The defendant Kelly was convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to 12 to 18 years imprisonment. The defendant Foulks was convicted at the same trial on two indictments charging him with being an accessory after the fact to Kelly and one Ola Mae Smith 2 , respectively. The cases are here under G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G. 3
These cases arise out of a bank robbery of the Union Federal Savings and Loan Association at the Eastfield Mall in Springfield on July 9, 1971, at about two o’clock in the afternoon; about $2,700 was taken. From the testimony it appears that at that time two men entered the bank. One was armed with a long barreled shotgun or rifle and stood by the door. 4 The other came behind the counter and ordered the tellers to put the money in a bag he was holding. *443 One of the tellers, Linda Welzyn, identified him as the defendant Kelly. One William Shays testified that at about 2:20 or 2:30 p.m. he saw two men drive into the parking lot at the Eastfield Mall in an automobile, which later turned out to have been stolen. They left the automobile and drove off in a waiting station wagon operated by a woman. 5 He identified one of the men as Kelly. The Commonwealth also introduced a photograph of the defendant Kelly and the defendant Foulks sitting in an apartment, rented by Kelly and occupied by Kelly and Foulks, in front of a coffee table on which were a number of packages of currency.
I. The defendant Kelly.
Kelly attacks: (a) the introduction in evidence of and the failure to suppress the photograph, (b) the identification by Mrs. Welzyn, and (c) the introduction by the prosecuting attorney of “mug shots” of the defendant. The contentions are without merit.
(a) The photograph. The motion to suppress the photograph was based on testimony at a pre-trial hearing by Kelly and Foulks’ sister that it was kept in a manila envelope in a dresser drawer and that two detectives came to the apartment in the morning of August 21, 1971, questioned Foulks’ sister and “looked around in the dresser.” She further testified that on August 25 at about 2:30 or 3:00 a.m. four armed policemen “barged in” and went through the drawers. At no time did they produce a search warrant. She left the apartment and returned on August 28 to take her possessions, includingthe manila envelope.
The court denied the motion, making no findings. The Supreme Judicial Court has indicated the desirability of findings of fact when a motion to suppress is denied (see
Commonwealth
v.
Frank,
That the photograph was an accurate representation was not questioned; defense witnesses testified that it was taken as a joke some time before the robbery. The credibility of this testimony was a matter for the jury. The prosecution could obviously not fix a time when the photograph was taken, whether before or after the robbery. However, the photograph showed strapped money on the coffee table and strapped money had been taken in the robbery. And further “there were strong accompanying circumstances of guilt of an independent character.”
Commonwealth
v.
Coyne,
(b) Mrs. Welzyn’s identification. At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Mrs. Cook, atelier, was interrogated by the prosecuting attorney in connection with a pre-trial conference in the district attorney’s office held within two weeks prior to trial and seven months after the robbery. She was shown pictures of Kelly and testified that the photo *445 graph of the defendants described above was also on the table, off to the side somewhere. In the course of her testimony she said that Mrs. Welzyn was also at the pretrial conference and had seen the photograph. 6
Defense counsel made no attempt to inquire from Mrs. Cook beyond the testimony elicited by the prosecuting attorney set out in fn. 6. He did not call Mrs. Welzyn or in any way attempt to develop whether she had in fact noticed the photograph, and, if she had, how, if at all, it had affected her. The pre-trial hearing was concerned almost exclusively with the identification by Mrs. Cook who, as it turned out, did not identify the defendant at the trial in any event.
The defendant also argues that he should have been given a voir dire prior to Mrs. Welzyn’s in-court identification. This is based on an exception taken after a bench conference which followed the prosecuting attorney’s question whether she recognized anyone and which was apparently not recorded by the stenographer. There was nothing to indicate that there was any objection that the bench conference was not taken 7 and there was no attempt thereafter to put on the record the substance of the bench conference which might have been the basis for the exception. In any event, the trial judge was well within his discretion in denying a voir dire. There was no surprise, and the defendant had already had a hearing on his motion to *446 suppress. Rule 101B of the Superior Court (1954). We observe that in any event Mrs. Welzyn had identified the defendant from photographs shortly after the robbery and long before the pre-trial conference of which the defendant complains. She had also had ample opportunity to observe him at the robbery.
