These appeals were consolidated for hearing. Each of the appellants seeks reversal of his convictions of robbery, conspiracy to commit robbery, and carrying a deadly weapon without a license (§ 22-2901, D.C.Code (1940); 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Supp.1951); § 22-3204, D.C.Code (1940, S'upp. VII)). On cross-examination of a principal witness for the prosecution, counsel for one of the appellants 1 asked the witness whether during the years 1938 through 1941 she was not convicted several times of prostitution and vagrancy. In sustaining objection to this question, the court advised counsel that he might ask some particular question but not such a general one. Defense counsel did not pursue the subject further, but proceeded to question the witness on a different point. It was well within the discretion of the court to require a more precise question. If counsel desired to go further into the subject matter he should have reframed his question.
It is also urged that the court erred in not requiring the production under subpoena of the arrest record of the same witness. The subpoena was in form a subpoena to testify, with a notation in script regarding the arrest record of the witness. Assuming this made it a subpoena duces tecum, the officer of the Metropolitan Police Department who responded testified that he had no arrest record of the witness in question by the name contained in the subpoena, did not have any record under any other name and did not know that she used two other names mentioned to him by counsel. Assuming, further, that there was an arrest record of this witness under any of the several names by which she might have been known and that the Police Department could be required to produce such record though it were- not itself admissible (see Sanford v. United States, 1938,
Material error not appearing from examination and consideration of the record, the judgments are
Affirmed.
Notes
. In the circumstances of this case and for purposes of this opinion we treat objection made on behalf of either defendant to be available to the other.
