The defendant, Harold Ledger, has appealed from a judgment of conviction entered in the Superior Court, Somerset County, on a jury verdict finding him guilty of the murder of his wife, Carrie Ledger, in violation of 17-A M.R.S.A. § 201(1)(A). 1 We deny the appeal and affirm the judgment of conviction.
The jury would have been warranted in finding the following facts. The defendant resided in Smithfield with the victim, his wife, Carrie Ledger, until February 10, 1980. Shortly after he' left the Smithfield home, the victim initiated a divorce action. The defendant thereafter manifested substantial antagonism toward the victim over a period of three months. He and the victim argued frequently when he returned to Smithfield on nearly a daily basis to feed his dogs. In late April, the defendant told a Somerset County sheriff that “someone” would be killed if the divorce action were pursued. On at least one occasion, he directly asked his wife to drop the suit; when she refused, he became visibly upset. The defendant’s anguish over the matter was prompted by his concern for the ownership and integrity of the personal property he left in Smithfield. Indeed, he voiced this concern to a deputy sheriff and even asked that his wife be arrested in order to prevent her from tampering with his property.
The defendant stored several guns, including two handguns, at his mother’s house in Norridgewock. Several weeks before the homicide, he retrieved one of the handguns.
The defendant’s uncle, Albert Ledger, who was employed in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, at the time of Carrie Ledger’s death, maintained a home in Skowhegan, but lived during the week in Kittery. On Sunday, May 11, 1980, the defendant agreed to drive Albert Ledger to Kittery, and Carrie Ledger accepted the defendant’s invitation to accompany them. She drove Albert Ledger and his wife in their car, and the defendant drove separately in his own to Kittery. The glove compartment of the defendant’s car contained a .22 caliber handgun. The defendant and the victim returned in the defendant’s car from Kit-tery to the defendant’s residence, a trailer, in Skowhegan.
While no direct evidence of the assailant’s identity was presented at trial, the victim was sitting in the passenger seat of the defendant’s ear when she was shot twice in the left side of her head from within a distance of two feet. The resulting wounds were fatal. The bullets, both .22 caliber long rifle hollow points (which the evidence established could be fired from a .22 caliber handgun), travelled in virtually a lateral path from one side of her head towards the other. Bullets of the same type, though perhaps made by a different manufacturer, were found in the defendant’s Skowhegan residence. The defendant’s .22 caliber handgun was never found. 2
With his wife’s body still in the car, the defendant drove aimlessly during the night of May 11. The next day, he covered the body with a tarp and some tree boughs, and he parked the car in a hospital parking lot. Sometime later, the defendant retrieved his second car and drove to his mother’s camp in Canaan. He remained there alone until *408 May 16. That evening, he called his mother and asked her to bring him some food and to pick him up. When she arrived with the defendant’s daughter, the defendant told them that his wife had been shot. The three drove to the Somerset County Sheriff’s Office where the defendant reported his wife’s death to several officers. Her death was evidently unknown to the authorities until that time. As a result of the defendant’s report, an officer was dispatched immediately to the hospital parking lot. A deputy sheriff asked the defendant to accompany him to the Skowhegan Police Station, and the defendant responded, “I will go willingly, no cuffs, I’m tired of running.” When interviewed, the defendant presented a version essentially identical to that narrated at trial. See note 2 supra.
The defendant was indicted for the murder of Carrie Ledger on July 10, 1980, and he was convicted after a jury trial.
1. Juror Prejudice
Pursuant to M.R.Crim.P. 21(a), the defendant moved on August 18, 1980, for a change of venue from Somerset County on the ground of prejudicial pretrial publicity. Presented at the October 24 hearing on this motion were a series of newspaper articles and what appears to be script copy for use by the electronic media. 3 Except for one article, which reported the scheduled hearing on the motion to change venue itself, all of the media accounts presented at the hearing reported certain developments in the case through the defendant’s arraignment on July 28 when he entered a plea of not guilty. The earlier reports include the discovery of the victim’s body after the defendant told officers that she had been shot and could be found in the parking lot, the existence of an undisclosed suspect in the homicide, and the defendant’s arrest in connection with the shooting. The sole photograph accompanying those articles depicts the defendant, who is not handcuffed or restrained, walking to the Somerset County Courthouse escorted by his counsel and a uniformed deputy sheriff.
