Commonwealth v. Colon ( 2019 )


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    SJC-11610
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   DENNIS COLON.
    Essex.       February 8, 2019. - October 22, 2019.
    Present:   Gants, C.J., Lenk, Gaziano, Lowy, & Kafker, JJ.
    Homicide. Constitutional Law, Admissions and confessions,
    Voluntariness of statement, Assistance of counsel.
    Evidence, Admissions and confessions, Voluntariness of
    statement. Practice, Criminal, Assistance of counsel,
    Admissions and confessions, Voluntariness of statement,
    Instructions to jury, Capital case.
    Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on May 27, 2010.
    The cases were tried before Richard E. Welch, III, J., and
    a motion for a new trial, filed on October 24, 2014, was heard
    by him.
    James W. Rosseel for the defendant.
    Catherine Langevin Semel, Assistant District Attorney, for
    the Commonwealth.
    GAZIANO, J.    In June 2012, a Superior Court jury convicted
    the defendant of murder in the first degree on a theory of
    felony-murder in connection with the May 2009 shooting death of
    2
    Juan Caba (victim).1   The defendant's motion for a new trial was
    denied after an evidentiary hearing.   The matter is before this
    court on the defendant's direct appeal, consolidated with his
    appeal from the denial of his motion for a new trial.
    The defendant argues that a new trial is necessary because
    of the ineffective assistance of his trial counsel.     He contends
    that counsel failed to make use of evidence that the defendant
    had engaged in a telephone conversation with his girlfriend,
    while in police custody and using a police officer's cellular
    telephone, to argue that the defendant's statements to police
    the following morning were not voluntarily made.   Relatedly, the
    defendant also contends that counsel erred in not using
    recordings of the defendant's custodial interviews on the
    evening of his arrest in challenging the voluntariness of the
    inculpatory statements he made the following morning.     In
    addition, the defendant argues that trial counsel provided
    ineffective assistance because he did not properly request a
    DiGiambattista instruction.   See Commonwealth v. DiGiambattista,
    
    442 Mass. 423
    , 447-448 (2004).   The defendant argues that the
    combination of errors likely influenced the jury's decision, and
    1 The defendant also was convicted of armed burglary, which
    was placed on file at sentencing, and assault and battery by
    means of a dangerous weapon on the victim's girlfriend, who was
    shot and injured during the same attack.
    3
    that, accordingly, a new trial is required.       He also seeks
    relief under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm the defendant's
    convictions and the denial of his motion for a new trial, and we
    decline to grant relief under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.
    1.    Background.2   a.   The shooting.   At approximately
    4:30 A.M. on May 22, 2009, intruders broke into the victim's
    house while the victim and his girlfriend, Tori,3 were asleep.
    Tori awoke to find the victim sitting up in bed and two men
    standing at the edge of the bed, pointing guns at her and the
    victim.    The men wore sunglasses and hats that obscured their
    faces.    Although Tori did not recognize either man, she thought
    that one of them might have been a man she knew as "PS," to whom
    the victim twice had sold marijuana.      Tori believed the other
    man was approximately five feet, six inches tall, roughly the
    same height as the defendant.
    Tori screamed, "Please, don't shoot, don't shoot."       The
    victim could not see what was happening, as he was blind, and
    2 The facts in this and the following sections are derived
    from a combination of (1) trial testimony; (2) the trial judge's
    voir dire of the defendant's girlfriend, before the jury were
    sworn, in relation to motions to exclude her testimony; (3) an
    evidentiary hearing held in conjunction with the defendant's
    motion for a new trial; and (4) undisputed documents in the
    record.
    3   A pseudonym.
    4
    began waving his hands.      A gun went off, and the victim fell on
    top of Tori.    The men left.    Tori testified that she saw the two
    men for a total of approximately five minutes.
    A projectile from a .380 semiautomatic weapon had entered
    the victim's head on the left side and fragmented in at least
    two different directions.       The victim was transported to a
    hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 11:25 P.M.       The cause
    of death was a single gunshot wound to the head.       A portion of
    the bullet passed through the victim's head and into Tori's
    chin, breaking her jaw.      Two permanent metal plates had to be
    installed in Tori's jaw to hold the jaw together.
    b.    Interrogations.    On June 22, 2009, while Lawrence
    police were investigating a separate incident involving a
    burglary, they encountered the defendant and found a Beretta
    firearm on his person.4      The defendant was arrested for
    possession of a firearm without a license, and was transported
    to the Lawrence police station.
    That evening, the defendant was interrogated at the
    Lawrence police station in two separate interviews that took
    place approximately one hour apart.       He said nothing inculpatory
    related to this offense during these two interviews, and no
    4   The caliber of the Beretta is not clear from the record.
    5
    testimony was introduced at trial concerning the defendant's
    statements on the evening of his arrest.
