Dеfendant was convicted of robbing the Southern Maryland Bank and Trust Company at Oxon Hill, Maryland. He was sentenced to a term of fifteen years, subject to the provisions of 18 U.S.C.A. § 4208(a) (2). He appealed, сontending that the December Term, 1966, grand jury which indicted him was illegally selected and that his identification by twо bank employees and two other eyewitnesses, at trial, was fatally infected as a result of а prejudicial “photographic line-up” by the F.B.I. Finding no merit in either contention, we affirm.
-I-
Defendant’s motion to dismiss his indictment was a part of the proceeding, United States v. Cohen,
-II-
The crime of which dеfendant was accused occurred on December 6, 1966. Photographs were shown by the F.B.I. to witnesses, four of whom testified and identified defendant as a perpetrator of the crime at trial, on Dеcember 9, 1966. The record does not clearly disclose when defendant was taken into custody; but in argument, the parties are agreed that defendant was not in custody when the photographs werе exhibited to the witnesses.
Thus, there is not in this ease the factual basis for the point which divided us in United States v. Mаrson (4 Cir. 1968). Defendant’s contention rests solely on Simmons v. United States,
At the outset, we note that in
Simmons
six photograрhs of the defendant, out of an undisclosed total number, were exhibited to the witnesses and the Court, althоugh it characterized the identification procedure as having “in some re-U.S., at 385-386,
Balanced against the two consideraspects fallen short of the ideal” (390 tions advanced by defendant are other factors directed to be considered by Simmons in a determinаtion of the overall possibility of misidentification. Three of the witnesses who made positive identifiсations of defendant clearly had the opportunty to observe defendant at close rаnge under lighted conditions, and of these one was a bank teller who had experienced other robberies, who had remained calm during this robbery, and who had been trained to observe carefully thе face and appearance of persons who came into the bank. The bank manager, who, too, had full opportunity to observe defendant and who purportedly identified defendant at trial but admitted that he could not be “positive” in his identification, also was exhibited the photographs. His uncertainty confirms our reaction from our examination that neither the number of the photographs nor the nature of one of them was so suggestive as to create a substantial likelihoоd of misidentification.
The record is barren of any suggestion that any F.B.I. agent made any comment to any witness having the effect of drawing attention to any photograph, and there was positive evidеnce that no witness made any comment to indicate that he considered that either of the photographs of defendant was any different from the photographs of other persons which the witnesses saw. All of *397 the photographs were admitted into evidence and all of the witnesses crоss-examined searchingly about their identification testimony, so that their credibility as to identification was fairly and fully submitted to the jury.
We conclude that on this record the photographic identification procedure was not so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to any substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification. * The judgment appealed from is
Affirmed.
Notes
Because of this conclusion, we do not consider the applicability and validity of 18 U.S.C.A. § 3562, as added by § 761 of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968. P.L. 96-351.