Because the defendant moved well before trial to change venue and because the motion was not renewed at trial itself, we construe the August 18 motion as urging the court to change venue irrespective of whether the veniremembers were found to be actually prejudiced against the defendant. “A due process violation can occur when the publicity surrounding the case is of such an extensive and invidious nature as to constitute prejudice per se, in which case actual prejudice need not be shown.”
State v. Grant,
Me.,
The media coverage, as presented to the court below, cannot be characterized as sufficiently extensive or invidious to render any jury drawn in Somerset County presumptively prejudiced. The media reports here are factual accounts of the developments in this case. The press and electronic media could be expected to be drawn to a story of this significance. Their reports appear to be factual and not sensational in tone. They did not urge official action or take any position on the question of the defendant’s guilt or innocence. See
Clark,
The defendant here argues, on appeal, apparently for the first time, that the motion justice abused his discretion, apart from the constitutional claim, in failing to grant his August 18 motion for change of venue. We have found no such abuse in past cases involving media accounts which permit a stronger demonstration of the likelihood of potential prejudice than can be made in the case at bar. See
Clark,
The defendant’s brief on this appeal may further be construed to raise, also for the first time in this case, the issue of actual prejudice among the jury panel. Even were it cognizable, this claim is without merit. Inquiry was made into whether any veniremembers were familiar with the case. Two persons who later sat on the jury panel stated on voir dire that they had only vague recollections of the incident, but each also stated that he or she had not formed any opinion as to the defendant’s guilt or innocence. A third had been told by his wife that this case was scheduled for the period during which he would serve as a juror. On voir dire, he stated that he immediately told his wife “that I had better not hear any more.... ”
The objective of inquiries into the veniremembers’ familiarity with a case “is to ascertain whether the potential jurors have acquired a bias or prejudice against the defendant or a fixed and settled impression as to his guilt or innocence.”
State v. Heald,
Me.,
2. Discovery Violation
On December 9, 1980, several days before trial was originally scheduled to commence, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss the indictment on the ground that the State had violated the automatic discovery provisions of M.R.Crim.P. 16(a)(1)(C). At the hearing on this motion, counsel for the State admitted to the substance of the factual allegations asserted in the motion, that on December 8, the day preceding the filing of the motion, he had forwarded to the defendant’s counsel an anonymous handwritten note which read:
Dear Officer, There was a lady name [s/c] Carrie, who died on Mother’s Day. She should not of [s/c] gone with my husband;
For she lay with a bullet hold [s/c] in the head in a little green opel that kind of car brings bad memeroies [s/c]. Too bad?
A state police report introduced at the hearing indicated that state authorities had possession of this letter on May 27, 1980, more than six months before it was submitted to the defendant. This police report, which referred several times to “an anonymous letter in regard to the LEDGER case,” had been furnished to the defendant at an earlier date. While in the State’s possession, the letter was examined for latent fingerprints, but none were found.
The court denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss the indictment, reasoning that the police reports should have put defense counsel on notice as to the existence of the letter and because, although not dispositive, the State’s attorney himself had not received the letter until several days before *410 he tendered it to defense counsel. The court did, on the other hand, grant the defendant’s alternative motion to continue the trial date and to authorize funds necessary for an investigation of the note. Upon further motions made by the defendant over the next several months, the court later ordered several persons to submit handwriting exemplars as part of the defendant’s investigation precipitated by his discovery of the existence of the anonymous letter.
M.R.Crim.P. 16(a)(1)(C) provides that [t]he attorney for the State shall furnish to the defendant within a reasonable time ... [a] statement describing any matter or information known to the attorney for the State which may not be known to the defendant and which tends to create a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt as to the offense charged.
