The defendant appeals seven convictions of murder in the second degree on seven indictments which charged murder in the first degree, 1 and a conviction of arson. 2 The defendant claims error in (1) the denial of his motion to suppress; (2) the failure of the judge to instruct the jury on the issue of voluntariness; (3) the exclusion of testimony by a defense psychiatrist as to whether the defendant’s statements to a fellow inmate were the product of a rational mind; and (4) the admission of testimony by the Commonwealth’s psychiatrist on the issue of criminal responsibility. We conclude that the judge correctly denied the motion to suppress. However, we also conclude that the judge erred in failing to instruct the jury on the issue of voluntariness, in excluding the testimony of the defense psychiatrist and in *98 admitting the testimony of the Commonwealth’s psychiatrist. We therefore reverse and remand for a new trial.
We summarize the facts. On April 9, 1978, an apartment building at 39 Chelmsford Street, Lawrence, burned down. Seven people died in this fire. The defendant was at the scene of the fire.
On April 9, 11, and 13, 1978, the defendant gave detailed statements to the police. 3 On each occasion, an officer of the Lawrence police department advised the defendant in Spanish, his native language, of the Miranda warnings. Prior to giving each of these statements, the defendant signed a card indicating that he understood these warnings.
On April 8, 1978, the defendant attended a party. At that party he told one witness that “he was going to set fire on Chelmsford Street.” 4 At approximately 5 a.m., on April 9, 1978, the fire broke out at 39 Chelmsford Street.
After his arrest, the defendant was taken to the Essex County house of correction. While there, the defendant bragged to a fellow inmate that he set the fire at 39 Chelms-ford Street.
Prior to trial, the defendant moved to suppress the statements he made to the police and these private citizens. The *99 judge denied this motion, and the trial proceeded. The main issue at trial was criminal responsibility.
1. Motion to Suppress.
a. Statements to police. The defendant claims that his statements to the police were inadmissible, because they were not the product of a rational intellect. 5 We disagree.
“[Bjefore any statement by a defendant to law enforcement officers or their agents may be placed before the jury, the Commonwealth must prove voluntariness beyond a reasonable doubt. If the judge concludes that [a] defendant’s statements are voluntary beyond a reasonable doubt, that conclusion ‘must appear from the record with unmistakable clarity.’”
Commonwealth
v.
Tavares,
At the suppression hearing, the judge considered the defendant’s mental state. He gave special attention to the expert testimony presented by two psychiatrists. 6 However, *100 because the statements to the police were “chronological,” “coherent,” and exculpatory, the judge determined that the defendant “understood his position.” He therefore concluded that these statements were a “meaningful act of volition.”
These findings are amply supported by the record. 7 There was evidence at the suppression hearing that when the police began their interrogation, the defendant was “calm,” “coherent,” and “cooperative.” Moreover, the clarity and detail of the defendant’s statements to the police suggest a normal memory and a lack of confusion. When questioned about the fire, the defendant denied that he was responsible. This attempt at exculpation is evidence from which the judge could find that the defendant was aware that his statements to the police could have adverse consequences, and therefore the statements were voluntarily made.
Although there was evidence that the defendant was suffering from intermittent schizophrenia or toxic psychosis at the time he gave his statements, the judge was not required to allow the motion to suppress. “[Tjhere is no per se rule holding inadmissible [statements] given by individuals suffering severe psychotic conditions. Rather, a [statement] is inadmissible if it would not have been obtained but for the effects of the confessor’s psychosis. There is nothing unfair about using the admissions of a psychotic individual where the giving of the admissions is not substantially related to the effects of the psychosis. In such a case, no advantage has been taken of the individual’s disability.”
8
Gibbs
v.
*101
Warden of Ga. State Penitentiary,
b.
Statements to civilians.
The defendant made two statements to civilians, which he sought to suppress. On April 8, 1978, he told one witness that he was going to set fire to Chelmsford Street. After his arrest, he boasted to a fellow inmate at the Essex County house of correction in Salem that he set the fire. Relying on
Commonwealth
v.
Mahnke,
In
Commonwealth
v.
Mahnke, 368
Mass. 662, 679-681 (1975), we held that a judge must determine the voluntariness of statements extracted by private coercion unalloyed with any government involvement. We reached this result because “a statement obtained through coercion and introduced at trial is every bit as offensive to civilized standards of adjudication when the coercion flows from private hands as when official depredations elicit a confession. Statements extracted by a howling lynch mob or a lawless private pack of vigilantes from a terrorized, pliable suspect are repugnant to due process mandates of fundamental fairness and protection against compulsory self-incrimination. See
People
v.
Berve,
But that rationale does not apply to this case. At the suppression hearing there was no evidence that the defendant’s statements to private citizens were the product of coercion. 9 Thus, our decision in Commonwealth v. Mahnke, supra, did not require the judge to determine whether the defend *102 ant’s statements to private citizens were a meaningful act of volition. 10 The judge acted properly in denying the defendant’s motion to suppress these statements.
2. Failure to Instruct the Jury on the Issue of Voluntariness.
The defendant claims that the judge erred because he failed to instruct the jury on the issue whether the defendant’s statements to the police were the product of a rational intellect. We agree.
