After a jury trial in the Superior Court, the defendants were convicted of aggravated rape. G. L. c. 265, § 22 (a) (1986 ed.). Silvia was sentenced to from nine to twelve years at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Cedar Junction; Vieira to from six to eight years. They appeal from their convictions and from the denial of their motions for a new trial. We transferred the cases here on our own motion and we affirm.
The facts the jury could have found are as follows. On the evening of March 6, 1983, a young woman (victim) entered Big Dan’s Tavern in New Bedford to purchase cigarettes. While
Sometime after the other woman left Big Dan’s, the victim also prepared to leave. Cordeiro and Raposo offered to give her a ride home, which she declined. While the victim was standing in the area of the bar, Silvia and Vieira approached her from behind, knocked her to the floor, and removed her pants as Cordeiro and Raposo tried to force the victim to perform fellatio.
Silvia and Vieira then dragged the victim, kicking and screaming, and swung her onto the pool table. There, Silvia penetrated her vaginally while she was restrained at various points by Cordeiro, Raposo, and Vieira. After Silvia got off the victim, he held her by the hair as Vieira got on top of her. While the victim was restrained on the pool table, Cordeiro again attempted to force her to perform fellatio. Eventually, clothed only in a shirt and one shoe, the victim escaped and ran into the street where she flagged down a passing truck.
On appeal, the defendants Vieira and Silvia raise the following arguments. First, they claim that the prosecution’s failure timely to disclose exculpatory evidence, in the form of inconsistent and more incriminating statements by the victim, deprived them of State and Federal due process rights; similarly, they contend that the prosecutor’s suppression until after trial of a witness’s recorded account of the victim’s condition and statements shortly after the alleged rape deprived them of due process. The remaining contentions addressed here
3
concern evidentiary rulings which the defendants assert prejudiced their ability to present a consent defense. First, the defendants argue
1. The prosecutor’s failure to disclose exculpatory evidence.
a. The defendants
4
argue that their due process rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights were violated by the prosecution’s failure to provide timely disclosure of certain inconsistent pretrial statements made by the victim, and that the resulting prejudice entitles them to a new trial. On February 7, 1984, more than two weeks prior to commencement of trial, the victim told the prosecutors for the first time a version of the events at Big Dan’s in which she was able to specify the precise number of men who attacked her and described their specific roles. This version was the first in which she (1) connected Silvia with forcibly assisting her other assailants after he had sexual intercourse with the victim on the pool table, and (2) connected Vieira with acts of sexual intercourse, dragging her to the pool table, and forcibly restraining her while Silvia had sexual inter
There is no dispute that the details provided by the victim just prior to trial were inconsistent with reports initially provided to defense counsel and that the information should have been furnished to the defendants under
Brady
v.
Maryland,
A defendant is deprived of due process if he was prejudiced by the prosecution’s failure timely to disclose requested exculpatory and material evidence. There is no real dispute that the statement was exculpatory, and, therefore, subject to disclosure under
Brady
and its progeny. Although the evidence was more incriminating than the earlier statements, it was exculpatory in the sense that the variance with the previous statements permitted “challenge[ ] [to] the credibility of a key prosecution
witness.”Commonwealth
v.
Ellison,
The more difficult issues here concern the closely related questions of materiality and prejudice. “Undisclosed exculpatory evidence is ‘material’ if, ‘evaluated in the context of the entire record,’ it ‘creates a reasonable doubt that did not otherwise exist.’”
Commonwealth
v.
Gregory, ante
437, 442 (1988), quoting
United States
v.
Agurs, supra
at 112. See
Commonwealth
v.
Gallarelli,
First, whether or not additional time might have enhanced the defendants’ preparedness for cross-examination of the victim, the defendants’ cross-examination of this key witness “was not only extended but searching, and we do not think it would have been materially improved by earlier warning about the witness’s departure from the written statement.”
Commonwealth
v.
Gilbert,
Next, we consider the defendants’ contentions of prejudice related to preparation of their respective defenses. Silvia argues that he had anticipated relying on a defense of consent and arguing nonparticipation in any joint venture. Numerous pretrial statements available to Silvia provided evidence of his acts of force and her resistance, thus contradicting his consent defense. While it is true that it was in the course of the victim’s trial testimony that Silvia first learned that she claimed he restrained her after having sexual intercourse, he was aware that the bartender had told the police that Silvia had been undressing the victim while Cordeiro forced her to perform fellatio. Silva was therefore apprised before trial of acts which contradicted both prongs of his defense theory. In these circumstances, the prosecution’s failure to disclose a statement which provided some additional evidence of a continuing joint venture does not warrant the grant of a new trial.
