On October 15, 1973, - two indictments in three counts were returned jointly charging defendant et alii with selling controlled substances (Ch. 195, V.A.M.S.) to Bill McConnell, an undercover agent for the Springfield-Greene County Narcotics Bureau. Defendant and Peggy Gardner, then cohabitants, allegedly made sales of a salt of amphetamine and cocaine, respectively, on January 17 and 29, 1973; defendant and Larry Tate were charged with a January 18, 1973, sale of heroin. At the court-tried joint trial of defendant and Peggy on the consolidated cases represented by the two indictments, it was indicated that Tate previously had been acquitted; we do not know the disposition of the charges against Peggy. The trial court found defendant guilty on all three counts, which findings had the force and effect of a jury verdict. Rule 26.01(b), V.A.M.R.;
State v. Daniels,
*286 Defendant raises four points on appeal. Two are interrelated and will be considered together. In fine, they are that the trial court erred in overruling his motions to quash and dismiss the indictments because the delay of nine months between the time of the alleged offenses and the return of the indictments deprived him of his right to a speedy trial and to due process of law as guaranteed under the Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. N.B. — defendant does not complain of the period which elapsed between the return of the indictments and the time he was tried on the charges.
The delay which occurred between the charged offenses and the indictments gave rise to a claim under due process rather than under the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of a speedy trial.
United States v. Washington,
In
Marion,
the Supreme Court of the United States observed that “since a criminal trial is the likely consequence of our judgment and since appellees may claim actual prejudice to their defense, it is appropriate to note here that the statute of limitations does not fully define the appel-lees’ rights with respect to the events occurring prior to indictment. Thus, . the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment would require dismissal of the indictment if it were shown at trial that the pre-indictment delay in this case caused substantial prejudice to appellees’ rights to a fair trial and that the delay was an intentional device to gain tactical advantage over the accused. . . . However, we need not, and could not now, determine when and in what circumstances actual prejudice resulting from pre-accusation delays requires the dismissal of the prosecution. . Actual prejudice to the defense of a criminal case may result from the shortest and most necessary delay; and no one suggests that every delay-caused detriment to a defendant’s case should abort a criminal prosecution. To accommodate the sound administration of justice to the rights of the defendant to a fair trial will necessarily involve a delicate judgment based on the circumstances of each case.”
Defendant trusts
Ross v. United States,
Defendant’s argument that the preindictment delay denied him due process of law wends this path: The delay was an unnecessary conscious act on the part of the state; the delay was of such a duration that defendant, even with the aid of Peggy’s memory, could not reconstruct or remember what had transpired on the dates of the alleged offenses; the evidence against defendant consisted of testimony by adverse witnesses who had no independent recall of the involved events and who were dependent on notes to refresh their recollections; and the delay could have been shortened because the usefulness of McConnell as an undercover agent was virtually exhausted after March 1973, as he had made only five “buys” after that time. In pretrial hearings, defendant asseverated that he had suffered amnesia (total in some areas and scattered in others) as the result of a May 6, 1973, vehicular accident. Indications that this claimed condition would be used to augment the alleged prejudice to him by reason of the preindictment delay have been forsaken on appeal in favor of another point to be considered anon.
Merely because the preindictment delay was admittedly a conscious act on the part of the state would not singly sustain defendant’s claim of a denial of due process. Representatives of the narcotics bureau and the prosecuting attorney presented testimony to the effect that the delay, at least in part, was necessary due to limited personnel and financial resources; it was not practical or economical to permit an undercover agent to be “burned,” i. e., publicly identified, every time a case could be made. Because of restricted manpower and money, the bureau attempted to maintain the agent’s cover until he could go as far as possible, not only with a particular subject, but in making “lateral progress” by trying to find other and more people involved in the sale of drugs. “[W]e respect the [state’s] need to keep the identity of such informants and agents confidential, both to protect their safety and to continue to use them effectively.”
United States v. Jackson,
supra,
Unlike the government’s witnesses in the Ross-type cases, agent McConnell’s testimony of his “buys” from defendant and the co-indictees was not steeped in remembrances blurred, obscured, dissipated or destroyed by the passage of time. McConnell had known defendant “from grade school and high school,” and had been a fellow employee of Larry Tate at a food processing plant. The agent had three separate encounters with Peggy Gardner—the first of which (as corroborated, by Peggy) was when she greeted him at the-threshold of the house where the “buys” were subsequently made with a double-barreled shotgun. Defendant’s argument that the state’s witnesses needed to resort to notes to attain any recall of the events surrounding the charged offenses, strays precariously from the truth. Note referrals were made in areas collateral to the actual “buys,” as memoranda references were employed principally to establish the sequence of handling the controlled substances as they were processed through the narcotics bureau into the possession of the crime laboratory director for analysis. McConnell’s meetings with defendant and the others indubitably outclass the agent’s single brief contacts with strangers prevalent in the Ross-type cases, and McConnell’s particularized retracings of the involved dealings attested to the accuracy of his independent reminiscences.
