Commonwealth v. Matos , 95 Mass. App. Ct. 343 ( 2019 )


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    revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound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
    17-P-1380                                               Appeals Court
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   NICHOLAS MATOS.
    No. 17-P-1380.
    Bristol.       December 10, 2018. - May 23, 2019.
    Present:     Green, C.J., Wolohojian, & Wendlandt, JJ.
    Robbery. Assault and Battery. Identification. Evidence,
    Identification, Photograph, Argument by prosecutor.
    Practice, Criminal, Identification of defendant in
    courtroom, Instructions to jury, Witness, Argument by
    prosecutor.
    Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on May 21, 2015.
    The cases were tried before Thomas F. McGuire, Jr., J.
    K. Hayne Barnwell for the defendant.
    Stephen C. Nadeau, Jr., Assistant District Attorney, for
    the Commonwealth.
    WOLOHOJIAN, J.     The defendant was convicted after a jury
    trial of unarmed robbery (G. L. c. 265, § 19 [b]) and assault
    and battery (G. L. c. 265, § 13A).     On appeal, he argues that
    evidence he terms in-court and out-of-court identifications was
    2
    erroneously admitted.   He also contends that the judge erred in
    failing to give a specific unanimity instruction with respect to
    the unarmed robbery charge.    Finally, he contends that various
    improprieties in the prosecutor's closing argument require
    reversal of his convictions.    We affirm.
    Background.    We summarize the trial evidence as the jury
    could have found it.    Around 5:30 P.M. on March 2, 2015, Michael
    Nichols was sitting inside the main entrance of Morton Hospital
    in Taunton, having completed his shift as a technician at the
    hospital, where he had worked for eighteen years.      Nichols, who
    did not drive, was waiting for a taxicab (taxi) to take him to a
    bar where his pool league was to meet.       Nichols had several
    items with him on that particular evening:      a carrying case
    containing his pool stick, his cell phone (phone), and a
    backpack that contained various personal items, including his
    checkbook.   As he waited for the taxi, Nichols was approached by
    a white man of medium build with a darker complexion who was
    wearing a red hat, a black North Face brand jacket, and blue
    jeans.   Nichols did not know the red-hatted man, but he
    nonetheless agreed to the man's request to borrow his phone.
    The man took the phone outside and returned a few minutes later,
    saying that he had left the phone in his car.      The man also told
    Nichols that Nichols should follow him to his car in the parking
    lot to get the phone back.     Accordingly, Nichols followed the
    3
    man to his car, which was one to two hundred feet away in the
    hospital parking lot.    The man offered to drive Nichols back to
    the hospital entrance, and so Nichols got into the man's car.
    Leaving Nichols in the car, the man went inside the hospital; he
    returned about five minutes later with two other men, who got
    into the rear passenger compartment of the car.    Nichols asked
    for his phone, but the red-hatted man made no response.
    Instead, he drove a block away from the hospital and demanded
    Nichols's backpack.   When Nichols refused, the red-hatted man
    punched Nichols twice in the nose and grabbed one of the straps
    of the backpack to restrain Nichols.   Nichols managed to slip
    his arms out of the backpack and to escape from the car.     The
    man drove away with Nichols's backpack, phone, and pool stick
    case.
    A police officer happened to be nearby, and Nichols
    immediately reported to him the assault and robbery along with
    the car's license plate number and a description of the men
    involved.   Nichols was visibly upset and shaken, his nose was
    bleeding, blood was running down his face, and his lip was
    swollen.    Using the license plate number Nichols provided, the
    police determined that the car was registered to the defendant's
    girlfriend.   The police then went to the hospital, where they
    viewed video footage captured by the hospital's surveillance
    4
    system.   Still images from the hospital's surveillance system1
    were consistent with Nichols's account of what had happened.
    Those stills showed Nichols seated in the hospital lobby, a man
    approaching him wearing a red hat,2 Nichols (wearing his backpack
    and carrying his pool stick case) following a man in the
    hospital parking lot, a man in a red hat standing near the
    hospital's main lobby desk a few minutes later, and that same
    man joined by another man wearing a gray hooded coat, black
    sneakers, and white baseball cap with a "P" insignia on front.
