Court Opinion

ID: 9374039
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-02-22 16:16:45.581923+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:44.392791
License: Public Domain

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SJC-11667

                 COMMONWEALTH   vs.   TAMIK KIRKLAND.

      Hampden.       November 7, 2022. - February 22, 2023.

  Present:   Budd, C.J., Gaziano, Cypher, Kafker, & Georges, JJ.

Homicide. Identification. Evidence, Identification,
     Photograph, Expert opinion, Third-party culprit. Witness,
     Expert. Constitutional Law, Assistance of counsel.
     Practice, Criminal, Assistance of counsel, New trial,
     Capital case.

     Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
Department on June 9, 2011.

     The cases were tried before Tina S. Page, J., and a motion
for a new trial, filed on September 26, 2016, was heard by
Michael K. Callan, J.

     Merritt Schnipper for the defendant.
     Joseph G.A. Coliflores, Assistant District Attorney, for
the Commonwealth.

    KAFKER, J.    A jury convicted the defendant, Tamik Kirkland,

of murder in the first degree on the theory of deliberate

premeditation for the death of Sheldon Innocent (victim), who

was fatally shot at a Springfield barbershop.     The defendant was
                                                                   2

also convicted on several related charges connected to the

barbershop shooting and a subsequent altercation with police at

a private residence in which the defendant shot a police officer

who was trying to arrest him.1   The defendant now appeals from

his convictions of murder in the first degree, armed assault

with intent to murder, and assault and battery by means of a

dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury, as well as from

the denial of his postconviction motion for a new trial.

     On appeal, the defendant raises three principal arguments.

First, he argues that his trial counsel were ineffective because

they failed to present expert testimony on the impossibility of

the defendant matching eyewitness descriptions of the

perpetrator due to his hairstyle.   Second, he asserts that they

were ineffective for failing to present expert testimony on

eyewitness misidentification, based on environmental factors and

impermissibly suggestive photographic array procedures used by

police.   Third, the defendant argues that the trial judge erred

in excluding certain third-party culprit evidence on the basis

that it did not provide a "substantial connecting link" between

     1 In addition to the conviction of murder, the defendant was
convicted of three counts of armed assault with intent to
murder, two counts of assault and battery by means of a
dangerous weapon, one count of assault and battery by means of a
dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury, two counts of
unlawful possession of a firearm, and two counts of unlawful
possession of a loaded firearm, sawed off shotgun, or machine
gun.
                                                                      3

the third party and the victim's murder, and that the judge who

denied his motion for a new trial (motion judge) erred in his

evaluation of the defendant's ineffective assistance of counsel

claim, where the defendant presented additional third-party

culprit evidence that was not presented at trial.     The defendant

also argues that each of these errors should have entitled him

to a new trial.   Finally, the defendant argues that he is

entitled to a new trial pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E.

    We discern no reversible error in our review of the

defendant's direct appeal or the postconviction motion for a new

trial.   Having thoroughly examined the record, we also conclude

that there is no reason to grant relief under G. L. c. 278,

§ 33E.   Thus, we affirm the defendant's convictions and the

denial of his postconviction motion.

    1.   Background.   a.   Facts.   We summarize the facts that

the jury could have found at the defendant's trial, reserving

certain details for our discussion of the legal issues.

    At around noon on a balmy Saturday, April 30, 2011, Darryl

King was giving the victim a haircut at a Springfield barbershop

when the defendant, wearing a black sweatshirt with a hood

("hoodie"), black T-shirt, jeans, and black gloves, walked

backwards into the barbershop.    The hood was pulled "over his

head," but King noticed that the defendant's hair was braided.
                                                                    4

     The defendant turned around, and King made eye contact with

him, noticing his eyes were red.    King asked the man whether he

wanted a haircut.     The defendant said nothing as he pulled out

two firearms, one at a time, from the front pocket of the

hoodie.   Seeing the guns, King said, in part, "Don't shoot me,

man."    The defendant began shooting inside the barbershop at

around 12:04 P.M.2    King was shot eleven times but survived.3

The victim was shot four times and succumbed to his injuries.

     Rodney Ball, who was at a convenience store next door,

heard the shots, left the store, and saw a Black man with

medium-brown skin, standing five feet, seven inches to five

feet, eight inches tall, in jeans and a black hoodie with the

hood "on his head," leaving the barbershop and walking "briskly"

towards Montrose Street.    Local and State law enforcement were

dispatched to the barbershop and directed to look for a "suspect

dressed in dark clothing," including a black hoodie, with a

"slim build, running from the scene" down Montrose Street and

toward Burr Street.

     2 ShotSpotter technology alerted Springfield police to the
sound, detected as an acoustic "impulse sign," of gunshots in
the vicinity of State and Montrose Streets at around 12:04 or
12:05 P.M.

     3 King testified that the defendant first shot him seven or
eight times and then returned to shoot him three more times.
                                                                      5

    The defendant entered a house on Burr Street through the

back door and encountered Lekeanna Carter styling Carolyn

Wright's hair in the living room.     A third woman, Linka

Baulkman, and two infants -- Baulkman's and Carter's -- were

also present.     The defendant was wearing a black hoodie with the

hood off his head, black pants, and black gloves, and he was

holding a cell phone and chrome-topped pistol.     Talking into the

cell phone, he looked out the windows and asked about a car

coming for him.     He then pulled a second black pistol from his

waist area and hid it in a reclining chair.     He also asked

Baulkman for a change of clothes, which she provided.

    Meanwhile, Carter and Wright fled upstairs with Carter's

baby, leaving the defendant downstairs.    While they were

upstairs, the defendant left the house and got into the open

trunk of a gray Chevrolet Impala that had backed into the

driveway.   As the driver attempted to leave, State and local law

enforcement surrounded the vehicle.     The trunk opened and, at

approximately 12:16 P.M., the defendant began shooting at

police, hitting State police Trooper Stephen Gregorczyk in his

bulletproof vest.     Police returned fire, wounding the defendant.

