The defendant, Kenneth A. Appleby, appeals from his convictions of rape and kidnapping. 1 He raises numerous issues concerning the right to counsel at trial, procedure, and evidence. We affirm.
The facts are sordid. For present purposes, we need give only an outline of the evidence. Facts pertinent to the issues raised will appear in appropriate sections of this opinion. In the early morning hours of October 22, 1977, the victim, a resident of New York city, was abducted from that city by the defendant and another person, James Carey Junkin, and taken by car to a house in West Springfield, Massachusetts. During the trip, the victim was at various times blindfolded, handcuffed, gagged, beaten, and forced to swallow pills. He was unconscious for a good part of the trip. Once at the house, the victim was interrogated, shackled, disrobed, and forced by Appleby and Junkin to submit to repeated acts of fellatio and sodomy. He was eventually taken to a woodshed and left there at least overnight, still blindfolded and shackled. When released from the shed, he was again interrogated and drugged. Appleby made statements to the effect that he would use torture to dominate the victim. Finally, the victim was put into a car and driven to a city that he recognized as Hartford, Connecticut, when his blindfold was removed. He was given money for bus fare to New York city when he was freed. He returned to New York city by bus and he reported the incident to the New York city police within a few days. In *362 December, 1977, the victim underwent surgery to remove a testicle which had been causing him pain since the incident.
The defendant was tried before a jury in the Superior Court in Hampden County from January 21, 1980, to February 8, 1980. Upon conviction, the defendant was sentenced to the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Walpole for eighteen to twenty-five years for rape and eight to' ten years for kidnapping, the sentences to be served concurrently. On a motion to revise and revoke the sentence on the rape conviction, a different Superior Court judge imposed a term of ten to twelve years. 2 It appears that the motion to revise and revoke the sentence on the kidnapping conviction had been continued at the request of the defendant. The disposition as to the assault and battery indictments was not disturbed. After Appleby filed his appeal, we took the case on our own motion. G. L. c. 211 A, § 10(A).
A. The Right to Counsel and the Motions for Continuance.
Appleby claims that the “trial court” 3 erred in denying his appointed counsel’s requests to withdraw and in denying Appleby’s request for other counsel. He also argues that the trial judge abused his discretion by failing to allow continuances of the trial in order to permit the defendant and the appointed counsel sufficient time to prepare.
The indictments in this case were returned in July, 1978. From that time until October 17, 1979, Appleby was represented by three different attorneys who apparently were *363 privately retained. During this period, a number of discovery and procedure motions were filed. 4 Although the record is unclear as to why the first attorney withdrew, Appleby at some point fired the second and third attorneys. 5
On October 17, 1979, Attorney Peter Rutherford of the Massachusetts Defenders Committee was appointed to represent Appleby. There was, at first, a question whether Appleby was entitled to appointed counsel but, after an investigation by the probation department, it appears that a judge determined in early November, 1979, that Appleby was indigent. 6 Between October 17 and November 30, 1979, the defendant filed more motions, and at some point, trial was scheduled for January 7, 1980.
On November 30, Mr. Rutherford filed a “motion to disappear” on the ground he could not adequately represent Appleby because Appleby had expressed a lack of confidence in the attorney’s ability. 7 A judge denied the mo *364 tian, declaring his belief in Mr. Rutherford’s ability. The judge then gave Appleby the choice to proceed pro se or to accept Mr. Rutherford’s representation. 8 Later in the hearing Appleby asked if he would be permitted to file pro se motions, and the judge told him he would. The judge instructed Mr. Rutherford to stay in the case and to take an active role in advising Appleby. When Mr. Rutherford expressed doubts concerning the arrangement, the judge stated that in making his decision he had considered the feelings of Mr. Rutherford and Appleby and “the administration of the Court and the procedure of cases to trial and the potential for delay and miscarriage of justice.” Appleby did not protest the judge’s decision, and it was clear that the trial was to commence on January 7, 1980.
