OPINION
Larry David Holdren appeals the district court’s denial of his habeas petition. We address his claims in turn, and we affirm.
On December 28, 1982, Mrs. Cheryl Martin-Sehroeder was jogging after work along the Kanawha riverfront in Charleston, West Virginia. Shortly after Mrs. Martin-Schroeder began jogging, Holdren approached her and pushed her down a Mil towards the river. A struggle ensued as Holdren dragged Mrs. Martin-Schroeder dоwn the hill and towards a concrete tunnel facing the river, all the while threatening to kill her. Once in the tunnel Holdren had Mrs. Martin-Schroeder sit down, and he removed her clotMng. Hol-dren then removed Ms clothing, except for his shirt, and proceeded to perform several sexual acts with her. After the ordeal, Hol-dren put on Ms clothes, combed Ms hair, and left.
Holdren was charged under а single indictment with six counts of first degree sexual assault and convicted on July 31, 1984. Following exhaustion of state remedies, the present petition was filed February 25, 1991, in the Umted States District Court for the Southern District of West Virgmia. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B), the district court referred the petition to a Umted States Magistrate Judge with directions to submit proposed findings of fact and to recommend an appropriаte disposition of the petition. The Magistrate Judge recommended that the writ be denied and that the action be dismissed and stricken from the docket. In a judgment order issued February 24, 1992, the district court adopted in full the recommendations of the Magistrate Judge. TMs appeal followed.
Destruction of Evidence
Holdren claims that three separate instances of destruction of evidence violated his due process rights. The first is the discarding or rmnation of collected semen samples by agents employed by the prosecution. The second and third involve the failure of the police to preserve physical evidence by measuring and making plaster casts of footprints and by fingerprinting a beer bottle and comb.
After the assault, Mrs. Martin-Schroeder was taken to thе Charleston Area Medical Center by a detective of the Police Department of the City of Charleston. While at the Medical Center a physician examined her and collected body substances for both medical and forensic evaluation. After preparing slides from the collected substances and viewing them for the presence of spermato *60 zoa, the physician sent the slides to the Medical Center and discarded the unused fluids.
Holdren was notified of the existence of the laboratory slides in March 1984. Both prior to trial and during a pending habeas petition in 1990, Holdren was allowed to have the semen specimens scientifically tested to determine if he could be excluded as the possible defendant. In both instances, the tеsts revealed nothing because the staining process used by the original examining physicians had rendered the specimens unsuitable for testing. Holdren claims that because the examining physicians were agents of the prosecuting attorney and because their actions rendered the semen samples untestable for blood typing and DNA analysis, the physicians deliberately destroyed evidence in violation of his due process rights.
Under
Brady v. Maryland,
Without deciding whether the physicians were agents of the prosecution, we are of opinion that even if they were agents, they did not act in bad faith by failing to preserve the semen samples in such a state that they later could be subjected to further scientific analysis. First, the рhysicians followed standard procedures in collecting, analyzing, and disposing of the semen. Second, at the time that the physicians disposed of the remaining semen, they did not know of any exculpatory value of the semen because the semen had not been tested for a blood grouping analysis. That test, indeed, was not one performed at the Medical Center. 1
Hоldren also claims that the failure of the police to measure or preserve the footprints at the scene or to fingerprint the comb and beer bottle found at the scene violated his due process rights. This claim, however, asserts nothing more than negligence on the part of the police investigators and does not indicate any bad faith on their part in failing to preserve the evidence. Furthermore, Hol-dren did not request an instruction regarding destruction of the evidence and has presented no authority requiring the district court to give such an instruction.
Results of DNA Testing
Pursuant to a state habeas court order filed April 17,1990, Holdren was allowed to have DNA testing performed on two un *61 identified pubic hairs removed from Mrs. Martin-Sehroeder during her original examination. These two hairs, Hair A and Hair B, were tested by a forensic lab and the results were as follows: “[Hair A] is most consistent with the victim but is also consistent with the defendant. [Hair B] is very similar to the victim and could be hers.” The lab then ran a more extensive DNA test on Hair B because it, unlike Hair A, had a portion of the hair root remaining. From this test the lab listed Mrs. Martin-Sehroeder as a potential source of the hair and eliminated Holdren as a source of the hair. At trial, however, a forensic biologist, based on a visual analysis of the hairs, had excluded Holdren as the source of Hair A but not as the source of Hair B. Because the DNA testing revealed that Holdren was not the source of Hair B and the forensic biologist testified at trial that Holdren could have been the source of Hair B, Holdren claims that the testimony at trial was prejudicial. 2
Although the DNA testing produced results that were opposite to the trial testimony regarding the hairs, we are of opinion that the discrepancy was not prejudicial and was at most harmless error. Without making specific reference to the labeling of each hair, the net effect of the trial testimony and the DNA testing was to exclude Holdren as the source of one hair,' include him as the possible source of the other hair, and include Mrs. Martin-Sehroeder as the possible source of both hairs. Viewing the impact of the tests together, the trial testimony was neither more inculpatory nor less exculpatory than the DNA testing, and thus the trial testimony in no way prejudiced Holdren. Rather than consider the net effect of the tests, Holdren instead urges us to exclude Holdren as the source of both hairs, which none of the evidence did. Even if we were to adopt such an approach, however, the result still does not exculpate Holdren because both of the hairs could have been Mrs. Martin-Schroeder’s. Only if both Holdren and Mrs. Martin-Schroeder were exсluded as the source of both hairs would this evidence be necessarily exculpatory.
