This bizarre joint trial bank robbery case presents fourteen points of error *1234 from the gratuitous grant of a new trial on a motion for reduction of sentence, which one defendant still disclaims; to the admission of evidence of an airplane hijacking in Canada against the other. After unraveling this tangled web of human misereance and judicial error, we conclude that this case must be affirmed in part and vacated in part.
The convoluted factual matrix of this case had its genesis in the robbery of the Farmers and Merchants State Bank of Ladonia, Texas on August 19, 1968. Shortly thereafter, Fred Louis Bell and Charles Lavern Beasley were arrested and indicted for this robbery. After indictment, on December 9, Bell pled guilty and was sentenced to six years, which he began to serve immediately. Several months later Bell filed a pro se F.R.Crim.P. 35 motion requesting a reduction in his sentence. The district judge, on April 25, 1969 denied all relief affirmatively sought by the motion, but ordered that the motion be treated as one made under 28 U.S.C.A. § 2255 (1971). An evidentiary hearing was thereupon conducted, followed by an order vacating the prior conviction and requiring a new trial. The Court found that the arrest warrant was defective since the supporting affidavits did not attest to the credibility and reliability of the
eyewitnesses,
whose statements it quoted, citing Aguilar v. Texas,
Subsequently, the same district judge heard Bell’s new pretrial motion to suppress, but this time he reversed himself and held that the arrest and subsequent search were not illegal. Another judge of the district presided over the actual trial of the case.
Bell and his co-indictee Beasley, who had pled not guilty, were tried jointly. The jury found both defendants guilty of conspiring to rob the bank in violation of 18 U.S.C.A. § 371 (1966). Bell was found guilty of violating 18 U.S.C.A. § 2113(a) (1970) (robbery of a bank without assault), and Beasley was found guilty of violating 18 U.S.C.A. § 2113(d) (1970) (robbery by assault). Bell was sentenced to concurrent terms of ten and five years, four more years than he received at the first sentencing. Beasley received the same sentences.
On this appeal we first will discuss those issues unique to Bell, then those unique to Beasley, and finally, their common contentions.
BELL
Bell first asks that his original conviction be reinstated since the first district judge erred in gratuitously granting him a new trial. Under the circumstances of this case, we reluctantly conclude that Bell may not collaterally attack this final order. Because Bell did not appeal the granting of a new trial,
see
28 U.S.C.A. § 2255 (1971), the district judge’s order became final. While this in itself may not be enough to preclude a collateral attack in other cases, here there is more. Bell did not complain during the thirteen month hiatus between the granting of a new trial and the new trial itself, nor did he complain during the trial. In fact, this point of error was not raised until Bell had been reconvicted. According
nunc pro tunc
invalidity to an order in such circumstances would have serious precedential ramifications. It would encourage others to similarly seek
*1235
to have the best of all possible worlds. Such a defendant would receive a second bite of the trial apple in hopes of acquittal, and as a safety valve, retain the assurance that he could reclaim his prior conviction if he should receive a less satisfactory sentence on the second go-round. Even though we agree that the district judge committed error in granting a new trial, we will not allow Bell to have his proverbial cake and eat it too. Cf. Thomas v. United States,
Bell complains of the admission of the in-court identification testimony of one of the government’s witnesses. He claims that she viewed an impermissibly suggestive photo spread just two days after the robbery and identified him then, but was unable to choose him out of a lineup about ten days later. Bell asserts that the display was suggestive because his photo is a full length shot while the rest of the photos are bust shots, which was an unduly suggestive difference because that witness had seen the actual robber
standing
beside his car. The trial judge followed the procedure suggested in United States v. Sutherland,
Bell next argues that the trial judge erred in not making available to him certain alleged Jencks Act documents. The trial judge conducted an examination of the documents in camera and decided that only four pages out of fifty had to be produced. These documents consisted of reports prepared by FBI agents relating to interviews with witnesses and the processes and results of the investigation. The trial judge correctly refused to require the production of reports relating to the witness interviews. There was an insufficient connection between these reports and the FBI agent’s direct testimony.