On January 7, 1980, Appleby was arrested at the Canadian border in the State of Washington. 9 When he did not appear at trial that morning, a default warrant was issued. At a hearing on that date before a second Superior Court *365 judge, Mr. Rutherford renewed his motion to withdraw on substantially the same grounds as before, and the motion was again denied. Appleby waived extradition from Washington and was present for a hearing before the same judge on January 14. At this hearing, and at hearings held by that judge on January 17 and 18, and by the trial judge on January 21 and 22, Mr. Rutherford presented motions to withdraw and Appleby presented motions to appoint different counsel. Mr. Rutherford and Appleby emphasized that a breakdown of the attorney-client relationship between them had occurred and that they were not prepared for trial. The motions were all denied.
As of January 14, 1980, Appleby had not quarreled with the notion that he was representing himself with Mr. Rutherford as standby adviser, although Appleby said he wanted another lawyer and had decided to proceed pro se only because he did not want Mr. Rutherford to represent him. 10 He did not request a continuance, however. At the January 17 hearing, Appleby stated that Mr. Rutherford, or any attorney from the Massachusetts Defenders Committee, would be unable to represent him adequately because they could not understand, and might be repulsed by, the homosexual and sadomasochistic aspects of the case. He claimed that such an understanding was necessary because “[tjhis is a positive defense. It’s consensual relationship.” When Appleby said that he did not wish to represent himself, the judge instructed Mr. Rutherford that he was to represent Appleby.
In his remarks on January 21 11 and 22, the trial judge said that he had read the more than fifty motions that had been *366 filed by Appleby and his various attorneys. His opinion was that Appleby had apparently caused many of his own problems and “seem[ed] to be creating this delay.” He noted that Appleby had “had many hearings before many judges on the same matters we’re talking about today.” The judge further noted that Mr. Rutherford, whom he characterized as a highly competent attorney, was in the case for all purposes as of January 17, 1980. The judge said that Appleby had the right to conduct his own defense but that Mr. Rutherford was his attorney and, rather than being a passive adviser, Mr. Rutherford would be expected to make suggestions for the conduct of trial as though he were participating in it as counsel.
At a lobby conference the next day, Appleby and Mr. Rutherford again voiced their objections to the situation. When Appleby stated that he did not consider Mr. Rutherford to be his attorney and did not want Mr. Rutherford to speak on his behalf, the judge instructed Mr. Rutherford “to stand by as counsel, and ... to give . . . advice at all times.” The empanelment of the jury was commenced following this conference.
1.
Assistance of counsel.
The assistance of counsel is “deemed necessary to insure fundamental human rights of life and liberty.”
Johnson
v.
Zerbst,
The only issue for decision at the hearing on November 30, 1979, was whether Mr. Rutherford, on his own motion, should be allowed to withdraw. Although Appleby was evidently dissatisfied with Mr. Rutherford, he did not request that a new lawyer be appointed at that time. The judge found that Mr. Rutherford was a competent attorney. There was no indication that either Appleby or Mr. Rutherford could not be prepared for trial on January 7, 1980. Indeed, from the number of motions filed between the time Mr. Rutherford was appointed on October 17, 1979, and the hearing on November 30, 1979, it is apparent that significant preparations for trial were being made.
Unlike the defendant in
Commonwealth
v.
Cavanaugh,
We have noted that at the November 30 hearing Appleby did not protest the judge’s decision to require him to choose. We do not imply that Appleby waived his right to counsel by his silence. Such an implication might be constitutionally offensive.
Carnley
v.
Cochran,
The fact that Appleby refused to sign a waiver form is not conclusive of a lack of waiver, see
Commonwealth
v.
Beneficial Fin. Co.,
*370
As of November 30, when Appleby waived his right to counsel, the trial was scheduled to begin on January 7. Because Appleby had fled the jurisdiction, trial did not begin on that date. In these circumstances, we think that Apple-by’s later claims of communication problems and “complete breakdown” and his requests for an appointed attorney came “within the broad discretionary power of a court over requests for last-minute shifts in representation which threaten to delay a proceeding.”
Commonwealth
v.
Jackson,
2.
Motions for continuance.
We can see no error in the trial judge’s denials of the motions for continuances.
19
Such motions are addressed to “the sound discretion of the judge, whose action will not be disturbed unless there is a patent abuse of discretion.”
Commonwealth
v.
