This is an appeal from a conviction of passing two falsely endorsed United States Postal Money Orders in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 500.
The two transactions were essentially the same. It was charged that, using a reportedly stolen bank card as identification, the appellant cashed the money orders in question at grocery stores in Ogden and Roy, Utah. The record shows that when the bank card was stolen it had not been signed by the rightful cardholder. The manager of one of the stores testified that the signature on the card was purportedly that of the payee on the money order which was the appellant’s assumed name.
The store manager and the cashier at the other store identified the appellant from a group of photographs shown to them by the Ogden police. It is urged that the appellant was entitled to the presence of counsel at the photographic identifications, that the procedure used for identifying the appellant was improper, and that the Government did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant knew that the money order endorsements were false. Each contention is without merit.
In United States v. Wade,
“The argument that the defendant was deprived of his constitutional right to counsel by the out-of-court identification of photographs in the absence of counsel is without merit. In McGee v. United States, 10 Cir.,402 F.2d 434 , 436, we held that the line-up decision, United States v. Wade, . . . did not apply to out-of-court identification of photographs.” Rech v. United States,410 F.2d 1131 , 1132 (10th Cir. 1969), cert. den.396 U.S. 970 ,90 S.Ct. 457 ,24 L. Ed.2d 438 .
We cannot agree with United States v. Zeiler,
Appellant also urges that the photographic identifications by the two witnesses were impermissibly suggestive under the standard set down in Simmons v. United States,
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Finally, it is urged that the Government did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant knew that the money orders were falsely endorsed. However, the record reveals that the knowledge element of 18 U.S.C. § 500 was clearly established, and the evidence is more than sufficient to support a conviction. McGee v. United States,
Affirmed.
