The defendant was convicted of the murder in the first degree of Jeffrey S. Boyajian. He appeals from his conviction, arguing: (1) that his Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated by allegedly improper police conduct with respect to a photographic identification; (2) that the judge abused his discretion in refusing to accept the defendant’s plea of guilty of murder in the second degree; and (3) that justice requires, under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, that we order a new trial, or that we direct the entry of a verdict of a lesser degree of guilt, *298 because the defendant was only vicariously responsible for the killing. We conclude that the defendant’s arguments are merit-less, and accordingly we affirm. 1
There is evidence from which the jury could have found the following. At 4 a.m. on November 16, 1979, Richard Dwyer was sitting in his parked taxicab on Washington Street in downtown Boston. He observed three young black men enter ITOA taxicab No. 649, which was parked directly in front of his. The taxicab then drove off. Later that morning, having learned of the murder of the driver of ITOA taxicab No. 649, Dwyer went to a police station. He was shown a photographic array, and identified the defendant as one of the three persons he had seen get into that taxicab. At trial, he again made an identification of Watson as one of the individuals involved.
Shortly after 4 a.m. on the same morning, Phillippa Sweatt, a resident of 20 Brookway Terrace in the Archdale Housing Project, in the Roslindale section of Boston, heard a disturbance outside her kitchen window. She saw the victim, Jeffrey S. Boyajian, being pulled from his taxicab by three men. Boyajian was yelling, “Leave me alone. Let me go.” Phillippa Sweatt later, in court, identified the defendant as one of the three men involved.
While Mrs. Sweatt was observing this scene, she called her son to the window. Neal Sweatt testified that he recognized the defendant Watson as one of the two men holding the victim, while a third man, Frederick Clay, went through his pockets. The three men then began to beat Boyajian, and Neal Sweatt testified that he heard him cry out, “Take what you want, but let me live.” Boyajian was knocked to the ground, and Sweatt’s view of what then happened was partially obscured by a dumpster. The three apparently left the victim lying on the ground, while Clay walked over to the taxi. When Clay returned, he pulled an object from his pocket. Sweatt could not see what the *299 object was, but he testified that he heard at least three shots being fired. 2 The three men then ran away. Police officers arrived on the scene minutes later to find Boyajian’s body slumped against the dumpster with gunshot wounds in his head.
1. Photographic identification. Watson first challenges the propriety of the photographic identification made by Neal Sweatt a few days after the murder. 3 A few minutes after the police had found Boyajian’s body, they questioned Sweatt, who was standing in the courtyard of 20 Brookway Terrace. Sweatt initially was reluctant to tell the police what he had seen, allegedly because of fear for his family’s safety: “I was scared because I have a family, and the reason why I lied about I didn’t see anything is because I was afraid for my family, and then I see that my mother she couldn’t sleep at night.” To alleviate his fear, the police offered to help Sweatt and his family move from the Archdale project to another housing project, if Sweatt would describe to the police what he had seen on the morning of November 16. Accordingly, on November 19, Sweatt made a positive identification of the defendant Watson from a group of twelve or fourteen photographs of black males who frequented the Archdale project. He then positively identified the defendant at trial as one of the three men involved in beating Boyajian. Through the efforts of the Boston police, Sweatt and his family were moved to a different housing project.
*300
“[C]onvictions based on eyewitness identification at trial following a pretrial identification by photograph will be set aside . . . only if the photographic identification procedure was so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.”
Commonwealth
v.
Clark,
The defendant has cited no authority which even suggests that this kind of arrangement between the police and a prosecution witness somehow renders unconstitutional the admission of the witness’s identification of a defendant. Of course, the Commonwealth is required to reveal any “understanding or agreement” with a witness, and the defendant is entitled to introduce it at trial.
Giglio
v.
United States,
2.
The judge’s refusal to accept defendant’s guilty plea.
A judge is afforded wide discretion in determining whether to accept a plea of guilty. See
Commonwealth
v.
Souza,
3.
Review under G.L. c. 278, § 33E.
Finally, the defendant contends that, because he did not actually shoot the victim, we should exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to order a new trial or to direct the entry of a verdict of a lesser degree of guilt. We decline to do so. “[O]ur power to mitigate verdicts under § 33E is to be used sparingly.”
Commonwealth
v.
Dalton,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The defendant was first tried, and found guilty of murder in the first degree, in August, 1981. We reversed the defendant’s conviction and ordered a new trial, on the ground that the judge had failed to instruct the jury that the defendant “could be guilty of felony-murder, based on armed robbery, only if he had knowledge of [his accomplice’s] possession of a gun.”
Commonwealth
v. Watson,
We affirmed the conviction of murder in the first degree of Frederick Clay in Commonwealth v. Watson, supra. The third assailant has never been apprehended.
At trial the defendant challenged neither the admissibility of the identification made by Sweatt, nor the judge’s refusal to accept his plea of murder in the second degree. “It is a fundamental principle of appellate review that a prompt objection at trial is a prerequisite to the presentation of an issue for appellate review.”
Commonwealth
v.
Gallison,
Agreements such as that at issue here, which are designed to protect a potential witness from retaliation, are hardly unusual. In fact, according to the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970, Pub. L. 91-452, § 502, 84 Stat. 933 (1970), in certain circumstances “[t]he Attorney General ... is authorized to rent, purchase, modify, or remodel protected housing facilities and to otherwise offer to provide for the health, safety, and welfare of witnesses and the persons intended to be called as Government witnesses . . . .” See generally
United States
v.
Partin, 552
F.2d 621, 643-645 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,