Also related to the issue of the defendants’ ability to impeach the victim, the defendants argue that the prosecutor’s failure to disclose the victim’s ability to make critical identifications where she had not done so before implicated another key feature of their anticipated defense strategy.
7
Until trial, for reasons not relevant here, the defendants held the understandable, but mistaken, belief that the victim had previously failed to identify Silvia or Vieira from an array of photographs. The defendants contend that their inability to demonstrate to the jury that the
As to Silvia, there simply is no prejudice inasmuch as his defense was one of consent and identification was not a material issue. Nor do we perceive any prejudice to Vieira, whose precise role and actions in the incident were a major issue. Notwithstanding the unfortunate surprise and confusion caused by misapprehension concerning various photographic arrays, defense counsel successfully elicited testimony that the victim not only had viewed an array of photographs and selected only those of Cordeiro and Raposo, but also that she had not identified Vieira and Silvia at Big Dan’s immediately after the incident. In sum, irrespective of whatever role the office of the district attorney may have had in creating or not disspelling the defendants’ misapprehension, we see nothing in the record which indicates that “a more credible defense would have been available” had this misapprehension been clarified earlier. See
Commonwealth
v.
Bryant,
Last, we briefly address Vieira’s contention that his decision not to object to being joined for trial with Silvia was made in reliance upon the state of the evidence as it was known through pretrial discovery and that he was therefore prejudiced by lack of timely disclosure. The short answer is that matters of joinder and severance are within the sound discretion of the trial judge and that a new trial is granted only where there has been an abuse of that discretion.
Commonwealth
v.
Moran,
b. The defendants 8 contend that they are entitled to new trials on the additional ground that the prosecution suppressed exculpatory evidence which had bearing on the credibility of the victim and contradicted the testimony of a nurse at Parkwood Hospital. The statement alleged to have been suppressed was made by a hospital ward clerk to an assistant district attorney and a State trooper. The statement was made during an interview conducted while the trial was in progress; the defendants did not learn of the contents of this statement until after trial. According to the defendants, the ward clerk stated that on the night of the incident (1) the victim claimed that she had been raped on top of the bar, rather than on the pool table, (2) the victim stated that she had gone out to purchase milk but never mentioned cigarettes, and (3) it was her distinct impression that the victim was “high.” The defendants contend that the ward clerk’s testimony would have been valuable evidence serving to impeach the victim’s testimony by virtue of both the discrepancy in details and providing evidence that the victim was so “high,” or intoxicated, that she had no independent perception of what happened to her at Big Dan’s and subsequently modified her testimony to conform with that of other Commonwealth witnesses.
First, we note that, during the course of hearings on the defendants’ motions for a new trial, an evidentiary hearing was conducted with respect to the alleged suppression of the ward clerk’s statement. The judge expressly found, inter alia, that, contrary to the defendants’ assertion, the ward clerk did
2. Evidentiary Rulings.
The defendants challenge various evidentiary rulings made during the course of trial which, it is argued, deprived them of a full and fair opportunity to present their defense, in contravention of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights and the United States Constitution, or in the alternative, were otherwise in error because the excluded evidence should have been admitted for impeachment purposes.
a.
Prior complaint of rape.
At trial, the defendants sought to introduce a medical record, dated July 21, 1981, from Parkwood Hospital indicating that a woman having the same name as the victim had complained of rape. Examination of that record indicates that the complaining patient requested that hospital personnel telephone the police but that she was not examined “because she signed out, after an emotional confrontation [with] the [New Bedford Police Department], in which she was recalcitrant and uncooperative.” The judge ruled that the record itself could not be admitted as extrinsic evidence of a prior bad act (false allegation of rape), but permitted cross-examination regarding the recorded July 21,1981, hospi
Relying on
Commonwealth
v.
Bohannon,
We would agree, but for the critical fact that, as was found by the judge, the hospital record itself provides no evidence that the allegation of rape was indeed false. As we stressed in Bohannon, supra at 95, our decision there was premised in part upon the defendant’s offer of proof which “indicated that he had a factual basis from independent third party records for concluding that prior allegations of rape had, in fact, been made and were, in fact, untrue” (emphasis added). The entries in the hospital record do not create an inference of falsity. Nonetheless, the judge permitted cross-examination on that issue. The judge having done so, however, the admission of the document itself to impeach the victim’s denial of the 1981 hospital admission would have served no purpose other than to impeach her on a collateral issue. 10 There was no error.
