Grаce Campbell (Campbell) was convicted of kidnapping and Rosalind Kelley (Kelley) of kidnapping and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon in connection with an incident at the home of Calvin Williams (Calvin) in Roxbury on May 27, 1974. They appeal pursuant to G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G.
Shortly after midnight on that date Campbell, a friend of Calvin’s wife (Nancy), appeared at the door of the Williams’s apartment and asked to use the bathroom. Either Calvin or Nancy let her in. While Campbell was in the bathroom, Kelley entered the apartment and accused Calvin of raping her sister. She was holding what appeared to be a pistol. When Calvin denied the accusation, he and Kelley began to struggle. Calvin testified that аt one point he managed to wrest control of the gun from Kelley and give it to Campbell, who had emerged from the bathroom, but that Campbell handed the gun back to Kelley. Calvin also stated at trial that in the course of the fight Kelley cut him on the forehead with a knife.
After the scuffle, Calvin agreed to go with Kelley to ask her sister whether he had been the rapist. There was some dispute at the trial whether Calvin or Kelley initially suggested the idea of searching out Kelley’s sister, but Calvin testified that he decided to go out of fear for himself and his family. He left his apartment at gunpoint with Kelley and Campbell.
Kelley directed Calvin across the street to a blue and white car and ordered him into the back seat with her. Campbеll drove. A third woman, thought by Calvin to be Barbara Simpson (Simpson), who had at one time lived with Nancy dining the latter’s marital separation from Calvin, occupied the front passenger seat. Campbell drove to at least two places. At one of the places a young woman came downstairs, looked at Calvin in the car and said, “That’s not the guy.” Kelley told Calvin he should be glad he wasn’t the one; then the women dropped Calvin at the Forest Hills MBTA station. He walked back to his and Nancy’s apartment from there.
Meanwhile, Nancy had left the apartment to go to her *574 sister-in-law’s apartment around the comer to telephone the police. An officer arrived about twenty minutes later and took Nancy back to her apartment in his cruiser. Both Nancy and the оfficer testified that when they arrived back at the Williams’s apartment they saw Simpson carrying a portable television set belonging to the Williamses into a blue and white car. Campbell was sitting in the driver’s seat and Kelley was in the back seat. The police officer immediately arrested Simpson and Campbell, but Kelley managed to escape. 2
Campbell and Kelley were indicted on February 10, 1975, after a probable cause hearing in a District Court, and arraigned on March 11, 1975. 3 At trial, in April, 1976, Campbell was convicted of kidnapping, and Kelley was convicted of kidnapping and assault and battery with a pistol but was acquitted of assault and battery with a knife. Both defendants were sentenced to indeterminate terms at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Framingham to be served from and after sentences they were already serving on other convictions. They both argue that they were denied their constitutional and statutory rights to a speedy trial. Campbell also asserts several independent grounds for reversal — underrepresentation of women on the grand jury which indicted her, prejudice on the part of the trial judge, errors of law in the conduct of the trial, and error in the denial of her motion for a directed verdict. We discuss each issue separately.
Section 72A Speedy Trial Claim.
Both defendants argue that it was error for the trial judge to deny their motions to dismiss the indictments for failure to grant a speedy trial pursuant to G. L. c. 277, § 72A
4
As Campbell and Kelley were both imprisoned as a
*575
result of сonvictions in other cases, they satisfy a primary requirement for protection under § 72A. Compare
Commonwealth
v.
Dabrieo,
Although we find § 72A applicable to Campbell, we do not believe that its application requires dismissal of the
*576
kidnapping indictment. It has been held repeatedly that § 72A does not compel the dismissal of an indictment if the case is not tried or otherwise disposed of within six months after an application for speedy trial is received by the court.
Commonwealth
v.
Loftis,
*577
Kelley also faces a statutory obstacle at the threshold in that she never filed an application for speedy trial pursuant to § 72A. However, there being no evidence in the record that she was informed of her § 72A rights in prison, we treat Kelley’s motion for a speedy trial, filed on April 22, 1975, as an application under § 72A.
Commonwealth
v.
Boyd,
1. The first court action subsequent to Kelley’s motion for a speedy trial occurred on May 1, 1975. The stenographic record indicates that on that day an attorney from the Massachusetts Defenders Committee appeared before the court to inform the judge that the attorney assigned to the case agreed to continuе it until May 9. When on May 9 Kelley’s counsel did not appear, the judge continued the case until June 23, 1975, at the assistant district attorney’s request. Her counsel having agreed to the first continuance and not having objected to the second, Kelley cannot now complain of those delays.