See
United States v. Graves,
A more complicated problem arises, however, in determining the correctness of the refusal to require production of the reports of the investigatory procedures and results. It is well established that “individual ‘notes and reports’ of agents of the Government, made in the course of a criminal investigation, are the proper subject of inquiry and subject to production under the Jencks Act, . . . . ” Lewis v. United States,
Bell asserts that the jury was not authorized under Count I of the indictment to find him guilty as a principal to robbery of a bank without assault inasmuch as Count I charged him solely with aiding and abetting. While the better practice would have been to frame the charge in the alternative, the contention is without merit. Under 18 U.S.C.A. § 2 (1969), an aider and abettor is a principal and can be punished as such.
Bell urges that the trial judge erred in allowing a police state atmos *1236 phere to be fostered at the trial. He points out that all the spectators, most of whom were his friends, were searched by United States Marshals each time they entered the courtroom. He further indicates that the jury entered through the same door as the spectators, and that the spectators’ seats were within a few feet of the jury box. Bell argues that the jury could not have helped but notice the searches, and thus may well have inferred that he was a dangerous man who consorted with lawless people. Bell and Beasley were black and the spectator-friends were also black. However, no indications or intimations were given to the jury that there was an association or connection between Bell and any of the spectators, other than the inference which a juror might draw from their attendance in today’s world of sparse interest in trials on the part of the' general public. This wholly conjectural link is an insubstantial link to prejudicial error. Furthermore, the record reveals that the trial judge had been advised that there was a possibility of a courthouse escape attempt. Even if this was mere rumor he certainly did not abuse his discretion in instituting the reasonable security measures described here.
Bell claims that proper credit was not allowed him on his sentence for pre-conviction time spent in the Dallas County jail, the Smith County jail, and the Harrison County jail. We are unable to discern from the record whether or not Bell was entitled to credit against his sentence for any period of these incarcerations or whether, if proper, such credit has been given. We therefore must remand to allow the district court to consider this contention.
See
Ballard v. Blackwell,
As previously noted, Bell was sentenced to ten years at this trial, whereas in the first proceeding, in which he pled guilty, he received six years. The arguments advanced by both sides concern the proper application of North Carolina v. Pearce,
BEASLEY
Beasley likewise complains of the impermissibly suggestive nature of a photo display. He points out that he is the only person in the display with a bandage on his forehead and his mouth open exposing snaggled teeth. Beasley also alleges that all the other persons in the display possess an extremely dark skin in comparison to his. The judge followed Sutherland procedures as to the admissibility of these photos. We have reviewed the display and conclude both that the differences in skin tone which are minimal and the bandage and visibility of Beasley’s teeth do not render the display impermissibly suggestive. We have further considered the differences in their totality and agree that they do not constitute impermissible suggestiveness.
*1237
Beasley was placed under arrest in Montreal, Canada for attempting to hijack an airplane from St. John, New Brunswick, Canada to Cuba. At trial, the Government adduced this evidence as indicating flight from the scene of the robbery. Beasley interposes two objections to the admissibility of this evidence. First, he argues that the sole witness to the hijacking based his testimony upon hearsay evidence. The witness was a Canadian policeman who testified he arrested Beasley when he disembarked from the plane, and later pressed charges against Beasley in a Canadian court. He admitted that he had no personal knowledge of events prior to the effectuation of the arrest, but he also testified that he was present when Beasley pled guilty to the hijacking charge. The fact that he knew from conversations with others that there had been a hijacking was only admitted to show why he had arrested Beasley. Enlow v. United States,
Beasley’s second objection to this evidence presents us with cause for more concern. He asserts that the prejudicial effect of the skyjacking far outweighs the tenuous link between the crime in Canada and the bank robbery in Texas. Beasley was arrested three weeks after the robbery at a place in Canada approximately 1900 miles from the scene of the robbery. There is no question but that flight may be used as evidence of guilt. United States v. Deas,
Beasley contends that the trial judge erred in not granting his motion for judgment of acquittal. He reasons that the sole identification witness’s testimony was inadmissible due to the suggestiveness of the photo display; therefore, there was no evidence remaining to support a conviction. Since we have previously held the in-court identification admissible, this ratiocination must fail. In this direct evidence case, we conclude that “taking the view most favorable to the Government, a reasonably minded jury could accept the relevant evidence as adequate and sufficient to support the conclusion of the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Hill,
COMMON CONTENTIONS
Bell was arrested at his home in Dallas, Texas about four days after the robbery, pursuant to an arrest warrant which we have previously noted was found both defective and valid by the first district judge who handled Bell’s ease. The facts were that FBI agents, after effecting the arrest of Bell in the house, searched the house and yard and found an envelope in a bedroom and partially burned green sweater in the backyard near some garbage cans. The envelope bore the return *1238 address of the bank, and it was identified by a bank employee as the envelope she placed in the robbers’ pillow case. The sweater appeared to have one of its sleeves cut off. It should be noted here that one of the robbers, to this day unidentified, wore a mask made of the same type and color material as the sweater. This mask had been recovered beside a country road outside Ladonia.
