A jury convicted Gerald Lucas of robbing two branches of the Home Savings Association in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113 (1988). On appeal, he argues: (1) that the Government failed to prove, as required by section 2113, that the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) insured Home Savings’ deposits when the robberies occurred; (2) that a gun seized when he was arrested should have been suppressed; (3) that the district court 1 erroneously permitted Lucas’ girlfriend to identify him, at trial, in surveillance photographs; and (4) that the district court improperly considered certain of Lucas’ past arrests and convictions when sentencing him.
Lucas was initially tried on a charge of robbing the Home Savings Association branch at 2614 Independence Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri. A mistrial was declared when the jury failed to reach a unanimous verdict. After the mistrial, the Government filed a superseding indictment charging Lucas not only with robbing the Independence Avenue location, but also with robbing a Home Savings branch at 3568 Broadway Street in Kansas City, Missouri.
At the second trial, the Government attempted to prove that the FSLIC insured Home Savings’ deposits by introducing a Certificate of Insurance issued by the FSLIC to Home Savings and by the testimony of two witnesses. Joe Cruse, the manager of the Broadway branch, identified the Certificate of Insurance, stated that it covered all of Home Savings’ branches, and said that it was in effect when the robberies occurred. A teller at the Independence Avenue branch, Dana Glorioso, also testified that the FSLIC insured the accounts of the Independence Avenue branch during the relevant time period.
Lucas was arrested in the kitchen of an apartment at 3499 Wyoming Street in Kansas City, Missouri. Hope Lane, Lucas’ girlfriend, opened the apartment door when police officers knocked upon it. Through the doorway, the officers saw Lucas sitting in the kitchen with two other persons. As the officers walked toward Lucas, he stood up and reached toward a kitchen cabinet. He repeatedly stretched his arm toward the cabinet during his ensuing struggle with the arresting officers. After Lucas was subdued, one of the officers opened the cabinet door and found a pistol.
On June 6, 1988, Lucas filed a motion in the district court to suppress introducing the gun into evidence. In that motion, he
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argued that the search of the cabinet was not a permissible warrantless search incident to his arrest,
see Chimel v. California,
Lucas filed objections to the magistrate’s report in the district court. In those objections, he reiterated his argument that the weapon was not within his immediate control when it was seized. After reviewing the report on a de novo basis, the district court 3 adopted all of the report’s conclusions and reasoning.
At the second trial, the Government asked Lucas’ girlfriend to identify him in surveillance photographs taken during the bank robberies. Lucas’ objection to allowing such an identification was overruled, and she did testify regarding the photographs.
The district court, when sentencing Lucas, had before it his record which included a number of arrests and convictions. In evaluating Lucas’ claimed incompetence, the district court considered this entire record.
I.
The indictment in this case stated that the accounts of Home Savings were insured by the FSLIC. Thus, the Government was required to show that the money stolen by Lucas was insured by the FSLIC.
See
18 U.S.C. § 2113(g); 12 U.S.C. §§ 1724-1730 (1988). Lucas argues that the decisions in
United States v. Hadley,
To establish the insurance element, the Government offered Home Savings’ Certificate of Insurance and testimony by both a branch manager and teller. Lucas contends that this proof was inadequate because it contained neither testimony by a bank officer nor a cancelled check showing that Home Savings had paid a premium covering FSLIC insurance for the date of the robberies. We are not persuaded by this argument.
Although Lucas relies on cases in which a cancelled check or testimony by a bank officer
4
was offered to help establish the element of federal insurance, none of those cases held that the Government’s proof would have been insufficient without those items. While the proof in this case was less than ideal, we believe that Mr. Cruse’s responsibilities as a branch manager qualified him to testify regarding the insured status of the institution’s funds. It is also significant that the Government’s evidence concerning insurance was uncontradicted. Therefore, we hold that the Government’s burden of establishing the existence of federal insurance has been satisfied on the record before us.
5
In so holding, we note
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that other circuits have accepted similar proof as sufficient.
See, e.g., United States v. Baldwin,
II.
Lucas argues that the search that produced the gun falls outside the scope of the doctrine governing searches incident to arrest. In
Chimel,
The magistrate found that Lucas was seated at a kitchen table with two other men as the officers stood in the front doorway of the apartment in which he was arrested. As Lucas began to get up from the table, the officers entered the apartment and ran into the kitchen. Two officers attempted to apprehend Lucas, and one officer monitored the other two men seated at the table. By the time the officers reached Lucas, his hand was within inches of the handle on a cabinet door. During the ensuing struggle, which lasted for approximately forty seconds, Lucas and the two officers slid around on the slick floor. At one point, Lucas fell to the floor, and the skirmish continued until Lucas was handcuffed. As an officer pulled Lucas from the floor and moved him toward the living room, another officer immediately stood up, opened the cabinet door that Lucas had been attempting to reach, and found a chrome automatic pistol inside the cabinet. The two men seated at the kitchen table were not handcuffed until after the gun was discovered. (Magistrate’s Report ¶1¶ 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7, at 5-6). The magistrate’s findings were adopted by the district court after de novo review, and no argument is made on appeal that they are clearly erroneous.
