Commonwealth v. Forte , 469 Mass. 469 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  • NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal
    revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound
    volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical
    error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of
    Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1
    Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557-
    1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us
    SJC-10991
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   MICHAEL FORTE.
    Hampden.       January 10, 2014. - August 22, 2014.
    Present:    Ireland, C.J., Cordy, Botsford, Gants, & Duffly, JJ. 1
    Homicide. Identification. Evidence, Identification,
    Photograph, Videotape, State of mind, Prior misconduct,
    Disclosure of evidence, Exculpatory. Practice, Criminal,
    Capital case, Motion to suppress, New trial, Identification
    of defendant in courtroom, Required finding, Disclosure of
    evidence, Recalling witness, Self-representation. Due
    Process of Law, Disclosure of evidence. Witness,
    Recalling. Subornation of Perjury.
    Indictment found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on September 24, 2008.
    A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by
    Constance M. Sweeney, J.; the case was tried before her; and a
    motion for a new trial, filed on September 26, 2012, was
    considered by her.
    Kevin S. Nixon for the defendant.
    Katherine A. Robertson, Assistant District Attorney, for
    the Commonwealth.
    1
    Chief Justice Ireland participated in the deliberation on
    this case prior to his retirement.
    2
    CORDY, J.   Shortly before 3:30 A.M. on July 27, 2008,
    Steven Donoghue, a homeless man, was stabbed in the alcove of a
    storefront at the intersection of State and Bliss Streets in
    downtown Springfield.    He died several hours later following
    extensive surgery.   Two young women, who had gone out for a
    late-night meal, reported the incident after having passed the
    victim alive and minutes later discovering him bleeding
    profusely.    They had seen only one other person on the street
    that night.   Through a series of identification efforts,
    including reliance on footage from surveillance videotapes, the
    defendant was identified and indicted as the perpetrator.
    Following a trial at which the defendant represented
    himself with the assistance of standby counsel, the defendant
    was convicted of murder in the first degree on the theory of
    extreme atrocity or cruelty and sentenced to life in prison.
    Through appellate counsel, the defendant appeals from his
    conviction and from the denial of his motion for a new trial and
    for an evidentiary hearing. 2   He asserts that the judge, who
    2
    After trial, the trial judge granted the defendant's
    motion for appointment of appellate counsel and denied his pro
    se motion to set aside the verdict, declare a mistrial, and
    provide postverdict relief. After appointment of appellate
    counsel, the defendant filed several motions on his own, on
    which the motion judge, who was also the trial judge, took no
    action because they were not filed by appellate counsel.
    Appellate counsel was initially appointed in June, 2010, and
    replaced in January, 2012. Replacement appellate counsel filed
    a motion for a new trial and evidentiary hearing before this
    3
    served as trial judge and motion judge for all relevant matters,
    erred in denying his motion to suppress identifications,
    permitting the introduction of evidence of prior bad acts to
    show the defendant's state of mind, denying his motion for a
    required finding of not guilty, and denying his request to
    recall the two percipient witnesses, which was the subject of
    his motion for a new trial.   In addition, he claims that his due
    process rights were violated by the Commonwealth's untimely
    disclosure of access codes needed to view the footage of the
    surveillance videotapes secured from the MassMutual Center
    (MassMutual), a local civic and convention center.   Finally,
    independent of his appellate counsel, the defendant asserts that
    the Commonwealth knowingly procured false testimony in such a
    way that merits reversal of his conviction.
    We conclude that the judge did not err in permitting the
    introduction of state of mind evidence where she provided
    numerous limiting instructions, and did not err in denying the
    defendant's motion to suppress and his motion for a required
    finding.   We also conclude that the defendant was not denied
    timely access to the MassMutual footage in a way that prejudiced
    the preparation of his defense, that the judge did not abuse her
    discretion in denying the defendant's request to recall the
    court, which was remanded to the trial judge and denied.    That
    denial is a subject of this consolidated appeal.
    4
    percipient witnesses, and that the defendant's false testimony
    claim is unmeritorious.   Because we find no reversible error and
    discern no basis to exercise our authority under G. L. c. 278,
    § 33E, we affirm the defendant's conviction.
    Background.   We summarize the evidence presented by the
    Commonwealth at trial, reserving certain details for our
    discussion of the issues raised and including other details
    relevant to our discussion of the motion to suppress.   At
    approximately 3 A.M. on July 27, 2008, Ivette Torres and her
    cousin, Jariely Vazquez, who were both eighteen years of age at
    the time, decided to get something to eat.   They left Torres's
    house on Howard Street in Springfield, walked to Main Street,
    and turned left onto Main Street to head toward the Crown Fried
    Chicken restaurant, located on the northwest corner of State and
    Main Streets.   As they walked along the west side of Main
    Street, they passed the victim, a local homeless man who was
    resting in the alcove of Chapin's Furniture Store at the
    intersection of Main and Bliss Streets.   The women exchanged
    greetings with the victim, whom they had seen before in the
    neighborhood, and continued onward.
    Very shortly thereafter, the women noticed a man coming
    toward them from in front of the restaurant.   As the man
    approached, he shouted at the women angrily, calling them
    "bitches and sluts."   The women had almost reached the corner of
    5
    State and Main Streets when they decided to cross Main Street
    because they were afraid of the approaching man.   They observed
    that the man continued to walk south along the west side of Main
    Street, toward where they had seen the victim.
    When the women reached the United Bank on the northeast
    corner of State and Main Streets, they looked across the
    intersection and saw that the restaurant was closed.     They
    turned back to return to Howard Street and noticed the man who
    had been shouting at them washing his hands in a puddle "next"
    to where they had seen the victim.   When they heard an
    automobile horn, the women turned away, and when they looked
    back the man was gone.   The women walked south on Main Street,
    back in the direction from which they came, and crossed Main
    Street near Bliss Street.   When they approached the alcove where
    they had seen the victim resting, they saw that his throat had
    been slit and he was covered in blood.   Torres attempted to dial
    911 from her cellular telephone but the battery had died, and
    the women continued south on Main Street until they were able to
    stop a passing motor vehicle and contact the police. 3    From the
    time they left Torres's apartment to the time they sought
    assistance in calling the police, the women did not see anyone
    3
    When the police arrived, they found the victim slumped
    back in the alcove, bleeding heavily, with a green duffle bag
    next to him containing a variety of personal effects.
    6
    else on Main Street other than the victim and the man who had
    shouted at them.
    1.     Identification.   The women initially described the man
    they had seen to the police as "a white male . . . wearing a
    black T-shirt [and] tan pants," in his forties, "with a pot
    belly but not really fat or built."     They described his hair as
    "bushy, blond, possibly whitish" or gray, and "scruffy."     Both
    women observed that the man had white lettering on the front and
    back of his shirt and that he was walking strangely. 4    An officer
    broadcast a description of the perpetrator as approximately
    forty to fifty years of age, with "kind of bushy, shoulder-
    length, blondish-gray hair, wearing a black T-shirt and tan
    pants." 5   The women went to the police station and were shown
    many photographs of men who were under fifty years of age, none
    of whom they recognized. 6
    At around 6 A.M., a police detective was returning to the
    station from the scene when he saw the defendant leaving a small
    park wearing a black T-shirt and tan pants.     He observed that
    4
    Ivette Torres testified that they were within fifteen feet
    of the man that night and had gotten a fairly good look at him.
    Jariely Vazquez said they were within twenty to thirty-five feet
    of him.
    5
    The shoulder-length descriptor appears to have been in the
    description broadcast but was not specifically mentioned in the
    witnesses' initial statements.
    6
    These photographs were those of white males between forty
    and fifty years of age from the police database.
    7
    the defendant's clothing was wet and his shirt was inside out,
    and that he fit the general description of the potential
    perpetrator. 7   The detective stopped, asked to speak to the
    defendant, and conducted a pat-down to ensure he had no weapons.
    The detective then informed the police dispatch that he had
    found an individual who fit the description of the perpetrator.
    Shortly thereafter, another detective brought Torres and
    Vazquez to the area.     The detective instructed only Torres to
    step out of the police cruiser and look at the man.     She
    understood that she was to determine whether it was the man she
    had seen three hours prior.     She later reported that she did not
    feel rushed.     Torres told the detective and Vazquez that,
    although the man had similar clothing, he was not the man she
    had seen. 8   Afterward, the women returned to the station to look
    at more photographs, to no avail.
    On July 28, the police acquired footage from the
    surveillance videotapes at MassMutual, located at the northeast
    corner of State and Main Streets, and from the restaurant.      The
    MassMutual footage from around the time of the murder shows a
    7
    In the early morning hours of July 27, 2008, there had
    been occasional thunderstorms and showers. Shortly after the
    police arrived at the scene, there was a torrential downpour.
    8
    At the hearing on the defendant's motion to suppress the
    identifications, Torres testified that she thought the defendant
    was in fact the man she had seen earlier, but that she had been
    afraid to say so.
    8
    silhouette walking south on the west side of Main Street,
    crossing in front of the restaurant, wearing a dark top and
    lighter pants. 9   The restaurant videotape, which provides a
    clearer image, depicts an individual, walking south on Main
    Street, who the police determined fit the description provided
    by the two women.    Two officers familiar with the defendant, who
    had each seen him within the last two days, recognized him as
    the man in the restaurant videotape. 10
    Later that day, the two women returned to the police
    station, where each woman was shown the restaurant videotape
    separately and asked if she saw anybody that she did or did not
    recognize.   Both confirmed that the man in the videotape was the
    man they had seen that night.    Torres also indicated that it was
    the same man she had seen at the showup the day before, but that
    she had not recognized him then because his hair had been darker
    and wet and his shirt was inside out, hiding the white
    lettering.   Immediately after watching the videotape, each woman
    was shown a photographic array containing eight individual color
    photographs, and each selected the defendant as the man she had
    9
    The footage from the MassMutual Center (MassMutual) also
    depicts two females standing in front of the United Bank,
    looking across Main Street.
    10
    One of these officers identified the defendant in court.
    In her ruling on the defendant's motion to suppress the
    identifications, the judge also observed that the man in the
    videotape bore a close resemblance to the defendant.
    9
    seen that night and in the videotape. 11,12   At trial, both
    witnesses watched the restaurant videotape and provided in-court
    identifications of the defendant as the man in the videotape and
    the man they had seen that night.
    In addition to the introduction of the restaurant videotape
    and MassMutual footage at trial, other evidence corroborated the
    identification of the defendant as the man in the videotapes and
    the man the two women had seen that night.     A security officer
    had seen the defendant in a park near Tower Square at
    approximately 8:20 P.M. on July 26 and had asked him to leave
    because he was drinking beer.    Surveillance footage of the park
    admitted at trial revealed a man who closely resembled, both in
    physical appearance and attire, the man in the restaurant
    videotape and fit the description the two women had provided.       A
    Springfield police officer also had observed the defendant, whom
    he recognized from a police department homeless initiative, at
    11
    Torres also identified the defendant as the man at the
    showup.
    12
    According to the evidence presented at the hearing on the
    defendant's motion to suppress the identification, the array
    included the defendant's photograph along with others selected
    by a police detective from a group of computer-generated
    photographs of men between the ages of forty-eight and fifty-two
    and who matched other characteristics of the defendant. Each
    woman was told that the man she had seen may or may not be among
    the photographs, and that she should inform the officer if she
    recognized anyone.
    10
    approximately 11:30 P.M. on July 26 wearing khaki-colored pants
    and a dark blue or black T-shirt with a white emblem on it.
    Another individual testified that he had been in the park
    on the morning of July 27 and had seen the defendant there, whom
    he had seen around and knew to be homeless.     Surveillance
    footage of the park showed the defendant, who fit the women's
    description. 13
    2.    State of mind evidence.   The Commonwealth also
    introduced evidence of several incidents within the sixteen-hour
    period preceding the murder to establish that the defendant was
    in a hostile and aggressive state of mind at the time of the
    murder.     On July 26, at approximately 11 A.M., the defendant was
    discharged from Providence Hospital after he had engaged in
    disruptive and violent behavior, including turning over the
    furniture in the television room, throwing a chair into the
    hallway, shouting obscenities, and threatening to kill people.
    At approximately 4 P.M. that day, the defendant had caused a
    disruption in a local supermarket, where he was "looming over" a
    female customer, shouting in her ear and saying that he wanted
    to kill her and kill Hispanics, and that he was drug-addicted
    and was going to start killing people because they made him
    sick.     The store manager, who described the defendant as
    13
    In the footage and accompanying still images, the
    defendant's shirt is on backwards and inside out.
    11
    "unstable and dangerous," cautiously walked him to the front of
    the store, where police officers escorted him away.       At
    approximately 8 P.M., the defendant appeared on a surveillance
    videotape in a park near Tower Square, a few blocks from the
    intersection of State and Main Streets, apparently chasing two
    other men out of the park, before he was asked to leave by a
    security officer for drinking beer.     Finally, at approximately
    11 P.M., the defendant went to McCaffrey's Public House, a bar
    on Main Street just south of State Street, and ordered a beer.
    As he left, he had an outburst, appearing suddenly angry and
    shouting that everyone in the bar was "human scum."
    Discussion.   We begin by addressing the evidentiary issues
    and then turn to the defendant's remaining claims.
    1.   Evidentiary issues.   a.   Motion to suppress
    identifications.   The defendant contends that the judge erred in
    denying his motion to suppress both out-of-court and prospective
    in-court identifications made by the percipient witnesses,
    Torres and Vazquez, which he alleges were the product of
    unnecessarily suggestive procedures. 14   There was no error in the
    denial of the motion and subsequent admission of the
    identifications.
    14
    The defendant was represented by counsel at the hearing
    on his motion to suppress. After the denial of the motion, the
    defendant proceeded pro se and filed a motion "to disallow the
    prosecution from seeking in-court identification of defendant
    from crime scene witnesses." This motion was denied.
    12
    The identification process testified to at trial, as
    outlined above, was virtually identical to the evidence
    presented at the motion to suppress hearing and summarized by
    the judge in her memorandum of decision.   In a written order,
    the judge concluded that the defendant's motion to suppress the
    identifications failed on two grounds.    First, to the extent the
    defendant challenged the showup, this identification actually
    could assist the defendant by casting doubt on the defendant's
    identity as the perpetrator.   Further, the showup was not
    unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken
    identification procedures.
    Second, the identifications made from the photographic
    array, following the videotape screening, did not violate the
    defendant's due process rights, because credible evidence
    established that both of the women had a good opportunity to
    observe the defendant, including his features and clothing, near
    the time and place of the crime, for several moments as he
    approached them; the identifications were made within a
    reasonable time following the women's initial observation of the
    perpetrator; the police complied with neutral identification
    procedures; and the police made no attempt to suggest to the
    women that the defendant was a suspect.
    On appeal, the defendant asserts that by showing the women
    the videotape, which depicted a single individual who appeared
    13
    very similar to the defendant, immediately prior to conducting
    the photographic array, the police engaged in an unnecessarily
    suggestive procedure that encouraged the women to select the
    photograph that most closely resembled the man in the videotape
    rather than the man they had seen that night.    Instead, the
    defendant contends, the police should have conducted the
    photographic array first, or waited until the defendant was
    arrested and conducted a lineup.
    "In reviewing a ruling on a motion to suppress, we accept
    the judge's subsidiary findings of fact absent clear error, 'but
    conduct an independent review of [her] ultimate findings and
    conclusions of law.'"    Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    440 Mass. 642
    , 646
    (2004), quoting Commonwealth v. Jimenez, 
    438 Mass. 213
    , 218
    (2002).   See also Commonwealth v. Moon, 
    380 Mass. 751
    , 756
    (1980) ("The determination of the weight and credibility of the
    testimony is the function and responsibility of the judge who
    saw the witnesses").     We are not persuaded that the judge erred
    in denying the motion.
    An identification stemming from a videotape containing only
    one individual is analogous to a one-on-one identification,
    which is considered inherently suggestive.    See Commonwealth v.
    Austin, 
    421 Mass. 357
    , 361 (1995).    A one-on-one pretrial
    identification raises due process concerns only if it is
    "unnecessarily suggestive of the defendant . . . so as to give
    14
    rise to a very substantial likelihood of a mistaken
    identification" (citations omitted).    Moon, 
    380 Mass. at 758
    ,
    and cases cited.   To suppress an identification, the defendant
    must prove by a preponderance of the evidence, in light of the
    totality of the circumstances, that the identification procedure
    employed was "so unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to
    irreparable misidentification that its admission would deprive
    the defendant of his right to due process."    Commonwealth v.
    Walker, 
    460 Mass. 590
    , 599 (2011), and cases cited.
    In assessing the suggestiveness of an identification, we
    consider "whether good reason exists for the police to use a
    one-on-one identification procedure."    Austin, 421 Mass. at 361.
    Here, the police had reason to believe that the defendant was
    the man the women had seen, based on an officer's identification
    of him in the restaurant videotape.    However, they wanted to
    confirm that they were viewing the correct time frame in the
    videotape and that the man in the videotape was indeed the man
    the women had seen.   See id. at 362, citing Commonwealth v.
    Barnett, 
    371 Mass. 87
    , 92 (1976), cert. denied, 
    429 U.S. 1049
    (1977) (good reason includes "usefulness of prompt confirmation
    of the accuracy of investigatory information, which, if in
    error, will release the police quickly to follow another
    track").   Conducting the photographic array prior to showing the
    videotape would require the police to create the array with the
    15
    assumption that they were correct that the man in the videotape,
    whom they believed to be the defendant, was the same man whom
    the women had seen that night.     By showing the women the
    videotape first, the police were able to confirm this assumption
    and then proceed to the next step in the identification process.
    Had the women not identified the defendant in the photographic
    array, the police would have at least confirmed that the
    videotape footage offered a reliable representation of the
    perpetrator.    Cf. Austin, supra at 362 (police may consider
    reliability of percipient witnesses in determining
    identification procedures). 15
    As to the propriety of the array itself, we decline to
    disturb the judge's ruling.      The police appear to have complied
    with the guidance set forth in Commonwealth v. Silva-Santiago,
    
