Defendant John Michael McCambridge filed two appeals after his conviction in the district court of attempted robbery of a federally insured savings and loan association in Peabody, Massachusetts, a violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2113(a) and 2.
I. The First Appeal
Under the first appeal McCambridge alleges error in the denial of his pretrial motion to suppress evidence seized from his car upon his arrest several weeks after the robbery attempt; in the purportedly imprecise jury instructions given; and in the denial of his motions for acquittal. Further claims of error are made with respect to the court’s refusal to declare a mistrial when Venere, a codefendant, pleaded guilty, and its failure to grant a motion to exclude jurors who might have overhead defense counsel state that he was visiting McCambridge at Walpole prison. McCambridge complains additionally that the trial was “unfair” because the Government advanced only in closing argument the theory that he could have been an aider and abettor.
Before discussing these contentions, we shall summarize the Government’s case against McCambridge. There was evidence that on March 18,1975, at approximately 10 a. m., a masked man entered the Boston Federal Savings and Loan Association in Peabody, Massachusetts, and announced a holdup. This caused a teller to panic, and she ran out the front door followed by the holdup man. A car was parked out front and, as the teller ran from the bank, a second masked individual got out of the passenger side and fired a shot at the teller which missed her. The car, driven by a third person, took off after both masked men jumped in. The getaway car, a Dodge *868 Polara with New Hampshire plates KL35, was recovered very shortly thereafter in a nearby parking lot with its motor running.
No witness identified McCambridge as having been at the scene, but his fingerprints were found on the outside rear view mirror of the getaway car and on one of two vodka bottles found on the floor of the car. There was evidence that the car had been stolen the day before between 8 a. m. and 10 a. m. and its license plates replaced with the New Hampshire plates. It was also shown that, about a week before the attempted robbery, McCambridge using the alias John O’Donnell, bought a used Plymouth in New Hampshire, registered it there, receiving the New Hampshire plates which were later to be found on the getaway car. The night before the attempted robbery, less than 12 hours prior, he checked into a Boston hotel at 10:49 p. m., again using his alias, and indicating on his registration card that he was driving a Plymouth with New Hampshire license plates KL35.
It was established that McCambridge acquired a birth certificate in his assumed name two days after the robbery attempt and that on the following day he flew across the country to the State of Washington taking with him a suitcase and some papers that had been in the Dodge Polara getaway car when it was stolen the day before the attempted robbery. These items were the subject of the motion to suppress to which we now turn.
a. The Motion to Suppress
McCambridge moved to suppress the suitcase and various items taken from him when he was arrested in the State of Washington after the robbery. At the pretrial hearing on his motion the following appeared: At approximately 3:30 p. m. on April 5, 1975, (about three weeks after the attempted holdup in Peabody, Massachusetts) Washington State Deputy Sheriff Miller observed in that State a car driven by McCambridge traveling at 50 mph in a 55 mph zone following ten-to-twenty feet behind another vehicle. “Following too closely” is a misdemeanor under Washington law, see Wash.Rev.Code §§ 46.61.-145, 46.61.010, and the sheriff had just stopped another vehicle for that offense when he observed McCambridge. Testifying at the suppression hearing, Sheriff Miller stated that normally he would issue a citation to a driver whom he stopped for following too closely, but that occasionally he might exercise his discretion and arrest the driver. The sheriff explained why he would arrest a driver for the traffic violation:
“There could be outstanding arrest warrants on these people. They could have a temporary driver’s license, did not have a picture, did not show good identification. It could be in relation to a drunk driving charge, it could be many things. . Some of them I didn’t feel that by letting them sign the citation we would ever see them again. Some of them have been out of state. The policy is that we take them in and make them post. Numerous different reasons.”
