In the early morning hours of December 2, 2005, the defendant, Thomas A. Woods, and the victim, Paul Mullen, left a nightclub and agreed to meet later to smoke marijuana. The defendant drove to the local Hess gasoline station located in the city of Brockton, which was a popular late-night meeting place. When the victim telephoned the defendant to ask where he was, the defendant told him he was at Hess, and the victim said he would be right there. Once the victim arrived, the defendant asked him to sit in the driver’s side seat and roll a marijuana “blunt,” while he went into the store to buy some pizza. While the defendant made idle conversation with the cashier inside the station, two masked men approached the vehicle and one shot the victim eight times, killing him almost instantly. The defendant went to the vehicle, laid the victim on the ground, and drove to his girl friend’s house, where he was seen talking to a man similar in description to the shooter.
On appeal, the defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to prove his guilt as a joint venturer. He contends that the Commonwealth’s case, which relied almost entirely on circumstantial evidence, did not include any direct evidence that he knew the shooting was to take place. He further argues that the trial judge erred in finding that he was not a “target” of the investigation when he was called to testify before the grand jury, and that, because he was a “target,” he was entitled to be advised of his right not to incriminate himself pursuant to the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution before he testified. In the absence of such advice, the defendant contends that his testimony was improperly compelled. Additionally, the defendant argues that the judge erred in not including, sua sponte, an instruction pursuant to Commonwealth v. DiGiambattista,
We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to permit a jury to find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree. We also conclude that there was no error in the judge’s determination that the defendant was not a target of the investigation at the time of his grand jury testimony. However, we announce a prospective rule requiring self-incrimination warnings to those witnesses testifying before the grand jury who fall within a class of persons that we define as targets, or those reasonably likely to become targets, of the investigation. Finally, we also conclude that the defendant was not entitled to a DiGiambattista instruction where it was not requested at trial. Because we find no reversible error and discern no basis to exercise our authority under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, we affirm the defendant’s conviction.
1. Background. We summarize the facts as the jury could have found them, in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth. Commonwealth v. Sanna,
a. Threats. The defendant and the victim were longtime friends and street-level marijuana dealers. At some point, however, a rift arose between them over a debt of $3,700 that the victim owed to the defendant. In August, 2005, the defendant told a mutual friend that the victim was “lucky he was such a good friend of [mine] because anybody else would have been killed a long time ago for the money he owed [me].” He later left the victim a voicemail message, where he angrily stated, “cracker, you better have my money, or I’m going to shoot you.”
In November, 2005, the victim’s friend, Shawn Flaherty, attempted to purchase a pound of marijuana from the defendant for $1,300. Before the transaction took place, the defendant told Flaherty that “Paul Mullen owed him $3,700 for a long time now and that he was upset that it had been so long, he was extremely upset, that he wanted to kill Paul because of it, and that he would shoot him in the stomach.” He added, in a hostile tone, “I’ll shoot that dude.” He then took Flaherty’s money, did not give him his marijuana, and told him to get his money from the victim.
b. The shooting. On December 1, 2005, the defendant drove the automobile owned by his girl Mend, Erin Andrews, to a bar, where he spent some time socializing with two friends, Serena Epps and Takisha Turner. While there, he recognized another Mend, Eldon Terry (Eldon), and the two left together-and drove to Boomers nightclub.
After the nightclub closed, the defendant and the victim agreed that the victim would go home, retrieve some marijuana, and call the defendant, and then the two would meet and smoke it together. The defendant then drove with Eldon to the Hess station and parked at the rear of the right side of the building, knowing that this area was out of the view of any security cameras. The two got out of the vehicle, and when Eldon went to use the restroom, the defendant began chatting with women outside the station. He went into the Hess station to buy a cigar “blunt,” where he encountered, among others, Epps, Turner, and Tomiko Terry (Tomiko), the mother of his child. After noticing Eldon and “paying him no mind,” he continued “roaming around” the station and parking lot, periodically checking on his vehicle.
