Appellant, Rene Ferguson; was tried before a jury and found guilty of rape and involuntary deviate sexual intercourse. His contentions, on direct appeal, concern the putative prosecutorial misconduct in the Commonwealth’s summation and cross-examination of Defendant.
The standards for judging prosecutorial misconduct are well established. Any caustic, ill-advised or otherwise improper remarks by the Commonwealth are not necessarily grounds for a new trial.
Commonwealth v. Stoltzfus,
be to prejudice the jury, forming in their minds fixed bias and hostility toward the defendant so that they could not *187 weigh the evidence objectively and render a true verdict.” Commonwealth v. McNeal,456 Pa. 394 , 400,319 A.2d 669 , 673 (1974).
The effect of such remarks depends upon the atmosphere of the trial.
Commonwealth
v.
Stoltzfus,
supra;
Commonwealth v. Dickerson,
Defendant initially contends that the Commonwealth’s putatively argumentative and sarcastic questions during cross-examination were an improper expression of its view that the defendant was incredulous and guilty. Defendant mentions only four questions from the record:
Q You are the one that’s under oath? (N.T.264)
Q What is it you have, which makes you so irresponsible, 1 Mr. Ferguson? (N.T.272)
Q Don’t you think you assumed an awful lot? (N.T.264)
Q That’s the way you kiss your mother? (N.T.271)
Any complaint respecting the first two questions has been waived as defendant failed to object at trial to the first one and failed to request specific relief by way of cautionary instructions or a mistrial after the court sustained his objection to the second question.
Commonwealth v. Clair,
Defendant next argues that the Commonwealth’s references to a “night of terror” in its summation was a request for revenge and. hence reversible error. In recounting the facts, the Commonwealth had stated:
Now, Mrs. G— told you a story of a night of terror for her, when she was doing the most ordinary thing that you can imagine, driving an automobile with her child, on the way from her mother’s home to her home, in the middle of what is the fourth largest city in the country. (N.T.296).
The Commonwealth’s inference was factually supported and a refutation of counsel’s characterization of the victim as a willing and voluntary participant. The facts demonstrating the propriety of this inference are as follows: The prosecutrix developed car problems while she was driving home from her mother’s home in the evening. After the problem was corrected, defendant approached her. When she temporarily left her automobile to pick up her baby’s fallen bottle, defendant seized control of the car. Defendant drove the vehicle despite the victim’s persistent protestations and he. stopped in a driveway supposedly to check the motor. "When the victim exited the automobile, defendant suddenly grabbed her by the neck, ordered her to get in the back seat, pulled her hair while keeping one hand around her neck, threatened to injure her baby, choked her, forced her to *189 commit oral sex and then compelled her to engage in sexual intercourse (N.T.156-165). The victim screamed “Please help me, help me, somebody help me.” (N.T.219). Subjected thus to such foul abuse, how can anyone say that this lady was not terrified and that the perpetration of this outrage had indeed entailed a night of terror.
Courts have repeatedly rejected claims of prejudice arising from the Commonwealth’s employment of relevant characterizations, flowing from the evidence, even when infused with an emotional charge of equal or greater magnitude than in the instant case.
Commonwealth
v.
Baker,
Finally, appellant objects to the following statement made by the district attorney in his summation to the jury:
“Mr. Larrabee said there would be marks, doctors would know.”
“Who is Mr. Larrabee to tell you that doctors would know? Is he a doctor?”
“If he wants a doctor to come here and tell you about what doctors would see . . . ”
“Pulling a hair is going to leave a scar or a blood stain? If so, have a doctor come here and tell you that it would leave a blood stain. Our common sense tells you that every time our hair is pulled or every time our arm is twisted it doesn’t leave a mark.”
“Every time we have sexual intercourse, it doesn’t mean an abrasion, a cut or contusion.”
*190 The trial judge interrupted the district attorney to advise him of the impropriety of the above remarks.
The district attorney was responding to defense counsel’s contention that a sexual assault of the kind alleged to have been perpetrated by the appellant necessarily would have left telltale signs, of which there were none in the present case. Appellant assigns error to the prosecuting attorney’s tacit criticism of the defense counsel’s failure to produce expert medical testimony in support of his proposition because of its purported tendency to shift the burden of proof onto the appellant.
The prosecution is entitled to respond to the arguments advanced by defense counsel.
Commonwealth
v.
Stoltzfus,
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
Notes
. In the context of the cross-examination, which concerned defendant’s claim that the victim consented, it is more likely that the Commonwealth either said or intended to say “irresistible” and not “irresponsible”.
. Four of the five cases cited by defendant as authority for the prejudicial nature of the Commonwealth’s cross-examination are irrelevant.
Commonwealth v. Chandler,
