57 Mass. App. Ct. 901 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2003
In Commonwealth v. Schatvet, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 130, 134-135 (1986), we explicated the circumstances in which it is appropriate for a trial judge to give to a jury a missing witness instruction, i.e., to instruct the jury that if a party, without explanation, does not call a witness who is available to it and is likely to be friendly to it, the jurors may infer the testimony of that witness would have been unfavorable to the party that might have been expected to call the “missing witness.” There is no basis for such an inference, however, if the testimony of the witness not called would be unimportant, as would be the case if the testimony of the witness were just corroborative or cumulative. Id. at 134. Commonwealth v. Spencer, 49 Mass. App. Ct. 383, 386-391 (2000). Indeed, the missing witness instruction should be given “only in clear cases, and with caution.” Commonwealth v. Schatvet, supra. See Commonwealth v. Figueroa, 413 Mass. 193, 199 (1992), S.C., 422 Mass. 72 (1996); Commonwealth v. Alves, 50 Mass. App. Ct. 796, 802 (2001). Whether to give a missing witness instruction or to permit a lawyer to make a missing witness argument lies within the discretion of the trial judge, and an appellate court will not reverse unless it decides the exercise of discretion was manifestly unreasonable. Commonwealth v. Thomas, 429 Mass. 146, 151 (1999). Commonwealth v. Ivy, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 851, 860 (2002). The degree of discretion may be less when it is the defendant who asks for a missing witness instruction or to make a missing witness argument. Commonwealth v. Smith, 49 Mass. App. Ct. 827, 831-832 (2000).
Against this backdrop of decisional law, we conclude that the trial judge in the instant case acted within his discretion in declining a defense request for a missing witness instruction and in declining to grant counsel permission, in closing argument, to ask the jury to draw an adverse inference against the Commonwealth because it had not produced a particular witness.
The defendant, Salvatore Tripolone, stood trial on charges of rape, violation of a domestic abuse order entered pursuant to G. L. c. 209A, and armed assault in a dwelling house (G. L. c. 265, § 18A). The judge directed a required finding of not guilty on the last indictment and the jury returned verdicts of guilty as to rape and the c. 209A violation.
These, in summary, were the facts the jury could find, viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the Commonwealth. See Commonwealth v. Latimore, 378 Mass. 671, 676-677 (1979). The defendant, who had lived with the victim at an earlier time, made an unexpected visit to the victim’s
What follows concerns the police investigation, about which memories of witnesses at trial were imprecise, and as to which the paper record was ragged. We set out the details because they are at the center of the defendant’s missing witness argument. On November 8, 1993, approximately seventy-two hours after the assault complained of, a three-man team of Raynham police officers visited the victim’s mobile home. That team included Detective David Chaves, Officer Robert Midgley, and Captain Louis Pacheco, the ranking officer. At some point, they were joined by a fourth officer, Brian Carr. Their purpose was to videotape file victim’s living quarters and to assemble physical evidence. The police picked up a bedspread; they may or may not, according to Captain Pacheco, have picked up a pair of sweatpants, a thermal top, and white panties. In any event, the evidence list was lost and the videotape was lost. Testimony was equivocal as to who had charge of the videotape and who had charge of the evidence. Captain Pacheco thought it was Detective Chaves; Officer Midgley thought it was Captain Pacheco. After she had reported the rape, the victim was told by the Raynham police to go to Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis (town of Barnstable) for examination. Besides interviews by medical personnel, she was also questioned by Officer John Corbett, from the Barnstable police, who retrieved a rape Mt from the hospital and a pair of sweatpants that the victim had put on after the reported sex act. Those were offered as evidence by the prosecution and admitted as an exhibit. Brian Carr was the evidence officer of the Raynham police department. He spoke to having retrieved from the State crime laboratory a box of evidence that included a pair of panties, plus a couple of pairs of other panties, gray sweatpants, a rape Mt, a sheet cover (bedspread), and a dog biscuit.
Detective Chaves was not produced by the Commonwealth as a witness. He had left the Raynham police force to become an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and, so far as known, was “working terrorism in New York.” The core of the defense contention on appeal is that Chaves might have cleared up who did what at the victim’s apartment when the three-man squad of police visited it as a crime scene. It is not, on the record, in the least apparent why Chaves, seven years later,
Judgments affirmed.
The victim kept a dog and the dog biscuit apparently was on the bedspread when the police rolled it up and took it away.
The trial was held in October, 2000.