Commonwealth v. Berardi , 88 Mass. App. Ct. 466 ( 2015 )


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    14-P-482                                                 Appeals Court
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   ANTONIO BERARDI.
    No. 14-P-482.
    Essex.       February 3, 2015. - October 9, 2015.
    Present:    Kafker, Wolohojian, & Sullivan, JJ.
    Sex Offender. Sex Offender Registration and Community
    Notification Act. Practice, Criminal, Bifurcated trial,
    Empanelment of jury, Trial jury-waived, Assistance of
    counsel. Jury and Jurors. Constitutional Law, Jury, Trial
    jury-waived, Assistance of counsel. Due Process of Law,
    Assistance of counsel.
    Indictment found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on April 11, 2008.
    The case was tried before Garry V. Inge, J.; the subsequent
    offense portion of the indictment was heard by Richard E. Welch,
    III, J., and a motion for a new trial was considered by him.
    Elizabeth Dembitzer for the defendant.
    Quentin Weld, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    WOLOHOJIAN, J.        The defendant, a registered sex offender,
    was indicted for knowingly providing false information on a
    registration form, in violation of G. L. c. 6, § 178H(a), by
    2
    failing to disclose that he was employed.     He was charged as a
    subsequent offender and, as a result, faced imprisonment "for
    not less than five years."     G. L. c. 6, § 178H(a)(2), as
    appearing in St. 1999, c. 74, § 2.    In a bifurcated proceeding,
    a Superior Court jury convicted him of the underlying
    registration violation, after which he was convicted of the
    second and subsequent offense in a jury-waived trial.     We
    consolidated his direct appeal with his appeal from the denial
    of his motion for new trial.
    We agree with the defendant that, where thirteen jurors
    were seated, he was entitled, under Mass.R.Crim.P. 20(c)(1), 
    378 Mass. 890
    (1979), to thirteen peremptory challenges because he
    was charged with a "crime punishable by imprisonment for life,"
    and that it was error to allot him only five such challenges.
    We conclude with respect to his direct appeal, however, that the
    defendant has failed to show that the error resulted in any
    injury or deprived him of a fair and impartial jury.     For
    similar reasons, although we conclude that, accepting as true
    the affidavits submitted with the defendant's motion for new
    trial, he has satisfied the first prong of Commonwealth v.
    Saferian, 
    366 Mass. 89
    , 96 (1974), he has not satisfied the
    second.   Accordingly, we affirm his conviction and the denial of
    his motion for new trial.
    3
    Background.   The defendant was indicted for providing false
    information, second or subsequent offense, in violation of his
    reporting obligations as a registered sex offender.    More
    specifically, he was charged with falsely reporting that he was
    unemployed.1   A first trial ended in a mistrial when one of the
    jurors, upon being polled after the verdict, stated that the
    defendant was not guilty.
    At the second trial, the judge allotted to each side five
    peremptory challenges for a jury of thirteen (twelve plus one
    alternate).2   The defendant did not object.   The judge then
    conducted voir dire in two stages.   First, he questioned the
    venire as a whole.   Next, the jurors were individually
    questioned at sidebar.   Depending on a particular juror's
    responses, the judge then either excused the juror or found the
    juror indifferent.   If the latter, the parties were asked
    whether they wished to challenge that juror.
    As a result of this process, the judge excused nine
    potential jurors on his own initiative.   Nine additional jurors
    1
    The defendant was employed at a debt collection agency.
    His first day of employment was the same day he completed the
    registration form at issue. He had been offered the job either
    that morning, or the day before. In any event, the defendant
    contended that he did not know he was, or consider himself to
    be, in fact employed on that first day, which consisted of
    training.
    2
    The defendant had been allotted six peremptory challenges
    for the first trial.
    4
    were excused at the parties' request:    five jurors were excused
    by the defendant's exercise (through counsel) of his peremptory
    challenges, and the Commonwealth peremptorily challenged four
    others.    Defense counsel challenged no jurors for cause.3   Nor
    did he request additional questioning of any juror.
    The defendant's last peremptory challenge was used to
    eliminate Juror 42 for the thirteenth seat.    Juror 43 filled
    that final seat without challenge from either side.    Juror 43
    had not raised her hand in response to any of the questions
    posed to the venire as a whole.    Nor did the individual
    questioning at sidebar reveal her to be anything other than
    indifferent.4   Indeed, the defendant does not contend the judge
    erred in finding Juror 43 indifferent.    Both the prosecutor and
    3
    The Commonwealth made one challenge for cause, which was
    denied.
