Appellants were each found guilty of two counts of armed robbery (D.C.Code 1973, §§ 22-2901, -3202), and one count of carrying a pistol without a license (D.C.Code 1973, § 22-3204). Appellant Singletary argues on appeal (1) that the pretrial showup and in-court identifications of appellants were impermissibly suggestive and should have been suppressed, and (2) that his motion for judgment of acquittal should have been granted because the evidence did not permit a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Appellant Hardy raises different issues, contending (1) that the trial court erred when it refused to allow appellant to waive his right to be present during a hearing on a motion to suppress identification testimony, and (2) that it was prejudicial error for the trial court to deny appellant his right to recross-examine a complaining witness as to allegedly new and crucial matters which were brought out for the first time during redirect examination.
These convictions resulted from the robbery of two individuals, Moses Walker and Burnis Lee, in the early evening of March 20, 1975, in front of a liquor store on the corner of First and Q Streets, N.W., in Washington, D.C. Mr. Lee had gone into the store to buy beer. As Mr. Walker waited outside in his car, he was approached by a man in red pants who held a gun which was partially concealed in a plastic bag. The man pointed the gun at Walker and said: “Pops, this is a stick-up.” A second man, who was taller than the first and who was dressed in dark clothes, went around the front of Walker’s ear, got into the passenger side, and began to go through Walker’s pockets and the interior of the car.
At about this time, Mr. Lee emerged from the store. The man in red pants then approached him, with the gun covered with the plastic bag. The taller robber got out of Walker’s car and went through Lee’s pockets, netting a total of about $5.60 from the two men. According to the testimony of Mr. Walker, the taller man addressed his pаrtner as “Maurice” three times during the crime. Both Lee and Walker testified that the area was well lit, and that they got a good look at the faces of the men.
As the assailants fled, Walker got out of his car and followed the two men, who disappeared into an alley. Walker then flagged down a police cruiser and reported the robbery. He pointed in the direction of Bates Street, toward which the men had gone, and gave the two policemen a brief description, including the fact that the assailants were two black males and that one had on red pants. As the police cruiser pulled away, Wаlker yelled at the officers that the man in red pants had a gun. 1
The policemen proceeded in the direction indicated by Mr. Walker. As they turned into Bates Street, they saw two men who were heading east, in the same direction as Walker had told them the assailants had gone. According to police testimony, not more than three minutes had elapsed since the robbery had been reported, and these were the only persons on the block. When the two men realized a car was approaching, they crossed the street and doubled back toward the police car. As they did so, they passed behind a parked Cadillac, during which time the officers could not see their hands. One of the suspects was wearing red pants. The policemen ordered the men to stop in front of 72 Bates Street. They were frisked, but no weapon or money was recovered. They were then placed in *1068 the rear of the police cruiser and returned to the scene of the robbery, which was only about a block away.
One of the officers told Mr. Walker, “[W]e got two guys in the car similar to the ones you told us about.” Walker then positively identified them as the robbers. When he did this, the man in dark clothes said: “I think you got your people mixed. . You bettеr take a good look at us.” Walker replied; “I taken a good look at you while you was robbing me, a very good look at you.” Mr. Lee, who had not seen Walker make his identification, also positively identified the suspects.
Following the identifications, Walker asked the officers whether they had recovered the weapon. When they responded that they had not, he told them that the gun was in a plastic bag. The police then backtracked the escape route and found a gun in a plastic bag near the left rear wheel of the Cadillac which was parked in front of 72 Bates Street, about ten feet from where the suspects had been stopped.
I
Appellant Singletary contends on appeal that the pretrial showup identifications of him and subsequent in-court identifications made by the complaining witnesses were impermissibly suggestive
2
and were also fruits of an illegal arrest. Although a degree of suggestibility is inevitable in the context of every pretrial confrontation between a witness and a suspect,
United States v. Wade,
When the instant case is evaluated in light of these principles, it is clear that there were no special elements of unfairness in the showup identifications of the appellants. Both complaining witnesses testified that the area of the offense was well lit and that they got a good look at the faces of the men. Appellants matched the description given by Mr. Walker and were apprehended within a few moments of the crime only a short distance from the place where it had occurred. When they were brought back to the complainants, one of the officers told Mr. Walker, “[W]e got two guys in the car similar to the ones you told us about.” While these comments could have been phrased more neutrally, we do not find that they rendered the showup so suggestive as to give rise to a substantial likelihood of misidentification, where the victims had ample оpportunity to observe the defendants during the crime and the showup followed the assault by only a few
*1069
minutes.