    During the first interview, the defendant asked detectives
    if he "could see" his girlfriend, Giana.5      At that point, Giana
    was at the police station in a different room.        Giana, who was
    four months pregnant with twins, had come to the police station
    voluntarily to provide police information that she thought would
    help the defendant, concerning the gun that police had found on
    his person.    In response to the defendant's request, one
    detective said, "[A]ctually she's not going to be able to come
    down.    All right?     But I'll let you call her.   All right?"
    According to a police report, while the defendant was in
    the booking room after his first interview, a detective asked a
    fellow officer to tell Giana, who was upstairs, to call the
    officer's cellular telephone.       When Giana called, the officer
    handed the telephone to the defendant, who spoke with Giana.
    Subsequently, the defendant spoke with police for ten minutes,
    and the interview then concluded at 5:41 P.M.
    The following day, on June 23, 2009, while the defendant
    was being held in a cell at the Lawrence Division of the
    District Court Department, he requested to speak with a police
    officer whom he recognized.       At approximately 9:30 A.M., the
    5   A pseudonym.
    6
    defendant was interviewed by two officers.   According to police
    testimony, the defendant waived his Miranda rights, consented to
    the interview being recorded, and waived his right to prompt
    arraignment.   The defendant signed forms associated with each of
    these waivers, as well as his consent to the recording.     The
    period during the issuance of the Miranda warnings and the
    receipt of the defendant's waivers, however, was not recorded.
    In this interview, the defendant told police that he had
    participated in the break-in that led to the victim's death.
    The defendant admitted to having broken into the victim's
    apartment, along with individuals he identified as "Limbe,"
    "Smokey," "PS," and "Dezi," with the intent to steal money and
    marijuana.   The defendant said that he saw a dog in the
    apartment;6 as he was afraid of dogs, he stayed in the hallway to
    serve as the lookout.   He concluded by saying that someone other
    than he had fired a shot inside the apartment from a .380
    weapon.
    6 The victim and his girlfriend owned a dog, which was in
    the bedroom at the time of the incident.
    7
    In January 2011, the defendant's first attorney7 moved to
    suppress the defendant's inculpatory statement to police.8       The
    motion was denied after an evidentiary hearing.    In his written
    findings of fact and rulings of law, the motion judge determined
    that the defendant had been questioned by police at the Lawrence
    police headquarters on June 22, 2009, shortly after his arrest,
    for approximately thirty to forty-five minutes.     The judge found
    that, the following day, the defendant initiated contact with
    police, while being held in the cell block area of the District
    Court in Lawrence.    An officer read the defendant Miranda
    warnings before turning on a tape recorder.    The defendant was
    "eager" to speak with police.    The officer described him as
    "clear-headed, and not under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or
    mental illness."     The judge determined that the emotion the
    defendant displayed was "appropriate to the situation," and
    7 Prior to trial, the defendant's first counsel was replaced
    by a second counsel, who represented the defendant throughout
    the trial.
    8 The motion to suppress asserted, among other grounds, that
    the defendant did not knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily
    waive his right to remain silent or to have an attorney present
    during questioning on June 23, 2009; the defendant did not make
    any statement voluntarily; and any consent was not voluntarily
    obtained. The motion did not explicitly reference the
    defendant's concern for his girlfriend.
    8
    concluded that the defendant's "statements were voluntary and
    preceded by adequate Miranda warnings."9
    The defendant's trial counsel filed a motion for
    reconsideration, which was denied.    After trial began about one
    week later, counsel moved in limine to exclude the defendant's
    statement of June 23, 2009.    The trial judge deferred to the
    motion judge's ruling and denied the motion.
    c.   Trial.   Before the jury were sworn, trial counsel moved
    to exclude testimony by the defendant's girlfriend, Giana, with
    respect to statements she made at the Lawrence police station on
    June 22, 2009.     The Commonwealth had intended to call Giana as a
    corroborating witness, and possibly as a witness to show intent
    for the underlying felony.     Defense counsel explained that Giana
    sought to claim a privilege under the Fifth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution, because information that she gave
    police that inculpated the defendant purportedly was false.
    Counsel also moved to exclude Giana's statements on the ground
    of asserted police coercion.
    The judge conducted a voir dire of Giana.    Giana said that,
    while she was being questioned, a police officer threatened her
    9 The judge observed, "The failure to record the beginning
    of questioning is an issue for the trial judge, and does not
    provoke any concerns by this court about the voluntariness of
    the statements or the adequacy of the Miranda warnings, given
    [the defendant's] obvious desire to speak to police as shown by
    the audio recording."
    9
    by telling her that if she did not inculpate the defendant, she
    would go to prison and give birth there, and that she would
    never see her twins again.    Giana's son, who had come to the
    police station separately, was brought into a room where he met
    briefly with his mother, who was crying.
    The judge determined that "the police may have played upon
    [Giana's] emotions -- to a certain extent -- but I do not find
    that all of [Giana's] testimony is credible."    The judge
    explained that Giana had provided a "demonstratively false"
    statement that she had been given Miranda warnings only as she
    was walking out the door.    The judge also noted that the police
    report describing Giana's interview "doesn't even go into a fair
    amount of what she claims was asked her at the police station."