    4
    The judge found Juror 43 indifferent after the following
    exchange at sidebar:
    The judge: "I just have a couple of questions to ask you,
    given the nature of this case. First, have you or any
    member of your family ever been either accused of or been
    the victim or -- either one -- any type of sexual assault,
    whether or not reported to law enforcement?"
    A.:    "No."
    Q.: "Second question -- do you know anyone who has been or
    currently is required to register as a sex offender?"
    A.:    "No."
    5
    defense counsel indicated they were content with Juror 43 and
    with each of the other seated jurors.
    As we have noted, the trial was bifurcated.     The only issue
    during the first phase of the trial was whether the defendant's
    statement that he was unemployed was false.     The defendant
    stipulated to the remaining elements of the crime.5    The jury-
    waived second phase was limited to determining whether the
    defendant had previously been convicted of failing to register
    as required.    After the conclusion of phase two, the defendant
    was sentenced to State prison for five years to five years and a
    day, and to community parole supervision for life.
    The defendant raised no issue about the number of
    peremptory challenges until his motion for new trial, filed some
    two and one-half years after the verdict, when he argued that he
    was entitled to thirteen such challenges.     The motion judge (who
    had been the judge at the second trial) denied the motion
    5
    The judge read the following stipulation to the jury:
    "First, that the defendant . . . is the same Antonio
    Berardi who, in 1995, was adjudicated a delinquent juvenile
    by reason of the offense of rape of a child. Second, that,
    by such adjudication, Antonio Berardi was required, under
    the laws of Massachusetts, to register as a sex offender
    whenever he moved into a location. And, three, that the
    defendant, Antonio Berardi, knew he was obligated to
    register by providing true information to the Sex Offender
    Registry Board or a representative of the Sex Offender
    Registry Board regarding his employment status. He knew he
    had to give true information regarding his employment
    status."
    6
    without a hearing, reasoning that the defendant was entitled to
    only five peremptory challenges for the first phase of the trial
    and that it was immaterial whether the defendant was entitled to
    thirteen peremptory challenges for the second phase, because he
    had waived his right to trial by jury.
    Discussion.   Peremptory challenges.    1.   Direct appeal.
    Rule 20(c)(1) of the Massachusetts Rules of Criminal Procedure
    provides:
    "Upon the trial of an indictment for a crime
    punishable by imprisonment for life, each defendant
    shall be entitled to twelve peremptory challenges of
    the jurors called to try the case[.] . . . Each
    defendant in a trial of [such a crime] in which
    additional jurors are impaneled . . . shall be
    entitled to one additional peremptory challenge for
    each additional juror."
    Our initial focus is on the phrase "trial of an indictment for a
    crime punishable by imprisonment for life," with respect to
    which we must answer two questions.     First, we must consider
    whether the crime with which the defendant was charged is
    punishable by life imprisonment.   Second, we must assess whether
    "trial" means the whole trial, or only the second (subsequent
    offender) phase of the trial, which is the phase that carries
    the potential for life imprisonment.6
    6
    A first conviction carries a potential sentence of six
    months to two and one-half years in the house of correction or
    not more than five years in State prison. G. L. c. 6,
    § 178H(a)(1).
    7
    The statutory penalty for violating G. L. c. 6,
    § 178H(a)(2), by committing a second and subsequent offense of
    providing false information as a registered sex offender, is
    imprisonment "for not less than five years."   No maximum penalty
    is specified.   Hence, as the Commonwealth acknowledges, the
    statute is presumed to carry a life term.   Commonwealth v.
    Logan, 
    367 Mass. 655
    , 657 (1975).   Accordingly, the defendant
    was entitled to the benefit of rule 20 and, because the judge
    empanelled a jury of twelve plus one alternate, the defendant
    should have been allotted thirteen peremptory challenges.7
    Although bifurcation of the trial was required by G. L.
    c. 278, § 11A, inserted by St. 1967, c. 213 (as it is in other
    cases charging a second and subsequent offense),8 that fact makes
    7
    Instead he received five, which would have been the
    correct number had the defendant not faced a potential maximum
    penalty of life in prison. The judge apparently did not realize
    at the time of empanelment that, as a subsequent offender, the
    defendant faced a potential life sentence, and neither party
    brought this important information to the judge's attention.