Commonwealth
v.
Carr,
2. On June 23, 1975, the judge set trial for September 18, 1975. Kelley’s counsel objected and took an exception to the granting of the continuance. Although the record of that day’s proceedings does not indicate the reason for the
*578
three-month wait, at two subsequent hearings the assistant district attorney pointed out that June 23 was at the end of the court session and that September 18 was the next earliest possible trial date. Since there was no evidence of “oppressive or purposefully dilatory conduct” by the prosecution, the summer continuance should not be counted in the running of the statute.
Commonwealth
v.
Ambers,
3. On September 18, 1975, Kelley was present for trial but Campbell had not been brought in from M.C.I. Framingham because she was ill. Although the record does not indicate that the judge specifically ordered a continuance, the absence of Kelley’s codefendant warranted the delay. The American Bar Association has recommended with respect to the constitutional right to a speedy trial that a judge be given discretion to grant a continuance where the need to try a defendant with an absent codefendant is sufficiеntly great to justify a modest extension of the time limits applicable to the defendant. ABA Standards Relating to the Administration of Criminal Justice, Speedy Trial § 2.3 (g) and commentary (Approved Draft 1968) . 8
4. On September 25,1975, Kelley’s counsel agreed to an October 20 trial date so Kelley may not challenge that delay here.
Commonwealth
v.
Carr,
5. On October 20, 1975, the Commonwealth failed to have Kelley brought into court pursuant to a writ of habeas corpus. Kelley’s counsel and the assistant district attorney discussed the possibility that the case might be dismissed, after which the case was continued without objection until October 27. Kelley may thus not challenge that week-long delay. Id.
6. The transcript indicates that on October 27 the judge
*579
became ill and left the bench without specifically ordering a continuаnce. On November 17, 1975, Kelley filed a motion to dismiss the indictment and argued that the Commonwealth did not intend to prosecute because Calvin refused to testify. The assistant district attorney asked for a week to clear up the matter and the judge granted a continuance until November 24, 1975. Kelley’s counsel objected and took an exception, but the judge pointed out that there were no sessions available for an earlier date. Then, on November 24, a further two-day continuance was granted because the assistant district attorney was ill. This accumulated delay of nearly a month is “not attributable to the prosecution because there was no evidence of ‘oppressive or purposefully dilatory conduct by the prosecution... [and] [i]t is a fair inference that these delays were inherent in the general problems of the administration of justice in a congested county.’ ”
Ambers, supra,
at 652, quoting from
Commonwealth
v.
Rego,
7. On November 26,1975, the assistant district attorney reported that for an unexplained reason police witnesses had not been summoned to court. He requested a trial date and represented that both police and civilian witnesses would be available. The judge set January 7,1976, for trial. Kelley’s attorney objected and took an exception to the continuance. In light of the Commonwealth’s negligence in failing to have its witnesses present, coupled with the absence of any indication in the record as to why a trial date earlier than January 7,1976, could not have been ordered, this delay is properly chargeable to the Commonwealth.
8. On January 7, 1976, the case was sent to the second session for trial but was not reached in either January or February because of the overburdened court calendar. At the end of February the case was returned to the first session. On March 23, the judge in the first session told the parties that he would be available to begin the case on the following day. When the assistant district attorney handling the case notified the judge that she had a prior commitment in another county conflicting with the proposed tried date, the judge succeeded in having the district at
*580
tomey’s office reassign the case to a prosecutor who would be available for trial in that week. It is apparent that this delay was attributable, not to the prosecution, but to “the general problems of the administration of justice in a congested county.”
Commonwealth
v.
Ambers,
9. When the parties appeared before the judge on March 26, both Campbell and Kelley asked that their motions to dismiss for failure to grant a speedy trial be heard. During the court’s hearing on the motions it became obvious that because of disagreement among the attorneys as to what had transpired at a number of the above described court proceedings, it would be necessary for the court to receive affidavits from the attorneys and transсripts of the court clerk’s notes of those proceedings before ruling on the motions. The judge made the appropriate orders and continued the case until April 6. Kelley’s counsel agreed to file an affidavit but objected and took exception to the continuance. This delay was clearly not due to oppressive or purposefully dilatory conduct on the part of the prosecution and is not chargeable to the Commonwealth. Id.
On April 6, 1976, the judge denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss and commenced the trial. From what we have already said, it is apparent that at most only the delay between November 26, 1975, and January 7, 1976, can be laid at the door of the prosecutiоn. As the remaining continuances granted were within the sound discretion of the court, dismissal of the indictments against Kelley is not required under § 72A.