    The judge denied the motion to exclude Giana's statements.       He
    observed that, "plainly, the defense is entitled to bring these
    matters up to the jury," and left "it to the Commonwealth as to
    whether they want to open up this can of worms before the
    jury."10   Neither the Commonwealth nor the defense ultimately
    10Overall, the judge did "not find that the Lawrence
    [p]olice had been sufficiently shown to have so invaded
    [Giana's] personal security or in a way that would likely
    produce false testimony." The judge's findings on this point,
    however, are not entirely clear. The previous day, the judge
    had ruled that if Giana testified at trial that she had relayed
    false statements to the police, she would have no need to invoke
    the Fifth Amendment because "her testimony . . . would indicate
    that she did not willfully provide the false information, if
    10
    called Giana to testify at trial.   As a result, any information
    inculpatory to the defendant that Giana might have provided to
    police was not presented to the jury.
    The defendant's statements from the morning of June 23,
    2009, were the heart of the Commonwealth's case.   In addition,
    the Commonwealth presented testimony of an inmate, Alvin Rivera,
    who testified against the defendant pursuant to a cooperation
    agreement.   Rivera's testimony suggested that the defendant
    actually shot the victim, rather than serving as lookout.
    Rivera testified that, while detained at the Middleton
    house of correction in the summer of 2009, the defendant told
    him that the defendant and others, known as "Smokey," "Limbe,"
    and "PS," went to the victim's house on the night of the
    shooting in search of marijuana and money.   Rivera testified
    that Smokey handed the defendant a .380 weapon and PS a Beretta.
    According to Rivera, the defendant told him that Smokey stood in
    the hallway as lookout while the defendant and PS went into the
    apartment and made their way to the bedroom where the victim and
    Tori were sleeping.   Rivera testified that, when the defendant
    noticed the victim moving, the defendant got "nervous" and fired
    a single shot before running from the apartment.   The defendant
    told Rivera that he had sold the .380 but not the Beretta.      The
    indeed, it was false. If it is false, it was done due to
    intimidation, coercion, not willful activity on her part."
    11
    defendant said that if anyone questioned him about the shooting,
    he would say that he had been the person who stood outside as a
    lookout.   The defendant told Rivera that the defendant and three
    other individuals previously had broken into the victim's
    apartment, and had stolen marijuana.
    The defendant was convicted of all charges.    Because the
    felony-murder conviction was predicated on the burglary charge,
    that charge was placed on file.    The defendant's timely appeal
    was entered in this court in January 2014.
    d.    Motion for new trial.   Approximately ten months later,
    the defendant filed a motion for a new trial, and his appeal in
    this court was stayed.   In his motion, the defendant argued that
    he had received ineffective assistance of counsel as a result of
    both of his attorneys' failure adequately to investigate Giana's
    purported role in, and effect on, the police interrogation and
    the defendant's statements to police, as well as both attorneys'
    failure to mention the defendant's concern for Giana in
    challenging the voluntariness of the defendant's waivers of his
    Miranda rights and subsequent statements to police.    The
    defendant also argued that his counsel had been ineffective
    because counsel did not request a DiGiambattista instruction on
    the ground that the beginning of the defendant's June 23, 2009
    interrogation had not been recorded, including the portion where
    12
    the defendant assertedly was given Miranda warnings and waived
    his Miranda rights.11   See 
    DiGiambattista, 442 Mass. at 447
    .
    The defendant argued that, during his interrogation on the
    night of his arrest, police officers orchestrated a "cell[ular]
    [tele]phone ruse" in which they instructed Giana to call him
    using a detective's cellular telephone.    The defendant asserted
    that he was "surprised" to hear Giana on the telephone.     He said
    that, during this call, Giana told him about police threats to
    take away her children and charge her with murder.   Because of
    this call, the defendant maintained, he told the officers
    whatever he thought they wanted to hear.
    The trial judge conducted a three-day evidentiary hearing
    on the motion for a new trial.   Witnesses included the
    defendant's two prior attorneys; five police officers; the
    defendant; his girlfriend, Giana; and one of her sons.
    Ultimately, the judge denied the motion.    The judge found
    that numerous "facts alleged by the defendant never occurred."
    Specifically, the judge did "not credit, in the slightest, the
    defendant's assertion that the Lawrence police created a 'cell
    11The defendant argued, additionally, that trial counsel
    was ineffective because he failed adequately to investigate
    whether the defendant knowingly waived his right to prompt
    arraignment before his interview the morning after his arrest;
    to seek suppression of an identification made using a
    photographic array; and to object to that witness's in-court
    identification of the defendant on the basis of the prior
    identification.
    13
    phone ruse'" on June 22, 2009.     The judge found that "[w]hile
    there is no doubt that the defendant spoke briefly with [Giana]
    before he made his June 23rd statement to the police, that phone
    call conversation was brief and did not contain the sort of
    detailed description of police threats or coercion that the
    defendant now claims."    Accordingly, the judge concluded that
    "there was no basis to argue the phone call as one of the
    grounds for lack of voluntariness," and "[t]hus . . . no
    ineffective assistance of counsel."      The judge also determined
    that absence of a request for a DiGiambattista instruction based
    on the nonrecording of initial warnings and waivers "might well
    be considered an oversight," but that such oversight "did not
    deprive the defendant of a substantial basis for a defense."
