On November 15, 1967, John Policron-is, the manager of Post Cafeteria Number Two at the Boston Army Base, was brutally beaten about the head with a steel knife sharpener. He died of his wounds three days later.
On November 17, 1967, the day before the victim died, a federal commissioner’s complaint and arrest warrant were issued for the defendant. The complaint charged him with the beating and alleged the commission of a crime on a federal reservation, to wit, assaulting Policronis with a dangerous weapon. 1 As hereinafter appears, by that date defendant had already disappeared and his whereabouts were unknown.
The government presented the case to the grand jury on May 23 and 24, 1968, and an indictment for first degree murder was returned against the defendant on June 7, 1968. He was brought to trial on July 28, 1969, found guilty as charged and sentenced to life imprisonment. He now appeals from that judgment.
Defendant contends, first, that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss for unreasonable delay in (1) seeking an indictment; (2) bringing the case to trial; and (3) conducting a pretrial psychiatric examination. The delays, it is argued, amount to a deprivation of defendant’s constitutional right to a speedy trial. We cannot agree.
We need not stop to dissect the period between the commission of the crime and the trial to dispose of the constitutional argument. It is well-established that there is no constitutional deprivation where, as here, the delay was relatively short and there is no showing that the delay was improperly motivated or prejudicial to the defendant. Carroll v. United States,
It has been held that Fed.R. Crim.P. 48(b) sets a more exacting standard than the Sixth Amendment.
E. g.,
Mathies v. United States, 126 U.S. App.D.C. 98,
Defendant cannot complain of any delay attributable to his flight or unavailability.
See
ABA Project on Minimum Standards for Criminal Justice, Standards Relating to Speedy Trial § 2.3(e) (Tent. Draft 1967). The interval used to obtain a psychiatric examination of defendant was clearly necessary to the proper discharge of the court’s duties in this case. United States v. Davis,
Next, defendant claims that the admission in evidence of four photographic slides, vividly depicting the victim’s head injuries, was improper. The slides were taken by'the medical examiner at the autopsy and were introduced in conjunction with his testimony.
It is settled that demonstrative evidence which tends to prove a material issue is admissible if its probative value outweighs its prejudicial tendency. 3 That determination is within the sound discretion of the trial court. Here there was ample evidence from which the court could have concluded that the slides were probative of issues in the case. During the cross-examination of one of the government’s medical witnesses, who stated that the victim’s injuries were consistent with multiple blows to the head with a blunt object, counsel suggested that the cause of death might have been cardiac arrest or blows caused by a fall on the floor, against a radiator or sink, or from a chair. The slides were offered to show the nature, location and number of wounds on the head. We think they tend to refute such a hypothesis. We cannot, *365 therefore, conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the photographs.
After arguments of counsel and the court’s charge, defendant requested, and was denied, an opportunity to make an unsworn statement to the jury. He argues that this denial violated a longstanding rule and tradition and deprived him of his constitutional right to due process of law. 4
The practice of making an unsworn statement to the jury developed at a time when a criminal defendant was incompetent as a witness in his own behalf. It thereby avoided convicting defendants without affording them an opportunity to tell their version of the incident in question, a most basic element of fair criminal procedure. With the abolition of the incompetency rule, however, the rationale supporting the use of unsworn statements disappeared.
See
Ferguson v. Georgia,
Nor are we impressed with defendant’s final point, viz., that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his motions for judgment of acquittal and for a new trial. Suffice it to say that we have reviewed the record in detail and have concluded that there was ample evidence to warrant the jury in finding that the defendant was guilty as charged.
Affirmed.
Notes
. 18 U.S.C. § 113(c) (1964).
. He had been arrested there on August 27.
. Harried v. United States, 128 U.S.App. D.C. 330,
. In deciding this question, we apply the standard enunciated recently by the Supreme Court in Duncan v. Louisiana,
. Indeed, defendant did so in this case.
. This conclusion is consistent with the practice of the federal courts and all the states save Massachusetts. Ferguson v. Georgia,
supra,
at 586 n. 17,
