Appellant appeals from a jury verdict of guilty and a sentence of three years which was subsequently suspended in favor of five years probation. Appellant had been indicted for and convicted of violating 18 U.S.C. § 111 (1964) which prohibits assaulting or interfering with a federal officer in the performance of his duties. The same jury found appellant not guilty under another count alleging violation of the same statute.
Appellant presents a number of issues, the most substantial of which represent claims that the District Judge committed reversible error by failing to recognize that government proof of scienter was an essential element of the crime charged, and by failing to give appellant’s requested charge concerning trespassing.
The statute herein involved does not on its face require proof of scienter as an element of the crime. McNabb v. United States,
As to appellant’s trespass claims, we have read appellant’s proffered charge and the charge as given by the District Judge and find no reversible error in the charge as given when taken as a whole.
The only other appellate issue of possible substance is appellant’s claim that his pretrial motion for suppression of any reference to appellant’s prior felony convictions in the event appellant took the stand should have been granted, and that the District Judge’s failure to do so constituted reversible error. Actually, appellant testified and on direct examination his own counsel elicited the facts which he claims the trial judge should have suppressed. Under established rules of this circuit, the felony convictions were admissible. United States v. Wade,
And, in any event, we find no abuse of discretion
(See
United States v. Palumbo,
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
