460 Mass. 590 | Mass. | 2011
A jury in the Superior Court convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree on theories of deliberate premeditation and extreme atrocity or cruelty for the shooting death of Francis Stephens. The defendant was also convicted of the armed assault with intent to murder of Jose Astacio, who was shot but not killed, and possession of an unlicensed firearm. A codefendant, Willie Johnson, was acquitted on all charges.
In this consolidated appeal, the defendant argues that he should be granted a new trial because his attorney was ineffective in failing to move to suppress an improperly suggestive and unreliable out-of-court identification, in failing to object to the admission of hearsay with the out-of-court identification, in failing to object to the prosecutor’s characterization of the out-of-court identification in closing argument, and in failing to introduce evidence of a third-party confession. In addition, the defendant claims that the judge erred in limiting the jury’s use of exculpatory evidence of third-party culprits, in admitting evidence of the defendant’s participation in drug dealing, and in
Background. We summarize the evidence in detail, considering it in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, and reserving certain details for our analysis of the issues raised on appeal.
In September, 2000, the defendant and codefendant belonged to a gang from the Franklin Hill area in the Dorchester section of Boston known as the Franklin Hill Giants (Franklin Hill) that was engaged in escalating retaliatory violence with another neighborhood gang from the Esmond Street area (Esmond Street). After someone from Franklin Hill was stabbed while walking on Esmond Street on September 9, Kenie Smith, a senior member of Esmond Street, and Richard Green, a senior member of Franklin Hill, met to discuss the situation, in the presence of other gang members, including the defendant. After Green threatened Smith, and Smith made a move to his jacket, the defendant reached into his waistband and did something that sounded as though he were cocking a revolver. On September 12, an Esmond Street gang member was shot, and later that evening, a Franklin Hill gang member was shot. On September 16, at approximately 1 p.m., Smith was driving with three other Esmond Street gang members in a minivan when they spotted Green. Smith pulled in front of Green’s vehicle, and someone from his minivan fired four to five shots into the windshield of Green’s car, wounding Green.
Green was the “head man” of the Franklin Hill gang, supplied “crack” cocaine for sale by gang members, and determined which gang member was allowed to sell drugs on which neighborhood street. After the shooting of Green, several members of Franklin Hill, including the defendant, gathered at Akia Cheshire’s apartment, where the defendant, among others, lived. Later that afternoon, the defendant suggested to Shared Clark,
That afternoon, the defendant asked Terrance Dotson, who was friendly with Franklin Hill members, whether he would put gasoline in a Toyota Cressida automobile that Dotson had recently stolen and leave it for the defendant. Dotson followed his direction. At about 7 p.m., Dotson saw the defendant get into the Toyota automobile with Kyrone Childers.
Shortly thereafter, the defendant, wearing a black hooded sweatshirt, black gloves, and a black “skullie” cap, was driving the Toyota with the codefendant, Willie Johnson, now in the passenger seat, and stopped when he saw Clark, who was standing on the street with two companions. The defendant once more asked Clark to go “up the street with them.” This time, Clark and his two companions followed in Clark’s vehicle.
Clark testified at trial that the two cars drove to Glenway Street, with the defendant’s car in the lead. They saw three men talking together near the comer of Glenway and Harlem Streets, in Esmond Street territory.
At around 8:15 p.m., police officers and paramedics arrived on the scene and found Stephens lying face down on the sidewalk with multiple gunshot wounds to his head and torso that proved fatal.
At the crime scene, a man who refused to identify himself told police officers that he witnessed the shooting while he was driving his children home. The individual was later identified by a police officer as Sylvester Harrison. Approximately five months after the shooting, on February 13, 2001, Detectives John Martel and Michael Primm of the Boston police department interviewed Harrison at his home and showed him an array of twelve photographs. Detective Martel testified that Harrison did not make a positive identification but picked out two individuals that “look like the two people that were in the
Harrison testified at trial that on September 16, 2000, he was driving on Page Street toward the intersection of Glenway and Harlem Streets, when he heard shots coming from Glenway Street.
