Early on the morning of February 23, 1968 the appellants, Borman and King, accompanied by one William Johnson, broke into the Eastern National Bank in Hauppauge, Long Island. After the manager, the first employee of the bank to arrive, entered the bank he was forced to turn off the alarm and open the safes. The robbers than taped his mouth and handcuffed him. When five female employees arrived, they were herded into the men’s room and sprayed with an eye irritant. The appellants and Johnson took $83,210 in cash and checks and escaped.
Indictments were returned and the accused were apprehended and arrested on February 27, 1969, but were unable to post bail. Several pre-trial motions were made by the accused during March; then on May 29th, they moved for a speedy trial and Judge Mishler assigned the case for trial on June 5 to follow the case of United States v. Mc-Nulty. Johnson had agreed to testify for the Government in both United States v. McNulty and in the cases of Borman and King. The McNulty trial was reassigned to June 16th and then to June 30, 1969. At the completion of that trial the appellants’ case went forward on August 4, 1969. Meanwhile, they had filed motions for failure to prosecute and for reduction of bail, both of which were denied.
The appellants raise three points on appeal: denial of the Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial; error in the court’s submitting to the jury forms for verdicts which, in effect, contained a summary of charges; and in accepting verdicts based on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice who had pleaded guilty but remained unsentenced. The last two points can be summarily disposed of. The forms for the verdicts were similar to those used in United States v. Gallishaw,
The principal point argued, concerned the violation of the accused’s rights to speedy trial. The controlling decision of this court against which this claimed error must be tested is United States ex rel. Solomon v. Mancusi,
The judgments of the district court are affirmed.
Notes
. On January 5, 1971, the Council for the Second Circuit, in the exercise of its supervisory power over the administration of criminal justice, promulgated standards in regard to prompt disposition of criminal cases in this Circuit. These standards do not become effective until July 5, 1971.
