Case Title: Commonwealth v. DiBenedetto

Citation: 

Docket Number: SJC-10658

State: massachusetts

Court: Massachusetts Supreme Court

Date: 2016-09-08T00:00:00Z

Document:
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SJC-10658 
 
COMMONWEALTH  vs.  FRANK DiBENEDETTO. 
 
 
 
Suffolk.     May 5, 2016. - September 8, 2016. 
 
Present:  Gants, C.J., Spina, Botsford, Duffly, & Hines, JJ.1 
 
 
Deoxyribonucleic Acid.  Practice, Criminal, New trial, Appeal.  
Supreme Judicial Court, Jurisdiction.  Evidence, 
Exculpatory. 
 
 
 
 
Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court 
Department on May 21, 1986. 
 
 
Following review by this court, 458 Mass. 657 (2011), a 
motion for a new trial was heard by Robert A. Mulligan, J. 
 
 
A request for leave to appeal was allowed by Cordy, J., in 
the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk. 
 
 
 
Wendy H. Sibbison (Dennis A. Shedd with her) for the 
defendant. 
 
Zachary Hillman, Assistant District Attorney, for the 
Commonwealth. 
 
David B. Hird, Cecile Farmer, & Vanshika Vij, of the 
District of Columbia, Patrick O'Toole, Jr., & Evan Miller, for 
The Innocence Project, amicus curiae, submitted a brief. 
 
 
                     
 
1 Justices Spina and Duffly participated in the deliberation 
on this case prior to their retirements. 
2 
 
 
BOTSFORD, J.  On February 19, 1986, Joseph Bottari and 
Frank Chiuchiolo were shot multiple times and killed in the 
North End section of Boston.  Louis Costa, Paul Tanso, and the 
defendant in this appeal, Frank DiBenedetto, were charged with 
their murders.  On February 3, 1994, after a second trial, a 
jury found the defendant and Costa guilty of murder in the first 
degree of Bottari and Chiuchiolo.2,3  See Commonwealth v. 
DiBenedetto, 427 Mass. 414, 415 (1998) (DiBenedetto II).4 
 
In 2005, the defendant filed a motion for a new trial on 
the basis of newly discovered evidence, namely, deoxyribonucleic 
                     
 
2 Louis Costa and the defendant were first tried together in 
1988; each was found guilty of murder in the first degree.  The 
convictions, however, were reversed by this court based on the 
erroneous admission at trial of the uncross-examined deposition 
testimony of Richard Storella, a significant witness for the 
Commonwealth.  See Commonwealth v. DiBenedetto, 414 Mass. 37, 
38-44, 50 (1992) (DiBenedetto I). 
 
3 In 1988, Paul Tanso was tried separately from Costa and 
the defendant as a result of a successful motion to sever his 
case.  See Commonwealth v. DiBenedetto, 458 Mass. 657, 659 n.7 
(2011) (DiBenedetto III).  Tanso was initially convicted on two 
counts of murder in the first degree, but his convictions were 
reversed by this court based on the erroneous admission at trial 
of Storella's deposition testimony, see note 2, supra.  
Commonwealth v. Tanso, 411 Mass. 640, 641-642, cert. denied, 505 
U.S. 1221 (1992).  In 1994, Tanso was retried and found not 
guilty.  See DiBenedetto III, supra. 
 
 
4 The defendant filed in the United States District Court 
for the District of Massachusetts a petition for a writ of 
habeus corpus, which was denied, DiBenedetto v. Hall, 176 F. 
Supp. 2d 45, 66 (D. Mass. 2000), and the United States Court of 
Appeals for the First Circuit affirmed the denial.  DiBenedetto 
v. Hall, 272 F.3d 1, 13 (1st Cir. 2001), cert. denied sub nom.  
DiBenedetto v. Spencer, 535 U.S. 1024 (2002). 
3 
 
acid (DNA) evidence showing that both victims were excluded as 
contributors to the DNA that was found on the defendant's 
sneakers.  On January 12, 2009, the motion judge, who also was 
the trial judge, denied without a hearing the motion in a 
written memorandum of decision and order.  The defendant filed a 
gatekeeper petition pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E (§ 33E), and 
on June 16, 2009, a single justice of this court granted leave 
to appeal the denial of the motion for a new trial to the full 
court.  Following briefing and argument, this court vacated the 
order denying the motion and remanded the matter to the Superior 
Court for further findings.5  See Commonwealth v. DiBenedetto, 
458 Mass. 657, 659, 670 (2011) (DiBenedetto III).6 
                     
 
5 We stated that, on remand, if the Commonwealth so 
requested, an evidentiary hearing would be appropriate to 
inquire into the scientific reliability of the conclusions 
stated by the defendant's deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) expert.  
See DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 671.  We added that the 
Commonwealth also might seek to challenge whether the DNA 
evidence qualified as newly discovered evidence.  See id. at 671 
n.20. 
 
