A Superior Court jury found the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree by reason of extreme atrocity or cruelty. On appeal, the defendant contends that the motion judge improperly denied his motion to suppress evidence, and that the trial judge committed reversible error by improperly instructing the jury on the third prong of malice aforethought and omitting instructions on involuntary manslaughter and criminal responsibility. The defendant also argues that the prosecutor’s closing argument was improper. Last, the defendant asks that we reduce the verdict pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E (1994 ed.). We affirm the judgment and decline to exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.
1. Background. We summarize the facts as the jurors could have found them, in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth. Commonwealth v. Judge,
Sergeant Paula Loud of the State police was given the responsibility of investigating the homicide. During the inspection of the crime scene, the police found a number of fingerprints throughout the apartment. On October 14, 1991, State police positively matched at least one of the fingerprints found with the defendant’s fingerprint card on file with the bureau of criminal investigation. In the course of their investigation Sergeant Loud and Richard Franey, the Abington chief of police, went to the home of the defendant’s
The defendant’s father led the officers into the living room of the house.
After being read his Miranda rights the defendant said he understood them.
The defendant was then taken to the Abington police station, where Sergeant Loud again read him his Miranda rights and he again acknowledged he understood them. She further asked whether he wished to use the telephone and he
According to the defendant’s statement, he was addicted to cocaine but had been “clean” for 120 days. On October 10, 1991, however, he “slipped.” On October 11, 1991, he telephoned the victim and visited at about noon, during which the victim gave the defendant $10 as a birthday present. The defendant left in his mother’s Buick automobile and later consumed between two and one-half to three grams of cocaine while in the car. At about 7 or 8 f.m., he returned to the victim’s apartment to use the bathroom. As he was leaving, the defendant took the victim’s wallet, and used money he found in the wallet to buy more cocaine. The defendant returned again to the victim’s apartment, where an argument ensued over the stolen wállet. At that time, the defendant was carrying a knife that he had taken from his parents’ house because he had been contemplating suicide.
During the argument, the victim shoved the defendant, which made him “really angry.” As a result, the defendant attacked the victim with the knife, striking him between the throat and chest area. Shocked at his own actions, the defendant dropped the knife. The victim picked up the knife and asked, “Michael John, what are you doing?” The defendant grabbed at the knife, and the two struggled. Something “banged off [the defendant’s] head and really pissed [him] off some more,” so the defendant struck at the victim several more times. Finally, the defendant, with the victim lying unconscious on the floor, left the apartment and returned home. When asked why he had killed the victim, the defendant replied, “I don’t know. I was coked up when he shoved me. It made a spark.”
When the defendant had finished giving his statement, he
2. Warrantless search and seizure. The defendant argues that his warrantless arrest in his home and the observation of the cuts on his hands exceeded State and Federal limitations on searches and seizures by the police. As a. result, the defendant argues that his subsequent statement to the police and any evidence stemming from the arrest should be suppressed under the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine.
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 14 of the Declaration of Rights of the Massachusetts Constitution prohibit warrantless arrests in the home or warrantless searches and seizures, “absent exigent circumstances or consent.”
When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress evidence, we accept the motion judge’s subsidiary findings of fact absent clear error. Commonwealth v. Yesilciman,
The motion judge found that the police officers had first asked the defendant’s father for permission to enter the house to ask the defendant about the victim’s death. In response, the defendant’s father had invited the officers into the house, telling them, “Come on inside,” gesturing toward the door of the house, and leading the officers through the front door, into the living room where the defendant was talking on the telephone. Based on this evidence and the absence of credible evidence to the contrary, the motion judge found that the defendant’s father had freely and voluntarily given consent to the police to enter his house and we accept this finding.
The defendant further argues that, even if the consent were voluntary, it was invalidated by the deceptive practices used by the police to obtain the consent. He alleges that the police had gone to his home to arrest him and that their request to question him was mere pretext used to induce his father to consent to their entry. As a preliminary matter, we do not necessarily agree with the premise of the defendant’s argument that consent is rendered invalid when the police do not disclose everything that they might have in mind in seeking it. See Colorado v. Spring,
In addition, the defendant contends that the arrest exceeded the scope of the consent. However, in Commonwealth v. Cantalupo,
“[What] limitations on the consent are implied by the language or conduct of the consenting party is a question in the first instance for the judgment of the police officers to whom the consent is given. The ultimate question is whether, in light of all the circumstances, a man of reasonable caution would be warranted in the belief that some limitation was intended by the consent giver.”