    453 Mass. 782
    , 797-799 (2009), including informing the witnesses
    that the perpetrator may or may not be in the photographs,
    avoiding any suggestion or influence of the witnesses in their
    selection, and employing a permissible display of photographs by
    handing the set to each witness and instructing her to view them
    individually.    We defer to the judge's determination that the
    photographic array was "fair and reasonable," and "untainted by
    15
    Even if conducting the photographic array first or using
    a lineup would have been a reasonable alternative, "[f]ailure of
    the police to pursue alternate identification procedures does
    not in itself render an identification unduly suggestive."
    Commonwealth v. Martin, 
    447 Mass. 274
    , 280 (2006).
    16
    any suggestion of who the assailant might be."       See Silva-
    Santiago, supra at 795 (array not unduly suggestive where "men
    depicted therein possess reasonably similar features and
    characteristics"). 16
    The defendant's emphasis on the possibility that the women
    identified in the array the man from the videotape, rather than
    the man they had seen that night, is a challenge to the weight
    of the identifications and not their admissibility.       See
    Commonwealth v. Sullivan, 
    436 Mass. 799
    , 806-807 (2002).        Any
    potential issues with the women's ability to perceive the man
    who walked down the street and who was stopped at the puddle, or
    to recognize the man in the videotape or identify him in the
    photographic array, or any inconsistencies between their
    identifications and the other evidence presented, such as the
    videotape footage, could have been raised through cross-
    examination.     See Walker, 460 Mass. at 606-607.    The judge
    properly reserved an assessment of the weight of the
    identifications and the credibility of the witnesses for the
    jury.     See id.; Commonwealth v. Odware, 
    429 Mass. 231
    , 236
    16
    The Springfield police detective who prepared the array
    testified that he had tried to select photographs of other men
    who resembled the defendant. On cross-examination of the
    witnesses, defense counsel permissibly but unsuccessfully sought
    to demonstrate that the other photographs did not resemble the
    defendant.
    17
    (1999), quoting Commonwealth v. Martin, 
    399 Mass. 201
    , 208
    (1987).
    b.   Admissibility of prior bad acts.   The defendant next
    asserts that the judge erred in admitting, over objection, the
    evidence of the four instances of aggressive conduct by the
    defendant within the sixteen-hour period preceding the murder
    because they were irrelevant to the issue of identification and
    unduly prejudicial, suggesting only that the defendant had a bad
    temper and a propensity to commit such crimes.    We agree with
    the Commonwealth that this evidence was properly admitted to
    show the defendant's state of mind and motive and was properly
    and thoroughly limited to this purpose by the trial judge.
    Evidence of a defendant's prior bad acts is inadmissible to
    show a propensity to commit the crime or to illustrate bad
    character.   Commonwealth v. Triplett, 
    398 Mass. 561
    , 562 (1986),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Helfant, 
    398 Mass. 214
    , 224 (1986);
    Commonwealth v. Trapp, 
    396 Mass. 202
    , 206 (1985), S.C., 
    423 Mass. 202
     (1996), cert. denied, 
    519 U.S. 1045
     (1996), and cases
    cited.    However, such evidence may be admissible if it is
    relevant for some other purpose, such as "common scheme, pattern
    of operation, identity, intent, or motive," as long as its
    probative value is not substantially outweighed by its
    prejudicial effect.    Commonwealth v. Marrero, 
    427 Mass. 65
    , 67
    (1998), and cases cited.    We will not disturb a judge's exercise
    18
    of her sound discretion in conducting this balancing absent
    palpable error.   Id. at 68, quoting Commonwealth v. Valentin,
    
