Commonwealth v. Torres , 469 Mass. 398 ( 2014 )


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    SJC-10849
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   JOSE TORRES.
    Suffolk.       April 11, 2014. - August 18, 2014.
    Present: Ireland, C.J., Spina, Gants, Duffly, & Lenk, JJ.1
    Homicide. Practice, Criminal, Capital case, New trial,
    Assistance of counsel, Argument by counsel, Instructions to
    jury. Evidence, Opinion, Expert opinion. Witness, Expert.
    Indictment found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on June 26, 2008.
    The case was tried before Elizabeth M. Fahey, J., and a
    motion for a new trial, filed on October 19, 2011, was
    considered by her.
    Emanuel Howard for the defendant.
    Donna Jalbert Patalano, Assistant District Attorney (David
    A. Deakin, Assistant District Attorney, with her) for the
    Commonwealth.
    SPINA, J.     The defendant was convicted of murder in the
    first degree on theories of deliberate premeditation and extreme
    atrocity or cruelty.        He filed a motion for a new trial alleging
    ineffective assistance of counsel, and he requested an
    1
    Chief Justice Ireland participated in the deliberation on
    this case prior to his retirement.
    2
    evidentiary hearing.   The trial judge denied the motion without
    a hearing.   Her indorsement in the margin said, "for the reasons
    stated in [the Commonwealth's] opposition."     On appeal the
    defendant alleges error in the denial of his motion for a new
    trial, the judge's failure to make findings, and the judge's
    failure to hold an evidentiary hearing on the motion.     We affirm
    the conviction and the denial of the defendant's motion for a
    new trial.   We decline to exercise our power under G. L. c. 278,
    § 33E.
    1.   Background.   The defendant moved into his girl friend's
    third-floor apartment in the Dorchester section of Boston in the
    middle of February, 2008.   His girl friend, the victim, had four
    children, the oldest of whom was six years old.     On March 8,
    2008, Kristina Ortiz visited the victim at her apartment.       The
    defendant and the victim's four children were there.     As Ortiz
    was leaving, the defendant made a disparaging remark about the
    victim's children.
    That evening the victim sent her six year old son down to
    the first-floor apartment of a neighbor three times to ask the
    neighbor to come up to his mother's apartment.    Each time the
    neighbor said she would be right up, but became distracted by
    her own children and failed to appear.    At 9 P.M. the defendant
    went down to the first-floor apartment and told the neighbor
    that his "wife was waiting" for her.     The neighbor went up to
    3
    the victim's apartment at around 9:30 P.M.         The victim asked the
    neighbor if the neighbor knew where she could get some cocaine.
    The neighbor was surprised because she knew the victim was
    trying to stop using cocaine.         The neighbor said she did not
    know, and left after a brief conversation.
    Sometime between 2 and 3 A.M. on March 9 the first-floor
    neighbor heard "an unusual thud" from an apartment above hers.
    The victim's apartment was two floors directly above her
    apartment, but the neighbor could not tell if the noise had come
    from the victim's apartment.         Shortly thereafter she heard
    footsteps coming down the stairs.         She went back to bed.
    At about 11:15 A.M. on March 9 the victim's two eldest
    children appeared at the first-floor neighbor's apartment.          The
    oldest child said, "My mommy and daddy had a fight and he killed
    her.       She's dead."    He added that the defendant had left.    The
    next oldest, who was five years old at the time of the incident,
    testified at trial to the physical beating he saw the defendant
    inflict on his mother.         He saw the defendant push her under a
    leg of the kitchen table, then sit on the table.         The defendant
    then locked the children in their bedroom.2         The neighbor went
    upstairs and found the victim lying lifeless on the kitchen
    floor in a pool of blood.         An electrical cord was pulled tight
    around her neck.          The kitchen was in a state of disarray:
    2
    The record does not reflect how the children left their
    bedroom.
    4
    furniture was overturned, the kitchen table was broken, and
    laundry was strewn about the room.       The neighbor gathered the
    children, brought them to her apartment, and telephoned the
    police.
    In the meantime, at about 10 A.M. on March 9, the defendant
    had gone to the home of Doris Serrano, where the defendant's
    father lived in the basement.    He told his father that the
    victim had "kicked [him] out."    His father asked about scratches
    on the defendant's face.    The defendant explained that the
    victim had scratched him.    The defendant left his duffle bag and
    knapsack in his father's room and went out to have a beer.
