62 Mass. App. Ct. 859 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2005
At trial on a charge of assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, the defense attempted to establish that the defendant acted in self-defense to repel an attack by the much larger, albeit unarmed, complainant. A District Court jury of six heard conflicting accounts of the episode from prosecu
Background. The circumstances preceding the physical confrontation between the defendant and the complainant are largely undisputed. The defendant and the complainant knew each other fairly well; they had previously worked together, and they dated, and apparently lived with, two sisters.
On December 4, the defendant called the complainant’s house and asked to speak to the complainant’s girlfriend. The complainant answered the telephone, and the two exchanged hostile words.
The defendant did not testify at trial but, supported by the testimony of two witnesses who stated that they saw the attack, argued that he acted in self-defense to fend off an attack initiated by the much larger complainant. The prosecution challenged the defense version of events. The defendant claims that the jury were swayed by various errors to discount the defense version of events and to assign credibility to the prosecution version.
Detective James McGillicuddy of the Holyoke police interviewed the defendant following the confrontation between the defendant and the complainant. The detective advised the defendant of his Miranda rights, and the defendant does not claim that his election to speak to the detective thereafter was not voluntary. During the Commonwealth’s direct examination of Detective McGillicuddy, the prosecutor posed the following question: “At any time, did he ever mention that he had witnesses that had seen the event?” Defense counsel objected, and a conference followed at the sidebar. Following the sidebar conference, the detective was allowed to testify that, during his interview of the defendant, the defendant did not mention any witnesses to the event. That was error.
The Commonwealth correctly observes that if a defendant continues to speak to police following administration of his
Because the defendant’s objection preserved his claim of er
We agree with the defendant that it was improper for the prosecutor to argue in his closing that the testimony of one of the defense witnesses should be discounted because she did not call police at the time of the confrontation between the defendant and the complainant.
In assessing the significance of improper argument, we consider (1) whether defense counsel seasonably objected to the arguments at trial; (2) whether the judge’s instructions mitigated the error; (3) whether the errors in the arguments went to the heart of the issues at trial or concerned collateral matters; (4) whether the jury would be able to sort out the excessive claims made by the prosecutor; and (5) whether the Commonwealth’s case was so overwhelming that the errors did not prejudice the defendant. See Commonwealth v. Santiago, 425 Mass. 491, 500 (1997), S.C., 427 Mass. 298, and 428 Mass. 39, cert. denied, 525 U.S. 1003 (1998), and cases cited.
In the case before us, defense counsel seasonably objected to the prosecutor’s argument that the witness’s credibility should be discounted in light of her failure to call police to report the incident, and the judge refused counsel’s request for a curative instruction. As we observed above, the credibility of the defense witnesses, and their account of the incident, went to the heart of the defense, and the Commonwealth’s case depended largely on the jury’s acceptance of the complainant’s account rather than that given by the defense witnesses. Like the prosecutor’s question about the defendant’s “failure” to volunteer other witnesses to his alleged attack, the prosecutor’s closing reference to the defense witness’s “failure” to report the incident to police weighed heavily on the question of the credibility of the defense witnesses. Whether either the improper argument or the improper question would warrant reversal standing alone, we conclude that the cumulative effect of the errors was such as to
Judgment reversed.
Verdict set aside.
Though neither couple was married, each of the two protagonists referred to the other’s girlfriend as his “sister-in law,” and to the other as his girlfriend’s “brother-in-law.”
The complainant testified that he hung up on the defendant after the defendant challenged him: “If you’re so big and bad, why don’t you come down?”
The defendant asserts a separate claim that the trial judge improperly instructed the jury on the subject of the status of a baseball bat as a dangerous weapon. Our disposition of the defendant’s other claims obviates any need to address the jury instruction question.
One of the two defense witnesses observed the confrontation only briefly from her front porch before going back inside her apartment. The other witness stated that she was standing across the street from the defendant while both were waiting for their children’s school bus; the complainant stood outside his car in the defendant’s driveway, honking the car’s horn and yelling
The prosecutor’s comment that is the subject of the defendant’s claim was as follows:
“She’s concerned, she knows the defendant, [he] helps her husband out a little, here he is in a confrontation with this huge guy, two hundred*864 and sixty pounds, six-feet tall, he’s pushing the guy. Does she pick up the phone and call the police? Does she do anything to try to help him out? Wouldn’t you think she would?
“I mean, if it happened the way he said, where he’s just an innocent guy, backing up, getting pushed, and she’s so concerned about him, and this other guy’s so big, if it happened that way and she saw it happen that way, don’t you think she would have called the police?”