Harrison testified that “[t]he bottom line to me is I didn’t see who shot the person. I never seen the people’s face.” Pointing at the two defendants, he said, “I never seen that man or that man before in my life.” Harrison said the police officers came to his house late one evening and showed him an array of photographs that they described as “a gang.” The officers pressured him to identify suspects from the array and urged him to “guess” whom he might have seen, even though police officers knew at the time that he was intoxicated. Much of Harrison’s testimony contradicted itself. He said he had not selected any photographs from the array but admitted that he had told the grand jury that he had, explaining that he selected two photographs from the array when he got “tired” of the police officers’ persistence. He said he “did not see their face” and that his “head was turned backwards,” but he conceded that he saw “a quick image.” He said he did
The key witnesses against the defendant — Clark, Dotson, and Boyd — each arguably had received benefit or expected to benefit from their cooperation with the Commonwealth in the investigation. Clark first told police about his role in the shooting after he had been arrested while in possession of a nine millimeter semiautomatic firearm with a large capacity feeding device and faced prosecution as an armed career criminal. Clark’s armed career criminal charge was dismissed, and he was not prosecuted for his role in the shooting of Stephens and Astacio. Dotson had a pending armed robbery case when he testified before the grand jury, to which he later pleaded guilty and served eighteen months, and at the time of trial he was in jail awaiting trial on another pending criminal case.
After three days of deliberation, the jury sent a note to the judge that stated, in pertinent part, “We are deadlocked on our decision. Our decision is not unanimous, two individualfs] on opposite sides claim nothing will ever change their view.” The judge, after consulting with trial counsel, dismissed the jury for the day and on the next day delivered an instruction consistent with our holding in Commonwealth v. Rodriquez, 364 Mass. 87, 101-102 (1973) (Appendix), directing the jury to continue their deliberations. After returning to their deliberations, the jury
Discussion. 1. Ineffective assistance of counsel. Many of the defendant’s claims on appeal rest on the contention that he was denied the right to the effective assistance of counsel. Commonwealth v. Martinez, 425 Mass. 382, 387-388 (1997). Where, as here, the defendant has been convicted of murder in the first degree, “we consider his claim of ineffectiveness of counsel to determine whether there exists a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice, as required under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, which is more favorable to a defendant than the constitutional standard for determining ineffectiveness of counsel.” Commonwealth v. Gonzalez, 443 Mass. 799, 808 (2005). Where defense counsel is claimed to be ineffective because he failed timely to object during the course of trial, we determine whether there was error and, if so, whether the error was “likely to have influenced the jury’s conclusion.” Id., quoting Commonwealth v. Wright, 411 Mass. 678, 682 (1992). “Under this more favorable standard of review, we consider a defendant’s claim even if the action by trial counsel does not constitute conduct ‘falling measurably below that ... of an ordinary fallible lawyer.’ ” Commonwealth v. Gonzalez, supra at 808-809, quoting Commonwealth v. MacKenzie, 413 Mass. 498, 517 (1992). Where defense counsel made a strategic or tactical decision that the defendant now challenges, we determine whether the decision was “manifestly unreasonable” when made, recognizing that “[mjany decisions of defense counsel that are characterized in hindsight as errors may have been reasonable tactical or strategic
a. Defense counsel’s failure to file a motion to suppress Harrison’s out-of-court identification. The defendant argues that Harrison’s out-of-court identification was so impermissibly suggestive and so unreliable that any competent attorney would have moved for its suppression. After an evidentiary hearing on the motion for a new trial, in which defendant’s trial counsel and Detectives Martel and Primm testified,
In reviewing the judge’s denial of the defendant’s motion for a new trial, we first consider, as did the judge, whether a motion to suppress the identification likely would have been granted had it been filed. See Commonwealth v. Comita, 441 Mass. 86, 91 (2004) (where defendant claims ineffective assistance of counsel for failure to file motion to suppress, “defendant has to demonstrate a likelihood that the motion to suppress would have been successful”). Under art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, an out-of-court eyewitness identification is not admissible where the defendant proves by a preponderance of the evidence, considering the totality of the circumstances, that the identification is so unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable misidentification that its admission would deprive the defendant of his right to due process. See Commonwealth v. Johnson, 420 Mass. 458, 463-464 (1995); Commonwealth v. Thornley, 406 Mass. 96, 98 (1989). See also Commonwealth v. Silva-Santiago, 453 Mass. 782, 794-795 (2009) (Silva-Santiago).
