the credibility of the significant witnesses in a case where at least one principal issue related to the credibility (1) of Weyant, whose testimony, if believed, would have established that she was with Paradise until 2 a.m. on Sunday, August 12, 1979, and (2) of Bond, whose testimony about Paradiso’s 1982 disclosures to him at the Charles Street jail contained admissions of detailed facts which Bond (as this record strongly indicates) in all probability could not have learned from any other source than Paradiso himself.
Paradiso’s present attorney picks out of context from the prosecutor’s argument isolated passages as the basis of his contention that the summation was improper. As parts of the prosecutor’s whole analysis of the evidence (particularly that bearing upon the relative credibility to be accorded by the jury to the testimony of Bond and to that of Weyant), the arguments were appropriate.
2. In his brief Paradiso contends that he should have been granted a new trial and also an evidentiary hearing on his motion for a new trial. We perceive no respect in which the original trial was infected with any constitutional error. See Commonwealth v. Sullivan, 385 Mass. 497, 503 (1982). Thus we treat the issues of (a) what evidentiary hearing should be granted and (b) the denial of a new trial as matters within the sound discretion of the motion judge, also the trial judge, who was thoroughly familiar with all phases of the case in 1984
3. One contention in behalf of Paradiso is that the prosecution failed to disclose at trial the inducements which might have led Pisa to testify as he did. As had been stated, Pisa was cross-examined diligently at trial by defense counsel on the matter of inducements to him.
The Commonwealth very frankly disclosed at trial its prior discussions with Pisa. Compare the conduct adversely criticized in Commonwealth v. Collins, 386 Mass. 1, 11-15 (1982), and in Commonwealth v. Johnson, 21 Mass. App. Ct. 28, 40-42 (1985). It was known, of course, at trial in July, 1984, that, after Pisa testified at the motion to suppress on March 12, 1984, he had been released from custody the next day pending a decision on his own motion for a new trial.
The motives for Pisa’s testimony at trial in July, 1984, should be judged as of that time even though the Commonwealth over five months later on January 3, 1985, ceased to oppose (as it had before Paradiso’s trial) Pisa’s motion for a new trial in his own case in Middlesex county.
4. Paradise’s new counsel also contends that affidavits filed by him required that a new trial be granted. The trial judge could consider properly that one of them contained matter that could have been shown at trial; that one affidavit was by the operator of the East Boston bar who was actually present at trial but not called as a witness; that one affiant (also not called as a witness at trial) charged a witness at trial with discrepancies in her pretrial statements, a charge which the affiant had made
It should be noted also that the trial judge found “no substance to the allegation . . . [Paradiso] had ineffective assistance of counsel.” The judge stated that Paradiso “was not deprived in any way of a substantial defense, his main defense being that someone else” murdered the victim. See discussion of comparable affidavits in Commonwealth v. Cassesso, 360 Mass. 570, 575-579 (1971), vacated (so far as it left death penalty remaining in force) sub nom. Limone v. Massachusetts, 408 U.S. 936 (1972), and Commonwealth v. Stewart, 383 Mass. 253, 254, 257-260 (1981).
Judgments affirmed.
Orders denying motions for a new trial and for reconsideration affirmed.
Paradiso was not indicted for murder until June, 1982. Shortly thereafter an officer went to arrest him at the Weyant home in Revere. After advising Pardiso of his Miranda rights, the officer inquired, “Were you expecting to be arrested for this? . . . You don’t seem very surprised to see me.” Paradiso replied, “I’ve been expecting this for three years.”
