Convicted of perjury, the defendant, Robert Silva, a former Revere police officer, appeals, alleging that (1) the trial judge improperly admitted evidence of the defendant’s participation in a larceny as part of the corroborative evidence for the allegation of perjury; (2) the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; (3) the trial judge improperly admitted a tape recording of the alleged larceny; (4) improper cross-examination of the defendant was allowed on his failure to introduce certain evidence; (5) the only direct evidence of perjury was inadmissible hearsay; (6) the prosecutor’s summation was improper; and (7) improper instructions were given on the elements of perjury. We transferred the case to this court on our own motion. We affirm the defendant’s conviction.
We summarize the evidence. On Fеbruary 1, 1985, at 3:08 a.m. , a break-in took place at the Consumer Value Store (CVS) in Revere’s Northgate Shopping Mall. The break-in tripped a silent alarm operated by Sonitrol Security Systems, Inc. Sonitrol immediately alerted the Revere police. The noise of the break-in also activated a Sonitrol recording device which recorded all sounds in the store for approximately the next twenty minutes. At 3:12 a.m., defendant and his partner, Carl Moschella, were dispatched in their cruiser to investigate. Officer
Another witness, Scott Cohen, stated that he drove to the Northgate Mall sometime between 3 and 3:30 a.m. to use the automatic teller machines of Baybank and the First National Bank. He stated that after completing a business transaction at Baybank he drove to the First National Bank. 1 On route he saw two or three police cruisers parked in front of the CVS store. As he came within six feet of one of the cruisers his headlights shone on an officer who turned and looked in the direction of Cohen’s car. According to Cohen, the officer was leaning over the cruiser’s trunk holding a large box-like object. Cohen later identified this police officer as the defendant. Two other officers', whom Cohen later identified as Boyington and Anderson, were standing alongside the cruiser. Based on his observations, Cohen did not know there was any wrongdoing at the store.
Sometime between 3:35 and 3:40 a.m., the store manager and the pharmacist arrived at the scene. They inspected the store with the police. In the entrance they found a large green plastic barrel which did not belong to the store. 2 Merchandise was missing of an estimated value of $2,421.46. 3
Later that morning, the defendant again spoke with Mirasolo. This time he confided that he was confused and did not know what to do. Upset at what he had heard from the defendant, Mirasolo anonymously telephoned the State police later that same day claiming to have witnessed a larceny by police of the CVS store. 5 The following day Mirasolo also called the CVS store claiming to be a special investigator for the Revere police department and inquired about the break-in. On February 4, 1985, Mirasolo again telephoned the State police. This time he identified himself, and he repeated to Lieutenant Robert Bidder the defendant’s statement about Anderson and DiStasio.
In the meantime, on the afternoon of February 1, Ron Eisenhart, a security specialist for the CVS сorporation, telephoned the major crime unit of the Massachusetts State police. Eisenhart also spoke with Bidder. Eisenhart told Bidder about
On May 15, 1985, during the grand jury investigation into the theft at the CVS store, the defendant denied having spoken to Mirasolo about Anderson and DiStasiо at 7:30 a.m. on February 1. This denial formed the basis for the defendant’s perjury conviction.
I. Corroborative evidence. The defendant contends that it was unduly prejudicial to permit the jurors to hear Cohen’s identification of the defendant as the officer at the scene holding a large box-like object over the cruiser’s trunk. The defendant asserts that the Commonwealth’s evidence should have been limited to Mirasolo’s testimony as to the defendant’s alleged statement to Mirasolo, the defendant’s denial of that statement to the grand jury, the inventory to establish the larceny, and any evidence tending to implicate Anderson and DiStasio in the larceny. We do not agree.
Cohen’s testimony was relevant to establish the defendant’s knowledge of the facts contained in the alleged statement to Mirasolo. In addition, if the defendant took part in the larceny and knew he had been seen, he would have a motive to accuse Anderson and DiStаsio in order to exculpate himself. The evidence was relevant to prove motive and to present to the jurors as full a picture as possible of the events surrounding the making of the statements.
