Christоpher Brown and Robert Donati were convicted on three indictments charging armed robbery. 1 Donati was also convicted of operating a motor vehicle after his license had been suspended and before it was restored. 2 Anthony M. Zirpolo was convicted on three indictments charging, respectively, receiving stolen property, being an accessory before the fact to armed robbery in three counts, and being accessоry after the fact to armed robbery in three counts. The three defendants were tried together under G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G. All have appealed. They argue a total of fifty-six assignments of error, most of which center on three issues: (1) The lawfulness of the arrest of Donati and Zirpolo without a warrant, (2) the legality of the search warrant under which a search was made resulting in the recovery on the same day as the robbery of all of the stolen furs, and (3) the lawfulness of the arrest of Brown without a warrant. The remainder relate to rulings on evidence at the trial.
We summarize the evidence pertinent to the commission of the crimes and outline the evidence leading to the apprehension of the defendants. We point out, by way of preface, *340 that as soon as the crime had been reported to the police, groups of officers from different operational units within the Boston Police Department reported to the scene and then fanned out on different missions or were on alert for further instructions, all with the common purpose of apprehending the criminals and recovering the goods. Some of the detailed evidence, not given in the narrative which immediately follows, is reserved for statement in connection with the disposition of the specific issues raised by the assignments of error.
On Friday morning, April 9, 1965, a man who introduced himself as "Mr. Larson” entеred the shop of Huerth and Huerth, Inc., furriers, on the fourth floor of the building at 376 Boylston Street, Boston. For about twenty minutes or half an hour Huerth showed him furs and quoted prices. The man left. About 10 a.m. on Monday, April 12, 1965, Larson reappeared at the shop accompanied by an older man whom he addressed as "Sam,” later identified in court as the defendant Brown by Huerth and by Finn, an employee. Brown had under his arm a flat package about the size of a "Life” magazine. Larson said to Huerth, "I didn’t bring my girlfriend, but I brought my father. He will do just as well.” Thereupon the two men drew guns, forced the four employees present to lie on the floor, and bound and gagged them. They took the employees’ money from their wallets, about $400 from the store’s cash box, and fifty-six furs valued at about $40,000. "Sam” advised Larson which furs to take. One of the employees observed the men placing some of the furs in a large laundry bag. After the men had left, Huerth called the police who promptly arrived in large numbers and conducted or heard the questioning of the victims.
About 10:20 a.m., three women who were reentering 376 Boylston Street after a coffee break observed two men leaving the building carrying large white laundry bags marked "Pilgrim.” The two men placed the bags in the rear seat of a "green Cadillac convertible car, late model,” and^got into the car. The driver got halfway out again and *341 removed a white tag which was under the windshiеld wiper. The two then drove off.
Shortly before 11:30 a.m. on the same day, four Boston police officers who had earlier been at the Huerth shop in response to the alarm were driving, in furtherance of the investigation, toward Revere by way of the vehicular tunnel to East Boston. As they emerged from the tunnel they received a police radio message giving the registration number and description of an automobile and its occupants which had been at 376 Boylston Street that morning. Thereafter, while proceeding along McLellan Highway in East Boston, they received a police message to stop the car and arrest its occupants. At 11:30 a.m., the officers observed a green Cadillac convertible enter McLellan Highway from Waldemar Avenue and turn right in the direction of Revere. The registration number was 409918. When the Cadillac stopped for a red light the officers stepped from their unmarked сruiser and arrested the two occupants, Donati, the operator, and Zirpolo, who was seated beside Donati. In Zirpolo’s pocket was found a parking violation notice which had been placed on the car earlier that morning; in Donati’s pocket was a driver’s license issued to his brother Richard.
We pause to state the evidence regarding the whereabouts of the Cadillac convertible prior to its seizure at 11:30 a.m. The сar was registered to one Nicholas Ventola of Everett. Zirpolo had borrowed it from Ventola at 3 a.m., April 12, 1965, allegedly so that he could take his wife home from the Revere night club where they then were. At 7 a.m. Officer Costa, an M.D.C. police officer, saw Zirpolo and one of the two Donati brothers together at a diner in Revere. Several minutes later he saw the two men riding in the green Cadillac convertible, registration 409918. He stopped the car. The driver, one of the Donatis, showed him the license of Richard Donati. Between eight-twenty and eight-thirty on the same morning a Boston police officer placed a parking violation tag on the windshield of a Cadillac automobile, registration 409918, which was illegally parked *342 near 364 Boylston Street, a building in the same block as 376 Boylston Street. As already stated the Cadillac had been seen at or near 376 Boylston Street about 10:20 a.m. At 11:00 a.m. the same Cadillac was observed, unoccupied, in a parking lot within 100 feet of a multiple apartment unit at 199 Faywood Avenue, East Boston. The window on the driver’s side of the car was down.