3. Probable cause. The defendant also seeks to suppress his confession and other evidence obtained as a result of his statement, on the basis that the police did not have probable cause to arrest him at the time they entered his home. This argument improperly assumes that the police required probable cause to enter the defendant’s house. Probable cause is not required when the police have consent to conduct a search and seizure. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Sergienko,
4. Miranda rights. The defendant challenges the admission
5. Jury instructions on malice aforethought. The defendant challenges the judge’s failure to instruct the jury to consider evidence of the defendant’s intoxication at the time of the homicide on the issue of malice aforethought. While the judge’s instruction on the effect of intoxication on the third prong of malice was lacking in clarity, we decline to reverse the conviction and order a new trial because we find that any error in this regard could not have prejudiced the defendant’s case.
In order to convict a defendant of murder, the jury must find that the defendant acted with malice aforethought. Under what has come to be known as the third prong of malice, its existence may be inferred if, “in the circumstances known to the defendant, a reasonably prudent person would have known that according to common experience there was a plain and strong likelihood that death would follow the
In Commonwealth v. Sama,
In Commonwealth v. Sires,
The defendant testified that, on the day of the homicide, he was “fogged out” from the crack cocaine that he had ingested, and that he could not remember whether he had attacked the victim. However, he acknowledges that he was in the victim’s apartment immediately before and after the crime, and that he had a knife in his hand that he claimed he had taken from the victim. He did not directly testify to the circumstances of the crime or to what his state of mind was at the time. We do know from his testimony that he was fully aware of the circumstances immediately before and after the crime. That he now says he has no memory of the killing tells us nothing about the defendant’s state of mind at the time of the killing. Commonwealth v. Sires,
In instructing the jury on the three prongs of malice aforethought, however, the judge stated: “A defendant’s mental impairment because of the voluntary use of drugs is one of the factors you must and should consider in your deliberations on the issue of whether the defendant had specific intent to kill or grievously injure the victim.” The defendant made a timely objection to the judge’s instructions.
After one or two hours of deliberation the jury asked the judge to clarify his instructions on malice, and the judge responded:
“I’ve also instructed you that the defendant’s mental impairment from the voluntary use of drugs is one of the factors you should consider in your deliberations on the issue of whether the defendant had the specific intent to kill or grievously injure the victim. You may also consider intoxication by drugs on the subjective components of malice. That is, if you find that there was an impairment of his mental capacity caused by the ingestion of the drugs, you are to consider that impaired mental capacity in determining what circumstances were known to the defendant as it relates to whether a reasonably prudent person would have known that there was a plain and strong likelihood that according to common experience death of the victim would follow those actions.
“The burden of proof is, of course, on the Commonwealth to prove that the defendant was not so mentally impaired by drugs that he was unable to determine the circumstances surrounding the act or form the necessary specific intent to kill.”
“Therefore, if, after considering all of the evidence in this case, you find that the Commonwealth has proven beyond a reasonable doubt each of the three elements that I have previously given you: one, that the defendant committed an unlawful killing; two, that the killing was committed with deliberate premeditation; and three, that the killing was committed with malice aforethought, then you are warranted to find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree committed with deliberate premeditated malice aforethought.
“If, however, after your consideration of all the evidence, you find the Commonwealth has not proven any one of these three elements beyond a reasonable doubt, you must find the defendant not guilty of murder in the first degree under the principles of deliberate premeditated malice aforethought.”
We conclude that this supplemental charge adequately informed the jury of their duty to weigh any evidence of the defendant’s intoxication when considering the defendant’s knowledge of the circumstances of the killing. The fact that the judge clarified his instruction after two hours of jury deliberation is not fatal to thé Commonwealth’s cause. Commonwealth v. Gilliard,
After the supplemental charge referred to above the defendant requested a further charge
“This jury may consider the evidence in this case concerning the defendant’s use of drugs, that is, whether the defendant was under the influence of drugs at the time of the commission of the offense. You may consider this on the issue of whether the prosecution has proved the defendant had the specific intent to kill or grievously injure the victim beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Although the judge failed to explain that intoxication is a fac
6. Instructions on involuntary manslaughter and lack of criminal responsibility. The defendant argues that the judge erred in failing to give instructions on involuntary manslaughter. We disagree.
A conviction of involuntary manslaughter can be based on two independent theories. Commonwealth v. Pierce,
The defendant also claims that the judge improperly declined to allow the jury to consider the effect of intoxication on the defendant’s criminal responsibility. The defendant relies on Commonwealth v. McHoul,
7. The prosecutor’s closing argument. The defendant urges us to reverse his conviction because of certain alleged
Although the prosecutor’s remarks were, “enthusiastic rhetoric, strong advocacy, and excusable hyperbole,” they did not cross the line between fair and improper argument.