    2.    Discussion.    a.   Standard of review.   "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).   "[W]e examine the denial of a motion for a new trial to
    determine whether there was error, and, if so, whether the error
    created a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice."
    Commonwealth v. Ferreira, 
    481 Mass. 641
    , 649 (2019), citing
    Commonwealth v. Vargas, 
    475 Mass. 338
    , 355 (2016), and "afford
    particular deference to factual determinations made by a motion
    14
    judge who was also the trial judge."   
    Ferreira, supra
    .   "[W]e
    make our own independent determination on the correctness of the
    judge's 'application of constitutional principles to the facts
    as found.'"   Commonwealth v. Haas, 
    373 Mass. 545
    , 550 (1977),
    S.C., 
    398 Mass. 806
    (1986), quoting Brewer v. Williams, 
    430 U.S. 387
    , 403 (1977).
    b.   Telephone call and interviews on evening of defendant's
    arrest.   Although both initial and successor counsel had access
    to the recordings of the interviews on June 22, 2009, the
    evening of the defendant's arrest, as well as to information
    concerning the existence of the telephone call that took place
    between the defendant and Giana while the defendant was in the
    booking area, neither attorney relied on the recordings of the
    interviews or the existence of the telephone call in their
    motions to suppress the statements the defendant made the
    following morning.12   Trial counsel did not realize that pretrial
    counsel had given him recordings of the June 22, 2009
    interviews, which had been obtained through discovery;
    accordingly, he did not listen to the recordings.   The
    nonreliance on the call or recordings by each of the defendant's
    12As appellate counsel acknowledges, the defendant's
    initial and successor counsel received copies of a police
    report, dated June 22, 2009, before trial. The report explained
    that the call had taken place.
    15
    trial counsel was not a conscious, strategic, or tactical
    decision.
    Before this court, the defendant presses his argument that
    he received ineffective assistance because counsel did not rely
    on the recordings of his statements to police on the night of
    his arrest, or the telephone call between the defendant and his
    girlfriend, in challenging the voluntariness of the defendant's
    statements to police the following day.
    In reviewing claims of ineffective assistance of counsel
    under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, "[w]e focus more broadly on whether
    there was error and, if so, whether any such error 'was likely
    to have influenced the jury's conclusion.'"    Commonwealth v.
    Fulgiam, 
    477 Mass. 20
    , 29, cert. denied, 
    138 S. Ct. 330
    (2017),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Wright, 
    411 Mass. 678
    , 682 (1992), S.C.,
    
    469 Mass. 447
    (2014).    Where a motion for a new trial is
    premised on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, "the
    burden of proving ineffectiveness rests with the defendant"
    (citation omitted).    Commonwealth v. Kolenovic, 
    471 Mass. 664
    ,
    673 (2015), S.C., 
    478 Mass. 189
    (2017).
    A defendant's statements are admissible against him at
    trial only if they were made voluntarily.     See Commonwealth v.
    Magee, 
    423 Mass. 381
    , 387 (1996) ("Due process requires a
    separate inquiry into the voluntariness of the statement
    . . .").    To establish voluntariness, the Commonwealth must
    16
    prove beyond a reasonable doubt that "'in light of the totality
    of the circumstances surrounding the making of the statement,
    the will of the defendant was [not] overborne,' but rather that
    the statement was 'the result of a free and voluntary act.'"
    Commonwealth v. Baye, 
    462 Mass. 246
    , 256 (2012), quoting
    Commonwealth v. Durand, 
    457 Mass. 574
    , 595-596 (2010), S.C., 
    475 Mass. 657
    (2016), cert. denied, 
    138 S. Ct. 259
    (2017).     The
    Commonwealth also must establish beyond a reasonable doubt that
    police interrogation practices "were not 'so manipulative . . .
    that they deprived [the defendant] of his ability to make an
    unconstrained, autonomous decision to confess.'"    
    Baye, supra
    ,
    quoting United States v. Walton, 
    10 F.3d 1024
    , 1030 (3d Cir.
    1993).    "Absent some indication that the defendant was
    particularly vulnerable to suggestion, the focus of our inquiry
    has been on whether incriminating statements were 'the result of
    coercion or intimidation."    
    Baye, supra
    , quoting Durand, supra
    at 595.