The State contends here that the anonymous letter does not fall within the scope of rule 16(a)(1)(C) because it did not “tend to create a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt as to” the murder charge. The condition that, to be discoverable under rule 16(a)(1)(C), the material “tend to create a reasonable doubt” is one that is inevitably imprecise.
United States
v.
Agurs,
Viewing the effect of the letter at that point in the case’s development, we conclude that it tended to create a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt as to the murder charge. The contents of the letter created the possibility that the victim was involved in some manner with another man, thus creating a motive in that man’s spouse to kill the victim. The note thus suggests that one other than the defendant was responsible for the victim’s death. This possibility is particularly significant because no direct identification evidence existed at that time. This information thus fell within the scope of rule 16(a)(1)(C).
The State asserts that even if the letter tended to create a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt and is thus subject to automatic discovery under M.R.Crim.P. 16(a)(1)(C), which we conclude it is, the police report furnished to the defendant included the requisite “statement” describing the matter. We disagree.
In addition to promoting the requirement of constitutional due process,
see State v. Eldridge,
Me.,
We are thus presented once again with conduct of the State falling short of the requirements created by M.R.Crim.P. 16.
See, e.g., State v. Hutchins,
Me.,
Further, the nature of the default, whether it be by inadvertance or design, is immaterial to the determination of a breach of rule 16.
Cf. Agurs,
The detrimental effects of the State’s violation were, however, adequately remedied in this case by the trial court’s choice of sanctions. The sanctions applicable under M.R.Crim.P. 16(d), as imposed by the trial court due to non-compliance with the rule, must operate to promote the interests of justice and will be set aside as an abuse of discretion or error of law only where they fail to do so.
Hutchins,
3. Inadequate Investigation
The defendant claims for the first time in this case that the State’s investigation into the homicide was sufficiently inadequate that the court.below erred in failing to dismiss the indictment against him. 7
A criminal defendant must be afforded “proper opportunity to attack the probative value of the evidence developed by the police bearing on the defendant’s guilt or innocence.”
State v. Inman,
Me.,
4. Expert Testimony
As part of its case in chief, the State called Richard^ Arnold, a firearms examiner at the state crime laboratory, who examined the bullet fragments retrieved from the body of Carrie Ledger. Outlining his qualifications, Arnold stated at trial that since June 1975, he had “examined most all bullet and cartridge casings microscopically that have been submitted to the *413 State Police Crime Laboratory for examination or analysis.” His training included attendance at tactical training schools, at “homicide and crime scene and search schools,” at the FBI National Academy, and at eight firearms factories for instruction on how firearms and ammunition are manufactured. Arnold then testified that the lead pieces removed from the victim’s body were consistent with those of two .22 long rifle hollow point projectiles. 8 When the State’s attorney asked Arnold to describe the impact characteristics of a .22 long rifle hollow point bullet, defense counsel objected on the ground that the question called for a response that would exceed the scope of the witness’ expertise. See M.R.Evid. 702. The court overruled the objection and allowed Arnold to answer the question.
The defendant asserts that this ruling constitutes an abuse of discretion. We need not address this point, because even if error were committed, it was harmless.
See
M.R. Crim.P. 52(a). The State’s question on the fragmentation qualities of such a bullet was evidently designed to elicit Arnold’s testimony identifying them as .22 long rifle hollow point bullets. Arnold had already testified, without objection, however, that those fragments could have been those of two .22 long rifle hollow point projectiles. The challenged evidence is therefore merely cumulative and cannot be other than harmless.
See Ginn v. Penobscot Co.,
Me.,
5. Voluntary Statements
While incarcerated in jail awaiting trial, the defendant approached Somerset County Deputy Sheriff Robertson and described to him the events giving rise to this prosecution. Those statements were largely consistent with the version to which he has continually adhered, including that which he narrated at trial. At trial, the State called Robertson as a witness. Following a voir dire examination out of the jury’s presence, the defendant moved to suppress Robertson’s testimony about the defendant’s statements on the sole ground that they were not made voluntarily; 9 the defendant was under medication, and Robertson described him as then being “confused” and “agitated.” The court denied this motion and permitted Robertson to testify about the incident.