8. General Laws c. 278, § 33E, review. Although the trial was not error free, the evidence against the defendant was overwhelming, and we see no basis for concluding that a reasonable likelihood of a miscarriage of justice exists.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
A number of additional officers accompanied Sergeant Loud and Chief Franey to provide back-up security. They were stationed in the areas around the house.
The defendant’s father testified that he neither feared the officers nor did he feel uncomfortable about their entry into his house. He believed that, “they had a right to speak to [the defendant].”
These injuries were consistent with those often found resulting from a fight with a knife.
The defendant is a high school graduate, and had begun his second semester as a student at Massasoit Community College.
The defendant’s father later testified that as the police escorted the defendant out of the house, the defendant had asked his father to call his lawyer. Both Sergeant Loud, who accompanied the defendant out of the house, and Chief Franey, who was with the defendant’s father, testified that they did not hear this request. The motion judge found as a matter of fact that the defendant did not request a lawyer in either officer’s presence while he was at home.
In addition, the booking officer noted on the booking sheet that the defendant had been advised of his Miranda rights and that he had declined to use the telephone. Moreover, after Sergeant Loud had recited his rights, the defendant signed the booking sheet where it stated, “I was informed of my right to remain silent, to use a phone, to call a lawyer, or to have one provided for me.”
The defendant’s testimony during trial contradicted the statement which he had given to the police. His testimony diverged from his prior statement
We note that, even if the warrantless arrest of the defendant in his home was conducted without consent, his statement to the police, given while in custody, may still be admissible. In 1990, the United States Supreme Court held in New York v. Harris,
“Police may not make a warrantless entry into the home ... to arrest a suspect or to search for or seize evidence, absent exigent circumstances or consent.” Commonwealth v. Voisine,
The defendant argues that, in the circumstances, the consent was invalid because the police did not inform the defendant’s father of his right to withhold consent, and because the police blocked the driveway of the house. That the police did not advise the defendant’s father of his right to
The defendant further argues that the arresting officers did not have probable cause to arrest him. Probable cause to arrest exists where, “at the moment of arrest, the facts and circumstances within the knowledge of the police are enough to warrant a prudent person in believing that the individual arrested has committed ... an offense.” Commonwealth v. Santaliz,
The defendant contends, however, that the officers’ observations of the injuries on his face and hands could not be used to establish probable cause to arrest him. He argues that the removal of the blanket from his legs constituted an illegal search and seizure without probable cause or consent. Even if the removal of a blanket from the defendant’s legs was improper,
The defendant also asserts that the Miranda warnings given by the officer at the time of arrest were inadequate because they did not include the “fifth warning” informing the defendant of his right to stop any questioning at any time. This court, however, held in Commonwealth v. Lewis,
The definition of malice aforethought, as set forth in Commonwealth v. Grey,
In Commonwealth v. Doucette,
In Commonwealth v. Sama, supra, the defendant testified that he had a long history of uncontrolled alcoholism which had caused memory loss in the past. The defendant’s father also described the defendant’s chronic substance abuse and his perception of the resulting mental impairment. Last, an expert witness opined that the defendant could have hallucinated at the time of the killing due to the melange of drugs and alcohol he had taken earlier that day.
In Commonwealth v. Sires,
The defendant also moved for a mistrial. This claim has been abandoned on appeal.
The standard for criminal responsibility, set out in Commonwealth v. McHoul,
The defendant’s primary focus is on the following portions of the prosecutor’s closing:
“[0]n October 11th of 1991 Mario diCicco was a vital and an active 74-year-old man. He lived proudly in his modest but tiny apartment in Abington. He was surrounded by a family who [he] shared his holidays with, who he shared his wisdom with, who he shared his companionship with.
“Patricia Scanlon spoke with her Uncle Mario on Friday, October 11th, and when she hung up the phone she said, I’ll talk to you tomorrow. She should have been able to talk to him that next day. The family should have been able to share more holidays with their Uncle Mario.
“Instead, what are we left with? A photograph of Uncle Mario smiling proudly with his niece and her nephew. A photograph that should have been displayed on Patricia Scanlon’s mantle is lying before you next to a photograph of Mario diCicco’s bludgeoned and slaughtered body.
“Who is responsible for this atrocious act? Who is responsible for all of you sitting here and looking at these piles of evidence of Mario diCicco’s death? There is but one man who is responsible for this act. There is one man who spent his time trying to support his ugly habit. There is one man who would prey upon the humble generosity of his uncle who would accept a gift of $10 and in return leave him with 34 stab wounds and 15 blows to the head. The defendant is responsible for this vicious act and no one else.”
