Defendants, Fermín Vacallao-Alfonson and Lazaro Jorge-Salon, appeal their convictions for murder, attempted murder, and conspiracy to commit murder in connection with the killing of Eduardo Trizan-Montenegro and an assault upon Silvio Duquesne-Parodi in the United States Penitentiary in Atlanta, Georgia, where the defendants and the victims were in custody. 18 U.S. C.A. §§ 1111, 1113, and 1117. Following a jury trial, defendants were convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment.
On this appeal, defendants claim (1) violation of their Fifth and Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial, and violation of their Sixth Amendment right to effective *791 assistance of counsel; (2) insufficiency of the evidence; (3) deficiencies in the composition of the petit jury; (4) deficiencies in the selection of forepersons within the Northern District of Georgia; (5) erroneous refusal to instruct the jury that they could consider the Government’s failure to produce available evidence; (6) erroneous refusal to permit the jury to view parts of the Atlanta penitentiary; and (7) erroneous refusal to forbid the Government to refer at trial to the aliases of the defendants. We affirm. None of the points on appeal merits extended discussion, but we address them seriatim.
Defendants failed to show the preindictment delay resulted in substantial prejudice to their defense or represented a deliberate Government effort to gain a tactical advantage over them.
See United States v. Lovasco,
The argument that defendants’ rights to the effective assistance of counsel were violated due to the preindictment delay is raised for the first time on appeal. It is answered by the holding of the Supreme Court in
Kirby v. Illinois,
The contrary view of the Ninth Circuit in
United States v. Gouveia,
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Government,
Glasser v. United States,
There was no deficiency in the composition of the petit jury,
United States v. Tuttle,
It was not error for the judge to refuse to instruct specifically that reasonable doubt may arise from the absence of evidence, the so-called “missing witness” charge, since that charge is encompassed within the standard charge on reasonable doubt.
United States v. Tant,
The district court’s denial of defendants’ request for a jury view of the Atlanta penitentiary was within the sound discretion of the trial judge.
United States v. Bryant,
The district court’s refusal to forbid the Government to refer at trial to the aliases of the defendants was not plain error. Defendants neither renewed the pretrial motion to strike at the close of the evidence, nor reminded the court to give a cautionary instruction at the appropriate time, despite the court’s earlier request that they do so. The use of an alias in an indictment and in evidence is permissible if
*792
it is necessary to connect the defendants with the acts charged.
United States v. Taylor, a/k/a “Red”,
AFFIRMED.