    The following day, Taunton police arrested Jeremy Craven
    and Matthew DaSilva for shoplifting at a department store.     In
    Craven's pocket was Nichols's checkbook.    DaSilva was wearing a
    gray hooded sweatshirt and a baseball hat with a "P" insignia
    similar to those worn by the man standing with the red-hatted
    man in the hospital lobby.   The defendant was arrested several
    days later at his girlfriend's apartment.
    1 The hospital's surveillance equipment captured video
    footage, which the police viewed on the evening of the crime.
    But based on an internal policy concerning patient and employee
    confidentiality, the hospital produced to police only still
    images from the video recording. It was these still images that
    were used during the trial and the grand jury proceedings.
    2 Although this information was not admitted at trial, one
    of the investigating police officers recognized the defendant as
    the red-hatted man in the hospital surveillance video
    recordings.
    5
    Discussion.    1.   Identifications.   Because Nichols did not
    know his assailant, the identity of the man in the red hat was
    the central issue at trial.    Although the defendant identified
    the man in the red hat in the surveillance still images as the
    man who assaulted and robbed him, he never identified the red-
    hatted man as the defendant.    As a result, the Commonwealth
    sought to establish that the defendant was the man in the red
    hat (1) by having the jury themselves assess the defendant's
    resemblance to the man shown in the still images (which were
    admitted), (2) through the testimony of the defendant's mother,
    who testified that the man in the red hat shown in the still
    images was her son, the defendant, (3) through the testimony of
    the arresting officer, who identified the defendant as the man
    he arrested and as the man in the booking photograph, and (4)
    through circumstantial evidence, such as the fact that the
    vehicle used in the crime belonged to the defendant's
    girlfriend.   Because Nichols had never made an out-of-court
    identification of the defendant, the trial judge agreed with the
    defendant that Nichols should not be allowed to make an in-court
    identification of the defendant.   See Commonwealth v. Crayton,
    
    470 Mass. 228
    , 236-237, 241-242 (2014).    The defendant now
    contends, however, that several "identifications" nonetheless
    occurred.
    6
    a.    Surveillance images.   The first of these
    "identifications" was introduced by defense counsel, who
    introduced the portion of Nichols's grand jury testimony where
    Nichols was shown two of the still images from the hospital's
    security system.3    The first still image showed a man at the
    hospital's entrance who fit Nichols's description of the red-
    hatted man; the image was recorded when Nichols was waiting
    outside in the man's car.    Nichols identified the man as the
    person who borrowed his phone.    The second image showed the
    hospital entrance twelve minutes earlier, with both Nichols and
    the man in the frame.4    Nichols testified to the grand jury that
    the image showed the same man when the man asked to borrow his
    phone.    The defendant contends that there was no good reason to
    conduct this showup identification or photographic (photo)
    array, that it was impermissibly suggestive, and that Nichols
    should not have been allowed to testify to this identification
    at trial.
    Showup identifications are one-on-one identification
    procedures in which a victim or witness is asked to identify a
    3   Nichols had not previously seen the still images.
    4 By contrast, at trial Nichols was first shown the two
    surveillance photographs where both he and the red-hatted man
    were present, and then was shown the photograph containing just
    the red-hatted man. The order in which the photographs were
    shown to Nichols avoids any claim that there was a "one-on-one"
    identification process.
    7
    suspect (usually in person) in the immediate aftermath of the
    crime, often near or at the scene.   See Commonwealth v. Dew, 
    478 Mass. 304
    , 306-307 (2017).   No such procedure occurred here.
    Nor was Nichols shown a photo array as the defendant claims.      A
    photo array is a procedure by which a victim or witness is asked
    to identify a suspect from among a series of photographs showing
    similar-looking people.   See generally Commonwealth v. Silva-
    Santiago, 
    453 Mass. 782
    , 794-796 (2009) (procedures regarding
    photo arrays).   Again, no such process occurred here.
    Nonetheless, we accept arguendo the defendant's proposition
    that when questioning Nichols before the grand jury, the
    prosecutor engaged Nichols in a process "analogous to a one-on-
    one identification" when she asked him whether he recognized the
    man in the first still image, i.e., the one that showed only the
    man in the red hat.   Commonwealth v. Forte, 
    469 Mass. 469
    , 477
    (2014).   "An identification stemming from a videotape containing
    only one individual is analogous to a one-on-one identification,
    which is considered inherently suggestive."   