 
6 Louis Costa, who was tried with the defendant in both 
previous trials, had also filed a motion for a new trial in 
2005.  His and the defendant's motions were considered together 
in the Superior Court by the motion judge and thereafter by this 
court in DiBenedetto III.  Following remand to the Superior 
Court pursuant to the rescript in DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 
672-673, the defendant's case and Costa's case were separated, 
with the motion judge retaining jurisdiction only of the case 
against the defendant.  At the time of the murders, Costa was 
under the age of seventeen, and thus, after our decision in 
Diatchenko v. District Attorney for the Suffolk Dist., 466 Mass. 
655, 658-659 (2013), S.C., 471 Mass. 12 (2015), Costa was 
entitled to be resentenced to a sentence granting him the 
4 
 
Following remand, the Commonwealth did not seek an 
evidentiary hearing.  The defendant submitted additional 
affidavits, one from an expert in DNA analysis who confirmed the 
conclusions reached by the defendant's first DNA expert in 2004, 
and another from a separate expert concerning the reliability of 
eyewitness identifications.  After a nonevidentiary hearing, the 
motion judge again denied the defendant's new trial motion, 
explaining his reasons in a further memorandum of decision and 
order. 
The defendant filed a notice of appeal and a petition in 
the county court to reinstate his appeal in the full court.  The 
Commonwealth opposed the petition on both procedural and 
substantive grounds, arguing that the defendant was required to 
seek leave to appeal from the renewed denial of his new trial 
motion through a second gatekeeper petition under § 33E.  A 
single justice of this court agreed with the Commonwealth, 
treated the defendant's petition to reinstate his appeal as a 
second gatekeeper petition, and denied the petition, concluding 
that the defendant did not present a "substantial" claim that 
                                                                  
possibility of parole.  See Commonwealth v. Costa, 472 Mass. 
139, 140-141 (2015).  Because only the defendant is before this 
court in the present appeal, we discuss only the defendant's 
motion for a new trial, and its course through the Superior 
Court and this court. 
5 
 
warranted review by the full court.7  In September, 2015, after a 
series of additional motions and proceedings in the county 
court, the defendant filed a motion in the full court to 
reinstate his appeal.  The court thereafter ordered briefing "on 
the question whether the defendant is entitled to reinstatement 
of his appeal and on the merits of the defendant's underlying 
claims." 
 
In the discussion that follows, we consider first whether 
the defendant is entitled to have his original appeal to the 
full court from the denial of his motion for a new trial 
reinstated following the court's remand for further findings.  
We conclude that reinstatement of the appeal is appropriate, 
even though the court did not expressly retain jurisdiction.  We 
then consider the defendant's claim that he is entitled to a new 
trial based on the new DNA evidence, and conclude that the 
motion judge did not abuse his discretion in denying the 
defendant's motion.8 
 
1.  Background.  The facts of this case are set out in some 
detail in DiBenedetto II, 427 Mass. at 416-420, and DiBenedetto 
                     
 
7 Pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E, a single justice of this 
court may grant leave to appeal from the denial of a motion for 
a new trial to the full court where the gatekeeper petition 
"presents a new and substantial question which ought to be 
determined by the full court." 
 
 
8 We acknowledge the amicus brief submitted by The Innocence 
Project in support of the defendant. 
6 
 
III, 458 Mass. at 658-663.  We summarize them here.  Around 9:30 
P.M. on February 19, 1986, a Boston police officer found the 
bodies of the victims in Slye Park in the North End section of 
Boston.  Chiuchiolo had been shot seven times, including five 
shots to the head, and Bottari had been shot sixteen times, 
including six shots to the head.  Three different guns had been 
used to shoot each victim:  two .380 caliber semiautomatic 
pistols and a .22 caliber revolver.  When police responded to 
the scene shortly after the shooting incident ended, the 
victims' bodies were surrounded by pools of blood and multiple 
spent shell casings. 
 
Joseph Schindler, who lived in an apartment building on one 
side of Slye Park, observed much of the shooting incident as it 
took place in the park below him.  He testified that around 9:30 
P.M. that evening, he was sitting in his third-floor apartment, 
from which he had an unobstructed view of the park.  He heard 
four or five "'cracks or pops' that he thought were fireworks," 
DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 660, and he looked out his window 
and "saw orange-red flashes in the area of the hand of a man 
whom he later identified as [the codefendant,] Costa."  Id., 
quoting DiBenedetto II, 427 Mass. at 416.  Schindler saw five 
men running in the park, two of whom fell to the ground at 
separate times in different locations.  Each of the other three 
men, the shooters, left the park and walked toward Boston Harbor 
7 
 