Commonwealth
v.
Bradshaw,
Since the early 1800’s we have said that “one may not be convicted of perjury except on the directly opposing testimony of either two witnesses or one witness and, in addition, ‘independent evidence [of] strong corroborating circumstances. . . .’”
Commonwealth
v.
Parker,
Hereafter, the Commonwealth may secure a conviction of perjury where it is able to offer evidence of perjury and corroboration of that evidence sufficient to establish the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Commonwealth
v.
Coleman,
II. Denial of the defendant’s motion for a required finding of not guilty. The defendant argues that the judge erred in denying his motion for a required finding of not guilty. He argues that the Commonwealth failed to introduce sufficient evidence of materiality of his statement to the grand jury and failed to corroborate adequately Mirasolo’s testimony. We conclude there is no merit in these claims of error.
The defendant first argues that because the grand jury in fact issued indictments, his testimony cannot be said to have been material to the grand jury’s determinations. This argument was rejected in
Commonwealth
v.
Borons,
The focus of the grand jury’s investigation was whether certain Revere police officers committed a larceny. The defendant’s denial of his statement to Mirasolo that a larceny in fact had been committed by certain named police offiсers went to the heart of the investigation. A rational trier of fact could have found that the defendant’s denial was “material” to the grand jury’s investigation of larceny by certain Revere police officers. Thus, the trial judge did not err in denying the defendant’s motion for a required finding on the issue of materiality.
The judge also correctly denied the defendant’s motion for a required finding of not guilty on the issue of quantitative corroboration of perjury. The Commonwealth introduced ample strong corroborating evidence. See
Commonwealth
v.
Parker,
III.
Admission of the tape.
The defendant objected at trial to admission of the tape recording of the alleged larceny on the
The quality of the tape is extremely poor. Certain sounds are, however, distinguishable. For example, one set of voices can be heard in the first minute or two, and a different set of voices can be heard about five minutes later. 8 In addition, an intermittent crashing or rumbling noise can be heard before the initial set of voices, as well as aftеr the second set of voices.
The Commonwealth offered the tape for the proposition that, given the other evidence, the jurors were entitled to infer that the crashing or rumbling sound at the beginning of the tape was the noise of the original perpetrators removing merchandise from the store by means of dumping it into a plastic barrel, and that the intermittent resumption of a similar sound after the second set of voices was the noise of police officers removing more merchandise by the same method.
9
The issue whether
IV.
Cross-examination.
The defendant claims that it was error for the judge to allow the prosecutor to cross-examine the defendant regarding the defendant’s failure to subpoena Revere police department files allegedly related to Cohen. The defendant simply states his claim on appeal in cursory and conclusionary fashion. He cites no legal authority to support his claim. This is an insufficient appellate argument and is not properly before us. Mass. R. A. P. 16 (a) (4), as amended,
Even assuming the argument properly were before us, there is no error. “The scope of cross-examination rests largely in the discretion of the judge.”
Commonwealth v. Hoffer,
V. Present recollection refreshed. The defendant argues that the trial judge improperly allowed Mirasolo no independent recollection of the defendant’s exact words to him, and instead allowed Mirasolo to read his own grand jury testimony to the jury. There was no error. During direct examination, Mirasolo professed a lack of recollection of the exact words the defendant had spoken to him on the morning of the break-in. The prosecutor then showed Mirasolo a copy of his grand jury testimony to rеfresh his memory. After reading the copy to himself, Mirasolo answered questions about the exact words the defendant used. 11 “A witness may use a writing to refresh a failing memory. . . . The transcript. . . furnishes no basis for concluding that when [Mirasolo] did answer the prosecutor’s questions, [he] was not testifying from present memory.” (Citations omitted.) Commonwealth v. Hoffer, supra at 376.
VI.
The prosecutor’s summation.