Commonwealth
v.
Fields,
As in
Ambers,
the Commonwealth’s response to and compliance with Campbell’s and Kelley’s requests for a speedy trial differ significantly from the Commonwealth’s neglectful postures in
Commonwealth
v.
Gove,
Constitutional Speedy Trial Claim.
The defendants also assert that they were denied their constitutional right to a speedy trial. That right is guaranteed by both the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution as made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth Amendment
(Klopfer
v.
North Carolina,
Four basic factors must be considered in determining whether a defendant’s right to a speedy trial has been infringed — “[l]ength of delay, the reason for the delay, the defendant’s assertion of his right, and prejudice to the defendant.”
Barker
v.
Wingo,
1. Length of delay.
The right to a speedy trial is engaged by “either a formal indictment or information or else the actual restraints imposed by arrest____Invocation of the speedy trial provision thus need not await indictment, information, or other formal charge.”
Commonwealth
v.
Blaney, ante,
96, 97 (1977), quoting from
United States
v.
Marion,
In the case of Campbell the delay between arrest and trial
10
was nearly twenty-three months, while the delay between Kelley’s indictment and trial was fourteen months. Both delays are sufficient to “trigger” an inquiry on our part based upon the remaining
Barker
v.
Wingo
factors. See
Commonwealth
v.
Gove,
2. Reasons for the Delay.
We have already discussed the reasons for the delays in bringing Kelley to trial after her indiсtment. Most of the same reasons apply to Campbell as well in the period following her indictment. The defendants acceded to a number of the continuances and cannot now point to those delays as prejudicial. As we pointed out earlier, Campbell’s speedy trial right attached at the time of her arrest. Therefore, we must also examine the reasons for the delay of almost nine months in returning an indictment against her. The Commonwealth has advanced no reason in its brief for that delay,*
11
but at the April 6,1976, hearing on Campbell’s
*583
motion to dismiss, her attorney referred to the fact that she had also been indicted for at least two other crimes involving other codefendants. These occurred within a few months of the kidnapping incident here. It is reasonable to assume that the plethora of charges against Campbell and her fellow participants contributed to the delay in bringing formal indictments. Compare
United States
v.
Lovasco,
3. The Defendants’ Assertions of their Rights.
Both Campbell and Kelley took more than one step to secure a speedy trial. Campbell filed a pro se application for a speedy trial under § 72A in Seрtember, 1975 (seven months after her indictment), and a motion to dismiss for failure to grant her a speedy trial on December 3, 1975 (four months before trial) , 12 Kelley filed a motion for a speedy trial in April, 1975 (two months after indictment) and filed a motion to dismiss for failure to grant a speedy trial in November, 1975 (five months before trial). Both defendants renewed their motions for a speedy trial on March 26, 1976, when the judge held a hearing and denied the motions. These repeated actions by the defendants evidenced their concern for the delays in bringing them to trial. See Commonwealth v. Blaney, supra, at 98.
4. Prejudice to the Defendants.
Absent a showing of culpability on the part of the Commonwealth in delaying trial, it is the defendants’ burden
*584
to demonstrate that the prosecution unreasonably caused prejudicial delay.
Commonwealth
v.
Gilbert,
Both Campbell and Kelley argue that the delay was prejudicial to them because in the interim between indictment and trial Simpson, who apparently rode with them while they drove Williams to look for Kelley’s sister (and who, as stated, was later apprehended removing a television from Williams’s apartment), disappeared and could not be called to testify in their behalf.
At the hearing on the defendants’ motions to dismiss, counsel for Campbell stated that he had written to Simpson at her last known address and had received a letter back marked “Addressee Unknown.” Counsel further stated that Campbell had made several unsuccessful attempts to locate Simpson. Neither of the defendants’ attorneys supported their allegations of Simpson’s absence with affidavits; nor did they introduce evidence at the hearing with respect to attempts to locate her. See
Commonwealth
v.
Underwood,
Even if we were to assume that the defendants made all reasonable efforts to find Simpson, they have not suggested how Simpson’s testimony might have aided their cause. Simpson might have been able to testify as to what occurred in the car, but she was not present in Calvin’s apartment at the point when force was allegedly exerted and the kidnapping occurred. See
Commonwealth
v.
Eagan,
Kelley contends that the delay in bringing her to trial was prejudicial because the pendency of the charges prevented her from being granted parole from a sentence she was then serving. Delay in trial of untried indictments may deprive an inmate of opportunities for parole, and courts
*585
have considered this a serious form of prejudice in assessing speedy trial claims.