after each descended a series of staircases on the other side of 
the park.  In the course of their descent, each shooter at one 
point walked facing toward Schindler so that he could observe 
their faces and bodies -- their front profile -- one at a time.  
However, before the last person -- later identified by Schindler 
as the defendant -- descended all the sets of stairs and left 
the park, he stopped and turned around, returning to the area 
where Chiuchiolo's body lay on the ground.  This individual, 
whom we refer to as the third shooter, "stood bent at the waist 
so that he was just a few inches from the head area of the prone 
[Chiuchiolo].  Schindler then saw four to six flashes 
accompanied by the same sound he had initially heard."  
DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 660 & n.8.  The park was lit by 
artificial lights, and Schindler estimated that he observed the 
shooting incident and the three shooters in the park over the 
course of a three- to five-minute period, including a three- to 
five-second period during which the defendant stood facing him 
as he was walking down the stairs and leaving the park; 
Schindler testified that his ability to identify the defendant's 
face principally depended on this three- to five-second 
observation. 
 
After the three shooters left Slye Park, Schindler 
telephoned the police, who reported to the scene and interviewed 
him regarding his observations.  That night, Schindler provided 
8 
 
descriptions of the three men whom he saw leaving the park, 
descriptions that were not "entirely accurate," id., but the 
following day, Schindler went to the police station and informed 
police officers that, given the opportunity, he could identify 
the three men.9  He later identified the assailants as 
DiBenedetto, Costa, and Tanso on multiple occasions, including 
identifying each man individually in a separate lineup conducted 
at the police department, each in pretrial court room 
proceedings, and Costa and the defendant at trial.  Id. 
 
Richard Storella, who was at one time a close friend of the 
defendant and Costa, testified as follows.  Bottari and 
Chiuchiolo told him to set up a "drug buy" with the defendant, 
during which they would rob the defendant of the drugs.  
Storella set up the purported drug buy meeting for around 9 P.M. 
on February 19, 1986, but he first informed the defendant of the 
victims' intention to steal the drugs.  With that knowledge, the 
defendant formed a plan with Costa, Tanso, and Storella to meet 
with the victims in Slye Park and shoot and kill them on sight.  
Around 8 P.M. on February 19, these four men met at Enrico 
Ponzo's house and readied their weapons and ammunition, 
                     
 
9 Joseph Schindler testified at trial that when he was 
initially interviewed by police following the incident, he told 
the police that he was not able to make affirmative 
identifications of the three assailants because he saw that his 
wife was very concerned about the prospect of his being involved 
in the case. 
9 
 
including a .22 caliber revolver that Storella had retrieved and 
given to Tanso, and hollow point bullets.  Storella then 
accompanied the men to Slye Park but remained outside the park 
itself, from where he witnessed each of the three men fire shots 
at the victims when the victims arrived; Storella ran out of the 
park as DiBenedetto ran toward Chiuchiolo.  The following day, 
Storella heard Costa, Tanso, and the defendant talking about the 
incident.  During their conversation, each of them stated that 
he had shot each victim.  DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 659, 
quoting DiBenedetto II, 427 Mass. at 415-416.  Between 
Storella's first interview with the police and the 1994 trial, 
however, he had given five "different and inconsistent accounts 
of what he had seen that night, including one in which he 
claimed that he himself had been one of the murderers."  
DiBenedetto III, supra, quoting DiBenedetto II, supra.  Storella 
had been granted immunity from prosecution, including 
prosecution for murder, in exchange for his "truthful" testimony 
against the other three.  DiBenedetto III, supra. 
 
The defendant's motion for a new trial centers on a pair of 
Nike sneakers that were introduced in evidence for the first 
time during the 1994 trial.10  Schindler testified that the third 
shooter, i.e., the defendant, "wore white Nike brand sneakers 
                     
 
10 The Commonwealth did not introduce the sneakers in 
evidence at the defendant's first trial.  See DiBenedetto III, 
458 Mass. at 658. 
10 
 
that had become 'grayish with age,' identifiable by the 
trademark red 'swoosh' design on them."  DiBenedetto III, 458 
Mass. at 660.  When the defendant was arrested in his apartment 
four days after the shooting incident, he was wearing a pair of 
white Nike sneakers that Schindler identified at trial as 
"similar" to the shoes the third shooter was wearing on the 
night of the incident.  Id.  We repeat here our description in 
DiBenedetto III of the testing of the Nike sneakers: 
 
"At the time DiBenedetto's sneakers were seized in 
1986, they were sent to the Boston police crime laboratory 
(crime lab) for testing.  A senior criminalist employed by 
the crime lab visually examined the sneakers for the 
presence of blood, but observed nothing remarkable and 
specifically observed no stains that could be tested for 
the presence of blood.  No chemical testing of the sneakers 
was conducted at that time. 
 
