Commonwealth v. Carriere , 470 Mass. 1 ( 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    revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound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-11339
    COMMONWEALTH    vs.   EDMOND J. CARRIERE, JR.
    Barnstable.        May 9, 2014. - October 28, 2014.
    Present:   Spina, Cordy, Duffly, & Lenk, JJ.
    Homicide. Joint Enterprise. Evidence, Joint venturer,
    Testimonial statement, Pattern of conduct, Subsequent
    misconduct, Prior misconduct, Motive, State of mind,
    Declaration against interest. Constitutional Law,
    Confrontation of witnesses. Practice, Criminal, Capital
    case, Confrontation of witnesses, Argument by prosecutor,
    Presumptions and burden of proof.
    Indictment found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on July 13, 2010.
    The case was tried before Robert C. Rufo, J.
    Neil L. Fishman for the defendant.
    Julia K. Holler, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth
    DUFFLY, J.   On January 3, 1980, at approximately 8 P.M., the
    victim, who was the defendant's wife, was found dead on the
    bathroom floor in her home in Bourne.     She had died "quite some
    time" earlier of multiple stab wounds.     When the victim's body
    2
    was discovered, the defendant and his fourteen year old daughter,
    who lived with the victim, were in Florida visiting one of the
    defendant's older daughters.   In June, 2005, Steven Stewart, the
    man who stabbed the victim, was convicted of murder in the first
    degree; this court reversed his conviction in 2009 based on
    errors in the admission of testimony by a key witness.     See
    Commonwealth v. Stewart, 
    454 Mass. 527
    , 527-528 (2009).     The
    defendant was indicted in July, 2010, after Stewart entered into
    a plea agreement under which he pleaded guilty to manslaughter,
    agreed to testify against the defendant, and was sentenced to
    time served.
    The Commonwealth's theory at trial was that the defendant,
    who was in the midst of a highly contentious divorce from the
    victim, had engaged in a murder-for-hire scheme with Stewart and
    their mutual friend Richard Grebauski.1   Grebauski, the alleged
    middleman, arranged to hire Stewart for $5,000 after accepting
    the defendant's offer of $10,000 to kill his wife.   The
    Commonwealth's case relied heavily on evidence introduced through
    Stewart, who testified both to his own actions and to out-of-
    court statements by other asserted members of the joint venture,
    including Grebauski.   The remainder of the evidence was based
    largely on out-of-court statements introduced by witnesses to
    1
    Richard Grebauski also was indicted for murder, but died
    in 2004, prior to his trial.
    3
    those statements, such as the defendant's friends and neighbors
    Russell Breault, Charles Berryman, and David Phinney.     A police
    report and a letter sent to the police, containing additional
    statements, were introduced in evidence by stipulation.    In May,
    2012, a Superior Court jury found the defendant guilty of murder
    in the first degree on theories of deliberate premeditation and
    extreme atrocity or cruelty.   See G. L. c. 265, § 1.
    On appeal, the defendant challenges the admission of a
    number of out-of-court statements introduced through Stewart's
    testimony under the joint venture exception to the hearsay rule;
    the defendant contends that the Commonwealth did not prove the
    existence of a joint venture, and also that some of the
    statements were made outside the period in which the joint
    venture allegedly occurred.    The defendant maintains further that
    errors in the admission of impermissible and highly prejudicial
    propensity evidence, the judge's decision not to allow testimony
    concerning purportedly exculpatory statements made by Grebauski,
    and improper remarks in the prosecutor's closing argument require
    a new trial.   The defendant objected to certain of the
    evidentiary rulings and to some of the prosecutor's remarks at
    trial; other asserted errors were unpreserved.   The defendant
    also requests that we exercise our authority under G. L. c. 278,
    § 33E, to grant him a new trial.
    We conclude that there was no prejudicial error or
    4
    substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice in any of the
    challenged evidentiary rulings, or in the prosecutor's closing
    argument.   After careful review of the record pursuant to G. L.
    c. 278, § 33E, we discern no reason to order a new trial or to
    reduce the degree of guilt.
    Trial evidence.     We recite facts the jury could have found,
    reserving additional detail for later discussion.
    In the months prior to the killing, the defendant and his
    wife were engaged in a hotly contested divorce.     The defendant
    told a number of his friends that his wife intended to take the
    marital home and "everything else" in the divorce.     At one point,
    he told Grebauski, in Stewart's presence, that he had offered his
    wife money to "just go away," but she refused.     Approximately two
    to three months before the victim was killed, the defendant,
    Breault, and Berryman were at Berryman's house, drinking beer,
    when the defendant asked if they wanted to "make some money."
    When Berryman responded affirmatively, thinking the defendant
    meant a job installing vinyl siding, the defendant explained that
    it was not a siding job, but that he would pay $2,000 for killing
    his wife, because she was going to take everything in the
    divorce.    The defendant also said that, "[i]f [his] wife takes a
    dime, . . . he would pay $1,000 to get it back."    Breault and
    Berryman thought that the defendant was joking.     At some point
    either during or shortly after this conversation, Phinney
    5
    arrived.
    In December, 1979, when the defendant was at Grebauski's
    house, he asked if Grebauski "knew anyone big, big and black that
    would go in there and do things to his wife that she would never
    forget" while the defendant was in Florida with his fourteen year
    old daughter, Ginger Kirby.   Both Stewart and Shannon Glover
    Grebauski, Grebauski's then girl friend,2 heard the defendant
    talking about the divorce and his desire that his wife were dead.
    At some point thereafter, Grebauski approached Stewart,
    saying that he "[had] a deal for" Stewart, and that the defendant
    had offered Grebauski $5,000 to kill the defendant's wife.
    Stewart initially declined the offer, but, after continued
    "prodding" by Grebauski, eventually agreed to kill the
    defendant's wife because he owed Grebauski $500 for purchases of
    cocaine.   Approximately a week before the victim was stabbed,
    Stewart told his friend Stephen Tracy that "Grebauski had
    somebody who wanted him to do his old lady."
    Around December 10, 1979, a week before school vacation was
    to begin, the defendant and his daughter Kirby, who lived with
    the victim, left to visit the defendant's older daughter, Linda
    McCraney, who lived in Florida.   Kirby stayed with McCraney in
    2
    At the time of the stabbing, Richard Grebauski and Shannon
    Glover had been living together for approximately ten years.
