John Patler was found guilty by a jury in the Circuit Court of Arlington County, Virginia, of the first degree murder of George Lincoln Rockwell, the head of the American Nazi Party. Pat-ler was apprehended about one-half hour after the homicide less than a mile from the scene of the crime. The complex, “largely circumstantial” web of evidence upon which the jury verdict rested is set out in the opinion of the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia, which held that the verdict was based on sufficient evidence. Patler v. Commonwealth,
On October 9, 1972, Patler sought a writ of habeas corpus from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Three errors of constitutional magnitude were alleged: (1) that the identification testimony of two witnesses at petitioner’s state trial was tainted by their рresence at illegal show-ups and should have been excluded under United States v. Wade,
I.
At about noon on August • 25, 1967, Mrs. Alma Kilpatrick was backing her car from a parking space at a small shopping center in Arlington, Virginia, when she saw a man appear on the brick wall in front of her. He jumped down, ran behind her car, lоoked toward the area of the parking lot where Rockwell’s body was later found, turned and ran back over the wall. Upon being asked at trial if she could describe the person whom she saw, Mrs. Kilpatrick responded:
A. I believe that he was dark haired and he had either a brownish or a dark brown coat on, and he looked something like what Mr. Patler looks like.
Q. Where did you see Mr. Patler?
A. I saw Mr. ■ Patler again in the courtroom.
Transcript 523. Mrs. Kilpatrick talked with police on the day aftеr the shooting. Shown two different photographic spreads containing Patler’s picture, she was unable to make a positive identification. It was then suggested that she attend Patler’s preliminary hearing to obtain a view of the suspect. Failing to gain an unobstructed view of Patler, Mrs. Kilpatrick came to a second hearing. She at first declined to make a positive identification after the hearing, then changed her mind and informed the police that she could identify Patler, and finally concluded that she could not. On voir dire examination she stated: “I have decided to say I can’t positively because I know that would be a crime, that would be terrible. I can’t do that.” Transcript 543.
On this same day and at about the same time, Mrs. Nancy Thoburn was returning from Bon Air Park (located about four blocks from the shopping center where the shooting occurred) with her three children. As she walked up Liberty Street in the direction of the shopping center she saw a man running down the opposite side of the street in the direction of the park. Noticing him “because of his hurry,” she testified that she described him to a detective who interviewed her that same day as having “dark hair,” “a dark complexion,” and “was of medium build ond height.” Transcript 628. She further described his clothing:
He was wearing a long coat of some type, although I can’t exactly identify it in every detail, but it appeared to be a neutral color. Also, his pants impressed me as being a dark gray, and he wore a hat; and I noticed one thing that stood out was that his pants’ legs were wet.
Transcript 628. Later that same day Mrs. Thoburn went to the police station. She was seated on a bench together with three other potential witnesses outside of the rоbm in which Patler was confined. Patler, handcuffed and escorted by se.veral policemen, was led by the bench as he was transferred from one room to another. 1 The state trial judge, describing the show-up as “the worst *475 possible kind,” refused to allow Mrs. Thoburn to testify as to “any identification subsequent to that made at the police station.” Transcript 622-23. But the following testimony by Mrs. Tho-burn was allowed:
Mr. Hassan: [ Commonwealth’s Attorney] Did there come a time when you made any statement tо the police officers concerning what you have just described and its relationship to any picture or live viewing of Mr. Patter ?
Mr. Harrigan: [Patter’s Attorney] Objection, Your Honor.
The Court: The objection is overruled.
Mr. Harrigan: Exception.
The Witness: I had an opportunity to see Mr. Patter at the police station the same day, August 25th.
Mr. Harrigan: I object to that, Your Honor.
Mr. Hassan: What she told the police.
The Court: We just want to know what you told the police officer about your impressions of Mr. Patter.
The Witness: At that time I recall seeing — when I say seeing— when I was asked if I could make an identification, I said thаt there wasn’t any conflict in his appearance to the man I had seen, that there was nothing about him that conflicted my mental picture of what I had seen earlier that day.
Transcript 630-31.
The Commonwealth argues that because the testimony of Mrs. Kilpatrick and Mrs. Thoburn was inconclusive and did not rise to the level of positive identification and because counsel was at all times present at (although admittedly uninformed of) the сhallenged show-ups, the
Wade-Gilbert
exclusionary rule does not apply and the testimony must be tested only under the “totality of the circumstances” as prescribed in Stovall v. Denno,
The contention that the presence of counsel at these show-ups is enough to satisfy
Wade
and
Gilbert
flies in the face
*476
of the sixth amendment right sought to be protected. Both
Wade
and
Gilbert
speak in terms of informed presence,
1. e.,
notice.
