Appellant and three co-defendants were indicted for bank robbery and ancillary offenses in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) and 22 D.C.Code §§ 2901, 3202, and 502. Appellant’s three co-defendants each pleaded guilty to armed robbery, and appellant went to trial alone. After all the evidence was in, appellant moved for a judgment of acquittal. The motion was denied, and the jury found appellant guilty of entering a bank with intent to commit robbery therein, bank robbery, armed robbery, and assault with a dangerous weapon. The court imposed concurrent sentences on appellant running from fifteen to forty-five years. Appellant claims that it was error to deny his motion for acquittal and that a reference by the prosecutor to his prior confinement deprived him of a fair trial.
I
The prosecutive theory of the Government’s case was that appellant, although not one of the three men who entered and robbed the bank, “was an aider and abettor” and that he “played * * * the role of a conniver” and drove the getaway car. The evidence against appellant was mostly circumstantial, but we cannot say that the proof was so insufficient that acquittal should have been directed.
The evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the government, both as to its truth and as to all legitimate inferences to be drawn therefrom, in determining whether reasonable jurymen must necessarily have a reasonable doubt or might not have such a doubt. Crawford v. United States, 126 U.S. App.D.C. 156, 158,
Appellant relies upon Bailey v. United States,
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witness shouted, “They are robbing him!” — to be insufficient to show aiding and abetting.
See
Nye & Nissen v. United States,
In this case the evidence of guilty participation is stronger. Appellant was seen entering the getaway car some ten minutes before the robbery, accompanied by one of the confessed active perpetrators. He was carrying a gun. Someone drove the getaway car, and appellant was seen with two of the active robbers in New York one day later. This is sufficient evidence to go to the jury under the Curley-Crawford standards.
II
Appellant also claims he should have been granted a mistrial when the prosecutor asked him, on cross-examination, if it were not a fact that he had been confined in John Howard Pavilion, a part of Saint Elizabeths Hospital, in the months of September, October, November and December of 1968. Counsel say this intimated either that defendant was awaiting trial; or confined in Saint Elizabeths; or was confined after a criminal trial, — and constitutes an impermissible impeachment of defendant in a trial involving conflict of testimony.
If the question stood without context, it would raise a serious question of prejudicial error. Barnes v. United States,
While we affirm appellant’s robbery conviction under Section 2113(a), we note that his concurrent sentence for entry with intent to rob cannot be sustained under the rule of Prince v. United States,
It is so ordered.
Notes
. There was alibi testimony that defendant had, on the day of the robbery, been visiting his brother in John Howard. But he had not signed the visitors’ register. Defendant explained he knew Mr. Dan-ridge, in charge of the visitors’ lobby, and further testified that he knew Mr. Danridge only because of his prior visits to his brother. The prosecutor says he meant to test that assertion. But the materiality of defendant’s subsequent confinement in September-Deeember, 1968, was slight, if any, and might not have justified the question in view of the prejudice involved.