 
"On December 31, 1993, on request by the prosecutor 
and days before the retrial of DiBenedetto and Costa was 
scheduled to begin, David L. Brody, the director of the 
crime lab, performed a preliminary test for the presence of 
blood on the sneakers.  The test was conducted with the use 
of the chemical phenolphthalein and hydrogen peroxide, an 
oxidizing agent.  Brody's test of the right sneaker yielded 
no positive results, but an outside edge of the sole of the 
left sneaker tested positive, meaning the result indicated 
the presence of blood.  George Abbott, an expert retained 
by the defendant, however, was unable to replicate this 
result on the left sneaker, but identified a small area on 
the sole of the right sneaker that tested positive. 
 
 
"The type of phenolphthalein test performed by Brody 
and Abbott may return a false positive if applied to 
certain plant substances, referred to as 'plant 
peroxidase.'  Moreover, the test does not distinguish 
between human blood and any other animal blood.  It is only 
possible to make that type of distinction by performing one 
or more additional, confirmatory tests for the presence of 
human blood, but none was performed.  Immediately before 
11 
 
the second trial, the defendants' counsel moved to suppress 
any evidence relating to the phenolphthalein test results 
and in effect renewed the motion at trial; their argument, 
made most forcefully at trial, was that the evidence as 
presented did not allow a reasonable inference that any 
blood on DiBenedetto's sneakers was in fact the blood of 
'any relevant party' present at Slye Park on February 19, 
1986.  The motion to suppress was denied, the defendants' 
argument on the issue at trial overruled, and the jury 
heard evidence from Brody and from Abbott about the testing 
of the sneakers for blood and the respective experts' 
opinions concerning the results of the testing. . . . 
 
 
". . . 
 
 
"In 2004, Janet Hanniman, a forensic serologist 
retained by the defendants, reanalyzed DiBenedetto's 
sneakers.  She was able to extract DNA evidence from the 
area of the left sneaker that Brody testified had yielded a 
presumptive positive result for the presence of blood; she 
also extracted DNA from stains on other specific portions 
of the right and left sneakers.  She found that the DNA 
yielded 'weak and incomplete genetic profiles that were 
mixtures from at least three people.'  Based on her 
examination, she excluded both Chiuchiolo and Bottari as 
contributors to that DNA.  Hanniman opined that if the 
blood of either victim had been the cause of the positive 
preliminary tests completed in 1993-1994, DNA contained in 
that blood also would have been present on the sneakers; 
and that if that DNA were present, it would still be 
detectable in 2004. Hanniman could not confirm whether 
blood was the source of the DNA she identified, but she 
could not exclude it as a possibility." 
 
DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 661, 663. 
 
Following DiBenedetto III, on remand to the Superior Court, 
the defendant submitted an affidavit from Carll Ladd, a forensic 
scientist who is the supervisor of the DNA unit in the State of 
Connecticut's forensic laboratory.  Ladd confirmed Hanniman's 
conclusions that (1) DNA profiles were found in seven different 
locations on the sneakers, including the two locations that were 
12 
 
phenolphthalein positive in 1994; (2) the profiles consisted of 
DNA mixtures derived from multiple people; (3) the victims were 
excluded as contributors to any of the mixtures; and (4) if 
either of the victims' DNA had been deposited on the sneakers in 
1986, that DNA would still be detectable on the sneakers when 
tested in 2004.  The defendant also submitted an affidavit of a 
professor of psychology at Tufts University, Samuel Sommers, on 
the fallibility of eyewitness identifications.  Sommers opined 
on factors that present risks concerning the accuracy of 
eyewitness identifications generally and concluded that 
"[m]ultiple risk factors for mistaken eyewitness identification 
and inflated eyewitness confidence were present in Schindler's 
identifications of DiBenedetto and Costa."  As indicated, 
following a nonevidentiary hearing, the judge again denied the 
defendant's motion for a new trial. 
 
Discussion.  1.  Reinstatement of the defendant's appeal.  
General Laws c. 278, § 33E, governs not only direct appeals of 
convictions of murder in the first degree, but also motions for 
a new trial in such cases, whether filed before the defendant's 
direct appeal has been decided or after the entry of the 
rescript by this court.  With respect to motions for a new trial 
filed after rescript, § 33E provides: 
 
"If any motion is filed in the superior court after 
rescript, no appeal shall lie from the decision of that 
court upon such motion unless the appeal is allowed by a 
13 
 
single justice of the supreme judicial court on the ground 
that it presents a new and substantial question which ought 
to be determined by the full court." 
 