    Id.
       To suppress
    this identification, the defendant is required to 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.'"   
    Id.,
     quoting Commonwealth v.
    
    8 Walker, 460
     Mass. 590, 599 (2011).    This, the defendant has not
    done.
    To begin, we note that the defendant has not pointed us to
    (nor have we found) any case standing for the proposition that
    asking a witness to identify him- or herself in a photograph is
    unduly suggestive, even if the witness is the only person in the
    image.   The risk of misidentifying one's own self in a
    photograph seems so small as to verge on the hypothetical and,
    in any event, absent other circumstances, is unlikely to be the
    product of any suggestiveness inherent in the process of showing
    an image depicting only one person.
    As a corollary, we believe that asking a witness to
    identify him- or herself in a photograph that happens to include
    another person also does not raise concerns of unnecessary
    suggestiveness absent some other circumstance.   Nor does asking
    the witness to identify the other person shown in such an image
    raise such concerns.   In all of these situations, absent some
    other circumstance, the presence of the witness him- or herself
    in the image helps to protect against any suggestiveness that
    otherwise inheres in a single-person identification process.
    This is especially true where, as here, an image captures the
    witness in the moment when he or she is the victim of a crime
    and the events experienced by the witness during the crime are
    shown in the photograph.   Contrast Forte, 469 Mass. at 473-474
    9
    (witnesses shown videotape depicting suspect walking alone);
    Commonwealth v. Austin, 
    421 Mass. 357
    , 361 (1995) (witnesses
    shown videotape of robbery suspect committing different
    robbery); Commonwealth v. Carlson, 
    92 Mass. App. Ct. 710
    , 712
    (2018) (witness was shown one photograph of one man he knew was
    suspect).
    Moreover, other circumstances undermine the defendant's
    claim that the procedure was unnecessarily suggestive.      For
    example, Nichols gave a detailed description of his assailant
    and of the events at issue long before he was shown the still
    images, and the images merely confirmed what Nichols had
    previously told police.     Likewise, seeing the still images did
    not prompt any additional information from Nichols; he merely
    confirmed that the photographs showed events and people he had
    previously described.     As we stated above, Nichols did not
    identify the defendant from the photograph.
    b.     Lay identification testimony.   The defendant challenges
    the admission of his mother's lay opinion that he was the red-
    hatted man in the surveillance images on the ground that the
    jury were in as good a position as his mother to determine
    whether he was the person captured in the images.5     A witness may
    5 The defendant also argues that his mother's identification
    was prejudicial because of her potential bias against him. He
    did not raise this contention below, nor was the record
    developed regarding any potential bias. See Commonwealth v.
    10
    offer a lay opinion as to the identity of a person depicted in a
    surveillance photograph "if there is some basis for concluding
    that the witness is more likely to correctly identify the
    defendant from the photograph than is the jury.    Put another
    way, 'such testimony is admissible . . . when the witness
    possesses sufficiently relevant familiarity with the defendant
    that the jury cannot also possess.'"     Commonwealth v. Vacher,
    
    469 Mass. 425
    , 441 (2014), quoting Commonwealth v. Pleas, 
    49 Mass. App. Ct. 321
    , 326-327 (2000).    See Commonwealth v. Pina,
    
    481 Mass. 413
    , 429-430 (2019); Mass. G. Evid. § 701 (2019).
    Relevant factors to consider include whether "[the images] are
    neither 'so unmistakably clear or so hopelessly obscure that the
    witness is no better-suited than the jury to make the
    identification'" and "whether the defendant is disguised in the
    photograph or has changed his appearance since the time of the
    crime."   Pleas, supra at 325, 326, quoting United States v.
    Jackman, 
    48 F.3d 1
    , 5 (1st Cir. 1995).    See Commonwealth v.
    Pearson, 
    77 Mass. App. Ct. 95
    , 105 (2010).    We review the
    judge's decision to allow the mother to offer her lay opinion as
    Burnett, 
    428 Mass. 469
    , 475-476 (1998) (party may not raise
    ground on appeal that was not raised before motion judge).
    Indeed, at the hearing on the Commonwealth's motions in limine,
    the defendant specifically requested that his "history" with his
    mother be omitted, indicated that he did not expect the nature
    of the relationship to "interfere" with the mother's testimony,
    and said that he would have no follow-up questions after she
    identified her son.
