On Jаnuary 14, 1965, following a trial without a jury, appellant was found guilty of unlawful entry 1 and petit larceny 2 from the Piedmont Airlines’ office. A month later in another non-jury trial, he was convicted of the same offenses involving the Trans World Airlines. We are asked to review his convictions in these cases, consolidated here for appeal.
The evidence as developed at the Piedmont trial reflects that the company’s offices consist of a first-floor suite of three *509 rooms: a front room for customer information and sales; the sales manager’s office in the rear; and a middle room or utility office in which a safe is kept. The public has the right of access only to the front room. 3 A Piedmont employee testified that on March 23, 1964, about 11a. m., he heard a noise in the manager’s office and went to investigate. As he passed through the middle room, he noticed that the safe was open. In the manager’s office, he found a stranger attempting to leave by the rear door. When the employee tried to question him, he ran away. A check of the safe revеaled that $79 was missing from the cash box. From photographs furnished by the investigating officers, the employee identified appellant as the intruder. On June 29, 1964, pursuant to a warrant, Bond was arrested and taken by squad car to the precinct. The arresting officer testified that en route there appellant admitted the thefts from the Piedmont office, as wеll as two similar thefts from the nearby TWA office.'
At the second trial, on February 18-19, 1965, a TWA employee testified that about 5:30 p. m. on April 6, 1964, she locked a petty cash box in a cabinet in the office in which she worked and left the keys on her desk while she went into an adjoining room. When she returned about fifteen minutes later, she found the cabinet door ajar and hеr keys as well as the cash box missing. The cash box found discarded in a basement lavatory with an uncertain amount of money 4 missing, bore latent fingerprints subsequently identified as those of appellant.
The same employee further testified that by May 4, 1964, all locks had been changed. On that date, before leaving for the day, she locked the cabinet wherе the cash box was kept and took her new keys home. Another employee testified that he had worked late that evening and about 8 p. m. found a stranger in the closed office who, upon being questioned, said that he was a TWA employee and worked “for the man in the back room.” He could not, however, give the name of his supposed employer and was vague as to the nature of his duties. While being further questioned, he peremptorily left the scene. The following morning the cabinet was found to have been forced open and the cash box removed. Approximately $230 was missing. Bond was later identified as the man found in the office. As in the Piedmont trial, the arresting officer testified as to appellant’s confession made at the time of his arrest on June 29, 1964.
At both trials, appellant denied his guilt. He admitted, however, that one evening he did visit the TWA building, explaining that he was there to see a friend, whom he did not further identify.
Against this factual background, we consider appellant’s various allegations of error.
I. Absence of Special Findings
As to the January trial, appellаnt contends it was reversible error for the trial judge to deny his request for special findings.
Rule 14 11(b) of the criminal rules of the trial court, which is virtually identical with Rule 23(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, provides that “[i]n a case tried without a jury the court shall make a general finding and shall in addition
on request
find the facts specially.” [Emphasis supplied.] Cases construing thе Federal rule have held that a request made pursuant to this rule is “the
*510
proper procedure by which a defendant may preserve a question of law for purposes of appeal.” Cesario v. United States,
The cited cases and the express wording of the rule establish that a defendant is entitled to special findings as a matter of right and not by judicial discretion, but it is a right which must be claimed. If not timely exercised, it must be construed as having been waived and its denial does not in itself entitle a defendant to a new trial. To hold otherwise would enable a defendant to secure a second trial without regard to the merit of any claim of error.
In the instant case, appellant was represented from thе beginning by competent counsel. At trial no request was made for special findings. Not until eighteen months after trial was such a request made. 6 Under the circumstances, we hold it was not error for the trial judge to deny appellant’s request for special findings.
II. Denial of Speedy Trial
Appellant also contends he was denied a speedy trial and thereby deprived of due рrocess of law. He does not especially complain that the period between the filing of the informations and the trials was unreasonable, but rather that the total elapsed time between offenses and the trials violated the dictates of the Sixth Amendment.
The facts and circumstances of each case determine the aрplicability of the Sixth Amendment. Taylor v. United States,
1. Time Involved
For the purpose of determining whether the Sixth Amendment guaranty of a speedy trial has been violated, most circuits look only to the time elapsed after the formal indictment or information.
8
In this
*511
jurisdiction, however, the entire period between offense and trial may be considered. Mann v. United States,
2. Who Caused the Delay
Except in extreme circumstances, delay caused by the defendant is not to be computed in determining whether a defеndant has been denied a speedy trial. King v. United States,
Appellant first became a suspect on April 18, 1964; he was arrested June 29, 1964. The two and one-half month delay between identification and arrest, caused by errors and confusion in warrants, must be charged against the government. Another three weeks passed before appellant appeared in court and was bound over to the grand jury. This also can be charged to the government. On October 12, 1964, the grand jury returned an ignoramus. The present informations were filed October 22, 1964.