    8
    We believe that this is the first appellate case to state
    that G. L. c. 278, § 11A, applies to second and subsequent
    offenses under G. L. c. 6, § 178H(a)(2). We see no reason to
    think § 11A would not apply to § 178H offenses both because
    § 11A has been applied across a variety of contexts, regardless
    of the substantive nature of the underlying offense, see, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Thompson, 
    427 Mass. 729
    (1998) (unarmed
    robbery); Commonwealth v. Pelletier, 
    449 Mass. 392
    (2007)
    (operating a motor vehicle while under the influence);
    Commonwealth v. Kulesa, 
    455 Mass. 447
    (2009) (criminal
    harassment); Commonwealth v. Eberhart, 
    461 Mass. 809
    (2012)
    (armed career criminal statute), and because the purpose of
    § 11A is to ensure that proof of the substantive offense will
    8
    no difference for purposes of rule 20(c)(1).   Rule 20 does not
    operate differently in bifurcated trials nor does it apply only
    to the subsequent offender phase of a bifurcated trial.     The
    subsequent offender phase is not a separate trial nor does it
    entail proof of a separate crime.   Repeat offender statutes "do
    not identify freestanding crimes, but concern 'solely the
    sentence of a person convicted of a [current] violation . . .
    who has previously been convicted of at least one similar . . .
    offense.   The prior offense is not an element of the crime for
    which a defendant is charged but concerns the punishment to be
    imposed if he is convicted [of the current offense] and the
    prior offense is proved'" beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Commonwealth v. Miranda, 
    441 Mass. 783
    , 788 (2004), quoting from
    Bynum v. Commonwealth, 
    429 Mass. 705
    , 708-709 (1999).
    Commonwealth v. Richardson, 
    469 Mass. 248
    , 252 (2014).    See
    Commonwealth v. Bowden, 
    447 Mass. 593
    , 601 n.11 (2006) ("[p]rior
    convictions must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt . . . even
    though a prior conviction is not formally an element of the
    crime").
    It is true that G. L. c. 278, § 11A, allows a defendant to
    waive his right to a jury for either, neither, or both phases of
    a bifurcated trial, and that the election may be made with
    not be prejudicially infected by evidence that it is a
    subsequent offense.
    9
    respect to the second phase after the first phase of the trial
    has been completed.     Commonwealth v. Thompson, 
    427 Mass. 729
    ,
    737-738 (1998).     It is also true that the defendant would not be
    exposed to a life sentence if the Commonwealth succeeded only in
    proving the substantive crime, while failing to prove that it
    was a second and subsequent offense.     However, it does not
    follow that rule 20 applies only to the second phase of the
    trial.   To conclude otherwise would be unworkable as a practical
    matter because the same jury will usually hear both phases of a
    bifurcated trial.
    Indeed, the judge intended to use the same jury for the
    second phase of the trial at issue here, and he so informed the
    defendant during the jury-waiver colloquy.     It was within the
    judge's discretion to decide whether the same jury would
    consider both phases of the bifurcated trial or whether a new
    jury would be empanelled for the second phase, see G. L. c. 278,
    § 11A; Commonwealth v. Pelletier, 
    449 Mass. 392
    , 396 (2007), and
    neither party contends that the judge abused his discretion
    here.    Clearly, if a new jury is to hear the second phase, the
    members of that second jury must be empanelled in the same
    manner as any other jury, see G. L. c. 278, § 11A (second phase
    of the trial is "subject to all of the provisions of law
    governing criminal trials"), including allowing the full number
    of peremptory challenges required by rule 20.     However, where
    10
    (as here) the same jury is to be used for both phases, absent
    some reason to think the jury will not be fair and impartial for
    the second phase, neither our cases nor § 11A appears to require
    that additional voir dire be conducted before the second phase.
    See, e.g., Commonwealth v. 
    Thompson, 427 Mass. at 736-737
    ;
    Commonwealth v. Means, 
    71 Mass. App. Ct. 788
    , 797-798 (2008),
    reversed on other grounds, 
    454 Mass. 81
    (2009).    In other words,
    the full number of peremptory challenges required by rule 20
    must be allotted ab initio because, in the ordinary course,
    there will be no additional voir dire before the second phase.