See United States v. Thompson,
Lucas argues that Chimel does not justify the search here because he was being escorted, handcuffed, from the kitchen when the search occurred. While relevant under Chimel, this is not a determinative factor. Rather, the question is whether, in light of all of the circumstances, the police conducted a valid search incident to Lucas’ arrest. Considering the totality of the circumstances, we hold that they did.
Palumbo,
In upholding the search here, we are persuaded by the Seventh Circuit’s reasoning in
Fleming,
III.
Relying on
United States v. Farnsworth,
As we observed in
Farnsworth,
Rule 701 is satisfied in this context if “the witness is familiar with the defendant’s appearance around the time the surveillance photograph was taken and the defendant’s appearance has changed prior to trial.”
IV.
Lucas argues that the district court erred during sentencing by considering certain charges filed against him which did not result in convictions and some charges in which he was not represented by counsel.
In general, “a trial judge in the federal judicial system ... has wide discretion in determining what sentence to impose” and “may appropriately conduct an inquiry broad in scope, largely unlimited either as to the kind of information he may consider, or the source from which it may come.”
United States v. Tucker,
No limitation shall be placed on the information concerning the background, character, and conduct of a person convicted of an offense which a court of the United States may receive and consider for the purpose of imposing an appropriate sentence.
We have on several occasions emphasized the breadth of information that a court may evaluate in sentencing.
See, e.g., United States v. Gooden,
Lucas relies upon
Tucker,
a ease which the Supreme Court remanded for resentencing because the district court had unknowingly based Tucker’s sentence, in part, upon an uncounseled conviction that had been obtained in violation of
Gideon v. Wainwright,
We are satisfied that in sentencing Lucas, the district court considered these earlier arrests and charges only for the limited purpose of evaluating Lucas’ claims of incompetence and his bizarre and disruptive behavior during sentencing, including his statements that he had no brain, but rather an electric monitor in his head and had been paroled for being a vegetable. 7 Hope Lane testified at trial that Lucas had told her that he was going to “play crazy” to beat the charges against him. (Tr. 251). The district court made clear that even though Lucas had not been convicted of some of the charges, it was appropriate to consider them to establish his background. The district judge found that Lucas had “played [his] game long enough in [the district] court,” stated that Lucas had not fooled that court as he fooled other courts, and found him to be competent and putting on an act. (Tr. 382).
The sentencing transcript reveals that the district court was fully aware of the details of Lucas’ record, carefully outlining the charges resulting in conviction, those in which he was found to be incompetent to stand trial, and several cases where charges had been filed and were pending at the time of sentencing, with indications that state authorities were awaiting the results of the federal sentencing.
*612 The district judge specifically stated that the sentences were based upon the evidence as he saw and observed it, plus the findings of guilt and Lucas’ record as a repeated armed robber, and that the sentence would be the same even if he took into account only Lucas’ two earlier armed robbery convictions.
While the consecutive sentences of twenty-five years are substantial, we cannot conclude that the district court abused its discretion in sentencing, particularly when it articulated the two earlier armed robbery convictions.
V.
Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Dean Whipple, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. The Honorable Calvin K. Hamilton, Chief United States Magistrate for the Western District of Missouri.
. The Honorable D. Brook Bartlett, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri, presided at the first trial.
. In
Kane,
an officer of the FDIC, rather than a bank officer, testified.
See
.Like the Fifth Circuit, "we have difficulty comprehending why the Government repeatedly fails to prove this element more carefully since the Government’s burden is so simple and straightforward.”
Maner,
. The magistrate found that the kitchen "was approximately five to six feet long and five to six feet wide” when measured from wall to wall. (Magistrate’s Report ¶ 5, at 5). Furthermore, the "walkway" between the appliances and cabinets was only “two and one-half to three feet wide.” Id.
. Prior to Lucas’ trial, the Honorable Russell G. Clark, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri, conducted a hearing and held that Lucas was competent to stand trial. Although Lucas repeatedly disrupted his sentencing proceedings, the district court stated that Lucas’ outbursts did not influence his sentence.
