Appellant, William Bizanowicz, appeals from his criminal conviction. He and co-defendant Mario Antimone were indicted in a count that charged them with conspiring to embezzle and steal goods, specifically candy, constituting or moving as part of an interstate shipment of freight Both appellant and Antimone were further charged with aiding and abetting each other in the theft of goods on three separate occasions, which goods were then moving as part of or constituting an interstate shipment of freight. The indictment charges a violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 371 and 659.
There are two issues: whether at the time they were stolen the boxes of candy were moving in interstate commerce and constituted all or part of an interstate shipment; and whether the trial judge erred in permitting a tape containing a recorded telephone conversation between appellant and Steven Higgins, a truckdriver, to go into the jury room together with a tape player.
Appellant argues that the court erred in denying the motions and in allowing the tape player to enter the jury room. We affirm the judgment.
I
The evidence taken in the light most favorable to the prosecution,
United States v. Gabriner,
In 1982, Borden Corporation (Deran), in Cambridge, Massachusetts, manufactured and boxed candy which was transported by tractor/trailer to Wilmington Warehouse, in Chelsea, Massachusetts. Thence, it would be shipped to its final destinations throughout the United States and, in particular, to points within a thirteen state area including the New England states. The bills of lading were made up at the Chelsea warehouse. On a daily basis the warehouse would have an insufficient inventory of a particular type of candy and the candy received from Cambridge would be immediately placed on a waiting truck going to an out-of-state destination. Over 90% of the candy manufactured at Deran’s was sold and shipped outside Massachusetts.
On November 15, 1982, the president of Wilmington Warehouse went to the Kella-way Warehouse, in Somerville, Massachusetts where he found in excess of two complete trailer truck loads of Borden’s candy. From dates stamped on the boxes, it was determined that the candy in Somer-ville was shipped from Deran to Chelsea on *122 September 29, October 29 and November 10, 1982.
Appellant was employed by the president of Wilmington for six years. From September 1981 until November 15, 1982, he was manager of the Wilmington Warehouse at Chelsea. As part of his duties, appellant would assign men to do the receiving and would take the receiving sheets and forward them to the front office for inventory and billing purposes. Thomas McConologue, the traffic manager who worked at Chelsea, was responsible for shipping the candy from the Chelsea warehouse. He testified at trial that some of the stolen candy recovered from Somerville would have been used to make up outgoing interstate shipments. By comparing the dates on the boxes of the Somerville candy with the bills of lading and Borden’s records for the same dates, McConologue found that numerous interstate shipments were in fact delayed because of the insufficient amount of candy on hand at Chelsea. Some of the recovered candy were special order items produced for a private out-of-state label.
Appellant argues that none of the candy acquired an interstate flavor since at the time it was stolen, it was part of a purely intrastate shipment on a shuttle truck which transported candy only between the manufacturing plant in Cambridge and the warehouse in Chelsea. The sufficiency of the evidence is attacked only in relation to the status of this freight.
An essential element of the crime of embezzling or stealing goods under 18 U.S.C. § 659 and conspiracy to embezzle and steal such goods is that such goods 1) be moving as an interstate shipment, 2) be part of an interstate shipment, or 3) constitute an interstate shipment.
See United States v. Garber,
It is not necessary for the goods in question to be actually moving in interstate commerce at the time for an offense to lie under 18 U.S.C. § 659.
United States v. Wills,
Another factor to be taken into consideration is the preservation of the congressional intent in enacting the statute,
United States v. Henneberry,
*123 The interstate nexus of the candy having been established, appellant’s argument fails in this respect.
Appellant argues that the previously mentioned tape was never actually admitted into evidence. We disagree. The tape was initially marked as Exhibit 13 for identification. The government thereafter laid the proper foundation for its admission.
See United States v. Nashawaty,
No showing of prejudice has been made and no abuse of discretion is apparent in the manner in which the trial court allowed the tape and player to go to the jury. The tape had already been played to the jury. Ordinarily, exhibits are sent to the jury room. An audio exhibit should not be relegated to muteness because it can be perused only through the use of a tape player.
See United States v. Humphrey,
While the tape should, of course, have been marked as an exhibit, the error is at best harmless.
Cf. United States v. Costa,
The judgment of the district court is hereby affirmed.