    420 Mass. 263
    , 270 (1995).
    The defendant challenges the admission of testimony that he
    was physically or verbally abusive to his environment or to
    those around him on four occasions on July 26:    at the hospital
    at approximately 11 A.M., at the supermarket at approximately
    4 P.M., at the park at approximately 8 P.M., 17 and at the bar at
    approximately 11 P.M. 18   Prior to ruling on the admissibility,
    the judge carefully considered over the course of several days
    the probative value of the evidence as to the defendant's state
    of mind and motive in relation to its potential for prejudice. 19
    17
    The judge also permitted the use of the footage from the
    park for identification purposes, as it would show the defendant
    at approximately 8 P.M. in attire that matched the percipient
    witnesses' description.
    18
    The judge did not permit the use of evidence regarding an
    incident in the park after the murder, at approximately 8 A.M.
    on July 27, to show the defendant's state of mind, but did
    permit it for the purpose of showing that the defendant was
    wearing the same attire as in the witnesses' description and
    that his T-shirt was on backwards.
    19
    The judge heard arguments on the Commonwealth's motion in
    limine on the first day of trial. Revisiting the issue prior to
    opening statements on the second day, she observed that the
    conduct evidence had probative value as to the defendant's state
    of mind, but that she was unsure whether the probative value
    outweighed the prejudicial effect. The judge asked the
    Commonwealth not to refer to this evidence in its opening
    because she wanted to reserve decision on the issue until she
    had heard some of the evidence. On the second day of trial,
    after three witnesses had testified, the judge heard additional
    19
    Her reasoning and ultimate decision to admit the testimony were
    not in error.
    The evidence of the four incidents on July 26 served a
    limited and probative purpose of illustrating the defendant's
    angry state of mind in the hours preceding the murder.   See
    Commonwealth v. McGeoghean, 
    412 Mass. 839
    , 841 (1992).   Contrast
    Triplett, 
    398 Mass. at 563
     (evidence inadmissible because did
    not advance permissible purpose and only depicted defendant "as
    a violent, aggressive, and dangerous individual" guilty of crime
    charged because of bad temper).   Given the close temporal
    proximity of the incidents to each other and to the murder, and
    the similar nature of the defendant's outbursts to the
    interaction he had with Torres and Vazquez, see Commonwealth v.
    Cordle, 
    404 Mass. 733
    , 740 (1989), S.C., 
    412 Mass. 172
     (1992),
    the evidence here had a "rational link," Trapp, 
    396 Mass. at 207
    , to the women's testimony that the only man they saw on the
    street, who was unfamiliar to them, was angry and shouting
    obscenities at them.   The inferences the Commonwealth believed
    the jury could make from this prior conduct evidence were
    reasonable and possible, and advanced the Commonwealth's theory
    arguments, permitting standby counsel to argue the motion on the
    defendant's behalf given the seriousness of the issue. After
    ruling that the evidence would be admissible, she required the
    Commonwealth to demonstrate that it could "prove[] up" the
    incidents and to ensure that the evidence would be limited to
    state of mind and motive.
    20
    of the case that the defendant was in a state of mind at the
    time of the murder that led him to engage in unprovoked acts of
    hostility. 20   See Commonwealth v. Montez, 
    450 Mass. 736
    , 746
    (2008); Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    408 Mass. 811
    , 818-819 (1990).
    In addition, the judge ensured that the jury were
    instructed on numerous occasions regarding the limited purpose
    for which the evidence could be used, thereby minimizing any
    prejudicial effect. 21   See Marrero, 427 Mass. at 73.   See also
    20
    Although the judge indicated that this evidence was
    admissible only to show the defendant's state of mind, with the
    exception of the 8 P.M. incident in the park, which was also
    admissible for identity, we note that evidence of all of these
    incidents also likely would have been admissible for the purpose
    of showing the defendant's identity. The defendant's conduct at
    each location and his interaction with the percipient witnesses
    on Main Street consisted of unprovoked acts of rage and
    hostility toward strangers, in which he used similar derogatory
    and threatening language. As such, there were "meaningfully
    distinctive" elements "common to the [circumstances of the
    crime] and [the] former incidents to warrant the admission of
    evidence of prior bad acts as tending to prove that the
    defendant was the person who committed the crime charged."
    Commonwealth v. Brusgulis, 
    406 Mass. 501
    , 505, 506 (1990).
    21
    The judge carefully considered the appropriate timing of
    the limiting instructions. She stated that she would give the
    instruction with each event, unless the defendant requested a
    lesser frequency. Before the Commonwealth introduced the
    evidence, the judge provided a preview instruction, as requested
    by the defendant, informing the jury that the evidence could be
    used only for a limited purpose that would be explained later.
    With each witness, the judge reminded the jury of the limited
    use. When the Commonwealth finished presenting its evidence on
    these incidents, the judge provided a lengthy instruction,
    specifically mentioning each piece of testimony and informing
    the jury that the evidence could be used for the defendant's
    state of mind and motive, but not for proof of an act, bad
    character, or propensity. Later, when the Commonwealth called
    21
    McGeoghean, 412 Mass. at 842.     The judge did not err in
    admitting the evidence in this limited capacity.
    c.     Motion for required finding.   At the close of the
    Commonwealth's case, the defendant moved for a required finding
    of not guilty, which the judge denied without discussion. 22     The
    defendant contends on appeal that this denial was in error
    because the evidence presented merely placed the defendant in
    the general proximity of the crime scene but nothing more.       We
    disagree.    The evidence and the reasonable inferences drawn
    therefrom were sufficient to warrant a finding that the
    defendant was guilty of murder.    The judge properly denied the
    motion and left the assessment of the weight and credibility of
    the evidence for the jury.    See Commonwealth v. Semedo, 
    456 Mass. 1
    , 8 (2010), and cases cited; Commonwealth v. Martino, 
    412 Mass. 267
    , 272 (1992), and cases cited.
    "In reviewing the denial of the motion, we consider the
    evidence, together with permissible inferences from that
    evidence, in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth and
    'determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found
    one additional witness regarding the supermarket incident, the
    judge reminded the jury of the limiting instruction. In the
    specific instructions at the end of trial, the judge again
    provided direction to the jury regarding the use of the evidence
    for the limited purpose of state of mind and motive.
    22
    Because the defendant did not present any evidence, the
    judge determined that renewal of the motion was not necessary
    and denied the motion at the close of the Commonwealth's case.
    22
    the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.'"
    Commonwealth v. Platt, 
    440 Mass. 396
    , 400 (2003), quoting
    Cordle, 
    412 Mass. at 175
    .    See Commonwealth v. Latimore, 
    378 Mass. 671
    , 677 (1979).   The Commonwealth must have presented
    sufficient evidence "as a matter of law to sustain a conviction
    on the charge" of murder in the first or second degree.        Mass.
    R. Crim. P. 25(a), 
    378 Mass. 896
     (1979).      As long as the
    inferences are "reasonable and possible," the evidence may be
    wholly circumstantial.   See Commonwealth v. Linton, 
    456 Mass. 534
    , 544 (2010), quoting Commonwealth v. Lao, 
    443 Mass. 770
    , 779
    (2005), S.C., 
    450 Mass. 215
     (2007), and 
    460 Mass. 12
     (2011).
    The jury reasonably could have concluded beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant was the only person with the
    opportunity to murder the victim.      See Commonwealth v. Merola,
    
