Source: http://masscases.com/cases/sjc/460/460mass590.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-18 15:20:14+00:00

Document:
Practice, Criminal, Assistance of counsel, Motion to suppress, Argument by prosecutor, Failure to object, Instructions to jury, Capital case. Constitutional Law, Assistance of counsel, Identification. Identification. Due Process of Law, Identification. Evidence, Hearsay. Evidence, Exculpatory, Relevancy and materiality, Prior misconduct, Motive, Alibi. Armed Assault with Intent to Murder. Homicide.
At a murder trial, defense counsel did not render ineffective assistance in failing to object to the admission of hearsay statements contained in a witness's out-of-court identification, where one statement was integral to the identification and the second was harmless in the circumstances, in view of abundant other evidence on the same issue [607-609]; further, counsel's failure to object to the prosecutor's characterization of the identification in closing argument did not constitute ineffective assistance, where one statement was proper argument based on the evidence before the jury and the second, although inartfully phrased, was not improper [609-610].
At a murder trial, the judge acted within his discretion in limiting the jury's use of unreliable exculpatory evidence of third-party culprits [611-612]; further, the judge did not abuse his discretion in admitting evidence of the defendant's participation in drug dealing, where such testimony was relevant to the defendant's motive and the judge gave forceful limiting instructions on its use [612-613].
INDICTMENTS found and returned in the Superior Court Department on February 17, 2004.
The cases were tried before Raymond J. Brassard, J., and a motion for a new trial, filed on May 23, 2008, was heard by him.
GANTS, J. A jury in the Superior Court convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree on theories of deliberate premeditation and extreme atrocity or cruelty for the shooting death of Francis Stephens. The defendant was also convicted of the armed assault with intent to murder of Jose Astacio, who was shot but not killed, and possession of an unlicensed firearm. A codefendant, Willie Johnson, was acquitted on all charges. [Note 1] Represented by new counsel, the defendant filed a motion for a new trial on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel. The motion was denied after an evidentiary hearing by the same judge who had presided at trial.
failing to give an alibi instruction. The defendant also claims that he is entitled to reversal of the guilty verdict on the indictment charging armed assault with intent to murder because the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to support a finding of guilt as a principal. We affirm the convictions and the denial of the motion for a new trial. After a complete review of the record, we also conclude that there is no basis to exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to reduce his murder conviction to a lesser degree of guilt or to order a new trial.
Background. We summarize the evidence in detail, considering it in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, and reserving certain details for our analysis of the issues raised on appeal.
In September, 2000, the defendant and codefendant belonged to a gang from the Franklin Hill area in the Dorchester section of Boston known as the Franklin Hill Giants (Franklin Hill) that was engaged in escalating retaliatory violence with another neighborhood gang from the Esmond Street area (Esmond Street). After someone from Franklin Hill was stabbed while walking on Esmond Street on September 9, Kenie Smith, a senior member of Esmond Street, and Richard Green, a senior member of Franklin Hill, met to discuss the situation, in the presence of other gang members, including the defendant. After Green threatened Smith, and Smith made a move to his jacket, the defendant reached into his waistband and did something that sounded as though he were cocking a revolver. On September 12, an Esmond Street gang member was shot and, later that evening, a Franklin Hill gang member was shot. On September 16, at approximately 1 P.M., Smith was driving with three other Esmond Street gang members in a minivan when they spotted Green. Smith pulled in front of Green's vehicle, and someone from his minivan fired four to five shots into the windshield of Green's car, wounding Green.
another Franklin Hill gang member, that they should go to the Esmond Street area to "kill anybody over there." Clark responded that he was "not in on this one."
That afternoon, the defendant asked Terrance Dotson, who was friendly with Franklin Hill members, whether he would put gasoline in a Toyota Cressida automobile that Dotson had recently stolen and leave it for the defendant. Dotson followed his direction. At about 7 P.M., Dotson saw the defendant get into the Toyota automobile with Kyrone Childers.
Clark testified at trial that the two cars drove to Glenway Street, with the defendant's car in the lead. They saw three men talking together near the corner of Glenway and Harlem Streets, in Esmond Street territory. [Note 3] The codefendant started firing shots at the men, and Clark's car pulled in front of the Toyota to block traffic. One of the men ran into a nearby store. Another man (Astacio), after being shot in the leg, rolled under a parked van. [Note 4] The third man (Stephens) fell onto the sidewalk. Clark testified that the defendant stopped the car, got out, and walked toward the man lying on the sidewalk, firing downward multiple times with a nine millimeter firearm. Immediately after the shooting, the defendant drove the Toyota to the top of Fowler Street, a block away from where the shootings occurred. The defendant and codefendant abandoned the vehicle with the engine running. Clark told them to put the two firearms used in the shooting in his car, and he later hid them in a hamper at his aunt's house.
