Thе defendant Jones was convicted of armed robbery, La.R.S. 14:64, and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary. He perfected six bills of exceptions, but, upon his appеal, urges only three errors:
1.
After the jury was sworn, the defendant was asked to stand and to identify himself. His counsel objected on the ground that the defendant was being required to incriminate himself. The prosecutor explained that, since two defendants were on trial, he wanted the jury to know which was which. 1 The defendant perfected Bill of Exceptions No. 1 when his objеction was overruled.
We find no error in the trial court’s ruling. There was no issue as to whether the accused was, in fact, Johnny Belvin Jones; his defense was that he (Johnny Belvin Jones) did not commit the crime. The defendant’s privilege against self-incrimination was not violated when he was asked to stand and to identify himself. State v. Mixon,
2.
As a second claimed error (Bills of Exceptions Nos. 2 and 5), the defendant contends that the trial court imprоperly allowed into evidence the testimony of two prosecution witnesses taken at a preliminary examination. They did not testify in person at the trial, being allegedly unavаilable. See La.C.Cr.P. Art. 295.
These two witnesses were Saether and Granli, Norwegian seamen. They were the victims of the robbery. They positively identified the defendant as the gunman who held the pistol on them and robbed them of their money.
The defendant contends that he was denied his constitutional right to confront the witnesses against him by the production of testimony of the witnеsses taken before the trial, and then only read to the trial jury from the transcription.
At the preliminary hearing, the defendant was represented by counsel, who fully cross-examined these witnesses. In contending that the testimony was nevertheless inadmissible, he relies upon jurisprudence noting that the right to confrontation is a trial right entitling him, as well as to cross-examination, also to have the jury weigh the demeanor of the witnesses. Barber v. Page,
As defendant admits, the cited decision indicates that the state may nevertheless introduce such testimоny taken at a preliminary examination “where the witness is shown to be actually unavailable,”
Under the particular circumstances here shown, this contention does not possess reversible merit. It is true that subpoenas for the Norwegian seamen were issued only the dаy before the trial, and that the returns of the sheriff simply show that, after diligent search and inquiry, the two seamen could not be located because their ship was not in port. Under most сircumstances, the belated and limited search for the witnesses might be considered not reasonably diligent for the purpose of showing they were actually unavailable for the trial, at least so as to justify the use of the con *430 stitutionally-disfavored deposition evidence instead of live testimony.
Here, however, a specific purpose of the preliminary examination was to perpetuate the testimony of the Norwegian seamen for later use at the trial, because they would be unavailable when their Norwеgian ship left immediately after the preliminary examination of February 16, 1970. (The robbery had been committed on February 13, 1970.) From the testimony taken at the preliminary examination, there was no expectation that they would return to Louisiana for the trial.
Under these peculiar circumstances, the search for the foreign seamen was not so manifestly insuffiсient as to indicate they may not have truly been unavailable for the trial. We thus do not find merit to the contention that the preliminary examination testimony was improperly used аt the trial on the merits.
3.
The final issue argued (Bill of Exception No. 4) is that the in-court (i. e., at the preliminary examination) identification of Jones by the victims was tainted by a prior extra-judiсial line-up, where the defendant had not been represented by counsel. United States v. Wade,
The issue was raised by objection to the introduction at the trial of the preliminаry-examination testimony of the foreign seamen.
At the preliminary examination, these seamen were fully interrogated and cross-examined as to their independent opрortunity to see and identify the gunman who robbed them and also as to the certainty of their identification. 2 At this time, no issue was made as to the certain identification by these witnesses hаving been tainted by an allegedly illegal line-up.
In the record, the only evidence as to a line-up is contained in the testimony of the defendant Jones at the preliminary exаmination (he did not testify at the trial). Under direct examination, he replied, when asked if he had ever seen the sailors before, that the only time he previously saw them was when he was placed in a line-up and identified by them.
3
In amplifying cross-
*432
examination, the defendant’s testimony indicates that the others in the line-up were of about his height and dressed the same as he was. Therе is thus no showing whatsoever of any inherently unfair line-up. Foster v. California,
There is merit to the defendant’s contention that, when identification testimony is attacked as tаinted, the court should require as a predicate (presumably first outside the presence of the jury) a showing by the state that no illegal line-up tainted the identification or that thе identification is independent of and disassociated with the allegedly tainted identification.
5
Gilbert v. California,
Here, however, no such attack on the identification testimony was made at the time it was taken expressly for use later at the trial, for which all parties and the defendant’s retained counsel then knew the foreign seamen would be unavailable. We arе unable to say, under the present circumstances, that the trial court erred in overruling the belated objection to admission of the identification testimony, made for the first time mоnths later at the trial when these foreign witnesses were no longer available for examination as to the effect, if any, of the line-up upon their ability to identify the defendant.
Wе are re-enforced in this conclusion by the strong and positives identification of the defendant made by these witnesses on the basis of their opportunity for extended and detailed observation of the defendant independent of any line-up, State v. Mixon,
*434 Conclusion
The other bills reserved (Nos. 3 and 6) are not argued and possess no merit.
For the reasons assigned, the conviction and sentence are affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The co-defendant was also convicted, but he did not appeal.
. The seamen had been waiting for a taxi to take them back to their ship, when they were offered a ride in a vehicle driven by the co-defendant, in which the defendant Jones was front-seat pаssenger. Instead of taking them back to the ship, the driver drove to a deserted area. The seamen had the opportunity to observe the defendant Jones during the ride and аlso as be beld the gun on them as they were sitting in the rear seat, as well as when the seamen were let out.
. The co-defendant driver had earlier been arrested in the vicinity of his parked vehicle, in which the wallet of one of the *432 seamen was found The driver had been with the defendant just before the driver was found in a barroom; the defendant met the descriрtion of the driver’s companion ; and the defendant’s coat had been left at the barroom when the defendant left just before the driver was arrested there — these were the apparent reasons the police picked up the defendant for investigation and possible identification as the robber-
. The defendant was represented by а retained attorney at the preliminary examination. He had a different attorney retained for the trial.
. For the procedures when the inadmissibility of the identification evidence is raised by a motion to suppress in advance of trial, see State v. Wilkerson,
