In
Commonwealth
v.
Thornley,
In his original findings the motion judge found that “the photo array . . . was only suggestive in that the defendant had glasses on. Otherwise, there was no suggestiveness.” Id. at 363. He also found that no suggestiveness affected the identification procedures and ruled “that the Commonwealth had proved ‘to a point beyond reasonable doubt’ that the identifying witnesses were relying ‘upon their view of the defendant on the night of the shooting.’ ” Id. On remand, without further hearing, the judge found that “the identifying witnesses had the opportunity to view the defendant for a considerable period of time” and that, although the defendant’s glasses had become “a major issue,” the identification of the defendant as Davis’s assailant “was primarily an eyeball identification and was not wholly dependent on a photographic array nor on a composite sketch” (emphasis supplied).
The defendant appeals from the further findings claiming that (1) the original photographic identifications were impermissibly suggestive because both witnesses already had described the suspect as a man wearing glasses, the defendant’s photograph was the only one showing a man with glasses, in a thirteen-photograph array, and both witnesses relied on the defendant’s glasses in identifying him as the suspect; and (2) *98 the subsequent lineup and courtroom identifications should have been suppressed because the Commonwealth failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the subsequent identifications were based on a source independent of the suggestive array. We conclude that, based on the judge’s findings, there must be a new trial.
1.
Suggestiveness of the photographic array.
“Photographic identification procedures are constitutionally invalid if the procedures were ‘so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.’ ”
Thornley I, supra
at 364, quoting
Simmons, supra
at 384. A motion to suppress identification is governed by a two-part analysis as set forth in
Botelho, supra
at 866-868.
2
The burden rests initially on the defendant to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that considering the totality of the circumstances attending it,
3
the identification was so im
*99
permissibly or unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable misidentification as to deprive the defendant of his due process rights.
Botelho, supra
at 366-368.
Simmons, supra
at 384. If the defendant makes this showing, then there may be a “per se” exclusion of that identification and the prosecution may not offer the identification in evidence.
Botelho, supra
at 366. Cf.
Commonwealth
v.
Melvin,
If the defendant sustains his burden, then, in order to introduce any subsequent identifications at trial, the Commonwealth must establish by clear and convincing evidence that the later identifications were not the product of the suggestive identification and were based on a source independent of the initial suggestive identification. Botelho, supra at 866-868.
In addition to his finding that “the eyeglasses of the defendant had become a major issue in this case,” the judge also found that “the identifying witnesses did not spend much time in looking at photographs, but immediately picked out [the defendant’s] photograph.”* 4 The findings that (1) the defendant’s picture was the only one in the array with glasses; (2) the glasses were a “major issue”; and (3) the witnesses relied on the glasses in selecting the defendant’s picture, warrant the conclusion that the witnesses identified *100 the defendant because the defendant’s photograph showed him wearing glasses. 5
“[W]e disapprove of an array of photographs which distinguishes one suspect from all the others on the basis of some physical characteristic.”
Commonwealth
v.
Melvin,
After a defendant proves that an initial identification was impermissibly suggestive, the Commonwealth bears the burden to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that any subsequent identifications are based on an independent source. Botelho, supra at 867-868. As we noted in Thornley I, supra at 364, application of this test requires consideration of the five factors set forth in Simmons and Wade. The judge found that the “identification of the defendant was primarily an eyeball identification and was not wholly dependent on [the] photographic array” (emphasis added). A finding that the lineup and courtroom identifications were “not wholly dependent” on the suggestive array falls short of a determination that the identifications have an independent source. The judge’s original finding that “the identifying witnesses were relying ‘upon their view of the defendant on the night of the shooting’ ” does not aid the Commonwealth because the judge did not conclude that the witnesses were relying solely on their view of the defendant during the crime without regard to the photographic array. Indeed, this judge’s determination that the identification of the defendant was not wholly dependent on the photographic array suggests otherwise. Because the Commonwealth did not convince the judge that the lineup and courtroom identification were based on a source independent of the suggestive photographic identification, it was error to admit that testimony.
2.
Harmless error.
We next consider whether the constitutional errors in the present case were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Chapman
v.
California,
Applying the foregoing standard, we have no doubt that the errors here were not harmless to the defendant. The sole issue at trial was whether the defendant was mistakenly identified as the assailant. “The reasonable doubt standard is most crucial in cases where central facts (such as identity . . .) are at issue, and credibility plays a key role.” Commonwealth v. Garcia, supra at 441. The evidence erroneously admitted went to the central issue in this case — the question of identification — and not to a collateral issue. See Commonwealth v. Marini, supra at 521.
The Commonwealth’s case consisted of evidence regarding the original description, the “Identikit” composite sketch, the photographic array, the lineup, courtroom identifications, and testimony about the night in question. In an eyewitness identification case such as this, where the bulk of the trial was consumed by testimony regarding the improperly admitted identifications, we are unable to conclude that these identifications were “merely cumulative.”
Accordingly, the judgments are reversed, the verdicts are set aside, and the case is remanded for a new trial.
So ordered.
Notes
The facts are set forth in Thornley I, supra at 356-358.
The Commonwealth urges us to adopt
Manson
v.
Brathwaite,
We note that the Commonwealth concedes that “[ajpart from questions on burden of proof and quality of evidence, the
Brathwaite
focus on reliability factors and the likelihood of misidentification does not appear to be substantially different from the
Botelho
focus on whether there was an ‘independent source’ for the subsequent identification.” The Commonwealth asks us to conclude that the opportunity to view during the crime was the independent source for identification. The judge did not make that finding of fact. Although the judge could have made such a finding, he did not do so. “[T]he responsibility of weighing credibility and finding fact is reposed in the trial court.”
Commonwealth
v.
Haas,
At that point, the judge examines only the totality of the circumstances of the particular confrontation or identification itself and does not consider “the witness’s entire connection with the case to determine whether the confrontation, although . . . unnecessarily suggestive, was nevertheless reliable, and therefore usable. . . Botelho, supra at 867. Here, for example, that the three witnesses had ample opportunity to view the two men at the *99 bar on the night in question has no bearing on the suggestiveness of the photographic array. See id. Rather, such evidence, external to the array, enters into the second stage of analysis, if reached, i.e., “whether the witness’s ability to identify had an independent source.” Id. at n.5.
That the glasses were “a major issue” is confirmed by the descriptions the witnesses gave immediately following the incident. Both described the suspect as wearing glasses. The glasses worn by the defendant in the photographic identification had metal frames resembling the glasses described by the witnesses. In addition, as we observed in Thornley I, the composite sketch pictured the man’s glasses as a “prominent feature” of his appearance. Thornley I, supra at 364. Further, both Davis and McCarthy said that they relied on the glasses as probably the most significant factor in making their selection of the defendant’s photograph.
This conclusion is supported by McCarthy’s testimony that, in making his selection, he “picked the one with glasses.”
See
Commonwealth
v.
Melvin, supra
at 207 (involving array in which the victim specifically testified that the distinguishing feature — an arm sling — played “no part” in his selection of defendant’s photograph, which was based “solely on his [original] observations” of the suspect).
Commonwealth
v.
Mobley,