Law enforcement then pulled the defendant, wearing dark-colored

pants and sneakers, from the trunk and confiscated a Taurus

pistol from him.     The defendant was taken into custody,

transported to the hospital, and hospitalized for his injuries.
                                                                      6

     Police secured the Burr Street house and, after obtaining a

search warrant, discovered a pair of black gloves and a black

firearm -- later identified as a Ruger pistol -- stuffed

"between the cushion and the armrest" of a reclining chair in

the living room.     The Ruger had "no rounds in the weapon or in

the magazine."4    Behind the recliner, police found "an item of

black clothing on the floor" that matched the description of the

black hoodie worn by the barbershop shooter.     Investigators also

collected evidence from the driveway, including a pair of black

jeans, a second pair of jeans, and Nike sneakers.

     A few hours after the shooting, police interviewed King in

the hospital, took a statement from him, and showed him an array

of eight frontal view photographs, from which he selected the

defendant's photograph as the barbershop shooter.     This array

was also shown to Ball, who selected two photographs, including

one of the defendant, as "possibly" being the person he saw

leaving the barbershop after he heard shots fired, but he was

not entirely sure.

     Police also took a statement from, and conducted an array

with, Wright that afternoon.    Wright was only "[fifty] percent"

sure that she recognized, from the frontal view array, the

     4 Investigators also recovered two other firearms from the
residence. Neither of these weapons matched the ballistics
evidence from the barbershop or the driveway.
                                                                   7

defendant as the man with the gun inside the Burr Street house

but identified him based on his eyes and confirmed the

identification from a profile view array, this time also

recognizing his "cornrow" hairstyle.   Carter also gave a

statement to police that day, describing the man at the house as

having dark skin and wide eyes.   At trial, she further recalled

the defendant, the man she saw at the house, being average

height and slim but with a bit of muscle.

     A State police ballistics expert conducted test firings

with the Taurus pistol confiscated from the defendant and the

Ruger pistol recovered from the reclining chair.   He then

compared these firings with shell casings recovered from the

barbershop and the driveway.   Certain shell casings from the

barbershop matched the Ruger pistol, while others matched the

Taurus pistol.5   Shell casings recovered from the driveway also

matched the test firings from the Taurus pistol fired by the

defendant while he was in the trunk of the car.

     5 The ballistics expert also testified that some bullet
fragments recovered from the barbershop were "similar to the
test firings from the Ruger pistol" but there were "not enough
individual markings left . . . to identify them positively" as
having come from that gun, though the fragments had "identical
land and groove impressions to th[e] test firing from that Ruger
pistol." He reached the same conclusion of similarity for a
different set of fragments vis-à-vis the Taurus pistol. Defense
trial counsel objected twice to the introduction of what they
deemed "inconclusive findings," but the trial judge overruled
both objections.
                                                                     8

     Samples from the Ruger pistol, black sweatshirt, and gloves

recovered from the living room of the Burr Street house were

submitted to the State police crime laboratory (crime lab) for

deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing.     Analysis of the interior

of the gloves revealed a complex mixture of four profiles,

including one major DNA profile that matched the defendant's

profile.6   Analysis of "the interior cuffs and interior tag area

from the sweatshirt" found in the living room also revealed "a

complex mixture" of four profiles, including one major DNA

profile that matched the defendant's.7    "No detectable human DNA

was recovered from" the Ruger pistol.    The crime lab also tested

for gunshot residue on the gloves and the black sweatshirt from

the living room.8   The sweatshirt sleeves and front pocket tested

positive for gunshot residue, as did the gloves.

     6 The DNA analyst testified that the odds of a match such as
the defendant's occurring in a randomly selected unrelated
individual were between one in 916.6 billion and one in 458.5
trillion.

     7 The DNA analyst testified that the odds of a match such as
the defendant's occurring in a randomly selected unrelated
individual were between one in 2.157 quintillion and one in
10.28 sextillion.

     8 The forensic scientist from the crime lab testified that
she did not receive a second sweatshirt, found in the second-
floor bedroom of the Burr Street house, for testing. A sample
from this item was tested as part of postconviction proceedings,
however, revealing a major DNA profile that did not match the
defendant.
                                                                   9

     b.   Procedural history.   A grand jury indicted the

defendant on sixteen separate counts, including murder in the

first degree.9   Prior to trial, the defendant moved to suppress

King's and Ball's identifications, arguing that the police used

an "impermissibly suggestive identification procedure" by using

a photograph of the defendant with a distinctive braided

hairstyle different from the hairstyles of the men in the other

photographs in the array; the witnesses were primed to identify

the defendant as the barbershop shooter because the defendant

had appeared in media reports "in the days leading up to the

shooting" because of his escape from State prison; and the

witnesses "had a limited opportunity to observe the assailant."

After a three-day hearing, the judge, who was also the trial

judge, denied the suppression motion, finding that the

     9 The indictments charged murder in violation of G. L.
c. 265, § 1; home invasion in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 18C;
armed assault with intent to murder in violation of G. L.
c. 265, § 18 (b); assault and battery by means of a dangerous
weapon in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 15A (b); assault and
battery by means of a dangerous weapon resulting in serious
bodily injury in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 15A (c) (i);
unlawful possession of a firearm in violation of G. L. c. 269,
§ 10 (a); unlawful possession of a loaded firearm, sawed off
shotgun, or machine gun in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 10 (n);
unlawful possession of a large capacity weapon in violation of
G. L. c. 269, § 10 (m); and unlawful possession of a large
capacity feeding device in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 10 (m).
The Commonwealth ultimately entered nolle prosequi on the
indictments charging home invasion, unlawful possession of a
large capacity weapon, and unlawful possession of a large
capacity feeding device.
                                                                    10

photograph of the defendant used in the police array was "not so

singularly distinctive" that it was impermissibly suggestive and

that mere exposure to the defendant's image in the media was not

grounds for suppression.

     The defendant was tried before a Superior Court jury in May

and June of 2013.   At trial, the defendant sought to introduce

reasonable doubt by suggesting that he did not have cornrows as

claimed by several eyewitnesses but that a third-party culprit

did fit that description, and so the defendant could not have

been the barbershop shooter.    Following trial, the jury

convicted the defendant on all counts brought to trial,

including murder in the first degree on a theory of deliberate

premeditation.   The trial judge sentenced the defendant to life

in prison without parole on the murder conviction and numerous

concurrent terms on the lesser crimes.