The first issue we must face is the illegality
vel non
of Bell’s arrest. Even though the court initially held the arrest warrant invalid by extending the
Aguilar
and
Spinelli
requirements to eyewitnesses, nevertheless, on motion to suppress, this same district judge held that the agents possessed probable cause to arrest. Thus the arrest was legal, and the search was incident to a valid arrest. Although there is much sound and fury between the parties as to the existence of probable cause to arrest, we choose not to venture into the mostly visceral concept of probable cause, for a specter has arisen in this case that deserves to be laid to rest. It is now a well-settled and familiar concept, as enun-dated by
Aguilar
and
Spinelli,
that supporting affidavits in an application for a search warrant must attest to the credibility of an informant and the reliability of his information.
See also
United States v. Harris,
Having resolved that the arrest was made pursuant to a valid warrant, we must determine for Bell’s appeal the permissible scope of a search incident to a lawful arrest. However, preliminarily, we will adjudicate Beasley’s standing to contest this search. The litmus test for standing under the Fourth Amendment is whether or not the search was directed at the complainant, Alderman v. United States,
Since Bell does possess the requisite standing, we must review the propriety of this search. Bell was arrested at the door of his four-room home and was immediately taken before a magistrate. The search of the house and yard began after Bell had been taken away. Since this search occurred prior to Chimel v. California,
The rule allowing contemporaneous searches is justified, for example, by the need to seize weapons and other things which might be used to assault an officer or effect an escape, as well as by the need to prevent the destruction of evidence of the crime — things which might easily happen where the weapon or evidence is on the accused’s person or under his immediate control. But these justifications are absent where a search is remote in time or place from the arrest. Once an accused is under arrest and in custody, then a search made at another place, without a warrant, is simply not incident to the arrest. Agnello v. United States, supra, 269 U.S., [20] at 31, 46 S.Ct. [4] at 5,70 L.Ed. 145 .
The search of the yard was clearly too remote in time and place from the arrest to be incident to that arrest. The search began after Bell had been taken away and continued for more than two hours. The search of the yard clearly was not related to the arrest and in effect was a general exploratory search. We conclude then that the sweater was improperly admitted.
However, we conclude under the circumstances that this error was harmless to Bell. Harrington v. California,
Both defendants allege error in the failure to suppress Bell’s confession. The district. judge conducted the required Jackson v. Denno hearing and concluded that Bell had been advised of his rights as outlined in
Miranda,
that he knowingly and intelligently waived his right to counsel, and that the confession was freely and voluntarily made. These fact findings on the pretrial motion to suppress were not clearly erroneous. United States v. Merritt,
There were no blacks on the jury eventually selected to try this case, and there were only two blacks on the entire venire of seventy-five. Bell and Beasley argue that the trial judge erred in failing to sustain a motion to quash the jury panel because of presumptive racial discrimination. The jury selection procedure in the Eastern District of Texas is based on the random selection of persons from certified voter registration lists and has been approved by this Circuit. No showing was made that the procedure is inherently defective, and the testimony of the District Court Clerk that the plan was strictly adhered to was undisputed. The contention is without merit.