    They married in February, 2003.
    6
    McCraney's mobile home,3 and the defendant stayed with his girl
    friend and her family.    During that time, the defendant made a
    number of derogatory comments about his wife, including telling
    McCraney several times that her mother "was a whore" who was
    sleeping with everyone on Cape Cod, and that, "if [she] continued
    with the divorce she would be sorry for what she had done."
    McCraney thought that her father and sister would return to
    Massachusetts before school resumed on January 3 or 4, 1980, but,
    on January 3, they had not left and showed no signs of leaving.
    When McCraney asked the defendant about his plans, the defendant
    said that "it was none of [her] goddamn business and that he
    [would] leave whenever he[ was] ready to leave."
    On January 3, 1980, the day planned for the killing, Stewart
    went to Grebauski's house.    Grebauski received a telephone call
    from the defendant in Florida; the defendant said that "it had to
    be done that night" because Kirby needed to return to school.
    Grebauski gave Stewart one of two fillet knives that were kept on
    the kitchen windowsill, and a pair of gloves.   Grebauski told
    Stewart that the victim would be alone in the house, because her
    son would be working and her daughter was in Florida.    He told
    Stewart to just walk into the house and stab the victim in the
    heart.
    When Stewart drove to the victim's house for the first time
    3
    The defendant owned the mobile home.
    7
    that evening, no one was at home; he went to a nearby grocery
    store parking lot and returned shortly thereafter to see a
    vehicle in the driveway.    He entered as Grebauski had instructed,
    and found the victim upstairs in the bathroom.    He started to
    choke the victim, and she slipped and hit her head on the
    radiator.    Stewart then stabbed the victim in the heart and left
    her on the floor with her head leaning up against the side of the
    tub.    While he was moving the victim's body, he inadvertently cut
    her arm.    He threw the knife and gloves in the Cape Cod canal,
    then drove to his grandmother's house in Brockton, where he
    telephoned Grebauski to tell him that "it's done."    Grebauski
    came to the grandmother's house, and he and Stewart discussed
    plans for an alibi; Stewart planned to say that he had been with
    Grebauski in Brockton when the victim was killed.    Grebauski said
    that he could not pay Stewart until the defendant returned from
    Florida.
    That same day, Berryman telephoned the defendant in Florida,
    looking for Phinney.    Berryman and Phinney had been working on a
    vinyl siding job which was almost completed when Phinney suddenly
    departed for a week-long vacation in Florida.    When the client
    contacted Berryman, angry that the job was not finished, Berryman
    attempted to reach Phinney at the defendant's house in Florida.
    Berryman asked Phinney when he would be returning to
    Massachusetts to complete the job, and Phinney replied, "It
    8
    hasn't happened yet, but it's going to happen tonight.      Listen to
    your radio, watch the TV.   She's going to die tonight."4
    Edmond Carriere, III, the son of the victim and the
    defendant,5 contacted McCraney and Kirby in Florida to tell them
    that their mother had been killed; they flew to Massachusetts,
    while the defendant drove back.    At the victim's funeral service,
    the defendant did not go inside the church, but remained outside,
    sitting near his parked car.    Kirby testified that the family did
    not want the defendant at the funeral because they believed that
    he had harmed the victim.
    At some point shortly after the victim's death, Stewart and
    Grebauski were playing pool in Grebauski's house when the
    defendant telephoned to say he was coming over with the money.
    When the defendant arrived, he said he was pleased that his wife
    was dead ("the bitch was out of the way"), but was very angry
    that his son had not been killed and that the body had not been
    removed from the house so that it would not be discovered.     After
    an angry exchange during which the defendant told Grebauski he
    4
    At trial, David Phinney testified that he did not tell
    Charles Berryman to watch for news of the victim's death until
    after he had received notice the following day that she had been
    killed; Phinney said he told Berryman to watch the television
    news to get more information about the killing if he had not
    heard the details.
    5
    Edmond Carriere, III,   who was approximately twenty-two
    years old at the time of the   victim's death, lived with the
    victim and his fourteen year   old sister. For simplicity, we
    refer to Edmond by his first   name.
    9
    would not pay all of the agreed amount, the defendant and
    Grebauski resolved their differences and the defendant threw
    $10,000, in a stack of bills bound in an elastic band, onto the
    pool table.   When the defendant left, Grebauski and Stewart had a
    heated discussion about the amount Stewart would be paid.
    Stewart had believed that the full amount offered by the
    defendant was $5,000, not $10,000.   Eventually, Stewart agreed to
    accept $4,500 for the killing, representing the $5,000 Grebauski
    had discussed, minus a $500 deduction for the cocaine debt.
    A few months after the victim was killed, Berryman
    encountered the defendant on the driveway at Phinney's house.
    The defendant approached Berryman, put his arm around Berryman's
    shoulder, and said, "Charlie, I hear you're doing a lot of
    flapping."    When Berryman inquired what the defendant meant by
    this, he responded, "You know what I mean.    You keep it up,
    you're going to end up just like my wife."
    Several years after the victim's death, in 1994, the
    defendant encountered Edmond and Edmond's wife, Sharon Cope
    Carriere, at a fair in the Onset section of Wareham.    The
    defendant approached them, but Edmond refused to speak to him,
    claiming that the defendant was not his father.   The defendant
    then engaged in a loud and angry verbal confrontation with Cope
    Carriere, saying, among other things, that Edmond had had a
    sexual relationship with his mother and should have been killed
    10
    with her.
    Discussion.   1.     Standard of review.   The defendant
    challenges the introduction or exclusion of testimony to which
    there was an objection at trial, as well as testimony which was
    introduced without objection.    Where the error was preserved, we
    review for prejudicial error and consider "whether there is a
    reasonable possibility that the error might have contributed to
    the jury's verdict."     Commonwealth v. Alphas, 
    430 Mass. 8
    , 23
    (1999).   The Commonwealth "bears the risk of doubt when any
    exists as to the error being nonprejudicial."      
    Id.