By buttressing their positions with cases involving the voluntariness of confessions, the parties do not appear to dispute the characterization of the defendant’s statement to Robertson as a confession. For the purposes of this discussion, we thus also assume, rather than decide, that the defendant’s statements may be treated as a confession. 10
A confession is inadmissible unless the State proves beyond a reasonable doubt that it was made voluntarily.
State v. Ashe,
Me.,
The attending physician who worked at Somerset County jail when the defendant was incarcerated there testified out of the jury’s presence that, on the date the defendant made the statement to Robertson, he was taking medication for an ulcer and a heart condition. 11 The court asked whether *414 any of these drugs, either individually or in combination, would affect the patient’s ability to tell the truth or his “will to speak.” The physician responded in the negative. The record thus provides rational support for the court’s conclusion that the medication did not induce involuntary statements.
Robertson noted in his official report that the defendant, while making those statements to him, seemed “confused.” At trial, he explained this to mean that the defendant “looked like he wanted to say something else to me [after Robertson insisted that he, Robertson, had to return to his office], but he never got it out.” The defendant was described as “aggravated” when talking about his son and “upset” when describing the shooting incident itself. However, Robertson also testified that he knew the defendant, that the defendant was “alert” when making the statements, that the defendant was responsive, that he had no reason to believe that the defendant was “not in touch with his surroundings,” and that the defendant narrated the events “in an organized fashion.” This record thus also provides rational support for the court’s ruling that the statements were made voluntarily. While Robertson’s prior description of the defendant’s condition as “confused” is facially troublesome, the witness’ explanation revealed that it could not be taken so as to generate a conclusion, to the exclusion of all others, that the defendant acted involuntarily. 12
6. Testimony of Arguments and Complaints
Arlene Ledger Albert, the daughter of the defendant and the victim, testified during the State’s case in chief that she lived in her parents’ Smithfield home in February 1980, when her father moved out, until May of that same year. The defendant returned to Smithfield daily, she stated, and he and the victim would argue on those occasions. When Ms. Albert was asked how often those arguments occurred, the defense counsel registered an objection “to the nature of the inquiry” rather than to the “specific question itself,” on the ground of remoteness and prejudice outweighing any probative value. The court overruled the objection.
Even assuming, without deciding, that the defendant’s objection was sufficient to save his claim for appeal, we find that the court did not abuse its discretion in admitting this testimony. Rulings on the effect of remoteness on the admissibility of evidence are reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
State v. Lewisohn,
Me.,
Defense counsel did not articulate the basis for the claim that this evidence was more prejudicial than probative.
See
M.R. Evid. 403. This basis, however, appears to be identical to that underlying the remoteness claim, that because the quarrels were not proximate in time to the homicide, the
*415
testimony would confuse and mislead the jury. See
McEachern,
Later, defense counsel objected on the ground of remoteness, prejudice, and hearsay to a question calling for Ms. Albert’s recollection of a statement made in April 1980 by the defendant during a particular discussion with the victim. As an offer of proof, the State’s attorney explained at a sidebar conference that he expected the witness to testify that the defendant asked his wife to abandon the divorce action; when she refused, the defendant became very upset and left.
For reasons we have discussed, supra, such testimony is not inadmissible on the ground that it relates to matters too remote in time. Further, any prejudicial effect is outweighed by its probative value. See M.R.Evid. 403. These two challenges to this testimony are thus not meritorious.
As to the hearsay claim,
see
M.R. Evid. 801(c), the State identified one of its purposes in introducing this testimony as to demonstrate the nature of the defendant’s relationship with the victim. Testimony of the mid-April incident would be probative on this point without a belief in the truth of the particular statements made by the participants. Ms. Albert’s testimony, in this light, was not offered for its truth and is therefore not objectionable as hearsay.