Funderberg,
The trial judge indicated that he would do all that he could to see that Mr. Rutherford was furnished with what
*372
ever information he needed. He also offered Appleby a few days to discuss the case with Mr. Rutherford, but Appleby refused, saying he did not want Mr. Rutherford to represent him because of the “irreconcilable breakdown.” In making his decision, the trial judge noted that the “case has been lingering in this court since 1978” and that he was “not going to plow the same ground . . . plowed before the other . . . Judges.” It is apparent that he balanced the claims of Appleby and Mr. Rutherford, on the one hand, against the rights of the Commonwealth, on the other.
21
See
Commonwealth
v.
Cavanaugh,
B. The Voir Dire Examination of Prospective Jurors.
The defendant contends that the judge’s questions on voir dire were insufficient in light of the extensive publicity and the “sensational aspects of homosexuality, the black arts and Naziism.” Although during empanelment there was discussion of voir dire questions submitted by Appleby, the record does not contain a copy of any questions he submitted. Nor
*373
does the record reveal any mention of Naziism or the “black arts” prior to the voir dire. We have also not been supplied with any documentation concerning the nature and extent of the publicity that the case received. The judge did reveal the nature of the charges to the assembled venire, and he asked them generally if any of them were aware of any bias or prejudice, or whether any one would be too embarrassed by the nature of the evidence to serve on the jury. He also asked each juror individually a series of questions which satisfied the constitutional and statutory requirements for jury selection.
23
See
Commonwealth
v.
Sowers,
*374 C. The Admission and Exclusion of Certain Items of Physical Evidence.
Appleby claims error in the judge’s admission and exclusion of certain items as physical evidence.
1. A Massachusetts State police officer who had participated in a search of Appleby’s home in June, 1978, identified at trial a white cloth “voodoo” doll 25 as one he had found in Appleby’s safe. When found, the doll bore the name James Carey Junkin. The doll was marked for identification and subsequently admitted in evidence over Appleby’s objection and motion for mistrial.
Appleby now contends that the admission of the doll was highly prejudicial because “[t]he doll displayed various black magic incantations.” Aside from Junkin’s name, the only words now visible on the doll are “Venus Here [sic] Me,” which are printed on the back. Appleby has not directed us to any place in the record where there is mention of black magic or voodoo prior to the time the doll was admitted. Indeed, these topics apparently did not arise until Appleby later questioned Junkin
26
in what Appleby asserts
*375
was an effort to counteract the effect of the doll’s admission. There was no error. The doll was relevant as corroboration of the victim’s testimony that Junkin, who as yet had not been located, was present at the scene of the crime. The judge implicitly found that the doll’s probative value outweighed any prejudicial effect. See
Commonwealth
v.
Chretien,
2. Appleby alleges error in the admission of a letter signed by Junkin on the ground that the letter contained references to the Nazi party which were prejudicial to Appleby. Appleby characterizes the letter as “essentially a pledge of allegiance to the Nazi party.” The letter was first mentioned at trial by Junkin in response to a question from Appleby. Junkin stated that Appleby had forced him to sign the letter “under the pains of death,” that Appleby was
*376
supposedly a leader of the Fourth Reich, and that Appleby had told him that he (Junkin) would in time take his “rightful position as the head of the Fourth Reich.” Although this answer was not responsive to Appleby’s question, Appleby did not move to strike it but instead attempted to cross-examine Junkin on the credibility of Junkin’s statement.
28
The Commonwealth later attempted to introduce a copy of the letter as corroboration of Junkin’s testimony that he had signed such a letter. The letter was not admitted initially but was later admitted over Appleby’s objection, after Appleby had questioned Junkin further on the topic of Naziism. The jury were instructed that the letter was admitted only for the limited purpose of corroborating Junkin’s testimony and not for the truth of the matter asserted therein. In light of the fact that the Commonwealth did not, aside from having the letter introduced, mention Naziism, that Appleby attempted to exploit Junkin’s statement by cross-examination, and that Appleby was warned that his continued questioning concerning the letter might open the door to its admission, the judge did not abuse his discretion in admitting the evidence. We assume that the jury understood and followed the limiting instructions.
Commonwealth
v.