When he returned to his vehicle to begin preparing to smoke marijuana, the defendant received a cellular telephone call from the victim, who agreed to meet the defendant at the Hess station.
Meanwhile, as the victim sat alone in the driver’s seat of the vehicle, two masked men walked to the back of the station. Jane Moráis, an eyewitness sitting in a parked vehicle, noticed the two men and described one of them as a thin, “olive”-skinned man, wearing black shorts, a black mask, and a black hooded sweatshirt, standing about five feet, eight or nine inches tall. She described the other as a thin man wearing black pants, a black hooded sweatshirt, and a lighter jacket.
Moments later, Turner, who was standing outside the Hess station, saw a tall, thin, masked, very dark-skinned black man walk to the front of the vehicle and begin shooting at the victim. The shooter was wearing a black baseball cap, a black T-shirt, black jeans, and black shoes, under what appeared to be a black Carhartt-brand jacket. She described him as approximately six feet tall. The victim was shot in the head, chest, and abdomen, perforating his brain, heart, and viscera. He lost consciousness almost instantaneously, and died within minutes.
Turner ran into the store, found Eldon and Epps, and told them what had happened. She noticed the defendant standing in front of the station, after which he followed her inside and announced that “someone” had been shot. He also announced to the clerk, “somebody’s laying on the side of [my] car.” He then told Turner and Epps, “you all need to get out of here,” and, “go home.” Turner, Epps, and Eldon then got into Epps’s automobile and drove off, as the defendant told them to “get home safely, be careful.”
The defendant moved the victim’s body out of the driver’s seat and onto the concrete and drove to Andrews’s house. Jessica Campbell, Andrews’s cousin, heard the defendant yelling for Andrews and came to the window. She saw the defendant standing in the driveway, talking to a five foot ten inch tall black man. He was wearing a dark hooded sweatshirt and dark jeans.
Andrews eventually went outside, and noticed the other man
c. The interviews and grand jury. On December 2, 2005, the defendant drove from Andrews’s house to the police station, where he voluntarily gave an interview to police as a witness. Two months later, in February, 2006, the police asked the defendant if he would be willing to submit to a second interview, to which he agreed. At the second interview, which took place on February 6, 2006, the defendant was read the Miranda rights, although the police did not intend to place him in custody and still viewed him as a witness.
The officers explained to the defendant that the court preferred that in-station interviews were tape recorded, and thus they would prefer to do so. The defendant stated that he did not want the interview to be recorded, and signed a form indicating his waiver. Once the second interview began, the officers told the defendant that their investigation had revealed that some of his initial statements to them were not true.
On February 10, 2006, pursuant to a summons, the defendant testified before the grand jury. He gave another version of the events, and further explained the inconsistencies between his initial interview and his grand jury testimony. His grand jury testimony was admitted in evidence at his trial in order to illustrate his conflicting stories and outright lies.
2. Discussion, a. Sufficiency of the evidence. The defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to show that he acted in joint venture with the shooter. We conclude that the Commonwealth’s evidence was sufficient to support a conviction of murder in the first degree.
The standard we apply is whether, after viewing the evidence
There is no question that the evidence sufficed to show that the shooter acted with an intent to kill and premeditation when he donned a mask and fired eight shots into the victim as he sat defenseless in a vehicle. See Commonwealth v. Diaz,
The jury could properly have considered the defendant’s four threats to shoot the victim over a debt as evidence of his motive and intent to commit the murder. See Commonwealth v. Morgan,
Further, the jury could have found that the defendant met with the shooter in Andrews’s driveway immediately after the murder, which would support a permissible inference that he was complicit in the shooting. While the descriptions of the man in the driveway varied somewhat, both witnesses agreed that he was a thin man, between five feet, seven inches and six feet tall, wearing dark pants and a dark shirt. While Andrews did not notice that he was black, she did notice that he was wearing what appeared to be a Carhartt-brand jacket. This description was sufficiently similar to Turner’s description of the shooter as a thin black man wearing black pants, a black shirt, and a Carharttbrand jacket, as well as Moráis’s description of a thin man wearing dark pants, a dark shirt, and a light jacket, to allow the jury to find that the man in the driveway participated in the shooting
In addition, the defendant’s actions and statements after the shooting showed a consciousness of guilt that supported the Commonwealth’s case. “In conjunction with other evidence, a jury may properly consider actions and statements of a defendant that show a consciousness of guilt.” Rojas,
Here, the defendant’s inconsistencies were many. He initially told police that he did not know anyone in the Hess station, despite the fact that he knew several of the patrons — including Turner, an eyewitness to the shooting, and Tomika, the mother of his child — in what could be seen as an attempt to hamper the police officers’ investigation by preventing them from locating witnesses. Commonwealth v. Porter,
The evidence included other instances of consciousness of guilt. The defendant acted as though he did not know the victim immediately after the shooting. He discarded his bloody clothing at Andrews’s house, a fact that he did not disclose to anyone, and he lied to Andrews about many of the details of the shooting.
