We have previously emphasized the importance of ensuring fairness in eyewitness identification testimony.
E.g., Kampshoff v. Smith,
FACTS
On October 23, 1981, at approximately 9 a.m., the West Side Federal Savings and Loan Association, at 30 East 42nd Street, New York, New York, was robbed by three black males. One of the robbers stood at the door pointing a sawed-off shotgun. Another roamed the lobby carrying a small revolver. The third robber, carrying a revolver and a duffle bag, hurdled the counter to the tellers’ area and took money from each of the four tellers’ stations and put it in his bag. He then vaulted back over the counter and the three robbers left with approximately $15,800 of federally insured bank money. Bank surveillance cameras recorded the incident, and a number of tellers observed the robbery in progress.
Some twenty months later, after two of the robbers had been apprehended and pleaded guilty to the bank robbery, three different tellers identified a photograph of the defendant, Robert Archibald, in an array of mugshots. Teller Carl Jenkins, who at one point was but inches away from the robber who hurdled the counter, identified Archibald from the phоto spread, saying that he “looks like the man.” Teller Evrit Jackson also did so, stating, “I believe this is the man that is the vaulter.” Teller Dawn Krowl, who made careful observations of the robbers, said that Archibald’s photograph “looks like the man that vaulted the counter.” Each of the witnesses indicated that the vaulter’s hair at the time of the robbery was in braids, pushed back and under a hat, and that hе did not have a moustache, a description corroborated by surveillance photos. During the trial, Archibald’s hair was “pushed back” in Krowl’s words, but not braided, and he had a moustache.
At trial Archibald called Ricky Roberts and Wilson Sumbry, who had previously pleaded guilty to the robbery. Roberts testified that he and Sumbry had robbed the bank with a third man whom he had met only a few minutes before the robbery. *940 Although hе stated that he could not identify the man, when defense counsel presented him with the same photo array given the bank tellers, Roberts identified Archibald's picture as that of the third robber.
Sumbry testified that Archibald was not the third robber. On cross-examination, he denied that he had identified Archibald's picture in the photo array and denied further that it was his signature which appeared on the baсk of Archibald’s mugshot confirming such identification.
DISCUSSION
Archibald raises two principal arguments on this appeal. First, he claims that the photographic array from which the tellers identified his mugshot was unduly suggestive. Although it contained photos of six black men who bore certain resemblances to one another, the mugshot of Archibald was the only one that showed that he was arrested in the Borоugh of Manhattan. He also objects that his was the only photograph of an individual who looked as though he had braided hair. Second, Archibald claims that the in-court identifications were tainted by unduly suggestive circumstances, namely, that throughout the trial he was the only black person in the courtroom, except for one day when a black United States Marshal was present, and that he was seated at the defense table. In addition, he raises objections to the court’s charge and sentence. We discuss these contentions in turn.
This court has examined the photo spread presented to the bank tellers. Each man was wearing an identification plate showing the date and borough of his arrest, but the legends are not unduly prominent. Each is a black malе who appears to be in his twenties. Each has facial hair and is about the same weight and color of skin. The district court concluded that the array was “a remarkably fair group of photographs” and we do not disagree with the conclusion. The differences between Archibald’s photograph and the other mugshots would hardly suggest to an identifying witness that Archibald was more likely to bе the culprit.
See United States v. Magnotti,
Archibald argues that the array was unduly suggestive because the caption on his mugshot “identifped] him with criminality in Manhattan.” This argument is without merit. Given that the caption is so insignificant, and the boroughs listed on the other mugshots are all immediately adjacent to Manhattan, it is highly improbable that the caption could have caused any of the bank tellers to choose Archibald’s photo over the others. Indeed, despite the fairness of the photo spread, Archibald’s mugshot looks much more like the vaulter depicted in the surveillance photos than any of the others do.
1
We conclude that the photo spread was not impermissibly suggestive.
See United States v. Bubar,
If not impermissibly suggestive, however, the photo array was certainly unnecessarily so. It would have been a simplе matter to cut out the identifying captions before displaying the photos to the witnesses; indeed, this is precisely what was done before submitting the photos to the jury. Thus, although we conclude that the use of captioned photographs did not amount to constitutional error, it surely was poor prosecutorial practice.
Nor was Archibald deprived of due process by the district court’s exercise of its discretion in
not
holding a pretrial hearing on the issue of suggestiveness. No per se rule requires such a hearing,
Watkins v. Sowders,
Since the pretrial identification procedures were not impermissibly suggestive, we need not here reach the question whether, under the totality of the circumstances, there was a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.
See Manson v. Brathwaite,
The in-court identifications present us with a different problem. As is generally the cаse, the defendant here was seated next to defense counsel during the trial, a circumstance obviously suggestive to witnesses asked to make in-court identifications. Any witness, especially one who has watched trials on television, can determine which of the individuals in the courtroom is the defendant, which is the defense lawyer, and which is the prosecutor. In most cases, however, no objection is made to the fact that an identification occurs while the defendant is seated with defense counsel, probably because this arrangement is traditional.