Jackson,
3. Appleby did not object to the admission of certain handcuffs and shackles which the victim had identified as being those used to bind him, or as being similar to those used to bind him. A State police officer later testified that he had found both items during a search of Appleby’s home. On the evidence, the jury could properly infer that the handcuffs and shackles were the ones used by Appleby and *377 Junkin. See Commonwealth v. Jackson, supra, and cases cited. There was no error.
4. There was no error in the admission of five photographs taken at Appleby’s residence by State police during a search there in June, 1978. Prior to admission, there was a bench conference and voir dire on the photographs during which the judge heard Appleby’s objections as to the photographs’ relevancy and prejudicial effect. The pictures were relevant to corroborate the testimony of the victim, who was blindfolded during his captivity, as to the layout of Appleby’s residence. We note also that Junkin testified that two of the photographs depicted Appleby’s residence substantially as it was in October, 1977, with the exception that some of the objects depicted may have been arranged differently, and he also identified two of the pictures as depicting specific items in Appleby’s house. The question of prejudice is a matter for the sound discretion of the judge,
Commonwealth
v.
Jackson,
5. Appleby alleges as error the judge’s refusal to admit in evidence a will in which Appleby claims he named Junkin as his sole beneficiary. Appleby contends that the will would impeach Junkin’s testimony that he had been enslaved by Appleby. Appleby was allowed to testify as to the contents of the will and to the fact that he had discussed the will with Junkin. In these circumstances, any error in refusing to admit the will was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
D. Appleby’s Other Contentions.
We consider Appleby’s other contentions, none of which has merit.
1. All the jurors who were seated and who had admittedly heard or seen news reports of this case, of Appleby’s earlier case, or of his flight swore either that this information would not affect their judgment or that they knew no reason why they could not judge the case fairly and impartially. The defendant did not exercise all his challenges. There was no error in the denial of the motions for change
*378
of venue or dismissal based on pretrial publicity. See
Commonwealth
v.
Gilday,
2. The judge did not improperly restrict cross-examination of the victim, and Appleby was not deprived of his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation by the judge’s evidentiary rulings. While a defendant is allowed to ask questions demonstrating the bias of a witness, we fail to see how the questions propounded by Appleby, directed primarily to the victim’s life-style and knowledge of the homosexual community, could have demonstrated bias. There was no error in the judge’s refusal to permit further questions on these subjects. As to Appleby’s other contentions on this point, we note that the victim repeatedly denied having known Junkin before the incident, testified that he had been taken by force to West Springfield, denied knowing anything about a large sum of money which Appleby claimed had been stolen from him by Junkin and in conspiracy with the victim, and denied having threatened Appleby. The defendant was allowed great latitude on cross-examination of the victim.
3. Appleby has not shown that the judge abused his discretion by not recalling the out-of-State victim, who had already testified for over seven hours on cross-examination. See
Commonwealth
v. Hicks,
4. Appleby attempted to question a former chief of the Springfield police department about a report which Apple-by had given him in April, 1978, concerning a recent theft of money from Appleby. At the time of this questioning, there was no evidence that such a theft had occurred, although Appleby referred to a theft in his opening statement to that effect. The judge disallowed the question on the grounds that there was no proper foundation and that the testimony would be hearsay, but he said that Appleby could recall the witness if a proper foundation was later established. At the close of his questioning of this witness, Appleby acknowledged that he could recall the witness but he did not later do so. There was no error in the judge’s exclusion of the question.
*379
5. It does not appear from any part of the record to which our attention has been directed that Appleby requested an instruction on assault and battery as a lesser included offense to rape. He did not object to the judge’s omission of such an instruction. In these circumstances, we consider the claim of error only in so far as any error might create a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.
Commonwealth
v.
Freeman,
6. Junkin testified that he had reviewed the grand jury minutes prior to surrendering himself and that this review refreshed his recollection of “ [t]he basic facts and sequence of events.” Junkin claimed an attorney-client privilege as to why and by whom he was given the grand jury minutes, and the judge permitted the claim. There was no offer of proof as to what relevant evidence was shielded from disclosure to the jury by the claim of privilege, see
Commonwealth
v.