While the Commonwealth’s case was largely circumstantial, and not every inference the jury could draw was compelled, permissible inferences need not be necessary or inescapable. Beckett,
b. Self-incrimination advisement. The defendant argues that, at the time of his testimony before the grand jury, he was a target of the investigation and the Commonwealth was thus required to advise him of his Fifth Amendment right to avoid self-incrimination. The United States Attorneys’ Manual, § 9-11.151 (2009), defines a “target” of a grand jury investigation as “a person as to whom the prosecutor or the grand jury has substantial evidence linking him or her to the commission of a crime and who, in the judgment of the prosecutor, is a putative defendant.” We find no error in the judge’s ruling that the defendant was not a target, and that the prosecutor was not
We first review the judge’s finding that the defendant was not a target. In reviewing a judge’s ruling on a motion to suppress, we accept the judge’s subsidiary findings of fact absent clear error, “but conduct an independent review of his ultimate findings and conclusions of law.” Commonwealth v. Scott,
The police officers testified that the defendant had never, throughout his two interviews, been in custody or been a suspect. He voluntarily came to the police station and submitted to both interviews. Further, as of the date the defendant appeared before the grand jury, he was described by the police as “somebody that was very interesting,” because his statements throughout the two interviews had been inconsistent, but he was not a “suspect,” for whom they had either “probable cause” or “reasonable suspicion” to believe was involved in the murder.
Even if the defendant were a “target,” the Commonwealth was under no obligation to warn him of that status. United States v. Washington,
While the United States Supreme Court has indicated that full Miranda warnings are not required for grand jury witnesses, United States v. Mandujano,
The United States Department of Justice requires that grand jury “target[sj” and “subjects],” defined as persons “whose conduct is within the scope of the grand jury investigation,” United States Attorneys’ Manual, at § 9-11.151, be advised of their right to avoid self-incrimination as a matter of policy.
The issuance of a summons requiring a witness to appear and give testimony before the grand jury is a form of compulsion.
This rule is not a new constitutional rule, but rather an exercise of our power of superintendence “to regulate the presentation of evidence in court proceedings.” Commonwealth v. Dagley,
c. Videotaped interview. The defendant argues that the trial judge erred in not giving a DiGiambattista instruction where the initial interview at the police station on December 2, 2005, was unrecorded.
“[Wjhen the prosecution introduces evidence of a defendant’s confession or statement that is the product of a custodial interrogation or an interrogation conducted at a place of detention (e.g., a police station), and there is not at least an audiotape recording of the complete interrogation, the defendant is entitled (on request) to a jury instruction advising that the State’s highest court has expressed a preference that such interrogations be recorded wherever*721 practicable, and cautioning the jury that, because of the absence of any recording of the interrogation in the case before them, they should weigh evidence of the defendant’s alleged statement with great caution and care.”
The defendant may have been entitled to an instruction, because he was interviewed during the course of an investigation at “a place of detention,” namely, a police station.
