A pistol assault on a teenager in the Cathedral Housing Project of the South End of Boston led ultimately to the conviction of Trevor Watson for the federal offense of possession of a firearm by a person previously convicted of a felony, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Watson was identified by the victim within twenty minutes of the attack in a show-up in the project conducted by the alert Boston police officers on the scene. Watson was sentenced to 64 months of imprisonment followed by three years of supervised release.
Watson appeals, saying the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress the on-the-seene identification and in denying his motion for acquittal. He also says the government withheld exculpatory evidence. Finding that the district court’s conclusions, after it carefully and sensitively considered these arguments at the trial stage, were correct, we affirm.
*6 The jury was entitled to find the following urban saga. As Alexander Milette was bicycling home to the Cathedral Project, a Porsche drove past him and stopped in front of his house. Trevor Watson got out of the car, carrying a loaded pistol of the type favored by the Boston police, a Gloek 9mm semi-automatic. After accusing Milette of liking “hitting on” women, Watson aimed the gun at Milette’s stomach. Someone said “Don’t shoot him.”
Instead, Watson pistol-whipped Milette’s head, causing the gun to fire into a building and then to jam. Milette, bleeding, ran while Watson unjammed the gun and fired again, hitting the building Milette ran behind. Mi-lette sought sanctuary at a friend’s house and was helped with his bleeding head.
Watson had jumped back into the Porsche, only to have it stall out in a deep puddle. A nearby off-duty Boston Police officer, Officer Christopher Shoulla, heard the shots, drove to the project, and put out a call on his police radio. Officer Shoulla saw Watson and asked him to stop. Watson instead fled, clutching his right pocket, and, ironically, ran right past Milette and past another youth. Two other Boston officers arrived and gave chase. Watson threw the gun, as he ran, into a small garden. Officer Shoulla stopped Watson at gunpoint. When the officers patted down Watson and determined he had no gun, they retraced Watson’s steps and found it within forty seconds.
One officer saw Milette, still holding a bloody towel to his head, and had the others bring Watson over. Watson was brought over by patrol car and Milette was asked by the police, “What’s the story?” Milette looked, and identified Watson as his assailant. He later testified he was 100% sure of that identification. Watson was also identified by the other youth past whom he had run. The two spent cartridges from the scene of the assault matched the pistol Watson discarded.
The Show-Up
Watson attacks the show-up identification as impermissibly suggestive and unreliable and claims error in the denial of his motion to suppress. A district court’s denial of a motion to suppress will be upheld if any reasonable view of the evidence supports the denial.
United States v. de Jesus-Rios,
Evidence of pre-trial identification may be subject to constitutional limitations under the Due Process Clause.
Manson v. Brathwaite,
There is no reason to disturb the district court’s finding here that the show-up identification procedure was not unnecessarily suggestive, a finding that eliminates the due process argument. Show-ups that take place immediately after the offense has been committed may be necessary in order to avoid the mistaken apprehension of the wrong person.
See, e.g., United States v. Bautista,
The case on which Watson relies, Ve
lez v. Schmer,
The Brady Argument
Defendant also argues, without avail, that the government failed to disclose two items of information in violation of
Brady v. Maryland,
Rumor
The first has to do with a rumor. The pre-sentence report recounted a rumor that Mi-lette’s brother, who looks like Milette, threw water at a woman described as Watson’s girlfriend some time before the assault. Defendant moved for a new trial based on this “new” evidence, which the district court denied.
To show a
Brady
violation, the defendant must show that the withheld “evidence was exculpatory, as measured by its materiality.”
United States v. Hemmer,
The rumor was obviously inculpatory, not exculpatory. The argument presented— that if he had known of the rumor, Watson could have found a woman, not Watson’s girlfriend, who had water thrown on her and thus come up with a different assailant out to get Milette’s brother (and inadvertently Mi-lette) — is sheer speculation and not enough to meet Watson’s burden. 2 - In light of the identification of Watson by Milette and by the youth, the gun evidence, and the police testimony, there is no “reasonable probability that ... the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Id.