     The defendant timely appealed and was appointed

postconviction counsel.    Following several unsuccessful motions

and changes in postconviction counsel, the defendant filed a

motion for a new trial, which was denied, after an evidentiary

hearing, on September 27, 2021.10   The denial of that motion and

his direct appeal were consolidated into this single appeal.

     10On September 26, 2016, the defendant filed a pro se
motion for a new trial, which he amended on May 22, 2017, and
was granted further leave to supplement on January 19, 2018,
                                                                    11

    2.     Discussion.    "Where, as here, an appeal from the denial

of a defendant's motion for a new trial has been consolidated

with a direct appeal from a conviction of murder in the first

degree, we review both under G. L. c. 278, § 33E."       Commonwealth

v. Moore, 480 Mass. 799, 805 (2018).      The defendant addresses

three primary issues on appeal:       the impossibility of his having

cornrows on the day of the murder, eyewitness misidentification

based on several factors, and the existence of a third-party

culprit.    He argues that trial counsel provided him with

ineffective assistance and the trial and motion judges committed

reversible errors.     We address each issue in turn.

    a.     Cornrows.     Several eyewitnesses who identified the

defendant as the barbershop shooter and the man at the Burr

Street house described him as having braided hair, specifically

cornrows.   The defendant argues that trial counsel provided him

with ineffective assistance by failing to introduce photographs

showing him without cornrows in the weeks leading up to the

barbershop murder and present expert testimony on hair growth.

Having presented this argument in his motion for a new trial, he

after receiving new appointed counsel on August 24, 2017. The
defendant also filed a motion for forensic and scientific
testing analysis on July 6, 2018, which was denied on July 13,
2018. Appointed postconviction counsel was again replaced on
October 12, 2018. The defendant filed additional motions to
pursue lines of investigation throughout 2019 and 2020, as well
as a supplemental motion for a new trial on June 3, 2019.
                                                                    12

also argues that the motion judge erred in denying him a new

trial on these grounds.

    i.     Standard of review.   A.   Ineffective assistance of

counsel.   When evaluating ineffective assistance of counsel

claims in connection with the direct appeal of a conviction of

murder in the first degree, "we review for a substantial

likelihood of a miscarriage of justice by asking whether there

was error and, if so, whether the error was likely to have

influenced the jury's conclusion" (citation omitted).

Commonwealth v. Don, 483 Mass. 697, 704 (2019).     This standard

applies "even if the action by trial counsel does not constitute

conduct 'falling measurably below that . . . of an ordinary

fallible lawyer.'"     Id., quoting Commonwealth v. Gonzalez, 443

Mass. 799, 808-809 (2005).

    "In conducting this review, we 'accord tactical decisions

of trial counsel due deference.'"     Don, 483 Mass. at 704-705,

quoting Commonwealth v. Evans, 439 Mass. 184, 195, cert. denied,

540 U.S. 923 (2003).    "Unless such a decision was manifestly

unreasonable when made, we will not find ineffectiveness."        Don,

supra at 705, quoting Evans, supra at 195-196.     "[O]nly strategy

and tactics which lawyers of ordinary training and skill in the

criminal law would not consider competent" rise to the level of

manifestly unreasonable (quotation and citation omitted).
                                                                     13

Commonwealth v. Kolenovic, 471 Mass. 664, 674 (2015), S.C., 478

Mass. 189 (2017).

    B.    Motion for a new trial.    "'A motion for a new trial is

addressed to the sound discretion of the trial judge,' who may

grant a new trial 'if it appears that justice may not have been

done'" (alteration omitted).    Commonwealth v. Jacobs, 488 Mass.

597, 600 (2021), quoting Kolenovic, 471 Mass. at 672.     "We

review a decision on a motion for a new trial for an abuse of

discretion," ascertaining whether the denial "resulted from 'a

clear error of judgment in weighing the factors relevant to the

decision such that the decision falls outside the range of

reasonable alternatives.'"     Jacobs, supra, quoting L.L. v.

Commonwealth, 470 Mass. 169, 185 n.27 (2014).

    "Where a judge conducts an evidentiary hearing, we 'accept

the judge's findings where they are supported by substantial

evidence in the record'" (alteration omitted).     Jacobs, 488

Mass. at 600, quoting Commonwealth v. Velez, 487 Mass. 533, 540

(2021).   "When, as here, the motion judge did not preside at

trial, we defer to that judge's assessment of the credibility of

witnesses at the hearing on the new trial motion, but we regard

ourselves in as good a position as the motion judge to assess

the trial record."   Jacobs, supra, quoting Commonwealth v.

Perkins, 450 Mass. 834, 845 (2008).
                                                                   14

     We cannot say that trial counsel's decision not to

introduce the photographs through lay testimony was manifestly

unreasonable when it was made, and so the motion judge did not

err in denying the motion for a new trial on this issue.

Furthermore, any error in failing to call expert witnesses on

hair growth did not create a substantial likelihood of a

miscarriage of justice.

     ii.    Lay testimony and photographs.   Two sets of

photographs of the defendant are in question -- with Tiara

Galbreath on April 10, 2011, and with Chelsea Blake on April 22,

2011.     The photographs were taken at the State prison where the

defendant was incarcerated and from which the defendant escaped

on April 24, 2011.    At trial, defense counsel presented a letter

to the judge from the defendant, discussing his disagreement

with the decision not to introduce the Blake photographs11 to

demonstrate that he did not have cornrows at least one week

before the shootings.