    405 Mass. 529
    , 535 (1989).      They could have credited the
    percipient witnesses' statements that they saw only one person,
    a middle-aged man with blondish-gray hair in tan pants and a
    black T-shirt with white lettering, while they were walking on
    Main Street, and that the desolation of the street was supported
    by the MassMutual footage. 23    They could have credited further
    23
    We reject the defendant's contention that the MassMutual
    footage supports entry of a finding of not guilty because it
    calls into question the percipient witnesses' credibility. The
    MassMutual footage not only is difficult to parse from a timing
    perspective but also is not inconsistent with the witnesses'
    accounts of what happened that night. See Commonwealth v. Lao,
    23
    the percipient witnesses' testimony that they saw this one man
    walking toward Bliss Street on the west side of Main Street and
    then observed him washing his hands in a puddle, mere feet from
    the victim, whom they had seen alive minutes earlier and covered
    in blood moments later.    The identification of the defendant as
    that man was supported not only by the women's identifications
    of him in the photographic array and at trial, but also by a
    plethora of documentary evidence and accompanying testimony
    showing that the defendant matched the description provided by
    the two women prior to their viewing of any photographs,
    videotape footage, or other images of the defendant.    Thus,
    reasonable inferences supported the conclusion that the
    defendant had the opportunity, indeed the exclusive opportunity,
    to commit the crime, not just that he was in the general area of
    the crime.   See Platt, 440 Mass. at 401 n.6 ("Commonwealth is
    not required to prove that no one but the defendant could have
    committed the crime").    Contrast Commonwealth v. Salemme, 
    395 Mass. 594
    , 600-601 (1985) (Commonwealth had not sustained burden
    where evidence presented two persons with equal opportunity to
    commit murder, and evidence did not show more than mere
    opportunity).
    