Based on the evidence at the hearing on the motion for a new
We come to this conclusion cognizant that the detectives who conducted the identification procedure did not follow the protocol that we adopted in Silva-Santiago, supra at 798, for police to use “in the future” when conducting an identification procedure. The detectives failed to inform Harrison that the alleged wrongdoers may or may not be in the photographs depicted in the array, that it is just as important to clear a person from suspicion as to identify a person as the wrongdoer, that the individuals depicted in the photographs may not appear exactly as they did on the date of the incident because features such as weight and head and facial hair are subject to change, and that, regardless
The defendant asks that we revisit our conclusion in Silva-Santiago, supra at 798-799, that the choice of a simultaneous rather than a sequential display of photographs goes solely to the weight of the identification, not to its admissibility. We suggested in that case that we would revisit this conclusion if the substantial weight of additional empirical evidence demonstrates that “the sequential showing of photographs leads to greater accuracy” in eyewitness identifications. Id. at 798. The defendant contends that the empirical evidence is already clear that sequential display is the better procedure and that simultaneous display is inherently unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification.
Our review of the empirical research, as well as a survey of the empirical research conducted by a special master appointed by the Supreme Court of New Jersey,
In addition, we also recognize that the failure to provide warnings comparable to the protocol we adopted in Silva-Santiago, supra at 797-798, including warning the eyewitness that the alleged wrongdoer may not be among the photographs in the array and that it is as important to clear a person from suspicion as to identify a person as the wrongdoer, “substantially increases risk of misidentification.” Master’s Report, supra at 22. What is not clear from the studies is whether, and in what circumstances, the use of the protocol in a simultaneous photographic lineup diminishes the risk of false positive identification to a rate comparable to or less than that in a sequential lineup. We cannot determine whether a sequential display is superior to a simultaneous display and that the use of the latter is unnecessarily suggestive until we learn, at a minimum, whether the rate of false positive identification with the use of the protocol is significantly higher in simultaneous displays than in sequential displays.
Therefore, we believe it is still too soon to conclude that
The defendant also contends that the photographic array was “grossly improper” because it was composed entirely of suspects. The defendant argues that scientific and legal studies suggest that an all-suspect array “produces sharply inflated false identification rates compared with the single-suspect model.” See, e.g., Master’s Report, supra at 25 (“ordinary and accepted practice among law enforcement agencies is to present an array embedding the suspect among at least five fillers”); United States Department of Justice, Eyewitness Evidence: A Guide for Law Enforcement 29 (1999) (recommending that police “[i]nclude only one suspect per identification procedure”); Wells, Eyewitness Identification: The Importance of Lineup Models, 99 Psychol. Bull. 320 (1986).
We are not convinced that the rate of false positive identification is greater with all-suspect arrays, but we are persuaded that the danger that a false positive identification will result in a wrongful prosecution is greater with an all-suspect array, because an eyewitness who is mistaken in an identification will nonetheless point to a suspect in the case and the police will not know that the identification is mistaken. See id. at 322 (“there is no response that the eyewitness can make that can be classified as a known error in actual cases that use the all-suspect model”). Where the array consists of only one suspect and fillers, a mistaken identification will be apparent, because the filler has
We do not conclude that a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice arose from the use of an all-suspect array in this case. The photograph that Harrison identified as the man in the Toyota automobile was not the codefendant; but the codefend-ant, and not the man identified, was the person charged by the Commonwealth, which suggests that the police did not lock onto a suspect based on Harrison’s identification. Moreover, the heart of the Commonwealth’s case against Walker was the testimony of Clark, Dotson, and Boyd, not Harrison’s equivocal and retracted prior identification.