       Reversal is
    not necessary if the error "did not influence the jury, or had
    but very slight effect."    Commonwealth v. Cruz, 
    445 Mass. 589
    ,
    591 (2005), quoting Commonwealth v. Flebotte, 
    417 Mass. 348
    , 353
    (1994).   Where the error was unpreserved, we review for a
    substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.       Commonwealth
    v. Wright, 
    411 Mass. 678
    , 682 (1992), S.C., 
    469 Mass. 447
     (2014).
    2.    Admission of out-of-court statements.     "Out-of-court
    statements by joint venturers are admissible against the others
    if the statements are made during the pendency of the criminal
    enterprise and in furtherance of it."     Commonwealth v. Burton,
    
    450 Mass. 55
    , 63 (2007).    See Commonwealth v. Bongarzone, 
    390 Mass. 326
    , 340 (1983).    Such statements of coventurers are
    considered to be reliable, and are deemed "equivalent to a
    statement by the defendant."    Commonwealth v. Stewart, 
    454 Mass. 11
    527, 535 (2009), citing Commonwealth v. White, 
    370 Mass. 703
    , 708
    (1976).   Before statements by coventurers may be admitted, the
    Commonwealth first must establish the existence of the joint
    venture (and the defendant's involvement in it) by a
    preponderance of the evidence, independent of the out-of-court
    statements.   Commonwealth v. Cruz, 
    430 Mass. 838
    , 844 (2000).
    See Commonwealth v. White, 
    supra
     at 709 n.7.    If the judge is
    satisfied that the Commonwealth has met this burden, the
    statement may be admitted, and the jury are instructed that they
    may consider the statements only if they find that a joint
    venture existed independent of the statements, and that the
    statements were made in furtherance of that venture.   See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Bright, 
    463 Mass. 421
    , 427 (2012); Commonwealth
    v. Burton, supra; Commonwealth v. Silanskas, 
    433 Mass. 678
    , 693
    (2001); Commonwealth v. Cruz, supra at 844-846.
    Here, numerous out-of-court statements made by Grebauski,
    Stewart, and Phinney were introduced under the joint venture
    exception to the hearsay rule, the majority through Stewart's
    testimony.    The defendant argues that the Commonwealth did not
    establish the existence of a joint venture between the defendant
    and Grebauski, Stewart, or Phinney, and therefore that many of
    the out-of-court statements should not have been admitted.     The
    defendant argues also that, even if the evidence was sufficient
    to establish a joint venture between himself, Grebauski, and
    12
    Stewart, Grebauski's statements should not have been admitted
    because they were testimonial and introduced in violation of
    Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 53-54 (2004).
    Turning first to this later argument, the claim is
    unavailing.   A defendant's right under the Sixth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution to confront the witnesses against him,
    see Crawford v. Washington, 
    supra,
     "does not bar the admission of
    statements that a reasonable person in the position of the
    declarant would not objectively foresee as being used in the
    investigation or prosecution of a crime."    Commonwealth v.
    Burton, supra at 63-64, citing Commonwealth v. Gonsalves, 
    445 Mass. 1
    , 12-13 (2005), cert. denied, 
    548 U.S. 926
     (2006).      This
    inquiry looks to the intent of the declarant and the specific
    circumstances of the statement.   See Commonwealth v. Gonsalves,
    supra at 12. "Certainly, just after the murder, in the privacy of
    [a residence], neither [coventurer] would have reasonably
    foreseen [his] statements being used in the investigation or
    prosecution of a crime."   Commonwealth v. Burton, supra at 64.
    "Many other jurisdictions have reached a similar conclusion,
    holding in general that statements of joint venturers (or
    coperpetrators or coconspirators) are the type of remarks that
    the Crawford Court deemed nontestimonial."   Id.   See Crawford v.
    Washington, 
    supra at 56
     ("statements in furtherance of a
    conspiracy" are not testimonial).
    13
    a.   Evidence of existence of joint venture.     The defendant
    challenges as improper hearsay testimony the introduction of
    Stewart's description of statements Grebauski made to him
    concerning the defendant's plan to kill his wife, particularly
    that, on the night of the killing, Grebauski told Stewart that
    the defendant had said during a telephone call from Florida that
    "it had to be done that night" because the defendant's daughter
    had to return to school.   The defendant also contests testimony
    by Stewart's friend Stephen Tracy describing what Stewart told
    him about someone wanting Grebauski "to do his old lady" a few
    weeks before the victim's death; Berryman's testimony regarding
    the substance of the telephone call with Phinney in Florida on
    the day of the stabbing; and State police Sergeant Paul White's
    testimony that Phinney told him that he went to Florida in part
    to provide an alibi for the defendant.   The defendant filed a
    motion in limine to exclude Tracy's testimony, and thereafter
    objected when it was introduced at trial.   Defense counsel
    objected to portions of Stewart's and Berryman's trial testimony;
    the defendant did not object to White's testimony.
    The Commonwealth maintains that the evidence of joint
    venture was stronger in this case than in Commonwealth v.
    Stewart, supra at 534-536, in which the court concluded that
    there was sufficient evidence of a joint venture between the
    defendant, Grebauski, and Stewart, but insufficient evidence of
    14
    Phinney's involvement.
    We conclude that the evidence in this case was more than
    sufficient to permit the jury to find that the defendant entered
    into a joint venture with Grebauski and Stewart to kill his wife.
    Therefore, save for a few exceptions that we discuss infra, the
    statements by Grebauski and Stewart were admissible as made in
    furtherance of the joint venture to kill the defendant's wife.6
    See Commonwealth v. Bright, supra at 426-427; Commonwealth v.
    Stewart, supra.   Moreover, the defendant's own statements made in
    furtherance of the joint venture to kill his wife are not
    hearsay, and were admitted properly.   See Commonwealth v. Bright,
    supra at 426 n.8, citing Commonwealth v. Marshall, 
    434 Mass. 358
    ,
    365-366 (2001).
    6
    Because the testimony concerning Phinney's knowledge of
    the joint venture was scant, limited, and contradictory, however,
    and, in any event, no testimony was introduced to establish that
    Phinney shared the intent to kill the victim, the evidence was
    insufficient to establish a joint venture between the defendant
    and Phinney, or between Phinney and Grebauski or Stewart.