Michael Boyd testified that approximately one week after the shooting of Green, while Boyd was in the custody of the Department of Youth Services, he spoke by telephone with the defendant, who was a friend. The defendant asked whether he could vote if he was "on the run" for a "body" or for "one of those things," phrases that Boyd understood to mean that the defendant had killed someone. After Boyd's release from the custody of the Department of Youth Services in February, 2001, while Boyd was living with the defendant and the defendant's girl friend, the defendant told Boyd of his involvement in the shootings and gave a number of details: that the assaults were in revenge for the shooting of Green; that there was a meeting at Cheshire's apartment after Green was shot; that he "sent a guy named Terrence" to get a car and provided money to put gasoline in it; that the defendant drove the car during the shooting and got out of the car; that nine millimeter guns were used in the shooting; that after the shooting the defendant gave the guns to Clark, but Clark sold one of the guns to pay off a debt, which caused a problem between the defendant and Clark because the defendant wanted the gun returned to him. The defendant also told Boyd that the person he shot lived in the Esmond Street area but was not an Esmond Street gang member. He added that this "didn't matter because we had [a] beef with them anyway," and "it was revenge."
vehicle." Harrison told the detectives that he saw the person depicted in photograph number two (the defendant) operate a black Toyota, and "[h]e observed [this person] as being the shooter coming out of the vehicle and shooting at two individuals that were on the sidewalk." Harrison said the person depicted in photograph number four (who was not the codefendant) was "the passenger of the vehicle."
The key witnesses against the defendant -- Clark, Dotson, and Boyd -- each arguably had received benefit or expected to benefit from their cooperation with the Commonwealth in the investigation. Clark first told police about his role in the shooting after he had been arrested while in possession of a nine millimeter semiautomatic firearm with a large capacity feeding device, and faced prosecution as an armed career criminal. Clark's armed career criminal charge was dismissed, and he was not prosecuted for his role in the shooting of Stephens and Astacio. Dotson had a pending armed robbery case when he testified before the grand jury, to which he later pleaded guilty and served eighteen months, and at the time of trial was in jail awaiting trial on another pending criminal case. [Note 11] Boyd first spoke with the police about this case after he had been arrested on counterfeiting charges in November, 2003, while he was on probation, and received financial assistance to move outside the Boston area because of his cooperation in this case.
asked if it were possible to see the notes of Detective Martel's interview with Harrison in February, 2001. The judge told the jury that the report was not in evidence and they must rely on their collective memory of the testimony of Harrison and Detective Martel. The jury later asked for "further clarification" on the issues of "witness identification" and "collective memory and collective consciousness." The judge responded by repeating his identification instruction to the jury. He added that their collective memory should govern their understanding of the evidence and that the jury's collective memory need not be unanimous. He also told the jury that the law does not recognize the concept of "collective consciousness." The jury returned their verdicts on December 9, 2005, after eight days of deliberation.
decisions when made." Commonwealth v. Mosher, 455 Mass. 811 , 827 (2010). See Commonwealth v. Boateng, 438 Mass. 498 , 509 (2003).
a. Defense counsel's failure to file a motion to suppress Harrison's out-of-court identification. The defendant argues that Harrison's out-of-court identification was so impermissibly suggestive and so unreliable that any competent attorney would have moved for its suppression. After an evidentiary hearing on the motion for a new trial, in which defendant's trial counsel and Detectives Martel and Primm testified, [Note 12] the judge issued a 137-page memorandum of decision in which he concluded that a motion to suppress would have had only a "minimal chance of successfully suppressing Harrison's identification." In view of this minimal chance, the judge concluded that the defendant failed to prove that defense counsel's decision not to file the motion was manifestly unreasonable when made.
trial, as well as his knowledge of what occurred at trial, which included Harrison's trial testimony, the judge found that the defendant failed to prove that Harrison was intoxicated during the identification procedure, that the police detectives pressured Harrison to make selections from the photographic array, or that the detectives told Harrison that the photographic array depicted members of a gang. The judge also found that there was nothing about the photographs in the array that singled out the defendant and that the detectives did not suggest or otherwise emphasize his photograph. Because we conclude, based on our independent review of the evidence, that the judge's findings were not clearly erroneous, we accept these findings and agree that the defendant would not likely have been successful in proving that the identification procedure was unnecessarily suggestive.
