Appellant appeals from the denial of a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. Previously a state court jury had found appellant guilty of armed robbery and he had been sentenced to ten to 25 years.
The offense concerned took place on December 12, 1968, at a filling station in Lancaster, Ohio. A man, later identified by three witnesses as Hastings, robbed the service station attendant at gunpoint. Still later that evening, a man, also identified at trial as appellant, forced another man at gunpoint to drive him to Columbus, Ohio. Shortly after the unwilling ride-giver had been released, Pickway County police arrested Hastings for the kidnapping and a Lancaster police captain drove the filling station attendant to the Piekway County jail where he viewed the appellant through a one-way mirror while appellant was being fingerprinted.
At trial the filling station attendant testified positively as to his identification of appellant, testified that prior to and during the robbery he had had a half-hour to observe him in the lighted filling station, and that he had seen him at the Pickway County jail.
Before the District Court Judge and before us, appellant argues that the one-on-one identification procedure employed at the Pickway County jail was constitutionally impermissible and a violation of his rights to due process of law. He also argues that at the show-up he had been denied the right to counsel, although he had asked for it. In this regard appellant relies upon United States v. Wade,
This court has previously held that in circumstances where there was excellent opportunity for the victim to observe the offender and the identification was made promptly thereafter in the normal course of a police investigation, and under circumstances when a line-up would have been difficult or impossible, there is no per se violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment in a one-on-one show-up.
See
United States ex rel. Penachio v. Kropp,
If there was any doubt about the Supreme Court’s view on the identification problem, it was certainly laid to rest in Neil v. Biggers,
We note, of course, that the trial in the instant appeal took place after decision of the
Wade, Gilbert, Stovall
trilogy, whereas the Neil v. Biggers trial preceded it. The District Judge in this case, however, did not find that the show-up complained of was “so unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable identification that [appellant] was denied due process of law.”
See
Stovall v. Denno,
Even more conclusively a recent Supreme Court case serves to reject appellant’s claim that he was denied counsel at the show-up complained of, in violation of the Constitution. In Kirby v. Illinois,
We find no merit to appellant’s contention that the person kidnapped for purposes of escape from the area should not have been allowed to testify and identify appellant.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