Exposure to Photograph
A federal agent may have shown Milette a photograph of Watson before Mi- *8 lette testified at the suppression hearing. While such conduct, if it occurred, was both improper and could have jeopardized the government’s case, 3 on the facts here there is no resulting reversible error. That is because Watson was given this information before trial, the government did not attempt an in-eourt identification after the purported showing, and Watson’s case was helped, not hurt, by such conduct. The agent’s usual practice was to carry photographs of the defendant and subpoenas in the same file, which may have resulted in Milette seeing Watson’s photograph.
Immediately on learning that Milette said he had been shown a photograph of Watson, the prosecutor notified defense counsel shortly before trial began on October 3,1994. On October 5, the district court held a voir dire on the issue at which federal agent Sheila O’Hara testified that she carried photographs of defendant in her case file and may have inadvertently exposed them to Mi-lette when serving him with one of several subpoenas. The district court found that this happened no sooner than the day of the suppression hearing. The defendant used the information to his advantage by calling Agent O’Hara as his sole defense witness to testify that Milette did not identify the defendant as his assailant even if he saw a photograph of him and to attack the investigation.
Watson’s
Brady
violation argument is misplaced because the evidence was disclosed before trial and there was no demonstrable prejudice from the delay in the disclosure.
See United States v. Innamorati,
Further, the only identification Milette made was at the show-up within 20 minutes of the assault. No in-court identification was sought by the government. At the suppression hearing, almost a year after the assault, Milette testified that at the time of the show-up identification he was sure Watson was his assailant, and agreed that he had recently told Agent O’Hara that he could no longer identify his assailant. The fact that he may have been shown a photo after the show-up is not material, and the district court correctly found that it could not be the basis for a new trial.
Motion for Acquittal
Defendant also argues that the district court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal. We review the evidence presented at trial, viewed in the light most favorable to the government, to see if it could establish each element of the offense charged beyond a reasonable doubt.
United States v. Hernandez,
But
United States v. Owens,
“[T]he Confrontation Clause is generally satisfied when the defense is given a full and fair opportunity to probe and expose ... infirmities [such as witness’ forgetfulness, confusion or evasion] through cross-examination, thereby calling to the atten *9 tion of the factfinder the reasons for giving scant weight to the witness’ testimony.”
Id.
at 558,
Watson also argues that the use of Milette’s statement at the suppression hearing — that he was 100% sure at the show-up that the person he identified was his assailant — to refresh his memory at trial violated the Confrontation Clause. Watson’s claim is that the statement of certainty was not subject to unrestricted cross-examination because defense counsel did not know at the time of the suppression hearing that Milette may have been suggestively exposed to Watson’s photograph. Accepting the dubious premise that Milette was not subject to unrestricted cross-examination at the suppression hearing,
4
there was ample opportunity to cross-examine the witness as to the reliability of that statement at trial. There was no violation of the Confrontation Clause.
See Owens,
Conclusion
We find no error in the proceeding of the trial. The district court admirably handled these issues. The judgment is ajfirmed.
Notes
. The district court's second-level finding that the identification was reliable under the five-factor test articulated in
de Jesus-Rios
was also not erroneous.
See de Jesus-Rios,
. Defendant also claims that he could have put Watson's girlfriend on the stand to testify that no one threw water at her. However, the relevancy of that testimony would depend upon the admission of the rumor, which the district court correctly found was inadmissible hearsay.
. If the single photo indeed had been shown to Milette in an effort to bolster his identification of Watson, we join the comments of the experienced district judge that he was "astonished that a fede 1 investigative agency has an agent who goes opens her file folder with a picture of the deh uaant as a matter of course.”
. Defendant did not argue in his brief that this alleged impairment of his opportunity to cross-examine Milette at the suppression hearing affected the outcome of that hearing.