    Therefore, Berryman's testimony concerning Phinney's statement
    over the telephone, "It hasn't happened yet, but it's going to
    happen tonight. Listen to your radio, watch the TV. She's going
    to die tonight," should not have been admitted. The objected-to
    admission of this evidence, however, did not result in
    prejudicial error. The statement was cumulative of substantial
    other evidence of the defendant's plan to kill the victim on
    January 3, and also was cumulative of other evidence that Phinney
    unexpectedly traveled to Florida with his family a few days
    previously, inferably in part to provide an alibi for the
    defendant. Moreover, at trial, Phinney denied having made the
    statement, and said that he had told Berryman after being
    notified of the victim's death to watch the news for further
    details if Berryman did not already know them. See note 4,
    supra.
    15
    b.   Scope of joint venture.     We turn to consideration of
    particular statements that the defendant contends, even if we
    conclude that there was sufficient evidence of a joint venture,
    were beyond its scope.   The defendant maintains that certain
    statements were inadmissible because they were made before the
    joint venture was formed, or after it ended.    See Commonwealth v.
    Andrews, 
    403 Mass. 441
    , 452 (1988) (statements of joint venturer
    not admissible after joint venture has ended).    The inquiry to
    determine if a statement is made during the pendency of the joint
    venture, however, "focuses not on whether the crime has been
    completed, but on whether a joint venture was continuing."
    Commonwealth v. Stewart, supra at 537, citing Commonwealth v.
    Braley, 
    449 Mass. 316
    , 322 (2007).    Statements made prior to the
    formation of a joint venture may be admissible if they were made
    in furtherance of a joint venture that formed thereafter.    See
    Commonwealth v. McLaughlin, 
    431 Mass. 241
    , 248 (2000) ("Matters
    surrounding the history of the conspiracy, including statements
    of coconspirators, may be admissible even if they predate the
    conspiracy").   Statements made in an effort to conceal a crime,
    made after the crime has been completed, may be admissible under
    the joint venture exception because the joint venture is then
    ongoing, with a purpose to ensure that the joint venture itself
    remains concealed.   See Commonwealth v. Braley, supra at 322;
    Commonwealth v. Anderson, 
    445 Mass. 195
    , 211 (2005), quoting
    16
    Commonwealth v. Colon-Cruz, 
    408 Mass. 533
    , 543 (1990).
    The defendant challenges Stewart's testimony about
    Grebauski's initial $5,000 offer, and Tracy's statement that
    Stewart said Grebauski had someone who wanted Grebauski to "do
    his old lady" as having been made before the joint venture was
    formed.   The challenged statements, however, were probative of
    the defendant's intent to kill his wife and of the defendant's,
    Stewart's, and Grebauski's actions in furtherance of that intent
    several months later.    The judge did not abuse his discretion in
    determining that these statements concerning the formation of the
    joint venture were not "too remote to be relevant."   See
    Commonwealth v. McLaughlin, supra; Commonwealth v. Rankins, 
    429 Mass. 470
    , 474 (1999).
    The defendant also challenges Stewart's testimony regarding
    the theft of two truckloads of lumber, in which he, the
    defendant, and Grebauski were involved, as being outside the
    scope of the joint venture to kill the victim.   The testimony was
    introduced to support a finding that the three would have been
    involved in a subsequent joint venture to perpetrate the killing.
    We agree that this testimony should not have been admitted on
    this ground.   The lumber theft took place in 1977, several years
    before the defendant told his friends and acquaintances that he
    was seeking someone to kill his wife, and did not form any part
    of the later joint venture to perpetrate the killing.    The
    17
    testimony about another criminal enterprise in which the
    defendant was involved thus was not relevant to any issue in the
    case, and served only to suggest that the defendant was likely to
    engage in criminal activity.     Because the Commonwealth contends
    in its brief that the testimony was also admissible to show
    motive and intent, we reserve for later discussion, see part 4,
    infra, our consideration whether the admission of this
    unobjected-to testimony was error resulting in a substantial
    likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.
    3.    Propensity evidence.    The defendant asserts that certain
    of his statements and testimony concerning his conduct after his
    wife's death should not have been admitted because the evidence
    was more prejudicial than probative and was introduced merely to
    paint a negative portrait of his character.    We consider each
    challenged statement in turn.
    a.    Statements that defendant wanted his son killed.     The
    defendant asserts error in the admission of testimony that, in
    addition to his wife, the defendant sought to have his son
    killed.   This evidence included testimony by Stewart that when
    Grebauski initially made the $5,000 offer to Stewart to kill the
    defendant's wife, Grebauski said that the defendant also wanted
    his son killed, but Stewart refused to have anything to do with
    the son or with moving the wife's body.    The evidence also
    included testimony by Stewart that, at Grebauski's house after
    18
    the stabbing, the defendant was reported to have been angry that
    his son had not been killed; and testimony by the defendant's
    daughter-in-law that, in 1994, she and the defendant's son
    encountered the defendant at a fair in Onset, where the defendant
    told the son that he should have been killed just like his
    mother.   The Commonwealth sought to introduce this evidence under
    the joint venture exception, maintaining that a plan to kill the
    defendant's son was part of the joint venture between Stewart,
    Grebauski, and the defendant to kill his wife.    In its brief, the
    Commonwealth asserts also that the evidence is relevant to the
    defendant's motive to kill his wife.    The defendant did not
    object to the admission of most of this testimony at trial, but
    did object to certain statements.
    We conclude that the evidence was not sufficient to support
    the existence of a joint venture to kill the defendant's son.
    The only evidence of the defendant's solicitation of participants
    in a joint venture to kill his son, or of others' possible
    agreement to participate in such a venture, was introduced
    through Stewart.    Stewart testified that, when Grebauski
    initially had asked him about killing the defendant's wife,
    Stewart told Grebauski that he refused to have anything to do
    with killing the son or moving the wife's body.    The plan between
    Grebauski and Stewart proceeded with the killing of the
    defendant's wife.    Stewart also testified that he "assumed" that
    19
    the conversation about the son meant that the defendant and
    Grebauski had discussed the matter previously.    Stewart further
    testified that, after the killing, Grebauski said the defendant
    was angry that the son had not been killed and the wife's body
    had not been moved.    Because Stewart explicitly refused to
    participate in any plan to kill the son (which apparently went by
    the wayside upon Stewart's refusal), Stewart was not a member of
    a joint venture to kill the son, and his statements about any
    such venture, if one existed, do not fall under the joint venture
    exception to the hearsay rule.