Suggestive Photo Array of Defendant
Holdren next asserts that his conviction should be overturned because the trial court failed to sanitize to his satisfaction the five photographs used in his out-of-court identification.
3
Relying on our decision in
United States v. Harman,
Suggestive and Unreliable PreTrial Identification
In challenging an identification procedure, Holdren must prove that the identification procedure was impermissibly suggestive. See
Manson v. Brathwaite,
Presentation of Irrelevant and Emotionally Inflammatory Testimony by Prosecuting Attorney
Holdren asserts that the prosecution committed misconduct by eliciting irrelevant and inflammatory testimony, with respect to the requirements оf her job, from Mrs. Martin-Sehroeder, and by making certain statements with respect to Mrs. Martin-Schroeder’s credibility during closing argument. Under our test as set out in
United States v. Brockington,
Constitutionality of Six Count Indictment
Holdren next challenges his indictment and the trial court’s refusal to dismiss at least three of the six counts. Holdren asserts that the six count indiсtment put him in jeopardy more than once for the same offense, failed to state each alleged offense with sufficient particularity, and violated his right to a trial by jury free from prejudice. We find no merit to these arguments.
The indictment charged Holdren with three counts of contact of the male sex organ with the mouth, two counts of contact of the male sex orgаn with the female sex organ and one count of contact of the male sex organ with the anus, all in violation of W.Va.Code § 61-8B-3 as amended. The indictment tracks the statutory language verbatim, and under our holding in
United States v. American Waste Fibers Co.,
Sufficiency of the Evidence
In
Sneed v. Smith,
Constitutionality of the Alibi Instruction
In
Frye v. Procunier,
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Throughout his petition, Holdren raises several ineffective assistance of counsel сlaims. Specifically, Holdren claims that the following constitute ineffective assistance of counsel: 1) failure to request a Young-blood curative instruction regarding destruction of evidence, 2) failure to have an independent qualified expert perform a comparative hair analysis on the two pubic hairs, 3) defense counsel’s proposal of the alibi instruction that thе trial court subsequently gave to the jury.
Under the ineffective assistance of counsel standard established in
Strickland v. Washington,
After reviewing the trial record closely, we are of opinion that Holdren received effective assistance of counsel. Although Holdren’s counsel did not request a destruction of the evidеnce instruction, we cannot say, based on the overall record, that a destruction of the evidence instruction would have produced a different outcome nor can we say that counsel’s failure to request one constituted deficient representation or prejudiced Holdren in any way. Similarly, defense counsel’s failure to have an independent qualifiеd expert perform a comparative hair analysis on the two pubic hairs did not constitute deficient representation or deprive Holdren of a fair trial. An expert in the field of forensic biology performed the tests on the two hairs, and the results did not prejudice Holdren because he was excluded as the source of one hair and Mrs. Martm-Schroe- *64 der was dеtermined as a possible source for the other hair. Furthermore, the independent DNA tests performed later did not produce results that were in any way more beneficial to Holdren’s position. Finally, defense counsel’s proffering of the alibi instruction was not improper because, as we have noted above, the instruction was adequate.
We have considered any other assignments of error which may appear in Holdren’s brief and are of opinion they are without merit.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Holdren’s status as a non-secretor was brought out at trial, and his expert witnesses testified that blood typing cannot be performed on the body fluids of a non-secretor. While this might be said to be evidence against Holdren in that an analysis of his semen would produce no blоod typing, the argument goes that if the seminal fluid was tested and did reveal a blood type, this necessarily would exclude a non-secretor as a source of the sperm. Just such a situation as contemplated by this argument, however, was discussed in
Youngblood,
where the court stated, "If the [Arizona] court meant by this statement that the due process clause is violated when the police fаil to use a particular investigatory tool, we strongly disagree. The situation here is no different than a prosecution for drunken driving that rests on police observation alone; the defendant is free to argue to the finder of fact that a breathalyzer test might be exculpatory but the police do not have a Constitutional duty to perform any particular test.”
All of the facts concerning the tests made at the Medical Center, as well as the comments of Holdren's expert witnesses, were before the jury. While any deficiency in performance on the part of the doctors at the Medical Center undoubtedly went to the weight of the evidence, nothing in the record indicates a constitutional deficiency.
. The fact that the evidenсe of the forensic biologist was introduced by Holdren as his witness does not add to the weight of his argument.
. The police identification was removed from the photos. The profile and full face views were not cut apart.
. The alibi instruction states in full:
The defendant, Larry Holdren, has offered evidence for the purpose of showing that he was not present at the place where, and at the time when, the offense charged in the indictment was committed. Such defense is in law called an alibi. If after impartially considering, weighing and comparing all of the evidence, the jury or any member of the jury has a reasonable doubt of the presence of the defendant, Larry Holdren, at the place where and at the time when, the alleged offense was committed, you can not find the defendant, Larry Holdren, guilty.