    460 Mass. 12
    , 22 (2011). Interpretation of the footage in
    relation to the witnesses' testimony was for the jury.
    24
    In addition, the Commonwealth presented sufficient
    evidence, even if circumstantial, that permitted the jury to
    make the reasonable and possible inference that the defendant
    also had a motive to commit the crime.     See Linton, 
    456 Mass. at 545
    .    From the testimony regarding the defendant's activities in
    the sixteen hours leading up to the murder, the jury could have
    concluded that the defendant was in a sustained, hostile,
    aggressive state of mind on the night of the murder, and that
    this led him to engage in an act of violence toward another
    homeless man that would otherwise seem inexplicable and
    unprovoked. 24
    The Commonwealth's case therefore was not limited to "mere
    presence at the scene of the crime," Commonwealth v. Mazza, 
    399 Mass. 395
    , 399 (1987), citing Commonwealth v. Casale, 
    381 Mass. 167
    , 173 (1980), requiring the jury to engage in "impermissible
    conjecture or surmise."    Mazza, 
    supra.
       Taking this evidence
    overall in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the
    jury reasonably could infer that the defendant stabbed the
    victim, causing his death, because he had the exclusive
    opportunity to do so, see Merola, 
    405 Mass. at 535
    , and he was
    in a hostile state of mind that gave him the motive to do so.
    24
    The jury could have made further inferences regarding
    consciousness of guilt from the evidence that the defendant's T-
    shirt had been turned inside out sometime after the murder. See
    Commonwealth v. Paradise, 
    405 Mass. 141
    , 157 (1989).
    25
    See Commonwealth v. Rojas, 
    388 Mass. 626
    , 630 n.1 (1983),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Porter, 
    384 Mass. 647
    , 653 (1981) (state
    of mind evidence, "coupled with other probable inferences, may
    be sufficient to amass the quantum of proof necessary to prove
    guilt").    Accordingly, the judge did not err in denying the
    defendant's motion.
    2.    MassMutual surveillance footage issues.   We turn next
    to the three claims presented by the defendant relating at least
    in part to the introduction of the MassMutual footage at trial.
    He argues that the delay in the Commonwealth's provision of the
    access codes for the MassMutual footage denied the defendant his
    right to a fair trial such that he was unable to present an
    adequate defense in reliance on this footage; that the judge
    erred in denying his request to recall the percipient witnesses
    after the MassMutual footage was introduced in evidence so that
    he could cross-examine them on the inconsistencies between their
    testimony and that footage; and that these inconsistencies
    demonstrate that the Commonwealth knowingly presented false
    material evidence through the two percipient witnesses'
    testimony.    We begin with a brief summary of the MassMutual
    footage in relation to the percipient witnesses' testimony.
    Vazquez testified that she and Torres had reached the
    southwest corner of the intersection of State and Main Streets
    when they saw the man walking toward them, about to cross State
    26
    Street, shouting obscenities at them.    Torres reported that they
    first saw the man as he was passing the restaurant, and that
    they crossed the street once they were within ten to fifteen
    feet of him.   Both Vazquez and Torres testified that they saw no
    one else on the street that night other than the man and the
    victim.
    The MassMutual footage consists of images collected by a
    moving camera following a predetermined loop.    The camera was
    set to pan the street from the northeast corner of State and
    Main Streets, across Main Street, and then from north to south
    along Main Street. 25   According to the defendant's interpretation
    of the MassMutual footage, there are several discrepancies
    between the witnesses' testimony and the footage.    When the
    person identified as the defendant was walking toward State
    Street on the west side of Main Street, at the time at which
    Torres and Vazquez said they first saw him, 26 the two women were
    "absent from the scene."    In addition, the footage seems to show
    several other persons in the area shortly before the time at
    which the man identified as the defendant was seen on the
    25
    The color footage captured figures, but was not
    sufficiently detailed to enable an identification based on the
    footage alone.
    26
    There was some discrepancy between the time stamps on the
    videotape from the restaurant and the MassMutual footage. This
    made it somewhat difficult to rely on precise time stamps at
    trial.
    27
    videotape:   one standing in the doorway of the restaurant, one
    walking north near the bank at the southeast corner of State and
    Main Streets, and one walking north on the sidewalk directly
    under the MassMutual camera.   The defendant suggests that this
    documentary evidence is sufficiently clear to render the
    testimony of Torres and Vazquez unreliable and not credible.     At
    trial, however, he argued that the quality of the footage was so
    poor that it could not be relied on for identification purposes.
    Our own review of the still images of the MassMutual
    footage indicates that the content was open to interpretation
    and did not definitively establish that the defendant could not
    have committed the crime.   Accordingly, its interpretation, in
    relation to the other evidence presented at trial, was properly
    reserved for the jury.   It is with this understanding that we
    proceed to address each of the defendant's related claims.
    a.   Untimely disclosure of access codes.   The defendant
    first contends that the Commonwealth delayed in disclosing the
    access codes necessary to view the MassMutual footage, thereby
    denying the defendant of due process of law by preventing him
    from learning the value of that evidence.
    When the Commonwealth began to introduce the MassMutual
    footage at trial, the defendant requested sidebar and indicated
    that he was unsure if he had had the opportunity to review the
    footage that would be shown.   The Commonwealth explained that it
    28
    would be introducing the MassMutual footage from July 27 between
    3 A.M. and 3:30 A.M., which had been provided to the defense,
    and described what the footage would depict.   The defendant
    consulted with standby counsel and stated, "[A]s I understand
    it, there is nothing in there I haven't been made aware of, so I
    withdraw my objection."   The footage was introduced in evidence
    and shown to the jury without further objection. 27
    The defendant claims on appeal that he lacked sufficient
    time to review the footage and learn its evidentiary value, and
    that he had made known to the court the delay in receiving the
    access codes through several motions prior to trial.   Had he had
    more time, the defendant asserts, he could have prepared a more
    cogent defense that challenged the credibility of the percipient
    witnesses' testimony by way of the MassMutual footage.
    Because the defendant did not object when the footage was
    introduced at trial, and because he had a fair opportunity to
    raise this claim in his motion for a new trial but did not do
    so, 28 we consider the claim waived, see Commonwealth v. LeFave,
    27
    The defendant did object to the subsequent admission of
    still images from the MassMutual footage, claiming that they had
    no probative value because they were too indecipherable to
    permit identification, and were overly prejudicial because they
    would lead the jury to speculate. The judge overruled the
    objection and permitted the introduction of the images.
    28
    The MassMutual footage also was discussed at the
    evidentiary hearing on the defendant's motion to suppress prior
    to trial. At no point during the hearing or during trial did
    29
    
