We granted the defendant’s application for further appellate review to consider the propriety of a prosecutor’s closing jury argument which urged the jury to draw inferences adverse to the defendant David Young, Jr., because he sat impassively during the trial. The Appeals Court concluded that the prosecutor’s argument was permissible and not unfair.
Commonwealth
v.
Young,
*528 In the course of the prosecutor’s final argument to the jury in this case, involving charges of murder in the second degree of two brothers, the following occurred:
The prosecutor: “Is David Young, a conniving kind of fellow, somebody who can disguise his real feelings, to mislead people for his own purposes? Do think that he is? Is he a pretty cool customer? He’s been sitting here in front of you now for a week . . . .”
Defense counsel: “Your Honor, I object to this.”
The prosecutor: “And part of your function as jurors
Defense counsel: “Please.”
The judge: “I’ll allow him to continue.”
The prosecutor: “You are well entitled as jurors to use your eyes and ears and observe what goes on in front of you right here in this courtroom. And you’ve been watching him sit there for a week. Did you notice how he just sits there stone-faced, cool, never blinks an eye, doesn’t get upset about anything? He’s very in control. He doesn’t show his emotions when he doesn’t want to, does he?” (emphasis supplied).
Following the prosecutor’s argument, defense counsel renewed the point. The following occurred at the side bar:
Defense counsel: “You Honor, in reference to the prosecutor’s comment on the reaction, or lack of reaction of David Young at counsel table, I would be asking the Court to give the following instruction. I still note my objection and would move for a mistrial on that. But, I would ask the Court to consider giving, ‘The defendant may sit passively at counsel table for many reasons with no bearing on his guilt or innocence, including his advice of counsel, and you are to draw no inferences from the fact that the defendant has not reacted emotionally at this *529 trial, and any reference by the prosecutor as to the defendant’s actions or reactions are to be totally disregarded. ’ ”
“I have worked with him to be where he is today. He could have been a behavior problem. It was a concern that I had. And to have that twisted and used against him I think is very prejudicial.”
The prosecutor: “It’s not prejudicial at all.”
The judge: “No, wait, please.”
Defense counsel: “I also feel . . . .”
The judge: “Please. Now, he’s allowed to comment on his demeanor during the trial. And I cite to you Commonwealth v. Smith, 387 Mass, at Page 900, 1983 case.”
The judge consequently gave no curative instruction.
We have never permitted a prosecutor to argue that an inference should be drawn against a defendant from the fact that he sat quietly throughout the trial. “[N]o evidence of guilt arises when a defendant sits calmly in the court room.”
Commonwealth
v.
Borodine,
*530
There are cases in which we have not reversed convictions because, although the prosecutor commented on the defendant’s courtroom conduct, he did not argue that an inference of guilt should be drawn from it. See
Commonwealth
v.
Connor,
*531
As the Appeals Court said in this case, “It cannot be fair to pillory a defendant for behaving appropriately.”
Commonwealth
v.
Young,
The use against the defendant of his good behavior in the courtroom may be particularly unfair here. Defense counsel’s comments to the judge, quoted above, that she had worked with the defendant and that he could have been a behavior problem suggest that the Commonwealth as unknowingly taking advantage of the fact that the defendant followed his court-appointed attorney’s sound advice. The defendant’s first convictions had been overturned because, in the view of the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, he had improperly been required to sit in the prisoner’s dock during the trial. See
Young
v.
Callahan,
Although this case does not present the question whether a prosecutor may properly urge a jury to infer guilt from something the defendant did in the courtroom while not testifying, we comment on the point in order to help establish clear guidelines. In
Commonwealth
v.
Valliere,
We turn finally to matters argued on this appeal that may arise again at retrial. We agree with the Appeals Court’s conclusion concerning the proper admission of testimony about weapons. The admission of Anthony Grant’s hearsay statement (“Dave, don’t kill him in here . . .”) cannot be justified as evidence of statements attending the commission of a crime under
Commonwealth
v.
Harris,
The judgments are reversed and the jury verdicts are set aside.
So ordered.
Notes
It is most unfortunate that there must be a new trial, particularly in view of the long history of trials of these indictments which the Appeals Court
*528
recites.
Id.
at 453 n.1. See
Commonwealth v. Young,
The Appeals Court panel that decided the Pullum case was the same panel that acted in this case. The distinctions between the two cases, thought *530 by the Appeals Court to stand in counterpoint in certain pivotal respects (id. at 485), are not sufficiently major to warrant different results. Each case presents a minor variation on the same theme — unjustified prosecutorial argument that the jury should draw inferences from the fact that a defendant sat properly in the courtroom.
It has been held to be error for a judge to permit a prosecutor to argue that a defendant’s unruly courtroom conduct may be considered as evidence of guilt.
United States
v.
Wright,
We agree with the Appeals Court that the prosecutor’s remarks in this case could not reasonably be considered as a comment on the defendant’s failure to take the stand.
Commonwealth v. Young,
