An Alabama jury convicted Melvin McGuff of murder and the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction.
McGuff
v.
State,
Ala.Crim.App.1972,
On Sunday afternoon, April 27, 1969, Thomas Lee Berry was walking along a rural Alabama road with Junior Hollings-worth and Rovena Hollingsworth. A car approached from the opposite direction, passed the three walkers, and stopped at the side of the road. Five men, including Thomas Berry’s brother, were in the car. Immediately behind the first car came a dark blue Ford. The man in the right front of the Ford yelled an obscenity at the walkers as the Ford slowed to walking speed. Thomas Berry walked over to the Ford and was shot at close range with a pistol. The Ford was then driven away.
Early Monday morning, April 28, the police arrested McGuff, placed him in an automobile, and drove him from place to place to have various witnesses identify him. At times the assistant district attorney held conversations out of McGuff’s presence with persons who then came and viewed the suspect in the rear seat of the car. Upon arrival at the station house later that day, McGuff was placed by himself in a cell. The next day McGuff was viewed in his cell by a number of persons for the sole purpose of making identification. These confrontations occurred several weeks before either the indictment of McGuff or his bail bond hearing.
The Showup Confrontations
The Supreme Court established the due process standard against which police identification procedures are to be measured in
Stovall v. Denno,
1967,
We conclude in the present case that although the showup procedures were unnecessary and suggestive, the exceeding reliability of the identification outweighs the corrupting effect of the suggestive procedures. We cannot, however, overemphasize our dislike for such unnecessary and repetitive police conduct. Only the great reliability of these identifications saves the procedures utilized from constitutional infirmity.
The factors considered in evaluating the likelihood of misidentification include the opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the time of the crime, the witness’ degree of attention, the accuracy of the witness’ prior description of the criminal, the level of certainty demonstrated by the witness at the confrontation, and the length of time between the crime and the confrontation.
Manson v. Brathwaite,
Right To Counsel
The Sixth Amendment right to counsel “attaches only at or after the time that adversary judicial proceedings have been initiated.”
Kirby v. Illinois,
1972,
Other issues, such as the state’s failure to advise McGuff of his right to counsel at the time of arrest and the police’s holding of McGuff incommunicado for a period of time after the arrest, are not seriously pressed on appeal. The District Court’s order adequately discussed and disposed of these and other issues. Having considered McGuff’s primary contentions on appeal, we find that the District Court was justified in denying habeas relief.
AFFIRMED.