whether an identification is made, the investigation will continue. See id. at 797-798. Nor did the police ask the witness to state how certain he was of his identification, see id. at 798, although Harrison nonetheless volunteered that he was not positive and that the photographs only "look like the two people that were in the vehicle." Because the identification procedure with Harrison took place before we provided this guidance in Silva-Santiago, supra, the detectives cannot be faulted for failing to follow it. See id. (eyewitness identification admissible despite absence of protocol or comparable warnings to eyewitness).
The defendant asks that we revisit our conclusion in Silva-Santiago, supra at 798-799, that the choice of a simultaneous rather than a sequential display of photographs goes solely to the weight of the identification, not to its admissibility. We suggested in that case that we would revisit this conclusion if the substantial weight of additional empirical evidence demonstrates that "the sequential showing of photographs leads to greater accuracy" in eyewitness identifications. Id. at 798. The defendant contends that the empirical evidence is already clear that sequential display is the better procedure and that simultaneous display is inherently unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification.
identifications than simultaneous lineups, but where culprit not included in array sequential lineups produce twenty-two per cent fewer errors). Because an eyewitness tends to assume that a suspect's photograph is present in a simultaneous display, the eyewitness is more likely to identify one of the photographs in the display that looks most like the suspect, and therefore is more likely either to be correct or in error. See Wells, Eyewitness Identification: Systemic Reforms, 2006 Wis. L. Rev. 615, 618-619. However, "there is dispute as to the rate of reduction of accurate identifications as compared to the well-established rate of reduction in inaccurate identifications." Master's Report, supra. There is also dispute as to whether a sequential lineup may be preferable under some conditions and a simultaneous lineup preferable in others. Three experts who have surveyed the empirical studies in eyewitness identification have suggested that sequential lineups are superior to simultaneous lineups only when a perpetrator is absent from the array, and that "[s]equential lineups . . . produce fewer correct identifications [than simultaneous lineups] when the level of similarity [between suspect and fillers] is high." McQuiston-Surrett, Sequential vs. Simultaneous Lineups: A Review of Methods, Data, and Theory, 12 Psychol., Pub. Pol'y, & L. 137, 154 (2006).
In addition, we also recognize that the failure to provide warnings comparable to the protocol we adopted in Silva-Santiago, supra at 797-798, including warning the eyewitness that the alleged wrongdoer may not be among the photographs in the array and that it is as important to clear a person from suspicion as to identify a person as the wrongdoer, "substantially increases risk of misidentification." Master's Report, supra at 22. What is not clear from the studies is whether, and in what circumstances, the use of the protocol in a simultaneous photographic lineup diminishes the risk of false positive identification to a rate comparable to or less than that in a sequential lineup. We cannot determine whether a sequential display is superior to a simultaneous display and that the use of the latter is unnecessarily suggestive until we learn, at a minimum, whether the rate of false positive identification with the use of the protocol is significantly higher in simultaneous displays than in sequential displays.
sequential display is so plainly superior that any identification arising from a simultaneous display is unnecessarily suggestive and therefore must be suppressed. See, e.g., State v. Henderson (No. A-8-08), __ N.J. __, __ (2011) [slip op. at 30] ("For now, there is insufficient, authoritative evidence accepted by scientific experts for a court to make a finding in favor of either [simultaneous or sequential lineup] procedure"); McQuiston-Surrett, Sequential vs. Simultaneous Lineups, supra at 162 ("research base for [sequential lineups] may not be sufficiently developed from a methodological or theoretical point of view to currently advocate for its implementation to the exclusion of other procedures"). Until we reach such a conclusion, the choice of a simultaneous rather than a sequential display of photographs shall go solely to the weight of the identification, not to its admissibility. Silva-Santiago, supra at 798-799.