     Defense counsel explained that they reached this decision

after "a lot of back and forth" with the Commonwealth and

discussion among themselves and with the defendant.    Were they

     11At the evidentiary hearing on the motion for a new trial,
Galbreath testified that she gave photographs to trial counsel
in May or June of 2011, but trial counsel had no recollection of
receiving photographs from Galbreath. The only photographs the
defense considered introducing at trial, therefore, were those
of the defendant with Blake.
                                                                  15

to introduce a photograph of Blake and the defendant taken at

the prison, the Commonwealth wanted to raise the defendant's

prison escape and opportunity to change his appearance in the

eight days between the photograph and the shootings.   In

response to the parties' positions at sidebar, the trial judge

indicated that she was "not going to permit the photograph to be

introduced absent permitting the Commonwealth to explain the

circumstances under which it was taken and . . . what could have

happened between April 22 and April 30."   Simply put, defense

counsel did not want that information to come in and opted not

to pursue that line of inquiry.12

     12Nevertheless, defense counsel opened the door at trial to
information about the escape by questioning one of the
responding officers about the defendant having a warrant open
for his arrest -- a line of questioning that the trial judge
found not "necessary to ask . . . , in [her] opinion." Defense
counsel also repeatedly referenced the prison escape in their
closing argument. Even if we determined that these head-
scratching decisions rose to the level of error, such error was
not likely to have influenced the jury's decision, especially
considering the eyewitness, ballistics, and DNA evidence
presented that tied the defendant to the barbershop shooting and
the Commonwealth's inability to tie directly the defendant's
prison escape to the theory that King's son had shot the
defendant's mother, precipitating the defendant's escape to seek
revenge.

     Any error made by trial counsel by not pursuing further
lines of inquiry that reinforced the defendant's escape while
potentially sowing some doubt as to what hairstyle he wore --
when such evidence already had been introduced and eyewitness
testimony impeached on cross-examination -- did not, therefore,
result in a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.
                                                                    16

     At the evidentiary hearing on the motion for a new trial,

one of the defendant's trial counsel testified to the many

factors weighed when making this decision, including the

concerns about the Commonwealth's potential treatment of the

Blake photographs.    Trial counsel believed that to call Blake

was to "open up Pandora's box," as they were "concerned that

[she] knew details that could really hurt [the] defense."    They

even alluded to these concerns at sidebar on the last day of

trial.

     Counsel also testified that he and co-counsel "felt pretty

good about the state of the evidence" they presented on the

cornrows matter, which included a video from May 1, 2011 -- the

day after the shootings -- of the defendant in the hospital,

taken by a defense investigator, who also testified that he did

not observe the defendant to have cornrows or braids of any kind

that day, and the defendant's booking photographs, to argue that

the defendant did not and could not have had cornrows on the day

of the shootings.13

     13Trial counsel called the Springfield police officer who
took the defendant's booking photographs on May 6, 2011. This
officer testified that he had no idea what grooming or bathing
the hospital had done for the defendant in the six days that he
had been in the hospital at that point. The pictures that the
officer took, which were admitted as exhibits in evidence, show
the defendant with some facial hair and his hair cut close to
his head.
                                                                    17

    Although the defendant was clearly disappointed in his

counsel's decision not to call Blake to the stand, "[t]he

decision 'whether to call a witness is a strategic'" one,

Jacobs, 488 Mass. at 602, quoting Commonwealth v. Morales, 453

Mass. 40, 45 (2009), especially insofar as evaluating the

witness's credibility and preserving the integrity of the

defense, see Jacobs, supra.     In a sidebar discussion on the

penultimate day of trial, defense counsel noted that, while the

defendant wanted them "to call further witnesses on the issue of

braids," they had discussed the issue and "made the decision, as

experienced trial attorneys, to not present more evidence on

this subject."     The trial judge confirmed that they had

"reviewed all of the pros and cons with respect to calling

additional witnesses and . . . discussed that thoroughly with

[their] client."

    Where, as here, we can ascertain counsel's strategic and

tactical reasons for not calling either Galbreath or Blake to

the stand and introducing in evidence prison photographs of them

with the defendant, we cannot say that trial counsel's decision

was manifestly unreasonable.     See Jacobs, 488 Mass. at 603.   The

motion judge properly denied, therefore, the motion for a new

trial on this issue.

    iii.   Expert testimony.     "The decision to call, or not to

call, an expert witness fits squarely within the realm of
                                                                    18

strategic or tactical decisions," and so "we evaluate whether

the decision was 'manifestly unreasonable' at the time it was

made" (citation omitted).    Commonwealth v. Ayala, 481 Mass. 46,

63 (2018).    At the evidentiary hearing on the motion for a new

trial, the defendant called two expert witnesses:    Joy Talbot, a

barber instructor for the Department of Correction and member of

the State Board of Registration of Cosmetology and Barbering,

and Frederick Smith,14 a previously licensed barber who was

incarcerated with the defendant in State prison and cut his hair

during this period.    Talbot testified that hair grows, at most,

one-half inch per month, and cornrowing hair requires a hair

length of at least one and one-half inches -- meaning hair cut

with the shortest clipper attachment would require at least

three months of growth before it could be cornrowed -- but that

as little as one-half inch of hair is needed to attach cornrow

extensions.    Talbot also testified that, when cornrows are

removed, the hair may retain an indentation from the pattern.

     She examined the photographs of the defendant with

Galbreath on April 10, 2011, and opined that, while "[i]t is

very difficult to tell, because [the defendant's] type of hair

would stretch a little bit," his hair was likely too short to be

     14Because of later references to a potential third-party
culprit, Trevin Smith, by the surname Smith, we refer to
Frederick Smith as "Frederick."
                                                                    19

cornrowed at that time.    As to the Blake photographs from April

22, 2011, she thought the defendant's hair appeared "a little

bit shorter," thus "it might be more difficult" to cornrow, but

it was "hard to tell."    Finally, Talbot examined photographs of

the defendant in his hospital bed on May 6, 2011.    She concluded

that the defendant's hair was too short to cornrow at that

point, yet she could not determine whether he recently had

removed cornrows.   Furthermore, it was "hard to say" whether the

defendant's hair could have had extensions, that it was "a

little short, but not totally impossible," though removing

extensions would "probably" result in patches of hair.

