This is an appeal from a robbery conviction resulting in a four to *161 twelve year sentence. The only matter raised on appeal that gives us concern is whether the pre-trial confrontation between the main prosecution witness and defendant deprived the defendant of due process, and we remand for fuller exploration of the circumstances. 1
The Government’s case rested in essence on the testimony of one Massey, a cab driver, identifying appellant as the man who robbed him of approximately $18. He also testified on direct that he made a pre-trial identification in the U. S. Commissioner’s office. The only other evidence presented by the Government was testimony by Detective Bracey confirming the pre-trial identification.
Massey testified as follows: When he picked up defendant and another unidentified person at about 7:00 p. m. on April 3, 1966, he observed their faces before they entered his cab. On arrival at the appointed address, Sera-Leyva, sitting in the right rear seat, opened the back door and reached into his trousers as if to get some money to pay. Instead, he drew a gun and demanded and got Massey’s money. Massey got a very good look at defendant since the inside light was on; in consequence of his having been held up before, he had made a habit not only of turning on the dome light but also of staring in the face of all passengers before collecting his fare. After taking Massey’s money, the robbers fled on foot a couple of blocks, entered a parked car and drove off. Massey followed them, but fearing the gun, he turned his head away upon passing them so as not to be recognized. The police were contacted that night, but the ensuing search was fruitless.
An affidavit by Detective Bracey supporting the application for an arrest warrant shows that the next morning, after viewing about four photographs of suspects, Massey picked out Sera-Leyva’s, saying, without any doubt, that it was that man or his twin brother. Nothing about this photographic identification was introduced at trial and we have no other information about the surrounding circumstances.
Massey further testified that on calling the Robbery Squad on April 5, the second morning after the robbery, he was instructed without elaboration to report to the Robbery Squad office. There he was told to report across the street at the Commissioner’s office. According to both Massey and Bracey, Massey sat in the Commissioner’s office until he saw and identified Sera-Leyva coming through the door. Bracey said his only conversation beforehand was to direct Massey to sit, and if he saw the man who robbed him enter, and was positive, to tell the detective, but if not, “fine.” He also thought that two or three other hearings preceded Sera-Leyva’s, but it is unclear whether these occurred before Massey arrived and whether Massey saw anyone enter other than appellant. Massey denied knowing appellant’s name before he entered the room, but he did know defendant was foreign from hearing his accent in the car. Immediately before appellant entered the room, the marshal called out, “United States versus Toribio Sera-Leyva.”
Massey was unshaken on cross-examination in the positiveness of his identification : “In case a man threw a gun in your face, Mister, you would never forget that face, not within three weeks, three days, three years, or no time.”
The evidence at trial concluded with testimony of three alibi witnesses for the defendant.
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At trial defense counsel did not object to the testimony of Massey concerning the pre-trial identification, nor raise any due process question concerning that testimony. But the trial was held in July 1966, prior to the issuance, on June 12, 1967, of Stovall v. Denno,
The “claimed violation of due process of law in the conduct of a confrontation depends on the totality of the circumstances surrounding it,”
Stovall, supra,
We now consider this court’s three recent
en banc
lineup decisions, Clemons v. United States, Clark v. United States, and Hines v. United States, 133 U.S.App.D.C. —,
The conditions that existed at the confrontation of appellant are not at all clear on the record before us, and there may well be problems of suggestibility that should be carefully appraised. In appellant’s case there was a lone identifying witness, whereas in both Hines and Clemons there were four witnesses who made various identifications of the suspect — a factor lowering the “likelihood of irreparable misidentification.” Also, both Clemons and Hines were Negroes and presumably entered the hearing room after several others of their race. Appellant, however, was a foreigner; this was known by Massey before the confrontation; and the facts may include not only the marshal’s recital of a foreign name, but also the singularity of appellant's alien appearance.
The facts we have before us concerning the hearing room confrontation, elicited on direct and cross-examination of prosecution witnesses, are favorable to the Government. On hearing these damaging responses before the jury defense counsel did not press further. Without the inhibiting presence of the jury, however, he might well have probed deeper in his examination of both Massey and Detective Bracey, to attempt to bring out elements of suggestibility in the identification process.
4
This dilemma was
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recognized by the Supreme Court in
Wade, supra,
Counsel is then in the predicament in which Wade’s counsel found himself- — ■ realizing that possible unfairness at the lineup may be the sole means of attack upon the unequivocal courtroom identification, and having to probe in the dark in an attempt to discover and reveal unfairness, while bolstering the government witness’ courtroom identification by bringing out and dwelling upon his prior identification.
Avoiding this predicament was one reason why the Supreme Court guaranteed counsel at the lineup itself. It is equally a reason why Stovall due process determinations should, in most cases, be conducted before a judge without the presence of the jury.
The record now before us does not reveal something planted in Massey’s mind “so unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification,” Stovall v. Denno,
supra,
We could skirt the problems of the pre-trial confrontation if we were clearly able to make a determination of independent source, but the record in its- present state does not enable us to- initiate any such determination. This determination would be affected by the existence vel non of a nonsuggestive photographic identification
(see
Witness Aggrey in
Hines
and Witness Ranieeky in
Clemons),
and that issue in turn requires further factual investigation. While Massey’s identification is unusually strong, and there was good lighting, we hesitate to initiate a finding of independent source. It happens that we do not have evidence in the record of a derailed description by the identifying witness prior to the confrontation in issue.
Compare
Clark v. United States,
supra
133 U.S.App.D.C. -,
Accordingly the case must be remanded for further inquiry concerning the totality of the circumstances of the confrontation at the April 5 preliminary hearing. The due process issue will also likely embrace inquiry as to the photographic selection of April 4. If the circumstances of the confrontation brought out on the prosecution’s direct case were impermissibly suggestive, the question would arise whether denial of due process was or may be obviated by other sources justifying the out-of-eo-urt identification and providing reasonably reliable indicators of guilt. 5
In the present state of the record we do not spell out in detail the steps that may be involved in further proceedings. It suffices to say these should be conducted in accordance with this opinion and the en banc opinion in Clemons et cd.
Remanded.
Notes
. Appellant also asserts an abuse of discretion in the trial court’s allowing the use of an interpreter and also not granting appellant’s motion for judgment of acquittal. We find no merit in these asserted errors. Appellant’s trial attorney requested and strongly defended the use of an interpreter; he was needed so that the alibi witnesses, who spoke broken English, would not be confused nor confuse the jury; the judge and defense counsel both went to great pains to help defense counsel obtain an interpreter as he requested. The denial of judgment of acquittal was proper since there was disputed evidence of guilt which if believed by the jury was sufficient to uphold a finding of guilt.
. United States v. Wade,
. 133 U.S.App.D.C. at p. -,
. Defense counsel could also have explored what reason, if any, existed for failure to hold a lineup.
. Clemons v. United States,
supra,
133 U.S.App.D.C.-,