See Maine Gas & Appliances, Inc. v. Seigel,
Me.,
The State also introduced testimony that the defendant told the victim that he wanted her to drop the divorce suit, in order to prove that very point. The truth of the out-of-court declaration is thereby implicated. The statement is not, however, a hearsay statement. See M.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(A). The statement offered in evidence was the defendant’s own, made in his individual capacity. “It need not have been against [the defendant’s] interest when made.” Field and Murray,
Maine Evidence
§ 801.5 at 193 (1976). It could properly be admitted as substantive evidence of the facts stated.
State v. Sockbeson,
Me.,
Finally, Somerset County Deputy Sheriff Hardwick testified about complaints and threats that the defendant made to him against the victim in April and May 1980. As with threats against and quarrels with the victim herself, these threats and complaints are probative of the defendant’s scienter.
See Lewisohn,
7. Polygraph
The defendant’s claim that the lower court erred in excluding the results of a polygraph examination given the defendant needs no lengthy analysis. He claims that the admitted incredibility of his account, the fact that the account is uncontradicted by direct evidence, and the weak presentation of it to the jury, caused by his own admitted inarticulateness and low level of intellectual skills, combine to require the admission of the polygraph examination and the polygraph examiner’s conclusion that the defendant truthfully rendered his exculpatory version.
These observations, however, must be subordinated to our fundamental concerns with the reliability of the polygraph as an indicator of truthfulness,
see State v. Trafton,
Me.,
8. Evidence of Others’ Threats and Motives
Because of the circumstantial nature of the evidence linking the defendant to the homicide, the defendant sought at trial to create a reasonable doubt of his guilt by suggesting that other persons were responsible for the act. As defense counsel explained out of the jury’s presence, two theories were thought to implicate as the assailant Joseph Albert, the husband of Arlene Ledger Albert and the son-in-law of the defendant. Both theories rest on the same factual basis. Mr. Albert was an inmate at the Pre-Release Center in Bangor where, defense counsel stated, members of its population are granted restricted liberties. Albert took some food, which he said was stolen from the Center, to the Ledger’s house in Smithfield. Joan Ledger, another of the defendant’s daughters, learned of this and reported it to the Center’s officials. Joan also told her father who himself notified either the officials, or a person who later reported the matter to them. Defense counsel further represented that Mr. Albert made “less than valid threats” and “indirect threats” against both the defendant and his daughter, Joan. The defendant testified, without objection, that he thought the bullets which killed his wife were “meant for me.” Defense counsel also theorized that Mr. Albert intended to kill Joan because of her participation in reporting the stolen food. Counsel therefore sought to introduce a photograph demonstrating the physical similarities between Joan and her mother, the victim.
Before the defendant testified, and at several points during Joan Ledger’s testimony, both counsel engaged in colloquies with the court concerning the admissibility of Mr. Albert’s testimony and of the photograph depicting Joan Ledger and her mother, as such evidence would bear on the issue of identification. The defendant asserts on this appeal that the presiding justice erred in excluding the testimony of Mr. Albert. We do not so construe the court’s ruling.
The lower court appeared to recognize the general rule that a defendant may introduce evidence tending to show that another person committed or harbored an intent, motive, and opportunity to commit the crime of which that defendant is charged, if such evidence is not too remote in time or too weak in probative value under M.R. Evid. 403.
See, e.g., State v. LeClair,
Me.,
[State’s counsel]: Well, regardless of the conviction, my position is, there is no way under the Rules of Evidence that is admissible to prove that he [Albert] might have committed this act.
[Defense counsel]: I agree absolutely with that.
COURT: Well, I don’t want you to put him [Albert] on the stand and seek to discredit his testimony unless there is a reason that Harold [Ledger] had for fearing for his life. . . .
*417 ... I want to be satisfied there is a basis for [implicating Albert] as opposed to just charging someone because he is conveniently in the family and has been convicted in a criminal matter before, and he is conveniently there.
After further discussion, the court told defense counsel:
I don’t think there is any way I am going to permit you to put on Albert unless you can establish the kind of testimony ... [that can be] discredited by] the introduction of his record. It doesn’t make sense. You’re trying to suggest something that isn’t there.