Finally, Bell and Beasley assert that the trial judge erred in not granting a motion for severance. We believe that the jury could have properly evaluated separately the evidence against each defendant as to each separate charge. The trial judge did not abuse his discretion. United States v. Harris,
The judgment as to Beasley is affirmed. The judgment as to Bell is vacated and remanded for entry of a new *1241 judgment not to exceed six years. On this remand the district court should also determine what credit, if any, Bell should be awarded against such sentence on account of time served in jails before commitment.
Affirmed in part, vacated in part and remanded with directions.
Notes
. The district judge held that the illegal search and seizure caused the guilty plea and thus vitiated the plea. The general rule is, of course, that a plea of guilty waives all non-jurisdietional defects, including claims of illegal searches and seizures. United States v. Escandar, (5th Cir. 1972) [No. 71-1279, January 24, 1972] ; Hayes v. Smith,
.
Pearce
did not completely interdict the imposition of a higher sentence upon retrial. Chaffin v. Stynchcombe,
. The affidavit involved read as follows:
The undersigned complainant being duly sworn states:
That on or about August 19 , 1968, at Ladonia, Fannin County, Texas, in the Eastern District of Texas (1) Charles Lavern Beasley, wilfully and unlawfully and with felonious intent did (2) take by force and violence and by intimidation, from the person and presence of Mrs. W. D. Braley, Assistant Cashier, $13,111.76 in money, belonging to and in the care, custody, control, management, and possession of the Farmers and Merchants State Bank, Ladonia, Texas, the deposits of which were then insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and Charles Lavern Beasley in committing the aforesaid act did assault and place in jeopardy the life of Mrs. W. D. Braley by the use of a dangerous weapon, to-wit, a hand gun; and that the said Fred Louis Bell did wilfully and knowingly aid and abet Charles Lavern Beasley by waiting beside a red Mercury automobile near La-donia, Texas, on August 19, 1968, and thereafter did assist in the escape of Charles Lavern Beasley and his associate by driving them away from the Ladonia vicinity in a red Mercury automobile, following the robbery.
And the complainant states that this complaint is based on positive identification of a photograph of Fred Louis Bell by Mrs. Thelma Apple, Commerce Street, Ladonia, Texas, as the individual she observed standing by a red automobile on Willow Grove Road near Ladonia, Texas, during the morning of August 19, 1968.
John Arthur Smith, RFD, Honey Grove, Texas, can testify that at 10:00 A.M. on Farm to Market Road No. 1550, about five or six miles from Ladonia, Texas, he observed a 1964 or 1965 pale blue Plymouth occupied by three negro males closely followed by a red 1963 or 1964 Mercury convertible occupied by one negro male, proceeding toward Ladonia, Texas.
Mrs. Jane Rattan, Ladonia, Texas, can testify that she saw two men run from the Farmers and Merchants State Bank at Ladonia, Texas, at the time of the robbery on August 19, 1968, and enter a blue automobile which was driven away by a third individual at a high rate of speed.
Detective Wayne Posey, Intelligence Unit, Police Dept., Dallas, Texas, can *1239 testify that lie has personal knowledge that Charles Lavern Beasley and Fred Louis Bell are close associates at Dallas, Tex.
Special Agent O. T. Brown, Jr., F.B.I., Dallas, Texas, can testify that on August 20, 1968, he observed a red 1965 Mercury automobile parked at 4611 Garland Ave., Dallas, Texas, and determined that this car was registered to Freddie Louis Bell, Dallas, Texas.
On August 20, 1968, SA C. T. Brown, Jr., observed a recently burned 1963 Plymouth, 4-door automobile, blue in color on Willow Grove Hoad, a half mile from the location where Mrs. Thelma Apple had observed the red automobile.
And the complainant further states that he believes that
Mrs. Thelma Apple, Ladonia, Texas John Arthur Smith, RFD, Honey Grove, Tex.
Mrs. Jane Battan, Ladonia, Texas • Detective Wayne Posey, Int. Unit, Police Dept. Dallas, Tex.
SA G. T. Brown, Jr., F.B.I., Dallas, Tex. are material witnesses in relation to this charge.