    Frederick testified that he cut the defendant's hair with

the shortest clipper attachment, one-sixteenth of an inch,

approximately every two weeks for "a few months" while they were

incarcerated together, beginning sometime in 2010 or 2011.     From

his perspective, the hair length needed to be "[a]t least three

to four inches" to cornrow and that would have taken the

defendant "[a]t least six months" to grow out, but Frederick

also conceded that he did not know how to cornrow hair and could

not recall when he last gave the defendant a haircut.

    The defendant argues that, had the jury heard Talbot and

Frederick's testimony, they would have discredited King's

identification of the defendant as the barbershop shooter, along

with testimony from Wright, Gregorczyk, and Springfield police
                                                                   20

Officer Patricia Capoza that the defendant had cornrows when

they saw him at the Burr Street house.   The testimony of these

expert witnesses is not the "smoking clippers" that appellate

counsel makes it out to be, however; as the motion judge noted,

neither Talbot nor Frederick was able to say definitively how

long the defendant's hair was and, thus, whether he could have

had cornrows on the day of the barbershop shooting.

     Furthermore, although trial counsel conceded that he and

co-counsel did not investigate expert testimony "on whether the

hair shown . . . was susceptible to braiding or cornrowing" and

that such testimony "couldn't have hurt," the defense also

presented video and photographic evidence from their

investigator to counterbalance the Commonwealth's eyewitness

testimony that the defendant had braids and was the barbershop

shooter -- images that the Commonwealth conceded in their

closing portrayed his hair as "extremely tight to his head," so

tight "that you can see the outline of where the hair goes."

     At trial, defense counsel challenged the identification of

the defendant as the barbershop shooter and as the intruder at

the Burr Street house by cross-examining King, Wright,

Gregorczyk, and Capoza about seeing a man with cornrows.15   For

     15Defense counsel pointed out that King saw the defendant
for only "a fraction of a second" prior to the shooting, at
which point he tried to take cover, and Gregorczyk also only saw
                                                                   21

example, defense counsel pointed out that, given that King was a

barber, the shooter's hairstyle would have stood out to him.

But many eyewitnesses provided details about the person they saw

beyond his hairstyle -- details that ultimately corroborated

their identification of the defendant as the shooter at the

barbershop and as the individual who stashed a gun at the Burr

Street house.   King recalled staring into the "red" eyes of the

barbershop shooter -- a detail corroborated by Gonzalez, who

stared into the defendant's "bloodshot" and "wide open" eyes

while he was in the trunk of the Impala in the driveway.   Carter

also testified that, inside the Burr Street house, she saw

"[h]is whole face, mainly his eyes," which were "very big and

bloodshot red,"16 and that she recognized the defendant from the

the defendant for mere seconds in the trunk before he was shot.
With regards to Wright, defense counsel attacked her
credibility, drawing attention to conflicting statements in her
police statement the day of the incident, her statement to the
defense investigator one year later, and her statement to
prosecutors two years after the incident. As to Capoza, defense
counsel pointed out that she was relying on her memory of events
from two years prior, having been recently contacted by the
Commonwealth to testify, and without the benefit of refreshing
her recollection from her contemporaneous police report, which
could not be located.

     16Carter provided murky testimony as to the defendant's
bloodshot eyes. On cross-examination, defense counsel
established that Carter did not include that detail in her April
2011 statement to police, leading her to answer "no" to
counsel's question, "So that wasn't true, was it?"
                                                                   22

neighborhood, while Wright similarly recalled the defendant's

"big and scary" eyes.

    Given the lack of conclusive testimony on the defendant's

hairstyle offered by Talbot and Frederick at the evidentiary

hearing on the motion for a new trial, the extent to which

defense counsel challenged the evidence presented on the

defendant's hairstyle at trial, and the extensive evidence

connecting the defendant to the barbershop shooting, including

the damning ballistics and DNA evidence, discussed infra, we

"conclude that the proffered testimony would have been unlikely

to have changed the jury's conclusion."   Don, 483 Mass. at 707.

Talbot was unable to determine definitively that the defendant's

hair was too short to cornrow or attach cornrow extensions, and

Frederick neither knew how to cornrow nor could testify as to

when he last cut the defendant's hair to establish its length on

the day of the shootings.   Failing to call such experts,

therefore, did not amount to "a substantial likelihood of a

miscarriage of justice."    See id. at 704.

    b.   Eyewitness identification.    The defendant next argues

that trial counsel ineffectively assisted him by failing to

present expert testimony on the unreliability of eyewitness

identification in support of his motion to suppress King's

identification of the defendant as the barbershop shooter, as

evidence at trial, and in support of his proposed jury
                                                                   23

instruction on the fallibility of eyewitness identification.

The defendant claims that, had such testimony been presented in

support of the motion to suppress, the evidence of King's

identification of the defendant as the barbershop shooter would

have been excluded from trial.17   In the alternative, the

defendant argues that, even if the trial judge would still have

denied the motion to suppress and admitted King's

identification, an eyewitness identification expert's testimony

would have impeached the reliability of King's identification

before the jury.

     Specifically, the defendant argues that expert testimony

would have called into the question the accuracy of King's

identification based on (i) "impermissibly suggestive

identification procedure[s]" used by the police when presenting

King with a photographic array and (ii) various environmental

conditions under which King saw the barbershop shooter that can

lead to mistaken identification.   Having raised these arguments

in his motion for a new trial and presented such testimony at an

evidentiary hearing,18 the defendant further argues that the

motion judge erred in denying a new trial on these grounds.

     17The motion to suppress also addressed Ball's
identification, but that is not at issue on appeal.

     18The defendant called Dr. Deah Quinlivan, a tenured
associate professor of psychology at Florida Southern College,
                                                                    24

    We review the defendant's ineffective assistance of counsel

claims "for a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of

justice."    Don, 483 Mass. at 704.   We also "review a decision on

a motion for a new trial for an abuse of discretion" and "defer

to that judge's assessment of the credibility of witnesses at

the hearing on the new trial motion" (citation omitted).

