Defendants were convicted of breaking and entering an unoccupied building, MCL 750.110; MSA 28.305. Marks was sentenced to a prison term of from five to ten years. Holmes was sentenced to a term of from thirty months to ten years. Both defendants appeal as of right.
On November 5, 1983, at approximately 5:53 a.m., an alarm came in from Jan’s Hair Fashions to the Silent Alarm Company. The Flint Police Department was immediately contacted and Officers Thomas Hilgendorf and Joel Florida were dispatched to Jan’s. As the officers pulled into Jan’s driveway, Hilgendorf saw two individuals standing four to six feet in front of the side door. The two ran in opposite directions upon sighting the police. Hilgendorf apprehended Holmes while Florida caught Marks. Florida observed perspiration on Marks’ face and neck, and wood chips and ceiling tile fragments on his hair, neck, and clothing. After apprehending the two suspects, the officers checked the building and saw scuff marks on the east rear wall.
Tauheed Mateen, an employee of Church’s Fried Chicken, located across the lot from Jan’s, was closing the restaurant at the time. Looking out of the restaurant’s window, he saw a tall, slim man with a long afro, dark pants and a jacket disappear behind Jan’s and later come out of Jan’s and walk around the building while carrying a bag. He next saw the police car arrive and observed the officers get out of the cruiser. However, he did not see a woman at the scene nor did he see the officers chase anyone. After the officers had placed Marks and Holmes in the police car, Mateen ap *206 proached the officers and told Officer Florida that he saw who broke into Jan’s. Florida asked if the person Mateen saw was the man in the cruiser (Marks) and Mateen responded affirmatively. On cross-examination at trial, Mateen admitted that he was unable to see the suspect’s face from the restaurant because he was too far away.
Rodney Simpson, the husband of the owner of Jan’s, arrived at the scene and unlocked a door. He entered the building with Officers .Florida and Hilgendorf, observed a number of wastepaper baskets filled with beauty equipment, and further noticed that a portable television set and radio were missing. At that time, Simpson also discovered a square hole in the bathroom ceiling, which was made of one-inch thick plywood. Later that day, Simpson found a claw hammer and a screwdriver. These tools did not belong to Simpson, his wife or any of the store’s employees.
Marks and Holmes were transported to the police station, where Officer Hilgendorf also observed wood chips in Marks’ clothing and a white powdery substance and pieces of white ceiling tile on his pants. The clothing was stored in an evidence locker, "bunched together.” As a result, when the clothing was produced at trial, it did not contain all the wood chips and other particles as they were observed at the crime scene. The police did not conduct a laboratory analysis to determine if the particles on the clothing matched the material from Jan’s bathroom ceiling.
Marks and Holmes were interviewed separately at the station. Sergeant Acy Butler testified that he interviewed Holmes from approximately 6:30 to 7:00 a.m. on November 5, 1983. After waiving her Miranda 1 rights, Holmes told Butler that, at the *207 time of her arrest, she was passing by Jan’s with Marks while on the way to the E-Z Stop party store to purchase diapers and milk for her baby and that she knew nothing about the break-in. Butler next interviewed Marks, who corroborated Holmes’ account. At trial, an employee of Jan’s testified that the E-Z Stop store is six blocks away from Jan’s and is closed from approximately 2:00 a.m. to 7:00 A.M.
Both defendants took the stand on their own behalves and insisted that they knew nothing about the burglary. Holmes testified that during the evening of November 4, 1983, she went to the home of Marks’ father because she needed money to purchase diapers and milk. During this time, her upstairs neighbor watched her children. Because Marks was not at his father’s home at the time she arrived, Holmes left a message and returned to her residence. Marks’ father corroborated this testimony and further stated that he refused to lend Holmes money because she was already in debt to him.
