Raymond Louis Matlock was convicted by a jury in the Eastern District of Arkansas on four counts of mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, namely making false statements in applications for credit cards and failing to pay for purchases made with the cards. On appeal he urges that he wаs denied a speedy trial; that the search of his briefcase was illegal and the evidence resulting therefrom should have been suppressed; and that testimony concerning other crimes and wrongdoing should not have been permitted.
Speedy Trial.
At the time of Matloсk’s indictment in Arkansas, December 7,1976, he was serving an eight-year sentence following pleas of guilty to charges in the District of Kansas of interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle and interstate transportation of firearms by a felon, and а District of Oklahoma charge of sale and disposition of a stolen motor vehicle. His speedy trial and illegal search claims are based on his arrest on August 28, 1975 in Kansas, which preceded his pleas of guilty to the above charges.
On the advice оf his attorney, Matlock cooperated with the FBI after his arrest in the hope that all pending and potential charges against him could be consolidated for sentencing purposes. He disclosed his use of various identities and the fact that he hаd applied for credit cards under these various names. He gave handwriting exemplars to a postal inspector, who allegedly told him that any potential “postal charges” would probably be dropped in light of the Kansas prosecution. Mаtlock stated that he understood that if he pleaded guilty to the Kansas and Oklahoma charges, any subsequent federal charges would be included in the sentencing in the District of Kansas pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 20.
Matlock’s attorney did make some inquiry about having any chargеs from the District of Arkansas handled simultaneously in Kansas under Fed.R.Crim.P. 20, and stated in an affidavit that he was led to believe, following discussions with a postal inspector and an Assistant United States Attorney, that “there would be no further federal prosecution of the defendant in the District of Arkansas or any other place, and if there was to be any further prosecution, I was to be notified so as to Rule 20 those cases in the District of Kansas.” The postal inspector denied any such agreement.
The United States Attorney for thе District of Arkansas did not authorize the mail fraud case against Matlock until June 4, 1976, and stated that verification of handwriting and gathering records delayed the indictment. The handwriting report was received by the United States Attorney’s office on November 5, 1976, and an indictmеnt followed on December 7, 1976. Trial commenced January 24, 1977. The indictment charged Matlock with mail fraud during the period from August 1,1972 through August 28, 1975, the day of his arrest in Kansas, and alleges that he mailed the credit card applications on dates between August 1, 1972 and March 9, 1973.
The sixth amendment right to a speedy trial attaches where there is “either a formal indictment or information or else the actual restraints imposed by arrest and holding to answer a criminal charge.”
United States v. Marion,
In
United States v. Marion, supra
Investigative delay is fundamentally unlike delay undertaken by the government to gain tactical advantage ovеr the defendant, and due process does not require a dismissal for pre-indictment investigative delay.
United States v.
Lovasco, - U.S. -,
Moreover, appellant does not allege and did not prove any prejudice to his ability to defend himself at trial. His only allegation of prejudice is that he lost the opportunity to have one sentence imposed in the District of Kansas or to have his sentence run concurrently with another. But we are aware of no constitutional right on the part of a defendant to have all his offenses considered in a single district at time of sentence on a particular conviction. 2 Appellant did have an opportunity at time of sentence in Arkansas to request that his sentence be made to run concurrently with the one he was serving at time of trial. 3
We find no merit in the claim of unconstitutional delay.
Search of the Briefcase.
On August 28,1975, after ten o’clock at night, a police officer observed a strange van in Fredonia, Kansas and ran the license plate number through the National Crime Information Center. He received by radio information that the automobile tag was stolen, that a male subject who should be in the car was wanted by the Oklahoma office of the FBI for interstate transportation of a motor vehicle, that his name was Raymond Matlock, also known as Joe Dean Lantz, Robert Robush and Carl Thomas, among other, aliases. Appellant was driving the van, accompanied by his wife and family. The police stopped the van, arrest *1331 ed appellant, handcuffed him, and put him in the patrol car. After police discovered a gun in Mrs. Matlock’s purse, they ordеred all the family out of the van and discovered a revolver in the dog bed either in the course of searching the van or when appellant’s daughter carried the bed out of the van. Shortly thereafter, appellant told his wife or daughter to get some papers from a briefcase in the van. Appellant’s daughter testified that she entered the van, opened the briefcase, turning it so that the police officers could not see its contents, and hovered over it. Her mother then came and rеached into the briefcase and started to take out a billfold. At that point the police grabbed the opened briefcase and discovered a large sum of money and numerous credit cards which later formed the basis of the mail fraud indictment in thе District of Arkansas.
Accepting the testimony of appellant and his family concerning the search of the briefcase as true, we hold that the search of appellant’s briefcase was justifiable in the circumstances and reasonable under thе fourth amendment. The officers clearly had probable cause to stop the van and to arrest appellant after receiving by radio information that the man who should be in the van was wanted on a Dyer Act charge in Oklahoma and that the van’s license plate was stolen.
See United States
v.
Powless,
In
United States v.
Chadwick, - U.S. -, -,
When a custodial arrest is made, there is always some danger that the person arrested may sеek to use a weapon, or that evidence may be concealed or destroyed. To safeguard himself and others, and to prevent the loss of evidence, it has been held reasonable for the arresting officer to conduct a prоmpt, warrantless “search of the arrestee’s person and the area ‘within his immediate control’ — construing that phrase to mean the area from within which he might gain possession of a weapon or destructible evidence.” Chimel v. California, 395 U.S. [752], at 763 [89 S.Ct. 2034 ,23 L.Ed.2d 685 ], See also Terry v. Ohio,392 U.S. 1 [88 S.Ct. 1868 ,20 L.Ed.2d 889 ] (1968).
Evidence of Other Crimes.
A police officеr testified that he arrested appellant in August, 1975 and found sixty-one credit cards in three different names and drivers licenses in two different names in his briefcase and billfold and in Mrs. Matlock’s purse. Appellant contends that the prejudice resulting from this testimony outweighed its probative value on the issue of criminal intent, arguing that appellant’s intent in 1972-73 when he used the mails to apply for the cards was in issue and not his intent in August, 1975. We disagree.
The testimony was clearly relevant to the issue of criminal intent, a matter on which other crimes еvidence is admissible. Fed.R.
*1332
Evid. 404(b);
United States v. Aaron,
Even if relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice resulting from its admission. Fed.R. Evid. 403;
see United States v. Clemons,
Finding no error, we affirm.
Notes
. Appellant’s attorney, when asked by the sentencing judge if a plea bargain had been made, did not mention an agreement by Eastern District of Arkansas officials not to indict Matlock on mail fraud charges. There is no indication in the sentencing proceeding or the presentence report that the offenses charged in the Eastern District of Arkansas indictmеnt were considered by the sentencing judge in Kansas or were to be considered.
. Fed.R.Crim.P. 20 requires the approval of the United States Attorney of the transferring district as well as the consent of the transferee district before a criminal case may be transferred.
. He still has the right under Fed.R.Crim.P. 35 to ask the District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas to reduce his sentence after mandate issues from this court.
. It should be noted that part of this testimony was evidence of the offense charged, since it showed that five of the cards which formed the basis of the indictment were found in appellant’s possession.