    Later that afternoon the defendant visited his cousin Iliana
    Pagan (Serrano's daughter), who was a close friend of the
    victim.    Pagan's fiancé was present.    The defendant explained
    that the victim had scratched his face during an argument over
    drugs.    During the defendant's visit Pagan received a telephone
    call in which she learned that the victim had been found dead in
    her home.    Pagan burst into tears.   When her fiancé asked what
    was wrong, she broke the news in a voice loud enough for the
    defendant to hear.    The defendant said nothing.    He bowed his
    head and put his face in his hands.
    Police tried to locate the defendant.    They went to
    Serrano's apartment and asked if Serrano would get in touch with
    him.    Serrano reached the defendant by cellular telephone and
    5
    told him that his father was looking for him.       The defendant
    returned to Serrano's apartment within minutes.       The police
    asked him to accompany them to Boston police headquarters for
    questioning.     He agreed.
    The defendant made a statement that was audiorecorded by
    police.   He told police that he loved the victim and was
    supposed to marry her.        He described what had happened the night
    of March 8, saying that the victim went "bi-polar" on him.           He
    tried to hug her, but she scratched his face.       She threatened to
    kill herself and call the police if he did not leave.       He
    gathered all his belongings into a duffle bag (which was
    "heavy") and a backpack, and then left.        He took a bus to his
    father's home, arriving at about 1 A.M.        He denied striking the
    victim or killing her.    He also said he loved her children.        The
    defendant said he could not have hit the victim with the kitchen
    table because he has arthritis and scoliosis, and could not lift
    heavy objects.
    The pathologist who performed the autopsy determined that
    death was caused by a combination of ligature strangulation
    (probably by the electrical extension cord found around the
    victim's neck) and a sharp incision to the front of the victim's
    neck that severed her right carotid artery and jugular vein, and
    completely divided her trachea (windpipe).        The strangulation
    occurred before the incision wound.        The victim had suffered
    6
    blunt trauma to her head.   She also had been exposed to a
    caustic chemical, such as bleach, after death.   The pathologist
    could not determine if the incision wound was caused by drawing
    a sharp blade from right to left or from left to right.
    Police recovered the duffle bag and backpack the defendant
    had left in his father's room.   Inside the duffle bag was a
    "CharlieCard," a fare card used for Massachusetts Bay
    Transportation Authority (MBTA) services, that had been used at
    11:33 P.M. on March 8 on an MBTA bus that passed within a few
    blocks of the victim's apartment.   Also inside the duffle bag
    was a receipt from a 7-Eleven store that evidenced a cash
    purchase at 12:02 A.M. on March 9, 2008.   The backpack contained
    personal items, including a notebook, a pair of sandals, and
    some clothing.
    The notebook had served as a journal.    The defendant had
    made an entry on January 11, 2008, in which he wrote:
    "Today was a real good day. But out of nowhere I got
    filled with rage and a lot of anger for no apparent reason.
    I'm sick and tired of my mental illness. I can't control
    my actions. I'm afraid that one day I'm going to blow-up
    on someone. I'm on my meds like I'm supposed to be. . . .
    It's like all the people who done me wrong are targets.
    The way I see it it is like one thing in my mind,
    Liquidation time. Vaporize all the wrong doer's to me and
    my life."
    The tread on the defendant's left sandal was similar in
    size and pattern to a footwear impression made in blood within a
    few feet of the victim's body.   The impression left at the crime
    7
    scene lacked sufficient detail to support a definitive
    comparison.
    The victim was found to be a potential source of
    deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) evidence recovered from reddish-
    brown stains on the heel of the defendant's right sandal, three
    areas on the defendant's duffle bag, and the handle and blade of
    a knife found in the victim's kitchen sink, as well as a brown
    stain on the defendant's shirt, where 1 in 39 quintillion
    Caucasians, 1 in 1.7 sextillion African Americans, and 1 in 260
    quadrillion Southeastern Hispanics would have the same genetic
    profile.    The victim was also determined to be a possible source
    of DNA recovered from reddish-brown stains containing a mixture
    of DNA from two individuals on the defendant's denim pants,
    where 1 in 44 trillion Caucasians, 1 in 2.5 quadrillion African
    Americans, and 1 in 1.8 trillion Southeastern Hispanics would
    have the same genetic profile.    Both the victim and the
    defendant were determined to be potential contributors to a
    mixture of DNA from three or more individuals found on the upper
    half of the sole of the defendant's right sandal.