Jacobs, 488 Mass. at 600.    Because the motion judge was not the

trial judge, however, "we regard ourselves in as good a position

as the motion judge to assess the trial record" (citation

omitted).    Id.

    i.   Photographic array procedures.     Prior to trial, the

defendant sought to suppress King's identification of him as the

barbershop shooter, arguing that the array procedure was unduly

suggestive because only the photograph of the defendant in the

array featured a man with braided hair -- a photograph that had

been circulated by the media to publicize the defendant's recent

escape from prison.    At the motion for a new trial stage, the

defendant also submitted that the police presented the

photographs to the defendant in an impermissibly suggestive way

by not adhering to the recommended double-blind, sequential

procedure.

with eighteen years of experience researching eyewitness
identification.
                                                                    25

     A.   Distinctiveness.   In support of the motion to suppress

and at trial, the defense called the Springfield police

detective who developed the frontal view array.    The detective

testified on standard photographic array procedures and the

process that he used.    From the detective's perspective, the

frontal view photograph of the defendant depicted him with

"[s]hort black hair that's close to his head," and so he

compiled seven other frontal view photographs that had the same

hairstyle and "[v]ery similar forehead[s]," from a computer-

generated selection based on the defendant's age, race,

ethnicity, skin color, height, and weight.19   The detective also

noted that King would have signed a protocol form that contained

a warning that some features shown in a photograph, such as

hairstyle, may change.

     King testified, at both the motion to suppress hearing and

at trial20 that, while he thought the shooter was wearing braids,

he also saw the shooter's entire face, including his red eyes,

and that he recognized him immediately as the defendant -- a

young man he had seen on the news recently and who had grown up

     19The detective did not, however, construct the profile
view array that shows the defendant with a cornrow-like
hairstyle and was unaware of the corresponding profile view
photograph of the defendant and the hairstyle it would depict.

     20The defense called King at the motion to suppress
hearing, but he was the Commonwealth's witness at trial.
                                                                  26

in the neighborhood.    The trial judge, denying the motion to

suppress after an evidentiary hearing, determined that King made

the identification "as a result of [his] proximity to the

defendant on April 30 at the barbershop"; having seen the

defendant's "facial features and braided hair," King

"immediately recognized him as a person from the neighborhood

who was a friend of his son's and also as the man who recently

escaped from prison."

    On this point, that the photograph of the defendant in the

array was unduly suggestive because he is the only person with

braided hair, the proffered expert testimony would not have

affected the trial judge's denial of the motion to suppress.

The expert merely posited that King, as a Black barber, may have

noticed the cornrows in the photograph better than, for example,

a white police officer less familiar with hairstyles, especially

culturally Black hairstyles.   Having reviewed the frontal view

photographic array shown to King, we agree with the trial judge

that the array is hardly suggestive; the defendant's "hair style

is not distinctively different from the others," as the featured

braids are barely, if at all, distinguishable from a short,

close-to-the-scalp style.   See Commonwealth v. Montez, 450 Mass.

736, 756 (2008).

    We conclude that, even with such expert testimony, there

was no likelihood that the trial judge would have suppressed
                                                                  27

King's testimony, given King's emphasis on distinguishing

physical traits of the shooter -- including his eyes, as well as

his hair -- and King's prior familiarity with the defendant.

See Commonwealth v. Thornley, 406 Mass. 96, 100 (1989) ("A

witness's unequivocable testimony that he was not relying on a

distinctive feature will considerably neutralize any

suggestiveness in the photographic array").   Because the

proffered expert testimony would not have changed the outcome of

the motion to suppress King's identification, the evidence of

King's identification of the defendant in the array as the

barbershop shooter would still have gone to the jury.

    Furthermore, we cannot say that the failure of the

defendant's trial counsel to call an expert witness to testify

at trial as to the potential suggestiveness of the defendant's

hairstyle in the photographic array was likely to have

influenced the jury's conclusion, see Don, 483 Mass. at 704,

given King's identification of the defendant based on his facial

features and familiarity from the neighborhood, as well as the

physical evidence against the defendant, including the DNA on

the gloves and sweatshirt and the gun recovered from the

defendant in the trunk of the car that matched the ballistics

evidence collected from the barbershop.   Any error, therefore,

did not create a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of

justice.   Id.
                                                                  28

     B.   Presentation.   Defense counsel also elicited testimony,

at both the motion to suppress hearing and at trial, from two of

the State police troopers present for King's array-based

identification to describe how the photographs were shown to

King and how he made his selections.    The photographs were shown

to King "one by one," during which he put four to the side.

Then, he picked out two from the four, and finally, he selected

the defendant's photograph as the person who shot him in the

barbershop.21   While some of the troopers present knew the

defendant, the troopers testified at the motion to suppress

hearing and at trial that the trooper providing King with the

photographs "had no knowledge of anybody in the photo arrays."

     This court has emphasized that "the absence of [a double-

blind] procedure" and "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."

Commonwealth v. Silva-Santiago, 453 Mass. 782, 797, 798-799

(2009).   In this case, while police did not conduct a strictly

double-blind, sequential array, they did take precautions to

     21At the motion to suppress hearing, one trooper testified
that King said that the defendant's picture "mainly looked like
the guy" who shot him and, "That's the kid -- that's the boy who
shot me." At trial, the other trooper corroborated this,
testifying that King's comment that the defendant's photograph
"mainly" looked like the barbershop shooter and that King also
said, "Yeah, that's definitely the boy who shot me."
                                                                    29

promote accuracy, on which they testified at the motion to

suppress hearing.   On this point, therefore, additional expert

testimony would not have changed the outcome of the motion to

suppress, and King's identification would have still gone to the

jury.

     Furthermore, we cannot say that failure to call an expert

witness to testify at trial as to the potential suggestiveness

of the array's presentation to King was likely to have

influenced the jury's conclusion.   See Don, 483 Mass. at 704.

The array was not unduly suggestive, and there was more than

ample evidence identifying the defendant as the barbershop

shooter; thus, there was no substantial likelihood of a

miscarriage of justice.   See id.

     ii.   Environmental conditions.   The defendant argues that,

had trial counsel presented expert testimony on the

environmental conditions (also referred to as estimator

variables) that increase the likelihood of a mistaken

identification, then King's identification of the defendant as

the barbershop shooter would have been suppressed or, in the

alternative, the testimony would have affected the jury's

evaluation of King's identification at trial.   We are not

persuaded.