    11
    to the identity of the person in the surveillance images for
    abuse of discretion.     See Pleas, supra at 328.
    The defendant does not challenge his mother's familiarity
    with his appearance, nor that her familiarity was greater than
    the jury's.     His contention, instead, is that the surveillance
    images were sufficiently clear that the jury needed no
    assistance to determine whether the defendant was the red-hatted
    man depicted in them.     Having reviewed the images ourselves, we
    see no error in the judge's determination that, although the
    images are moderately clear, they were not "unmistakably clear,"
    id. at 325, as to the red-hatted man's features such that the
    mother's lay opinion threatened to "invade[] the province of the
    jury to draw their own conclusions about who is who."     Pina, 481
    Mass. at 430.    In addition, the defendant has not shown that the
    judge erred in finding that the defendant's appearance at trial
    was different from his appearance at the time of the crime and
    that the mother's testimony would for that reason also be
    helpful to the jury.6
    c.   Identification as person arrested and shown in booking
    photograph.     The defendant challenges the arresting officer's
    6 The judge found that the defendant had less facial hair at
    the time of trial, and such finding has not been shown to be
    clearly erroneous; the defendant has not supplied a photograph
    of his appearance at trial.
    12
    in-court identification of the defendant as the man he arrested
    and in the booking photographs.   The defendant argues that the
    prejudicial effect of this testimony outweighed its probative
    value because the jury could conflate the officer's
    identification of the defendant as the man he arrested with the
    identity of the man who actually committed the crimes.    He also
    argues that the booking photographs should have been excluded
    because the prosecutor called attention to their source and
    there was no need to introduce them.   Because these arguments
    were not preserved,7 we consider whether any error (if one there
    were) created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.
    Commonwealth v. Clemente, 
    452 Mass. 295
    , 322 (2008), cert.
    denied, 
    555 U.S. 1181
     (2009).
    There was no error in allowing the officer to identify the
    defendant in court as the man he arrested.   See Crayton, 470
    Mass. at 242 (even where "an arresting officer . . . was also an
    eyewitness to the commission of the crime, . . . the in-court
    showup is understood by the jury as confirmation that the
    defendant sitting in the court room is the person whose conduct
    is at issue rather than as identification evidence").    The jury
    knew that the officer was not an eyewitness to the crime and had
    no firsthand knowledge of the perpetrator's identity.    It was
    7 At trial, the defendant objected to the booking
    photographs only on the ground that they lacked probative value.
    13
    clear that the purpose of the officer's testimony was merely to
    show that the defendant was both the man the officer arrested
    and the man in the booking photographs.    The officer did not
    testify that the defendant committed the crimes.
    A judge has substantial discretion in balancing the
    probative value and prejudicial impact of the booking
    photographs and the judge's decision "will stand absent palpable
    error."   Commonwealth v. Talbot, 
    444 Mass. 586
    , 589 n.2 (2005).
    By the time of trial, the defendant, a young adult, had aged
    almost two years since the surveillance images were recorded
    and, as the judge found, had less facial hair than the man in
    the surveillance photographs.   The booking photographs were
    relevant because they showed the defendant's appearance only one
    week after the crime.    They thus bore squarely on the central
    question for the jury:   was the defendant the red-hatted man
    shown in the surveillance images?   See Commonwealth v. Holmes,
    
    32 Mass. App. Ct. 906
    , 909 (1992) (photographs showing
    defendant's appearance at time of incident "admissible on the
    question of identification -- a live issue at the trial").
    Because "[t]he jury knew that the defendant had been
    arrested for the crime[s] being tried," Commonwealth v. Waters,
    
    399 Mass. 708
    , 715 (1987), the probative value of the
    photographs was not outweighed by the fact that the jury were
    informed that they were taken at the defendant's booking.
    14
    Unlike situations where the Commonwealth seeks to use a mugshot
    from an earlier encounter with police, where (as here) the
    photographs are taken in connection with the defendant's arrest
    for the crimes being tried, no criminal record is suggested.8
    See Commonwealth v. Vardinski, 
    438 Mass. 444
    , 453 n.13 (2003);
    Commonwealth v. Andrade, 
    8 Mass. App. Ct. 653
    , 658 (1979).