    The defense theory was that the defendant did not kill the
    victim.    He had no motive to kill the victim, whom he loved, and
    he left her apartment after they argued.    He contended there was
    not enough time between the visit by the first-floor neighbor at
    9:30 P.M. and the CharlieCard activity at 11:33 P.M. for him to
    8
    kill the victim, pack his belongings, and attempt to cover his
    tracks at the scene with bleach or other caustic substance.
    2.    Standard of review.   The defendant asserted multiple
    claims of ineffective assistance of counsel in his motion for a
    new trial.    Because he has been convicted of murder in the first
    degree and his appeal from the denial of his motion for a new
    trial has been consolidated with his direct appeal, we consider
    his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel to determine if
    any error has created a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage
    of justice, as required by G. L. c. 278, § 33E.    This standard
    of review is more favorable to the defendant than the
    constitutional standard for determining ineffective assistance
    of counsel.   See Commonwealth v. Wright, 
    411 Mass. 678
    , 682
    (1992).   Under this more favorable standard, we consider whether
    there was error by trial counsel, regardless whether trial
    counsel's performance fell measurably below that of an ordinary
    fallible lawyer, and, if there was, whether the error was likely
    to have influenced the jury's verdict.    
    Id. However, a
    strategic decision by an attorney constitutes error only if it
    was manifestly unreasonable when made.   See Commonwealth v.
    Smith, 
    456 Mass. 476
    , 482 (2010).
    A judge is required to conduct an evidentiary hearing on a
    motion for a new trial only if a substantial issue is raised by
    the motion or affidavits.   See Commonwealth v. Wallis, 
    440 Mass. 9
    589, 596 (2003); Mass. R. Crim. P. 30 (c) (3), as appearing in
    
    435 Mass. 1501
    (2001).   In that regard a judge considers the
    seriousness of the issues raised and the adequacy of the
    defendant's showing on those issues.    See Commonwealth v.
    DeVincent, 
    421 Mass. 64
    , 67 (1995).    A judge is not required to
    credit assertions in affidavits submitted in support of a motion
    for a new trial, and may evaluate them in light of factors
    pertinent to credibility, including bias, self-interest, and
    delay.   See Commonwealth v. Grant, 
    426 Mass. 667
    , 673 (1998).      A
    judge may rely on his or her knowledge of the trial and
    evaluation of the witnesses and evidence at the trial when
    reaching a decision on a motion for a new trial, including
    whether to decide the motion without an evidentiary hearing.
    See Commonwealth v. DeVincent, supra at 69.
    The judge must make findings of fact necessary to resolve
    the defendant's allegations of error of law in a motion for a
    new trial.   See Mass. R. Crim. P. 30 (b), as appearing in 
    435 Mass. 1501
    (2001).   A judge's failure to make findings required
    by rule 30 (b) is "not fatal . . . where the ultimate conclusion
    is clearly evident from the record," Commonwealth v. Lanoue, 
    392 Mass. 583
    , 586 n.2 (1984), or where we are satisfied that "on
    review of the whole case manifest injustice would [not] result."
    Commonwealth v. Preston, 
    393 Mass. 318
    , 322 n.4 (1984).    See
    Commonwealth v. Dunnington, 
    390 Mass. 472
    , 478 (1983).
    10
    3.   Discussion.   We turn to the defendant's claims of
    ineffective assistance of counsel.
    a.   The defendant faults trial counsel for failing to
    exploit the time difference between the defendant's use of his
    CharlieCard at 11:33 P.M. on March 8 and the "unusual thud"
    heard by the first-floor neighbor on March 9 between 2 and 3
    A.M. followed by the sound of footsteps she heard shortly
    thereafter going down the stairs, both of which the Commonwealth
    relied on to link the defendant to the killing.    He also faults
    counsel for failing to request an alibi defense and pursue a
    third-party culprit defense (which he claims would explain the
    thud and footsteps heard by the first-floor neighbor).
    In his closing argument trial counsel did in fact highlight
    inconsistencies in the timeline.     However, the time of death had
    not been established by the autopsy.     The pathologist could only
    opine that the victim had been dead more than twenty-four hours
    by the time of the autopsy on March 11, 2008.     Because it was
    not clear precisely when death occurred, an alibi defense would
    not likely have succeeded where the defendant did not have an
    alibi for the time between 9:30 and 11:33 P.M. on March 8, when
    the jury could have determined that the killing occurred.
