A criminal defendant seeks reversal of his bank robbery conviction on the ground that the district court refused to charge in accordance with
Barber v. United States,
At approximately 10:20 a. m. on December 22, 1976, a shopping center branch of the Home National Bank in Milford, Massachusetts was robbed by two men, one of whom was armed. Witnesses at the bank could discern only that the perpetrators, who wore ski masks, were young Caucasian males.
The government’s case against the defendant 1 was wholly circumstantial. Earlier in the day of the crime, a Boston police officer in Charlestown observed the defendant, Arthur Godfrey, James Devlin, and Michael O’Halloran in Godfrey’s mother’s Chrysler automobile. Shortly after the crime, that car was found behind one of the shopping center buildings with trunk and passenger door open, keys in the ignition, and motor running. It appeared to have been intended as a “switch” car during the robbery. Inside the vehicle the police discovered two newspapers: the December 14, 1976 edition of The Star and a copy of the December 22, 1976 Boston Herald. Latent fingerprints later identified as the defendant’s were lifted from both newspapers. Also in the car were the wrist bands of a pair of rubber gloves, the hand portions of which were found along the robbers’ getaway route.
A Milford police officer who happened to be in the shopping center at the time the crime took place testified that shortly after-wards he observed a Ford automobile speed away from the scene carrying three masked passengers. A check of the license plate number revealed that the car had been stolen the previous day. Police officers traced its route to an embankment at the side of a road, where the car was found abandoned. From there, two sets of footsteps led through the snow into nearby woods and past the homes of two housewives. Both women testified that they had noticed three young male strangers, whose age, hairstyle, and clothing they described, walk down their street approximately 40 minutes after the crime occurred. One woman observed one of the youths separate from the other two. At a later lineup in which the defendant participated, one housewife identified O’Halloran, but not the defendant. The other was unable to make any identification.
From the neighborhood where three youths had been spotted, the chain of circumstances led to a Franklin taxi driver, Peggy Morton. At approximately noon on the day of the crime, two young men hailed her cab near where the two housewives lived. When they asked to go to Boston, Mrs. Morton replied that she could not take them that far, but agreed to deliver them to another taxi driven by her mother, Mrs. Leo O’Connell, who could take them the rest of the way. Mrs. O’Connell and her husband Leo O’Connell drove the young men to Boston. Mrs. Morton then responded to a call to take a different passenger, also a young man, from a restaurant in Bellingham to a Holiday Inn in Framingham.
Both O’Connells and Mrs. Morton were given two opportunities to identify their passengers. Two days after the crime they were each shown the same array of eleven photographs which included O’Halloran and Godfrey, but not the defendant. Mrs. Morton was unable to make an identification. Mr. and Mrs. O’Connell picked O’Halloran *11 and Godfrey as the passengers they had received from their daughter. On February 4, 1977, a lineup was conducted which included the defendant, O’Halloran, God-frey, Devlin, and five other males. Mrs. Morton chose the defendant and Devlin as the pair of young men who had flagged down her taxi. She also pointed out O’Hal-loran, whose photograph she had previously seen but not selected, as the lone passenger she had driven from Bellingham to Fram-ingham. Mr. O’Connell, who had previously identified O’Halloran and Godfrey as his wife’s passengers, chose the defendant and Devlin from the lineup. His wife also changed her mind, picking Devlin and another unidentified male. At trial, only Mrs. Morton was called by the government to identify the defendant as one of the individuals Mrs. O’Connell drove to Boston. The prior inconsistent identifications of all three witnesses were elicited by the defense. The defendant denied participation in the crime and gave an alibi.
At the close of the evidence, the district court refused the defendant’s request to charge the jury as follows:
“Testimony of witnesses as to identify [sic] must be received with caution and scrutinized with care. The burden of proof of the Government extends to every element of the crime charged, including the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt the identity of the perpetrator of the offense for which he stands charged.”
The dangers inherent in eyewitness identifications of strangers have been well chronicled.
See Simmons v. United States,
In
United States
v.
Barber, supra,
Drawing from
United States v. Barber,
the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia similarly established a model charge to be routinely given when the evidence demonstrates a danger of misidentification.
United States v. Telfaire,
In view of such precedent, we conclude that the requested charge would have been appropriate here. The trustworthiness of the eyewitness identifications was an important factual issue for the jury to resolve.
See United States
v.
Holley, supra,
While we approve the instruction submitted by the defendant, under the circumstances here, the failure to give it is not reversible error. Defense counsel focused heavily on the possibility of misidentification through skillful cross-examination of the government’s witnesses and introduction of Mr. O’Connell’s testimony during presentation of the defense case.
See United States v. Amaral,
*13
Unlike those cases in which the failure to give the
Barber
or
Telfaire
charge resulted in reversal, the government’s case against this defendant did not hinge on possibly mistaken identification testimony alone.
See United States v. Hodges, supra,
We are tempted to join the majority of other circuits by announcing that in the future the preferred practice in this circuit will be to give a particularized identification charge at the request of counsel when the evidence establishes a factual basis for it. But, for the present at least, we resist the temptation. We do so, not because we value the importance of accurate identification less, but because we are reluctant to multiply the catalogue of mandated charges in the absence of specific experience pointing to a felt need. We are confident that district courts will, in situations where mis-identification is a real risk, remind jurors of their critical task of assessment.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Although it appeared from the evidence that two men and at least one accomplice had committed the crime, the defendant was tried alone.
. Reversal was not ordered in
United States v. Telfaire,
. To date the Fifth Circuit has not ruled on the issue.
. The need for a focused identification charge increases where an out of court identification was made under suggestive circumstances.
See United States v. Sambrano,