O’Brien,
7. A Massachusetts State police officer testified that on January 11, 1980, he saw Appleby in Bellingham, Washington. An assistant clerk of the Superior Court in Hampden County testified that on January 7, 1980, a default warrant and copias issued on one of the indictments for which Appleby was then about to stand trial. There was no error in admission of the testimony as evidence of consciousness of guilt. There is no showing that the prejudicial nature of this testimony outweighed its probative value. It was open
*380
to Appleby to rebut this evidence. See
Commonwealth
v.
Toney,
8. In response to a question from the assistant district attorney concerning a document, Junkin stated that “ [t]his is the document that I signed with a gun at my head by Mr. Appleby.” There is no indication that the Commonwealth elicited the statement in bad faith. At the suggestion of Mr. Rutherford, Appleby moved for a mistrial on the ground that the remark concerning the gun was prejudicial. The judge denied the motion and informed Appleby that he might move to strike the comment. Appleby did not move to strike, nor did he request curative instructions. There was no error in the denial of the motion for mistrial. See
Commonwealth
v.
Simmonds,
9. Appleby suggests as an issue on appeal the judge’s refusal to allow him to inquire into Junkin’s “prior sexual conduct, history and background.” The issue, however, is nowhere argued in the brief. We deem the issue waived. Mass. R. A. P. 16 (a) (4), as amended,
10. The judge did not abuse his discretion by refusing to issue subpoenas for certain out-of-State witnesses. See
Commonwealth
v.
Watkins,
11. The judge did not abuse his discretion by refusing to declare Junkin a hostile witness. See
Commonwealth
v.
Monahan,
The judgments are affirmed, and the Commonwealth’s appeal from the allowance of the motion to revise and revoke the sentence on the rape conviction is dismissed.
So ordered.
Notes
Appleby was also tried on five indictments charging assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon. He was acquitted of two of these charges. On each of the remaining three indictments, he was convicted of assault and battery. The indictments were placed on file with his consent and are therefore not before us on appeal.
Commonwealth
v.
Delgado,
The Commonwealth filed an appeal from the allowance of the motion to revise and revoke, and we allowed the Commonwealth’s application for direct appellate review. The Commonwealth, however, did not file a brief. At oral argument before the court, defense counsel moved that this appeal be dismissed. We took the matter under advisement and we now dismiss the Commonwealth’s appeal. Mass. R. A. P. 19 (c),
It is apparent that Appleby uses this phrase to refer to the different judges of the Superior Court who heard and denied the various motions to withdraw and to appoint other counsel, and we so construe the phrase. Although Appleby uses the same term in his argument on the denial of the motions for continuance, the only such denials properly before us were made by the trial judge. See note 19, infra.
These included motions for change of venue or “adjournment on ground of prejudice” which were denied. On July 20, 1979, the defendant filed a motion for speedy trial, which was allowed on September 4, 1979, at the same time that a second motion for a change of venue was denied. On September 21,1979, the defendant’s motion “for continuance to insure the interests of Justice” was denied.
The two attorneys were apparently associates. They represented Appleby in late 1978 at his trial for charges of assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon stemming from unrelated incidents. As of March 15, 1979, both attorneys had filed appearances on behalf of Appleby in the present matter. One of the attorneys was allowed to withdraw as of May 7, 1979, and the other as of October 17, 1979.
The docket entries reflect that there was an investigation but do not reveal whether a determination of indigency was made. We take the information concerning the determination of indigency from a statement made by Mr. Rutherford at a later hearing.
Mr. Rutherford said that he had been informed that Appleby had sent three pro se petitions to this court, seeking a change of venue, a stay of proceedings, and a writ of habeas corpus. A single justice of this court ordered the petitions returned to Appleby with instructions that he file any further petitions through his appointed counsel. Appleby returned the petitions to this court with a cover letter stating that Mr. Rutherford had refused to file the petitions and that Appleby considered Mr. Rutherford incompetent.
Mr. Rutherford told the motion judge that he had thought it “would be premature to pursue these matters, frankly, to run in to the Supreme
*364
Judicial Court every time a motion is acted on in this Court, which is not acceptable to him.” Mr. Rutherford did not believe he could adequately defend Appleby because the impact of the accusations in the letter “destroys any kind of attorney-client relationship.” Although Appleby has not argued here that Mr. Rutherford’s refusal to file the motions denied him the effective assistance of counsel, we note that counsel cannot be expected to appeal the denial of every pretrial motion in order to protect himself from claims of ineffective assistance, see
Commonwealth
v.