When making these remarks, the presiding justice appeared to have understood the defendant’s strategy to be the presentation of Mr. Albert as a witness in order to introduce his criminal record. The court’s remarks demonstrate that it would permit Mr. Albert to testify that he had threatened the defendant or Joan Ledger; conversely, the court would not permit him to take the stand if the defendant’s only purpose was to effect the admission of Mr. Albert’s manslaughter conviction. See M.R.Evid. 404(a)(2), 607-609. The nature of this ruling was made even more clear during a subsequent conference in chambers.
[Defense counsel]: ... The Court at one point requested whether I was going to put [Albert] on the stand or not.
COURT: I acknowledge that you can call him and put him on the stand. I said I didn’t know what you would do. I understood you would put him on the stand just to try to discredit his testimony by showing his record.
It is thus apparent that the court below did not prevent the defendant from calling Mr. Albert to testify as to whether he had made any threats against either the defendant or Joan Ledger. His failure to testify is not attributable to the court, and so no error can be found in the defense counsel’s election not to call him as a witness. 13
Also revealing is the parties’ discussion with the court about whether Joan Ledger would be permitted to testify that she was aware of threats made against her by Joseph Albert:
COURT: Then, as I say, you want to put [Joan Ledger] on, I guess, and she will say she heard some threats. You’re entitled to put them on, but I’m a little bit reluctant to listen to it, so once you have introduced this evidence by way of hearsay, because I guess the State is also entitled to cross examine the witness, equally, especially because of the consequence of this kind of evidence of this nature that could be put on. As I said, whether they are valid threats or invalid threats to this witness, you can introduce it.
[Defense counsel]: Your Honor, can I not introduce the fact that she did make complaints [to the Center] on behalf of her father. From my question yesterday, as I understand it, I can’t get into anything that she heard about these threats. That would be hearsay, as I understand it.
COURT: What makes the information material and relevant, sure, but I can rule it as hearsay if you get the threats in. I don’t know at this point.
[State’s attorney]: Maybe I won’t object if she proves it.[ 14 ]
Defense counsel asked no further questions on direct examination when this conference terminated. Thus, while defense counsel indicated to the court an intent to elicit from Joan Ledger testimony of the threats, and while the court left open the door to such questioning, the opportunity to do so was never actually exploited. The defendant cannot now argue that the court refused admission of testimony about such threats.
*418 The defendant also offered a photograph of Joan Ledger and her mother for the purpose of showing that the two looked alike. Without proving as a foundation that a third party may have intended to harm Joan, a demonstration that Joan physically resembled her mother would have been immaterial to any issue then in the case. See Field and Murray, Maine Evidence § 401.1 (1976). The trial court explicitly conditioned the admissibility of that photograph on the production of proof that threats were in fact made against Joan. This ruling was correct and without error. See M.R.Evid. 401.
Finally, the defendant sought to introduce several photographs which portrayed Joseph Albert and the defendant’s son. A hospital employee had testified that, for several seconds, he saw someone look into the defendant’s car when it was parked in the hospital parking lot during the week of May 11, 1980. The witness’ description of that person was vague, and he was unable to determine whether or not any of those persons in the photographs resembled the person he saw some months earlier.
15
Rulings on the admissibility of demonstrative evidence are reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
Cope v. Sevigny,
Me.,
9. Competence of the Defendant
Toward the end of trial, the defense counsel presented to the court in chambers a forensic psychologist who said that he was “seriously concerned about Mr. Ledger’s intellectual limitations and possible organic brain syndrome and this man’s ability to assist his attorney.” He explained his hypothesis that the defendant’s brain was not receiving enough oxygen, thereby rendering him unable to answer abstract questions and to provide “concrete answers that you would expect from a child.” After further discussion among the court, the psychologist, and counsel, the court expressed satisfaction that the defendant was competent to stand trial and .-that further inquiry would be unnecessary. The court made clear that its decision was based on its observations of the defendant as a witness while he had testified the previous day for nearly three hours, the defendant’s courtroom behavior over the previous seven days, and the limited nature of the psychologist’s evaluation. The defendant claims here that this ruling was error.