The evidence does not show, nor does defendant contend, that the preindictment “delay was an intentional device to gain tactical advantage over the accused.”
United States v. Marion,
supra,
The trial court was not impressed, apparently, with the avowal that the prein-dictment delay had produced a total lack of recall on the part of defendant and Peggy, and its disbelief could have come, in part, from Peggy’s display of remembrance of the shotgun incident. The rulings on the motions to quash and dismiss the indictments indicate a finding by the trial court that the delay did not cause substantial prejudice to defendant’s rights to a fair trial. Upon review we find no error in the denial of the motions based on defendant’s due process guarantees.
United States v. Ybarra,
In his third point defendant says the trial court erred in failing to quash and *289 dismiss the indictments “for the reason that [defendant] could not recall the events of the date of the alleged offenses because of an amnesia condition and therefore could not receive a fair trial or effective assistance of counsel.” More important for present purposes, however, is not what defendant claims in his point, but what he does not and never has claimed, id est, he does not claim that as a result of mental disease or defect or amnesia he lacked the capacity to understand the present proceedings against him or to assist in his own defense; he does not claim he was not responsible for the criminal conduct charged because, as a result of mental disease or defect or amnesia, he did not know or appreciate the nature, quality or wrongfulness of his alleged conduct on the dates of the averred sales of controlled substances; and he does not claim that he was incapable at any time of conforming his conduct to the requirements of the law because of any mental disease or defect or amnesia.
Defendant testified at length on the motions to quash and dismiss the indictments. His answers to questions propounded upon direct and cross-examinations and those put to him by the court, indicated clear recall in some areas and a claimed lack of recall in others. As previously indicated, defendant described his claimed amnesic condition as being “total about some things and scattered about others.” To the admittedly conclusionary declaration by defendant that he had not been able to assist counsel in preparing the defense, it was iterated that the inability to assist was limited to defendant’s lack of ability to “tell us about what happened” on the days the controlled substances were allegedly sold.
In this area, the concern of many courts is the very real danger that amnesia can be feigned easily and that discovery of proof of feigning and malingering is difficult. But consideration of that aside, if a defendant has, in fact, developed an amnesia preventing his recollection of the day or days in question, this would not constitute a defense if defendant has sufficient present ability to consult with defending counsel with a reasonable degree of rational understanding and is possessed of a factual understanding of the proceedings against him.
United States v. Sullivan,
Defendant’s evidence of his alleged inability to remember the events occurring on the dates in question was not proof that he was incapable of knowing, understanding and appreciating the nature, quality or wrongfulness of his alleged conduct; neither did the evidence demonstrate that the amnesia, if granted, produced a lack of capacity to understand the proceedings against him or to assist counsel in his own defense. Amnesia is no bar to prosecution of an otherwise competent defendant.
United States v. Stevens,
Defendant’s final point complains that the trial court should have sustained his motion for judgment of acquittal (Rule
*290
26.10, V.A.M.R.) “for the reason that the State failed to prove the necessary elements of the crime for which the appellant can be charged.” This point is written in utter disregard of the mandate of Rule 84.04(d), V.A.M.R., applicable in criminal cases through the direction of Rule 28.18, V.A. M.R. State
v. Vineyard,
Nevertheless, lest defendant by his last point may have been contending the evidence was not sufficient to sustain the conviction — an area which constitutes, plain error affecting substantial rights within the meaning of Rule 27.20(c), V.A.M.R. [State
v. Williams,
We have read the transcript and find the final point without merit. The only case cited by defendant to this point is
State v. Sockel,
The judgment in the consolidated cases is affirmed.
All concur.
Notes
. As acknowledged in
Marion,
supra,
. “The accused in the delayed arrest cases might not recall where he was or what he was doing on a specific day, but like any other person he is capable of knowing whether or not he ever was at a certain place or performed certain acts attributed to him. That he cannot recall at trial where he was at a particular time does not mean that he cannot with certainty remember, if it be true, that he was never, certainly not at a particular time, at a particular location, and that he never sold a package of drugs.”
Wilson v. United States,
(dissenting opinion),
. Under “Points Relied On” in defendant’s brief, four points are supposedly presented. However, they are all penned in identical language. It was only through a gratuitous reading of the argument portion of the brief that we were able to ascertain that the points were actually different.