    2.   Specific unanimity.   The defendant argues that the jury
    should have received a specific unanimity instruction for the
    unarmed robbery charge because there was more than one act of
    taking of property (the initial taking of the phone and the
    later takings of the backpack and pool stick).9   "[A] specific
    unanimity instruction indicates to the jury that they must be
    unanimous as to which specific act constitutes the offense
    charged," Commonwealth v. Keevan, 
    400 Mass. 557
    , 566-567 (1987),
    and is needed "where evidence of separate incidents is offered
    8 Such a risk, by contrast, accompanies the use of
    photographs taken in connection with earlier arrests or police
    encounters. See Commonwealth v. Blaney, 
    387 Mass. 628
    , 637-638
    (1982) ("There is risk that any use in evidence of photographs
    of the double type ordinarily used in police identification
    files will suggest to the jury that the defendant may have a
    prior criminal record. . . . Accordingly, the decisions of this
    court have required judges and prosecutors to use reasonable
    means to avoid calling the jury's attention to the source of the
    photographs used to identify the defendant" [quotation and
    citation omitted]). See also Mass. G. Evid. § 1112(b)(1)(C).
    9 The defendant did not raise this issue below, so we review
    for error, and if one occurred, for a substantial risk of a
    miscarriage of justice. See Commonwealth v. Freeman, 
    352 Mass. 556
    , 563-564 (1967).
    15
    to the jury and any one incident could support a conviction,"
    Commonwealth v. Conefrey, 
    420 Mass. 508
    , 513 (1995).
    Here, the jury had before it facts supporting only one
    incident of unarmed robbery, which requires taking property from
    someone's person or control "by force and violence, or by
    assault and putting in fear."    G. L. c. 265, § 19 (b).   The
    evidence was unequivocal that Nichols was not assaulted, put in
    fear, or the subject of force or violence until he was in the
    perpetrator's car and the perpetrator demanded his backpack and
    punched him.   Nor was the case tried on any other theory.
    Contrast Commonwealth v. Grandison, 
    433 Mass. 135
    , 147 (2001).
    3.     Closing argument.   The defendant argues that three
    aspects of the prosecutor's closing argument, individually and
    collectively, require a reversal of his convictions.     "In
    analyzing a claim of improper argument, the prosecutor's remarks
    must be viewed in light of the 'entire argument, as well as in
    light of the judge's instruction to the jury and the evidence at
    trial.'"   Commonwealth v. Lamrini, 
    392 Mass. 427
    , 432 (1984),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Bourgeois, 
    391 Mass. 869
    , 885 (1984).
    As the defendant objected at trial, we review for prejudicial
    error.   See Commonwealth v. Roy, 
    464 Mass. 818
    , 829 (2013).     If
    prosecutorial error occurred,
    "[t]he consequences . . . depend on a number of factors,
    such as: Did the defendant seasonably object to the
    argument? Was the prosecutor's error limited to
    16
    'collateral issues' or did it go to the heart of the case
    . . . ? What did the judge tell the jury, generally or
    specifically, that may have mitigated the prosecutor's
    mistake, and generally did the error in the circumstances
    possibly make a difference in the jury's conclusions? . . .
    On numerous occasions, the impact of an improper final
    argument has been mitigated by the judge's forceful
    instructions to the jury that the argument was
    inappropriate and should be disregarded." (Footnote
    omitted.)
    Commonwealth v. Kozec, 
    399 Mass. 514
    , 518 (1987).     We turn now
    to the three specific aspects of the closing to which the
    defendant points.
    The defendant argues that the prosecutor impermissibly
    argued that key elements and facts supporting the prosecution's
    case were undisputed.10    We agree.   The defendant had no burden
    to disprove the Commonwealth's evidence or to contradict its
    witnesses' testimony; the burden always remains with the
    Commonwealth, whether or not the defendant disputes the
    Commonwealth's evidence.    See Commonwealth v. Waite, 
    422 Mass. 792
    , 801 (1996) ("Defendants are, of course, under absolutely no
    10The prosecutor stated: "There is no dispute that Michael
    Nichols was in the lobby of that hospital on March 2nd, 2015.