See Washington v. United States,
D.C.App.,
Appellant Singletary further argues that his identification was the result of illegal police conduct and was thus the fruit of an illegal arrest. In this case appellants were stopped within three minutes of the time the crime was reported, approximately a block from the scene of the incident. They were walking in the direction in which the robbers reportedly had fled and were the only persons on the street. Moreover, appellants were wearing clothes which precisely fit the description given by complainant Walker, including appellant Hardy’s distinctive red pants, and their conduct upon seeing the police car in crossing the street and reversing the direction in which they were walking could under the circumstances have been considered suspicious. Thus, the trial court correctly held that the police had probable cause to detain the suspects in order to return them to the scene of the crime.
See Randall v. United States,
D.C.App.,
II
Appellant Hardy’s first contention on appeal is that the trial court erred when it *1070 refused to allow him to waive his right to be present during the testimony of the complainant, Moses Walker, at a hearing before trial on the motion to suppress identification testimony.
At the motions hearing, Mr. Lee was the first witness. Before even being asked to do so by the prosecutor, he pointed to appellant Hardy as the man who had approached him with a gun. He also spontaneously identified appellant Singletary as the second assailant. He further testified that he recognized the men without difficulty by their faces and clothes, and that there was “[n]o doubt in my mind that they are the ones.”
At the conclusion of Mr. Lee’s testimony, counsel for appellant Hardy moved on behalf of her client to waive his presence during the testimony of the second complaining witness, Moses Walker. Counsel explained that appellant wished to avoid another confrontation during which the witnesses would have “a greater oppоrtunity to familiarize themselves with the two defendants,” which might enable the witnesses to make an inaccurately persuasive in-court identification before a jury. The motion was denied in the following colloquy:
THE COURT: One of the purposes of this hearing is to see whether an identification [can be made]. You know when you file a frivolous motion, on its face it would appear to be a frivolous motion so far, that is one of the hazards of it. I’ve never permitted it yet. I know of no authority that requires a judge to play cat and mouse with a witness. Okay, bring in the next witness.
COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT HARDY: May I have a ruling on my request, Your Honor?
THE COURT: It is denied. If you have any authority that says I’m оbligated to do it, if you can cite any case—
COUNSEL: Not at this time, Your Hon- or.
THE COURT: Well then, you should have had some authority.
Subsequently, Moses Walker was called as a witness. He testified that he had no difficulty at all in recognizing the suspects at the scene of the incident, and he identified them in the courtroom.
Appellant asserts that he has a right to waive his presence at a hearing on a motion to suppress identification testimony in order to avoid a further unnecessarily suggestive confrontation, and that the court’s ruling denying his request was prejudicial error which requires reversal of his conviction. It is well settled that a criminal defendant has a constitutional right to be
present
at critical stages of his рrosecution, under the confrontation clause of the Sixth Amendment and the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment, whenever the presence of the defendant “bears, or may fairly be assumed to bear, a relation, reasonably substantial to his opportunity to defend.”
Snyder v. Massachusetts,
Neither the Constitution nor Rule 43 can be interpreted to require a *1071 defendant’s presence at a pretrial suppression hearing. The Supreme Court early emphasized
the distinction everywhere drawn between proceedings at the trial and those before and after. Many motions before trial are heard in the defendant’s absence, and many motions after trial. . [Snyder v. Massachusetts, supra at 107,54 S.Ct. at 333 ],
Thus, it has been held that a defendant’s presence is not required by the confrontation clause of the Sixth Amendment in” order to aid counsel in cross-examination in proceedings which do not involve questions of guilt or innocence.
United States v.
Makris,
Furthermore, it is clear that a рerson may make an intelligent waiver of a constitutionally protected right.
See, e. g., Johnson v. Zerbst,
The procedures in a hearing on a motion to suppress identification testimony are designed to permit the trial court, outside the presence of the jury, to determine whether a pretrial identification by an eyewitness was violative of due process or right to counsel and, if such a violation is found, to decide whether an in-court identification would still be admissible because it has an independent source.
Clemons v. United States, supra
We note that the rules against trials in absentia were designed to protect the rights of the defendant, not the government.
