Plaintiff-appellant Gary Hensley appeals the district court’s grant of a summary judgment in favor of defendants-appellees Theodore Williams and Robert Stanley on his claim that Williams and Stanley .allegedly conducted a suggestive lineup which resulted in Hensley being arrested and confined for a period of 111 days. We affirm.
I.
On September 12, 1979, an unknown man followed Carol Pufpaf to her home at 4120 N. Campbell in Chicago, Illinois. While Pufpaf was entering the front door of her home, the unknown man entered the house through an unlocked rear door, confronted Pufpaf and forced her onto a bed. The assailant fled after Pufpaf and her sevеn year-old son started screaming. Pufpaf subsequently described the assailant as a white male with an olive complexion, dark brown hair, about 5' 9" in height, approximately 150 pounds in weight, and about 19 years of age.
Hensley, a white male, 18 years of age, with a blond military-style haircut, with light skin, is 6' 0" tall, weighed 165 pounds, and was a member of the Unitеd States
During the evening of Septеmber 15, 1979 appellant Theodore Williams, a Chicago police officer, arranged for a lineup that included Hensley and five other white males. Hensley was the only person in the lineup wearing a short military-style haircut. Even though Williams was aware of this fact he and another officer, Detective John Beaumont, attempted to but were unable to locate any other white males with short haircuts, including members of the police department itself, to participate in the lineup. Appellant Robert Stanley, also a Chicago police officer, approved of the lineup, and the group was exhibited to Pufрaf. Pufpaf identified Hensley as her assailant, and Hensley was subsequently indicted on various criminal charges of burglary, attempted rape, and attempted robbery. Hensley, unable to post bond, remained in custody for 111 days while awaiting trial.
According to the prosecuting attorney assigned to the case, Pufpaf’s sevеn-year-old son after observing Hensley at a preliminary hearing 1 stated to the mother “that is not the man,” meaning that Hensley was not Pufpaf’s attacker. According to police investigators, they believed Pufpaf’s son had more than ample opportunity to view the assailant during the attack as he observed the assailant push his mother into the bedroom. After her son’s comment, Pufpaf told the prosecuting attorney that she had not had a good look at her assailant and picked Hensley out of the lineup because of his short hair. While Pufpaf was not sure whether Hensley was her attacker after her son’s comment, she maintаined that her earlier description of the assailant had been accurate. At the hearing in which the state court dismissed the charges pending against Hensley, the prosecution stated:
“I spoke to the victim, Carol Pufpaf, about this at length and it was her opinion that she certainly was not now convinced and definitely decided the defendant was not the person who committed the crime in question. Carol expressed to me her opinion that she would stick by her original description and that the Defendant had dark brown hair and olive skin and the reason for picking him out of the lineup and being confused was the military look definitely portrаyed by the Defendant in this case, the same type of military look that she recalled the Defendant or perpetrator of this crime having.
She further went on to say that she did not get a very good look at the offender on the date in question due to the fact that she was staring at a very large knife that he was jabbing towаrds her and pushing her into a bedroom.”
The police re-evaluated the case and conducted a further investigation of Hensley’s prior alibi that he had been elsewhere at the time of Pufpaf’s attack and now convinced of Hensley’s truthfulness released him on January 4, 1980.
On March 23, 1981, Hensley filed suit against Williams and Stanley pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that his constitutional rights had been violated under the Fifth, Sixth, and the due process clause of the U.S. Constitution in that the officers had conducted a suggestive lineup. Hensley originally named Bernard Carey, the Cook County States Attorney, Williams, Stanley and various other defendants in his suit but the district court dismissed all but Williams and Stanley. Hеnsley appeals the
II
“A grant of summary judgment is proper if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Wainwright Bank & Trust Company v. Railroadmens Federal Savings & Loan Association of Indianapolis,
Hensley argues that the district court imрroperly granted summary judgment in favor of Williams and Stanley on his claim pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He maintains that defendants-appellees deprived him of his Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights because they subjected him to an unduly suggestive lineup. The appellees maintain that they were entitled to a summary judgment as a matter of law since the Constitution does not guarantee a suspect an impartial lineup. This is a case of first impression since, as the district court stated, “it appears that no court has yet passed on whether police officers may be liable under § 1983 for conducting an improper lineup.”