    Clearly, it was poor performance for the defendant's
    initial and successor counsel not to listen to the recordings of
    interrogations of his client by police, which each counsel had
    in his possession as part of mandated discovery.    Our review of
    these recordings, and the judge's findings about the call,
    however, lead us to conclude that they were not likely to have
    made a difference in counsels' efforts to suppress the
    17
    defendant's confession on the following day.   See 
    Kolenovic, 471 Mass. at 672-673
    , quoting Commonwealth v. Walker, 
    443 Mass. 213
    ,
    224 (2005) ("[A] judge's findings of fact after an evidentiary
    hearing on a motion for a new trial will be accepted if
    supported by the record. . . .   Where, as here, the motion judge
    is also the trial judge, we give 'special deference' to the
    judge's findings of fact . . .").13
    First, the trial judge, who conducted the hearing on the
    motion for a new trial, was warranted in finding that the
    telephone call between the defendant and Giana was not the
    product of a police-orchestrated ruse.   Transcripts of the
    defendant's interrogation on the night of his arrest support the
    judge's determination that the defendant could not have been
    "surprised" to find Giana speaking to him on the telephone, as
    the defendant contended.   The transcript of the interview states
    13Contrary to his suggestion, the defendant is not entitled
    to de novo review of all the evidence to determine if it
    supports his claim that his statement on June 23, 2009, was
    involuntary. While the defendant is correct that this court may
    review documentary evidence, including transcripts,
    independently, see Commonwealth v. Novo, 
    442 Mass. 262
    , 266
    (2004), determinations of witness credibility were central to
    the resolution of the defendant's claims of ineffective
    assistance in his motion for a new trial. See Commonwealth v.
    Mosher, 
    455 Mass. 811
    , 818 (2010), citing Commonwealth v.
    Sparks, 
    433 Mass. 654
    , 656 (2001) ("We accept as true the
    subsidiary findings of fact made by the motion judge absent
    clear error, deferring to the credibility findings of the judge,
    who had the opportunity to observe and evaluate the witnesses as
    they testified").
    18
    clearly that the defendant requested to see Giana; subsequently,
    a police officer told the defendant that the officer would allow
    them to speak over the telephone.    It was, accordingly, not
    inaccurate for the judge to characterize the call as the result
    of the officers' allowance of the defendant's request to speak
    with Giana.
    Second, the judge was not unwarranted in finding that
    neither Giana nor the defendant provided the defendant's initial
    or successor counsel with any indication that Giana had
    communicated police threats to the defendant during their
    telephone call.   This finding was based on the fact that both
    counsel several times had attempted to have suppressed the
    defendant's inculpatory statements, and testimony by both
    counsel, which the judge credited.   The defendant's first
    counsel testified, "If there was something that impacted [the
    defendant's] voluntariness that he had revealed to me, . . . I
    would have hoped I would have included it in the affidavit [as]
    a ground for the suppression."   Successor counsel testified that
    he interviewed Giana in his efforts to obtain suppression of the
    defendant's confession, and that "[i]f [information about police
    threats was] not in [his] motion [to suppress], then it wasn't
    discussed."
    Based on this, the judge drew a permissible inference that
    the reason that the defendant did not disclose to counsel any
    19
    knowledge of alleged police pressure placed on Giana was that
    she did not communicate police threats to the defendant during
    their telephone call.   Because the call itself was not recorded,
    the judge's factual determinations concerning the call rested
    largely on assessments of witness credibility.   The judge found
    portions of the defendant's and Giana's testimony with respect
    to the contents of the call not credible, and explained his
    reasoning.   Cf. Commonwealth v. Rakes, 
    478 Mass. 22
    , 36 (2017).
    The judge noted that Giana provided "plainly false"
    testimony at the motion hearing, in that she asserted that she
    had spoken about the call "out loud in a court setting just like
    this."   This statement is refuted by the transcript of her prior
    voir dire testimony before the same judge.   In addition, as was
    his prerogative, see 
    Rakes, 478 Mass. at 36
    , the judge did not
    credit Giana's testimony that she told the defendant's trial
    counsel about the call "the moment [they] spoke."   This
    determination is particularly apt in light of the testimony by
    trial counsel indicating that he had no memory of such
    statements, and that he would have relied on them in support of
    motions to suppress if he had heard such assertions at the time.
    The judge also was not required to credit the defendant's
    testimony that his telephone conversation with Giana included
    discussion of specific police threats toward her.   See 
    Rakes, 478 Mass. at 36
    .   Like Giana, the defendant provided
    20
    contradictory information relative to his interactions with the
    police on the evening of his arrest and the following day.     For
    instance, in a written affidavit in support of his motion to
    suppress his June 23, 2009 statement, the defendant attested,
    "Prior to being arrested I had taken some [K]lonopin tablets.
    . . .   I was under the influence of the pills when the police
    interrogated me."   At the hearing on his motion for a new trial,
    the defendant testified that he had not been under the influence
    of drugs during any of his interviews with police, and that the
    affidavit he signed under the penalty of perjury was "not true."
    The judge's determination that "[t]he conversation, as was
    true of most phone conversations of a similar sort in the
    booking area, did not last [ten] to [fifteen] minutes as the
    defendant alleges," and instead was "quite a brief conversation"
    is supported by the record.    As the judge noted, Giana testified
    at the hearing that the telephone conversation lasted only "[a]
    few seconds, a few minutes."    The judge observed that the
    defendant gave contradictory estimates concerning the length of
    the call; while the defendant's affidavit in support of his
    motion for a new trial stated that the call lasted ten to
    fifteen minutes, the defendant testified at the hearing that the
    call lasted "six or seven minutes or a little bit -- a little
    bit longer, a little bit."     In addition, the police officer who
    had been in the room during the telephone call testified that
    21
    the call must have been short, because he would not have allowed
    the defendant to talk on the cellular telephone for ten minutes.
