The defendant was convicted in July, 1968, on indictments charging accessory before the fact to murder and two separate conspiracies to commit murder. We affirmed the defendant’s convictions and those of his code
*369
fendants in
Commonwealth
v.
French,
Following some unsuccessful appellate and postconviction remedy attempts, 1 the defendant filed a third motion for a new trial on September 5, 1979. After hearing, the motion was denied by a judge of the Superior Court. A single justice of this court allowed the defendant’s application for leave to appeal to the full court pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 278, § 33E. 2 We affirm the order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial.
The facts of this case are set forth in
Commonwealth
v.
French, supra.
In this appeal, the defendant argues that instructions by the trial judge to the jury pertaining to malice and reasonable doubt were prejudicially erroneous in light of decisions of this court and the Supreme Court of the United States issued after the defendant’s trial and direct appeal. In particular, the defendant asserts that the malice instructions created a mandatory presumption in favor of the Commonwealth, thereby shifting the burden of proof on that issue to him, see
Commonwealth
v.
Pisa, ante
362, 363-364 (1981), and cases cited, and that the use of personal decision-making examples in instructing the jurors on rea
*370
sonable doubt trivialized the standard of proof requirement,
Commonwealth
v.
Garcia,
The defendant asserts that the language in the charge similar to the language found to be violative of due process in
Sandstrom
v.
Montana,
Malice was not an issue at the defendant’s trial. The victim, Edward Deegan, was found with six gunshot wounds inflicted by “[a]t least three different weapons.”
Commonwealth
v.
French,
Tameleo does not claim error in the definition of the reasonable doubt standard apart from the use of personal decision-making examples. Any complaint as to the sufficiency of the definition could have and should have been raised at trial and in the first appeal. See
Commonwealth
v.
Maddocks,
The defendant does claim that the use of personal decision-making examples in the charge so trivialized the standard of proof required of the Commonwealth as to require reversal of his convictions. This is the first genuine oppor
*371
tunity this defendant has had to raise this issue and hence we consider it. See note
2, supra.
We “have never held . . . that the use of specific examples necessarily imports error, constitutional or otherwise.”
Commonwealth
v.
Smith,
The defendant did not object to the now challenged portion of the charge at trial. In the absence of an objection, our consideration is limited to the impression made by the instruction as a whole. “Error in a charge is determined by reading the charge as a whole, and not by scrutinizing bits and pieces removed from their context.”
Commonwealth
v.
Cundriff,
The charge imposed in this case adequately reflected the seriousness of the duty imposed on the jurors. The judge clearly instructed the jury on several occasions that they must be satisfied that the Commonwealth had proved each element of the crimes charged beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the defendants came to court protected by a presumption of innocence. The charge emphasized the “great responsibility” of the jurors to ascertain the truth from the evidence presented, and generally impressed on the jurors the caution and care they must exercise before returning any verdict against any defendant. We conclude that, read in its entirety, “the charge here did not so trivialize the concept of proof beyond a reasonable doubt as to require reversal of the conviction.”
Commonwealth
v.
Smith,
The order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
The defendant filed motions for a new trial in 1970 and 1972. A petition for habeas corpus filed in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts in 1974 was dismissed in 1975, and that dismissal was affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
Grieco
v.
Meachum,
The single justice determined that the cases on which Tameleo relies, namely
Sandstrom
v.
Montana,