2
The state argues further that since Patler had not been indicted and the Commonwealth had not “committed itself to prosecute” [Kirby v. Illinois,
Although the failure of a witness to make a positive, in-court identification cannot be used by the statе to insulate its improper identification procedures from scrutiny, it is entirely possible, we think, for a skilled trial judge to separate the tainted matter from what the witness actually observed at the scene of the crime and thus avoid an unnecessarily blunt application of the exclusionary rule of Wade or Gilbert. That is what occurred here.
We need not decide whether the improper show-ups might have suggested or strengthened Mrs. Kilpatrick’s and Mrs. Thoburn’s testimony in court, even to the point of positive identification, because the capable trial judge, alert to the problem, made certain that the questioning was limited to eliciting only what they saw at the scene and an inconclusive comparison with Patler’s physical appearance. As to the latter he barely skirted constitutional error, for if there is a line between “resemblance” and “identification” testimony it is admittedly thin.
But see
United States v. Brooks,
At no point did she make a positive identification, but what identification she makes, dubious as it is, appears to me to be the direct product of what she saw while she was sitting in her car.
Transcript 559.
As for Mrs. Thoburn’s testimony, the trial judge was even more cautious, recognizing .that the state had arranged views of “the worst possible kind.” He therefore limited her testimony to what she told the officers at the police station —-something short of even “resemblance” testimony. Under the announced limitation Mrs. Thoburn described the clothing of the person seen near the place of the crime; and, in response to whether she could make an identification, failed to do so, saying only that the appearance of Patler was not “in conflict” with the person she had seen.
In declining to order a new trial despite flagrant police viоlations of show-up standards, we think we do no injury to the therapy of the exclusionary rule of Gilbert. For the lesson got to the trial judge and through him to the prosecutor and the police, and it is this: unfairly obtained identification testimony will not be freely received, and if allowed at all, it will be under such severe limitations that the prosecutor will be deprived of most of its potential for persuasiveness. Thus the purpose of the exclusionary rule, to deter the violation of the constitutional rights of those accused of crime, is served.
II.
Spent bullets and shell casings matching the murder weapon were seized from the pasture of a farm owned by Patler’s father-in-law, Sam Ervin. Testimony at trial tended to show that the area from which the inculpatory evidence was recovered was occasionally used by the two families as a picnic area аnd as a play area for their children and had within a month prior to the shooting been used by Patler for target shooting. It was located 250 feet from the dwelling house and about 200 feet outside a fence which enclosed the house and outbuildings. Although the trial court found invalid on its face a search warrant obtained by officers prior to the search, the evidence was not suppressed on the theory that the area searched was outside the curtilage. The Supreme Court of Appeals affirmed, specifically relying on the “open fields” doctrine of Hester v. United States,
In Jones v. United States the Court, in construing Rule 41(e) which gives to any “person aggrieved by an unlawful search and seizure” the right to move to suppress evidence thereby secured, held that, “In order to quаlify as a ‘person aggrieved by *478 an unlawful search and seizure’ one must have been a victim of a search or seizure, one against whom the search was directed, as distinguished from one who claims prejudice only-through the use of evidence gathered as a consequence of a search or seizure directed at someone else.” (Italics added)362 U.S. at p. 261 ,80 S.Ct. at p. 731 .....
While possession of the evidence seized here was not an element of the offense charged, Patter demonstrated both that he had a possessory interest in the property searched,
4
Brown v. United States,
Appellants’ reasonable expectations of privacy — while extending to their dwellings and the immediate area around them and even to the area occupied by outbuildings such as the barns in question . . . — cannot, in light of Hester, be said to include the “open fields” around the barn.
See also
United States v. Minton,
III.
In Brady v. Maryland,
We now hold that the suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.
Petitioner alleges that his
Brady
rights were violated by the prosecution’s failure to release the results of scientific tests made by the FBI on certain physical evidence until that evidence was intrоduced late in his trial.
5
The district
*479
court correctly characterized the test results as “neutral” rather than “exculpatory.”
Petitioner’s argument rests, finally, on the assertion that disclоsure was not timely. While there may be instances where disclosure comes too late to benefit the defendant,
see, e. g.,
Clay v. Black,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Mrs. Thoburn described the scene on voir dire examination:
Q. Did you go down to the police station on the 25 th?
A. Yes.
Q. How many other peoide were down there ?
A. There were three other witnesses there.
Q. Did you know what you were going down there for?
A. To give a description. I thought I was going down there to see if I could identify the man that I saw running.
Q. Where did you go in the police station?
A. To the detective’s office.
Q. That is the third floor?
A. I guess it is; I couldn’t say right now.
Q. Were you in the hall there?
A. We were in the office, and Mr. Patler’s lawyer would not let us look at him.
Q. Who was that lawyer?
A. Mrs. Lane, I guess.
Q. She would not let you look at him?
A. That was the reason we were given for sitting so long in the office.
Q. Who gave you that reason?
*475 A. The detectives. I don’t know; that was what I heard. I did not see Mrs. Lane that day, period. This is the reason thаt I was given why we were kept waiting because his lawyer, whoever it was, would not let us see him.
