Michael Roby appeals his conviction on a nine-count indictment for interstate transportation, with fraudulent intent, of falsely made, forged, altered and counterfeited securities in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2314. He asserts that evidence as to the interstate transportation was insufficient to sustain his conviction, that the securities in question (Republic Money Orders) were not proven to be falsely made, forged and counterfeited, that the trial court erroneously admitted identification testimony against him and, finally, that the trial court failed to define the essential elements of the offense.
It was established at trial that Roby cashed money orders in Wichita, Kansas, which were presented for payment to the Republic National Bank of Dallas, Texas. A Republic Bank official testified that the money orders in question were among a shipment sent by his bank to Kansas City, Missouri, stolen at a Safeway Store there in 1970, and eventually returned “in normal banking channels” to Dallas, where the words “Payment- Stopped” were printed on them and a record made of their arrival. Roby’s complaint that this evidence failed to show “the elements of transportation” is without legal significance. It is well established that the “specific means” of interstate transportation need not be established, Pereira, et al. v. United States,
Roby next contends that a distinction must be made between a forged security and a forged endorsement on a security, and that insufficient proof was offered to show that the money orders in question were, in themselves, “falsely made, forged, and counterfeited,” as required by the statute. This premise is not without merit, since there is persuasive evidence that the portion of 18
U.S'.C. §
2314 which requires no jurisdictional amount, and forms the basis for the indictments in this case, was intended to reach the “multiplying” of forged securities “on a large scale,” not simply the forging of a signature on an already valid document.
1
Appropriately, therefore, this Court has held before, in a case involving a bogus cashier’s check, that “a false endorsement is not a criminal offense under § 2314.” Pauldino v. United States,
Under the facts of the present case, however, there is ample evidence for the jury to conclude that Roby violated the statute. Roby was identified as having stolen a “check protector” device used to fill in the store number and face amount of the nine money orders in question, is shown by Regiscope
4
photograph cashing most of them, and left latent fingerprints on six out of nine of them. The totality of the above is persuasive circumstantial evidence of sufficient preparation of the previously blank money orders so as to constitute “forgery” or the “false making” of them by Roby, not simply the forging of an endorsement on a security. Moreover, since the statute speaks in terms of “knowing [the securities] to have been falsely made, forged, altered, or counterfeited . . . ,” the jury could have properly concluded that “the appellant had a sufficient connection with the fraudulently completed money orders to be held to possess the necessary guilty knowledge.” McGee v. United States,
Fully recognizing the damning nature of the testimony by a grocery store employee identifying him as having stolen the check protector used to prepare the money orders in question, Roby next contends that the trial court *154 erred in not holding an in camera hearing to investigate the prearrest photographic “show up” in which the eyewitness first identified him. 5 The government did not submit the results of this “show up” at trial and the eyewitness testified that the basis of his identification was from the theft itself, not the photographs shown him by the F.B.I. nearly five months later.
Each case of this type must be decided on its own facts. Simmons v. United States,
The eyewitness here had sufficient time to observe the manner of the theft (which took place in the store where he was employed), described in detail the coat worn by the thief, pursued the thief, identified only Roby in a photographic show up of more than one photograph, and unequivocally identified Roby at trial, stating specifically that his testimony was based on observation at the time of the theft. There is no evidence that the thief was masked or that the grocery store in question was poorly illuminated. We are satisfied in light of these facts that the witness was able to form a definite image in his mind that would have been independent of an imprint from suggestive show up procedures. United States ex rel. Phipps v. Follette, supra;
see
United States v. Cooper,
Finally, Roby contends that he is entitled to a new trial since the instructions given the jury did not include definitions of the terms “forged and falsely made securities,” or “securities.” However, defense counsel did not object to the instructions, which adequately instructed the jury upon the essential elements of the crime, and we will not consider them here absent manifest injustice to the defendant.
See
Popeko v. United States,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
.
See
letter from Attorney General, May 5, 1939, as reproduced in Streett v. United States,
. Note that Pub.L. 90-535, 82 Stat. 885, added to § 2314 the paragraph stating:
“Whoever, with unlawful or fraudulent intent, transports in interstate or foreign commerce any
traveler’s check
bearing a forged countersignature . . . . ” (emphasis supplied). Nonetheless, the
Pauldino
principle, consistent with the rule that criminal statutes should be strictly construed, has still been applied to securities other than traveler’s checks since the 1968 amendment. United States v. Boone,
. Other courts have held that insertion of the name of a fictitious payee may turn a genuine money order into one which is “falsely made” and therefore under the purview of 18 U.S.O. § 2314. Gearing v. United States,
. The Regiscope is a camera used in commercial establishments to photograph customers and commercial paper for later identification.
. This issue was not raised at trial and we are reluctant to consider it here. However, it is clear that defendant’s “substantial rights” could have been affected and we are compelled to consider the matter. Haskins v. United States,
