Jаmes Doss and Carmelita, his wife, appeal from judgments entered on verdicts finding James guilty of bank robbery (18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) (d) and Car-melita guilty of assisting James in said robbery as an accessory after the fact (18 U.S.C. § 3).
We will discuss the asserted errors seriatim.
First,
that the district judge denied defendants’ motion to dismiss the indictment on the ground that it was based solely upon hearsay. We disagree. Jack v. Unitеd States,
Second, that the district judge denied defendants’ motions to suppress and overruled their objections to identification testimony by witnesses Meija and Mang. Defendants urgе error in three separate respects.
(a) The compelled appearances.
After defendants had been released on bail, the judge made an order compelling them to appеar at police lineups. Their attorney was present throughout the proceedings.
Defendants argue that the district judge lacked power to order thеir appearance and hence (to quote James) “the identification obtained at the lineup from the eye-witnesses should have been suppressed.”
We think defendants’ premise is unsound and hence reject their conclusion. The Supreme Court has squarely held that mere compulsion to appear in a pretrial lineup does not
per se
violate any constitutional right against self-incrimination. United States v. Wade,
Thus, since a lineup is not constitutionally impermissible and, since the use of a lineup is a well recognized and valuаble aid in the administration of justice, we believe a district court possesses the inherent power to compel participation by an accused. See United States v. Doe,
(b) Right to counsel at the lineups.
Defendants, although conceding the lineups were not unfairly conducted and that their attorneys were in attendance, assert thаt neither counsel was permitted to listen in on any remarks that may have passed between the spectators — particularly the witnesses and the officers, both during the proceeding and immediately afterward. Relying upon Wade v. United States,
We wholly disagree.
The rationale and decision in Wade is epitomized in the following quotation:
“Since it appears that there is grave potential for prejudice, intentional or not, in the pretrial lineup which may not be capable of rеconstruction at trial and since the presence of counsel itself can often avert prejudice and assure meaningful confrontation at trial, thеre can be little doubt that for Wade the post-indictment lineup was a critical stage of the prosecution at which he was ‘as much entitled to such aid’ [оf counsel] — as at the trial itself.” (p. 237,87 S.Ct. at p. 1937 )
The grave “potential for prejudice,” of course refers to the likelihood of a mistaken identification of a susрect in a lineup, and as the Court carefully pointed out, the probability of such an error in judgment is most often due to “the degree of suggestion inherent in the manner in which the prosecution presents the suspect to witnesses for identification.” Significantly the Court noted that cross-examination at the trial often affords аn adequate means to protect the accused but that a witness at a lineup can be subjected to subtle influences of which he may not be aware — for example, the composition of the lineup, distinctive dress of the suspect, etc. Cross-examination might very well not suffice to disclose such covеrt improprieties as those mentioned in Wade, but we do not believe that the ordinary wit *604 ness is so unlikely to be schooled in the detection of influences, consisting of verbal suggestions, that he could not recall them on cross-examination. In sum, we conclude that Wade does not support appellant, that the ordinary witness is capable of recalling and recounting conversations concerning the identity of a suspect and that the prosecution need not, in effect, permit defense counsel to “sit in” on cоnferences with prospective witnesses.
(c) Due process.
James urges that the lineup witness’s identification testimony should have been suppressed on due process grounds. He asserts that “prior to” the lineup a collection of photographs, his included, was shown witnesses Mejia and Mang, but at the lineup the participants, except for him, were not the same ones pictured in the photographs. Appellant, relying upon Stovall v. Denno,
Appellants, as noted earlier, make nо attack on the lineup itself; neither do they urge anything “impermissibly suggestive” in or about the showing of the photographs to the witnesses — that being the test commonly applied to photographic [Simmons v. United States,
Third, the alibi rebuttal.
The District Attorney, to rebut alibi evidence that Carmelita was at a doctor’s office with her infant child when the crimes were allegedly committed, called Dauphine Tiller to the stand. Mrs. Tiller had previously made a signed stаtement that it was she, not Carmelita, who had taken the child to the doctor on the day in question. However, upon being questioned, Mrs. Tiller testified in substance that she hаd been mistaken about the date. Thereupon, the District Attorney, claiming surprise, confronted her with the statement; at that point defense counsel objeсted and the jury was excused; during the ensuing discussion, the judge ruled that he would not admit the written statement but would allow the District Attorney to refer to it in framing questions to Mrs. Tiller. The jury was thеn recalled and the examination of Mrs. Tiller proceeded in accordance with the ruling.
The District Attorney now insists that the evidence was admissible both for imрeachment and as substantive proof. We disagree on both counts and hold the ruling error.
1. During the colloquy, the District Attorney acknowledged that, before cаlling Mrs. Tiller, she had told him that her statement was untrue; yet he nevertheless persisted in an effort to get its contents before the jury. As we recently reiterated in Bushaw v. United States,
2. Neither were the prior inconsistent statements admissible as substantive evidence. Benson v. United States,
James raises several additional pоints in a supplemental brief. None has merit. 1
Finding no reversible error, the judgments are affirmed.
Notes
. Having made no objection to the introduction of evidence tending to impeach the witness Massingale, defendants laid no foundation for the late motion to declare a mistrial. Moreover, it is at least doubtful that the evidence was inadmissible.