    In sum, it was error to allow the defendant only five
    peremptory challenges rather than thirteen.    The defendant
    argues that a deprivation of this magnitude is a form of
    structural error requiring reversal without a showing of
    prejudice.   For the reasons that follow, we disagree.
    "Although the Sixth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution and art. 12 of the Declaration of Rights of the
    Massachusetts Constitution guarantee the right to be tried by an
    impartial jury, there is no Federal or State constitutional
    right to exercise peremptory challenges."     Commonwealth v.
    Mello, 
    420 Mass. 375
    , 396 (1995).   Commonwealth v. Bockman, 
    442 Mass. 757
    , 762 (2004).   "Because peremptory challenges are a
    creature of statute and are not required by the Constitution, it
    is for the State to determine the number of peremptory
    11
    challenges allowed and to define their purpose and the manner of
    their exercise."9,10   Ross v. Oklahoma, 
    487 U.S. 81
    , 89 (1988)
    (citations omitted).    The mistaken denial of peremptory
    challenges is not per se structural error under the Federal
    Constitution.   Rivera v. Illinois, 
    556 U.S. 148
    , 158 (2009).
    Nor have we held that it is structural error under art. 12.
    Indeed, to the contrary, as explained further below, we require
    a showing of prejudice or injury resulting from the erroneous
    reduction in the number of peremptory challenges, except where
    the error is preserved.
    Even though the error is not structural per se, it can
    nonetheless result in reversal either where the defendant is
    deprived of his constitutional right to an impartial jury or he
    9
    "When States provide peremptory challenges (as all do in
    some form), they confer a benefit 'beyond the minimum
    requirements of fair [jury] selection,' Frazier v. United
    States, 
    335 U.S. 497
    , 506 (1948), and thus retain discretion to
    design and implement their own systems." Rivera v. Illinois,
    
    556 U.S. 148
    , 157-158 (2009).
    10
    Our Supreme Judicial Court has stated that "[t]he purpose
    of the properly exercised peremptory challenge is to aid the
    constitutional right to a fair and impartial jury."
    Commonwealth v. Wood, 
    389 Mass. 552
    , 560 (1983). "[Peremptory
    challenges] are afforded to a defendant to enable him to
    eliminate from the jury that will decide his case jurors whom he
    perceives to be prejudiced against him or who may be 'harboring
    subtle biases with regard to the case, which were not elicited
    on voir dire or which do not establish legal cause for
    challenge.'" Commonwealth v. 
    Bockman, 442 Mass. at 762
    , quoting
    from Commonwealth v. Soares, 
    377 Mass. 461
    , 483-484, cert.
    denied, 
    444 U.S. 881
    (1979).
    12
    "does not receive that which state law provides."     Ross v.
    
    Oklahoma, 487 U.S. at 89
    .   The defendant has not shown either.
    He does not challenge the judge's determination that each seated
    juror was indifferent.   He challenged no juror for cause,
    including (perhaps most importantly) the last juror, who was
    seated after the defendant had used all his peremptory
    challenges.   Nor does he contend that his lawyer should have
    challenged any particular juror for cause.    Although the
    defendant's affidavit submitted in connection with his motion
    for new trial states that he "did not want the last juror who
    was seated on my jury to be on my jury," it does not state why.
    This is not, therefore, a situation where the defendant was
    forced to accept a juror who could or should have been
    challenged for cause.    Nor has the defendant otherwise shown
    that he was deprived of his constitutional right to a fair and
    impartial jury.
    Turning to what "state law provides," the analysis is
    slightly different, but the defendant fares no better.       "No
    irregularity in . . . [the] impanelling of jurors shall be
    sufficient to set aside a verdict, unless the objecting party
    has been injured thereby or unless the objection was made before
    the verdict" (emphasis added).   G. L. c. 234, § 32.   See
    Commonwealth v. Montecalvo, 
    367 Mass. 46
    , 51 (1975)
    (irregularity in empanelment insufficient to reverse conviction
    13
    unless defendant is harmed by it).    No prejudice need be shown
    if the defendant timely objects before the verdict or if the
    defendant's "exercise of a peremptory challenge is erroneously
    denied and the challenged juror is seated on the panel and
    participates in deciding the case" (emphasis added).
