OPINION
Smith wаs convicted of conspiracy to manufacture and conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846. He appeals, raising three questions. First he claims thаt the district court erred in recessing for the day in the middle of his cross-examination of the government’s informant. He next *1361 characterizes the government’s conduct during the investigation of the сase as so outrageous as to violate his due process rights. Finally, he contends that the government’s postarrest conduct requires reversal. We affirm.
I. Recess During Cross-Examination
During the cross-examination оf the informant witness, who was obviously a key to the government’s case, the district judge recessed until the following morning. At that time, the informant had been on the stand for three hours; the examination continued for one hour the next day. Smith believes that he was on the threshold of destroying the informant’s credibility and that the recess allowed the government to counsel with the witness and to prepare him for the final period of the cross-examination.
The recess was called at 4:30 p. m. There is no explanation in the record for this other than that this was a normal time tо suspend proceedings for the evening. Although the district judge, after the jury was released, made some strong statements as to how he felt about the credibility of the witness, we fail to see where an abuse of discretion has been demonstrated.
Carter v. United States,
II. Involvement of Law Enforcement Agents
Smith next contends that the government informant’s involvement in the crime itself was conduct so shocking as to bar prosecution on due process grounds. In
United States v. Russell,
In determining the due process question before us, the government’s activity must be viewed in light of the limited range of law еnforcement techniques available for investigating drug manufacturing enterprises.
Russell
highlighted this problem and expressly approved infiltration of and limited participation in unlawful drug-related еnterprises as proper investigatory strategies which ordinarily do not violate due process.
But Smith contends that here a different result should obtain. He first points to the preparаtory aid the government informant supplied. The informant was argued to have provided 100 grams of mercuric chloride (which is readily available on the open market), some glass tubing and $750, and, on one occasion, to have helped in transporting some phenyl-2-propanone. This conduct clearly falls within the infiltration activities allowed by Russell and Lue.
Smith also alleges that fundamental fairness was violated when the government employed a pharmacist and longtime friend of Smith’s as an informant to betray him. The basis of Smith’s contention seems to be that the choiсe of informant was too good. The argument is frivolous.
Smith further contends that the government was improperly involved in having the informer participate in manufacturing the illegal drugs. However, participation in the manufacturing process does not in and of itself equal outrageous conduct. In
Russell,
the informer had aided in the production of methamphetamine on one оccasion, although the Court noted that he “did not otherwise participate in the manufacture of the drug
or direct any of the work.”
Smith cites the two-week delay between the initial manufacture of approximately one ounce of the drug and the subsequent production of аbout 550 pounds of the chemical as evidence of governmental conduct which shocks the conscience. This argument falls wide of the mark. It is sound law enforcement practice for the Drug Enforcement Administration to cast its net as far as possible in order to gather evidence on drug violators associated with Smith, as well as to cement its case against him. In
Russell,
thеre was a month delay between the government’s purchase of the illegal drug and the arrest, with a significant amount of the drug left in Russell’s possession for potential distribution.
Whether we consider the informant’s acts singularly or as a whole, “[t]he law enforcement conduct here stops far short of violating that ‘fundamental fairness, shocking to the universal sense of justice,’ mandated by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.”
United States v. Russell, supra,
III. Postarrest Government Activity
Smith’s next attack is on events occurring subsequent to his arrest. The first instance of misconduct alleged is the isolation of Smith after his arrest and the refusal to allow him to see an attorney until he had given a statement, in violation of
Miranda v. Arizona,
We need not reach the question whether there was a violation of the
Miranda
rules
1
since even if there were, there would be no error in this case. The government did not attempt to introduce his statements into evidence in its case-in-chief but used them rather for impeachment during cross-еxamination of Smith. The Supreme Court specifically upheld this procedure in
Oregon
v.
Hass,
The police conduct here does not distinguish this case from Hass. There, the incriminating • evidence in question was received after the police officer had properly said that Hass could telephone а lawyer as soon as they arrived at the office, but improperly continued the interrogation in the car after the defendant had asked to call his attorney. The Court recognizеd that its holding might encourage misguided police officers to continue their questioning in these circumstances, since they would have little to lose while standing to garner impeachment material. However, the Court stated:
If, in a given case, the officer’s conduct amounts to abuse, that case, like those involving coercion or duress, may be taken care of whеn it arises measured by the traditional standards for evaluating voluntariness and trustworthiness.
Smith raises three additional instances of alleged governmental misconduct, all of which lack merit. In light of free press considerations, there was no impropriety in affording television coverage of the mobile home when it was brought to the DEA office. Nor was it error to present testimony of an informant who had been convicted of a misdemeаnor in the past and was thought to be unreliable by the trial judge. It was for the jury to assess his credibility. Finally, there was no evidence whatsoever that the government induced the informant to commit рerjury. Nor was it an abuse of discretion to curtail cross-examination of the informant so as to exclude hearsay statements made by the government attorney to the informant during the recess that interrupted the informant’s testimony.
See United States v. McGregor,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Nor need we be concerned about the continuing vitality of the
Miranda
rule itself questioned in the petition for certiorari in
Brewer v. Williams,