Upon observing the station wagon McCambridge was driving violating the law by “following too closely”, Sheriff Miller “paced the vehicle to ascertain the speed.” After determining that the car was travel-ling below the speed limit, the Sheriff attempted to stop it, first by activating his rotating overhead light over a quarter-mile distance. It was broad daylight and the driver gave no indication at that time that he had noticed the police ear. Miller next sounded his siren, at which point the driver “first looked over his shoulder, looking behind towards my patrol vehicle. Then he started to bend forward during this period of time, as if he was hiding something or pushing something down in the front part of his vehicle.” This made the Sheriff suspicious. While the driver was making these gestures “[t]he vehicle was swerving onto the shoulder of the highway.” Finally, Miller ordered the driver to stop through a loud-speaker and the driver complied. The distance traveled from the beginning of the pacing of the vehicle to the actual stop was “approximately a mile or two miles, total distance.” At no time did the car accelerate.
*869 McCambridge was asked for his driver’s license and the car registration, both taken from an envelope which McCambridge got from the glove compartment then left on the front seat. The license was a temporary one which had expired, and on which, it turned out, the birth date had been altered. The name on the license, Edward Robbins, matched the name on the automobile registration. Miller asked for no additional personal identification.
Observing that McCambridge “had an odor of intoxicants about his person” and that there was a 90 percent empty half gallon of wine on the floorboards, Miller asked McCambridge to get out of the car for a sobriety test. A “finger and nose test” and a “balance test” as well as observation of McCambridge’s gait, convinced Miller that McCambridge was in a satisfactory condition to drive.
Next, Miller asked McCambridge if he could look into the car. McCambridge said no and after some further discussion told Miller to get a search warrant. At that point, Miller became even more suspicious and advised McCambridge that he was under arrest. Miller testified that the charges were following too closely, expired operator’s license, and failure to yield right of way for an emergency vehicle. 1 A pat-down search disclosed a box of shotgun shells but no weapons. McCambridge was handcuffed and placed in the rear of the police car.
Returning to the car McCambridge had been driving, Miller approached from the passenger side “[t]o obtain positive identification of the vehicle pursuant to impounding.” At this point, he testified that he saw an inch or two of the end of the barrel of a sawed-off shotgun which was wrapped in a coat, partly under the front seat. Miller removed the weapon then went to the other side of the ear to check for the vehicle identification number (VIN) which he found was gone. Under Washington law, a vehicle with a missing VIN:
“shall be impounded and held by the seizing law enforcement agency until the original number or marks are restored, or it is determined that the motor vehicle . was reported as stolen and it is returned to the rightful owner as provided in this subsection.”
Wash.Rev.Code § 9.54.030(2). Miller removed everything in the vehicle that was in plain sight and that appeared to belong to McCambridge, including the envelope on the front seat, clothing, several sacks of food and- a black suitcase. Miller looked through the envelope but did not search the suitcase at that time. All of the items were placed in the police car to be taken to the station.
The sheriff filled out an impound sheet on the car and after a wrecker towed it away to a security bunker, he took McCambridge to the courthouse for booking, then returned to the police station with the items removed from the car. There the contents of the suitcase were inventoried. A search warrant was obtained at a later time for a thorough search of the automobile. The contents of the suitcase, the suitcase itself, and papers from the envelope were ultimately introduced at trial.
After the hearing on the motion to suppress during which Deputy Sheriff Miller as well as the defendant testified, the district court on January 23,1976, made the following ruling and findings on the motion to suppress:
“This motion is allowed with respect to the contents of the suitcase found in the defendant’s vehicle and is otherwise denied. I find the arrest to have been for the purpose of justifying a search, but that there was probable cause for searching the vehicle independent of the purported arrest. Memorandum to follow.”
The court never issued a memorandum but on January 26, 1976, altered its original order as follows:
“After rehearing, and after review of the Court Reporter’s notes, I find as a fact *870 that the ‘inventory search’ of defendant’s suitcase was in connection with the valid impoundment of the vehicle rather than the invalid arrest of the defendant. Accordingly, I rescind the order of 1-23-76 and deny the motion in its entirety.”
On appeal, the Government argues that the arrest was valid and that the search was for probable cause. We agree that the arrest was valid. Why the district court referred to the arrest itself as “invalid” is not clear. Presumably it had in mind its earlier finding that the arrest-was for “the purpose of justifying a search”. But while we do not say that there could never be an egregious situation where an arrest on purely colorable grounds might be held invalid as “pretextual”,
cf. Taglavore
v.