    Had trial counsel pursued a third-party culprit defense,
    about which the defendant offers no details, the Commonwealth
    was ready to offer evidence of the defendant's jailhouse
    11
    confession to another inmate that included many details not
    publicly known, together with a detailed diagram of the crime
    scene.    After trial counsel announced that the defendant would
    not testify, the prosecutor decided not to call as a witness at
    trial the inmate to whom the defendant had confessed.       Counsel's
    decision to make do with what he had rather than pursue a highly
    risky strategy not likely to produce favorable results (but
    likely instead to yield highly damaging admissions from the
    defendant) was a reasonable tactical decision we infer from the
    record.    "Neither ineffectiveness nor a likelihood of a
    miscarriage of justice arise from counsel making the best he can
    out of the circumstances of the crime."     Commonwealth v. Hung
    Tan Vo, 
    427 Mass. 464
    , 471 (1998).
    This theory of ineffectiveness was not supported by any
    affidavit filed on behalf of the defendant.3    We are satisfied
    that no substantial question was presented that required an
    evidentiary hearing, and that on review of the whole case there
    was no substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice in the
    absence of written findings by the judge.    The existence of a
    reasonable tactical decision by trial counsel in proceeding as
    he did is clearly evident from the record.
    3
    Trial counsel submitted an affidavit in response to
    specific questions posed by appellate counsel concerning each
    issue raised in the motion for a new trial (and on appeal).
    Trial counsel's response was: "As to these topics, I cannot
    remember whether I specifically considered these issues, or not;
    however, I remember leaving 'no stone unturned' in this case."
    12
    b.   The defendant contends that trial counsel was
    ineffective for failing to object to testimony by Serrano to the
    effect that she lied to the defendant by telling him his father
    was looking for him.     She said she knew that if she had said the
    police were looking for him he would not come.    The defendant
    argues that this was impermissible comment on his credibility.
    See Commonwealth v. Triplett, 
    398 Mass. 561
    , 567 (1986).
    Although probably objectionable, Serrano's remark did not
    create a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.
    Contrary to the defendant's assertion, the prosecutor did not
    refer to, or even allude to, Serrano's statement in his closing
    argument.   Trial counsel elicited from Serrano on cross-
    examination that she had been with the victim and the defendant
    for about fifteen minutes on March 6, two days before the
    victim's death, and that they appeared to be getting along.
    Serrano detected no tension between them at the time.     Moreover,
    the defendant went with police voluntarily to give a statement,
    offering no resistance.    We are satisfied that Serrano's remark
    was fleeting and isolated.    It was hardly the kind of
    prejudicial comment that permeates the testimony of a key
    Commonwealth witness on a critical issue in the case such that a
    new trial is required.    Compare Commonwealth v. 
    Triplett, supra
    .
    Counsel was not ineffective.
    13
    c.     The defendant asserts that trial counsel was
    ineffective for failing to recognize that the incision on the
    victim's neck was caused by a left-handed person, for failing to
    recognize from available information that the defendant was
    right-handed, and for failing to consult with an appropriate
    expert to show that the defendant could not have caused the
    incision wound.    This is the only claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel supported by affidavit.
    The defendant presented the affidavit of a physician who is
    a recognized expert on knife wounds and has testified as an
    expert both for the Commonwealth and for defendants.       Based on
    the autopsy report and autopsy photographs, it was the
    physician's opinion that "[t]he pattern of this incision [wound
    to the neck] is most consistent with an assailant delivering the
    incision using his left hand while positioned behind the
    victim."    The defendant filed an affidavit stating that he is
    and always has been right-handed.    Affidavits from his mother
    and his older sister similarly attested to his right-handedness.
    The defendant also submitted medical records indicating two
    injuries purportedly consonant with right-handedness.
    The defendant's assertions that trial counsel failed to
    recognize critical details is purely speculative.    In addition,
    even if this defense had been presented to the jury, it likely
    would not have influenced the jury's conclusion.    See
    14
    Commonwealth v. 
    Wright, 411 Mass. at 682
    .     The defendant told
    the detectives who interviewed him, "I cannot lift heavy objects
    . . . I cannot really grasp, like grasp, certain things . . . .
    Any time I try to grasp something hard, all I feel is a pain and
    it goes straight numb cuz you can feel the bone right here.      I
    don't do much lifting.   I can't exercise."   Although the
    defendant may be right-handed, he told police he is unable to
    use his major hand for rigorous projects.     Moreover, he has not
    claimed that he could not grasp something, such as a knife, with
    his left hand and use it to cut the victim's throat.    Nor has he
    claimed that he would not have been able to strangle the victim
    with an electrical cord.   The defendant admitted carrying his
    heavy duffle bag and his backpack when he left the victim's
    apartment to go to his father's home.     The jury could well have
    believed that the defendant could not have cut the victim's
    throat with his right hand, but instead used his left hand.