Saferian,
The following colloquy ensued:
The judge: “ I should point it out. Do you understand what I mean by pro se, Mr. Appleby?”
The defendant: “Represent myself, Your Honor.”
The judge: “Yes.”
The defendant: “I’d rather represent myself than have Attorney Rutherford.”
The judge: “All right. That may be your option, then.”
We take this information from the assistant district attorney’s statement at a hearing on January 7. Appleby does not dispute this information.
On January 17, Appleby told the judge that Mr. Rutherford was not his attorney, that he wanted another attorney, and that he was representing himself only because of the breakdown in his relationship with Mr. Rutherford.
On January 21, Mr. Rutherford informed the trial judge that another attorney from the Massachusetts Defenders Committee had earlier that day brought a petition before a single justice of this court to allow Mr. Rutherford to withdraw. The petition was denied.
We examine the consequences of this waiver, infra.
Given Appleby’s later claim that no attorney from the Massachusetts Defenders Committee could adequately present his defense, it is unlikely that he would have accepted alternate counsel from this source in any event.
At the close of the November 30 hearing, the judge asked Appleby if he had “anything else” to say. Appleby replied in the negative. In light of Appleby’s outspokenness at the later hearings, we think that his reticence on this occasion derived more from his agreement with the outcome of the hearing than from resignation in the face of it.
At this hearing Appleby did attempt to introduce a letter written to Mr. Rutherford by one of Appleby’s former attorneys in which, apparently, criticisms of Mr. Rutherford were made. The judge refused to put the contents of the letter on record, stating that he considered the allegations contained in it completely false, and he acknowledged that the matter had been previously discussed at a lobby conference.
At the hearing on January 17, Mr. Rutherford responded in the negative when the judge asked him whether he was revolted by the “alleged crime or the alleged details.” In response to a statement by the judge, Mr. Rutherford also acknowledged that there was nothing in the case which would indicate that he could not adequately represent Apple-by.
In the present case, Appleby did not present a defense based on consent but instead denied that he participated in any allegedly criminal conduct. In these circumstances, we do not understand how Mr. Rutherford’s supposed lack of understanding of homosexual and sadomasochistic life-styles could have hindered his representation of Appleby.
We note that the trial judge, who had extensively reviewed the record, specifically indicated his disbelief that such a breakdown had occurred. When Appleby made this claim, the judge responded: “I like the words you’re using. I like the place they came from, but I’d like to believe that they are applicable to your case.”
The dockets contain no references to motions for continuance after November 30, and Appleby makes no argument with respect to any such motions prior to that date. On January 18, however, the hearing judge indicated that he would take no action on Appleby’s motion for continuance because a petition for a stay had been brought before a single justice of this court who had not yet ruled. The petition was denied. On January 21,1980, the trial judge denied Appleby’s apparently oral motion for a continuance. The matter of a continuance was also discussed on January 22 and 23, but it is unclear whether Appleby made separate motions for continuance on those dates. We assume that whatever motions for continuance Appleby made before the trial judge on those dates were denied.
On January 17, Mr. Rutherford claimed that he was unprepared because he had not yet received copies of the victim’s criminal records, if any. At later hearings he claimed that he had been unable to interview Junkin and had not had time to develop rebuttal to any consciousness of guilt evidence the Commonwealth might try to introduce concerning Appleby’s default and arrest in Washington on January 7.
As to the first two claims, the record indicates that the Commonwealth had attempted to locate the criminal records of the victim, had been frustrated by their lack of information concerning him, and had been unable to find any such record, and that Junkin was apparently at sea at the time of the hearings. Even if Junkin’s whereabouts had been known, the Commonwealth could not, of course, force him to talk with Appleby or his counsel. As to the third claim, the judge need not have allowed Mr. Rutherford extra time to prepare evidence concerning a situation which Appleby himself created.
