Joseph Daniel Baca appeals his convictions for possession of heroin with intent to distribute it, and for distribution of heroin, both violations of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a).
A security guard at a vocational school saw Baca, a part-time student there, in the school parking lot crouched down beside his *1359 car with another man and a woman. The guard approached closely and watched Baca furtively pour gray powder from a small bottle into a plastic bag. When Baca saw the security guard, he yelled “run” and dropped the bottle. The guard seized the woman, the bottle, and a $10 bill she had in hand. Later, the Albuquerque police arrested Baca. A chemical analyst for the Albuquerque Police Department tested the powder in the bottle and concluded it was heroin. The State of New Mexico brought charges against Baca, but dropped them six months later. After another six months, pursuant to an order of the state court, the Albuquerque police destroyed the heroin. Soon thereafter, Baca was indicted, tried, and convicted of the federal offenses from which he has taken this appeal.
On appeal Baca contends (1) his due process and Brady rights were violated because he was convicted without the powdery substance being introduced into evidence, and because he was not able to independently test the substance to determine whether it was heroin; 1 (2) he received ineffective assistance of counsel; (3) he was prejudiced by unreasonable delay occurring before he was indicted on federal charges; and (4) he was not mentally competent at the time of trial.
This Court previously has held that absent bad faith or fraudulent purpose on the part of the government, the destruction of evidence prior to trial does not necessitate reversal of a criminal conviction.
Chandler v. United States,
In the instant case evidence was destroyed not by federal authorities but by
*1360
state officers pursuant to an apparently routine order of the state district court. Baca attempts to show bad faith in that the federal charges were brought shortly after the state destroyed the powder — implying that the state found the substance was not heroin, and the federal authorities, aware of that fact, purposefully delayed prosecution until after the destruction. But nothing appears in the record to show collusion or even contact between state and federal authorities prior to the destruction of the powder. The state dropped its charges in part because of Baca’s heroin addiction and mental problems. Nothing appears in the record why the federal government delayed its prosecution, although it has a policy against duplicating state prosecutions arising out of the same factual circumstances.
See Petite v. United States,
Turning now to the significance of the loss of the evidence, the destroyed powder is important to this case because an essential element of the government’s burden of proof was to show that it was heroin. The ideal situation is to have the substance available for testing by the defendant. But the legal question is whether Baca was denied a fair trial because the powder was not available. See
United States v. Wilks,
The Albuquerque police department expert who analyzed the powder testified regarding five standard tests he utilized to identify the substance as heroin. Baca challenges the analyst’s credentials and the accuracy of the testing process; but these issues go to credibility and were for the jury to consider. The analyst had five years experience, had taken 36 semester hours of college level chemistry, and had tested heroin approximately 50 times. We do not find either the analyst or the testing procedures so lacking in credibility as to create such substantial doubt about the identity of the substance that we should reverse the conviction as a matter of law.
See State v. Chouinard,
Baca’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is tested by whether he received “the skill, judgment and diligence of a reasonably competent defense attorney.”
See Dyer
v.
Crisp,
Baca’s third claim is that he was impermissibly prejudiced by unreasonable delay between his arrest and his indictment on federal charges. Although thirteen months elapsed between Baca’s arrest and the federal indictment, half of this time was consumed by the state’s aborted prosecution. Baca’s claim of prejudice by the delay is insubstantial, and Baca has made no showing that the government deliberately delayed prosecution to its advantage.
See United States
v.
Marion,
Finally, Baca claims that at the time of trial he was mentally incompetent.
That issue was raised at trial, and the judge ordered Baca examined, first by a local psychiatrist and later for a thirty-day period by the staff of the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners. Based upon the medical testimony, the trial court found Baca to be competent, a conclusion we must accept unless it is clearly erroneous.
See Arnold v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The allegation is not properly founded on
Brady v. Maryland,
. We do not imply counsel had a duty to seek a test during the state prosecution, especially since he succeeded in having the state charges dismissed.
. This failure is alleged by counsel representing Baca on appeal as evidence of incompetent representation at trial. Appellant’s Br. 25. Defense counsel objected to the police analyst’s testimony on the basis of insufficient foundation as to chain of custody (R.IV, 99, 108), and asked for dismissal at the close of trial because the government failed to produce the heroin (R.V, 241). But Baca’s principal defense, rejected by the jury, was insanity.