The constitutional requirements of due process are satisfied where “the accused is capable of understanding the nature and object of the charges and proceedings against him, of comprehending his own condition in reference thereto, and of conducting in cooperation with his counsel his defense in a rational and reasonable manner.”
Thursby v. State,
Me.,
Further, there is no indication that the defendant was not competent under the
Thursby
criterion. The psychologist expressed concern that the defendant, who claimed to be a woodsman, was unable to distinguish between a salmon and a trout,
16
and that he referred to his wife in the present tense. The defense counsel also noted that the defendant could not remember whether Mother’s Day, the day of the homicide, fell on a Saturday or a Sunday. The fundamental concern in a competency inquiry, however, is “with the mental capacity of the accused
as it relates to the criminal adjudication process.” State v. Vane,
Me.,
We conclude that, on this record, the court acted within the proper scope of its discretion by concluding that no genuine issue existed as to the defendant’s competence to stand trial, thereby eliminating the need for a full hearing on the issue. 17
10. Motion for Funds
The defendant claimed at a motion for new trial that the jury may have been improperly influenced by two events. First, at the trial, an inmate of the Somerset County jail testified out of the jury’s presence that the defendant admitted shooting his wife. The State withdrew this proffered evidence. The defendant argued at the hearing that one or more of the jurors may have been exposed to any newspaper stories describing the inmate’s testimony. 18
Additionally, the defendant stated that on the day before the jury deliberations, a
*420
television program dealing with techniques of crime investigation was broadcasted locally. One segment of the show depicted the autopsy of a person who had been shot in the head. The similarity of the circumstances displayed in the program to the physical facts of this case was thought to create the possibility of juror prejudice. Consequently, the defendant requested funds to subsidize an investigation into the possibility. The court rejected the motion. Here, the defendant claims error in this ruling, framing, for the first tifne in the case, the issue as a denial of equal protection. Relying on
State v. Curtis,
Me.,
We conclude, however, that the court below was not presented with a sufficient basis to conclude that such an investigation would be necessary. The trial judge is charged with making a “threshold inquiry into whether potential prejudice exists” as a result of publicity generated by the proceedings.
State v. Bazinet,
Me.,
The defendant bears the burden of demonstrating that a new trial is warranted.
See Carver v. Lavigne,
One final point relating to the media report deserves note. The witness, whose testimony was assertedly the subject of the news story, appeared in court on February 13, 1981, five days before the jury began its deliberations. If defense counsel became aware of the news report within that five day period and had informed the court about it, the court could then have taken any measure it deemed necessary to inquire into the existence of actual prejudice and to cure such defects, for example, by substituting the tainted juror with an alternate, if such defects were found to exist. Yet the defendant did not account at the hearing for his failure to raise this matter at trial when remedial measures were available, without the need for the expense and burden of a new trial. He has thus failed to satisfy his burden,
see Carver,
The television program portraying the autopsy is postured somewhat differently in the motion for new trial than the news account, because defense counsel explicitly *421 represented to the court that it had not come to her attention any earlier than the commencement of the jury’s deliberation. Further, defense counsel described the contents of the program in greater detail than that of the news report. The court was thereby made susceptible to a more knowledgeable appreciation of the nature of that program and of its effect on the members of the jury, if seen by them.
On the basis of the description presented below, however, we find that the court could properly conclude that the program did not create potential prejudice. Medical and other official testimony presented by the State in this case described in occasionally graphic detail both the condition of the victim’s body when it was discovered and the autopsy performed on it, including an account of how the bullet fragments were retrieved from the skull and isolated from brain and other cranial matter. Because the court could properly find that the program would not, in this light, create potential prejudice among the jurors, there arose no duty to inquire into the existence of actual prejudice.