Commonwealth
v.
Gove,
In weighing the speedy trial essentials, we conclude that the judge did not err in denying the defendants’ motions to dismiss the indictments. Unwarranted preindictment or pretrial delays are of course not to be countenanced; but in the absence of a clear demonstration here of actual prejudice to Campbell or Kelley, we do not conclude that the impediments to their right to a speedy trial have been so egregious as to warrant recourse to dismissal. See
United States
v.
Cabral,
Grand Jury Argument.
Campbell argues that under
Taylor
v.
Louisiana,
The record indicates that Campbell was indicted on February 10, 1975, but there is no reference on the record before us to the date on which the grand jury which indicted her was convened. Inasmuch as Campbell’s brief omits reference to the date of the convening and the brief’s approach to the grand jury issue is that Brunson, Daggett and similar cases were wrongly decided, we must assume that the grаnd jury was convened prior to the decision in Taylor, 14 Consequently, under Brunson, supra, and its progeny, Campbell’s grand jury argument fails. .
Bias of the Judge.
Campbell asserts as error the judge’s refusal to disqualify himself for alleged prejudice against her. Her bias argument rests on the allegation that in a previous criminal trial involving Campbell, the same judge asked a police officer, ex parte, what sort of people the codefendants were and the officer replied, “They are animals and they will do anything.” In the earlier case and in the instant case, the judge refused to disqualify himself because of the incident.
Federal due process and arts. 11 and 29 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, of course, require that judges be “as free, impartial and independent as the lot of humanity will admit.”
Ward
v.
Monroeville,
Here the judge’s decisions to continue to preside at both the earlier trial involving Campbell and at this trial constituted an unequivocal assertion that in his own mind there was no danger of prejudice.
King
v.
Grace,
1. It was not error for the judge to permit Nancy and a police officer to testify that as they approached the Williamses’ apartment in a police cruiser after the kidnapping, they saw Simpson carrying a television out of the Williamses’ house toward Campbell’s parked car. The television episode occurred within minutes of the end of the kidnapping (compare
Commonwealth
v.
Eagan,
Evidence relevant to a criminal charge is not rendered inadmissible merely because it indicates that the defendant may have committed another crime.
Commonwealth
v.
White,
2. A second contention is that it was error for the judge
*589
to refuse to permit Campbell’s counsel to cross-examine Calvin at length about the nature of the relationship between Nancy and Simpson. Without deciding whether Campbell properly saved an exception to the judge’s refusal to permit the testimony, we nonetheless examine that refusal for the possible light it might shed on Campbell’s suggestion that the judge was biased against her and therefore should have disqualified himself.
“A
basic rule states that reasonable cross-examination for the purpose of showing bias and prejudice of the witness is a matter of right.”
Commonwealth
v.
Ahearn,
Here the judge limited questions which Campbell now claims were put for the purpose of showing that during the Williamses’ separation Nancy had been living in a homosexual relationship with Simpson. Campbell suggests that Calvin’s embarrassment or anger because of that relationship may have moved him to manufacture his kidnapping testimony against Simpson’s friends Campbell and Kelley. Since Simpson was not charged with the kidnapping, it hardly follows that whatever hostility Calvin may have borne toward Simpson would have motivated him to testify falsely against Campbell and Kelley. We doubt that either the Supreme Court in
Davis
or the Supreme Judicial Court in such cases as
Ferrara
and
Ahearn
intended “to sanction speculative expeditions into areas only tangentially related to the facts in issue in the hope that some basis for implying an ulterior motive might be found.” See
United States
v.
Ong,
*590
3. The paraphrased restatement of a portion of Calvin’s testimony
15
by the judge was not prejudicial error. While the judge’s characterization of Calvin’s testimony as being “clear and unequivocаl” may not have been completely accurate in describing the confrontative conversation which led to Calvin’s leaving his apartment with Kelley and Campbell to look for Kelley’s sister, the judge fairly summed up Calvin’s testimony about that conversation. Cf.
Greenberg
v.
Weisman,
4. The judge did err in refusing to permit Calvin to answer a question as to whether Campbell had “force [d] [hini] to do anything against [his] will.” The Commonwealth argues that the question was improper because it called for an opinion as to the ultimate issue before the jury. We disagree. The cases cited by the Commonwealth are inapposite, and in fact two of them support the proposition that, while it would have been improper for defense counsel to have asked Calvin whether he had been kidnapped, it was permissible to ask whether he had been compelled by Campbell to do anything against his will. See
Commonwealth
v.