Hensley bases his argument that his constitutional rights were violated and he should recover damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 relying on
Stovall v. Denno,
In granting summary judgment for the defendants in this case, the district court reasoned that the procedurаl safeguards discussed in
Stovall
and
Brathwaite
pro
In
Cerbone v. County of Westchester,
“Cerbone [plaintiff] does nоt allege that the evidence from the ‘show-up’ itself was introduced at his trial or that any harm resulted from it. The mere failure of a ‘show-up’ to pass constitutional requirements, without a showing of resulting prejudice, does not establish a constitutional deprivation. The constitutional guarantee against a pretrial cоnfrontation ‘that is unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification’ does not exist in vacuo but is meaningful only by reference to the right of an accused to a fair trial, of which it is a corollary. No violation of the due process clause occurs unless an improper identification has some prejudicial impact on an accused’s defense.”
Id.
at 786. Similarly, in
Pyles v. Keane,
“The present complaint neither states nor suggests that plaintiffs suffered convictions after a trial or trials at which the tainted ‘show-up’ evidence was admitted agаinst them. Nor apparently could it truthfully so state; as previously noted, it is undisputed that Charles and Walter Pyles were tried only on unrelated charges, without testimony of witnesses who had attended the allegedly suggestive ‘show-up.’ As discussed above, this is fatal to plaintiffs’ claims.”
Id.
at 275. In both
Cerbone
and
Pyles,
the court emphasized that the Constitution guarantees the right tо a fair trial and that procedural rules prohibiting the introduction of evidence derived from unduly suggestive lineups exist only to protect an accused’s right to a fair trial.
Cerbone,
To support its decision that a defendant does not have a right to an impartial lineup in itself, the district court analogized to a set of cases in which criminal defendants brought § 1983 actions against police officers alleging that the officers were liable under § 1983 for failing to properly give the defendants
Miranda
warnings. The district court stated that
“The Constitution and laws of the United States do not guarantee [plaintiff] the right to Miranda warnings. They only guarantee him the right to be free from self-incrimination. The Miranda decision does not even suggest that police officers who fail to advise an arrеsted person of his rights are subject to civil liability; it requires, at most, only that any confession made in the absence of such advice of rights be excluded from evidence. No rational argument can be made in support of the notion that the failure to give Miranda warnings subjects a police officer to liability under the Civil Rights Act [§ 1983].”
Id. at 1263. Applying the same logic that the Tenth Circuit used in Bennett here, we find that Stovall and Brathwaite establish procedural safeguards to insure that only reliable identification evidence is admitted at trial. Stovall and Brathwaite do not establish a right to an impartial lineup as long as the evidence gained through that lineup is not used at trial. Thus, the defendants could not have violated Hensley’s сonstitutional rights simply by subjecting him to a lineup which was allegedly unduly suggestive. 4
Furthermore, we also note that the lineup at issue in the present case was not unduly suggestive.
Manson v. Brathwaite,
“The ‘totality of the circumstances’ reference is a reminder that there can be an infinite variety of differing situations involved in the conduct of a particular lineup. The police authorities are rеquired to make every effort reasonable under the circumstances to conduct a fair and balanced presentation of alternative possibilities for identification. The police are not required to conduct a search for identical twins in age, height, weight or facial features. If an Eskimo werе to be involved in a burglary in Vernon county, it is not to be expected that the sheriff will seek to locate or send to the Arctic for tribesmen who could pass as brothers. What is required is the attempt to conduct a fair lineup, taking all steps reasonable under the ‘totality of the circumstances’ to secure such result.”
Wright v. State,
Notes
. The record is unclear as to whether Pufpaf s son attended the hearing held on September 24, 1979 or on September 28, 1979.
. 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982) states:
"Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any state or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivatiоn of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress. For the purposes of this section, any Act of Congress applicable exclusively to the District of Columbia shall be considered to be a statute of the District of Columbia.”
. A "show-up” differs from a “lineup” in that only one individual is exhibited to a witness and that witness is asked whether he or she can identify that individual as the perpetrator of whatever crime is being investigated.
See Kirby v. Illinois,
. At oral argument, counsel for Hensley cited
Kerr v. City of Chicago,