Time consumed in grand jury proceedings is not chargeable against the government, since this is regarded as the routine, normal delay inherent in judicial procedures. United States v. Kennedy, D. C.App.,
3.The Purposeful Aspect of Delay
To be chargeable against the government, delay need not be due to bad faith or chicanery. United States v. Parrott,
4.Prejudice to the Defendant
Where the delay is substantial, prejudice is presumed and to overcome this presumption the government has the burden of proving that there was no more delay than is reasonably attributable to the ordinary processes of justice and that the accused suffered no serious prejudice thereby. Williams v. United States, 102 U.S. App.D.C. 51, 53,
Based on these criteria, we find that appellant has made no showing of prejudice or even a reasonable possibility thereof. The delay was less than substantial, and appellant did not claim either that, by reason of the delay, he could not recall at trial his activities on the dates of the offenses or that key witnesses were no longer available.
5.Waiver by the Defendant
In general, the right to a speedy trial is waived unless it is asserted promptly. Mathies v. United States,
We are of the opinion that, absent a prompt assertion of the right, a speedy trial challenge will not be recognized on appeal unless defendant has suffered actual prejudice caused by the delaying tactics of the government. In case of doubt as to the existence of prejudice, the proper means fоr exploring that issue is by appropriate motion in the trial court.
III. Confessions
A
Appellant contends that his confessions were secured in violation of the safeguards required by Escobedo v. State of Illinois,
Under
Escobedo,
the violation of a Sixth Amendment right must be claimed and an objection entered at trial in order to preserve for appellate review the contention that evidence was obtained in violation of that right. United States v. Indiviglio,
Appellant did not choose to raise his claim in the trial court. Furthermore, the record, by which we are bound, discloses that en route to the precinct he was informed by the arresting officer of his rights, including his right to remain silent, but insisted on confessing that he had committed the offenses at the Piedmont and TWA offices and pointing out the places where they had taken place. His frank admissions of guilt were voluntary and in no way violative of the principles enunciated in Escobedo.
B
Appellant further contends that criminal rule 39(a)
18
of the trial court, which is substantially identical to rule 5(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedurе, and Mallory v. United States,
IV. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Appellant’s final contention is that there was insufficient evidence to support any of his convictions. A thorough examination of the record convinces us this claim is without merit.
On all three occasions there was ample evidence to establish the offenses of petit larceny beyond a reasonable doubt. On two of the occasions, he was identified as being present in the offices of the airlines at the times the losses occurred. 20 On the third occasion his fingerprints were found on the cash box, which could be explained only if appellant was the thief. 21
The convictions for unlawful entry must also stand. In Bowman v. United States, D.C.App.,
As we find no error affecting any substantial right, appellant’s convictions are
Affirmed.
Notes
. D.C.Code § 22-3102 (1961 ed.).
. D.C.Code § 22-2202 (1961 ed.).
. Two employees of a business concern оn the floor above had permission to go through the manager’s office to use the door leading to the outside to reach their parking places in the alley. This door is always locked and cannot be opened from the outside.
. Although the amount was uncertain, it seems to have been in excess of $100. This, however, does not defeat а conviction for petit larceny. Brock v. United States, D.C.Mun.App.,
. See also United States v. Schuemann,
. Appellant filed notice of appeal in this court shortly after conviction, but in the absence of a sufficient transcript or statement of proceedings and evidence, we revoked our initial permission to appeal in
forma pauperis,
which ruling was reversed in the United States Court of Aрpeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (Bond v. United States,
. The first four factors are enunciated in United States v. Parrott,
. See e.g., Harlow v. United States,
. See also Petition of Provoo,
. Also Jackson v. United States, 122 U.S. App.D.C. 124,
. See United States v. Parrott, supra note 7. See also Note, 34 Geo.Wash. L.Rev. 527, 535, 538-39 (1966).
. The second TWA violations do not, of course, have the benefit of this computation since they occurred May 4, 1964.
.The concurring opinion in Nickens v. United States,
. E. g., Petition of Provoo, supra note 9 [ten years]; United States v. McWilliams,
.
.
. E. g., Mathies v. United States,
.This rule requires that an officer making an arrest under warrant “shall take the arrested person without unnecessary delay before a judge of [that] court.”
. See White v. United States, 114 U.S. App.D.C. 238,
. Cf. Williams v. United States, 108 U.S. App.D.C. 384,
. Compare Borum v. United States,