Finally, the defendant urges that we revisit our jurisprudence under art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights and
We recognize that, in State v. Henderson, supra, the Supreme Court of New Jersey recently concluded that, where a defendant presents some evidence of suggestiveness that could lead to a mistaken eyewitness identification, the defendant is entitled to a pretrial hearing where the judge will consider all of the factors relevant to the reliability of the identification, including both “[s]ystem [vjariables” (defined as “variables within the State’s control,” such as the pretrial identification procedure, id. at 248) and “[e]stimator variables” (defined as “factors beyond the control of the criminal justice system,” such as factors related to the incident, the witness, or the perpetrator, id. at 261). The court declared, “[I]f after weighing the evidence presented a court finds from the totality of the circumstances that defendant has demonstrated a very substantial likelihood of
Our convening of a study committee on eyewitness identification reflects our willingness to revisit our jurisprudence regarding such evidence, see note 16, supra, and to consider, among other alternatives, the approach established in New Jersey, but we will not do so in a case where the defendant did not move to suppress the identification and where the issue is whether the defendant’s attorney was ineffective in failing to do so. Where, as here, the pretrial identification was not obtained through an unnecessarily suggestive police identification procedure or especially suggestive circumstances, and where the alleged unreliability of the eyewitness identification arose from distance, lighting, the brevity of the observation, and the emotional state of the eyewitness at the time of the observation, there was no substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice from the admission of the eyewitness testimony. See Commonwealth v. Odware, supra at 236; Commonwealth v. Payne, supra. The jury were capable of making an informed assessment of the accuracy of
For these reasons, we conclude that defense counsel was not ineffective for failing to move to suppress Harrison’s pretrial identification, and its admission did not result in a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.
b. Defense counsel’s failure to object to hearsay in Harrison’s out-of-court identification. The defendant also claims that defense counsel rendered ineffective assistance because she failed to object to Detective Martel’s testimony that Harrison said he saw the person depicted in photograph number two (the defendant) operate a black Toyota and “[h]e observed [this person] as being the shooter coming out of the vehicle and shooting at two individuals that were on the sidewalk.” The defendant contends this was hearsay that went beyond the permissible scope of an identification. We conclude there was no error in the admission of this testimony.
We allow the admission in evidence of a pretrial identification even where the identifying witness denies or does not remember having made such an identification, provided the identifying witness testifies at trial and is subject to cross-examination concerning the pretrial identification, and we do not limit the use of
The defendant contends that Harrison’s out-of-court statements went beyond a statement of identification and into the realm of inadmissible hearsay. We have recognized that “[a]bsent context, an act or statement of identification is meaningless. . . . [Identification evidence must be accompanied either by some form of accusation relevant to the issue before the court, or some form of exclusionary statement, in order to be relevant to the case.” Commonwealth v. Adams, 458 Mass. 766, 772 (2011).
The judge, in denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial,
*608 “The extent of the statement needed to provide context will vary from case to case, depending on what the witness remembers or denies at trial. We emphasize that the rule was not intended to render a witness’s entire statement admissible, but only so much as comprises relevant evidence on the issue of identification. Judges have broad discretion in this area, and parties who intend to offer pretrial statements of identification are well advised to bring the matter to the attention of the trial judge at the earliest practicable time, preferably in a motion in limine.”