     At the evidentiary hearing on the motion to suppress, the

defendant's trial counsel challenged the accuracy of King's
                                                                   30

identification based on these conditions -- his short exposure

time to the shooter under extremely stressful conditions; the

likelihood of his fixating on the weapons, as opposed to the

face of the person holding them; and the risk of unconscious

transference due to his familiarity with the defendant from the

community and media reports of the defendant's recent escape

from prison.   In his motion to suppress, the defendant argued

that King "had a limited opportunity to observe the" barbershop

shooter, given how quickly events unfolded and the shooter's

face being at least partially obscured by the hoodie.     At the

suppression hearing, defense counsel further elicited from King

that he saw the defendant's face for just "[a] fraction of a

second" prior to him pulling a gun on King.   Expert testimony on

these factors would not have changed the outcome of the motion

to suppress, as it did not bear on the admissibility of King's

identification.

    At trial, defense counsel further attacked King's

identification of the defendant as the shooter, both on cross-

examination and in closing argument.   They emphasized how King's

recollection of the shooter's features was based on viewing his

face, partially obscured by the hoodie over his head, again for

a "fraction of a second," not to mention the lack of description

of any physical features in King's statement to police.    Defense

counsel also impeached King's credibility by pointing to various
                                                                  31

pieces of testimony, such as what King said to the shooter,

recognizing him from the community, and various clothing items

worn by the shooter, that did not appear in his contemporaneous

statement to police, as well as his contradictory testimony

before the grand jury that the shooter was not wearing a black

T-shirt in addition to the black hoodie.

    As to the expert testimony's potential effects at trial,

the motion judge correctly noted that the testimony had the

potential to be a double-edged sword for the defense,

potentially helping the defendant's case on the one hand but

hurting it on the other.   The various effects on the accuracy of

identification due to stress, time, familiarity with the

defendant, and the display of weapons would apply differently to

different witnesses -- several of whom identified the defendant

after observing him under different conditions with different

levels of prior familiarity, or absence thereof.

    Most importantly, there was incredibly damning physical

evidence unrelated to this expert's testimony, including

ballistics evidence that connected the barbershop shooting to

the firearm found in the possession of the defendant, the

defendant's DNA found inside gloves that matched the description

of the shooter's gloves, DNA found inside a sweatshirt that

matched the shooter's sweatshirt, and the gunshot residue on the
                                                                   32

gloves and the black sweatshirt.   In sum, overwhelming evidence

identified the defendant as the barbershop shooter.

     Finally, at the time of trial, expert evidence on

eyewitness identification was still being developed and was not

commonly introduced at trial; defense counsel did not have the

benefit of our opinion in Commonwealth v. Gomes, 470 Mass. 352,

367, 376 (2015) (Gomes I), which recognized evolving research on

eyewitness testimony and incorporated it into our jurisprudence,

albeit prospectively.   See Commonwealth v. Gomes, 478 Mass.

1025, 1025-1026 (2018)(Gomes II).22   We, therefore, discern no

error by trial counsel in failing to include the expert evidence

proposed at the motion for a new trial.   We also emphasize that

even if such evidence had been available and had been introduced

at the time of trial, it was not likely "to have influenced the

jury's conclusion," particularly given the ballistics and DNA

evidence.

     c.   Third-party culprit evidence.   The defendant argues

that the trial judge improperly excluded proffered evidence that

a third-party culprit -- another man from the neighborhood,

     22We also agree with the motion judge that Gomes II
precludes a finding of ineffectiveness for failing to present
expert evidence necessary to support the New Jersey eyewitness
identification instruction. As we explained in Gomes II, 478
Mass. at 1026, "[a]n attorney who would make such an effort is
worthy of commendation by the defense bar, but the attorney who
does not can hardly be deemed incompetent."
                                                                 33

Trevin Smith -- was the barbershop shooter.   He also argues that

the motion judge, when presented with additional third-party

culprit evidence, failed to properly consider it and erroneously

denied the motion for a new trial on that ground.    We review

each argument in turn.

    As this court has explained, "[a] defendant may introduce

evidence that tends to show that another person committed the

crime or had the motive, intent, and opportunity to commit it"

(citation omitted).   Silva-Santiago, 453 Mass. at 800.    Indeed,

"[w]e have given wide latitude to the admission of relevant

evidence that a person other than the defendant may have

committed the crime charged."   Id. at 800-801.   "If the evidence

is 'of substantial probative value, and will not tend to

prejudice or confuse, all doubt should be resolved in favor of

admissibility.'"   Id. at 801, quoting Commonwealth v. Conkey,

443 Mass. 60, 66 (2004), S.C., 452 Mass. 1022 (2008).

Nonetheless,

    "this latitude is not unbounded. The limitations are
    twofold. First, because the evidence is offered for the
    truth of the matter asserted -- that a third 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"
    (quotations and citation omitted).

Silva-Santiago, supra.   "Second, the evidence, even if it is not

hearsay, 'must have a rational tendency to prove the issue the
                                                                  34

defense raises, and the evidence cannot be too remote or

speculative.'"   Id., quoting Commonwealth v. Rosa, 422 Mass. 18,

22 (1996).   Because "the exclusion of third-party culprit

evidence is of a constitutional dimension," we examine it

independently.   Id. at 804 n.26.   If the evidence was improperly

excluded, then we determine "whether the error was harmless

beyond a reasonable doubt."   Conkey, supra at 70.

     At trial, the defendant first sought to introduce testimony

from Smith's long-time girlfriend, Karen Fuller,23 in support of

a third-party culprit defense that Smith was the barbershop

shooter.   After a voir dire of Fuller, the trial judge found

that Fuller's testimony on what Smith was wearing (a black

hooded sweatshirt), his hairstyle (braids), and seeing him in a

car in the neighborhood on the same day as the barbershop

shooting was "not enough of a substantial connecting link . . .

to permit the introduction of third-party culprit evidence."