The defendant also contends that the photographic array was "grossly improper" because it was composed entirely of suspects. The defendant argues that scientific and legal studies suggest that an all-suspect array "produces sharply inflated false identification rates compared with the single-suspect model." See, e.g., Master's Report, supra at 25 ("ordinary and accepted practice among law enforcement agencies is to present an array embedding the suspect among at least five fillers"); United States Department of Justice, Eyewitness Evidence: A Guide for Law Enforcement 29 (1999) (recommending that police "[i]nclude only one suspect per identification procedure"); Wells, Eyewitness Identification: The Importance of Lineup Models, 99 Psychol. Bull. 320 (1986).
common-law principles of fairness, and require a trial judge to serve as a gatekeeper to exclude unreliable eyewitness testimony even where a defendant is unable to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the identification is unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable misidentification. In Commonwealth v. Jones, 423 Mass. 99 (1996), we recognized that common-law principles of fairness dictate that an unreliable identification arising from "especially suggestive circumstances" should not be admitted in evidence even where the police were not responsible for the suggestive confrontation. Id. at 108-109. See Commonwealth v. Odware, 429 Mass. 231 , 236 (1999) ("in some circumstances an identification that has been tainted, but not by the government, may become so unreliable that its introduction into evidence is unfair"). We have not suggested, however, that in the absence of an unnecessarily suggestive police identification procedure or especially suggestive circumstances, a judge must serve as a gatekeeper of eyewitness identifications offered by the Commonwealth and admit only those identifications the judge finds to be reliable. Two years after we decided the Jones case, we rejected the argument that nonsuggestive pretrial identifications should be suppressed on the ground that they were unreliable, declaring, "[w]hen the procedures are not suggestive, the pretrial identifications are admissible without a further showing." Commonwealth v. Payne, 426 Mass. 692 , 694 n.3 (1998), quoting Commonwealth v. Warren, 403 Mass. 137 , 139 (1988).
irreparable misidentification, the court should suppress the identification evidence." Id. at . The court noted that, under its previous framework, a defendant needed to prove that police procedures were "impermissibly suggestive" before a motion judge could consider estimator variables that bear on reliability. [Note 18] Id. at . Now, where a defendant has met the initial burden of showing some evidence of suggestiveness, a motion judge may consider all evidence relevant to reliability, including both system and estimator variables, in determining whether the defendant has proved a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification. Id. at . See State v. Hubbard, 48 P.3d 953, 963 (Utah 2002) ("Even if law enforcement procedures are appropriate and do not violate due process, eyewitness identification testimony must still pass the gatekeeping function of the trial court and be subject to a preliminary determination -- whether the identification is sufficiently reliable to be presented to the jury").
b. Defense counsel's failure to object to hearsay in Harrison's out-of-court identification. The defendant also claims that defense counsel rendered ineffective assistance because she failed to object to Detective Martel's testimony that Harrison said he saw the person depicted in photograph number two (the defendant) operate a black Toyota and "[h]e observed [this person] as being the shooter coming out of the vehicle and shooting at two individuals that were on the sidewalk." The defendant contends this was hearsay that went beyond the permissible scope of an identification. We conclude there was no error in the admission of this testimony.
such evidence to impeachment. Commonwealth v. Cong Duc Le, 444 Mass. 431 , 441-442 (2005). The witness in the Cong Duc Le case, during a pretrial identification procedure, had identified the photograph of one codefendant as the person who had attacked his friend, and the photograph of the other codefendant as the person who had struck him and knocked him to the ground. Id. at 433-434. At trial, however, the witness admitted having identified the photographs of the two codefendants, but claimed that he identified them as persons he had seen outside the nightclub on the evening of the assault, not as the assailants. Id. at 435. We concluded that the admission of the detective's testimony regarding "the contents of [the witness's] statement of identification" was proper under our common-law rules of evidence and did not violate the defendants' right of confrontation. Id. at 442.
The defendant contends that Harrison's out-of-court statements went beyond a statement of identification and into the realm of inadmissible hearsay. We have recognized that "[a]bsent context, an act or statement of identification is meaningless. . . . [I]dentification evidence must be accompanied either by some form of accusation relevant to the issue before the court, or some form of exclusionary statement, in order to be relevant to the case." Commonwealth v. Adams, 458 Mass. 766 , 772 (2011). [Note 21] We have concluded that an eyewitness's out-of-court statement identifying a defendant as the person shooting at the eyewitness's friend is part of the context of the identification, see id. at 770-771, but a statement regarding the number of shots fired, the color of the firearm, and the defendant's behavior after the shooting goes beyond the context of the identification of the shooter. See Commonwealth v. Martinez, 431 Mass. 168 , 175-176 (2000).