    And I also suggest there's no dispute the defendant was in that
    same lobby of the hospital and that the defendant went up to
    Michael as Michael was sitting waiting for the cab. And the
    still photos show you that. I suggest there is no dispute that
    Michael was assaulted, punched twice in the face, and that he
    was robbed of his personal property. The only question you have
    to ask yourselves is who did it." The prosecutor later
    repeated, "Now, remember, the only issue you need to consider is
    who punched Michael and who robbed him of his personal
    property."
    17
    obligation to disprove government accusations . . .");
    Commonwealth v. Amirault, 
    404 Mass. 221
    , 240 (1989) ("A
    prosecutor cannot comment on a defendant's failure to contradict
    testimony and cannot make statements that shift the burden of
    proof from the Commonwealth to the defendant"); Mass. G. Evid.
    § 1113(b)(3)(E).   However, the judge gave a forceful and
    specific instruction to remediate the error,11 and gave extensive
    general instructions on the presumption of the defendant's
    innocence, the burden of proof, and what constitutes a proper
    evidentiary basis for a verdict.   This mitigation, together with
    the overwhelming strength of the Commonwealth's case, leads us
    to conclude "with fair assurance" that the prosecutor's error
    did not "substantially sway[]" the jury's decision (citation
    omitted).   Commonwealth v. Flebotte, 
    417 Mass. 348
    , 353 (1994).
    The defendant also argues that the prosecutor engaged in
    impermissible vouching.   Specifically, the defendant points to
    the portion of the prosecutor's closing in which she raised (and
    then answered) a number of questions regarding hypothetical
    11The judge instructed the jury: "Counsel began by saying
    that there is no dispute about certain things. That's improper
    argument, and I understand sometimes lawyers lapse into that
    phrasing, intending to talk about what the focus was on in the
    evidence; but it's improper, because it might mislead the jury
    into thinking that the Commonwealth has been relieved of its
    burden of proving certain things. Everything is in dispute
    . . . [K]eep in mind everything is in dispute in this case."
    18
    scenarios designed to show why Nichols was telling the truth.12
    Taken in context, and keeping in mind that the defendant's
    closing argument focused largely on Nichols's credibility, the
    prosecutor's comments did not constitute impermissible vouching.
    "A prosecutor is permitted to 'make a fair response to an attack
    on the credibility of a government witness.'"   Commonwealth v.
    Smith, 
    450 Mass. 395
    , 408, cert. denied, 
    555 U.S. 893
     (2008),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Chavis, 
    415 Mass. 703
    , 713 (1993).
    Finally, the defendant argues that the prosecutor's
    statements that it was the defendant who asked to borrow
    Nichols's phone, invited Nichols to his car, drove Nichols away
    from the hospital, and assaulted and robbed Nichols were not
    grounded in the evidence.   Although "prosecutor[s] may not
    misstate evidence or refer to facts not in evidence in a closing
    12The prosecutor stated: "Ask yourselves why would Michael
    [Nichols] lie to make this up? What would be the reason to lie?
    Well, maybe a person would lie if he didn't like the other
    person, or if he had an issue with the other person, if he
    wanted to get back at someone. But that doesn't apply here,
    because Michael doesn't know the defendant. He didn't know the
    two men in the back seat. So he has no reason to lie or make up
    about what happened to him. Now, maybe a person would lie to
    protect somebody, but again, Michael doesn't know them. So he
    has no reason to protect anybody. Maybe a person would lie
    because they were afraid, but Michael had gotten out of the car,
    away from all three of them. He wasn't in danger anymore.
    Maybe a person would lie if he had something to hide. But if
    Michael had something to hide, would he have immediately gone to
    the police for help? That is the first thing he did. . . . Who
    do you believe? . . . Michael who[se] testimony, I suggest, was
    credible in every way?"
    19
    argument," Commonwealth v. Goddard, 
    476 Mass. 443
    , 449 (2017),
    they are entitled "to marshal the evidence and suggest
    inferences that the jury may draw from it."     Commonwealth v.
    Drayton, 
    386 Mass. 39
    , 52 (1982).    While it is true that Nichols
    himself did not identify the defendant as the perpetrator, he
    identified the red-hatted man in the surveillance photographs as
    such.   And the defendant's mother identified the defendant as
    the red-hatted man.    The prosecutor did not overstep the bounds
    of acceptable argument when her argument connected the
    evidentiary dots.     The judgments are therefore affirmed.
    So ordered.