    Nor was there sufficient evidence independently to support
    the existence of a joint venture to kill the defendant's son.
    The only evidence of such a joint venture was the hearsay
    statements by Stewart.    The statements by the defendant at the
    fair in Onset, years after the killing, that his son should have
    been killed like the defendant's wife, do not indicate anything
    about the defendant's involvement in a joint venture years
    earlier that might have been formed with an intent to kill the
    son.
    The Commonwealth asserts also that the defendant's hostility
    toward his son is probative of the defendant's hostility toward
    the victim.    Evidence of a defendant's hostility towards his
    spouse may be admissible to show a defendant's motive to kill the
    spouse.    See Commonwealth v. Dung Van Tran, 
    463 Mass. 8
    , 15
    20
    (2012).    Here, however, evidence of the defendant's hostility
    towards his son does not render the desired inference of the
    defendant's hostility toward the victim and intent to kill her
    more probable than it would have been absent such evidence
    without asking the jury to make impermissible inferences
    concerning the defendant's character.    See Commonwealth v.
    Fayerweather, 
    406 Mass. 78
    , 83 (1989).   The defendant's motive to
    kill his wife is unrelated to any motive he may have had to kill
    his son.    The two crimes were separate and distinct.   The
    evidence of the defendant's motive to kill his wife hinged on her
    refusing to give him a divorce or to accept money to "just go
    away," and the defendant's belief that his wife would take
    everything he owned in a divorce.    There was no such motive for
    the defendant to want to kill his son.    Furthermore, statements
    made years after the victim's death were not, as the Commonwealth
    argues, "part and parcel" of the plan to kill the defendant's
    wife.   We agree that the evidence that the defendant said he
    wanted his son killed was more prejudicial than probative.
    Moreover, the evidence was not crucial to the Commonwealth's
    case.   Although the evidence of the defendant throwing $10,000 on
    the pool table, and his argument with Grebauski about whether the
    whole amount should be paid, was part of the course of the joint
    venture, the argument also involved the defendant's expressed
    anger over the manner in which the victim had been killed, and
    21
    the fact that her body had not been removed from the house as he
    had told Grebauski he wanted done.   Likewise, Stewart's argument
    with Grebauski over the $5,000 he believed had been offered for
    the stabbing, and the amount of $10,000 that the defendant had
    discussed with Grebauski, did not involve the defendant's son.
    Thus, the Commonwealth could have presented its case effectively
    without statements about a hypothetical crime that never
    occurred.
    Nonetheless, given the extensive, properly admitted
    testimony about the defendant's statements that he wanted his
    wife killed, and his efforts to hire someone to do so; his trip
    to Florida and his statements while in Florida; and his actions
    following the victim's death, the admission of the testimony
    concerning the defendant's statements about his son was unlikely
    to have influenced the jury's verdict.   See Commonwealth v.
    Ortiz, 
    435 Mass. 569
    , 578-579 (2002).
    b.   Evidence of defendant's hostility toward victim.   The
    defendant contends also that other testimony, both objected to
    and not objected to at trial, was unduly prejudicial and
    introduced to attack his character by portraying him as what the
    defendant characterizes as an "evil" man who did not like his
    family (a "cold monster or devil . . . who cared so little about
    his wife and children").   The challenged testimony includes the
    statement by the defendant's daughter McCraney that the defendant
    22
    said her mother was a "whore" who was engaging in sex with
    "everyone on Cape Cod"; that while McCraney and the defendant's
    younger daughter flew back from Florida upon being told of the
    victim's death, the defendant instead chose to drive back; and
    that the defendant did not attend his wife's funeral.    The
    defendant also challenges the admission of statements by Glover
    Grebauski, Grebauski's then girl friend, that, approximately one
    month before the stabbing, the defendant had asked if Grebauski
    "knew anyone big, big and black that would go in there and do
    things to his wife that she would never forget."   The
    Commonwealth maintains that this evidence was admitted properly
    to show the defendant's state of mind and intent toward the
    victim, and that the judge's instruction on prior bad acts was
    sufficient to cure any prejudice.
    Evidence of a defendant's adversarial or hostile
    relationship with a spouse may be admissible to show a
    defendant's motive to kill the spouse.   See, e.g., Commonwealth
    v. Dung Van Tran, 
    463 Mass. 8
    , 15 (2012) (evidence that defendant
    was abusive to estranged wife and children and had threatened to
    kill them prior to starting fire in wife's house was admissible
    because it "tended to show the defendant's long-standing and
    persistent anger and hostility toward" his family and thus was
    relevant to establish motive and intent); Commonwealth v. Mendes,
    
    441 Mass. 459
    , 464 (2004) (defendant's use of cocaine and
    23
    association with prostitutes admissible to show motive to kill
    wife, because it supported inference that defendant would seek
    money from wife's inheritance to support these habits);
    Commonwealth v. Hunter, 
    416 Mass. 831
    , 837 (1994), S.C., 
    427 Mass. 651
     (1998) (out-of-court statements concerning witness's
    conversation with victim admissible to show hostile relationship
    between defendant and victim, in order to establish defendant's
    state of mind and motive to kill victim); Commonwealth v. Gil,
    
    393 Mass. 204
    , 215 (1984) (evidence of hostile relationship
    between defendant and spouse may be admissible as relevant to
    defendant's motive to kill spouse).
