Appellant Antonio Torres Sanchez was tried below for violating 21 U.S.C. §§ 173, 174, and was found guilty by Judge Tyler, sitting without a jury. The indictment charged appellant with selling approximately 27.10 grams of unlawfully imported heroin on December 4, 1962, and 13.05 grams on January 9, 1963. Although the second sale took place in early 1963, appellant was not arrested until February 27, 1964, some thirteen and one-half months later. The court below sustained an objection to a question addressed to the arresting officer, Agent Wysor, as to why he had waited so long to arrest Sanchez. Appellant claims that this ruling precluded a showing that the pre-arrest delay deprived him of Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights and that the indictment should have been dis *825 missed pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 48 (b).
We hold that the court below committed no error and that the conviction should be affirmed. After the government objected to the question put to Wysor, defendant’s counsel did not make clear to the trial judge the purpose of the inquiry into pre-arrest delay, and Judge Tyler was therefore well within his discretion in limiting the cross-examination. Moreover, the right to a speedy trial
after
arrest or indictment is deemed waived unless promptly asserted. United States ex rel. Yon Cseh v. Fay,
Appellant relies heavily on Ross v. United States,
It seems fair to say that our solidarity as to the remand in this case, and the fact of identical remands in other pending appeals, reflected a growing apprehension upon the part of many members of this court as successive cases have come to establish the pattern and effect of the undercover narcotics operations of the Metropolitan Police. The recurring spectacle of convictions based solely upon the testimony of a police witness who, by reason of lapse of time, could not testify on the basis of unaided personal recollection, began to implant doubts as to the propriety of permitting the reasonableness of the delay, in this very narrow and specialized class of narcotics cases, to be “controlled exclusively by the applicable statute of limitations.”
In addition,
Ross
is clearly distinguishable. In this case, unlike
Ross
(see
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
