*253 OPINION
This is аn appeal from a conviction of burglary of a habitation. The sole point of error on appeal is whether the trial court erred by allowing the victim to identify Warren Brown, the appellant, as the assailant in court based on a suggestive pretrial identification procedure.
Factual And ProceduRal History
On March 14, 1998, Britt Chelma found an intruder in her house. As she pursued him, he ran up a few steps towards a bathroom. Turning to face Chelma, the intruder then pushed her down one step, causing her to fall backward. Although injured during the fall, Chelma continued to chase the intruder until he left her house. As she waited for the police to аrrive, Chelma noticed that a videocassette recorder had been placed on the bathroom floor and her own videocassette recorder and stereo had been placed on her bed, with the cords wrapped around the units as if ready for transport. Aso, she noticеd that someone had opened and gone through her dresser drawers.
When the police arrived, Chelma stated with certainty that the burglar was a black man with “empty eyes” who was wearing a brown or beige sweater and tan pants. She also gave an approximate age for the intruder, although she was hesitant in doing so. According to the police officer interviewing her at the scene, Chelma was certain that she could identify the burglar if she saw him again. Sometime later, Chelma added that the burglar was about her height, i.e., five feet, five inches. She also described his weight.
Over a month later, Chelma saw a man who fit the description she had given the police. The man was wearing clothes similar to the clothes the intruder had worn and was standing near her house. Chelma immediately drove to a friend’s house and called the police because she believed the man she saw outside her housе to be the same man who had been inside her home a month earlier. However, Chelma was unable to get a good look at this man’s face because he was wearing a baseball cap. By the time the police arrived, the man was gone.
On May 6, 1998, the police showed Chelma a phоtospread containing six photographs, none of which depicted the appellant. At that time, Chelma did not identify anyone as the burglar. Later that month, the police summoned Chelma to the police station for a video lineup. The video presented five black males of varying heights. Aсcording to the testimonies of both Chelma and Officer Laura Whalen, the detective who made the video, the first individual was about six feet; the second was between six feet and six feet, one inch; the third was about five feet, ten inches; and the fourth was between five feet, ten inches and five feet, elеven inches. The height of the fifth man was unclear from the record, varying between five feet, five inches, and five feet, ten inches. Chelma identified the appellant, who was in the fifth position, as the intruder.
The appellant was arrested, tried, and convicted of burglary of a habitation. During the trial, Chelma idеntified the appellant as the perpetrator over defense objections. The jury found the appellant guilty and sentenced him to fifty years’ confinement.
Admissibility of an In-Court Identification
An in-court identification is inad-missable if tainted by an unduly suggestive pretrial identification.
See Loserth v. State,
Suggestiveness of Pre-trial Lineup
Under the first step of the analysis, we evaluate the pretrial lineup itself to determine whether it was impermissibly or unduly suggestive. “A lineup is considered unduly suggestive if other participants are greatly dissimilar in appearance from the suspect.”
Withers v. State,
The video lineup did not provide a clear and undisputed record of the height of the appellant, who was the individual in the fifth position, as evidenced by the varying accounts of his height by Chelma and Officer Whalen. Our viеw of the videotape lineup yielded similar results. It is not possible to determine exact heights from the record; rather, a viewer of the videotape lineup could only estimate that the man in the fifth position was a little under five foot, eight inches. However, one viewing the videotape cоuld easily discern a large differential between the heights of the other four individuals in the lineup and the appellant, a differential which likely rises to the level of “impermissibly suggestive.” Assuming the lineup was impermis-sibly suggestive, we address the second part of the analysis, i.e., whether the pretrial procedure caused a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.
Reliability of In-Court Identification
Under the second phase of the analysis, we assess the reliability of the in-court identification by looking to the factors set forth in
United States v. Wade,
We use the first
Wade
factor to determine the historical facts.
See id.
at 773 (citing
Sumner v. Mata,
The second Wade factor analyzes whether a discrepancy exists between any pre-lineup description and the defendant’s actual description. Here, no discrepancy exists. The appellant claims that Chelma gave a vague description. However, aside from the height, weight, race, age and clothing descriptions she provided, it is difficult to discern what further information Chelma could have given the police. There is nothing in the record to suggest the appellant had any unusual features, such as a scar, tattoo or physical deformity-
In a case in which the court fоund a vague description determinative in holding the in-court identification was not rehable, the key witness described the murderer as “tall and thin” and wearing dark clothes.
See Loserth v. State,
The third, fourth, and fifth Wade factors inquire whether there was an identification of another person prior to the lineup, whether the witness was able to identify the defendant by picture prior to the lineup, and whether the witness failed to identify the defendant on a prior occasion. Before the lineup, Officer Whalen showed Chelma а photo spread that did not include the appellant. Chelma was very certain that the burglar was not in the photo spread. The police did not provide Chel-ma any other opportunities to view photographic lineups before the video lineup in question, and Chelma did not fail to identify the appellant on any occasion.
The sixth
Wade
factor inquires into the length of time between the alleged act and the lineup identification. At least one of our sister courts of appeals has concluded that two and a half months is not long enough to automatically assume the witness’s memоry has faded.
See Woodson v. State,
We also consider the degree of attention the witness focused on the criminal act taking place. Witnesses who are more than just casual observers have more reаson to be attentive.
See Barley,
Finally, we consider the level of certainty the witness demonstratеd at the confrontation. According to Chelma and Officer Whalen, Chelma was unshakable in her conviction that the appellant was the intruder in her home. Chelma stated that she identified the appellant as he first entered the lineup but waited to verbally identify him until the end of the lineup according to the detective’s directions. Also, Chelma testified that she identified the appellant by recognizing his face; his height was not a critical factor in her identification. Chelma’s high degree of certainty as to her identification of appellant carried through to the trial where she remained convinced thе appellant was the burglar. She testified that her identification of him was based upon her observations on the day of the burglary, particularly during her close encounter with him as he faced her on the steps, and that she would have recognized him in court without having seen him in the video lineup.
*257
Having reviewed the historical facts, we now weigh them against the effect of the pretrial lineup. The only factor that reasonably could be construed against the reliability of the in-court identification is the very short period of time Chelma had to view the intruder; however, the Court of Criminal Appeals has made it clear that the length of the encounter is not necessarily determinative.
See Delk,
Notes
. Those factors are: 1) the witness's opportunity to view the criminal act, 2) the witness’s degree of attention, 3) the accuracy of the suspect’s description, 4) the level of certainty at the time of confrontation, and 5) the time between the crime and confrontation.
See Barley,