    Moreover, the evidence strongly suggested that the victim's
    throat was cut after she was strangled.    The jury could have
    concluded that the neck wound was inflicted after the victim
    collapsed to the floor, not while the defendant was standing
    behind her, as the defendant's expert implied.     Cutting the
    victim's throat while she was in that condition would not have
    been difficult, even for someone with disabilities the defendant
    claims to have.
    15
    The defendant has not raised a substantial issue about his
    right-handedness that would have required the judge to hold an
    evidentiary hearing.   The record strongly refutes a conclusion
    that only a left-handed person could have cut the victim's
    throat.   Written findings were not required to resolve any
    issues.   We conclude that the defendant has not shown that
    counsel was ineffective in failing to pursue this issue.
    d.    Contrary to the defendant's argument, trial counsel was
    not ineffective for failing to request a Daubert-Lanigan
    hearing, or otherwise failing to object to or moving to strike
    the expert testimony concerning the comparison of the treads on
    the defendant's footwear with a footwear impression made in the
    blood at the crime scene.   See Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms.,
    Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993); Commonwealth v. Lanigan, 
    419 Mass. 15
    (1994).   The defendant emphasizes that of the four factors
    considered by the Commonwealth's expert, namely, (1) pattern,
    (2) size, and two individualizing factors -- (3) wear and tear,
    and (4) distinctive (random) marks -- the witness acknowledged
    that only factors (1) and (2) were similar, and because there
    were insufficient details as to factors (3) and (4) to enable
    the witness to conclude that they, too, were similar, the
    witness should not have been permitted to give an opinion that
    essentially was speculative.   The expert opined that a bloody
    footprint impression at the crime scene could have been made by
    16
    the defendant's left sandal, but he could not give a definitive
    opinion.
    Judges have broad discretion in deciding whether to admit
    expert testimony.    Commonwealth v. Fitzpatrick, 
    463 Mass. 581
    ,
    603 (2012).   The test is whether the testimony "will assist the
    trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact
    in issue."    Mass. G. Evid. § 702 (2014).   See Commonwealth v.
    Dockham, 
    405 Mass. 618
    , 628 (1989).    An expert opinion that is
    not definitive, but expressed in terms of observations being
    "consistent with" a particular cause, or words of similar
    effect, does not render the opinion inadmissible on the ground
    that it is "speculative."   See Commonwealth v. Azar, 32 Mass.
    App. Ct. 290, 302-303 (1992), S.C., 
    444 Mass. 72
    (2005).
    Here, the expert was asked if he had an opinion "to a
    reasonable degree of scientific certainty" whether the
    defendant's left sandal was "consistent with" the bloody
    footprint observed at the crime scene.   He said he had such an
    opinion, and that the defendant's left sandal "could have" made
    the bloody impression, but the impression "was not detailed
    enough for a more definitive conclusion."    Having explained to
    the jury how he applied the four factors, he further explained
    how they shaped his opinion, which essentially neither excluded
    the defendant's sandal nor led him to opine regarding the
    existence of a definitive match.   Instead he was led to an
    17
    inconclusive result.     Trial counsel made this quite clear in his
    cross-examination, that is, the expert's opinion did not express
    the existence of a definitive match.     The expert's opinion was
    not improper.    See Commonwealth v. 
    Azar, supra
    .
    The defendant contends that where only two out of the four
    factors produced positive results, the expert's opinion did not
    even rise to the level of a preponderance of the evidence and
    thus was speculative.     We disagree.   There is no suggestion in
    the record that a proper analysis requires a particular "score"
    among the four factors.     Rather, as with many areas of forensic
    science, prescribed factors that must be applied when
    considering a particular matter ultimately involve a matter of
    judgment, and are intended to guide and shape the expert's
    reasoning.    How the expert proceeds with the application of
    those factors is usually fertile ground for cross-examination.4
    What is often crucial is how the expert presents his or her
    opinion and analysis to the jury.     Of particular concern is the
    danger that the jury is misled into an understanding that the
    "science" at hand is "hard" science, when in fact it is "soft"
    science.     There was no danger of that in this case.   The jury
    were given the visual images of the defendant's left sandal and
    4
    If the defendant had chosen to call an expert witness to
    give an opinion that the footwear impression was not consistent
    with the defendant's left sandal, relying on the same factors as
    the Commonwealth's expert, we have no doubt that the opinion
    would have been admissible.