In denying the motion for a new trial, the judge determined that the statement about a “good look” was “proper argument based on the evidence before the jury and permissible inferences drawn therefrom.” The judge recognized that Harrison did not testify at trial that the face of the shooter looked like the face of the defendant, but instead said that to Detective Martel, who reported it to the jury in his testimony. The judge concluded that the prosecutor’s statement was not improper because, despite “the prosecutor’s inartful phraseology,” a reasonable jury would have understood that the prosecutor was referring to the pretrial identification of the photographs made by Harrison, not to his trial testimony.
Because the judge would have overruled defense counsel’s objections to these closing argument statements and was within his discretion in doing so, we conclude that defense counsel’s failure to object did not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. See Commonwealth v. Raymond, 424 Mass. 382, 391
d. Defense counsel’s failure to introduce evidence of third-party confession. In her cross-examination of Dotson, defense counsel elicited from him that he had stated to Detective Michael Devane in October, 2000, that one of Green’s brothers had shot the victim in the chest and another brother had “finished him in the head.” He testified “that was the word” he had heard. On redirect examination, Dotson testified that this was the word “that was going around the hood,” and that he had passed on the rumor to the police, having no firsthand information. In her cross-examination of Detective Devane, defense counsel elicited that Dotson had told him that two of Green’s brothers shot the victim. However, on redirect examination, when the prosecutor asked the detective if he recalled “all of what Mr. Dotson had to say” regarding the Green brothers’ involvement in the shooting, the detective testified that Dotson had recanted that statement and admitted it was not true. He said Dotson “changed it to something he heard and then backed off even hearing that.” The defendant asserts that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his trial attorney did not attempt to elicit from Dotson or Detective Devane the information contained in the detective’s report of this interview that Dotson had heard this information from the Green brothers.
We agree with the judge that it was not manifestly unreasonable for defense counsel to fail to attempt to elicit this information. In the police report, Detective Devane wrote that Dotson initially stated that he heard this information from the Green brothers during a conversation with them, then said he overheard a conversation between the Greens, then denied hearing any conversation, and then admitted that his statement that the Green brothers committed the shooting was not true. If the defendant’s attorney had elicited from Dotson or Detective Devane that Dotson had initially told the detective that he heard the Greens admit to this crime, the prosecutor would have elicited from Dotson or Detective Devane that Dotson immediately recanted this information and admitted it was not true. By not pressing this point, defense counsel was able to leave the jury with the
Having addressed each of the claims of ineffective assistance of counsel raised by the defendant in his motion for a new trial, we affirm the denial of the motion and move to the other claims raised by the defendant.
2. Limitation on use of exculpatory evidence. Through co-defendant counsel’s cross-examination of Boston police Sergeant Detective James J. Wyse, the jury learned that an “unknown black male” had approached a police officer who had responded to the crime scene and told him that two Hispanic males had left the suspects’ car, “possibly” dropped something near a Cadillac up the street, and fled in a Honda or Toyota automobile.
Where evidence is offered for its truth to prove that a third
3. Evidence of drug dealing. The defendant claims that the judge erred by permitting the Commonwealth to introduce “entirely tangential” and highly inflammatory evidence that the defendant sold crack cocaine. Over the defendant’s objection, Clark testified that the defendant was involved in the sale of crack cocaine from Akia Cheshire’s apartment, but he never saw the defendant make any drug transactions or handle any narcotics. In addition, apart from evidence about Green’s drug dealing, several police officers and civilian witnesses testified to the prevalence of drug dealing among members of the Franklin Hill gang. We review for prejudicial error.
While evidence of prior bad acts, such as drug dealing, may not be introduced for the purpose of showing the accused’s
The Commonwealth’s theory, as the prosecutor stated in his closing argument, was that the shooting of the victim and Asta-do appears senseless unless one understands its context. The jury heard evidence from which they could infer that the viciousness of the shooting was motivated by rage that Green, a key source of drugs and therefore of revenue for the Franklin Hill gang, had been shot. The defendant’s participation in the gang’s drug dealing provided motive for his participation in the shooting. The judge’s forceful admonitions to the jury reasonably ensured that the jury considered the drug testimony for the limited purpose of establishing motive and not for the forbidden purpose of inferring the defendant’s bad character. See Commonwealth v. O’Laughlin, 446 Mass. 188, 208-209 (2006) (no unfair prejudice to defendant where judge gave limiting instructions on evidence of prior drug abuse relevant to motive). Because testimony about drug dealing was relevant to the defendant’s motive and the judge gave forceful hmiting instructions, we conclude that the judge did not abuse his discretion in finding that the probative value of the testimony outweighed the risk of unfair prejudice.