concluded that Harrison's statement that the person in photograph number two looked like the person who operated the car and then fired shots at two individuals on the sidewalk was "limited context integral to the identification," and therefore properly admitted. The judge also concluded that Harrison's description of the car as a "black Toyota" was "extraneous to the identification," and was inadmissible hearsay, but was harmless in the circumstances in view of abundant other evidence that the car involved in the shooting was a black Toyota. We agree. Because an objection by defense counsel to this testimony would have been overruled except to exclude the statement regarding the black Toyota, and because the admission of that statement was harmless, we conclude that defense counsel was not ineffective for failing to object.
c. Defense counsel's failure to object to the prosecutor's closing argument. In his closing argument, the prosecutor told the jury that Harrison had "a good look" at "the driver, the person doing the shooting" and that Harrison "tells us" that the face of the driver looked like the face of the defendant. The defendant maintains the prosecutor's "glaring misstatements" went to the "heart of the case," and that "defense counsel's failure to object to the statements was constitutionally ineffective."
In denying the motion for a new trial, the judge determined that the statement about a "good look" was "proper argument based on the evidence before the jury and permissible inferences drawn therefrom." The judge recognized that Harrison did not testify at trial that the face of the shooter looked like the face of the defendant, but instead said that to Detective Martel, who reported it to the jury in his testimony. The judge concluded that the prosecutor's statement was not improper because, despite "the prosecutor's inartful phraseology," a reasonable jury would have understood that the prosecutor was referring to the pretrial identification of the photographs made by Harrison, not to his trial testimony.
(1997) (prosecutor's statements must be considered in context in which they were made to determine what jury likely would have understood them to mean).
d. Defense counsel's failure to introduce evidence of third-party confession. In her cross-examination of Dotson, defense counsel elicited from him that he had stated to Detective Michael Devane in October, 2000, that one of Green's brothers had shot the victim in the chest and another brother had "finished him in the head." He testified "that was the word" he had heard. On redirect examination, Dotson testified that this was the word "that was going around the hood," and that he had passed on the rumor to the police, having no firsthand information. In her cross-examination of Detective Devane, defense counsel elicited that Dotson had told him that two of Green's brothers shot the victim. However, on redirect examination, when the prosecutor asked the detective if he recalled "all of what Mr. Dotson had to say" regarding the Green brothers' involvement in the shooting, the detective testified that Dotson had recanted that statement and admitted it was not true. He said Dotson "changed it to something he heard and then backed off even hearing that." The defendant asserts that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his trial attorney did not attempt to elicit from Dotson or Detective Devane the information contained in the detective's report of this interview that Dotson had heard this information from the Green brothers.
Having addressed each of the claims of ineffective assistance of counsel raised by the defendant in his motion for a new trial, we affirm the denial of the motion and move to the other claims raised by the defendant.
party is the true culprit, "we have permitted hearsay evidence that does not fall within a hearsay exception only if, in the judge's discretion, 'the evidence is otherwise relevant, will not tend to prejudice or confuse the jury, and there are other "substantial connecting links" to the crime.' " Silva-Santiago, supra at 801, quoting Commonwealth v. Rice, 441 Mass. 291 , 305 (2004). Here, it is not apparent from the statement whether the "unknown black male" personally observed the crime or obtained the information from a third party and, if he did observeit, whether he saw the perpetrators well enough to identify them as Hispanics. Nor was there evidence of the emotional state of the declarant that may have permitted the statement's admission as an excited utterance. The judge could reasonably conclude that such unreliable testimony would tend to prejudice or confuse the jury if admitted for its truth. In these circumstances, we conclude that the judge acted within his discretion in limiting the use of this evidence, and that the limitation did not create a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.
3. Evidence of drug dealing. The defendant claims that the judge erred by permitting the Commonwealth to introduce "entirely tangential" and highly inflammatory evidence that the defendant sold crack cocaine. Over the defendant's objection, Clark testified that the defendant was involved in the sale of crack cocaine from Akia Cheshire's apartment, but he never saw the defendant make any drug transactions or handle any narcotics. In addition, apart from evidence about Green's drug dealing, several police officers and civilian witnesses testified to the prevalence of drug dealing among members of the Franklin Hill gang. We review for prejudicial error.
propensity to commit the crime charged, evidence of prior bad acts may be admitted where it is not unduly prejudicial and is relevant "to establish motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or pattern of operation." Commonwealth v. Horton, 434 Mass. 823 , 827 (2001). We leave to the judge's sound discretion whether the probative value of the evidence outweighs the risk of unfair prejudice. Id. at 828. We conclude that the judge did not abuse his discretion by admitting this testimony.