“Our ‘humane practice’ requires that ‘when [a defendant’s incriminating] statements . . . are offered in evidence, the. question whether they were voluntary is to be decided at a preliminary hearing by the presiding judge in the absence of the jury. If he is satisfied that they are voluntary, they are admissible; otherwise they should be excluded.’”
Commonwealth
v.
Cole,
At trial, there was substantial evidence before the judge that the defendant was suffering from a psychotic episode
*103
for one month before the crime, and for a short time after the crime. Thus, “the judge had an independent obligation to instruct the jury to consider the voluntariness of the [defendant’s statements to the police].”
Commonwealth
v.
Cole,
Moreover, the Commonwealth’s psychiatrist relied on the statements to the police in arriving at his opinion on criminal responsibility. The statements were a critical part of the Commonwealth’s case both on the issue of guilt and on the issue of criminal responsibility. In these circumstances, we conclude that there is a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice. See G. L. c. 278, § 33E;
Commonwealth
v.
Cole,
3. Exclusion of Testimony by the Defense Psychiatrist.
The defendant claims that the judge erred in excluding the testimony of the defense psychiatrist as to whether his statements to a fellow inmate were the product of a rational intellect. 12 We agree.
The defense psychiatrist characterized the defendant’s statements to the inmate as suggestive of psychosis, and used these statements as one basis for his conclusion that the defendant lacked substantial capacity to appreciate the crimi
*104
nality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law. See
Commonwealth
v.
McHoul,
4. Admission of Testimony hy the Commonwealth’s Psychiatrist.
Over the defendant’s objection, the judge allowed the Commonwealth’s expert to testify that the defendant was criminally responsible. The defendant argues that the admission of the expert’s opinion in this form was error. We agree. An expert may only express his opinion concerning a defendant’s criminal responsibility in accord with the standard set out in
Commonwealth
v.
McHoul,
The judgments are reversed, the verdicts set aside, and the cases are remanded to the Superior Court for a new trial.
So ordered.
Notes
At the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s case, the judge allowed the defendant’s motion for required findings of not guilty to so much of the indictments as charged murder in the first degree. The judge denied the defendant’s motion for required findings of not guilty to so much of the indictments as charged murder in the second degree, and manslaughter, and to the indictment for arson. The defendant does not claim error in these rulings, and we deem the defendant’s failure to argue these issues as a waiver. See
Commonwealth
v.
Cundriff,
The defendant was sentenced to concurrent terms of life imprisonment on the murder convictions, and a concurrent sentence of eighteen to twenty years on the arson conviction.
On April 9, 1978, the defendant told the police that he walked by 39 Chelmsford Street on his way home from a party. Arriving at 39 Chelmsford Street, he saw flames coming out of the house. When the police pointed out that 39 Chelmsford Street was not on his way home, the defendant said that he was going to see a girl friend on Center Street. However, the defendant refused to disclose the name or address of this girl friend.
During this interview, the defendant also admitted that he had entered the building and that he had a lighter in his hand when he left the building. The defendant said that he went inside to warn people to leave the building. Because of all the smoke, the defendant said that he needed his lighter to see.
On April 11,1978, the defendant did not deny that he had told a person at the April 9 party that he was going to burn Chelmsford Street. Instead, he said that he did not remember making this statement.
On April 13, 1978, the defendant admitted that a friend drove him to Chelmsford Street fifteen minutes before the fire.
The defendant had lived at 39 Chelmsford Street with one of the tenants and her two children. Prior to the fire, the tenant ordered the defendant to leave the premises.
The defendant concedes that the police fully apprised him of the Miranda warnings. Thus, the defendant does not argue that the judge should have suppressed the statements to the police because they violated the requirements of
Miranda
v.
Arizona,
The defendant’s psychiatrist and the Commonwealth’s psychiatrist testified at the suppression hearing. The Commonwealth’s expert examined the defendant’s statements to the police and determined that the defendant *100 was criminally responsible. Relying in part on the statements to the inmate, the defense psychiatrist concluded that the defendant lacked criminal responsibility.
Other evidence presented at the suppression hearing supports the judge’s findings. Two newspapermen who were present at the scene of the fire testified that they spoke with the defendant, and that he was responsive to their questions and gave them a coherent story.
Courts do exclude statements by individuals suffering from mental illness if the disease rendered the individual incapable of understanding the meaning and effect of a confession or caused the individual to be indifferent to self-protection. See
Pea
v.
United States,
Under
Commonwealth
v.
Mahnke,
Since the judge was not required to determine whether the defendant’s statements to private citizens were a meaningful act of volition, it follows that he did not have to submit this issue to the jury.
Although the defendant did not object to the charge on this ground, these crimes occurred before July 1,1979. We therefore review these convictions under G. L. c. 278, § 33E. See
Commonwealth
v.
Davis,
The Commonwealth objected to the admission of this testimony. The basis of the Commonwealth’s objections is not clear. The defendant made a timely offer of proof that the psychiatrist would testify that the statements to the inmate were not the product of a rational intellect.
