OPINION OF THE COURT
This is an appeal by defendant from his conviction for bank robbery in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Three assignments of error are made. First, the admission over objection of the record of defendant’s prior state court conviction for aggravated rape 1 which had been set aside and a new trial granted shortly after a certified copy thereof was obtained for use at this trial; second, the identification of defendant by a bank employee at a “show-up” where defendant was unrepresented by counsel; third, insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict.
A recitation of the basic facts will prove illuminating. On January 20, 1970, in broad daylight, four armed blacks entered the federally insured Central Penn National Bank at Broad and Glenwood Streets in Philadelphia, held up a teller or tellers and fled with about $7500 in cash. An alert management trainee of the bank, who already had a good view of all the robbers, including the defendant, observed their departure in a Pontiac car. His description of the robbers, their car and its license number was immediately phoned to the police, placed on a eitywide police broadcast and within minutes of the radio alert, the getaway car, with four blacks inside, was observed by a motorized policeman, its license number verified and chase given. In short order, this car was forced into a telegraph pole, three blacks escaped therefrom and the fourth, this defendant, taken into custody as he backed out of the car holding a sawed-off shotgun in one hand and, in the other, a paper bag containing the stolen cash. Defendant was forthwith taken by several officers to the nearest detective division but, almost simultaneously with their arrival, a telephone call was received directing them to return the defendant to the scene of the crime where, within less than a half hour of the robbery, he was “99 percent” identified by the management trainee who had observed the robbery and flight. At trial, Mrs. Murdock, a teller, testified defendant was “one of the first two men that came in [the bank].” The management trainee said he was “99% sure he (Savage) seems to be the gentleman with the shotgun” and a bank guard, Mul-kern, testified “Mr. Savage was the man with the shotgun.” An F.B.I. agent testified defendant orally confessed his part in the robbery to him. A portion of the money (bait money) in defendant’s possession when apprehended was positively identified as having been stolen from the bank less than one half hour before.
Defendant’s first contention that he was deprived of his 6th Amendment right to counsel at the “show-up” shortly after the event can be readily disposed of. On the scene confrontations shortly following a crime have consistently been upheld by the courts. United States v. Gaines,
Next, defendant argues that his conviction should be reversed because, over objection, a certified copy of the record of his state court conviction for rape was placed before the jury whereas, in fact, his conviction had been set aside just prior to this trial. It is axiomatic that the use of invalid prior convictions is error. Gilday v. Scafati,
The final point that there was insufficient evidence to sustain a verdict of guilt is scarcely worthy of comment. No reasonable person can read the record of this trial without concluding not only that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict but that defendant was guilty as charged. In fact, were it necessary so to find, we are of the opinion that the evidence is so strong as to demonstrate defendant’s guilt beyond any reasonable doubt.
The conviction below will be affirmed.
Notes
. Admitted in accordance with the long-settled rule of this Court for the sole purpose of challenging credibility of the defendant.
. He was not one of the bank robbers but was arrested that night, taken to the police station and questioned for ten minutes. He was fingerprinted, over his objection his picture was taken by a newspaper reporter and “immediately after that, I was taken to the bank” for the purpose of a “show-up.” (Transcript P. 487). While at the bank he was handcuffed, as he had been since his arrest, and employees were asked if he was one of the men involved in the hold-up. The two who positively identified him at trial, Mrs. Murdock and Mulkern, were not then present, but Coleman, the trainee, “99%” identified him. None of the other employees were able to identify defendant at the “show-up.”