Q. All right. Did they come out and finally tell you okay?
A. No, they did not.
Q. What happened?
A. They put a bench for us beside the elevator so that when he was changed from one room to anotiier and brought down the hall that we would catch a glimpse of him then.
Q. Was he brought down the hall?
A. Yes.
Q. How many detectives were holding onto him?
A. I know there were at least two escorts.
Q. Was he handcuffed?
A. Yes.
Q. Was it pretty obvious who the defendant was and who the detectives were ?
A. Yes, indeed.
Transcript 604-05.
. The following colloquy between the trial judge and the Commonwealth’s attorney would tend to establish that there was no notice 1o Patler’s attorney of the identification procedures:
The Court: Does the Commonwealth deny that his counsel was advised that he was to be shown to eye witnesses at that time?
Mr. I-Iassan: I don’t think counsel was advised at any time. I don’t think there is any requirement to advise counsel.
Transcript 621.
.
Wade
and
Gilbert
are effective prospectively from June 12, 1967. Stovall v. Denno,
. The record owner of the property, Sam Ervin, was Patler’s father-in-law. The Pat-ler and Ervin families resided in the same dwelling in Arlington, and both families used the Highland County farm frequently.
. In his petition for certiorari to the United States Supreme Court petitioner itemized the various pieces of evidence, their relationship to the case against him and the results of scientific tests performed on them as follows :
During the afternoon of the day of the crime, a cap and a reversible coat, brown on one side and black on the other with a mutilated woman’s pantyhose stuffed in one pocket, were found under a tree a few blocks from the scene of the crime. (Tr. 777, 794-95). On the afternoon of the next day, a 7.63 mm. Mauser pistol was found in a park several blocks away, lying between two rooks in a creek in аbout six inches of water. (Tr. 1434-35) This proved to be the murder weapon. (Tr. 1707-8) It was identified as the property of Robert A. Lloyd, III, an active member of the Nazi Party, who testified that he had loaned it to petitioner in 1964. (Tr. 1806, 1812-13) Lloyd also testified that when he requested the return of the gun in 1965 petitioner told him it had been stolen or mislaid, and that the coat found under the tree “looked exactly like” one petitioner had worn. (Tr. 1813-14, 1824-25) Another Party member testified that the coat “is” petitioner’s. (Tr. 1856) Petitioner denied that Lloyd had ever loaned him the gun and presented several witnesses who said they had seen it in Lloyd’s possession after 1964. (Tr. 2469-70, 2178, 2276-76) The defense in- *479 troduoed a different black raincoat, found in petitioner's home the day after the crime, which he identified as his own. (Tr. 2562, 2464) The police delivered their items of physical evidence to the FBI, where they were subjected to all the usuаl scientific tests, as was the clothing worn by petitioner at the time of his arrest and the towel he. was carrying. Before the trial petitioner’s attorneys asked the trial court to order the reports of these tests and any exculpatory evidence possessed by the prosecution to be shown to defense counsel. This motion was denied. Late in the prosecution’s case, the Commonwealth presented this evidence. Tests to establish whether the articles found under the tree or the towell had been associated with a firearm were negative. (Tr. 1709-11) So were tests attempting to associate any of these items with paint, samples taken from the shopping center. (Tr. 1741-43) Petitioner’s shoes could not have made the footprints found on the roof. (Tr. 1731-33) Soil found on petitioner’s shoes did not match any of the 17 soil samples taken along the escape route. (Tr. 1738-39) There were no hairs or anything else on the cap or the coat that could connect them to petitioner. (Tr. 1764) Neither the tar found on petitioner’s shoes nor the tar taken from the roof contained identifying impurities ; the expert witness declined to say they were identical, though he said they were similar: “Tar is tar.” (Tr. 1745-46) There were no fingerprints on the murder weapon. (Tr. 1727-28)
. Cf. Fed.R.Crim.P. 16(a)(1)(D), as amended (effective July 1, 1974) :
Reports of examinations and tests. — Upon request of a defendant the government shall permit the defendant to inspect and copy or photograph any results or reports ... of scientific tests or ex-I)eriments, made in connection with the particular case, or copies thereof, within the possession, custody or control of the government, the existence of which is known, or by the exercise of due diligence may become known, to the attorney for the government.
