This appeal arises out of convictions for the theft of a tractor-trailer containing a shipment of 49 head of hung beef valued on July 20, 1972, the time of the theft, at $22,000. The convictions were on a substantive count of stealing, with intent to convert to appellants’ own use (18 U.S.C. § 659), the tractor-trailer, which was traveling in interstate commerce from Dakota City, Nebraska, to *1129 the Jamaica Wholesalers in Jamaica, Queens. Appellant Kaylor was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of ten years and appellant Hopkins to one of seven years.
Appellant Kaylor claims that the trial court’s conduct deprived him of a fair trial, that there was not competent evidence before the grand jury identifying him so as to support an indictment, that the trial court erred in not suppressing the testimony of two witnesses who refused to identify him in court and that the trial court improperly received in evidence certain admissions by appellant. Appellant Hopkins argues that an in-court identification of him by the driver of the tractor-trailer was tainted by the fact that it had occurred after the witness had testified and when he was recalled after having seen appellant at the counsel table, and that the court erred in refusing to sentence appellant pursuant to the Youth Corrections Act and in refusing to consider possible recommendations of the sentencing panel which is operative in the Eastern District of New York.
Carl Wolverton, an over-the-road tractor-trailer driver, was the lucky fellow who arrived in Jamaica with the 49 beef carcasses all the way from Dakota City, Nebraska. He parked his truck, and at about 11 o’clock that night went for a few minutes to get a sandwich. When he returned to the truck, as he was about to “pick a little” at his guitar and lock the door to the cab, someone opened it, pointed a gun at his head and told him to get in the bunk at the back of the cab. One man held a gun in his ear and a second tied his arms and legs with rope and subsequently put white tape over his eyes and over the top of the rope. One of them roughed him up by hitting him “a few good clips” with the gun on his head, and after being driven around for a couple of hours and stripped to his underwear, Wolverton was thrown out of the cab of his tractor like a “sack of taters” into a Dodge van, and then hit, kicked and urinated upon. He was abandoned in the van and worked himself free during the following morning.
The Dodge van had been stolen in Brooklyn the morning of the hijacking, and when found, the inside,of the left front door bore the fingerprints of the appellant Hopkins. About 7:00 a.m. an alert New York City detective, John Flynn, saw a tractor-trailer at Hegeman and Logan Streets in Brooklyn and began to follow it, his suspicions aroused. He stopped it and asked for and received identification from the driver, but still was suspicious, so he followed the truck to a meat market. There five men in butcher’s jackets were directing the vehicle into an alleyway. At this point Flynn called for assistance and proceeded toward the vehicle when the two people in the tractor-trailer broke and ran. Sure enough, the tractor-trailer turned out to be Wolverton’s with the Dakota City load of beef. At trial Flynn identified appellant Hopkins as the helper he had observed in the truck. The other individual, the driver of the truck, has, however, never been apprehended.
The proprietors of the meat market to which the truck was being delivered were Charles Simonian and Nicholas Stolfi. While the tractor-trailer was approaching the entrance of the meat market, Simonian was standing at the back with an individual he knew as “Shorty,” which also happens to be a nickname for appellant Kaylor. This individual was black and described by Simonian as about 5' 5" to 5' 8" with a stocky build and short cropped hair, 30 to 35 years old, and having no beard or moustache. “Shorty” had been around before to see if these butchers wanted to buy some meat. On that very morning “Shorty” had telephoned Simonian and told him that he had some meat for him, and the two had met in a luncheonette a few doors down the street and gone to the meat market when Simonian opened it. Simonian did not want the whole trailer load of meat because it was “too much.”
Before the grand jury both Simonian and his partner, Stolfi, identified a pic *1130 ture of James Kaylor as the man they knew as “Shorty” when they were shown a spread of photographs. This picture of Kaylor, like their description of “Shorty,” was of a man without a moustache or a beard. At the time of trial, however, while both of the butchers thought James Kaylor “looked like” or “resembled” “Shorty,” they stated that Kaylor was not “Shorty.” At the time of trial Kaylor had grown a moustache and beard, had longer hair and puffier cheeks and was somewhat heavier than the “Shorty” that he “looked like” or “resembled.”