At the hearing on January 21, Mr. Rutherford stated that Appleby had not been in contact with him between November 30 and January 14. Appleby had contended on January 14 that “Mr. Rutherford will not advise me. I’ve received a letter from him that he wants any questions in writing. I’ve called him a number of times and couldn’t get any advice. I have no one to advise me even on the voir dire questions . . . .” Mr. Rutherford responded that he had drawn up and filed voir dire questions which were not satisfactory to Appleby and that the only call from Apple-by of which he was aware had occurred when he was out of the office and the secretary refused to accept the telephone charges. The record indicates that Mr. Rutherford was present and available to Appleby at all times during the trial and that a number of Appleby’s present claims of error are based on observations and suggestions made by Mr. Rutherford at trial.
The assistant district attorney informed the trial judge that the victim and two other witnesses had been summoned from out of State to appear and that the Commonwealth desired a speedy trial because there was “a risk we’ll lose our victim.” On January 17, the assistant district attorney had informed the motion judge that the victim had been postponing surgery in order to attend trial. The trial judge apparently had transcripts of the January 17 hearing available to him.
We also see no abuse of discretion in the judge’s denial of Appleby’s motions for continuance, based on his claim of illness, during trial. The judge did, in fact, give Appleby one day off from trial and he shortened the proceedings on the next day. On that day, the judge also spoke by telephone with a nurse for the doctor who had examined Appleby, and the judge questioned a State health worker who had also examined Apple-by.- The judge concluded that Appleby could proceed with trial and stated that he would recess early and give consideration to requests for recesses during the day. When Appleby next complained of illness, the judge granted a recess and, when trial resumed, Appleby agreed to continue after the judge stated that he would recess for the day if Appleby could not proceed.
The judge asked each juror individually whether he or she could fairly and impartially consider the testimony of homosexual persons or of the defendant if he should testify; whether he or she had seen or read about the case and, if so, whether that report would affect his or her judgment, or whether he or she was aware of any reason why he or she could not fairly and impartially judge the case on the evidence. The judge also asked each juror a question designed to elicit whether he or she could apply the law as the judge gave it regardless of personal opinion.
The defendant does contend that one of the jurors selected to sit made a “prayerful gesture” at Mr. Rutherford as the juror left the courtroom
*374
and that a cheer arose from the jury room as that juror entered. At Mr. Rutherford’s suggestion, Appleby moved for a mistrial and the judge denied the motion. There was no error. The judge called the jurors into the courtroom and asked them collectively if any of them had discussed the case. The jurors replied in the negative. Absent any indication that the juror’s gesture and the subsequent cheer from the jury room were in any way connected with the case, the judge’s questioning of the jury was an appropriate method to determine whether an extraneous issue might have influenced the jury. The jurors’ negative response justified the denial of the motion for mistrial. See
Commonwealth
v.
Jackson,
When the doll was introduced it was not identified as a “voodoo” doll. The term “voodoo” was first used by Junkin during direct examination by Appleby.
Junkin surrendered himself to Massachusetts authorities on the morning of February 1, 1980. Prior to that time, all efforts to locate Junkin had failed. On January 30, the judge informed Appleby and the attorneys that an attorney whom the judge had appointed at Appleby’s request had succeeded in speaking with Junkin’s father and an acquaintance of Junkin but that neither had been able to supply his address.
Appleby claims that the judge erred when he stopped Appleby’s examination of Junkin on the subject of black magic. Appleby, however, did not object to the judge’s instruction to him that “[wje’ll have no more of the black arts testimony or voodoo, whatever it is.” We will not consider Appleby’s claim of error for the first time on appeal. Even if the objection had been timely raised, the judge would have been acting properly to exclude questioning which had no “rational tendency to prove an issue in the case.”
Commonwealth
v.
LaCorte, 373
Mass. 700, 702 (1977). While “[a] criminal defendant may not be prevented from explaining seemingly incriminating evidence offered by the prosecution,”
Commonwealth
v.
Hicks,
Appleby asked, inter alla, the following questions, to all of which the Commonwealth successfully objected: “So, because you were shown a letter with an S.S. death head at the top with double lightning bolts at the top, and you were given supposedly this somewhat unlikely story — “You readily believed this somewhat hard-to-digest story, correct?”; “Did any of the discussions about Naziism and international and South America, did any of these discussions about that feed into your already somewhat factious oriented mentality?”
However, it appears that the Commonwealth did issue a subpoena for one of the doctors who apparently declined to honor it.