4. Denial of request for an alibi instruction. The defendant
While a judge may choose to give an alibi instruction, it is well settled that an “alibi instruction is not required where the charge as a whole makes clear that the Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed the crime for which he was indicted.” Commonwealth v. Thomas, 439 Mass. 362, 371 (2003). See Commonwealth v. Medina, 380 Mass. 565, 579 (1980) (not error to omit alibi instruction where judge “otherwise made clear that the burden of showing that the defendant was present at the time and place, and thus capable of committing the crime, remains on the Commonwealth”). Here, the judge repeatedly emphasized throughout trial, and forcefully instructed in his charge to the jury, that the Commonwealth alone bore the burden of proving every element of each crime charged beyond a reasonable doubt.
5. Sufficiency of the evidence as to the charge of armed assault with intent to murder. On the charge of armed assault with intent to murder, the Commonwealth proceeded solely on an attempted battery theory of assault,
“Under the attempted battery theory, the Commonwealth must prove that the defendant intended to commit a battery, took some overt step toward accomplishing that intended battery, and came reasonably close to doing so.” Commonwealth v. Melton, 436 Mass. 291, 295 (2002). Here, the evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, established that on the evening of September 16, 2000, the defendant armed himself with a nine millimeter semiautomatic weapon and drove in a stolen automobile to territory controlled by Es-mond Street with the intent to “kill anybody over there” in revenge for the shooting of Green. At the intersection of Glenway, Harlem, and Page Streets, the passenger in the defendant’s car fired the first shots, a wounded Astacio rolled under a van, and the defendant then left the car and began shooting multiple times in a downward direction on Glenway Street. Based on the ballistics evidence, a reasonable jury could infer that at least one shot from each of the two firearms used by the shooters was fired near the van under which Astacio rolled, which suggests that each of the shooters attempted to shoot Astacio after he was wounded.
6. Review under G. L. c. 278, § 33E. Having thoroughly examined the record, we see no reason to exercise our authority under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to reduce the murder in the first degree conviction to murder in the second degree, or to order a new trial.
7. Conclusion. For the reasons stated above, we affirm the defendant’s judgments of conviction, and the denial of his motion for a new trial.
So ordered.
Willie Johnson was charged with murder in the first degree, assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, and possession of an unlicensed firearm.
At the time of trial, one of Shared Clark’s companions was deceased. The other, Christopher Robinson, testified that he did not recall ever being in a vehicle with Clark on the day of the murder.
The transcript refers to Harvard Street, but according to the map in evidence, the street that intersects Glenway Street is Harlem Street. We infer that the reference to Harvard Street is a stenographic error.
Jose Astacio asserted his right against self-incrimination pursuant to the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and did not testify at trial.
The trial testimony of two nonparticipant eyewitnesses corroborated Clark’s description of the shooting. Jonathan Baskin testified that at approximately 8 p.m. he heard a loud sound and looked out of the third-story window of his home near the intersection of Glenway and Harlem Streets. He “saw a gentleman standing and firing a gun . . . in a downward direction” on the sidewalk on Glenway Street near Harlem Street. Baskin described the man as a dark-skinned African-American male of “average height,” which he set variously as between five feet, six inches, to five feet, ten inches tall. After the shooting, he saw the man jump into the passenger side of a car that “took off up Glen-way Street.” Baskin did not see the face of the man. At trial, he identified a photograph of a dark-colored Toyota Cressida as the car used by the shooter.