Citing
Commonwealth
v.
Lowe,
The defendants additionally assert by way of a footnote that the statement was admissible for impeachment purposes. It does not appear from the record that this argument was raised in the defendants’ motion for a new trial, nor does this assertion here rise to the level of an appellate argument. Mass. R. A. P. 16 (a) (4). We, therefore, do not consider the issue.
c. Exclusion of testimony concerning prior conversation between Silvia and the victim. Prior to trial, Silvia moved, pursuant to the rape-shield statute, G. L. c. 233, § 21B (1986 ed.), to be permitted to introduce evidence of a conversation between Silvia and the victim allegedly occurring two to three months prior to the incident in which the victim expressed an interest in engaging in sex in exchange for money with Silvia and others. The judge excluded that part of the conversation which pertained to matters of prostitution but permitted Silvia to testify about any past relationship and his state of mind. Additionally, the judge ruled that the defendants could cross-examine the victim with regard to her prior association with Silvia. Vieira joined Silvia’s objection to these rulings. The defendants apparently elected not to cross-examine the victim on the issue.
The defendants contend that the portion of the conversation pertaining to prostitution was improperly excluded because (1) it had bearing on the issue of consent and was not barred under G. L. c. 233, § 21B, and (2) it was relevant to Silvia’s state of mind and his defense that he honestly and reasonably believed the victim to be consenting to sexual intercourse.
11
They did not seek to introduce the testimony for purposes of demon
The defendants do not contend that the evidence of the conversation was admissible under G. L. c. 233, § 21B, as evidence of prior sexual conduct. Therefore, the judge was well within his discretion in ruling that the conversation was too remote in time and substance to give rise to a logical or reasonable inference of consent to the incident at Big Dan’s. The judge correctly permitted only a portion of the prior conversation to show a prior relationship bearing on the issue of consent. See
Commonwealth
v.
Mosby,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
See Commonwealth v. Cordeiro, post 843 (1988).
The defendants join codefendants Cordeiro and Raposo in challenging their convictions on the ground that the judge’s order barring electronic media coverage of the victim, while permitting such coverage of the testimony of the defendants, denied the defendants their due process right to a fair trial. See Commonwealth v. Cordeiro, post at 845.
In their brief, defendants Cordeiro and Raposo purport to incorporate by reference, pursuant to Mass. R. A. P. 16 (j),
The content of the undisclosed statements was in fact more inculpatory, giving rise also to a duty to disclose under
Commonwealth
v.
Gilbert,
The defendants urge us to analyze materiality under what they characterize as the more exacting of the standards in Agurs, supra, applicable to cases involving a specific request under Brady, supra. That standard, as quoted and adopted in some Massachusetts cases, requires that “ ‘the reviewing judge ... set aside the verdict and judgment unless his “conviction is sure that the error did not influence the jury, or had but very slight effect.” ’ ” Commonwealth v. Gallarelli, supra at 23, quoting United States v. Agurs, supra at 112. While there is arguably a distinction between the two formulations of the applicable standard, we conclude that under either standard there was no prejudice.
The defendants apparently have abandoned the argument previously advanced in their motion to dismiss that, where the prosecution knew or should have known that defense counsel had “the clear, firm belief” that the victim had failed to identify the defendants, it was under an obligation, pursuant to Commonwealth v. Gilbert, supra, to correct any misunderstanding.
Cordeiro and Raposo also incorporate by reference this argument. Unlike the arguments discussed at note 4, supra, this argument relates generally to all defendants and is, therefore, appropriately incorporated by reference pursuant to Mass. R. A. P. 16 (j).
Here, it should be noted that, unlike the statements discussed in part la,
supra,
the ward clerk’s statement was not the subject of specific request and is therefore to be considered material only “ ‘if the omitted evidence creates a reasonable doubt that did not otherwise exist. ’ ”
Commonwealth
v.
Gilday,
The defendants do not argue that the victim’s statement, “I was raped,” recorded in an authenticated hospital record, was admissible for impeach
The defendants contend that, by barring the proffered evidence, “the Court obviated mistake of fact as a defense.” They do not, however, incorporate or independently advance the argument of Cordeiro and Raposo that they were entitled to a charge on mistake of fact under a subjective standard. See Commonwealth v. Cordeiro, post at 849-851.