The defendant has not claimed that his trial counsel was ineffective, although he briefly argues that “[f]or no apparent reason, defense counsel did not ask for a DiGiambattista instruction. . . . [Tjhere could have been no legitimate, strategic reason not to make such a request and no reason for the judge not to give one.” To the contrary, trial counsel may have had valid reasons not to request a DiGiambattista instruction. First, the value of such an instruction is lessened where, as here, the defendant’s statements, dubious as they may be, were largely exculpatory. See Commonwealth v. Barbosa,
d. General Laws c. 278, § 33E. We have reviewed the record
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Neither the shooter nor the other masked individual was ever identified.
While it appears that neither the victim nor the witnesses took any of these threats seriously, the jury could have concluded that they were expressive of the defendant’s anger with the victim and probative of his motive.
There was some confusion among the witnesses whether the nightclub was called Boomers or the Safari Club at the time of the incident. We refer to it as Boomers.
According to the defendant, the conversation went as follows: the victim called the defendant and asked where he was. The defendant replied, “I’m up at the Hess. I’m about to roll this blunt.” On hearing this, the victim replied, “Hold on a second. I’m on the way there. Let me roll it.”
Erin Andrews did not see the man’s face, and was unable to discern his skin color.
These inconsistent statements are discussed more fully, see part 2.a, infra.
The defendant told Andrews that he had gone to the bar by himself; that a woman had specifically told him, “Tommy, your car is getting shot up”; that the victim asked to be taken out of the car and laid down because he was in pain; and that he had lost his cellular telephone that night.
The defendant postulates that the facts support three inferences: (1) the shooter was en route to another shooting and killed the victim on impulse when he was surprised at the sight of him; (2) the shooter intended to kill the defendant, a black man, and mistakenly shot the Caucasian victim; or (3) someone at the Hess station saw the victim and decided to shoot him. While all three scenarios are feasible, the defendant errs in arguing that these theories were equally as supported by the evidence as the Commonwealth’s theory. There was little to no evidence supporting these possibilities beyond mere speculation, and the Commonwealth need not disprove every possible theory of the case. See Brown v. Commonwealth,
In response to the prosecutor’s inquiry regarding whether the defendant was a suspect, Officer Scott Warmington of the Brockton police department responded: “I think he was a little more than a witness. But, like I said, he was giving us information. It wasn’t adding up. Was he a suspect that we believed we had probable cause or even reasonable suspicion? No.”
Section 9-11.151 of the United States Attorneys’ Manual requires that the prosecutor warn “subject[s]” that (1) the grand jury is conducting an investigation of possible violations of Federal criminal laws; (2) they may refuse to answer any question if a truthful answer to the question would tend to incriminate them; (3) anything they say may be used against them before the grand jury or in a subsequent legal proceeding; and (4) if they have retained counsel, they may be permitted a reasonable opportunity to step outside the grand jury room to consult with counsel if they so desire. As for witnesses who are “target[sj,” they must also be warned that their conduct is being investigated for possible violation of Federal criminal law. Id.
At the request of the court, and pursuant to Mass. R. A. P. 16 (1), as amended,
We adopt the United States Attorneys’ Manual definition of “target,” as noted in the text, supra.
The defendant’s interview on February 6, 2006, also was not recorded, pursuant to his own refusal to consent to a recording. The defendant does not argue that he was entitled to a DiGiambattista warning based on this second, unrecorded interview, instead focusing only on the December 2, 2005, interview. In any event, our analysis would not change upon consideration of the second interview.
The situation here is distinguished from that in Commonwealth v. Issa, ante 1, 20 (2013), in which the defendant was not entitled to an instruction where he “voluntarily and without advance notice showed up at the [police] station,” and “[t]he police had not asked the defendant to come in or be interviewed, did not know who the defendant was until he told them, had yet to ascertain that the cause of death was a homicide, and did not identify the defendant as a suspect until after the completion of the interview.” Here, the police knew there had been a murder, and the defendant informed them that he had been with the victim moments before he was killed. He therefore was more closely connected to the crime than the defendant in Issa, and may therefore have been entitled to a DiGiambattista instruction.
This is true even where, as here, the defendant affirmatively requests that the interview not be recorded. See Commonwealth v. Rousseau,