The defendant's motion for a new trial at issue here was 
filed after the rescript of his direct appeal from the 1994 
conviction in DiBenedetto II.  A single justice allowed his 
gatekeeper petition, impliedly concluding that it raised a "new 
and substantial question which ought to be determined by the 
full court."  Commonwealth v. Ambers, 397 Mass. 705, 707 (1986).  
In DiBenedetto III, however, we did not reach the merits of the 
question raised -- whether the new DNA evidence relating to the 
sneakers "cast[] real doubt on the justice of the conviction," 
Commonwealth v. Grace, 397 Mass. 303, 305 (1986) -- because we 
determined that it was "necessary to remand the case for further 
findings by the motion judge concerning the proffered DNA 
evidence and its importance to the defendant['s] claim [that he] 
was not the third shooter in light of the evidence presented at 
trial."  See DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 670.  We added that 
"[a] remand [was] particularly appropriate . . . because of the 
fact that the motion judge was the trial judge with a thorough 
knowledge of the trial proceedings . . . who had the opportunity 
to observe the trial witnesses firsthand."  Id. at 670-671.  
Accordingly, we vacated the motion judge's order denying the 
defendant's motion for a new trial and remanded the case to the 
Superior Court for further consideration of the motion in a 
14 
 
manner consistent with our opinion.  Id. at 672-673.  We did not 
explicitly state that we were retaining jurisdiction.11 
 
We disagree with the Commonwealth's position that because 
we did not expressly retain jurisdiction in remanding the case 
to the Superior Court, we did not intend to do so, and that, 
therefore, the defendant could only seek to appeal from the 
judge's further denial of the motion by filing a second 
gatekeeper petition under § 33E.  Rather, we conclude that the 
second gatekeeper petition was not required here because a 
single justice already determined in 2009 that the defendant's 
motion for a new trial raised a new and substantial issue worthy 
of consideration by the full court.  We did not decide that 
issue in DiBenedetto III, but instead remanded the case to the 
Superior Court for further hearing and findings that would 
enable us to better do so.  Now that the judge has held the 
hearing and rendered a further decision, the defendant is 
entitled to have us decide that issue.12  Cf. Commonwealth v. 
                     
 
11 Compare Commonwealth v. Greineder, 464 Mass. 580 (2013); 
Commonwealth v. Lennon, 463 Mass. 520 (2012); Commonwealth vs. 
Mazza, SJC-11363. 
 
 
12 Contrary to the Commonwealth's claim, the merits issue 
the defendant raises here is not "wholly new," but the same 
issue he originally raised in his motion for a new trial:  
whether he is entitled to a new trial based on the new DNA 
evidence, where the Commonwealth and the judge in effect 
accepted that the DNA evidence was newly discovered. 
15 
 
Geraway, 364 Mass. 168, 175-176 (1973).  Cf. also Commonwealth 
v. Hurley, 391 Mass. 76, 78-79 (1984). 
 
2.  Motion for a new trial.  To prevail on a motion for a 
new trial on the basis of newly discovered or newly available 
evidence, the defendant must meet a two-part test.  He must 
demonstrate, first, that the evidence was previously unknown to 
him or not reasonably discoverable before trial and, second, 
that the evidence "casts real doubt on the justice of the 
conviction."  Grace, 397 Mass. at 305.  See Commonwealth v. 
Cowels, 470 Mass. 607, 616 (2015).  In this case, the 
Commonwealth, although afforded a specific opportunity to do so, 
see DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 664 n.11, 671 n.20, has not 
contested that the DNA analysis performed by Hanniman in 2004 
constitutes newly discovered evidence.  We therefore accept, as 
did the judge, that the defendant satisfies the first prong of 
the Grace test.  The issue is whether he has satisfied the 
second. 
The defendant argues that, for two reasons, the newly 
discovered DNA evidence, indicating that both victims were 
excluded as possible sources of the DNA mixture contained in 
blood found on the Nike sneakers, casts real doubt on the 
justice of his conviction.  The first, and most significant in 
the defendant's view, is that the evidence constitutes 
"powerfully exculpatory evidence" because it tends to show that 
16 
 
the defendant could not have been the third shooter in the 
circumstances of the case.13  The second reason is that the same 
DNA evidence would likely render inadmissible the evidence of 
the phenolphthalein test results as evidence tending to show 
that the victims' blood was on the sneakers, and more 
importantly, the new DNA evidence would foreclose the 
Commonwealth from arguing that the defendant's sneakers, with 
the blood, provided strong physical evidence that supported and 
reinforced Schindler's identification of the defendant as the 
third shooter. 
 