The defendant Brown was arrested about 3 p.m. on April 12 in circumstances later to be stated. All of the stolen furs, in three white laundry bags marked “Pilgrim,” were found in an apartment in East Boston occupied by Zirpolo’s wife Sandra in the course of a search conducted under a warrant also tо be discussed later. The man who called himself “Mr. Larson” has not been identified or apprehended.
• One month before the trial, Zirpolo stopped his car near Beachmont Station and said to Officer Costa, “DQou didn’t see me that morning, did you?”
1. Donati and Zirpolo contend that there was no probable cause for their arrest and that, as a result, the evidence taken from them upon arrest should have been suppressed. We do not agree. We think that there was probable cause on either of two grounds. The officers had probable cause to make the arrest on their own initiative. They had been at the fur shop; they knew that a robbery had been committed by two men whose description they had heard at the shop; they then, en route to Revere, received a definite description including the registration number of the car suspected of being used in the crime. Fortuitously, they came upon the car which precisely matched the given description and was occupied by two men who in a general way conformed to the description given at the shop. On this information they could reasonably believe that the two men had committed a felony.
Commonwealth
v.
Holmes,
2. We consider the validity of the search warrant which resulted in the recovery of all of the stolen furs at 3:35 p.m. on April 12, 1965, in an apartment occupied by Zirpolo’s wife. Detective Fawcett and Officer Donahue, both Boston police officers assigned to Division 7 in East Boston, together with other officers, were aware of the time and place of the arrest of Zirpolo and Donati and were directing their efforts to the recovery of the stolen goods and the apprehension of the other criminals. Zirpolo’s mother’s apartment at 218 Leyden Street, where Zirpolo lived, was placed under surveillance, as was the housing project unit at 199 Faywood Avenue where Zirpolo’s wife Sandra lived.
Following a conversation with Detective Fawcett at approximately 2:15 p.m. Officer Donahue obtained a search warrant from the assistant clerk of the East Boston District Court, a person competent to issue such warrants.
Commonwealth
v.
Penta,
Most of our decisions on the sufficiency of affidavits to support the issuance of a search warrant cite
Aguilar
v.
Texas,
We perceive no difference in substance between the affidavit in the Moran case and Officer Donahue’s affidavit so far as they relate to the reliability of the informant. The fact that Donahue rather than Detective Fawcett madе the application reciting the informant’s reliability does not detract from its validity. Donahue and Fawcett were in truth *346 acting as partners in law enforcement, a truth which is readily inferable from the face of the affidavit. Little need be said about the sufficiency of the underlying facts given by the informant. The promptness of the information, the specificity of the observations, the particularity of detail as to the location all strongly point to the cоnclusion, or reasonably permit the inference, that the hitherto reliable informant saw the described items at the precise place stated or that he saw them being carried into the building by a person or persons who to his knowledge had access in the building only to the apartment stated. Although, as the judge commented, the affidavit was far from being a model to be followed, it provided sufficient basis for the' issuance of the warrant. The warrant and sеarch were lawful.. All assignments which arise from the alleged insufficiency "of the affidavit show no error.