    Although the derogatory statements about the defendant's
    wife were prejudicial to the defendant, they were not unfairly
    prejudicial.   The defendant's intent, and his participation in
    the planning of the killing that was carried out by Stewart and
    Grebauski, were key issues in the case, and the statements were
    clearly probative on those issues.     See Commonwealth v. Carey,
    
    463 Mass. 378
    , 387-388 (2012).   The statement concerning "someone
    big, big and black," who would do things his wife would never
    forget, is similarly relevant to the defendant's state of mind
    and his hostility toward the victim.    Although, as the defendant
    emphasizes, the statement contained both racial and sexual
    overtones, it was not of such an unduly inflammatory nature as to
    require a conclusion that the judge abused his discretion in
    24
    allowing its admission, where its probative value concerning the
    defendant's state of mind was strong.    See Commonwealth v. Olsen,
    
    452 Mass. 284
    , 294 (2008) (that evidence on material matter is
    "gruesome" or "inflammatory" does not necessarily render it
    inadmissible).    There was also no error in the judge's decision
    to permit the introduction of evidence that the defendant drove
    rather than flew home after being informed of his wife's death,
    and that he did not attend the victim's funeral.    Evidence of a
    defendant's behavior after a victim's death may be admissible
    where it is probative of the defendant's mental state at the time
    of the killing.   See Commonwealth v. Mendes, supra at 466-467;
    Commonwealth v. Cardarelli, 
    433 Mass. 427
    , 434 (2001).
    4.   Prior bad acts.    Stewart testified that, approximately
    two years before the killing, he and Grebauski stole two
    truckloads of lumber from a lumberyard in Wareham, at the behest
    of the defendant, with Stewart acting as the driver, and that
    Grebauski paid him $2,500 for the job.   In addition to his
    argument that testimony concerning the theft of the two
    truckloads of lumber was beyond the scope of the joint venture,
    see part 2, supra, the defendant argues that the testimony was
    not relevant to any issue in the case, and was introduced
    impermissibly only to attack his character.
    Evidence of prior bad acts "is not admissible to show a
    defendant's bad character or propensity to commit the charged
    25
    crime."   Commonwealth v. Dwyer, 
    448 Mass. 122
    , 128 (2006).   It
    may, however, "be admissible if relevant for other purposes such
    as 'common scheme, pattern of operation, . . . identity, intent
    or motive.'"   
    Id.,
     quoting Commonwealth v. Marshall, 
    434 Mass. 358
    , 366 (2001).   See Commonwealth v. Beneche, 
    458 Mass. 61
    , 80
    (2010) (evidence of misconduct or prior bad acts may be
    admissible to show defendant's motive, intent, or state of mind).
    Even if such evidence is relevant for other purposes, its
    probative value must not be substantially outweighed by its
    prejudicial effect.   See Commonwealth v. Sylvia, 
    456 Mass. 182
    , 192 (2010); Mass. G. Evid. § 403 (2014).
    We conclude that, in addition to not supporting the
    formation of a later joint venture to kill the defendant's wife,
    the testimony concerning the lumber theft also should not have
    been admitted to show motive or intent.   The lumber theft was too
    remote in time to make the formation of a joint venture between
    the defendant, Stewart, and Grebauski to kill the victim more
    likely, and bore little, if any, probative value on a motive to
    kill the victim.   It served therefore merely to paint the
    defendant as someone prone to criminal activity.
    Nonetheless, there was no substantial likelihood of a
    miscarriage of justice in the erroneous admission of this
    evidence.   In the context of the other evidence at trial
    concerning the brutal killing and the victim's efforts to defend
    26
    herself, the theft of materials from a lumber yard was a
    relatively minor offense.    Furthermore, Stewart testified that
    Grebauski, who was "into everything," and not the defendant, paid
    him to be a driver in the lumber yard theft.    Moreover, defense
    counsel made use of the lumber theft evidence as part of his
    defense strategy.    In both opening statement and closing
    argument, defense counsel argued that Grebauski, not Stewart,
    killed the victim, and that the lumber theft gave Grebauski an
    independent motive to want the victim dead, because both the
    victim and the defendant's son Edmond were planning to testify
    against Grebauski at his upcoming trial on charges stemming from
    the lumber theft.7
    5.   Exclusion of statement by deceased joint venturer.    The
    defendant argues that his right to due process was violated when
    the judge denied his motion to admit, as a statement against
    penal interest, testimony from David Mello that, while he and his
    friend Grebauski were driving past the victim's house at some
    point within a month of the stabbing, Grebauski said, "See that
    white house there?    I offed the bitch.   She was getting to be too
    much trouble and I killed her.   I had to wait until her daughter
    went to Florida with her father before I could kill her."
    A defendant has a constitutional right to present a defense,
    7
    Testimony suggested that the defendant was estranged from
    Edmond in part because of Edmond's plan to testify against
    Grebauski.
    27
    and to offer evidence that another person committed the crime.
    See Commonwealth v. Galloway, 
    404 Mass. 204
    , 208-209 (1989);
    Commonwealth v. Jewett, 
    392 Mass. 558
    , 562 (1984).   An out-of-
    court statement "is admissible under the penal interest exception
    if (1) the declarant's testimony is unavailable; (2) the
    statement so far tends to subject the declarant to criminal
    liability that a reasonable person in his position would not have
    made the statement unless he believed it to be true; and (3) the
    statement, if offered to exculpate the accused, is corroborated
    by circumstances clearly indicating its trustworthiness."
    Commonwealth v. Charles, 
    428 Mass. 672
    , 677 (1999), citing
    Commonwealth v. Drew, 
    397 Mass. 65
    , 73 (1986).   A judge
    determining whether to admit such a statement "should not base
    his determination on an assessment of the proffered witness's
    credibility," but rather should consider several factors,
    including the relationship between the declarant and the witness,
    the reliability and character of the declarant, and "the
    credibility of the declarant and the credibility and probativity
    of his statement" to assess whether "there is some reasonable
    likelihood that the statement could be true" given the other
    evidence.   Commonwealth v. Drew, 
    supra at 75-76
     (citation
    omitted).   Where the question of corroboration of the declarant's
    credibility or trustworthiness is a close one, a judge should err
    in favor of allowing the statement to be admitted.   See
    28
    Commonwealth v. Tague, 
    434 Mass. 510
    , 516-517 (2001), cert.
    denied, 
    534 U.S. 1146
     (2002) (judges should favor admission of
    statements against penal interest and leave assessments of
    credibility and weight to jury).