Meanwhile, Marks was at the Dirty Disco, an afterhours nightclub. Upon returning to his father’s home early in the morning of November 5, 1983, his father gave him Holmes’ message and lent him $10. Marks went to Holmes’ residence and the two went to the E-Z Stop store. On the way to the store, the two approached Jan’s. Holmes decided to take a shortcut across the lot behind Jan’s and agreed to meet Marks again in front of the Church’s restaurant. Both defendants testified that, while Holmes was behind Jan’s and Marks was in front of the building, the police officers arrived and immediately placed them under arrest. According to Marks, he and Holmes decided to go to the E-Z Stop store because they had seen a 24-hour sign in front of that store and *208 they knew that the other stores nearby would be closed. Marks also explained that his clothing contained wood chips at the time of his arrest because, the night before the arrest, he put plywood on a table top for Roger Brownlee. Marks stated that he wore his dirty work clothes to the Dirty Disco, he did not run away from Officer Florida, and, contrary to Florida’s testimony, he was not sweating or breathing heavily at the time of his arrest. Brownlee corroborated that Marks did indeed do carpentry work for him the day before, but this involved only the construction of steps for a trailer.
i
Defendant Marks argues that he should not have been subjected to the on-the-scene identification procedure without the presence of counsel. He asserts that the procedure as conducted violated his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. We disagree.
A
Actually, the Sixth Amendment does not apply to the "pre-indictment” identification in this case. The basis for defendant Marks’ assumption that it does is easily documented. In
People v Anderson,
(1) "intelligent” waiver of counsel by the accused, see e.g., People v Shipp,21 Mich App 415 [175 NW2d 529 ] (1970); (2) emergency situations requiring immediate identification, see e.g., People v Adams,19 Mich App 131 , 133 [172 NW2d 547 ] (1969); (3) prompt, "on-the-scene” corporeal identifications within minutes of the crime, see e.g., Russell v United States, 133 US App DC 77;408 F 2d 1280 (1969). [389 Mich 187 , n 23. Emphasis in original.]
Since
Anderson,
the question of on-the-scene identification has been raised in the context of the "constitutional right to counsel,” see e.g.,
People v Wilki,
While
Anderson
and the above cases from this Court at first glance appear to be Sixth Amendment cases, further inquiry reveals otherwise. In
People v Jackson,
In Kirby v Illinois,406 US 682 [92 S Ct 1877 ;32 L Ed 2d 411 ] (1972), the plurality opinion made clear that the right to counsel announced in Wade and Gilbert attaches only to corporeal identifications conducted "at or after the initiation of adversary judicial criminal proceedings — whether by way of formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information, or arraignment.”406 US, at 689 . This is so because the intiation of such proceedings "marks the commencement of the 'criminal prosecutions’ to which alone the explicit guarantees of the Sixth Amendment are applicable.” Id., at 690. Thus, in Kirby the plurality held that the prosecution’s evidence of a robbery victim’s one-on-one stationhouse identification of an uncounseled suspect shortly after the suspect’s arrest was admissible because adversary judicial criminal proceedings had not yet been initiated. In such cases, however, due process protects the accused against the introduction of evidence of, or tainted by, unreliable pretrial identifications obtained through unnecessarily suggestive procedures. Id., at 690-691; Neil v Biggers,409 US 188 [93 S Ct 375 ;34 L Ed 2d 401 ] (1972); Stovall v Denno,388 US 293 [87 S Ct 1967 ;18 L Ed 2d 1199 ] (1967); see generally Manson v Brathwaite,432 US 98 [97 S Ct 2243 ;53 L Ed 2d 140 ] (1977).
See also
Summitt v Bordenkircher,
608 F2d 247 (CA 6,1979), aff'd sub nom
Watkins v Sowders,
The question then is not whether defendant Marks was deprived of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel, but whether the right to counsel estab *211 lished by Anderson was violated. As noted earlier, Anderson recognized that the absence of counsel is justified where a prompt, on-the-scene corporeal identification is held. We turn our focus now to that justification.
B
As an example of the "on-the-scene” justification,
Anderson
cited
Russell v United States,
133 US App DC 77; 408 F2d 1280 (1969), cert den
At day-break on June 28, 1967, one George McCann investigated the sounds of a blaring radio and breaking glass at the Community Shoe Shine shop. The radio was sitting on the sidewalk outside the broken shop window. Stationing himself in a brightly-lighted gas station across the street, he saw a man emerge from the shop, look across at him, and proceed past him up the street. McCann went directly to a nearby police station and reported the incident three or four minutes after it occurred. The police broadcast a radio look-out, and officers in a responding squad car promptly encountered appellant in the vicinity. Since he matched the radioed description of the suspect and fled from the approaching police car, the officers pursued him to the porch of a house. There they discovered that he had a radio in one hand and a hatful of cigarettes and small change concealed under his coat. He also had a coat hanger and a screwdriver in his pocket, and on this particular summer night he was wearing gloves. They arrested him and drove him to the shoe shine shop where McCann identified him as the man he had seen coming out of the shop. [133 US App DC 78; 408 F2d 1281.]