Here, however, the defendant himself recognized that there was a problem of suggestiveness and asked his lawyer to bring the problem to the attention of the court. Before commencement оf the trial, the defendant requested a corporeal lineup. He told counsel that he did not want to sit at the counsel’s table, but wanted to be seated with five or six other black men who looked reasonably like him, to ensure that he would not be obviously singled out by an educated witness. This request was relayed to the judge’s law clerk, who in turn conveyed it to the court, which did not make a pretrial ruling. After the direct testimony of the first bank teller witness, defense counsel renewed his request. The judge, denied it, stating: “I do not think it can be considered a valid request.... I certainly do not think that [it] is practical, anyway.” Later in the case, the judge stated: “This is not a lineup. This is a trial. And that request is just absolutely inappropriate. And we have no — the court has no obligation, nor does the govеrnment have any obligation, nor does defense counsel have any obligation, to stage a lineup here. This isn’t the place for a lineup. And this is a trial.”
The judge below did not fully appreciate the concern that this court had shown with in-court identification procedures. We may agree with the court that there was no obligation to stage a lineup, but there was, however, an obligation to ensure that the in-court procedure here did not simply “amount[ ] to a ‘show-up.’ ”
United States v. Kaylor, 491 F.2d
1127, 1131 (2d Cir.1973),
vacated on other grounds sub nom. United States v. Hopkins,
Our concern with suggestive in-court identification procedures has been noted in a number of cases. In
United States v. Ravich,
Perhaps the case which has considered the question most carefully in this circuit is
United States v. Brown,
when a defendant is sufficiently aware in advance that identification testimony will be presented at trial and fears irreparable suggestivity, as was the case here, his remedy is to move for a line-up order to assure that the identification witness will first view the suspect with others of like description rather than in the courtroom sitting alone at the defense table.
Id. at 594.
Archibald did not exactly seek the remedy prescribed in
Brown.
Instead, he waited until the moment before trial to request that he be seаted away from the defense table and that other black men be seated in the courtroom. Nevertheless, in light of
Brown
and the other cases noted herein, his request should not have been dismissed so quickly or so absolutely by the trial court. A fairly short delay of proceedings was all that would have been required to rearrange the seating in the courtroom and to secure the prеsence of some people of the defendant’s approximate age and skin color. While it was not necessary for the court to conduct a true Wade-type of lineup, these relatively minor steps were required to ensure that the identification was not unfair. The in-court identification procedure utilized here was so clearly suggestive as to be impermissi
*943
ble, however traditional it may be.
But cf. United States ex rel. Clark v. Fike,
The request made in this case, therefore, was not “just absolutely inappropriate,” as the district court stated. 2 Indeed, the suggestiveness of the situation was clearly indicated at trial. One of the three witnesses who identified Archibald stated on cross-examination that she “had the feeling that he would be sitting next to” the defense lawyer in the courtroom. It was an obviously suggestive situation.
Having said that, however, the question remains whether the error was harmless. When the array with the photo of Archibald is compared to the surveillance photos, it is clear that the photographic identification testimony alone could have supported the convictiоn.
United States v. Magnotti,
Archibald also argues that the court’s charge to the jury was erroneous and that the court improperly denied him young adult offender status in imposing a fifteen-year sentence. With respect to the charge, he claims that the court failed to instruct the jury that, in order to convict him under 18 U.S.C. § 2113(d) (1982), it must at least infer that one or more of the guns used during the bank robbеry was loaded and therefore was objectively capable of inflicting severe injury. In addition, he contends that the judge on several occasions stated that section 2113(d) required an assault “or” putting life in jeopardy, although the indictment read in the conjunctive.
The charge, however, was proper under
United States v. McAvoy,
In respect to the denial of young adult offender status
3
to Archibald,
Dorszynski v. United States,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court. 4
Notes
. We also note that the jury had before it both the photo array and the surveillance photos. including enlargements of some of the latter.
. This court in the past has suggested the availability of in-court lineups in a variety of situations.
See, e.g., United States v. Estremera,
. Eligibility for youth offеnder status is defined as follows:
In the case of a defendant who has attained his twenty-second birthday but has not attained his twenty-sixth birthday at the time of conviction, if, after taking into consideration the previous record of the defendant as to delinquency or criminal experience, his social background, capabilities, mental and physical health, and such other factors as may be considered pertinent, the court finds that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the defendant will benefit from the treatment provided under the Federal Youth Corrections Act (18 U.S.C., chap. 402) sentence may be imposed pursuant to the provisions of such Act.
18 U.S.C. § 4216 (1982). Under the Youth Corrections Act, a court is given special latitude in sentencing if it finds that incarceration will not benefit the offender, or if some other treatment is more appropriate. 18 U.S.C. § 5010 (1982).
. The Government concedes that Archibald’s conviction under Count One charging the lesser offense under 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) (1982) should be vacated and merged with his conviction under Count Two for armed bank robbery under 18 U.S.C. § 2113(d) (1982).
Grimes
v.
United States,