New evidence will "cast[] real doubt on the justice" of a 
defendant's conviction if there is a substantial risk that the 
jury would have reached a different conclusion had the evidence 
been admitted at trial.  Grace, 397 Mass. at 306.  The standard 
is not whether the verdict in fact would have been different, 
but whether there is a meaningful risk that it would have been.  
See Commonwealth v. Sullivan, 469 Mass. 340, 350-351 (2014), 
                     
 
13 Schindler testified that the third shooter was standing 
essentially over the prone body of Chiuchiolo with his gun just 
inches away from Chiuchiolo's head and then fired the gun 
repeatedly.  By the time the police arrived, there were large 
pools of blood on the ground around Chiuchiolo's head.  The 
defendant argues, therefore, that if he were the third shooter 
and had been wearing the subsequently seized Nike sneakers 
during the killings, certainly the sneakers would have the blood 
of one or both victims on them. 
17 
 
quoting Grace, supra.  Accord Cowels, 470 Mass. at 617.14  And 
because "[s]uch fact-specific analysis requires a thorough 
                     
 
14 In a number of recent cases, we have considered 
arguments, similar to the defendant's second argument -- that a 
new trial was required because of newly discovered or newly 
available evidence that would have rendered inadmissible certain 
evidence on which the Commonwealth relied at trial.  See 
Commonwealth v. Cameron, 473 Mass. 100 (2015); Commonwealth v. 
Cowels, 470 Mass. 607 (2015); Commonwealth v. Sullivan, 469 
Mass. 340 (2014).  In Cowels, we discussed how the Grace test 
applies to such a case: 
 
 
"In the typical case, where a defendant argues on the 
basis of newly discovered exculpatory evidence that was not 
presented at the original trial, we ask 'whether the new 
evidence would probably have been a real factor in the 
jury's deliberations' had it been presented [emphasis 
supplied].  Commonwealth v. Grace, 397 Mass. at 306.  In 
this case, where the defendants argue on the basis of a 
newly available analysis that likely would have rendered 
inculpatory evidence presented at the original trial 
inadmissible, we ask whether that inculpatory evidence 
'likely was a "real factor" in the jury's deliberations 
such that its elimination would cast real doubt on the 
justice of the defendant's conviction' [emphasis supplied].  
Commonwealth v. Sullivan, 469 Mass. 340, 350 (2014). . . .  
If we conclude that the subsequently eliminated inculpatory 
evidence likely did play an important role in the jury's 
deliberations, then we must conclude that there is '"a 
substantial risk that the jury would have reached a 
different conclusion" if it had not been admitted at 
trial.'" 
 
Cowels, supra at 618.  As we explained in Cowels, although the 
question asked to determine whether newly discovered evidence 
entitles the defendant to a new trial may differ, depending on 
the potential effect of that evidence on the case -- i.e., would 
the new evidence add exculpatory evidence or remove inculpatory 
evidence -- the focus of the test is the same:  whether the 
evidence probably would have been a "real factor" in the jury's 
decision, such that there is a substantial risk that the jury 
would have reached a different conclusion had the evidence been 
admitted at trial (or excluded, as the case may be).  Id. at 
18 
 
knowledge of trial proceedings . . . , we afford special 
deference to the rulings of a motion judge who was also the 
trial judge" (citation omitted).  Sullivan, supra at 351. 
The motion judge in this case, who was also the trial 
judge, rejected both of the defendant's arguments.  The judge 
questioned the exculpatory value of the new DNA evidence insofar 
as, in his view, the jury reasonably could have inferred either 
that the defendant was not wearing the same Nike sneakers on the 
night of the killings as he was when arrested four days later, 
or that the defendant had wiped the sneakers clean of virtually 
all the blood that may have been on them; the judge also stated 
that, in any event, because the serologist Hanniman had only 
tested a discrete number of areas on the sneakers, the defendant 
had not demonstrated the "complete absence" of the victims' DNA 
from the sneakers. As for the defendant's second argument, the 
judge restated the conclusion he had reached when he originally 
denied the defendant's motion for a new trial in 2009:  his 
observation of the first trial as it proceeded persuaded him 
that the allegedly inculpatory blood-on-the-sneakers evidence 
had been of marginal value to the prosecution and "was not of 
significant consequence at trial to the jury's assessment of the 
defendant's guilt."  The judge's principal reason for rejecting 
                                                                  
617-618.  See Commonwealth v. Tucceri, 412 Mass. 401, 413 
(1992), citing Grace, 397 Mass. at 306. 
19 
 
the defendant's claims, however, was tied to his assessment of 
the strength of the Commonwealth's case, and, in particular, the 
exceptional (in his view) strength and credibility of the 
identification evidence supplied by Schindler -- an 
identification that was corroborated by the other eyewitness, 
Storella, who, despite having provided many versions of the 
events, undisputedly knew the defendant (as well as Costa and 
Tanso) and had consistently identified the defendant and Costa 
as two of the three shooters. 
The defendant challenges the judge's decision as based on a 
mischaracterization of trial evidence and speculation as to the 
inferences the jury might draw if the new DNA evidence had been 
presented at trial.  On mischaracterization, he argues, for 
example, that the judge repeatedly stated that Schindler viewed 
the defendant for three to five minutes, and that the judge 
declined to give any weight to Schindler's critical testimony 
that his (Schindler's) ability to identify the defendant was 
based on a three- to five-second observation of the defendant as 
he stood on a well-lit set of stairs leading out of the park.  
Schindler certainly did testify about the importance of the 
three- to five-second period of observation of the defendant's 
face to his (Schindler's) ability to identify the defendant, but 
Schindler also testified that he was "accumulating" information 
about the defendant during the entire three- to five-minute 
20 
 
