Defendant Wilson was convicted in the District Court for the Western District of Washington of illegally selling heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 174 and 26 U.S.C. § 4704(a), after a trial to a jury. This court has jurisdiction over his appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We see no merit in any of the points raised by the defendant, and we therefore affirm his conviction.
On July 7, 1967, an agent of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics in Seattle, Aubrey Abbey, received a phone call from an informant, Julius Bishop. Bishop told Abbey that the defendant had heroin for sale and that he would sell it to Abbey, who was working in an undercover capacity. Abbey and Bishop *186 met with the defendant the night of July 7, and to gain the defendant’s confidence Abbey falsely told him that they had met previously while both were serving time at McNeil Penitentiary. The sale was concluded, and a later government analysis showed that the substance which the defendant had sold to Abbey was heroin. The entire transaction was witnessed by two other police officers who corroborated Abbey’s story at the trial.
The defendant was not taken into custody the night of July 7. Despite the fact that he was in Seattle the entire time with the knowledge of government officials, the defendant was not indicted by the Grand Jury until November 14, 1967; and he was not arrested until January 31, 1968, almost seven months after the sale of the heroin. The trial was originally set for March 5, 1968, but at the defendant’s request it was continued until April 22 so that a court-appointed investigator could attempt to locate the informant, Bishop. Bishop was not found, and he did not testify at the trial. The trial resulted in the guilty verdict from wnich the defendant brings this appeal.
The appellant’s primary contention is that the seven months delay between the date of the crime and the date of his arrest denied him due process of law.
Appellant relies heavily upon Ross v. United States,
In
Ross,
the court quoted from Nickens v. United States,
“Although it has not been directly decided due process may be denied when a formal charge is delayed for an unreasonably oppressive and unjustifiable time after the offense to the prejudice of the accused.”
Under the
Ross
rule the reasonableness of the police conduct in the particular case is to be weighed against the possible prejudice to the defendant.
On the other hand, appellant does not show that his defense was prejudiced by the delay. His defense was a general denial that he had ever seen Abbey, that he knew Bishop, or that he had sold nar *187 cotics to anyone since his release from prison. He did testify that he could not remember where he was on July 7, 1967. However, in this case, the danger of misidentification was extremely remote.
Unlike the lone prosecution witness in Ross, whose undercover work had begun less than two weeks after he became a policeman, Abbey had been a state law enforcement officer for 13 years and a federal narcotics agent for more than 18 months before the alleged transaction with appellant. Again, unlike Ross, where the witness had no personal recollection of the transaction, Abbey testified that although he had reviewed his file on the case before trial, his testimony and recollection of events were independent of any notes or records he had made. Also, Abbey had ample opportunity to make a careful identification. The transaction required 10 to 15 minutes to consummate, and during much of this time the seller was sitting alone in the back seat of Bishop’s car and Abbey in the front seat while the two discussed the terms of the sale. Moreover, Abbey testified that although he did not know appellant before the transaction, he had seen him before; appellant had been identified to Abbey, and Abbey knew who appellant was. Finally, unlike Ross, two other witnesses identified appellant as the man in the company of Abbey and the. informant at the time of the alleged transaction, and substantially corroborated other portions of Abbey’s account of the sale.
It should also be noted that although Bishop could not be located at the time of trial, appellant has not suggested that his testimony would have supported the defense that appellant was not the seller.
Under the circumstances of this case, therefore, we cannot say that the delay in appellant’s arrest resulted in a denial of due process.
The defendant’s remaining contentions may be quickly disposed of. He urges that the failure of the government to call the informant Bishop as a witness denied him a fair trial. However, the rule in this and other circuits is that the failure of the government to call an informant as a government witness does not necessarily violate a defendant’s rights. Clingan v. United States,
Finally, the defendant argues that the trial court committed error by not giving the jury an instruction pertaining to the law of entrapment. However, at the trial the defendant denied that he had committed the offense with which he was charged. There was no evidence to justify the issue of entrapment. Under these circumstances appellant was not entitled to an instruction on that issue. Clingan v. United States,
supra;
Smith v. United States,
Judgment affirmed.