    18
    the bloody impression made at the crime scene, and the expert
    led the jury through the factors he applied in his analysis.
    Although the witness should not have been asked if he had an
    opinion to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty but
    instead should have been asked if he had an opinion to a
    reasonable degree of certainty within the study of footwear
    impression comparison, or comparable words, it was readily
    apparent to the jury that the opinion given was a matter of
    judgment, and not a scientific result driven by precise
    mathematical calculations.   See Commonwealth v. Pytou Heang, 
    458 Mass. 827
    , 848-850 (2011).   It was made clear to the jury that
    this was a matter they could weigh for themselves, and the judge
    instructed them that they could accept or reject an expert's
    opinion.
    The evidence had probative value that was enhanced when
    juxtaposed with the expert testimony about the DNA evidence from
    the defendant's right sandal.   The prosecutor did not argue
    unfairly from the testimony of the expert on footwear
    impression, as the defendant contends.   The prosecutor spent a
    significant amount of time discussing the DNA evidence in his
    closing argument.   At the end of that discussion he spoke
    briefly about the footwear impression testimony, arguing
    essentially that, when viewed together, the DNA testimony and
    the footwear impression testimony provided strong circumstantial
    19
    evidence that the defendant was the person who killed the victim
    because the victim's blood made its way on to the defendant's
    right sandal at about the same time the defendant stepped in her
    blood and left a footwear impression with his left sandal.     The
    powerful synergistic effect of the expert testimony was an
    entirely reasonable and proper inference to draw.
    Finally, the defendant has not shown that had trial counsel
    moved for a hearing under Commonwealth v. 
    Lanigan, supra
    , the
    Commonwealth's expert probably would not have been allowed to
    testify.    Cf. Commonwealth v. Comita, 
    441 Mass. 86
    , 91 (2004)
    ("in order to prevail on an ineffective assistance of counsel
    claim on the ground of failing to file a motion to suppress, the
    defendant has to demonstrate a likelihood that the motion to
    suppress would have been successful").
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that counsel has not
    been shown to be ineffective as to this claim.
    e.     There is no merit to the defendant's claim that counsel
    was ineffective for arguing on manslaughter in his closing
    argument, a theory that was inconsistent with the primary theory
    at trial, which was that the defendant was not the killer.     The
    Commonwealth's case was very strong, and trial counsel carefully
    avoided the admission of the defendant's jailhouse confession.
    Trial counsel requested a manslaughter instruction based on
    theories of heat of passion and reasonable provocation (the
    20
    victim first scratched his face and then "kicked [him] out").
    His argument to the jury was more in passing than it was
    inconsistent with the primary trial strategy.    He argued at the
    very end of a closing argument that spanned approximately
    twenty-three pages of the transcript, "You must return -- must
    return a verdict of not guilty.    And at the most, at most, the
    government has proven manslaughter."    The argument was hardly
    the "abrupt switch" in strategy about which the defendant
    complains.    Rather, in the context of the entire closing
    argument and the entire trial, it was the gentle planting of a
    small seed.    It served primarily as a quiet introduction to the
    judge's instructions, and not a shift in strategy.    The
    requested instruction also gave the jury, and the defendant, an
    additional option between guilty of murder and not guilty of
    murder.   Without an affidavit from the defendant or counsel as
    to what, if anything, was discussed in this regard, we cannot
    say that counsel's strategy was manifestly unreasonable.      This
    is especially true in light of the understated manner in which
    counsel proceeded on this issue.
    Finally, the judge's instruction on manslaughter was the
    model instruction.    Counsel's failure to object to the
    instruction was not ineffective assistance of counsel.      See
    Commonwealth v. Tassinari, 
    466 Mass. 340
    , 356-357 (2013)
    (manslaughter charge nearly verbatim to model instruction -- no
    21
    error).   Taken as a whole, we think the jury understood that a
    verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree required proof
    beyond a reasonable doubt of the absence of reasonable
    provocation and the heat of passion, and that there was no error
    as in Commonwealth v. Acevedo, 
    427 Mass. 714
    , 717 (1998).
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that trial counsel
    has not been shown to have been ineffective.    We also discern no
    error in the denial of an evidentiary hearing, and we conclude
    that there was no substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of
    justice in the judge's failure to make written findings.
    4.    Review under G. L. c. 278, § 33E.    We have reviewed the
    briefs and the entire record and conclude that there is no
    reason for us to reduce the degree of guilt or order a new
    trial.
    Judgment affirmed.
    Order denying motion for a
    new trial affirmed.