Bond’s testimony reported Paradiso as having told Bond that he (Paradiso) had taken Weyant home at some time in the evening of August 11 before 11 p.m. and then had returned alone (in Weyant’s automobile) to the East Boston bar. Paradiso reported to Bond engaging there in conversation and drinking with the victim until they both left the bar together
The trial judge in a pretrial decision of March 13, 1984, denied the Commonwealth’s motion to admit (to prove Paradise’s operating methods) evidence of other somewhat similar assaults by him in 1972, 1973, and 1980. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Paradiso, 368 Mass. 205, 206-207 (1975). In that decision he referred to Pisa’s testimony before him at the preceding motion hearing. The judge said in part: “[Pisa] testified that, in substance . . . [Paradiso] told him that he (Paradiso) had killed Marie Iannuzzi.... This information was volunteered [to Pisa] by... [Paradiso], and . . . [Pisa] was not acting in any way was an investigator or aid to any attorney at the time of each conversation. . . . [Pisa made contact with] the District Attorney’s office in Middlesex County, and thereafter this information was passed ... to the Suffolk District Attorney’s office. Much of the testimony of . . . [Pisa] may be admissible at the trial of this case (Iannuzzi), such as admissions, familiarity with areas, . . . [Paradise’s] motive (fear of incarceration), and so forth.”
At a pretrial hearing on March 12, 1984, Pisa testified at length. The judge, who heard Pisa at that motion hearing and at trial, then was made fully aware of the fact that Mr. Cavicchi had been representing Paradiso during the summer of 1979, but the present record does not show that this representation was continuing on Christmas Eve, 1979.
The judge commented at the bench conference which followed the summations that he had “listened to both . . . arguments . . . [and] thought that they were both good . . . .”
The Commonwealth argues that Paradiso’s lawyer’s failure to object to the prosecutor’s summation was a tactical decision, not to be reversed on appeal unless his violation of duty was both “substantial and prejudical.” Commonwealth v. Adams, 374 Mass. 722, 729 (1978). Commonwealth v. Bertrand, 385 Mass. 356, 368 (1982). Defense trial counsel, indeed, may have thought that to request comment by the judge on minor details of the summation might reemphasize those points to Paradiso’s disadvantage. See Commonwealth v. Fredette, 396 Mass. 455, 466 (1985).
The whole situation should be considered on principles mentioned in Commonwealth v. Bourgeois, 391 Mass. 869, 878 (1984). There it was said that a prosecutor’s conduct should be evaluated “in light of the entire trial” and (at 884-885) his summation “must be considered in the context of . . . [his] entire argument, as well as in light of the judge’s instruction to the jury and the evidence at trial.” See, for a recent discussion of the considerations which should be used in appraising a closing argument, Commonwealth v. Kozec, 399 Mass. 514, 516-524 (1987).
It may well have been thought necessary to protect Pisa from the serious risk of other inmates’ resentment of his cooperation with the Commonwealth had he been returned to confinement. A transcript of the hearing concerning Pisa’s release from custody on March 13 was ordered to be furnished to defense trial counsel on May 31, 1984.
Cross-examination went fully into the motives and discussions which caused Pisa to be willing to testify. Pisa’s conversations with agents of the Commonwealth were brought out, not only through his testimony, but also through testimony of members of the Middlesex and Suffolk district attorney’s offices with whom Pisa had spoken. There was evidence that Pisa was unwilling to testify unless precautions were taken to ensure that his family would be protected as well as himself. See note 8, supra.
There was no such lack of reliability in Pisa’s (or in Bond’s) testimony as should lead to exclusion of their testimony. See and compare United States v. Dailey, 759 F.2d 192, 196-201 (1st Cir. 1985).
At the renewed hearing in 1985 on Pisa’s motion it was pointed out that Pisa had passed a polygraph test which indicated that he had not been the person who had actually shot the security guard for whose murder he had been convicted as a joint venturer, whereas another person also charged with that murder had not passed such a polygraph test; that Pisa was nearly eligible for parole after confinement for over fourteen years; that he appeared to have been an exemplary prisoner, to have been rehabilitated, and to have held a job after his release from actual custody; and that he had been cooperative in this case and another case. He was granted a new trial, allowed to plead guilty to manslaughter, and given a sentence of time served.