On January 19, 1966, the proprietor of a jewelry store, Ralph Wilcox, was robbed. After a jury trial in July 1967, appellant was convicted of the robbery (22 D.C.Code § 2901 (1967)) and sentenced to from three to nine years imprisonment. At trial the only evidence against appellant was his identification by Wilcox as the man who robbed him. On appeal he raises three issues: (1) that the delay by the police of seven months between the time Wilcox tentatively identified him from some photographs and the time of his arrest was prejudicial under Ross v. United States,
We hold that the admission of appellant’s prior conviction was prejudicial error under Luck and accordingly remand for a new trial. Further, a strong showing has been made of a possible violation of Ross and therefore a full pretrial hearing should be held on that point before a new trial is had. In addition, a hearing should also be held regarding the identification of appellant by Wilcox to determine whether that identification *641 accorded with the requirements of Stovall.
I
A defendant’s rights under Ross are violated when there is an unreasonable lack of diligence on the part of the police in making an arrest which renders the defendant unable to remember and account for his whereabouts at the time of the crime. Where the delay is for a valid purpose, such as protecting the identity of an informer, that factor can be weighed against the prejudice to the defendant. Here, however, the record fails to show any such purpose. 3
Briefly, there was testimony to the effect that in February 1966, one month after the crime, the complaining witness tentatively identified the appellant from some photographs. Thereupon the police and the FBI (called in because of possible interstate aspects of the robbery) both attempted to locate appellant. However, possibly through lack of communication (each believing the other was acting), their total effort over a seven-month period apparently amounted to no more than a few checks at his residence and at former places of employment, plus leaving a message with his mother that the police were looking for him and leaving a telephone number for him to contact the police which, according to his testimony, he attempted to do. During this seven-month period appellant lived at his mother’s apartment in the District of Columbia and, as the police were aware, for most of the period worked as a licensed barber in a shop a few blocks from his home. Appellant eventually came into custody in September 1966, not on the instant charge, but through an arrest on another charge for which he was subsequently tried and acquitted. Appellant testified that, apparently because of the delay in learning of the charge against him, he was unable to reconstruct his activities on the day of the robbery.
On remand, in order that the principles announced in
Ross
may be applied by the District Court, there should be a full pre-trial hearing in which the Government is given an opportunity to justify the seven-month delay in appellant’s arrest and in which appellant is given the opportunity to show the extent to which the delay prejudiced him.
Compare
United States v. Godfrey, D.D.C.,
*642 II
The record in this case is not adequate to decide appellant’s claim under Stovall v. Denno. That case held that a pre-trial identification used at trial violates due process when, considered in the “totality of the circumstances surrounding it,” it is “unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification.”
“ * * * Even if the police subsequently follow the most correct photographic identification procedures and show him the pictures of a number of individuals without indicating whom they suspect, there is some danger that the witness may make an incorrect identification. This danger will be increased if the police display to the witness only the picture of a single individual who generally resembles the person he saw, or if they show him the pictures of several persons among which the photograph of a single such individual recurs or is in some way emphasized. * * * Regardless of how the initial misidentification comes about, the witness thereafter is apt to retain in his memory the image of the photograph rather than of the person actually seen, reducing the trustworthiness of subsequent lineup or courtroom identification.” (Footnotes omitted.)
Ill
The
Luck
doctrine gives a trial judge, under 14 D.C.Code § 305 (1967), discretion to rule, before a defendant takes the stand, whether his prior convictions can be introduced to impeach his credibility. The twin concerns behind the doctrine are that the cause of truth may be “helped more by letting the jury hear the defendant’s story than by the defendant's foregoing that opportunity because of the fear of prejudice founded upon a prior conviction,” and that the “prejudicial effect of impeachment [may] far outweigh the probative relevance of the prior conviction to the issue of credibility.”
Appellant’s trial counsel made three attempts to raise the Luck issue. At a bench conference at the start of trial and again during the Government’s case counsel raised the issue, pointing out that his trial strategy depended upon the judge’s ruling. The judge stated in both instances that the point was premature. At the end of the Government’s ease the defense again re-urged the issue, informing the court of the nature of appellant’s prior conviction. 6 The court, without questioning the defense as to the nature of appellant’s proposed testimony, ruled that the prior conviction of assault was admissible. The Government contends that these defense efforts were insufficient to raise Luck. We disagree. The defense made it clear that it wanted the judge to consider the Luck issue; once the defense has brought the issue before the judge, even though the burden of persuasion remains on the defendant, there is a duty upon the judge to make sufficient inquiry to inform himself on the relevant considerations :
“The burden of persuasion in this regard is on the accused; and, once the issue is raised, the District Court should make an inquiry, allowing the accused an opportunity to show why judicial discretion should be exercised in favor of exclusion of the criminal record. This, admittedly, places a very difficult burden on trial judges * * *."
Gordon v. United States,
Perhaps the court here did not make the “on-the-record inquiry” contemplated by
Luck (Gordon, supra,
Appellant, having taken the stand in response to the obvious need, was confronted with his prior record consisting of an assaultive crime. This is indeed “a classic illustration of a case in which ‘the prejudicial effect of impeachment far outweighs the probative relevance of the prior conviction to the issue of credibility.’ ”
Brown, supra,
“ * * * Acts of violence * * * which may result from a short temper, a combative nature, extreme provoca *644 tion, or other causes, generally have little or no direct bearing on honesty and veracity. * * * ”
Reversed for a new trial and for pretrial proceedings.
Notes
.
See, e. g.,
Woody v. United States,
. Appellant also raises a claim of prejudice in that the trial judge’s charge summarized only the prosecution’s evidence. In view of our disposition, we need not reach this point.
But see
Wabisky v. D.C. Transit System,
“ * * * In a simple criminal case, there is little excuse for the trial court’s exercising its common law right to comment on the testimony of witnesses. The jury is in as good a position as the judge, not only to remember their testimony, but to appraise it. So, when a trial judge undertakes the risk of trenching on the function of the jury, he must do so with the certain knowledge that his actions will be subjected to strict scrutiny. * * * ”
. Though the extent of the delay is not the determining factor, a seven-month period is well within the scope of the
Ross
cases.
E. g.,
Ross v. United States,
. In
Godfrey
an undercover narcotics agent filed a complaint two months after the alleged crime and then terminated his assignment; the police then looked for the defendant at his home, failed to find him there, advised federal and local authorities that he was wanted, and surveyed areas where he was likely to be found. The police failed to find him even though he was present within the District, residing in his mother’s home, and was working “many of his evenings” at a nearby carry-out shop. He was apprehended two months later while travelling in New Jersey by New Jersey police. The District Court found that the reason the police could not find Godfrey was “not clearly ascertainable,” and that the delay was “neither purposeful nor deliberate.”
. The fact that the defendant takes the stand does not, of course, preclude his raising the
Luck
point on appeal.
See
Barber v. United States,
. The Government in its brief cites Hood v. United States,
. Among the inadequacies in the Government’s case were the facts that none of the stolen jewelry was ever found, that none of the two or more alleged accomplices was ever found, that the only fingerprints found were not appellant’s, and that the gun appellant allegedly used was never discovered. AVhen to this is added the fact that AVilcox’s identification of Jones from the photographs was only tentative and his in-person identification came eight months after the robbery, the weakness of the Government’s case is apparent.