The defendant did not press an objection to the argument. In the absence of an objection to final argument, the defendant is not entitled as of right tо appellate review of the alleged improper remarks.
Commonwealth
v.
Bourgeois,
The defendant asserts that the prosecutor’s use of the words “I submit” and “I suggest” in commenting on the tape was “tantamount to testimonial interpretation.” We do not agree. The prosecutor in this case permissibly used the words as a rhetorical device to urge the jury to draw inferences from the evidence favorable to his case. See, e.g.,
Commonwealth
v.
Drayton,
VII.
Jury instructions.
The judge instructed the jury, “The Commonwealth must prove facts from which it can be determined that any allegedly false answer was directly or circumstantially relevant and material to the inquiry [of the grand jury].” The defendant did not object to this instruction. In the absence of an objection below, we review the charge as a wholе to determine if there is a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. See
Commonwealth
v.
Freeman,
The instruction the judge gave in this case did not create a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. “The word ‘material’ and the idea of materiality are commonly understood, and every day judgments on a variety of subjects are made uрon a layman’s sense of materiality.”
Commonwealth v. McDuffee,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Bank officers from Baybank and the First National Bank testified that there was no record that Cohen used the machines that morning. The viсe president for Baybank stated that it is possible that there could be a transaction made without a record although she had no personal experience with a transaction without a record.
The barrel was not held as evidence by the Revere police officers at the scene and was not mentioned in the police report of the incident. The defendant did not contest the fact that the plastic barrel was at the scene.
The missing items included 125 cigarette cartons, thirty-six bottles of cologne, seventeen Russell Stover Valentine candies, and an assortment of razor blades.
Mirasolo testified that he was “extremely close” to the defendant. At the time of the incident he thought the defendant was “a friend that [Mirasolo] could probably depend on throughout [his] working career.” At trial, the defendant stated that Mirasolo was “[j]ust [a] co-worker”; he did not associate with him on a “social basis”; and he was “not close” to Mirasolo.
Mirasolo claims he called at 9 a.m. Lieutenant Detective Robert Bidder, with whom Mirasolo spoke, said that the call came in at 2 p.m. It is undisputed, however, that Mirasolo called Bidder within twelve hours after the break-in occurred; Bidder testified that he recognized Mirasolo’s voice as being that of the anonymous caller when he spoke with Mirasolo three days later.
The tape recording was played to the jury and introduced as an exhibit. The admissibility of the tape is discussed below.
Mirasolo reported the incident to the State police within twelve hours after it occurred. Mirasolo also told the State police early on about the plastic barrel and how it was used — details Mirasolo only could have learned from someone present during the larceny, because the barrel was not mentioned in the incident report and was not рreserved as evidence by the officers. See note 2, supra. Neither Westphal nor Cohen, the only civilian witnesses present while the police were at the store, was able to state that he saw any wrongdoing.
The defendant admitted that the first set of voices in all probability belongs to the original perpetrators of the break-in. The defendant also admitted that the police were on the scene at the time the second set of voices was recorded.
Testimony was given that the tape began running at 3:09 a.m. when the store’s alarm system was triggered. The defendant does not challenge this fact and does not challenge the authenticity of the tape. The total amount
The defendant argues in his brief that the Commonwealth violated its discovery obligations by not turning over the relеvant police records to the defendant. However, there is no indication in the appellate record that the Commonwealth had records concerning any such incident, or that police records even existed as to an incident between Cohen and the defendant. The record on appeal therefore does not substantiate the defendant’s claim that the Commonwealth had exculpatory records which it did not give him.
There was no objection to this procedure.
The dеfendant asserts in one sentence in his brief that the prosecutor’s comments during summation regarding the defendant’s failure to corroborate the grudge Cohen allegedly held against the defendant are grounds for reversal. The defendant’s cursory argument made without citation of authority is an insufficient appellate argument. See
supra
at 327. We therefore treat it as waived. Mass. R. A. P. 16 (a) (4), as amended,