    The judge denied the motion to admit Mello's testimony on
    the ground that Grebauski's statement did not meet the third
    prong of the requirements for a statement against penal interest,
    that the statement be corroborated by circumstances clearly
    indicating its trustworthiness.    See Commonwealth v. Charles,
    supra.   The judge noted that, in addition to being Mello's
    cocaine supplier, Grebauski had engaged in a number of criminal
    ventures with Mello, including selling drugs, stealing, and
    automobile theft.   He concluded that there was no corroborating
    evidence, and that nothing in the circumstances indicated the
    proffered testimony was trustworthy.   Given a defendant's
    constitutional right to present exculpatory evidence, and that,
    in considering a statement against penal interest, "[t]he jury,
    rather than the judge, should evaluate the credibility of the
    witness," Commonwealth v. Drew, 
    supra at 76
    , Mello's proffered
    testimony should have been admitted.   See Commonwealth v. Tague,
    supra.
    There was no prejudice, however, in the decision not to
    leave the question of Mello's or Grebauski's credibility to the
    jury.    Grebauski's statement that he "offed" the victim was not
    29
    exculpatory and did nothing to undermine the Commonwealth's
    theory that Grebauski participated in the killing at the
    defendant's request, while the defendant was the mastermind.
    Whether Grebauski killed the victim himself, or hired Stewart to
    do so, did not exculpate the defendant; under either theory of
    the crime, the defendant asked Grebauski to kill the victim, and
    paid him for having done so.   Given the other evidence of
    Grebauski's involvement, the statement would have "had but very
    slight effect" on the jury.    Commonwealth v. Flebotte, 
    417 Mass. 348
    , 353 (1994), quoting Commonwealth v. Peruzzi, 
    15 Mass. App. Ct. 437
    , 445 (1983).
    6.   Prosecutor's closing argument.    The defendant contends
    that a new trial is required based on two improper aspects of the
    prosecutor's closing argument.   He maintains first that the
    prosecutor misstated the law and impermissibly shifted the burden
    of proof by several of his remarks.   The defendant maintains
    further that certain of the prosecutor's comments were highly
    inflammatory and not based on the evidence, but rather were
    inappropriate efforts to attack the defendant's character and to
    portray him as a "mastermind," a "puppet master," and the
    "architect of a murder for hire" who wished to "envelop" himself
    in "a cloak of darkness" and a "veil of secrecy."
    Prosecutors may not "misstate the evidence or refer to facts
    not in evidence" or "play . . . on the jury's sympathy or
    30
    emotions, or comment on the consequences of a verdict."
    Commonwealth v. Kozec, 
    399 Mass. 514
    , 516-517 (1987).     They may,
    however, argue "forcefully for a conviction based on the evidence
    and on inferences that may reasonably be drawn from the
    evidence."   
    Id. at 516
    .   "Remarks made during closing arguments
    are considered in the context of the entire argument, and in
    light of the judge's instructions to the jury and the evidence at
    trial."   Commonwealth v. Viriyahiranpaiboon, 
    412 Mass. 224
    , 231
    (1992).   See Commonwealth v. Francis, 
    450 Mass. 132
    , 140 (2007).
    The absence of an objection at trial may be viewed as "some
    indication that the tone [and] manner . . . of the now challenged
    aspects of the prosecutor's argument were not unfairly
    prejudicial."   Commonwealth v. Mello, 
    420 Mass. 375
    , 380 (l995),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Toro, 
    395 Mass. 354
    , 360 (1985).
    "[I]nstructions may mitigate any prejudice in the final
    argument."   Commonwealth v. Kozec, 
    supra at 517
    .
    a.    Statements concerning Commonwealth's burden.    As he did
    at trial, the defendant challenges certain of the prosecutor's
    statements that the defendant maintains were misstatements of law
    that shifted the burden of proof away from the Commonwealth, or
    that would have resulted in juror confusion as to the standard of
    proof necessary for a conviction.    He points particularly to the
    prosecutor's comment that it was the jury's duty to "determine
    what happened or what didn't happen," and "to determine what
    31
    version [of events] is the correct version.    What is it that
    happened?"    He also challenges the prosecutor's statement that
    "[t]he term 'verdict' comes from the Latin 'veritas,' truth; and
    'dicta,' to speak.   Speak the truth.   Thirty-two years is a long
    time; and now it's time for you, jurors, to speak the truth."
    Following closing arguments, the defendant sought a curative
    instruction as to these statements.     He argued that telling the
    jury that their job is to decide "which version is correct . . .
    shifts the burden," and, "They're not looking for the truth here.
    They're looking to see whether the Commonwealth has proved their
    case [beyond a reasonable doubt]."    The judge declined to give
    such an instruction.   In his final charge, however, the judge
    instructed:
    "[Y]our function as the jury is to determine the facts
    of this case. You are the sole and exclusive judges of the
    facts. You alone will determine, What evidence do I accept?
    How important any evidence is that you do accept. And what
    conclusions you can draw from all of the believable evidence
    in this case. After that, you must apply the law as I'm
    going to state it to you to the facts as you have determined
    them to be in order to decide whether the Commonwealth has,
    as it must, proven this particular Defendant guilty of the
    offense known as murder beyond a reasonable doubt."
    "It is improper for a prosecutor to equate a guilty verdict
    with justice."   Commonwealth v. Francis, supra at 140.    See
    Commonwealth v. Degro, 
    432 Mass. 319
    , 328-329 (2000) (request to
    jury to "do your job" and, implicitly, to find defendant guilty,
    was not permissible argument).   Even assuming that certain of the
    32
    prosecutor's statements could be seen as implicitly urging the
    jury to do their job and find the defendant guilty, the majority
    of the prosecutor's statements that the defendant characterizes
    as burden-shifting did not suggest that the Commonwealth's burden
    was less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt, or that the jury
    could do their duty only by reaching a guilty verdict.   Indeed,
    early in his argument the prosecutor noted that the defendant's
    counsel had misspoken at one point and suggested that the burden
    of proof rested on defense counsel; the prosecutor then correctly
    stated:
    "But many times, he also said the burden is on the
    Commonwealth. And folks, make no mistake about that. That
    is absolutely 100 percent true. The burden is on the
    government here to prove this case to you beyond a
    reasonable doubt."
    The prosecutor's statement regarding the jury's duty to determine
    what happened, and to seek the truth, were not improper.   See
    Commonwealth v. Lyons, 
    426 Mass. 466
    , 471-472 (1998) (prosecutor
    may urge jury to "do [their] duties as jurors to return a just
    verdict").   It is appropriate for counsel to "impress upon the
    jury their duty to act with . . . impartiality."   Commonwealth v.