    The judge was warranted in concluding that, "if the defendant
    was unaware of the alleged inappropriate police pressure, it
    could not have affected his voluntariness."
    Undoubtedly, if made to a defendant, "threats concerning a
    person's loved one . . . may impinge on the voluntariness of a
    defendant's confession."    Commonwealth v. Monroe, 
    472 Mass. 461
    ,
    469 (2015), citing Lynumn v. Illinois, 
    372 U.S. 528
    , 534 (1963).
    Police threats directed at an individual other than the
    defendant, however, and which are not communicated to the
    defendant, cannot reasonably be said to constitute coercion of
    the defendant.   Compare 
    Monroe, supra
    ("Here, . . . detectives
    threatened the defendant with the loss of contact with his child
    by repeatedly and falsely claiming that if he did not tell them
    what happened, the child could be taken away and raised by
    strangers").
    After reviewing the record and the judge's conclusions, we
    are not "left with the firm conviction that a mistake has been
    committed."    Commonwealth v. Tavares, 
    385 Mass. 140
    , 156, cert.
    denied, 
    457 U.S. 1137
    (1982), quoting New England Canteen Serv.,
    Inc. v. Ashley, 
    372 Mass. 671
    , 675 (1977).
    The defendant argues, in the alternative, that "[e]ven if
    the call did not include mention of the [alleged] coercion, the
    22
    circumstances surrounding the call would still have been
    admissible on the question of how 'upset and dismay[ed]' [Giana]
    was during the call, and how 'concern[ed]' [the defendant] was
    as a result."   The defendant contends that he should receive a
    new trial because "the call still would have been a real factor
    in the jury's voluntariness decision, had it been developed at
    trial."   We do not agree.
    Factors relevant to assessing voluntariness "include, but
    are not limited to, 'promises or other inducements, conduct of
    the defendant, the defendant's age, education, intelligence and
    emotional stability, experience with and in the criminal justice
    system, physical and mental condition, the initiator of the
    discussion of a deal or leniency (whether the defendant or the
    police), and the details of the interrogation, including the
    recitation of Miranda warnings.'"   Commonwealth v. Selby, 
    420 Mass. 656
    , 663 (1995), quoting Commonwealth v. Mandile, 
    397 Mass. 410
    , 413 (1986).
    Based on the totality of the circumstances, there was
    sufficient evidence to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the defendant's statement on June 23, 2009, was "the product of
    a 'rational intellect' and a 'free will,' and not induced by
    physical or psychological coercion," Commonwealth v. LeBlanc,
    
    433 Mass. 549
    , 554 (2001), even given the defendant's knowledge
    of Giana's "upset and dismay" on June 22, 2009.
    23
    At no time on June 22 or 23, 2009, did the officers
    interrogating the defendant improperly provide "an assurance,
    express or implied, that [a confession would] aid the defense or
    result in a lesser sentence."   See Commonwealth v. Meehan, 
    377 Mass. 552
    , 564 (1979).   Indeed, at the defendant's first
    interview, an officer made clear that "it's going to be up to
    the DA.   Whatever happens.   OK?   We . . . won't make any
    promises at all."14   During the interview on the following day,
    initiated by the defendant, an officer stopped to reread the
    defendant the Miranda warnings; the defendant's waiver of those
    rights was recorded.15   The emotion the defendant displayed
    14An interrogating officer did tell the defendant, in
    response to the defendant's concerns for the safety of his
    family, that "if you do cooperate with us and continue to
    cooperate with us I'm going to talk to Section 8. . . .
    [T]hat's something I can do." "[F]alse 'promises . . . as might
    excite hopes in the mind of [an interviewee] that he should be
    materially benefitted by making disclosures' can undermine a
    defendant's ability to make an autonomous decision to confess,
    and are therefore properly regarded as coercive." Commonwealth
    v. Baye, 
    462 Mass. 246
    , 257-258 (2012), quoting Commonwealth v.
    Taylor, 
    5 Cush. 605
    , 610 (1850). Here, however, the officer's
    statement was phrased as explaining that he would make an
    inquiry, and did not promise a result. Furthermore, the
    statement was made in response to security concerns raised by
    the defendant, regarding subjects apart from prospective
    punishment or leniency. See Commonwealth v. Mandile, 
    397 Mass. 410
    , 413 (1986). In addition, the officer explicitly repeated
    that he could not make promises of any kind to the defendant.
    15The interrogating officer said, "Let's stop. We read
    your Miranda." After beginning to recite the Miranda rights
    again, the officer asked, "Remember I read you this before? I
    want to go over it again to make sure you understand it because
    it's important. . . . You heard this before, right? Yes, no?"