    430 Mass. 169
    , 172-173 (1999), quoting Commonwealth v. Amirault,
    
    424 Mass. 618
    , 639, 644 (1997), and accordingly review the
    alleged error for a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of
    justice.    See Commonwealth v. Randolph, 
    438 Mass. 290
    , 294
    (2002).
    The Commonwealth is required to disclose exculpatory,
    material evidence "at such a time as to allow the defense to use
    the favorable material effectively in the preparation and
    presentation of its case."     Commonwealth v. Wilson, 
    381 Mass. 90
    , 107 (1980), quoting United States v. Pollack, 
    534 F.2d 964
    ,
    973 (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied, 
    429 U.S. 924
     (1976).     Where such
    evidence is disclosed belatedly, "it is the consequences of the
    delay that matter, not the likely impact [of the evidence]."
    Id. at 114.    Even assuming that there was a meaningful delay in
    the disclosure of the access codes, the defendant has not
    demonstrated how, with more timely disclosure, he "would have
    been able to prepare and present [his] case in such a manner as
    to create a reasonable doubt that would not otherwise have
    existed."    Id.   The defendant had ample opportunity to cross-
    examine witnesses about the MassMutual footage and to
    incorporate references to the footage in his opening and closing
    arguments.    See Commonwealth v. Cundriff, 
    382 Mass. 137
    , 150-151
    the defendant or his counsel express concern that the MassMutual
    footage had not been sufficiently disclosed.
    30
    (1980), cert. denied, 
    451 U.S. 973
     (1981).    As such, he has
    failed to show any prejudice, let alone that any delay caused a
    substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.
    b.   Request to recall witnesses.   We next consider whether
    the judge erred in denying the defendant's request to recall the
    percipient witnesses in the presentation of the defense.
    Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion to expand the
    witness list to include Vazquez and Torres.    The judge noted
    that they were already on the witness list and confirmed that
    the defendant understood this.    The Commonwealth's presentation
    of evidence proceeded as follows.    The Commonwealth called
    Torres as the second witness and introduced the restaurant
    videotape through her.   The defendant cross-examined the witness
    on her account of what had happened that night, the description
    she provided of the man she had seen, the showup, her viewing of
    the restaurant videotape, and the photographic array.    Vazquez
    was called on the second day of evidence, and the defendant
    cross-examined her as well.    Later that day, the MassMutual
    footage was admitted through Springfield police Sergeant Roy
    Carter.
    On the third day of evidence, when the Commonwealth
    expected to rest, the parties spoke with the judge regarding the
    presentation of the defense.    The defendant indicated that he
    wanted to recall Torres and Vazquez because he wanted to
    31
    introduce their witness statements and wanted to discuss the
    issue of mistaken identification.   The judge stated that the
    defendant had had an opportunity to do this on cross-examination
    of both witnesses.   The defendant responded that there was "a
    little bit of misunderstanding" because he believed that during
    the Commonwealth's case-in-chief, his cross-examination was
    limited to the direct testimony, and that as a result he did not
    ask all of the questions he had wanted to.   The judge stated
    that the defendant's cross-examination had gone beyond the scope
    of direct examination, and she did "not accept [his]
    representation" regarding the scope of his cross-examination of
    them.   She concluded that he "had a full and fair opportunity,
    which [he] used to cross-examine the identifying witnesses on
    all aspects," and that he simply wanted "a second bite at the
    apple to do that which [he had] already done."   She therefore
    denied the defendant's request to recall the percipient
    witnesses.   The judge did, however, permit the introduction of
    the written statements made by Torres and Vazquez to the police
    on July 27 and 28, because the statements were relevant and the
    women had authenticated them in their testimony.
    The defendant challenged the judge's ruling in his pro se
    motion for a new trial under Mass. R. Crim. P. 30 (b), as
    appearing in 
    435 Mass. 1501
     (2001), which the judge refused to
    consider because it had not been filed by the appellate counsel
    32
    who represented him at the time.   Two years later and through
    new appellate counsel, the defendant filed another motion for a
    new trial and for an evidentiary hearing, which was considered
    and denied by the judge.   In that motion, he asserted that the
    judge's denial of his request to recall the percipient witnesses
    deprived him of his right to present a defense.
    In denying the motion, the judge, who was also the trial
    judge, recognized that the defendant had represented himself,
    with the assistance of standby counsel, and that the central
    issue at trial was identification.   She noted that the defendant
    had engaged in vigorous cross- and recross-examination with each
    of the percipient witnesses that was "thorough and repetitious."
    Revisiting the discussion they had had regarding the defendant's
    request to recall, she stated that the defendant had not offered
    any reason why recall was necessary other than that it was his
    right to do so.   In his motion for a new trial, he provided no
    new explanation and no legal authority for his request.   On
    appeal, the defendant again contends that the judge's ruling
    denied him the opportunity to examine the percipient witnesses,
    specifically regarding the MassMutual footage.
    We review the judge's denial of the motion for a new trial
    for "a significant error of law or other abuse of discretion."
    Commonwealth v. Grace, 
    397 Mass. 303
    , 307 (1986).   We give
    special deference to the rulings of a motion judge who was also
    33
    the trial judge.    
    Id.
        The manner and order of the presentation
    of evidence and the interrogation of witnesses is entrusted to
    the sound discretion of the trial judge.     See Mass. G. Evid.
    § 611(a) (2014).    This includes the determination "[w]hether or
    not a witness should be recalled in a criminal case."
    Commonwealth v. Hicks, 
    375 Mass. 274
    , 276 (1978), citing
    Commonwealth v. Williams, 
    5 Mass. App. Ct. 809
    , 809-810 (1977).
    Recall is appropriate if the defendant would otherwise be
    "unreasonably deprive[d] . . . of an opportunity to present
    newly discovered information material to the defense."     Hicks,
    