United States,
Having arrested the driver, the sheriff was entitled to enter and secure the vehicle which, left by itself on the highway, would be subject to vandalism and might threaten “public safety and convenience.”
See South Dakota
v.
Opperman,
We affirm the denial of the motion to suppress.
b. Fairness of the Trial
McCambridge asserts that the trial was unfair because the aiding and abetting theory was introduced only in final argument. He also claims that the indictment charged only the substantive offense. However, the indictment cited 18 U.S.C. § 2. It is well settled that even though a defendant is indicted solely for commission of a substantive offense, he may be convicted as an aider and abettor even if not designated as such in the indictment.
E. g., United States v. Pellegrino,
c. Sufficiency of the Evidence
There was ample evidence from which a jury could find that McCambridge aided and abetted in the commission of the attempted robbery. Viewed in the light most favorable to the Government, see
United States v. Doran,
The motions for acquittal and for a new trial based on the insufficiency of the evidence were properly denied.
d. The Jury Instructions
Defendant claims that the instructions to the jury were impermissibly imprecise, especially on the element of specific intent.
See United States v. Garguilo,
The lack of an objection under Fed.R.Crim.P. 51 is fatal to these contentions. ■ The instructions were legally correct and substantially in accordance with those requested by both sides; and while they might have been improved or clarified in some particulars, there was no “plain error” such as would justify reversal in the absence of objection. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b).
e. Failure to Exclude Jurors
McCambridge argues that the court erred in failing to grant a pre-trial written motion to exclude from sitting “potential jurors” who were present in the courtroom the previous day (January 12, 1976). In an attached affidavit, defense counsel stated that on that day he had said to the judge, when discussing trial date, “When I visited my client at Walpole he suggested . .” before being informed by government counsel that there were present jurors who might be sitting on the defendant’s case. This motion was never acted on, and it is significant that the same experienced and vigorous counsel who made the motion and affidavit concerning the January 12 incident did not refer to the matter in the jury voir dire questions which he proposed on January 23 nor is there any indication that he objected to the seating of any juror or pressed the motion in any respect. The trial commenced January 26. With nothing to indicate that at anyone who had been present on January 12 was a juror in McCambridge’s trial or, indeed, that potential jurors had actually been present or overheard or understood the attorney’s remark, we do not accept the mere existence in the case file of the unacted-upon motion as indicative of any error. It seems only reasonable to assume that the concerns which led counsel to file the motion were dissipated in light of later events, and that the motion was abandoned.
f. Codefendant’s Guilty Plea
After the second day of trial, the codefendant, Venere, pleaded guilty out of the presence of the jury. The court subsequently instructed the jury that they were not to speculate about the reduction in the number of defendants in the case and to go forward considering the case of McCambridge as though he had always been the only defendant. As the record disclosed no. motion for a mistrial, McCambridge apparently claims on appeal that a mistrial should have been granted,
sua sponte.
He relies on
Rogers v. United States,
II. The Second Appeal
When McCambridge’s case came on for disposition, he was allowed to make a statement in allocution. During this lengthy statement, he mentioned that he had wanted to take the witness stand at trial but that his lawyer had advised him not to because his criminal record would have almost certainly been used against him. The court, which had not been asked during the trial to rule on the admissibility of the defendant’s record, indicated in response to this revelation that it might grant defendant a new trial. The Government objected that a motion for a new trial would be untimely and that, in any event, a hearing should be held on the question. The court then set a date for a hearing on any motion for a new trial that the defendant might wish to file. At that hearing, the court denied defendant’s motion for want of jurisdiction because it was not based on “newly discovered evidence” as required when such a motion is not filed within seven days of the verdict. Fed.R.Crim.P. 33. A fif *873 teen year sentence was imposed and the defendant filed the appeal discussed in Part I above.
