Larry Woodrow Harris was convicted after a jury trial of bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a). The district court sentenced him to 210 months’ incarceration and three years’ supervised release, and also ordered him to pay $2,180 in restitution. On appeal Harris argues that his conviction was tainted by a dubious line-up identification and two erroneous evidentiary rulings. We affirm.
*669 I. Background
On the morning of September 1, 1999, a man walked into an M & I Bank branch in Milwaukee and approached a teller named Talesha Wallace. The man handed Wallace a note stating that he had a gun and wanted money. After Wallace read the note, the man told her “now.” Wallace handed over the money, and the man instructed her not to do anything until he left. The man exited the bank, money and note in hand.
Police arrived soon after the robbery. Wallace described the robber as African-American, in his mid-50s, heavy-set, dark complected, with black and gray hair, and wearing a dark T-shirt with a logo on the front and dark blue trousers. The following day police showed Wallace photographs of four individuals, and she tentatively selected Harris as the perpetrator.
That same day an anonymous person told investigators that he had worked with Harris and that Harris had bragged about committing various robberies. The informant also told investigators that Harris had tried to recruit him days earlier to assist in a bank robbery. He then identified Harris as the man pictured in the bank’s surveillance footage.
Acting on this tip, police interviewed Louis Graber, the office manager at Instant Labor Temporary Help Agency, Harris’s employer. Graber identified Harris as the man in the surveillance photograph. Six months later Wallace was asked to view a five-person line-up, and she again identified Harris as the perpetrator.
Before trial Harris moved to suppress Wallace’s line-up identification, arguing that it was unduly suggestive because the police had showed Harris’s picture to Wallace a day after the robbery. After a hearing the district court denied the motion upon the recommendation of the presiding magistrate judge.
Harris then filed a motion in limine to exclude testimony regarding the anonymous tip on the grounds that it would be overly prejudicial and irrelevant, and would constitute inadmissible propensity evidence. The district court granted the motion in part, permitting the government only to present evidence that the police had information that Harris worked at Instant Labor.
At trial Harris called as a witness Ralph Spano, one of the detectives present at the line-up identification. After defense counsel asked Spano about witnesses who viewed the line-up other than Wallace, the government objected on the ground of hearsay. At a side-bar conference, defense counsel told the court that she intended to ask Spano if there were any witnesses at the line-up who did not identify Harris as the robber. The court sustained the government’s objection.
II. Discussion
On appeal Harris contends that the district court erred by (1) allowing Wallace’s line-up identification to be admitted into evidence because it was unduly suggestive, (2) allowing the government to refer to the anonymous tip, and (3) preventing him from eliciting testimony from a detective that two witnesses could not identify him as the robber.
A. Line-up Identification
The standard of review for decisions refusing to suppress an identification has been described both as clear error,
see United States v. Galati,
Consistent with
Ornelas,
we conclude that the latter standard of review is appropriate — a district court’s decision to admit or suppress a line-up identification should be subject to de novo review with due deference to the court’s findings of historical fact. This standard conforms to that followed in our sister circuits.
See, e.g., United States v. Bowman,
In this case the district court properly admitted the line-up identification. We conduct a two-step test in evaluating a challenge to the admissibility of a lineup identification. Harris must first establish that the line-up was unduly suggestive.
See Downs,
B. Anonymous Tip
Harris also contends that the district court erred by admitting testimony regarding the anonymous tip, a decision we review for abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Hunt,
COUNSEL: Did you have occasion to meet with a person by the name of Louis Graber on September 2, 1999?
DETECTIVE BEYER: Yes, I did. COUNSEL: And very briefly, why was that?
DETECTIVE BEYER: I had information that the suspect in this robbery may work at Instant Labor, with the office being in the 2200 block of South Muske-go.
(Tr. at 78-79.)
Harris argues that this evidence is irrelevant and unfairly prejudicial. Evidence is relevant if it has “any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” Fed. R.Evid. 401;
United States v. Rhodes,
Harris’s challenge under Federal Rule of Evidence 403, which provides that relevant evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice,
see United States v. Bogan,
C. Failed Identifications
Harris also argues that the district court erred by precluding him from eliciting testimony at trial that two witnesses were unable to identify him at the line-up as the robber. The court sustained the government’s objection that such evidence constituted inadmissible hearsay, a determination we review for abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Green,
Affirmed.