The judge permitted Fuller to testify, however, as to "what she

     23The defendant also initially intended to introduce
testimony from two other witnesses, but one invoked her right
against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment to the
United States Constitution and did not testify, and trial
counsel opted not to call the other witness, a minor, and
instead presented a stipulation.
                                                                   35

did" on the day of the shootings "but not what . . . Smith said

to her over the telephone."24

     The defendant asserts that the trial judge erred in her

ruling.   Indeed, when denying the introduction of third-party

culprit evidence, the trial judge conflated the "substantial

connecting link" limitation required to admit a certain type of

evidence -- otherwise inadmissible hearsay, see Silva-Santiago,

453 Mass. at 801   -- with the general limitation on all

proffered third-party culprit evidence -- that it "must have a

rational tendency to prove the issue the defense raises, and the

evidence cannot be too remote or speculative," id., quoting

Rosa, 422 Mass. at 22.   Quoting Rosa, however, the trial judge

went on to say that the evidence was too speculative to prove

that Smith was the barbershop shooter.   For example, she noted:

"a black hoodie and jeans . . . is such a common urban outfit,

especially on a Saturday.   That, you know, I could -- that's

something I may wear on a Saturday."

     Although the trial judge erred in part of her reasoning,

the defendant still presented, through Fuller's testimony, the

evidence he sought to admit -- Smith's hairstyle (including a

     24Fuller testified that, at around noon on the day of the
shootings, Smith told her to drive her car, a gray Chevrolet
Impala, to the Burr Street house, back into the driveway, open
her trunk, and then wait for his cell phone call with further
instructions. She complied. It is from this car's trunk that
the defendant was apprehended.
                                                                   36

photograph of Smith with braids, as he appeared on the day of

the barbershop shooting); attire (black hooded sweatshirt); and

whereabouts on the day of the shootings.   As to Smith's alleged

"flight from the scene," the defense called the trooper who took

Fuller's statements.   The trooper testified that Fuller

described Smith as being "hot and sweaty" when she saw him on

the day of the shootings.   The defense also argued their third-

party culprit theory at closing.   For these reasons, any error

by the trial judge was "harmless beyond a reasonable doubt."

See Conkey, 443 Mass. at 70.

     The defendant also appeals from the denial of his motion

for a new trial on these grounds, arguing that the motion judge

misunderstood the significance of additional third-party culprit

evidence presented for the first time at the postconviction

stage:25

     "(i) Smith's statement to police containing details of
     Smith's flight to New York after the shootings; (ii)
     evidence of a shooting that occurred four days earlier in a
     location close to the barbershop; and (iii) evidence that
     witnesses at [the Burr Street house] lied about Smith's
     presence at the house close in time to the barbershop
     shooting."26

     25On his motion for a new trial, the defendant argued that
his trial counsel were ineffective for not presenting at trial
certain additional evidence, discussed infra. At this stage,
however, he argues solely that the motion judge erred in
evaluating that evidence as presented.

     26The defendant also argues that the motion judge erred by
considering the proffered third-party culprit evidence
                                                                 37

    For the reasons stated by the motion judge, we discern no

error.   As the motion judge explained, Smith's statement to

police "would have been more harmful than helpful to the

defendant."   He directly implicated the defendant in the

shootings, including providing support for a damaging theory

that the defendant committed the barbershop shooting in

retaliation for his mother having been shot a week prior.

Furthermore, Smith's flight to Brooklyn and destruction of the

cell phone he used to communicate with the defendant supported

the Commonwealth's theory that he was implicated in directing

Fuller to the Burr Street house to help the defendant flee --

just as much as, if not more than, it supported the defense's

theory that he committed the barbershop shooting.

    The defendant also suggested in his motion for a new trial

that evidence of a shooting that happened four days prior to the

barbershop shooting and took place "approximately two blocks"

away supported the defense that Smith was the third-party

singularly and ignored its cumulative effect with expert
testimony presented on the cornrows and eyewitness
identification issues. This argument has no merit, however, as
the motion judge explicitly considered the cumulative effect of
all asserted errors and the evidence presented at the
evidentiary hearing on the motion, including the excluded third-
party culprit evidence, and determined that there was no
substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice in this case
given the weight of the evidence against the defendant. Having
discussed, supra, the overwhelming implications of the
ballistics and DNA evidence against the defendant, we agree.
                                                                   38

culprit.   Witnesses, including King, saw "a [B]lack male,

wearing a black hooded sweatshirt . . . and jean[s]" firing at a

vehicle and that he fled in "a silver car with Tennessee plates"

that was later found parked next to the Burr Street house.      The

police also recovered a pair of gloves similar to those found at

the Burr Street house.   As the motion judge explained, however,

none of this evidence implicated Smith in the barbershop

shooting any more than it exonerated the defendant, whose DNA

was found on the black gloves and a black hoodie recovered from

the Burr Street house, where witnesses saw him after the

barbershop shooting and police apprehended him.

    Finally, the defendant proffered statements made by Carter

and Baulkman to demonstrate that they "lied about Smith's

presence" at the Burr Street house.   The motion judge noted,

however, that defense counsel successfully impeached Carter's

testimony at trial, establishing that she "initially told police

that Smith was not at" the Burr Street house but then testified

on cross-examination that she saw him leave when she arrived

that morning.   As to Baulkman, the motion judge found that the

statement, from a person who did not testify at trial, also did

not support the defendant's proffered third-party culprit

defense that Smith committed the barbershop shooting.   We agree;

in fact, at trial, the defendant established through Fuller's
                                                                   39

testimony that Smith was in a car in Fuller's driveway at the

time.

     Having reviewed the evidence presented on the motion for a

new trial, we discern no error by the motion judge when he

denied the motion after considering the proffered additional

third-party culprit evidence at the postconviction stage.

     d.   Review under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.   We have reviewed the

record in accordance with G. L. c. 278, § 33E, and discern no

basis to set aside or reduce the verdict of murder in the first

degree or to order a new trial.

     3.   Conclusion.   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the

defendant's convictions and the denial of the defendant's

postconviction motion for a new trial.

                                     So ordered.