Charles C. Soles was convicted, after trial before Judge Tyler and a jury in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, for two sales of heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A). He was sentenced to concurrent five year terms of imprisonment and subsequent concurrent three year terms of special parole. The federal sentences were set to run concurrently with sentences aggregating 25 years, which Soles is presently serving in Maryland for possession of cocaine and attempted bribery of two police officers. 1
The Government’s evidence was this: On November 30, 1971, Detective Clyde Isley, acting in an undercover capacity, was introduced to Soles by an informant at a tavern in the Bronx. After an episode in which Soles spoke only through the informant, Isley insisted on direct negotiation with Soles for the purchase of narcotics. Soles assented and invited both men to follow him.
Soles drove off in a 1968 green Pontiac, which New York State records later showed to be his; Isley and the informant followed in a government ear. Soles parked the Pontiac in the parking lot at 100 Lane Crest Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y., the address shown for him in the Westchester telephone directory. The trio entered Soles’ apartment. Isley said he was interested in purchasing a “piece” of heroin, Soles responded that he had one, and the informant departed. Isley paid Soles $1,100. Soles then went to the kitchen, removed a brown paper bag from a cabinet and carried it into his bedroom. While Soles was there, Isley observed several letters addressed to Charles Soles, 100 Lane Crest Avenue. Soles delivered an ounce of heroin to Isley, the informant returned, and, in response to an inquiry from Isley, Soles instructed that future contacts should be made through the informant. The three men returned to the parking lot, and Isley and the informant drove off. A surveilling agent, watching the parking lot through binoculars, identified Soles and reported that he then returned to his apartment. 2
Six days later Isley again met Soles at the tavern and asked to purchase another ounce of heroin. They entered Isley’s car and drove to Soles’ apartment. Again Soles removed an ounce of heroin from a brown paper bag, diluted it, and sold it to Isley for $1,100. Before they departed, Soles gave Isley a phone number to call if he wished to make further purchases. The Westchester telephone directory listed this under Soles’ name. Soles and Isley then returned to the car and Isley drove Soles back to the tavern. The surveilling agent watched the two drive off and again identified Soles as the man accompanying Isley.
The only point of any significance scored in cross-examination was that Is-ley’s reports described Soles as 5'1Q" in height whereas in fact he was only 5'6". Isley asserted the report was in error; he recalled Soles’ height as being between 5'6" and 5'8". The surveilling agent testified that Soles was “maybe a little bit shorter” than Isley, whose height was 5T0". Soles did not testify and called no witnesses.
The first point raised on appeal is Judge Tyler’s ruling that the Government could use defendant’s attempted bribery conviction to impeach him if he chose to take the stand. Pursuant to United States v. Palumbo,
We are unpersuaded by Soles’ contention that United States v. Semensohn,
The question is somewhat troublesome. If the conviction should be reversed within the two years allowed by F.R.Crim.P. 33 for moving for a new trial — and commonly at least the first appellate court in the hierarchy would have considered the case within that pe: riod, the defendant would be entitled to a new trial upon showing that there was a significant possibility that a new trial
*108
with the conviction unavailable for impeachment would produce a different result. See United States v. Miller,
Appellant’s other claim is that the trial court should have compelled the Government to disclose the identity and whereabouts of the informant, who, it is alleged, might have supported a claim of mistaken identity. The guiding principles are stated in Roviaro v. United States,
Where the disclosure of an informer’s identity, or of the contents of his communication, is relevant and helpful to *109 the defense of .an accused, or is essential to a fair determination of a cause, the privilege must give way.
Both reason and context demonstrate, however, that these words are not to be read with extreme literalness. Determining whether the testimony of an informer is likely to be “relevant and helpful” is a task best left to the trial court’s informed discretion.
5
On the next page of the
Roviaro
opinion, the Court made it clear that the principle of disclosure is far from absolute,
We believe that no fixed rule with respect to disclosure is justifiable. The problem is one that calls for balancing the public interest in protecting the flow of information against the individual’s right to prepare his defense. Whether a proper balance renders nondisclosure erroneous must depend on the particular circumstances of each case, taking into consideration the crime charged, the possible defenses, the possible significance of the informer’s testimony, and other relevant factors.
We have had occasion to apply these principles in many cases.
6
The most analogous is United States v. Russ,
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. Twenty years of the sentence were for the narcotics violation; a consecutive term of five years was imposed for the attempted bribery.
. The agent had also observed a man of the same height and wearing the same costume entering and leaving the tavern but, at that time, had not had a clear look at his face.
. We have previously distinguished
Semensohn
on much the same grounds. United States v. Kaufman,
In United States v. Owens,
. Soles’ appeal from the conviction for attempted bribery provides an example of an appeal based on extremely questionable grounds. On his appeal to the Court of Special Appeals, Soles contended that an illegal arrest, search and seizure vitiated not only the narcotics conviction but also the attempted bribery conviction. If he had not been arrested, he argued, there would have been no reason for him to attempt to bribe the police officers. The court held that the narcotics arrest was valid, the search and seizure was proper, and there was ample evidence to support the narcotics conviction. The court added that even if the arrest, search and seizure had been illegal, the bribery conviction would stand. In his petition for certio-rari to the Maryland Court of Appeals, Soles argued the invalidity of bis narcotics arrest at great length, but added only a single sentence attacking the attempted bribery conviction. Despite a dictum in Sugarman v. State,
. The Court strongly suggested that the trial judge should be primarily charged with making this determination. In the sentence following the quotation on which appellant relies, Mr. Justice Burton wrote that “the trial court may require disclosure,” not that it must.- And in a footnote to the same passage, the Court added: “Early decisions established that the scope of the privilege was in the discretion of the trial judge.”
Both the Proposed Federal Rules of Evidence 510(c) and the ALI Model Code of Evidence rule 230 place primary responsibility on the trial court in resolving the issue of disclosure so as to assure the defendant a fair trial.
. This court has regularly held that the right to disclosure is not absolute. See,
e. g.,
United States v. Rosario,
. Prior to trial, the Government commendably offered to make its witnesses available for a lineup in which they would be required to identify Soles. Compare United States v. Fernandez,
. We call the attention of district judges who are confronted with the problem here to the procedure for
in camera
investigation of the probable nature of an informant’s testimony outlined in Proposed Federal Rules of Evidence 510(c) (2) and endorsed in Judge McLaughlin’s concurring opinion in United States v. Day,
