Forty-four cartons of men’s Italian knit turtleneck sweaters, consigned by an Italian firm, DEPE, from Milan to Sue B. Fashions of New York City and valued at approximately $45,000, were stolen on November 25, 1973. On arrival at Lufthansa’s facilities at John F. Kennedy Airport, the cartons had been loaded on a truck, belonging to Lance Airfreight Company, which was then driven back to and parked at Lance’s loading dock at the U. S. Custom Service in Cargo Building 80 pending delivery later to the consignee. In the afternoon of November 25, a man appeared at the office of Bob’s Towing Service, pursuant to previous telephone arrangement, to pay $35 for the towing of the truck and execute documents to authorize the towing; two employees, Robert Bavaro and Robert Schmeltz, engaged the man in brief conversations, the first ascertaining the nature of the towing job and the second filling out the necessary papers. The man identified himself as a mechanic for Lance Airfreight and explained that the truck parked at Lance’s dock had to be towed to an American gasoline station in *75 Brooklyn for repair. A driver, Kenneth Mantione, picked up the truck and towed it, as instructed, to the gasoline station in Brooklyn. Arriving there about 9:00 p.m., he met a man who told him where to place the truck and assisted him in positioning it. Bavaro, Schmeltz, and Mantione subsequently made photographic identifications of defendant Mes-sina as the man they had seen on November 25.
On the basis of these identifications FBI agent Jules and Port Authority Police Department detectives McKenna and Maiolo arrested Messina at his home pursuant to an arrest warrant on December 18, and Agent Jules advised him of his rights with respect to interrogation. They took him to the New York office of the FBI, where Agent Jules again advised him of his rights and he signed the FBI Advice of Rights form. The four men proceeded to the federal courthouse in the Eastern District of New York for Messina’s arraignment. According to Agent Jules, while awaiting this, Messi-na, after saying he wasn’t feeling well, stated he had nothing to do with the hijacking but wanted “to cooperate” and admitted he had been selling “some of these sweaters”. He said he had had five, obtained from a person known as Vinnie at a social club in Brooklyn. He added that two were still at his home and “If you want these sweaters, you can have them.”
The magistrate appointed the Legal Aid Society to represent Messina. Mr. Edward Kelly, a Legal Aid attorney, conferred with him. While he had no specific recollection of the events of December 18, Mr. Kelly testified that his practice was to advise clients not to make any statements to law enforcement officers without first consulting with counsel.
After Messina was released, Agent Jules informed Mr. Kelly not to worry about him since the agent was “going to drop him off at his home because he wasn’t feeling well.” Mr. Kelly made no comment but admitted in his testimony that he knew Jules was an FBI agent. During the journey, Messina and Detective Maiolo “were talking about Italy and where who came from and what.” Maiolo and Messina went up the stairs to the latter’s apartment. Messina gave Maiolo “a small shot” of whiskey and instructed his wife “Go get the sweaters”. She went into another room, came back and handed two sweaters to Messi-na, who gave them to Maiolo, saying “This is it, and I want to show you I am trying to help.”
Bernard Ruderman, sales manager of Sue B. Fashions, later identified the sweaters as bearing his firm’s “RN”, a registered number assigned by the Federal Trade Commission under the Wool Products Labeling Act, 15 U.S.C. § 68, see 16 C.F.R. §§ 300.3(a)(3), 300.4, and testified that the sweaters were of the same type as those in the stolen shipment.
After trial before Judge Weinstein and a jury in the District Court for the Eastern District of New York, at which Bavaro, Schmeltz, and Mantione again identified him, Messina was convicted on two counts of stealing and of possessing the 44 cartons of sweaters in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 659.
Messina mounts a vigorous attack upon the identifications, on which Judge Weinstein had conducted an extensive suppression hearing. Without going into burdensome detail, it suffices to say that the pre-arrest identification procedures included the obtaining of descriptions from the three witnesses, selection by Schmeltz from a large collection maintained by the Port Authority of a number of photographs generally resembling the man who had appeared at the office, the making of composite drawings by Mantione and Bavaro, and positive identifications by all three men from a spread of seven photographs. After arraignment there was a lineup, attended by Messina’s attorney, at which the three men, separately, chose Messina.
This case does not require us to add to the enormous literature on the application by this and other courts of the mandate in Simmons v. United States, 390
*76
U.S. 377, 384,
Putting aside for the moment the argument that the visit to Messina’s home to obtain the sweaters subsequent to the arraignment violated Messina’s rights under the Sixth Amendment, we see no merit in the contention that Judge Weinstein erred in finding that the agents did not violate Messina’s Fourth Amendment rights. As he specifically found, Messina blurted out his offer to hand over the sweaters without the slightest suggestion from the agents. Compare United States v. Gaynor,
Somewhat more troubling at first blush is the claim that the failure of the agents to advise Messina’s lawyer of their intention to collect the sweaters violated his Sixth Amendment right “to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.” To be sure, Massiah v. United States,
However, there are decisions of lower courts that, after a criminal prosecution has been commenced and counsel has been retained, appointed or requested, consent to a search , given in the absence of counsel is invalid unless the record justifies a finding that the deprivation of the right was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt or, presumably, that the right to the assistance of counsel has been effectively waived.
See
United States ex rel. Daley v. Yeager,
We are not clear whether appellant’s counsel makes an additional argument against admission of the sweaters on the ground of irrelevancy. If so, it is without merit. Messina’s possession of the sweaters, produced by the very manufacturer for the very consignee who was the victim of the theft, and received at its approximate time, clearly made his participation “more probable than it would be without the evidence.” That is all that is needed. Proposed Federal Rules of Evidence, rule 401.
Affirmed.