maintains the judge's denial of defense counsel's request for an alibi instruction violated his constitutional right to a fair trial. Because the issue was preserved for appeal, we review for prejudicial error, and find none.
defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to convict him as a principal of armed assault with intent to murder Astacio because "[t]here was no evidence presented that Astacio was ever even close to [the defendant's] line of fire." In reviewing the judge's denial of a motion for a required finding, we determine "whether the evidence offered by the Commonwealth, together with reasonable inferences therefrom, when viewed in its light most favorable to the Commonwealth, was sufficient to persuade a rational jury beyond a reasonable doubt of the existence of every element of the crime charged." Commonwealth v. Lao, 443 Mass. 770 , 779 (2005), S.C., 450 Mass. 215 (2007), and ante 12 (2011), quoting Commonwealth v. Campbell, 378 Mass. 680 , 686 (1979).
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant intended to commit a battery on Astacio, took overt steps toward accomplishing that aim, and came "reasonably close" to doing so. See Commonwealth v. Melton, supra.
6. Review under G. L. c. 278, § 33E. Having thoroughly examined the record, we see no reason to exercise our authority under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to reduce the murder in the first degree conviction to murder in the second degree, or to order a new trial.
7. Conclusion. For the reasons stated above, we affirm the defendant's judgments of conviction, and the denial of his motion for a new trial.
[Note 1] Willie Johnson was charged with murder in the first degree, assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, and possession of an unlicensed firearm.
[Note 2] At the time of trial, one of Sharod Clark's companions was deceased. The other, Christopher Robinson, testified that he did not recall ever being in a vehicle with Clark on the day of the murder.
[Note 3] The transcript refers to Harvard Street but, according to the map in evidence, the street that intersects Glenway Street is Harlem Street. We infer that the reference to Harvard Street is a stenographic error.
[Note 4] Jose Astacio asserted his right against self-incrimination pursuant to the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and did not testify at trial.
[Note 5] The trial testimony of two nonparticipant eyewitnesses corroborated Clark's description of the shooting. Jonathan Baskin testified that at approximately 8 P.M. he heard a loud sound and looked out of the third-story window of his home near the intersection of Glenway and Harlem Streets. He "saw a gentleman standing and firing a gun . . . in a downward direction" on the sidewalk on Glenway Street near Harlem Street. Baskin described the man as a dark-skinned African-American male of "average height," which he set variously as between five feet, six inches, to five feet, ten inches tall. After the shooting, he saw the man jump into the passenger side of a car that "took off up Glenway Street." Baskin did not see the face of the man. At trial, he identified a photograph of a dark-colored Toyota Cressida as the car used by the shooter.
Glennis Pena testified that, while she was on her second-story porch on Fowler Street, which intersects Glenway Street, a block away from the intersection where the shooting occurred, she witnessed a car going "very fast" up the street. The car stopped further up Fowler Street, and two people got out and entered a car that was "coming from behind." She did not recognize the occupants of the cars.
[Note 6] Dr. Mark Flomenbaum, the chief medical examiner, testified at trial about the wounds to Stephens. Dr. Flomenbaum did not perform the autopsy or write the autopsy report but testified because the medical examiner who had done so was no longer with the medical examiner's office. Without objection, Dr. Flomenbaum testified that, according to the autopsy report, the victim had been shot fifteen times; the injuries caused by eight of the bullets that struck him would independently have been fatal. Three shots were fired to the back of Stephens's head, and another was consistent with having struck Stephens when he was "belly down." Three pages of the autopsy report were admitted in evidence, also without objection. While this testimony and the autopsy report were inadmissible hearsay whose admission violated the defendant's right of confrontation under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, see Commonwealth v. Barbosa, 457 Mass. 773 , 784 (2010), cert. denied, 131 S. Ct. 2441 (2011), the defendant does not contend on appeal that defense counsel was ineffective for failing to object to their admission or that their admission produced a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice. We independently consider this error under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, and conclude that no substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice resulted from its admission, because there was abundant other reliable evidence that the shooter repeatedly fired at Stephens while he lay helplessly wounded on the sidewalk.
[Note 7] The police also recovered a light-colored T-shirt from the abandoned Toyota, and a Red Sox baseball cap found under a Cadillac automobile that was parked near the Toyota. Deoxyribonucleic acid samples from the baseball cap did not match that of either defendant; nor did fingerprints found in the interior of the Toyota and on its registration plate. The T-shirt was sent to the crime laboratory but there was no testimony about any results of forensic testing or whether such testing was done.