3. We summarize the testimony which bears upon Brown’s contentions that he was unlawfully arrested, that his statements to and conduct in the presence of the arresting officers should not have" been admitted in evidence, and that it was error to have denied him a voir dire when he requested it. After Zirpolo’s arrest at 11:30 a.m. on April 12, Boston Officers Twohig and Scagnoli placed under surveillance1‘a building at 213 Leyden Street in which Zirpolo and' his mother had an apartment. About 12:30 p.m. they saw a man, later identified as Brown, arrive in a taxicab. ■ As Brown left the cab, he spoke to. a woman who came out of 218 Leyden Street. The woman entered the cab and Brown entered the building. Officer Curtin of the robbery squad arrived. He had been among the first to report at.the fur shop in the morning, and had participated in the arrest of Zirpolo and Donati on McLellan Highway. About..three o’clock, a woman beckoned the officers. As a result of conversation with her, Officers Curtin and Twohig went" into the backyard, climbed onto a table and over a wall, ten feet or more high, and went through another backyard to' the street behind Leyden Street. They observed. Brown and a . boy walking together .[¿Curtin called out and Brown stopped. *347 Curtin asked Brown’s name. Brown replied, “Frank Secori.” Brown’s counsel excepted to the admission of any conversation with Brown. The judge asked Officer Curtin if Brown had been placed under arrest. Officer Curtin said he had not. The judge ruled that Brown’s conversation with the officers was admissible and denied Brown’s request for a voir dire. The district attorney then elicited from Officer Curtin the following testimony, “I asked him where he lived? He said, ‘Revere.’ I said, ‘What are you doing up here?’ He said, ‘I am walking.’ I said, ‘What are you walking in the backyards for?’ He said, ‘I wasn’t in any backyard.’ I said, ‘Where abouts in Revere do you live?’ ‘Just Revere.’ I said, ‘The lady claims you are in her backyard.’ I says, ‘You have no objection to going back and talking to her, do you?’ He said, ‘No.’ I said, ‘All right, let’s go.’” On cross-examination Officer Twohig testified that he had asked the boy, in Brown’s presence, why he had taken Brown through the backyards. The boy replied that Brown had said he wanted to “get out of the house and that he would buy . . . [the boy] a new bicycle” if he would take him out. As the three men began to return through the backyards, they encountered a woman standing in a doorway. Officer Curtin testified that in Brown’s presence “I asked the woman if she had seen the gentleman, Brown? And she said, ‘Yes.’ I asked her, ‘Where?’ She said, ‘He just went through my yard.’ Mr. Brown spoke up, said, ‘You are mistaken, Lady.’ She says, ‘You went through my yard. I was sitting in the window and I saw you and these two men followed right after you.’” When the group reached the wall, Brown went over first and, while the others were on top of the wall, ran out of the yard. The officers chased him and eventually found him under a porch. They arrested him on a charge of armed robbery.
.. Contrai-y to Brown’s contentions, there was no reversible error in the judge’s rulings concerning the episode near 218 Leyden Street which resulted in his arrest. Again we nóte that the trial was held in September, 1965. This was after the decision of
Escobedo
v.
Illinois,
We think also that there was no error in denying Brown’s motion for a voir dire. No confession was involved.
Commonwealth
v.
Marshall,
4. Donati points to certain evidence which it is claimed was improperly received by the judge at the voir dire. As already pointed out, the arrests оf Donati and Zirpolo were lawful. In any event, Donati fails to show that any of this evidence, received in the absence of the jury, ever came to the attention of the jury. Since no prejudice has been shown there can be no reversible error.
5. The defendants assign as error the admission of certain testimony before the jury. Brown and Zirpolo assign the following testimony by a Boston police officer. Q. “Whose house was that, 218 Leyden Street?” A. “Mr. Zirpоlo’s.” The objection was made after the answer was given. There was no motion to strike. On its face the question reasonably appears designed to elicit who lived at the address and the answer appears to be based upon the officer’s personal knowledge. If the answer was thought untruthful or erroneous, that fact should have been developed by cross-examination, The issue should not be presented to us on appeal in this fragmеntary fashion. The burden is on the defendants to show error.
Donahue
v.
Kenney,
' ■ Other argued assignments relating to the admissibility of testimony are so frivolous as not to merit discussion.
6. Brown alleges error in overruling of his objection to the district attorney’s reference in his argument to the jury: “That Mr. Brown is an expert on furs —.” This was a permissible characterization in light of the testimony that, o's “Sam,” Brown had advised Larson what furs should be taken.
7. There was no error in denying the motions for directed verdicts. The judge’s charge was complete and frеe from error. There was a case for the jury on all the indictments.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
One of the indictments charged them with robbery of Carl Huerth, president and treasurer of Huerth and Huerth, Inc., of furs valued at $41,725 and $500 in money. Bach of the other indictments charged them with the robbery of money from an employee.
It was admitted at the trial that Donati’s license had been suspended and had not been restored.
The affidavit, on the form set out in G. L. c. 276, § 2B (see
Commonwealth
v.
Monosson,
“These decisions reflect the recognition that the Fourth Amendment’s commands, like all constitutional requirements, are practical and not abstract If the teachings of the Court’s cases are to be followed and the constitutional policy served, affidavits for search warrants, such as the one involved here, must be tested and interpreted by magistrates and courts in a common-sense and realistic fashion. They are normally drafted by nonlawyers in the midst and haste of a criminal investigation. Technical requirements of elaborate specificity once exacted under common law pleadings have no proper place in this area. A grudging or negative attitude by reviewing courts toward warrants will tend to discourage police officers from submitting their evidence to a judicial officer before acting.” See
Commonwealth
v.
Rossetti,