    supra at 276-277
    .
    The judge did not abuse her discretion here.     The defendant
    has presented no explanation, either at trial, in his motion for
    a new trial, or on appeal, for why he could not have questioned
    the witnesses who testified after the introduction of the
    MassMutual footage and still images about the presence of
    another person around the time of the crime and the
    inconsistencies between the footage and the percipient
    witnesses' testimony. 29    Indeed, as the judge observed in denying
    29
    The MassMutual footage and still images were introduced
    through Springfield police Sergeant Roy Carter, who was
    responsible for preparing and overseeing video evidence for the
    Springfield police department. Sergeant Carter went through the
    images in his testimony and described what he saw in each one of
    them. Effective cross-examination of him could have revealed
    discrepancies between the footage and the percipient witnesses'
    testimony. After Sergeant Carter, the Commonwealth called four
    34
    the motion for a new trial, the defendant engaged in vigorous
    cross- and recross-examination of both percipient witnesses.    As
    discussed above, the defendant had access to the footage and was
    aware of its contents before trial.   He was therefore not denied
    his constitutional right to confront the witnesses against him,
    or the opportunity to challenge the witnesses' credibility and
    the truth or accuracy of their testimony.   See Commonwealth v.
    Miles, 
    420 Mass. 67
    , 71 (1995); Commonwealth v. Tanso, 
    411 Mass. 640
    , 650, cert. denied, 
    505 U.S. 1221
     (1992).
    Even if the judge had abused her discretion or otherwise
    erred in this ruling, there is no substantial likelihood of a
    miscarriage of justice.   As the Commonwealth emphasizes, the
    defendant was free to present his interpretation of the
    MassMutual footage in his closing argument and to emphasize its
    inconsistencies with the percipient witnesses' testimony.   See
    Commonwealth v. Murchison, 
    418 Mass. 58
    , 59-60 (1994).    Indeed,
    the defendant emphasized a misidentification defense in his
    opening and closing statements and in his questioning of the
    Commonwealth's witnesses.
    additional Springfield police officers who were involved in the
    case in varying respects and who could have been cross-examined
    regarding accounts of what had happened that night to
    demonstrate to the jury that there were inconsistencies in
    relation to the MassMutual footage. The defendant declined to
    cross-examine two of these witnesses.
    35
    We reach this conclusion fully aware that the defendant
    chose to represent himself at trial, with the assistance of
    standby counsel, and may not have had sufficient familiarity
    with the rules of criminal procedure and the permissible scope
    of cross-examination to put forth the strongest defense
    possible.   However, a pro se criminal defendant is bound by the
    same substantive and procedural rules as attorneys.    See
    Commonwealth v. Jackson, 
    419 Mass. 716
    , 719 (1995), citing
    Commonwealth v. Barnes, 
    399 Mass. 385
    , 392 (1987).    Throughout
    trial, the defendant had the benefit of standby counsel and was
    encouraged by the judge to consult with him, which he did at all
    stages of the trial. 30   Where the defendant was deemed competent
    to represent himself by the judge after thorough inquiry, 31 see
    30
    Prior to trial, the judge gave the defendant general
    guidance about his self-representation and assisted him in
    resolving an issue with access to his materials in the jail. In
    a few instances, standby counsel spoke on behalf of the
    defendant. Our review of the transcripts also suggests that the
    Commonwealth showed no signs of disrespect or ill-will toward
    the defendant and his decision to proceed pro se. See
    Commonwealth v. Jackson, 
    419 Mass. 716
    , 721 (1995) (Commonwealth
    did not take advantage of defendant's pro se status).
    31
    Prior to trial, the defendant underwent a competency
    assessment, withstood a hearing, and engaged in a lengthy
    colloquy with the judge regarding his competency to stand trial
    and represent himself. The judge took the defendant's request
    to proceed pro se seriously but warned him of the disadvantages
    and challenges of self-representation, particularly in such a
    grave matter, and ensured that he understood the choice he was
    making. We are satisfied that the judge treated the defendant's
    voluntary waiver of counsel with appropriate care and caution.
    See Commonwealth v. Means, 
    454 Mass. 81
    , 89 (2009) ("judge must
    36
    Commonwealth v. Means, 
    454 Mass. 81
    , 89-90 (2009), and he chose
    to exercise his constitutional right to do so, we decline to
    find that any errors or inadequacies in that self-representation
    gave rise to a substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of
    justice.    Such errors "were inherent in the risk he assumed."
    Jackson, supra at 721.     To conclude otherwise would compromise
    the right to waive the "guiding hand of counsel" afforded by
    art. 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights.      See id. at
    719, quoting Powell v. Alabama, 
    287 U.S. 45
    , 69 (1932).        See
    also Means, supra at 89.
    c.    False testimony. 32   Finally, the defendant asserts that
    the Commonwealth wrongly introduced the testimony of the
    percipient witnesses, Torres and Vazquez, when it knew that
    their testimony was false material evidence in light of the
    MassMutual footage.     He claims, as discussed above, that the
    MassMutual footage demonstrates that Torres and Vazquez did not
    cross paths with the defendant at the time and place they said
    that they did, and that there is a person moving south in the
    footage at 3:12 A.M., according to the time stamp, while Torres
    and Vazquez were not in sight.      Therefore, the defendant
    ensure by careful inquiry on the record" that waiver is made
    voluntarily and with understanding of magnitude of undertaking,
    and that defendant appreciates seriousness of charge and
    potential penalties).
    32
    Appellate counsel disassociated himself from this
    argument, pursuant to Commonwealth v. Moffett, 
    383 Mass. 201
    ,
    217 (1981).
    37
    contends that the women lied in their descriptions of what
    happened that night, both in regard to their proximity to the
    defendant and to the absence of any other persons in the area.
    Further, the defendant contends that in viewing the footage in
    advance of trial, the Commonwealth was aware that Torres and
    Vazquez had committed perjury related to the sole material issue
    in the case, the identification of the perpetrator, because it
    objectively could have determined that their testimony was false
    from the MassMutual footage.
    The Commonwealth may not present testimony at trial "which
    [it] knows or should know is false."   Commonwealth v. Sullivan,
    