Chief Judge Bazelon, writing for the majority, *212 wrestled with the implications of Wade (the Supreme Court had not yet decided Kirby or Moore). He recognized that the facts before him were quite different than those of Wade, stating,
The present case, however, involves an immediate on-the-scene confrontation 5 o’clock in the morning when there would necessarily be a long delay in summoning appellant’s counsel, or a substitute counsel, to observe a formal lineup. Such delay may not only cause the detention of an innocent suspect; it may also diminish the reliability of any identification obtained, thus defeating a principal purpose of the counsel requirement. [133 US Ap DC 80-81; 408 F2d 1283-1284.]
He then considered and balanced the suggestiveness of the identification procedure and the limitations of human perception and recognition and concluded;
[I]t appears that prompt confrontations in circumstances like those of this case will "if anything promote fairness, by assuring reliability . . . .” This probability, together with the desirability of expeditious release of innocent suspects, presents "substantial countervailing policy considerations” which we are reluctant to assume the Supreme Court would reject. We therefore conclude, with some hesitation, that Wade does not require exclusion of McCann’s identification.
This conclusion does not rest on a determination that McCann’s identification was in fact especially reliable. It rests instead on a general rule that it is not improper for the police immediately to return a freshly apprehended suspect to the scene of the crime for identification by one who has seen the culprit minutes before. [133 US App DC 81; 408 F2d 1284.]
Judge Danaher, concurring, noted that the thor *213 oughly experienced trial judge had characterized the circumstances as the strongest case of identification he had observed in sixteen years on the trial bench. 133 US App DC 83, n 3; 408 F2d 1286, n 3.
I find the
Russell
analysis and rule persuasive. However, the simplicity of the
Russell
rule has not been accepted by this Court. The case was cited along with several other cases in
People v Hutton,
I disagree with those cases which say that
People v Coward, supra,
adopted a blanket rule allowing the police to conduct prompt, on-the-scene identifications without counsel under any circumstances.
People v Fields,
I do not believe we need to go beyond Coward and its predecessors and utilize the "very strong evidence” rule of Turner, supra. Having said that, I hasten to point out that this case does not require a choice between Coward and Turner. For reasons I will state later, the police did not have very strong evidence against Marks and, therefore, the identification was proper under either case. Nevertheless, to stimulate further consideration by bench and bar of this conflict in the case law, I will address the problems I see with Turner and its successors.
c
Coward was criticized in Turner, supra, p 36, n 1, and Raybon, supra, p 307, for not adequately accounting for the inherent suggestiveness of the on-the-scene identification. In both Turner and Raybon, this Court then referred to Russell, pre *215 sumably as an example of proper consideration of the inherent suggestiveness in the identification procedure. However, note that Coward suggests pretty much the same general rule as Russell. The fact that Coward did not discuss suggestiveness does not mean it was not accounted for. In fact, suggestiveness is one of the underpinnings of the Russell rule. Russell created the rule, Coward simply followed it. That Coward string cited its precedent, rather than "recreate the wheel,” should not be construed as a failure to account for a necessary element expressed in that precedent.
Turner and the subsequent cases have accounted for suggestiveness twice over and reached, I believe, á wrong result. Suggestiveness was accounted for once in reaching the rule that defendant is entitled to counsel at a pretrial identification. That did not, however, prohibit a justification for the absence of counsel where the identification was prompt and on-the-scene. Anderson, supra. In Turner and its progeny, suggestiveness was then counted again to break down the "on-the-scene” rule further so that the justification for the absence of counsel exists only where there is less than "very strong evidence.” This analysis is not suggested by Anderson and runs counter to the result in Russell, where the Court upheld the identification under circumstances constituting the strongest case of identification observed by the trial judge in sixteen years.
Much of the motivation behind the
Turner
rule seems to be the Court’s effort to reconcile
People v Patskan,
Turner
also states that where the defendant is highly identifiable the exculpatory rationales for the police and the defendant are absent and counsel is that much more important.