United States v. Lockwood, supra
at 1115. Here, appellant believed that his presence would be more a detriment than a benefit. Because the Supreme Court has explicitly rejected the notion that a defendant must attend a proceeding “when presence would be useless, or the benefit but a shadow,”
Snyder
v.
Massachusetts, supra
*1072
On the facts of the present case, however, even though the trial judge was incorrect in refusing to permit the defendant to absent himself from the proceedings, reversal is not in order. Such an error does not rеquire reversal if the record affirmatively shows that the confrontation did not result in “any reasonable possibility of prejudice” to the defendant’s substantial rights.
Walker v. United States,
*1073 hi
Appellant Hardy’s second contention is that the trial court committed prejudicial error in denying him his right to recross-examine Moses Walker as to issues which allegedly were explored for the first time during redirect examination. He argues that these new matters were crucial because each of them bore directly on the reliability and credibility of Walker’s identification of appellant.
It is not disputed that the opportunity to cross-examine a witness is a fundamental right, which is guaranteed to an accused in a criminal trial through the confrontation clause of the Sixth Amendment.
Pointer
v.
Texas,
There is, moreover, generally no constitutional right to recross-examine a witness, since the scope of the redirect examination is limited to matters which were first raised on cross-examination, to which the opposing party is merely responding on redirect.
United States v. Morris,
Thus, the issue here becomes a factual one: were matters raised for the first time during the government’s redirect examination of Mr. Walker? Although appellant challenges three areas of questioning, we conclude after a review of the record that no material new matters were introduced during redirect examination.
The first allegedly new matter which was objected to by appellant relates to the length of time during which Walker was able to observe the man who robbed him. On redirect examination the following exchange occurred:
Q. How long would you say you looked at the face of the man who was outside the window with the gun?
A. Between eight and ten minutes, I guess.
Appellant argues that the exact time-frame of the incident was a crucial new matter, since particular figures had not been mentioned previously by Walker, and the specific length of time a witness has to observe *1074 an assailant is of critical significance in the jury’s assessment of the reliability of identification testimony. Cases cited by appellant 8 do not, however, establish the specific length of time which the witness had to view the criminal as a talisman; instead, they focus on several factors which may help the jury to evaluate a witness’ opportunity to observe. The critical issue is not how long the eyewitness watched the criminal, but rather how well he was able to observe the other person, in the totality of the circumstances. United States v. Wade, supra; Simmons v. United States, supra; Clemons v. United States, supra.
In the context of this case, even though the precise length of the encounter had not previously been set out for the jury, this quantitative factor added virtually nothing to the record. Mr. Walker had already established in both direct and cross-examination that he had had a good opportunity to observe the men during the robbery. He had testified that during the event appellant Hardy had been standing only about three feet from him, in a well lit area, and that he had been able to see the man’s face. Further, Mr. Walker had continued to watch both robbers during the assault on Mr. Lee. From this description of thе events it was clear that the encounter had lasted for a substantial period of time, and that Walker had taken more than a mere fleeting glimpse of his assailants. Moreover, Walker had told the jury that when he identified the men in the back seat of the police car at the scene of the incident, the man in dark clothes (appellant Singletary) had warned him that he had “better take good look at us,” to which Walker responded “I taken a good look at you while you was robbing me, a very good look at you.” Walker had also positively identified for the jury the gun and the clothing which appellants had been wеaring, and he had stated that “[t]here is no doubt in my mind” that appellants were the men who had robbed him. 9 On this record, the precise duration of the incident was, at most, cumulative evidence. Because the testimony, therefore, was not a new matter, and furthermore was not prejudicial to the defense, it was within the trial court’s dis *1075 cretion to deny recross-examination on this issue.
Appellant Hardy argues that a second matter which was raised for the first time on the prosecutor’s redirect-examination involved whether Walker had seen appellant before or at any time other than during the robbery and subsequent on-the-scene identification. His objection pertains tо the following exchange.
Q. Have you ever seen [appellant] since [the night of the robbery]?
A. No.
Q. Not at all?
A. Not at all.
* * * * * *
Q. Had you ever seen either of these gentlemen before that day?
A. No.
Q. Had you ever seen either of the gentlemen that robbed you before that? A. No, I don’t think I had.
Q. Other than during the robbery, had you ever seen either of the gentlemen that the police brought back a few moments later?
