517 F.2d 506 | 4th Cir. | 1975
Lead Opinion
We find no error in the trial and conviction of these defendants.
The showing of photographs taken during the course of the bank robbery to witnesses prior to their selecting pho
We also conclude that the first set of photographs was properly admitted into evidence, as was testimony of the F.B.I. agent who conducted the photographic lineup that he observed one witness identify one defendant in the photographic lineup even though the witness could not' identify him in court.
Affirmed.
The witness did testify, however, that she had identified two persons at a photographic lineup, the identity of whom she did not remember.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring):
I concur in the results in these cases and, in large part, in the opinion, but I do not agree that the hearsay testimony of one witness that another witness had, out of court, previously identified a photograph of one of the defendants is admissible. In this case, I do not believe admitting the testimony was reversible, especially in view of the unusually good photographs of the defendant taken during the actual commission of the robbery. The weight, of this on the spot photographic identification evidence was so overwhelming as to leave no doubt as to identity, and a jury verdict should not be disturbed. Had the identification of one of the defendants mentioned been based wholly, or even substantially, on the hearsay testimony of the officer, I would have voted to reverse in that case. The hearsay rule has not been abandoned. See Federal Rules of Evidence, P.L. 93 — 595, January 2, 1975.
This case is a perfect example of the justification of the statement of Chief Justice Marshall in Queen v. Hepburn, 7 Cranch 290, 3 L.Ed. 348 (1813), that hearsay evidence is, in its own nature, inadmissible.
In our case, the identifying witness, at the trial, identified one of the defendants but could not identify the other. Indeed, as a second defendant, the nearest she came to identification was that of a spectator, one Emmet Hamilton, although the second defendant was in the courtroom. Then, when asked what she did in making the photographic identification, she said: “Well, I looked through the photographs and I picked out a picture, and I said this, I believe, is the man that was in the robbery.” (Italics added)
When the FBI agent took the stand, his testimony was that she “selected” the two exhibits. This selection of the two exhibits has been construed in the opinion of the court that “he observed one witness identify one defendant in the photographic lineup.”
Thus, allowing the testimony of the FBI agent that the witness “selected” a photograph of the defendant, when the FBI agent’s testimony depends on the statement of the witness, is admitting into evidence a conclusion based on an out of court statement, even less reliable than the statement of the witness because a step further removed, and equally objectionable under the hearsay rule. For a good discussion, see Wharton’s Criminal Evidence, 13th Ed. (1972), Torcía, §§ 186, 187.
On the whole record, however, I think admitting the hearsay was harmless error. F.R.Cr.P. 52(a).