    Commonwealth v. 
    Bockman, 442 Mass. at 763
    .    See Commonwealth v.
    Smith, 
    461 Mass. 438
    , 443 (2012).    Here, no objection was made
    before the verdict, and no juror was seated over an exercised
    challenge.   At no time did the defendant object to the reduced
    number of peremptory challenges or ask for additional ones.      Nor
    did he preserve his rights by challenging the last juror for
    cause.   See Commonwealth v. McCoy, 
    456 Mass. 838
    , 842 (2010)
    (question of the impartiality of a juror is waived if no
    challenge for cause).   Therefore, the verdict need not be set
    aside unless the defendant can show injury.
    The defendant has not shown injury in the sense our cases
    have required.   Nor has he shown that his failure to object to
    the number of peremptory challenges resulted in a substantial
    risk of a miscarriage of justice.    See Commonwealth v. Beldotti,
    
    409 Mass. 553
    , 560-561 (1991) (applying miscarriage of justice
    analysis to unpreserved assertion of error in empanelling jury).
    As discussed above, the defendant has not shown that he failed
    to receive a fair and impartial jury.    He has not satisfied the
    test articulated in Commonwealth v. McCoy, supra ("prejudice
    14
    generally is shown by the use of a peremptory challenge to
    remove the juror who allegedly should have been excused for
    cause together with evidence that the defendant later was forced
    to accept a juror he would have challenged peremptorily but was
    unable to because his peremptory challenges had been
    exhausted").   See Commonwealth v. Clark, 
    446 Mass. 620
    , 629
    (2006); Commonwealth v. Somers, 
    44 Mass. App. Ct. 920
    , 922
    (1998).   Nor is this a situation where the judge's exclusion of
    a particular class of persons from the venire resulted in making
    one side's peremptory challenges relatively more valuable.     See
    Commonwealth v. McKay, 
    363 Mass. 220
    , 223 (1973) (no general
    disqualification of a class of people from the jury, therefore
    defendant not deprived of fair jury).   Contrast Searle v. Roman
    Catholic Bishop of Springfield, 
    203 Mass. 493
    , 500 (1909) (order
    excluding Roman Catholics from jury made one party's
    peremptories impermissibly more valuable).
    In short, although depriving the defendant of eight
    peremptory challenges was a serious error, it was not preserved,
    it was not structural, he has not shown that he was deprived of
    a fair and impartial jury, and he has not shown any of the other
    types of injury our cases have recognized or a substantial risk
    of a miscarriage of justice.   We conclude, therefore, that we
    15
    cannot set aside the verdict on direct appeal despite the
    magnitude of the error.11
    2.    Motion for new trial; ineffective assistance of
    counsel.   As noted above, the judge denied the motion for new
    trial without conducting a hearing, erroneously reasoning that
    the defendant was not entitled to the full complement of
    peremptories until the second phase of the trial.    Deciding as
    he did, the judge did not address the averments of the
    affidavits submitted with the motion.     We begin our analysis by
    setting them out here.
    Trial counsel's affidavit stated that he did not know that
    his client was entitled to at least twelve peremptory
    challenges, and that he believed five peremptories was the
    maximum number allowed.     He did not explain on what basis this
    belief rested, but it is a fair inference from the trial
    11
    Also in his direct appeal, the defendant argues that
    counsel's failure to object to multiple references to his
    underlying offense created a substantial risk of a miscarriage
    of justice where the offense had been stipulated to. It was
    permissible to read the stipulation to the jury. As read, it
    informed the jury that the defendant had been "adjudicated a
    delinquent juvenile by reason of the offense of rape of a
    child." As to the other references, even were we to assume
    error, we discern no substantial risk of prejudice. The
    additional references to "rape of a child" during trial were
    sparse, and were sometimes elicited by defense counsel in an
    apparent effort to diffuse the impact of the underlying offense
    and to keep the jury focused on the limited question of the
    defendant's failure to properly register. Moreover, the
    prosecutor made no reference to the underlying offense in
    closing.