A. A few minutes later?
Q. Yes, sir.
A. I’m not sure. Seems like I seen them at First and Q. I’m not for sure.
Appellant Hardy suggests that the somewhat ambiguous and possibly inconsistent nature of this testimony makes it an appropriate subject for recross-examination, since a witness’ testimony concerning his ability to recognize an assailant from observations either before or after the offense is a circumstance which could corroborate or negate the trustworthiness of the identification. Cases cited by appellant do not, however, establish the proposition that cross-examination is always required on the issue of whether a witness may have seen an assailant on a prior or subsequent occasion. 10 Moreover, in the total context of Walker’s testimony, his uncertainty as to whether he had ever before seen the men whom the police brought back other than at the robbery wоuld tend to undercut rather than to strengthen the trustworthiness of his identification. Accordingly, appellant’s lack of opportunity for recross-examination on this testimony under the circumstances was not prejudicial and the trial court’s ruling was not an abuse of discretion which would justify reversal.
The final allegedly new matter to which appellant Hardy objects relates to the fact that for the first time on redirect Mr. Walker stated that he was making his in-court identification by face. 11 In making his in-court identification on direct examination, Mr. Walker had described the defendants according to the roles they had played and the clоthing they had been wearing at the time of the robbery. He had no trouble distinguishing between the two men, and he testified on both direct and cross-examination that he had taken a good look at the faces of both men during the incident. During cross-examination, in *1076 deed, he had gone further and testified that the man in dark clothing (appellant Single-tary) was missing two or three front teeth and that the man in red pants (appellant Hardy) did not have a beard at the time of the robbery. Against this background, Mr. Walker’s testimony that he was now, in court, making his identification on the basis of the appellants’ facial characteristics was not a “new matter,” аnd it was within the discretion of the trial court to deny recross-examination on this issue.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This contention is essentially similar to appellants’ pretrial motion to suppress certain identification testimony which was denied by the trial court. Appellant Hardy does not join in challenging this ruling on appeal.
. Appellant Singletary argues that subsequent in-court identifications by Walker and Lee were tainted by the suggestiveness of the showup and that, consequently, the in-court identifications should have been inadmissible. As we have noted above, the trial court was correct in ruling that the confrontation was not impermis-sibly suggestive. Furthermore, even if we had concluded that the confrontation had been unduly suggestive, an in-court identification may be found valid even though it was preceded by deficient pretrial confrontations.
Clemons v. United States, supra
. Appellant Singletary also contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal. Such a motion must be granted if there is no evidence upon which a reasonable mind could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Marshall
v.
United States,
D.C. App.,
. This is the language of the rule which was in effect at the time of the hearing in this case. The local rule was amended on November 16, 1976, to require a defendant’s presence additionally “at the time of the plea.” The 1976 amendments did not substantially alter the rule but did bring it into conformity with the present version of Fed.R.Cr.P. 43. See Super. Ct.Cr.R. 43 & Comment.
. Cаses and Advisory Committee Notes interpreting the federal rule are equally applicable to the local rule.
Campbell v. United States,
D.C.App.,
. The government argues that “the public’s interest in insuring a defendant’s presence at his trial proceedings in order to preserve the appearance of justice weighs heavily against any claimed ‘right to be absent,’ ”
citing United States v. Curtis,
Similarly, the government’s reliance on cases which mandate a defendant’s presence at
trial, e. g., United States v. Moore,
. Appellant directs the attention of the court to the following cases:
United States v. Wade, supra,
. Although an eyewitness’ certainty as to his identification of a suspect is not, of course, a total assurance of the reliability of the identification, an assertion such as this is one factor to consider in determining the trustworthiness of the identification.
Crawley v. United States, supra, citing United States
v.
Johnson,
. Appellant refers to
Moss v. United States, supra,
(does not go to the issue of a witness’ ability to recognize a defendant outside thе context of the offense);
Smith v. United States, supra
at 167 (no mention of cross-examination on the issue of other views of the assailant);
United States v. Sanders, supra,
. The exchange between the prosecutor and the witness was as follows:
Q. How can you identify him today? He’s not wearing red pants and you haven’t seen him since then.
A. Well, I identified him as to face.
Q. You are identifying him by his face?
A. Right.
Q. Are you sure of that?
A. Yes.