    410 Mass. 521
    , 532 (1991), S.C., ante 340 (2014), citing Napue
    v. Illinois, 
    360 U.S. 264
    , 269 (1959).   However, the
    Commonwealth need not "make an independent credibility
    determination as to each witness prior to presenting that
    witness."   Sullivan, 
    supra.
       As long as the Commonwealth has not
    acted improperly in procuring or presenting evidence, it may
    leave for the jury the determination whether a witness is
    telling the truth.   See 
    id.
    Where there is "evidence indicative of innocence in the
    form of documents, photographs, or other physically-verifiable
    items," which we are in as good a position to assess as the
    jury, we may make an exception to our general rule that we "look
    to the jury to weigh the identification testimony against the
    38
    evidence offered to support a defense."   Commonwealth v.
    Vaughan, 
    23 Mass. App. Ct. 40
    , 43 (1986).   We have reviewed the
    still images from the MassMutual footage and do not find that
    that they are so indicative of the defendant's innocence as to
    require our intrusion on the role of the jury.    See Commonwealth
    v. Barbosa, 
    463 Mass. 116
    , 132 (2012).
    Nor are we persuaded that the testimony at issue was
    objectively false, as the defendant contends.    Torres and
    Vazquez were percipient witnesses who were in the immediate
    vicinity at the time of the crime and reported it to the police.
    The story told by the MassMutual footage is not sufficiently
    clear or contradictory that it would lead the Commonwealth to
    believe that the testimony from Torres and Vazquez regarding
    what they saw that night was false.   Minor inconsistences do not
    constitute falsities.   Such inconsistencies may be due to any
    number of factors, including confusion, the passage of time, or
    poor perception, see Commonwealth v. Daigle, 
    379 Mass. 541
    , 546-
    547 (1980), and they may be highlighted through cross-
    examination or rebuttal evidence.   There is no "requirement that
    evidence interlock with precision."   Commonwealth v. Nhut Huynh,
    
    452 Mass. 481
    , 488 (2008).   An assessment of the credibility of
    the witnesses in relation to a reasonable interpretation of the
    documentary evidence was a proper task for the jury.    
    Id.
       We
    therefore reject the defendant's contention that the
    39
    Commonwealth knowingly used false testimony that reasonably
    could have affected the judgment of the jury.      See Napue, 
    360 U.S. at 269
    ; Commonwealth v. Gilday, 
    367 Mass. 474
    , 490 (1975).
    3.   General Laws c. 278, § 33E.   We have reviewed the
    entire record and discern no reason to exercise our powers under
    G. L. c. 278, § 33E.    The judge was thoughtful and careful,
    cognizant that the defendant was proceeding pro se and
    appropriately suggesting that he consult with standby counsel on
    more difficult legal issues.
    Conclusion.   In sum, we reject the defendant's evidentiary
    arguments and conclude that the judge's rulings before and
    during trial were sound.    Further, we discern no error in the
    admission of the MassMutual footage and the testimony of the
    percipient witnesses.    We affirm the defendant's conviction and
    the denial of his motion for a new trial.
    So ordered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: SJC 10991

Citation Numbers: 469 Mass. 469, 14 N.E.3d 900

Judges: Ireland, Cordy, Botsford, Gants, Duffly

Filed Date: 8/22/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/10/2024

Authorities (34)

Commonwealth v. Gilday , 367 Mass. 474 ( 1975 )

Commonwealth v. Hicks , 375 Mass. 274 ( 1978 )

Commonwealth v. Brusgulis , 406 Mass. 501 ( 1990 )

Commonwealth v. Mazza , 399 Mass. 395 ( 1987 )

Commonwealth v. Cordle , 412 Mass. 172 ( 1992 )

Commonwealth v. Moffett , 383 Mass. 201 ( 1981 )

Commonwealth v. Murchison , 418 Mass. 58 ( 1994 )

Commonwealth v. Paradise , 405 Mass. 141 ( 1989 )

Commonwealth v. Daigle , 379 Mass. 541 ( 1980 )

Commonwealth v. Martino , 412 Mass. 267 ( 1992 )

Commonwealth v. Rojas , 388 Mass. 626 ( 1983 )

Commonwealth v. Sullivan , 410 Mass. 521 ( 1991 )

Commonwealth v. Porter , 384 Mass. 647 ( 1981 )

Commonwealth v. Triplett , 398 Mass. 561 ( 1986 )

Commonwealth v. Semedo , 456 Mass. 1 ( 2010 )

Commonwealth v. Linton , 456 Mass. 534 ( 2010 )

Commonwealth v. Merola , 405 Mass. 529 ( 1989 )

Commonwealth v. Moon , 380 Mass. 751 ( 1980 )

Commonwealth v. Scott , 408 Mass. 811 ( 1990 )

Napue v. Illinois , 79 S. Ct. 1173 ( 1959 )

View All Authorities »