    16
    transcript that neither the parties nor the judge realized until
    sentencing that the offense was a felony punishable by
    imprisonment for life.   In any event, counsel acknowledged that
    he failed to object to receiving only five peremptories and that
    he did not request any additional challenges.    Finally, counsel
    averred that if he had "believed [he] was entitled to 12 or more
    peremptory challenges [he] would have used more peremptory
    challenges during jury selection."   He does not, however, give
    any further detail and, significantly, he does not state that he
    would have exercised a peremptory challenge with respect to
    Juror 43.
    The defendant's affidavit states that he consulted with
    trial counsel throughout jury selection, read the completed jury
    questionnaires with his counsel, looked at the venire, and
    reached his own conclusions as to whom he would like to have on
    his jury and whom he would like to exclude.     The defendant
    states that he conferred with his attorney after each potential
    juror was questioned at sidebar and that they discussed "whether
    we would want to have this person as a juror based on their
    answers, their attitude, the way they looked at me, their
    answers on the questionnaire, or just the way I felt about
    them."   Further, the defendant averred:
    "10. There were some potential jurors that I did not want
    on the jury for my trial. There were some potential jurors
    that I felt would be biased against me even though that did
    17
    not explicitly come out during the judge's questioning.
    However, we did not use peremptory challenges on some of
    these individuals because we believed we were limited to
    five challenges and there were other potential jurors that
    I was even more concerned with.
    "11. I particularly remember that I did not want the last
    juror who was seated on my jury to be on my jury. However,
    because we had used up all of our peremptory challenges I
    believed that there was nothing we could do about it.
    "12. Had I known I was entitled to 13 peremptory
    challenges, I would have used more of them."
    For purposes of our discussion, we accept these affidavits
    as true.   On that basis, they can be read together to state that
    the defendant informed trial counsel that he did not want Juror
    43 on his jury but that, because of counsel's legal error, Juror
    43 was not challenged.   In addition, other jurors were also
    seated without challenge because of counsel's error.   On these
    facts, counsel's failure to assert his client's objection to one
    or more jurors because of counsel's ignorance of the law
    satisfies the first prong of Commonwealth v. 
    Saferian, 366 Mass. at 96
    , that counsel's "behavior . . . [fell] measurably below
    that which might be expected from an ordinary fallible lawyer,"
    particularly considering the magnitude of the error (five
    peremptories rather than thirteen) and the absence of any
    tactical advantage.
    That said, the affidavits -- even accepted in their
    entirety -- do not establish the second prong of Saferian, that
    defense counsel's performance "has likely deprived the defendant
    18
    of an otherwise available, substantial ground of defence."12
    
    Ibid. See Commonwealth v.
    Torres, 
    453 Mass. 722
    , 731 (2009)
    (failure to exercise peremptory challenge not ineffective
    assistance of counsel where no prejudice results).     See also
    Commonwealth v. Daye, 
    435 Mass. 463
    , 478 (2001) (same);
    Commonwealth v. Fudge, 
    20 Mass. App. Ct. 382
    , 390-391 (1985)
    (without showing of prejudice, counsel's inaction regarding
    questioning of jurors did not constitute ineffective assistance
    of counsel).     As set out above, the defendant has not suggested
    or shown that any seated juror could have been challenged for
    cause.     Nor does he challenge the judge's finding that each
    juror was indifferent.    The defendant has given no reason for
    his assertion that he would have challenged Juror 43, nor is any
    reason apparent on the record.     And, as to the other jurors he
    claims he would have challenged, he has failed even to identify
    them, let alone given any basis for his objection to them.        He
    has not shown that he was deprived of a fair and impartial jury.
    12
    We recognize that the credibility of the affidavits is
    not ours to assess, but lies within the discretion of the judge,
    who "may evaluate them in light of factors pertinent to
    credibility, including bias, self-interest, and delay."
    Commonwealth v. Torres, 
    469 Mass. 398
    , 403 (2014). Although in
    other situations we would remand for an evidentiary hearing,
    particularly given that the motion raised a substantial issue,
    see Commonwealth v. Licata, 
    412 Mass. 654
    , 660-662 (1992);
    Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(c)(3), as appearing in 
    435 Mass. 1501
    (2001),
    remand is not necessary here because even accepting the
    affidavits as true, they do not satisfy the second prong of
    Commonwealth v. 
    Saferian, 366 Mass. at 96
    .
    19
    For the reasons set out above, we decline to disturb the
    judgment.
    Judgment affirmed.
    Order denying motion for new
    trial affirmed.