Appellant was indicted, tried and found guilty of distributing heroin on October 2, 1972, and again on October 11, 1972. He has appealed from the judgment of conviction.
There is no controversy over the evidence produced by the government at the trial. Appellant did not testify and offered no witnesses in his behalf. The transactions followed the pattern which has become a common practice in apprehending and prosecuting persons who unlawfully' distribute controlled substances. The government informer in this case, Charles Bullock, purchased heroin on each occasion from appellant. Before the purchase, one or more officers attached to the office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement (DALE) searched Bullock and gave him a stated amount of currency, the serial numbers thereon having been recorded. Bullock then contacted appellant and made the purchase under the surveillance of DALE officers. In due time the indictment was returned and the prosecution followed.
Appellant vigorously contends that he was denied a fair trial because the government failed to produce Bullock at the trial in accordance with the prior assurance of the Assistant District Attorney that Bullock would be present and available for examination by appellant’s counsel. At the outset of the trial, which was scheduled for April 16, *687 1973, but which began the next day, April 17, a thorough examination of two of the officers who participated in the purchases revealed that they undertook a diligent search for Bullock several days prior to the scheduled trial date, but their efforts to locate him were unsuccessful. Thereupon, the court denied appellant’s motion for a mistrial and the trial proceeded.
After the appeal had been docketed in this court, the United States Attorney, acting pursuant to our action in United States v. Pollard,
Appellant’s attorney attaches importance to the fact that on June 29, 1973 —after the trial — Bullock, while confined in the St. Louis, Missouri, city jail, gave a written statement to an associate of appellant’s counsel. Therein Bullock denied selling narcotics to appellant on October 2 or October 11, and stated that the government officers had known where Bullock was located at the time of the trial. However, during the December 6 hearing, Bullock unequivocally testified that the statements made by him on June 29, 1973, were untrue, that he lied because he was in fear of his own safety, and that on June 29 appellant Little was also confined in the St. Louis city jail. In Bullock’s words, “Well, they had jumped on one informant at the city jail, jumped on him pretty bad, so they knew I was up there, so they had a knife and he was trying to jump on me. I didn’t have any friends up there so I had to do something, so that’s what I did.”
The district judge, in his findings, stated that he believed that Bullock’s fear for his life had prompted his statements to Mr. Nussbaumer (associate of appellant’s counsel) and that no prejudice had arisen from the government’s failure to make the informant available to the appellant.
Our examination of the record of the trial and of the hearing on remand leads us to the inescapable conclusion that appellant was not prejudiced by his inability to examine Bullock during the trial. It is convincingly clear that the government did not in any respect conceal Bullock or any exculpatory evidence. Consequently we conclude that justice has been served and that the case should not be remanded for another trial.
Appellant also complains because the prosecution struck all black members of the jury panel. We considered a sim
*688
ilar contention in Pollard v. United States,
Appellant was represented by Mr. Ben Ely, an able and experienced trial lawyer, but in view of the overwhelming evidence of guilt Mr. Ely was unable to persuade the jury of his client’s innocence. Neither has he been able to persuade us that the verdict of guilty resulted from any prejudicial error.
The judgment is affirmed.