(c) The mug shots. The two mug shots — one side view and one front view — to the introduction of which the defendant objects, showed the defendant clean shaven and were offered by the prosecuting attorney to impeach the testimony of the defendant’s father that the defendant always wore a moustache. (Mrs. Welzyn had testified that the robber she had identified as Kelly was clean shaven.)
In
Commonwealth
v.
Gerald,
Defense counsel in this case elicited testimony that the mug shots depicted the defendant when he was much younger and long before the present events. However, no motion to strike the photographs was thereupon made, nor had there been any attempt to argue the remoteness of the mug shots when the court ruled on their admissibility.
*447 Accordingly, we need not decide whether the admission of both photographs, if proved to have been taken at a time remote from the robbery, would have been error. In any event, they were minimally prejudicial, if at all, since defense counsel had himself previously elicited from Mrs. Welzyn testimony before the jury that she had made an identification from mug shots soon after the robbery.
II. The defendant Foulks.
Foulks attacks his conviction as an accessory after the fact and contends that his motion for directed verdicts should have been allowed because the evidence was insufficient to convict. G. L. c. 274, § 4, sets out the elements of the crime and provides: “Whoever, after the commission of a felony . . . assists the principal felon ... or gives such offender any other aid, knowing that he has committed a felony. . .
with intent that he shall avoid or escape detention, arrest, trial or punishment,
shall be an accessory after the fact.” We need not decide whether the jury could have found from the photograph of Foulks and Kelly, discussed above, that Foulks knew of the robbery. Such knowledge, of course, would not in any event be sufficient for a conviction. See
Commonwealth
v.
Perry,
We do not believe that this “afforded sufficient basis for an inference by the jury of the final essential element of the offence, namely, that the.. . [possession of the gun]
*448
was ... with the intent that. . . [the participants] would avoid apprehension by the police.”
Commonwealth
v.
Holiday,
The crime has evolved from one in which the offender is considered in some sense an accomplice in the original crime into an independent crime the gravamen of which is the obstruction of justice. See discussion, Model Penal Code, § 208.32, p. 195 (Tent. Draft no. 9). Thus the Model Penal Code (Proposed Official Draft) classifies the crime of being an accessory after the fact in article 242 entitled, “Obstructing Governmental Operations; Escape,” and the Proposed Criminal Code for Massachusetts places it among “Offenses Against Public Justice.” See
United States
v.
Barlow,
“Where, as here, a specific intent is an element of the
*449
crime charged, that intent must be proved.”
Commonwealth
v.
Carter,
Accordingly, the judgments against Foulks for being an accessory after the fact to Kelly and Ola Mae Smith, 9 respectively, are reversed, the verdicts .are set aside, and judgment is to be entered for Foulks on each indictment. The judgment against Kelly is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
She was tried together with Kelly and Foulks as a principal and also found guilty. No appeal on her behalf is before us.
The defendant Foulks originally filed a timely bill of exceptions and thereafter moved before a single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court to join in Kelly’s appeal under G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G, which had been entered in the Supreme Judicial Court. The defendant’s motion was allowed, and we construe this as permission to argue his exceptions as though incorporated in assignments of error. All parties have treated the case on this footing.
He was not tried with the others; he was deceased at the time of trial.
Ola Mae Smith was convicted on evidence that she drove the station wagon.
The Regulations For Court Stenographers issued by the Superior Court then read: “9. In each case the stenographer shall take ...(d) All conferences at the bench, unless the presiding justice otherwise orders.” Presently the Duties Of Reporters reads: “8. In each case the reporter shall take ...(d) all conferences at the bench, if and when requested by the presiding justice.”
Mrs. Weathersby, who had been called by the prosecuting attorney, denied on the stand that Foulks had said that the gun came from the robbery. Her testimony to the contents of the written statement was, at best, admissible for impeachment purposes. However, there was no attempt to limit it. Cf.
Commonwealth
v.
LaFrance,
No connection was shown between Foulks and Ola Mae Smith.