    LaCorte, 
    373 Mass. 700
    , 707 (1977).
    A few of the prosecutor's comments were more questionable.
    The remark that the jury had to determine which of two stories
    was the true version of events did not, standing alone, inform
    the jury that their duty was to decide whether the Commonwealth
    33
    had proven the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,
    rather than to pick between two scenarios proffered by the
    attorneys.8   Viewed in the context of the prosecutor's entire
    closing argument, however, see Commonwealth v. Lyons, supra,
    there was no prejudicial error.   See Commonwealth v. LaCorte,
    
    supra
     (prosecutor's remark that jury were courageous and that he
    8
    Although the defendant made no mention of this statement,
    we note that, toward the end of his closing, having summarized
    the evidence and immediately after his statement that thirty-two
    years is a long time, the prosecutor said, "Edmond Carriere, Jr.
    is guilty of murder in the first degree under the theory of
    deliberate premeditation; and he's guilty of murder in the first
    degree by extreme atrocity or cruelty." A prosecutor may not
    "interject his personal belief in the defendant's guilt" into his
    closing argument. See Commonwealth v. Young, 
    461 Mass. 198
    , 206
    (2012), citing Commonwealth v. Good, 
    409 Mass. 612
    , 623 (1991).
    In the context of the surrounding statements, however, the jury
    reasonably could have understood this statement as the prosecutor
    arguing permissibly that they should find the defendant guilty
    based on the evidence. See Commonwealth v. Mamay, 
    407 Mass. 412
    ,
    424-425 (1990). Cf. Commonwealth v. Santiago, 
    425 Mass. 491
    , 500
    (1997), quoting Commonwealth v. Bradshaw, 
    385 Mass. 244
    , 277
    (1982) (jury "could be expected to take both arguments with a
    grain of salt" and would be able to sort out excessive claims
    made by prosecutor).
    In any event, even if the statement were improper, it
    resulted in no substantial likelihood of a miscarriage of
    justice. At the beginning of his closing, the prosecutor himself
    said that the jury must find the facts and that their collective
    memories alone would determine what the facts were, not the
    attorneys' views of the evidence. Later, before summarizing the
    evidence, he argued properly, "I'm going to suggest to you,
    ladies and gentlemen, that you will be convinced beyond a
    reasonable doubt." In addition, the closing was followed by the
    judge's forceful instructions on the attorneys' arguments being
    merely their view of the evidence, and his instructions on the
    Commonwealth's burden of proof and the jury's duty to determine
    the facts and how much, if any, of the witnesses' testimony they
    believed.
    34
    believed they would return truthful verdict not improper).
    Immediately before and after making this statement, the
    prosecutor informed the jury correctly that the Commonwealth had
    to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt, and that it was
    their exclusive province to determine what the facts were.     The
    prosecutor's closing argument was followed by the judge's
    detailed and proper instructions that explained the
    Commonwealth's burden to prove the defendant's guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt; the instructions also emphasized that opening
    statements and closing arguments are not evidence.    See
    Commonwealth v. Francis, supra at 140-141 (prosecutor's statement
    that "justice delayed is justice denied" was improper, but error
    did not create substantial likelihood of miscarriage of justice
    because jury knew that thirty years had passed since killing
    occurred and argument was followed by appropriate jury
    instructions); Commonwealth v. Viriyahiranpaiboon, 
    supra at 232
    ,
    and cases cited (where prosecutor made improper burden-shifting
    comments in closing, defendant must show that effect on jury was
    sufficiently prejudicial to merit reversal).
    b.   Inflammatory remarks.    "A prosecutor must limit comment
    in closing statement to the evidence and fair inferences that can
    be drawn from the evidence."     Commonwealth v. Pearce, 
    427 Mass. 642
    , 646 (1998), quoting Commonwealth v. Kelly, 
    417 Mass. 266
    ,
    270 (1994).   Nonetheless, a prosecutor may argue zealously in
    35
    support of inferences favorable to the Commonwealth's case that
    reasonably may be drawn from the evidence.    See Commonwealth v.
    Johnson, 
    429 Mass. 745
    , 748-749 (1999), quoting Commonwealth v.
    Sanchez, 
    405 Mass. 369
    , 376 (1989) ("to the degree the recitation
    of the evidence was inflammatory, that was inherent in the
    odious . . . nature of the crime[] committed").    Although
    forceful, the prosecutor's characterization of the defendant
    seems to have been based properly on reasonable inferences that
    could have been drawn from the evidence.     The suggestion that the
    defendant was a "mastermind" and the "architect of a murder for
    hire" was grounded in the evidence of months of planning by the
    defendant to arrange his wife's killing in Massachusetts while he
    was with friends and relatives in Florida; the characterization
    of the defendant as a "puppet master," while perhaps hyperbolic,
    also rested on this evidence.   See Commonwealth v. Lyons, supra
    at 472-473, and cases cited ("The prosecutor's remarks were
    characteristic of 'enthusiastic rhetoric, strong advocacy, and
    excusable hyperbole,' and did not cross the line between fair and
    improper argument").
    Moreover, even if certain of the remarks might have been
    better avoided, there was no error giving rise to a substantial
    likelihood of a miscarriage of justice.    Given the properly
    admitted evidence, the comments that the defendant wanted someone
    else to "do the dirty work" so that he could have an alibi, or
    36
    that he "wishe[d] to envelop" himself "in a cloak of darkness, in
    a shroud of secrecy," did not step over the line of zealous
    advocacy.   Furthermore, during his final charge immediately after
    the prosecutor's closing, the judge instructed that closing
    arguments are not evidence, but "merely an opportunity for [the
    attorneys] to sum up from their perspective what they felt the
    evidence might suggest or mean to you."   See Commonwealth v.
    Francis, supra at 140-141; Commonwealth v. Kozec, 
    supra at 517
    ("instructions may mitigate any prejudice in the final
    argument").
    6.   Review pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E.    Having reviewed
    the entire record pursuant to G. L. c. 278, § 33E, we discern no
    reason to reduce the conviction of murder in the first degree to
    a lesser degree of guilt or to order a new trial.
    Judgment affirmed.