We accept the correction of counsel as to the exact time that the pistol used in the robbery was thrown away by the appellant; but the point is that the pistol so used, or onе similar to it, was traced into the possession of appellant after the robbery and before the arrest. It was said of old that the wicked flee when no *100 man pursueth, and there was evidence before the jury to warrant the finding that this was what happened in the instant case. The authoritiеs seem to agree that evidence of flight is always admissible, especially when the conduсt of the defendant is apparently inconsistent with innocence.
As stated in United States v. Heitner, 2 Cir.,
In United States v. Dalhover, 7 Cir.,
“Now later on in the evidence, and there has been no contradiction of that evidence, that up in Ponotoc County, after some kind of escapade abоut which we are not concerned, Mr. Kimes threw that gun out of his pocket, or threw a gun, the one whiсh has been introduced in evidence here, out of his pocket, that the law enforcemеnt officers later on went there and found it, and the gun which was thrown from Mr. Kimes’ pocket was here exhibited to you, and that the woman said that the man down there in the bank had a gun which apparently looked like that gun and made the same sort of sound.”
Again and again, the judge cautioned the jury that the only issue involved was whether the defendant robbed the Bank of Ackerman, and that nothing else should bе considered by the jury. The commission of the alleged bank robbery was undisputed, and the only issue befоre the jury was as to the identity of the defendant as the principal robber; the one who clicked and exhibited the gun. All the cross-examination about which the appellant complains was necessary, and due to the extensive use of fictitious names by the witnesses being questioned. The appellant voluntarily testified in his own behalf, and exposed his own criminal record to some extent. In one instance, the trial court said: “Your witness brought it out herself. I think the Government is entitled to have an explanation, if there is one.”
After a fair trial before a good judge and competent jury, with all the facts undisputed except the alibi of the defend *101 ant, we find nothing suspicious, questionаble, or remarkable in the action of the jury in returning its verdict of guilty after deliberating only twenty minutes. The triаl of this case consumed parts of several days, including the arguments of counsel and the chаrge of the court. During these days and the intervening nights, the jury had ample time for consideration and rеflection. It saw and heard the witnesses, including the defendant. It saw the size of his foot. It retired to consider its verdict with the final words of the court’s charge ringing in its ears: “You will remember that the only issue you are trying is whether Mr. Kimes robbed the Bank of Ackerman on that particular occasion. If there is any rеasonable doubt about this matter, you must give him the benefit of that doubt and acquit him. Also bearing in mind, if you arе satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that he did rob the Bank of Ackerman, it would be your duty to find him guilty.”
Finally, we think that the record in this case is entirely free from any reversible error, and that the petition for rehearing should be denied.
Petition denied.
