The defendant was convicted by a jury of six in a District Court after an earlier bench trial by a District Court judge. Following the Appeals Court’s affirmance of the defendant’s convictions of possession of a controlled substance (cocaine) and of operating a motor vehicle negligently so that the lives and safety of the public might be endangered,
Commonwealth
v.
Gordon,
On this appeal, the defendant makes four claims of error: (1) the trial judge’s refusal to allow him to play an audio recording of the testimony given at the bench trial by one of the arresting officers for the purpose of impeaching that officer’s testimony at the jury trial; (2) the denial of his motion for severance; (3) the denial of his motion for a required *353 finding of not guilty on the driving to endanger complaint; (4) the admission in evidence of the vial of cocaine, its contents, and an analysis of the contents. There was no error and we affirm the convictions.
1. The use of audio recordings for impeachment. At the jury trial, the defendant asked Officer Robert Eldredge, one of the arresting officers, a number of questions concerning his testimony at the bench trial in an effort to impeach the officer’s credibility by “demonstrating discrepancies between his prior testimony and his statements to the jury, and by showing a richness of detail in his later testimony which was lacking in his former testimony and thus suggestive of recent contrivance,” 2 as the defendant argues in his brief. Officer Eldredge testified that he did not recall his earlier testimony. The defendant then attempted to introduce in evidence, for impeachment, an audio recording of Officer Eldredge’s previous testimony. The judge refused to allow the recording to be played.
As the Appeals Court noted, the statement of the evidence discloses neither the context nor the grounds of the judge’s decision. More important, the record does not disclose whether the defendant made an offer of proof concerning the contents and relevancy of the audio recorded testimony. Without an offer of proof it is not possible in this case to determine whether there was error in excluding the evidence. See
Commonwealth
v.
Kleciak,
We take this opportunity to express our views concerning the use of audio recordings for purpose of impeachment since our view differs from that expressed by the Appeals Court. The Appeals Court stated that “[although for many purposes (see, e.g.
Commonwealth
v.
Vaden,
We note that a committee appointed in 1972 by the late Chief Justice of the District Courts, Franklin N. Flaschner, to investigate ways of preserving testimony in District Court proceedings strongly recommended the use of audio recording over any other method because of its accuracy, ease of operation, and relative inexpensiveness. Report on the Preservation of Testimony in Proceedings in the District Courts at 31, 87-115 (November 30, 1973) (report). In his report, Chief Justice Flaschner wrote of the advantages of audio recording over stenography. “While an audio recording may preserve many of the pauses, hesitancies, irrelevancies and poor grammar of some persons, these are things of which trials are made. It is the words uttered that comprise the record, not another’s version of them. Audio recordings will also preserve inflections and aural demeanor which typewritten transcripts will not. They are not instantaneously editable as are a reporter’s notes, and are a more accurate record of courtroom events. On playback they carry with them the flavor as well as the letter of what occurred and are superior to the ‘cold record’ which otherwise results. To the extent that this ultimate accuracy produces *355 a record that is perfectly reflective of what happened in court, it should be favored.” Id. at 49-50.
Chief Justice Flaschner contemplated that audio recordings be used routinely in place of typed transcripts. “For case preparation, impeachment and other reasons, and even the preparation of a draft report to the Appellate Division, a tape recording will do just as well [as a typed transcript], particulary if the tape is quickly available to counsel and is inexpensive. The system must, of course, be capable of producing a reasonably accurate typed transcript of proceedings if one is necessary, but that should be the exception. In the routine case a copy of a tape recording of the proceedings should suffice, provided it can be conveniently played by counsel or the court.” Id. at 77.
While we have in the past discussed the use of audio recordings during trial proceedings, see, e.g.,
Commonwealth
v.
Watson,
First, the testimony sought to be introduced must be otherwise admissible. See
Commonwealth
v.
Watson,
*356
supra
at 834-836 (no abuse of discretion to exclude tape recorded interrogation which contained much inadmissible hearsay). The judge would not be in error if he refused to admit an audio recording in evidence for reasons which would justify refusal to admit any other form of evidence of the same material. See
Commonwealth
v.
Chase,
*357
2.
Severance.