period he was observing the defendant and the other men in the 
park.  In that sense, the three- to five-minute period was 
certainly relevant to Schindler's capacity to identify the 
defendant, and we cannot say the judge abused his discretion in 
focusing on this longer period in assessing the strength of 
Schindler's identification testimony.15 
 
With respect to speculation, the defendant points to the 
judge's proffered reasons that the jury would not likely have 
given much significance to the new DNA evidence if it had been 
available at trial, such as the judge's assumption that the jury 
reasonably could have inferred that on the night of the 
killings, the defendant was wearing a pair of sneakers different 
from the ones he was wearing when he was arrested four days 
later, or that the defendant washed his sneakers prior to being 
                     
15 Another example provided by the defendant of the alleged 
misrepresentation of the evidence by the judge concerns the 
distance from Schindler's third-floor study window to the 
particular location in Slye Park where he observed each 
shooter's face when each shooter was heading out of the park and 
toward Boston Harbor.  There was evidence that the distance 
measured eighty-eight feet and, although Schindler testified 
based on a chalk depicting his apartment building and the park 
that he was "willing to believe" that the distance was 
approximately ninety feet, he later reaffirmed that his 
estimation of the distance was fifty feet; the judge's decision 
focuses on the fifty feet.  There was no evidence presented at 
trial as to what specifically could or could not be seen at 
fifty versus eighty-eight feet, and the jury also took a view 
and observed these locations for themselves.  In the 
circumstances of this case, the thirty-eight foot difference 
between the measured distance and Schindler's estimation does 
not appear to be of real significance in assessing the 
correctness of the judge's decision. 
21 
 
arrested.  We agree that the judge's reasoning is based on what 
are necessarily speculative assumptions because, by definition, 
the newly discovered evidence was not admitted at trial and not 
considered by the jury, but for reasons discussed infra, we 
conclude that the judge did not abuse his discretion in deciding 
that the exculpatory value of the new DNA evidence is far less 
significant than the defendant claims that it is. 
The defendant contends that the judge, in substance, 
ignored the factors that may have weakened or even undermined 
the reliability of Schindler's identification of the defendant, 
including -- as emphasized in the affidavit submitted by Sommers 
-- the repeated postevent exposure to information and evidence 
that, in Sommers's opinion, led to an evolving specificity of 
Schindler's identification over time.16  See generally Supreme 
Judicial Court Study Group on Eyewitness Evidence:  Report and 
Recommendations to the Justices (July 25, 2013) (study group 
report).  The judge, however, had the benefit of hearing and 
observing Schindler testify in person, and also specifically 
noted that he was aware of the factors that may affect 
eyewitness identification mentioned by Sommers.  We cannot 
conclude that the judge abused his discretion in declining to 
                     
16 The defendant points out that Schindler did not testify 
that the sneakers he observed the third shooter wearing were 
Nike sneakers with a trademark red swoosh until the second 
trial, after he had viewed a pair of dirty white Nike sneakers 
with a red swoosh in an evidence bag in the prosecutor's office. 
22 
 
question the reliability of Schindler's identification based on 
such factors.  It is also the case that the judge's instructions 
to the jury, which predated the study group report and our 
decision in Commonwealth v. Gomes, 470 Mass. 352 (2015), and its 
progeny, were faithful to the identification principles set out 
in Commonwealth v. Rodriguez, 378 Mass. 296, 310-311 (1979)  
(Appendix), S.C., 419 Mass. 1006 (1995), and included an 
instruction on the possibility of an honest but mistaken 
identification in accordance with Commonwealth v. Pressley, 390 
Mass. 617, 619–620 (1983).  See Commonwealth v. Navarro, 474 
Mass. 247, 254-255 (2016). 
 