    24
    during the June 23, 2009 interrogation was, according to the
    judge who ruled on the defendant's motion to suppress,
    "appropriate to the situation; [the defendant] confessed to
    involvement in a killing."   The judge found that the defendant
    was "not under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or mental
    illness."   This finding is supported implicitly by the absence
    of any indication in the record that the defendant had been
    under the influence of drugs or alcohol.   Moreover, the
    defendant now concedes that he was not under the influence of
    drugs during any of the interrogations.
    c.   DiGiambattista instruction.   The defendant also argues
    that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance because he
    did not rely on the telephone call between the defendant and
    Giana in seeking a DiGiambattista instruction, and because
    counsel did not request the instruction based on the incomplete
    recording of the defendant's June 23, 2009 interrogation.16     As
    The defendant replied, "Yes."   The officer then finished the
    recitation.
    16Trial counsel requested a DiGiambattista instruction on
    the ground that a police officer failed to record interviews of
    the defendant prior to his interrogation on June 23, 2009. See
    Commonwealth v. DiGiambattista, 
    442 Mass. 423
    , 447-448 (2004).
    This assertion was inaccurate. Indeed, at the time he sought
    the instruction, trial counsel was in possession of the
    recordings, but was unaware of that fact. In any event, the
    judge denied the defendant's request for a DiGiambattista
    instruction on the ground that it was not necessary to give such
    an instruction with respect to "other [unrecorded] discussions
    at other times [by police officers] . . . with the defendant,"
    25
    discussed, the interrogations of the defendant on the evening of
    his arrest and the following day were recorded.   The telephone
    call with Giana on the night of the defendant's arrest was not
    recorded.    The initial discussion on June 23, 2009, between the
    defendant and the interrogating officer, regarding Miranda
    rights, the right to prompt arraignment, and consent to
    electronic recording, was not recorded.
    In 
    DiGiambattista, 442 Mass. at 447
    , we held that "when the
    prosecution introduces evidence of a defendant's confession or
    statement that is the product of a custodial interrogation or an
    interrogation conducted at a place of detention . . . and there
    is not at least an audiotape recording of the complete
    interrogation, the defendant is entitled (on request) to a jury
    instruction."   This instruction advises the jury "that the
    State's highest court has expressed a preference that such
    interrogations be recorded whenever practicable, and caution[s]
    the jury that, because of the absence of any recording of the
    interrogation in the case before them, they should weigh
    evidence of the defendant's alleged statement with great caution
    and care."   
    Id. at 447-448.
      Further, where, as here,
    "voluntariness is a live issue and the humane practice
    instruction is given, the jury should also be advised that the
    where the Commonwealth was not seeking to introduce evidence
    from those conversations.
    26
    absence of a recording permits (but does not compel) them to
    conclude that the Commonwealth has failed to prove voluntariness
    beyond a reasonable doubt."    
    Id. at 448.17
    The defendant would not have been entitled to a
    DiGiambattista instruction on the basis of any putative
    incomplete recordings of the June 22, 2009 interrogations,
    because those interrogations were distinct from the June 23,
    2009 interrogation; at trial, the Commonwealth relied only on
    statements that the defendant made on June 23, 2009.18    This
    defendant's circumstances differ from those of Commonwealth v.
    Woodbine, 
    461 Mass. 720
    , 726, 739-740 (2012), in which we
    explained that a defendant should have received a DiGiambattista
    instruction when an interrogating officer capitalized on a
    strategic decision to record only one part of a "two-stage
    interrogation," and the recorded portion was suppressed.     We
    described the interrogation as a "two-stage interrogation"
    because the interrogating officer began questioning a defendant
    alone, then summoned another detective into the room after the
    defendant began talking, and only recorded statements the
    defendant provided to both officers.    
    Id. at 725-726,
    739-740.
    17   The judge gave a humane practice instruction.
    18The fact that, on June 22, 2009, the officers asked the
    defendant about the shooting on May 22 does not alter our
    analysis.
    27
    By contrast, here the defendant's third interview occurred only
    because he requested to speak with police, after police
    indisputably had ceased questioning him more than fifteen hours
    earlier, the day before.19
    Moreover, the fact that the defendant's telephone call with
    Giana was unrecorded would not have entitled him to a
    DiGiambattista instruction, because the call did not comprise
    part of the interrogation.     Police would not reasonably have
    known, and the defendant could not reasonably have expected,
    that facilitating the call in response to the defendant's
    request would be reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating
    response from the defendant.    See Rhode Island v. Innis, 
    446 U.S. 291
    , 301-302 (1980); Commonwealth v. Torres, 
    424 Mass. 792
    ,
    798 (1997).   See also Arizona v. Mauro, 
    481 U.S. 520
    , 527 (1987)
    (tape recorded conversation between defendant and his wife was
    not "functional equivalent" of interrogation, where detective
    asked no questions about crime or conduct during call, and
    evidence did not suggest call was psychological ploy).
    19We are satisfied that interrogation of the defendant
    ceased until "the accused himself initiate[d] further
    communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police."