This court has set forth the criteria for use in deciding whether to allow a motion to sever in
Commonwealth
v.
Blow,
The defendant claims that he was prejudiced by trial of the two complaints together because “[t]he jury would be likely to equate the possession of cocaine with negligent driving and therefore fail to evaluate each charge independently of the merits of the Commonwealth’s case.” Evidence that the defendant was operating his vehicle while under the influence of cocaine would be relevant to the charge of driving to endanger.
Commonwealth
v.
Scott,
The defendant does not claim that “a particular defense tactic or right was foreclosed by the joinder,”
id.
at 672, nor were the crimes charged against him inflammatory or of a kind to suggest that he was a man of criminal propensity. See
Commonwealth v. Hoppin,
3.
Motion for required finding of not guilty on the driving to endanger charge.
There was no error in the judge’s refusal to direct a verdict for the defendant on this issue because there was evidence from which a rational trier of fact could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Commonwealth
v.
Latimore,
4.
The admission of the vial, its contents, and the certificate of analysis.
We agree with the Appeals Court’s disposition of this issue. The fact that the vial’s contents were not separately tagged goes only to the weight of the evidence and not to its admissibility.
Commonwealth
v.
Baptiste,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
“On December 2, 1980, two Watertown police officers arrived at the scene of a three-vehicle accident. ‘The physical evidence indicated that . . . [Gordon’s] automobile had left the roadway, crossed the curb onto the shoulder of the road, grazed a small building, and entered a parking lot striking a parked automobile pushing it into another parked automobile.’ The front of Gordon’s ‘automobile was smashed and the windshield shattered.’ There was testimony from an officer that Gordon ‘told him all he could remember from the accident was he reached over to get his briefcase and the next thing he knew the accident happened.’
“Gordon, ‘unsteady on his feet’ had been injured. His ‘eyes were unblinking and glassy,’ his ‘speech was slurred,’ and, in one officer’s opinion, Gordon ‘was operating under the influence of “something.”’ He was placed under arrest and taken to the police station, seated alone in the back seat but handcuffed behind his back, with his brief cases beside him. During the ride one officer observed Gordon ‘turn and reach into one of the briefcases’and‘saw a “dark object” in . . . [Gordon’s] hand.’ The officer told him to ‘keep out of his case and that he could get what he needed at the [police] station.’ At the police station, the officer ‘found a vial on the seat behind where . . . [Gordon] was sitting.’ The vial’s contents were analyzed and found to contain cocaine.”
According to the statement of the evidence, Officer Eldredge “was asked what he had testified [to at the bench trial] concerning his whereabouts at the time of the call, the distance from the point the defendant’s vehicle had left the road to when it came to rest, whether the defendant had sat in the cruiser with his briefcases before he had been placed under arrest, whether the defendant had given the officer his driver’s license, whether his district court testimony omitted the defendant’s asking for a taxi, refusing to get into his cruiser, refusing the request by the Fire Department Ambulance Squad that the defendant seek medical attention, what the defendant had been arrested for, whether the officer had left the defendant alone sitting in the cruiser prior to being arrested.”
The defendant did not offer the tape as an exhibit at the jury trial nor did he include a copy of the tape as part of the record on appeal.
Courts in a number of other jurisdictions have left to the trial judge’s sound discretion the decision whether to admit otherwise relevant audio recordings in evidence for a variety of purposes. See, e.g., cases collected in
Commonwealth
v.
Watson,
In making this ruling, we take into account the time, difficulty, and cost involved in preparing an accurate transcript of District Court proceedings recorded on audio tape. Chief Justice Flaschner’s committee, for example, found that each hour of courtroom testimony required four to six hours for a typist to transcribe, assuming the recording was of good quality and an accurate log was kept. Report at 23-24.
It does not appear from the record that the defendant ever submitted an affidavit in support of his motion to sever as required by Mass. R. Crim. P. 9(d)(2),
The defendant does not argue that the admission of evidence of his driving to endanger prejudiced his trial for possession of cocaine. We therefore do not decide this question. We note, however, that Gordon’s defense counsel conceded at oral argument that “there was testimony which, if believed, would warrant the jury in inferring that Mr. Gordon had removed this vial from his brief case and put it behind him in the police cruiser.”