Glennis Pena testified that, while she was on her second-story porch on Fowler Street, which intersects Glenway Street, a block away from the intersection where the shooting occurred, she witnessed a car going “very fast” up the street. The car stopped further up Fowler Street, and two people got out and entered a car that was “coming from behind.” She did not recognize the occupants of the cars.
Dr. Mark Flomenbaum, the chief medical examiner, testified at trial about the wounds to Stephens. Dr. Flomenbaum did not perform the autopsy or write the autopsy report but testified because the medical examiner who had done so was no longer with the medical examiner’s office. Without objection, Dr. Flomenbaum testified that, according to the autopsy report, the victim had been shot fifteen times; the injuries caused by eight of the bullets that struck him would independently have been fatal. Three shots were fired to the back of Stephens’s head, and another was consistent with having struck Stephens when he was “belly down.” Three pages of the autopsy report were admitted in evidence, also without objection. While this testimony and the autopsy report were inadmissible hearsay whose admission violated the defendant’s right of confrontation under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, see Commonwealth v. Barbosa, 457 Mass. 773, 784 (2010), cert. denied, 131 S. Ct. 2441 (2011), the defendant does not contend on appeal that defense counsel was ineffective for failing to object to their admission or that their admission produced a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice. We independently consider this error under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, and conclude that no substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice resulted from its admission, because there was abundant other reliable evidence that the shooter repeatedly fired at Stephens while he lay helplessly wounded on the sidewalk.
The police also recovered a light-colored T-shirt from the abandoned
Page Street becomes Harlem Street at the intersection with Glenway Street.
Sylvester Harrison could not identify the photograph of the black Toyota as the car he saw blocking Fowler Street that night. Clark testified that the Toyota had front end damage before it was used in the shooting.
When asked to estimate the length of Page Street, Harrison replied that it was probably a distance of about “three quarters of a football field,” the equivalent of 225 feet, and that he was at the beginning of the street when he heard the shots. Page Street begins at McLellan Street, from which Harrison entered Page Street, and ends at Glenway Street. The defendant contends from this testimony that Harrison was 225 feet away from Glenway Street when he saw the shooter, but this ignores Harrison’s testimony that he drove in reverse on Page Street when he realized the shots were coming from Glenway Street, which suggests that he had driven some distance toward Glenway Street before he decided to go in reverse.
Terrence Dotson denied that he had been promised anything regarding his armed robbery case or his pending case.
Harrison died before the evidentiary hearing on the motion.
Where the defendant satisfies this burden, the out-of-court identification is per se excluded as a violation of the defendant’s right to due process under art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. Commonwealth v. Johnson, 420 Mass. 458, 462-463 (1995). In contrast, under the Fourteenth Amendment
The Supreme Court of New Jersey appointed a special master to conduct a “plenary hearing” to examine the scientific evidence regarding eyewitness identification. See Report of Special Master at 3 (June 18, 2010), State vs. Henderson, N.J. Supreme Court No. A-8-08. At the hearing, more than 200 published scientific studies, articles, and books were made part of the record, and seven expert witnesses on eyewitness identification testified. Id.
We urge district attorneys to provide training to police in proper identification procedures to ensure that the risk of a wrongful conviction arising from a mistaken identification is diminished.
Because eyewitness identification is the greatest source of wrongful convictions but also an invaluable law enforcement tool in obtaining accurate convictions, and because the research regarding eyewitness identification procedures is complex and evolving, we shall convene a study committee to consider how we can best deter unnecessarily suggestive procedures and whether existing model jury instructions provide adequate guidance to juries in evaluating eyewitness testimony.
The defendant’s additional alleged constitutional bases for suppression are groundless and merit only brief comment. That a police detective who was investigating the case composed and presented the array (that is, that the identification procedure was not “double-blind”) and that the interview was not recorded do not without more render the identification evidence unduly suggestive. See Commonwealth v. Silva-Santiago, 453 Mass. 782, 797, 799 (2009).