See Bazinet,
11. Sufficiency of the Evidence
There is one single standard of proof for all criminal convictions, and the test is the same in a case of either circumstantial or direct evidence:
whether from all the evidence and from such reasonable inferences as may properly be drawn therefrom the guilt of a defendant has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. LeClair,
Me.,
In light of the evidence presented, which we have carefully reviewed, the jury was entitled to conclude that the defendant’s exculpatory testimony, though uncontra-dicted, was not credible, see
Qualey v. Fulton,
Me.,
12. Conclusion
We have carefully reviewed both the facts and the law underlying the defendant’s remaining claims of error, including the admission of testimony of Somerset County Deputy Sheriff Peter Hardwick and the exclusion of that part of Paul Victor’s testimony concerning an abstract individual’s reaction to the death of another. None of these claims merit discussion.
The entry is:
Judgment of conviction affirmed.
All concurring.
Notes
. 17-A M.R.S.A. § 201(1)(A) provides: “A person is guilty of murder if ... [h]e intentionally or knowingly causes the death of another human being.. .. ”
. The defendant testified that he and his wife drove to his Skowhegan residence. She remained in the car while he went into his trailer to pick up some laundry, when he heard two shots. He then ran toward the car and saw two people walk quickly from his car to another car and drive away.
. Because a transcript of the October 24 hearing was not included in the record on this appeal, we remain unaware of whether the defendant demonstrated to the lower court that the copy had in fact been broadcasted and, if so, by what stations and when it had been broadcasted.
. Indeed, the United States Supreme Court has recognized that “because the significance of an item of evidence can seldom be predicted accurately until the entire record is complete, the prudent prosecutor will resolve doubtful questions in favor of disclosure.”
Agurs,
. The determination of whether as a consequence of the discovery violation the accused was deprived of a fair trial, on the other hand, can only be made in light of the events occurring at trial itself.
See Agurs,
. Rule 16(a)(1)(C) limits discoverable matters or information to that “which may not be known to the defendant....” The exclusivity of the State’s possession of the letter makes it evident that the matter was not so known by the defendant.
Cf. State v. LeClair,
Me.,
. The defendant claims to find five such shortcomings: (1) the State did not attempt to inventory the car in which the victim’s body was found; (2) it did not attempt to discover the identity of a person whom a hospital employee saw looking into the car at some point during the several days when the victim’s body lay concealed in it; (3) it did not pursue certain information which the defendant provided during the course of the investigation; (4) a Somerset County deputy sheriff did not make a record, until June 1980, of conversations he had with the defendant in April 1980 in which the defendant expressed concern for the safety of his property left in his wife’s custody; and (5) the State was unaware that the defendant’s son owned a .22 caliber pistol.
. Bullets of the same type were found in the defendant’s trailer.
. The defendant has expressly disavowed any reliance on Miranda requirements,
. We note that this characterization is a tenable one, at least to the extent that the defendant admitted to Robertson that his .22 caliber handgun was in the car on the date of his wife’s death and that he was present at the scene of the crime.
.The defendant asserts here that he was taking valium at the time he made the challenged statements to Robertson. The physician, how *414 ever, testified that he did not prescribe valium for the defendant until more than three weeks after the defendant made the statements.
. In its ruling, the trial court did not expressly refer to the standard of proof applicable in determining the admissibility of statements challenged as involuntary. There is, however, no indication that he used a lesser criterion.
See Ashe,
. We therefore do not reach the issue of whether proof of threats by and motive in a third person is admissible by itself, as tending to create a reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s responsibility for the criminal act.
Compare, e.g., State v. Schmid,
.
But see State v. True,
Me.,
. When asked if the person he saw resembled anyone in the photograph, the witness replied: “I want to make an intuitive yes, but I am reluctant to do that.... [My intuition] says, ‘Yeah, that guy looks like him there,’ but there is no way that I could reconstruct the information to come out with that person for you.”
. The court expressed some skepticism at the psychologist’s own understanding of the nature of that difference.
.
Drope v. Missouri,
.It was revealed during trial that the husband of one of the jurors was present in the courtroom during this testimony. The court interviewed the juror and was assured that the visitor said nothing to her about the testimony. The defense counsel was expressly satisfied with this conclusion.