    Edwards v. Arizona, 
    451 U.S. 477
    , 484-485 (1981). We conclude
    that the defendant's subsequent waiver of his Miranda rights was
    knowing, intelligent, and voluntary, see discussion supra.
    Oregon v. Bradshaw, 
    462 U.S. 1039
    , 1046 (1983), quoting Edwards,
    supra at 486 n. 9. See Commonwealth v. Thomas, 
    469 Mass. 531
    ,
    549-550 (2014). Contrast Commonwealth v. Hoyt, 
    461 Mass. 143
    ,
    153 (2011).
    28
    Nonetheless, it was error for defense counsel not to
    request a DiGiambattista instruction on the basis of an
    incomplete recording of the defendant's interrogation on
    June 23, 2009.   As we explained in 
    DiGiambattista, 442 Mass. at 448
    , an "instruction is appropriate for any custodial
    interrogation, or interrogation conducted in a place of
    detention, without regard to the alleged reasons for not
    recording that interrogation."    Accordingly, counsel erred in
    not requesting a DiGiambattista instruction as a result of the
    nonrecording of the defendant's initial acknowledgment and
    waiver of his rights.   The absence of a DiGiambattista
    instruction in this case, however, was not likely to have
    influenced the jury's conclusion, see 
    Wright, 411 Mass. at 682
    ,
    and did not result in a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage
    of justice.
    The fact that a brief, introductory portion of the
    defendant's interrogation on June 23, 2009, was not recorded did
    not prejudice the defendant.     A very short period of time passed
    between the start of discussions about the defendant's rights
    and his waiver of them, and the initiation of the recording.
    "The defendant does not contest the interviewing State police
    [officer's] testimony as to the introductory nature of the first
    [few] minutes of the interview, and nothing in the record
    suggests that any substantive exchange took place during that
    29
    time."    Commonwealth v. Vacher, 
    469 Mass. 425
    , 444 (2014).20
    Significantly, the recording does capture a police officer
    rereading the defendant his Miranda rights, after which the
    defendant confirmed that he had heard the reading of those
    rights before, and continued to talk.    In addition, the
    defendant's signed waiver and consent forms were introduced in
    evidence, and nearly all the interrogation was recorded and
    entered as an exhibit.    The jury "accordingly were well situated
    to determine the voluntariness of the defendant's statements"
    made on that date.    
    Vacher, 469 Mass. at 444
    .   The fact that the
    defendant initiated the June 23, 2009 interrogation, coupled
    with the interrogating officer's testimony that the reading of
    the defendant's rights was unrecorded only because that was
    standard practice at the time,21 present no indicia of
    20Before this court, the defendant argues that on June 22,
    2009, "marked differences in [the defendant's] affect and
    demeanor" before and after his call with Giana illustrate that a
    "substantive exchange" occurred during an unrecorded portion of
    the interrogation. As stated, we do not consider the unrecorded
    telephone call with Giana to comprise part of the interrogation.
    21The officer explained that it was standard practice at
    the time to read an individual his or her rights "off the
    record," get permission to record, and then review on record
    that the officer had read the individual his or her rights and
    the individual had agreed to waive them.
    30
    intimidation or coercion in relation to the lack of recording.
    See 
    Baye, 462 Mass. at 256
    , quoting 
    Durand, 457 Mass. at 595
    .22
    d.   Relief pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E.   The defendant
    argues that we should order a new trial or reduce the verdict of
    murder in the first degree because his role in the underlying
    felony was limited.   We do not agree.   This case is not one
    where the defendant's conviction "appear[s] out of proportion to
    [the] defendant's culpability."   Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    477 Mass. 805
    , 824 (2017), cert. denied, 
    139 S. Ct. 54
    (2018),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Rolon, 
    438 Mass. 808
    , 824 (2003).       The
    jury would have been warranted in finding that the defendant had
    been involved in more than the "remote outer fringes" of the
    crime that led to the victim's death.    The defendant told police
    that he had acted as the lookout -- which entails standing guard
    at the scene.   See Commonwealth v. Zanetti, 
    454 Mass. 449
    , 468
    (2009) ("knowing[] participat[ion] in the commission of the
    crime charged, alone or with others, with the intent required
    for that offense").   Compare 
    Brown, supra
    (verdict reduced where
    defendant supplied materials used by others to commit crime
    while defendant stayed home).
    The defendant also argues that we should reduce the murder
    verdict because other individuals involved in the crime were not
    22An unrelated confession, to Rivera, was also before the
    jury, through Rivera's testimony.
    31
    charged.    It is irrelevant to the defendant's culpability,
    however, whether other actors were prosecuted for their own
    involvement in the crime.    See 
    Zanetti, 454 Mass. at 468
    .
    3.     Conclusion.   We have reviewed the record in its
    entirety, in accordance with our duty under G. L. c. 278, § 33E,
    and discern no reason to order a new trial or to reduce the
    verdict of murder in the first degree.     The defendant's
    convictions and the order denying his motion for a new trial are
    affirmed.
    So ordered.