[Note 8] Page Street becomes Harlem Street at the intersection with Glenway Street.
[Note 9] Sylvester Harrison could not identify the photograph of the black Toyota as the car he saw blocking Fowler Street that night. Clark testified that the Toyota had front end damage before it was used in the shooting.
[Note 10] When asked to estimate the length of Page Street, Harrison replied that it was probably a distance of about "three quarters of a football field," the equivalent of 225 feet, and that he was at the beginning of the street when he heard the shots. Page Street begins at McLellan Street, from which Harrison entered Page Street, and ends at Glenway Street. The defendant contends from this testimony that Harrison was 225 feet away from Glenway Street when he saw the shooter, but this ignores Harrison's testimony that he drove in reverse on Page Street when he realized the shots were coming from Glenway Street, which suggests that he had driven some distance toward Glenway Street before he decided to go in reverse.
[Note 11] Terrence Dotson denied that he had been promised anything regarding his armed robbery case or his pending case.
[Note 12] Harrison died before the evidentiary hearing on the motion.
[Note 13] Where the defendant satisfies this burden, the out-of-court identification is per se excluded as a violation of the defendant's right to due process under art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. Commonwealth v. Johnson, 420 Mass. 458 , 462-463 (1995). In contrast, under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, a motion judge must apply a two-step analysis to the question of admissibility. The judge asks first whether the eyewitness identification was obtained by a police procedure that was unnecessarily suggestive. See Manson v. Brathwaite, 432 U.S. 98, 110 (1977). If it was, the judge then asks whether, notwithstanding the unnecessarily suggestive procedure, the eyewitness identification was reliable under "the totality of the circumstances." Id. at 113. Because "reliability is the linchpin," the identification, if found reliable, is admissible even where obtained through an unnecessarily suggestive procedure. Id. at 114. The United States Supreme Court expressly rejected the "per se" rule of exclusion as "go [ing] too far since its application automatically and peremptorily, and without consideration of alleviating factors, keeps evidence from the jury that is reliable and relevant." Id. at 112. Because the standard for the admissibility of an identification under the Massachusetts Constitution is more favorable to a defendant than the standard under the United States Constitution, we need not consider the defendant's Federal constitutional claims concerning Harrison's out-of-court identification.
[Note 14] The Supreme Court of New Jersey appointed a special master to conduct a "plenary hearing" to examine the scientific evidence regarding eyewitness identification. See Report of Special Master at 3 (June 18, 2010), State vs. Henderson, N.J. Supreme Court No. A-8-08. At the hearing, more than 200 published scientific studies, articles, and books were made part of the record, and seven expert witnesses on eyewitness identification testified. Id.
[Note 15] We urge district attorneys to provide training to police in proper identification procedures to ensure that the risk of a wrongful conviction arising from a mistaken identification is diminished.
[Note 16] Because eyewitness identification is the greatest source of wrongful convictions but also an invaluable law enforcement tool in obtaining accurate convictions, and because the research regarding eyewitness identification procedures is complex and evolving, we shall convene a study committee to consider how we can best deter unnecessarily suggestive procedures and whether existing model jury instructions provide adequate guidance to juries in evaluating eyewitness testimony.
[Note 17] The defendant's additional alleged constitutional bases for suppression are groundless and merit only brief comment. That a police detective who was investigating the case composed and presented the array (that is, that the identification procedure was not "double-blind") and that the interview was not recorded do not without more render the identification evidence unduly suggestive. See Commonwealth v. Silva-Santiago, 453 Mass. 782 , 797, 799 (2009).
[Note 18] The Supreme Court of New Jersey, in contrast with this court, had earlier adopted the two-step analysis in Manson v. Braithwaite, 432 U.S. 98, 110 (1977), in which a judge first determines whether an identification procedure was impermissibly suggestive and, if so, then considers in the totality of the circumstances whether the identification was nonetheless reliable. State v. Henderson, __ N.J. __, __  (2011), quoting State v. Madison, 109 N.J. 223, 232 (1988).
[Note 19] The defendant claims that Harrison's identification is unreliable because he was too distant from the men he observed, he saw only a "quick image," he was focused more on the safety of his children than the identity of the shooter, and his pretrial identification occurred five months after the incident. The defendant's cross-examination and the judge's instructions to the jury were adequate to address the danger of unreliability arising from these sources.