The Supreme Court of New Jersey, in contrast with this court, had earlier adopted the two-step analysis in Manson v. Braithwaite, 432 U.S. 98, 110 (1977), in which a judge first determines whether an identification procedure was impermissibly suggestive and, if so, then considers in the totality of the circumstances whether the identification was nonetheless reliable. State v. Henderson, 208 N.J. 208, 237 (2011).
The defendant claims that Harrison’s identification is unreliable because he was too distant from the men he observed, he saw only a “quick image,” he was focused more on the safety of his children than the identity of the shooter, and his pretrial identification occurred five months after the incident. The defendant’s cross-examination and the judge’s instructions to the jury were adequate to address the danger of unreliability arising from these sources.
Because we conclude that there was no reasonable likelihood that Harrison’s pretrial identification would have been suppressed had defense counsel so moved, we need not address whether it was manifestly unreasonable for defense counsel to make the strategic decision not to challenge its admissibility and use Harrison’s testimony to argue that the police were overzealous in their investigation of the murder by pressuring him to make a false identification. See Commonwealth v. Acevedo, 446 Mass. 435, 446-447 (2006) (defense counsel ineffective for strategic decision only where decision was manifestly unreasonable when made).
We added in Commonwealth v. Adams, 458 Mass. 766, 772 (2011):
In view of the conclusion that defense counsel’s actions were not manifestly unreasonable, we need not determine whether the Green brothers’ purported admission to the crime would have been admissible in evidence.
Neither the defendant nor the codefendant is Hispanic. Both are African-American.
The defendant initially sought to admit this out-of-court statement through
Our confidence that the defendant did not suffer unfair prejudice from the admission in evidence of the defendant’s participation in drug dealing is strengthened by the fact that there was far more extensive evidence regarding his codefendant’s drug dealing, and the jury found the codefendant not guilty. Clark testified that he had seen the codefendant selling illegal drugs approximately twice a week through the summer of 2000. Trooper Patricia Riley testified that she personally observed the codefendant “multiple times” in the summer of 2000 while conducting physical surveillance of the sale of crack cocaine in the Franklin Hill housing complex. Not surprisingly, it was codefendant’s counsel, not the defendant’s, who took the lead in objecting to testimony about illegal drug dealing. If any unfair prejudice attached to the evidence of
We add that the alibi defense in this case was weak. The evidence established that the shooting occurred between 8 and 8:15 p.m. The only evidence of an alibi came from the testimony of Jose DeJesus, an acquaintance of the defendant, who said that he saw the defendant and others when he arrived at Alda Cheshire’s apartment on the evening of the shooting. He estimated that he arrived at Cheshire’s apartment some time after 8 p.m., based on “the math” he had done with defense counsel concerning the timing of his earlier activities that day.
The Commonwealth did not elect to proceed on the assault theory of “immediately threatened battery,” under which it would have been required to “prove that the defendant intentionally engaged in menacing conduct that reasonably caused the victim to fear an imminent battery.” Commonwealth v. Melton, 436 Mass. 291, 295 n.4 (2002). See Commonwealth v. Porro, 458 Mass. 526, 530-531 (2010) (examining difference between imminent threatened battery and attempted battery).
While the prosecution sought and obtained a joint venture instruction as to the charge of murder, it did not seek a joint venture instruction as to the charge of armed assault with intent to murder.
Officer Mark Lydon, a ballistics expert called by the Commonwealth, testified that twenty-six shell casings were recovered at the scene. Subsequent forensic testing indicated that twelve of those casings were from bullets fired from one nine millimeter semiautomatic weapon and fourteen were from bullets fired from another nine millimeter semiautomatic weapon. A map introduced in evidence and used by Detective Lydon during his testimony showed that a shell casing from one weapon was located under the right rear tire of the van, and another casing from that same weapon was recovered on the pavement