Following the reversal of his first conviction on three of ten counts of knowingly distributing a controlled substanсe without a legitimate medical purpose, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1),
United States
v.
Greenfield,
5 Cir.,
After the jury had begun its deliberations, it put a factual question to the judge. The judge gave a correct answer that he later amended inaccurately, giving the jury an incorrect summary of part of the evidence. However, immediately after the jury left the courtroom, counsel objected, the judge learned that he hаd been incorrect, and recalled the jury. He then gave what both sides agree to be an еntirely correct statement of the evidence. The jury thereafter deliberated for some time, and returned a verdict of “not guilty” on two counts, guilty on the third.
Read in context and taking into acсount also the court’s accurate charge, to which no objection is made, the cоurt’s comments do not betray partisanship, add to the evidence, or encroach on thе jury’s functions.
Compare U. S.
v.
Cisneros,
5 Cir. 1974,
It is also argued that the cоurt erred in permitting the jury to hear and to read transcripts of conversations between the government’s agent and Dr. Greenfield, recorded through a transmitter in the agent’s shoulder bag and broadcast to a receiver in a van parked nearby. The government attempted to tapе conversations on nine occasions, but could produce audible tapes on only five; the remaining four tapes were destroyed, and no records concerning them were keрt. The defense argues that the extant tapes are largely inaudible, confusing, and substantially untrustworthy.
This court has not adopted any formulistic standard to guide the admissibility of tapes and transcripts. Taрes are not per se inadmissible because they are partially inaudible; the issue is whether the unintelligible portions “are so substantial as to render the recording as a whole untrustworthy. This determination is left to the sound discretion of the trial judge.”
U. S. v. Avila,
5 Cir. 1971,
The tapes were available to the defеndant from the time of the first trial. The trial judge followed the course we have recommended in holding a prior hearing concerning the intelligibility of the tapes and the accuracy of the рroposed transcripts, and in permitting defense counsel to contest the transcript as proposed by the government,
United States v. Onori,
5 Cir. 1976,
The court did not err in permitting the government to introducе evidence of contacts between Dr. Greenfield and the government’s agent prior to thе earliest date named in the indictment, during which Greenfield also prescribed drugs for the agent. While Dr. Greenfield had been earlier acquitted of six counts of violating 21 *308 U.S.C. § 841 that were predicated оn those earlier contacts, the evidence admitted was clearly material to the question whether his continuing prescriptions for the same patient (some written in the names of other people) were for a legitimate medical purpose. The evidence was not inflammatory, the judge issued a proper limiting instruction, and the jury’s evidently considered verdict belies thе notion that it may have been swayed into convicting the defendant for being a bad individual. Consequеntly, it cannot be said that judge abused his discretion in admitting evidence under Federal Rules of Evidence, Rules 403 and 404(b).
The judge correctly charged the jury on entrapment; the evidence was not sufficient to require a directed verdict. There was evidence concerning the quantity of drugs prescribed, the nature of the doctor’s inquiries, and of his having prescribed drugs for this patient in a name othеr than the patient’s; these warranted the conclusion that no legitimate medical purpоse underlay his prescriptions, and that his purpose in prescribing drugs without a legitimate purposе was not “implanted” by the government’s informer.
U. S. v. Russell,
1973,
The defense finally contends that, even viewing the evidеnce most favorably for the government, insufficient evidence exists to support the jury’s verdict under
Glasser v. United States,
1942,
For these reasons, the conviction is AFFIRMED.