Motions for a new trial are addressed to the "sound 
discretion" of the trial judge.  DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 
663-664.  See L.L. v. Commonwealth, 470 Mass. 169, 185 n.27 
(2014).17  Having been the trial judge, the motion judge here, as 
he was entitled to do, clearly made "use of his knowledge of 
                     
 
17 We restated the standard for judging an abuse of 
discretion in L.L. v. Commonwealth, 470 Mass. 169, 185 n.27 
(2014), as follows: 
 
 
"An appellate court's review of a trial judge's 
decision for abuse of discretion must give great deference 
to the judge's exercise of discretion; it is plainly not an 
abuse of discretion simply because a reviewing court would 
have reached a different result. . . .  [A] judge's 
discretionary decision constitutes an abuse of discretion 
where we conclude the judge made 'a clear error of judgment 
in weighing' the factors relevant to the decision . . . 
such that the decision falls outside the range of 
reasonable alternatives" (citations omitted). 
23 
 
what occurred at trial."  Commonwealth v. Kirwan, 448 Mass. 304, 
315 (2007).  Although he certainly could not know what was in or 
on the minds of the jurors who decided the case, the judge was 
entitled to assess the credibility of the witnesses at trial, 
including in particular Schindler, who testified over the course 
of four days.  In the judge's view, very clearly, this was a 
case in which "[t]he strength of the case against [the] 
defendant . . . weaken[ed] the effect of evidence which is 
admittedly newly discovered."  Grace, 397 Mass. at 306.  
Considering the defendant's two claims about the impact of the 
new DNA evidence in conjunction with our own full review of the 
trial record, we cannot conclude that the judge's view reflects 
a "clear error of judgment."  L.L., supra. 
The defendant's claim that the new DNA evidence was 
"powerfully exculpatory" is premised on the belief that the 
third shooter was highly likely to have gotten one or both of 
the victims' blood on his sneakers, and that the absence of any 
DNA from the victims was strong evidence that the defendant was 
not the third shooter.  The factual basis of this premise is not 
self-evident from the record.18  Moreover, the exculpatory value 
                     
 
18 Although photographs showed pools of blood around the 
victims by the time the police arrived at and secured the crime 
scene and photographed the victims lying on the ground, there 
was no evidence as to whether or in what amount blood was 
present when the third shooter came back to where Chiuchiolo was 
lying and fired the additional shots at Chiuchiolo, and no 
24 
 
of the new DNA evidence is diminished by (1) the DNA examiners' 
opinions that the DNA evidence found on the sneakers was small 
and, according to the serologist, consisted of "weak and 
incomplete genetic profiles," see DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 
663, 671; and (2) the fact that the sneakers had been seized by 
the police approximately eighteen years before they were tested 
and had not been stored in any type of scientifically protective 
manner.19 
 
The defendant's separate claim is that the prosecutor's use 
of the phenolphthalein test evidence against him at trial and 
particularly during her closing argument was likely a real 
factor in the jury's decision to find him guilty, and the DNA 
                                                                  
evidence concerning likely blood spatter pattern relating to 
those additional shots.  It is also the case that the third 
shooter may have taken caution not to step in the areas where 
blood was visible, and that, as the judge hypothesized, if the 
defendant was the third shooter and was wearing the Nike 
sneakers at the time of the killings, he may have wiped any 
blood off the sneakers by the time they were seized after his 
arrest four days later. 
 
 
19 The defendant's experts, Janet Hanniman and Carll Ladd, 
stated in their affidavits that DNA, if deposited on the shoes 
on the night of the shooting, would be present eighteen years 
later, but Ladd went on to clarify that that conclusion was 
based on the assumption that the sneakers were properly stored.  
The lack of proper storage, he opined, could cause more 
significant degrading of the DNA contained in the sneakers.  He 
also stated that if the sneakers had been washed after the 
victims' blood was transferred to one or both of them, the 
survival of a detectable amount of DNA would depend on multiple 
factors, "including how much DNA was originally present, how 
much washing was done, and whether bleach, soap or another 
detergent was used." 
25 
 
evidence would have prevented the prosecutor from making such an 
argument.  We have reviewed the prosecutor's closing argument, 
including a videotape of the argument submitted by the 
defendant.  Near the end of her lengthy closing, the prosecutor 
does argue forcefully about the value of the phenolphthalein 
test evidence as concrete physical evidence corroborating the 
eyewitness testimony.20  However, the closing argument, taken as 
a whole, was not built around or centered on this point, and it 
was also clearly not the most forceful point.  The prosecutor, 
rather, focused primarily on the credibility of the 
identifications of the defendant and his codefendant, Costa, 
made by Schindler, and most particularly on the fact that 
Schindler's detailed observations about the events in the park 
and the actions of the shooters corresponded with specific 
details supplied by Storella, and both of these witnesses' 
testimony corresponded with details testified to by the medical 
examiner -- an effective triangulation of consistent evidence. 
In sum, we accept the judge's conclusion, reflected in his 
denial of the motion for a new trial, that this is not a case in 
which "justice may not have been done."  Mass. R. Crim. P. 30 
(b), as appearing in 435 Mass. 1501 (2001). 
                     
20 See DiBenedetto III, 458 Mass. at 661-662, where this 
portion of the prosecutor's closing argument is quoted. 
26 
 
Conclusion.  The order denying the defendant's motion for a 
new trial is affirmed. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
So ordered.