Jones,
However, we consider the error to have been harmless. Counsel for Campbell was permitted to ask Calvin a num
*591
ber of other questions the answers to which indicated that Calvin had not been actively coerced by Campbell, viz., that during the fight with Kelley Calvin was not afraid of Campbell, that during the entire incident Campbell never assaulted him or laid a hand on him, that Campbell had not threatened him in any way, and that Campbell had not said anything about going to see Kelley’s sister. See
Commonwealth
v.
Anderson,
5. There was no error in the charge to the jury. The test on appeal is the impression created by the charge in its entirety.
Commonwealth
v.
Pinnick,
Motion for a Directed Verdict
We turn finally to Campbell’s motion for a directed verdict. We consider the evidence in its light most favorable to the Commonwealth
(Commonwealth
v.
Flynn,
Mere presence at the commission of a crime and even failure to take affirmative steps to prevent it do not render a person liable as a participant.
Commonwealth
v.
Benders,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
It does not appear in the record when Kelley was eventually arrested.
Charges against Simpson were dismissed at the District Court level.
General Laws c. 277, § 72A, as appearing in St. 1965, c. 343, provides: “The commissioner of correction, the sheriff, master or keeper *575 of a jail or house of correction, or in Suffolk county, the penal institutions commissioner of the city of Boston, shall, upon learning that an untried indictment, information or complaint is pending in any court in the commonwealth against any prisoner serving a term of imprisonment in any correctional institution, jail or house of correction, which is under his supervision or control, notify such prisoner in writing thereof, stating its contents, including the court in which it is pending, and that such prisoner has the right to apply, as hereinafter provided, to such court for prompt trial or other disposition thereof.
“Such application shall be in writing and given or sent by such prisoner to the commissioner of correction, or such sheriff, master, keeper or penal institutions commissioner, who shall promptly forward it to such court by certified mail____
“Any such prisoner shall, within six months after such application is received by the court, be brought into court for trial or other disposition of any such indictment, information or complaint, unless the court shall otherwise order.”
Arguably, the date of the first hearing on the defendants’ motions to dismiss (March 26, 1976) might be taken for purposes of a speedy trial analysis as the date on which the trial commenced. We do not decide thе issue here but rather adopt the date most favorable to Campbell (and Kelley), namely the date of actual proceedings before a jury. See
Commonwealth
v.
Gove,
Judges are urged to heed the oft-stated advice that when granting continuances under this statute they should specifically order an extension of the statutory period and delineate the reasons therefor. See
Commonwealth
v.
Loftis,
See note 5, supra.
The Supreme Judicial Court has endorsed the ABA standards for “possible guidance as to what might justify delay” in a § 72A case.
Commonwealth
v.
Boyd,
The record does not indicate when, if at all, Kelley was arrested on the charges leading to her conviction and these appeals. She was apparently indicted while serving a sentence on anothеr conviction. Since she argues that her right to a speedy trial attached on the date of indictment, we adopt that date as the measuring point of her right to a speedy trial.
See note 5, supra.
The Commonwealth’s brief appears to assume, contrary to what we have just reiterated, that Campbell’s right attached only at the time of her indictment, which probably accounts for the Commonwealth’s failure to explain the pre-indictment delay.
We consider the motion to dismiss as “the functional equivalent of a specific demand for speedy trial.”
Commonwealth
v.
Gove,
Taylor, in reversing a conviction, held that where women had been almost totally excluded from trial jury panels, the Sixth Amendment’s requirement that a defendant be tried by a fair cross section of the community was not satisfied.
It seems unlikely that Campbell omitted the date of the convening by inadvertence since she had had experience in litigating the identical issue on another indictment in another court. See
Campbell
v.
Bates,
The judge, in foreclosing further repetitive cross-examination about the exchange between Kelley and Calvin in the latter’s apartment, stated to defense counsel, “Look, you’ve gone all over that. His testimony is clear and unequivocal. First this lady said, ‘You’re going to go,’ and then he said, ‘All right. I’ll go.’ ”
The relevant testimony was as follows:
Defendant’s counsel: “Didn’t you tell Miss Kelley that you were prepared to show her you weren’t the one?”
Witness: “How am I prepared to show anyone when they’ve got a gun on you and — I had to prove it.”
Defendant’s counsel: “Didn’t you say to her that you would go — ?”
Witness: “Naturally — hold it. I said that because for the safety of my wife and kid, yes.”