On December 15, 1972, after a special FBI agent had warned Kaylor of his constitutional rights, Kaylor told him that “If I get uptight enough about this case I can tell you about it,” and that “I know about those two guys in the meat market and they should never have paid the police the $500.”
At the trial, the tractor-trailer driver, Wolverton, appeared but during his original testimony was not asked whether he could identify either of the two defendants. When he left the stand, however, he went back to the witness room and told Detective Flynn that he could identify the hijackers. Before permitting him to testify, the court held a hearing on suggestiveness out of the presence of the jury and found that no impropriety or suggestiveness had occurred. The witness was permitted to retake the stand in the presence of the jury and he then identified the two defendants as the hijackers.
We have examined the record with some care in the light of United States v. Friedgoog, 69 Crim. 102 (E.D. N.Y., Dec. 1, 1972) (Rosling, J.), remanded, No. 73-1122 (2d Cir., Apr. 25, 1973) (mem.) and United States v. Nazzaro,
*1131
Suffice it to say that the evidence of Simonian and Stolfi identifying Kaylor as “Shorty” from photographs was sufficient to warrant Kaylor’s indictment in light of the testimony before the grand jury that “Shorty” had offered to sell the meat in the hijacked trailer. This evidence indicated a “reasonable probability” that the crime of hijacking had been committed by Kaylor, and that is enough to warrant an indictment.
See
Carrado v. United States,
The trial court properly allowed the testimony of Simonian and Stolfi at trial. The fact that they refused to make an identification then did not take away from their prior photographic identification. Simonian had selected Kaylor’s photograph from a book of some 100-150 photos the very day he had seen “Shorty.” Subsequently two photos (including the one previously selected) were included in a spread of nine from which both Simonian and Stolfi selected one, a front and side photo. There is no indication that there was impermissible suggestiveness despite the presence of two photos in the spread since the appearance of the photographed individual was apparently sufficiently different as to cause each of the two witnesses to select only the one photo.
Cf.
United States ex rel. Johnson v. Department of Correction,
Appellant Kaylor complains that the court should not have admitted his statements to the FBI Special Agent made after Miranda warnings but in the absence of the attorney requested by Kaylor. But the statements or admissions were volunteered—one that “If I get uptight enough I can tell all about this case” and the other “I know about those two guys in the meat market and they should never have paid the police the $500.” The first was made before Kaylor asked for an attorney and the second was volunteered after the Special Agent had concluded his background information interview. As such, neither Massiah v. United States,
Appellant Hopkins complains that the court permitted the trucker, Wolverton, to return to the stand and make an identification which he had not made in the first instance; the objection is based upon the suggestiveness of the situation since—had the defendant known there was going to be identification testimony—he would have moved (and the court stated that it would have granted such a motion) to have the defendant seated away from the counsel table. As it was, the identification of Hopkins amounted to a “show-up,” but a “show-up” is not per se inadmissible or violative of due process, depending rather upon the totality of the circumstances, Neil v. Biggers,
We emphasize, in holding that there was not reversible error here, that there is not the slightest suggestion that the prosecution was in any way attempting to bring the confrontation about in the fashion that it occurred.
Appellant Hopkins seeks to have his conviction remanded for resentencing however, because the trial court made no affirmative
explicit
finding that appellant would “not derive benefit from treatment” under the Youth Corrections Act, 18 U.S.C. § 5010(d). This issue, unresolved in this circuit,
see
United States v. Guzman,
My brethren go with Cox and Jarratt essentially in holding that an implicit finding is all that is required. They view—quite properly I think—that this record contains such an implicit finding in Judge Rosling’s stating before verdict that he “always take[s]” youth offender eligibility “into consideration when sentence is to be imposed” and in the sentencing minutes in the course of which appellant Hopkins’ counsel referred to the Youth Corrections Act and the court said, “In imposing sentence, which is not a light one, I have taken into account the fact that you were quite young at the time you committed the crime.”
I disagree with this view and would as did the District of Columbia Circuit in
Coefield,
require an
explicit
finding.
See
The majority necessarily is of the view that there was no error in the trial court’s failure to consult with the sentencing panel in the Eastern District on the basis that the function of the non-sentencing judges on the panel is purely advisory, however helpful it might be. United States v. Brown,
Judgments affirmed; OAKES, J., dissents from the affirmance as to appellant Hopkins and would reverse and remand for resentencing.
