Thе defendant was convicted on two complaints charging her with obtaining possession of a controlled substance by “forgery or falsification of a prescription.” See G. L. c. 94C, § 33(b). She appeals and claims various errors in the judge’s charge tо the jury.
1.
Reasonable doubt.
The focus of the defendant’s attack is on the judge’s statement set out in the margin.
1
That
*772
comment was considered in
Commonwealth
v.
Williams,
It would havе been better to omit the comment; this “embellishment” has nothing to commend it except that through the years it appears to have passed unnoticed. See
Commonwealth
v.
Therrien,
*773
Moreover, the instruction on the presumption of innocence which preceded the instruction on reasonable doubt also emphasized that a defеndant can be found guilty “only upon evidence, evidence of the guilt beyond a reasonable doubt produced in court.” Further, the judge charged that the presumption “lasts until such time as the government offers evidence which convinces you, as reаsonable individuals, that the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” See
Commonwealth
v.
Hughes,
380 Mass, at 600. Cf.
Commonwealth
v.
Boyd,
2.
Failure to testify.
The defendant focuses on the statement in the сharge that “a defendant has the constitutional right not to incriminate himself or herself.”
3
This sentence and the words in note 3,
supra,
to which the defendant objects, are both found in the portion of the charge reproduced in
Commonwealth
v.
Morrissey,
*774
Since, as the
Delaney
case illustrates, a reference to the privilege аgainst self-incrimination in a charge may result in error, such a reference places an additional burden on this court to аnalyze the charge as a whole. It seems significant to us that the court in
Commonwealth
v.
Sneed,
Accordingly, we would suggest that genеrally — absent a request by the defendant or other special circumstances — any reference to the privilege against self-incrimination should be omitted from the charge. It seems preferable to us that the defendant’s right not to testify be put in terms оf “the right to remain passive, and to insist that the Commonwealth prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt without explanation or denial by him.” Commonwealth v. Madeiros, 255 Mass, at 307.
3. Of the two further criticisms of the charge the first, based on an exception, is without substance; no exceрtion brings the second criticism before us, and we need not discuss it. We do not in any way intimate that the second criticism has merit; indeed, it also appears to be without substance. Nor is there any indication of a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.
Commonwealth
v.
Freeman,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
“ If аn unreasonable doubt, or a mere possibility of innocence, was sufficient to prevent a conviction, then practically every criminal would be free to prey upon the community, and such a rule would be wholly impractical, and would breаk down the forces of law and make the lawless supreme.”
Because of the crucial role of that standard, we examine the impact of the comment to which the defendant now objects although the objection and exception to the charge on reasonable doubt were not specifically directed to that comment. See
Commonwealth
v.
Freeman,
Here again thеre was no objection or exception directed to that sentence (compare note 2, supra). The only exception in connection with the charge on the defendant’s failure to testify was to the use of the words “neglect... or refusal,” which appear in G. L. c. 233, § 20 (as amended through St. 1963, c. 765, § 3). It is hard to see any point to that exception in view of the explicit instruction that a defendant “may testify if he or she elects, but if he or she does not choose to do so, he or she may not testify” and the reference to this choice as a “right not to testify.”
