The defendant, Ramon Luis Vizcarrondo, appeals from his conviction of murder in the first degree by reason of extreme atrocity or cruelty. He alleges that he is entitled to a new trial because of incorrect jury instructions on the third prong of malice. He argues that there is a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice
The medical testimony established that the cause of death was multiple blunt force trauma that required four or more blows to the body. The medical testimony also indicated that the baby may have survived her injuries for as long as one hour, and was likely conscious for some of that time. The injuries would have been extremely painful. Medical experts opined that the baby’s injuries were not consistent with falling off a bed, falling to the ground with an adult, being hit in the abdomen by an adult’s elbow as the adult tripped, or being dropped from an adult’s arms.
At the time of her death, Lisa lived with her seventeen year old mother, Veronica Santiago. Together, they lived with the defendant, who was eighteen at the time, in the defendant’s room in his mother’s home. On the night of December 6, 1993, the defendant arrived home at about 11 p.m. While the baby slept in her playpen next to the bed, the defendant and Santiago lay in the bed and watched a television show. After the television show was over, they had sexual intercourse. The sexual relations ended when the defendant asked Santiago to perform a “very intimate” sexual act that she did not want to perform. Santiago then went upstairs to take a shower. The defendant remained in the bedroom with the baby. Approximately twenty minutes later, Santiago heard the baby crying, got out of the shower, and returned downstairs to check on her. When she returned to the bedroom, the defendant was on the bed leaning into the playpen, rubbing the baby’s back. The baby was lying in the playpen, positioned so that her head was at the opposite end of the playpen from when her mother put her down to sleep. The baby was breathing as if she had been crying and was just calming down. The defendant told Santiago that the baby had awoken and that he was quieting her. Santiago returned to the shower while the defendant remained with the baby. Five to ten minutes later the defendant brought the baby
The defendant did not testify at trial. However, statements he gave to the police, both before and after his arrest, were admitted in evidence at trial.
After he was arrested, the defendant admitted to police that he squeezed the baby “a little bit,” but not hard enough to kill her. He also admitted that he bit her arms twice. He denied responsibility for her death. The arresting officer told the defendant that his version of events was not consistent with the baby’s injuries. The defendant changed his account. He stated that he picked up the baby from the playpen and put her on the foot of the bed. She fell from the bed, and as he reached over to pick her up, he tripped over a pile of clothes, and the two of them fell. The defendant said that the baby must have hit her stomach against the wooden edge of the bed.
The arresting officer told the defendant that this account was still not consistent with the baby’s injuries. The defendant then told the arresting officer that as he attempted to lift the baby from the floor, he tripped over the bed, and his elbow landed on her stomach when he fell.
2. Instructions on the third prong of malice? The defendant asserts that the judge’s instructions on the third prong of malice,
“We reject any suggestion that we have made something less than a plain and strong likelihood of death sufficient for proof
A conviction of murder founded on a state of mind sufficient
Unlike previous cases where we rejected challenges similar to the one raised by the defendant, see Commonwealth v. Murphy,
The Commonwealth relies on cases in which we have held that jurors may properly infer malice aforethought from a simple blow with the hand to a young child, even though such a blow to a healthy adult would not support an inference of malice. See Commonwealth v. Hutchinson,
As the Appeals Court recently stated, quoting Yates v. United States,
3. Conclusion. The judgment is reversed, the verdict is set aside, and the case is remanded to the Superior Court for a new trial.
So ordered.
Notes
We review for a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice because the defendant did not object to the instructions at trial. See Commonwealth v. Burke,
On appeal, the defendant does not challenge the admission of these statements.
“Malice as an element of murder may be proved by evidence establishing any one of three facts beyond a reasonable doubt: if, without justification or
The judge’s instructions were, in relevant part:
“Malice aforethought includes an unexcused specific intent to kill or an unexcused specific intent to do grievous bodily harm or an unexcused specific intent to do an act which in the circumstances known to the Defendant would create a plain and strong likelihood that death would result.
“Malice aforethought may be inferred if from the circumstances known to the Defendant, a reasonably prudent person would have known that according to common experience there was a plain and strong likelihood that death or grievous bodily harm would follow the contemplated act” (emphasis supplied).
The judge, thus, gave both a correct and an incorrect definition of the third prong of malice. We cannot say which the jury followed. See Commonwealth v. Sneed,
We have been clear in our view “that the third prong of the malice definition can only be satisfied by proof that ‘there was a plain and strong likelihood of death.’ ” Commonwealth v. Fuller,
On occasion, however, when the definition of the third prong of malice has not been directly at issue, we have included the grievous bodily harm language in our statement of the definition. See Commonwealth v. Pierce,
The defendant also assigns error to the judge’s use of the “frame of mind” language that we have said “is not helpful and ought in the future to be omitted.” Commonwealth v. Eagles,