Under Russell and Coward, if the identification is prompt and on the scene, suggestiveness is to be considered, not with respect to the right to coun *217 sel, but in terms of the reliability of the identification and whether the defendant has been denied due process of law. Consideration of reliability is proper regardless of what standards or rules are used to determine the right to counsel.
In light of the due process protection provided a defendant undergoing an uncounseled on-the-scene identification, I cannot find a compelling need for the Turner rule. Furthermore, I do not believe the police can practically make a decision whether they have "strong evidence” or "very strong evidence.” Sometimes it will be obvious, as where the defendant immediately confesses. However, standards such as "highly distinctive evidence of the crime” or "highly distinctive personal appearance,” Turner, supra, pp 36-37, are going to end up requiring such a subjective determination by the police when confronted with complicated fact situations that the police will know no more than to act in good faith. This good faith entered into the definition provided in Wilki, supra, p 144, where this Court said:
In view of the purposes for on-the-scene identifications, we interpret the term "very strong evidence” to mean evidence such that the police, acting in good faith, have no reasonable necessity for confirming that the suspect they have apprehended is in fact the perpetrator.
Unfortunately, I cannot understand what the rest of the Court’s definition has to do with the strength of the evidence. In terms of police necessity, in every instance where the police have probable cause to arrest, they have the right to take the defendant to the station house, book him and begin judicial proceedings. Furthermore, if they are not sure they have the right person, they can still continue their investigation without first rul *218 ing out that they have the wrong person. The release of the wrong person is more necessitous for that person than for the police, it would seem. The police are going to determine whether an on-the-scene identification is necessary, proper or reasonable based on the totality of the circumstances, and not simply the strength of the evidence. For example, Russell pointed out the potential difficulties in promptly obtaining counsel where a nighttime arrest has occurred.
D
As I stated earlier, the above discussion is intended to stimulate further thought on this subject but is not necessary for resolution of the instant case because, even under the Turner rule, the on-the-scene identification of Marks was proper. At the time of Marks’ arrest, the evidence against him was that he was seen standing close to an establishment within minutes after a silent alarm had been triggered, he ran when the police approached, and he had wood chips and white particles on his clothing. That Marks was present at the scene is difficult to explain away, but his later explanation that he was going to a party store with a "24 hour” sign out front is not inherently incredible. His flight is certainly some evidence of a guilty conscience, but, as far as the police were concerned, he could have felt guilty about something else. That Marks had wood chips and particles on his clothing is not of great value because it does not appear that the police knew how Jan’s had been entered until later, when the owner’s husband let them in and they found the hole in the ceiling. Accordingly, the evidence does not qualify as "very strong evidence” and the on-the-scene identification is not rendered unjustifiable.
*219 Marks does not argue that the identification procedure was so suggestive as to render the on-the-scene identification unreliable. Because we find that identification proper, we need not reach the question of whether there was an independent basis for Mateen’s in-court identification of Marks.
ii
Marks also argues that he was denied a fair trial by the people’s failure to adequately preserve and test the wood chips and white particles found on his clothing. Defendant did not request that the evidence be preserved or tested. Because we do not find any intentional misconduct or suppression or bad faith on the part of the police or the prosecutor, defendant’s argument is without merit.
People v Jeffrey Johnson,
m
Defendant Holmes first argues that the evidence against her was insufficient and that the court erred in denying her motion for a directed verdict. In reviewing this claim, we must view the evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution and determine whether a rational trier of fact could have found that the essential elements of the crime were proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
People v Hampton,
iv
We lastly address Holmes’ arguments that the court abused its discretion at sentencing. We find no basis for reversal.
Holmes first asserts that the court considered her failure to admit guilt, contrary to the clear rule stated in
People v Randle,
Holmes next contends that the court erred in departing from the sentencing guidelines’ recommended minimum range for reasons that were already factored into the guidelines’ scoring system. This Court has consistently rejected this argument. See e.g.,
People v Richard Johnson,
Holmes lastly urges that, pursuant to
People v Coles,
Judges Mackenzie and Tahvonen concur in the results only as to Part i and concur fully with Parts n, ni, and iv. As to the propriety of the on-the-scene identification procedure challenged by defendant Marks, they would apply the rule of
People v Turner,
Affirmed.
Notes
Miranda v Arizona,
Marks recognizes that
People v Dixon,