[Note 20] Because we conclude that there was no reasonable likelihood that Harrison's pretrial identification would have been suppressed had defense counsel so moved, we need not address whether it was manifestly unreasonable for defense counsel to make the strategic decision not to challenge its admissibility and use Harrison's testimony to argue that the police were overzealous in their investigation of the murder by pressuring him to make a false identification. See Commonwealth v. Acevedo, 446 Mass. 435 , 446-447 (2006) (defense counsel ineffective for strategic decision only where decision was manifestly unreasonable when made).
"The extent of the statement needed to provide context will vary from case to case, depending on what the witness remembers or denies at trial. We emphasize that the rule was not intended to render a witness's entire statement admissible, but only so much as comprises relevant evidence on the issue of identification. Judges have broad discretion in this area, and parties who intend to offer pretrial statements of identification are well advised to bring the matter to the attention of the trial judge at the earliest practicable time, preferably in a motion in limine."
[Note 22] In view of the conclusion that defense counsel's actions were not manifestly unreasonable, we need not determine whether the Green brothers' purported admission to the crime would have been admissible in evidence.
[Note 23] Neither the defendant nor the codefendant is Hispanic. Both are African-American.
[Note 24] The defendant initially sought to admit this out-of-court statement through the testimony of Officer Brian Mahoney, who spoke to the unknown black male. The judge denied its admission on the ground that it was not an excited utterance. The defendant at that time did not seek its admission for the limited purpose of evaluating the adequacy of the police investigation. When the defendant proposed its admission for this limited purpose, the judge allowed the admission of the evidence through the testimony of Boston police Sergeant Detective James J. Wyse, who testified to the contents of Officer Mahoney's report of the interview. Because the defendant does not contend on appeal that the statement was admissible as an excited utterance, we do not consider the objection preserved, but the standard of review is irrelevant here because we find no error by the judge.
[Note 25] Our confidence that the defendant did not suffer unfair prejudice from the admission in evidence of the defendant's participation in drug dealing is strengthened by the fact that there was far more extensive evidence regarding his codefendant's drug dealing, and the jury found the codefendant not guilty. Clark testified that he had seen the codefendant selling illegal drugs approximately twice a week through the summer of 2000. Trooper Patricia Riley testified that she personally observed the codefendant "multiple times" in the summer of 2000 while conducting physical surveillance of the sale of crack cocaine in the Franklin Hill housing complex. Not surprisingly, it was codefendant's counsel, not the defendant's, who took the lead in objecting to testimony about illegal drug dealing. If any unfair prejudice attached to the evidence of drug dealing, it was the codefendant, not the defendant, who would have borne its brunt.
[Note 26] We add that the alibi defense in this case was weak. The evidence established that the shooting occurred between 8 and 8:15 P.M. The only evidence of an alibi came from the testimony of Jose DeJesus, an acquaintance of the defendant, who said that he saw the defendant and others when he arrived at Akia Cheshire's apartment on the evening of the shooting. He estimated that he arrived at Cheshire's apartment some time after 8 P.M., based on "the math" he had done with defense counsel concerning the timing of his earlier activities that day.
[Note 27] The Commonwealth did not elect to proceed on the assault theory of "immediately threatened battery," under which it would have been required to "prove that the defendant intentionally engaged in menacing conduct that reasonably caused the victim to fear an imminent battery." Commonwealth v. Melton, 436 Mass. 291 , 295 n.4 (2002). See Commonwealth v. Porro, 458 Mass. 526 , 530-531 (2010) (examining difference between imminent threatened battery and attempted battery).
[Note 28] While the prosecution sought and obtained a joint venture instruction as to the charge of murder, it did not seek a joint venture instruction as to the charge of armed assault with intent to murder.
[Note 29] Officer Mark Lydon, a ballistics expert called by the Commonwealth, testified that twenty-six shell casings were recovered at the scene. Subsequent forensic testing indicated that twelve of those casings were from bullets fired from one nine millimeter semiautomatic weapon and fourteen were from bullets fired from another nine millimeter semiautomatic weapon. A map introduced in evidence and used by Detective Lydon during his testimony showed that a shell casing from one weapon was located under the right rear tire of the van, and another casing from that same weapon was recovered on the pavement near the right rear of the van. A shell casing from the second weapon was recovered near the right rear of the van on the sidewalk, slightly apart from a group of casings from the second weapon that were recovered close to where the victim had been shot. Detective Lydon testified that the shooter most likely was standing to the left and front of where the shell casings were recovered, and although some of the casings may have rolled or bounced, they would not have traveled "too far" from where they were ejected.

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