After the initial appeal to this court was on file, McCambridge moved again in the district court for a new trial, contending that alleged incompetence of counsel in discouraging McCambridge from taking the stand constituted “newly discovered evidence”. Although the Government argued that incompetence of counsel could be raised only by way of a motion pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, the court decided to hear any evidence defendant wished to present on the issue of incompetent counsel. Defendant, now proceeding pro se, but with his former counsel present and apparently endeavoring to be helpful, called two witnesses who testified to the effect that McCambridge himself made the decision not to testify because of his concern that his prior record would be used against him. McCambridge then called his trial counsel, Mr. Zalkind, as a witness and questioned him about conversations that the two of them had had on the subject of the use of prior convictions to impeach if McCambridge should take the stand. McCambridge objected, however, to the Government’s later effort to cross-examine Zalkind about his entire advice to McCambridge concerning taking the stand. The court ruled that the whole conversation as it had bearing on the defendant’s decision not to testify would come in unless the defendant withdrew his motion. After some further discussion, McCambridge withdrew his motion. An appeal to this court alleging that he was coerced into withdrawing the motion was denied for want of jurisdiction. McCambridge then requested the district court to reopen his motion for a new trial which was treated by the court as a niotion for rehearing and denied on June 9, 1976. It is from that denial that McCambridge notfr appeals.
The District of Columbia Circuit has held in recent cases that alleged ineffectiveness of counsel resulting in-dereliction of constitutional dimension may constitute “newly discovered evidence” for the purpose of a Rule 33 motion for a new trial.
See United States v. Tindle,
Assuming arguendo that this may be so, the district .court was nonetheless correct in terminating the new trial hearing in light of McCambridge’s refusal to accept its ruling that Zalkind had to testify concerning his entire advice on taking the stand. After preliminary questioning, McCambridge asked Zalkind,
“On that subject, Mr. Zalkind, on the subject of the use of my prior convictions, on the subject of my prior convictions being placed in evidence by the attorney for the government for impeachment purposes, if I took the witness stand, would you tell the court now what you told me on that subject?”
By asking Zalkind about a privileged communication, McCambridge waived his privilege “as to all consultations relating to the same subject.” McCormick on Evidence § 93 at 195 (2d ed. 1972). McCambridge would like to narrow the waiver to advice on the use of prior convictions, and keep out other reasons that were discussed concerning whether or not it was advisable for him to testify. But the subject cannot be so finely circumscribed. The court ruled that the whole conversation would come in “insofar as it has anything to do with your taking the stand”. This was only reasonable in order for the court to assess the role of the prior conviction advice in McCambridge’s decision not to testify. Without inquiring into all facts, 3 the court could not *874 assess the overall soundness of Zalkind’s counsel, nor the impact of any part of it on McCambridge’s decision to remain silent. In addition, the court could not determine whether an acquittal would likely have resulted had McCambridge testified, a question relevant when passing upon a new trial motion. The Government’s last question was,
“Now you did discuss with him, prior to his or about the same time that he told you he was reserving his decision, did you discuss with him the reasons [objection] why he should or should not take the stand?”
The question, which was never answered because McCambridge withdrew his motion when the judge overruled his objection, was within the waiver of the privilege and was relevant.
The court could have pressed for an answer but was entitled to allow McCambridge to withdraw the motion and discontinue the hearing in light of his unreadiness to accept a correct ruling that was adverse to him. The denial of the motion for a rehearing is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. McCambridge testified at the hearing that the sheriff did not notice the expired license until he arrested McCambridge and took him to the station house. The court made no finding as to whose version it accepted.
. It is hard to see on what basis McCambridge has standing to challenge the search of the suitcase since, having been in wrongful possession, he can claim no ownership interest or other right to it.
Cf. Jones v. United States,
. McCambridge intimates on appeal that had he testified he would have explained to the jury that he had assumed the name “O’Donnell”, his mother’s maiden name, as an escaped convict to establish a new identity. This testimony, he argues, would have explained away certain incriminating circumstantial evidence. But it also would seemingly have disclosed a criminal background apart from the introduction of pri- or convictions for impeachment. Obviously *874 the substantiality of his claim to have been prejudicially misled by counsel could only have been answered if counsel’s complete advice and all other relevant considerations were placed before the court.
