In 1981, after a bench trial in the Cook County (Illinois) Circuit Court, Petitioner Walter Montgomery was convicted of rape. In 1988 he filed a petition for writ of habe-as corpus challenging his conviction. The district court denied relief. For the reasons set forth in the following opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
BACKGROUND
A. Facts
On November 17, 1976, at approximately 3 a.m., the victim left her apartment in Chicago after a disagreement with her fiance. Shortly afterwards, as she was walking down the street, a man grabbed her from behind. The man slipped a blindfold over her eyes and then held a large knife to her face. He then pushed her into the backyard of a nearby house and raped her. The yard where the rape occurred was poorly lighted, although some illumination did come from streetlights and a nearby hospital. The victim testified that, despite the blindfold, she saw her attacker at three different points during the crime, when she was able to look out from under the blindfold and see his face. At those points, according to the victim, the assailant was kneeling at her feet as she lay on the ground.
After the attacker fled, the victim walked to the emergency room of the neighboring hospital. There she spoke to police officers and described her assailant as a cleanshaven black man with a short afro haircut. She did not attempt to quantify the man’s height and weight; instead she described him as “very large” and “huge.” Tr. at 55. Upon further questioning, the victim, who was 5'4" tall, raised her hand as high as she could and said that he was “about that tall or taller.” Id. at 55-56. The interviewing police officer reported that the attacker was 6' to 6'1" tall and over two hundred pounds. During her interview the victim stated that there was no doubt in her mind that she could identify the man again.
On November 19,1976, the victim viewed a line-up that did not contain the defendant; she did not identify anyone as her assailant. That same day, while out of the presence of police officers, she reviewed a number of mug books and loose photos. She identified Mr. Montgomery from one of the loose photos. She stated at that time that she was not completely sure of her identification because the man in the photograph had a beard, and that she would be more certain if she could see the man in person and listen to his voice. The police did not record which loose photographs they showed the victim, but only retained the *679 photograph of Mr. Montgomery that she identified. 1
On November 27, 1976, police officers arrested Mr. Montgomery after making a warrantless entry into his home. 2 After his arrest, the police put him in a line-up, and the victim identified him as her assailant. At the time of his arrest Mr. Montgomery was 6'5" and weighed between 245 and 275 pounds. He was substantially larger than any other participant in the line-up, and was the only person who was clean-shaven. The victim testified at trial that she did not know that the man whose photograph she had selected on November 19 would be in the line-up. She also stated that when she identified Mr. Montgomery in the line-up, she did not realize that she had seen his photograph before.
The state trial court suppressed evidence of the post-arrest line-up identification on the ground that it was the fruit of an unlawful arrest.
See Payton v. New York,
Based on the in-court identification and circumstantial evidence, the court found Mr. Montgomery guilty of rape, and he received a sentence of imprisonment for forty years to life. The Illinois Appellate Court affirmed his conviction in an unpublished opinion, and the Illinois Supreme Court denied leave to appeal.
B. District Court Proceedings
Having exhausted his state remedies, Mr. Montgomery filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. He raised three issues. He argued, first, that the trial court impermissibly considered the photo identification in determining whether the in-court identification was influenced by the suppressed post-arrest line-up. Because the police did not retain a list of the photos that it showed to the victim, he argued, the photo identification was unconstitutionally suggestive and therefore should have been suppressed. Second, he contended that the trial court failed to hold an adequate hearing to determine the suggestiveness of the photographic identification. Third, he argued that the in-court identification itself was unconstitutional because it was based on the photo identification and the suppressed post-arrest line-up.
The district court rejected all of these arguments. It held, first, that Mr. Montgomery’s claim that the photo identification was unconstitutional was untenable in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Arizona v. Youngblood,
II
ANALYSIS
A. Guiding Principles
When reviewing a court’s decision to grant or deny a petition for writ of habeas corpus, we consider all questions of law de novo.
Matta-Ballesteros v. Henman,
B. Arguments on Appeal
1. The photo identification
Mr. Montgomery first challenges the victim’s photo identification. He claims that, because the Chicago police failed to preserve the photographs that they showed the victim, her photo identification of him was per se suggestive. 3 Consequently, he contends, the state trial judge should not have relied upon it in determining that the in-court identification was independent of the suppressed post-arrest line-up.
We believe that the district court was on solid ground in relying upon
Arizona v. Youngblood,
2. In-court identification
An in-court identification will be considered reliable, and therefore admissible, if, despite impermissible suggestion (the suppressed line-up here), there is no “very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.”
Biggers,
The state and the district courts concluded that the victim’s in-court identification of Montgomery was reliable and sufficiently independent of the suppressed post-trial line-up to make it admissible at trial. We agree. The victim had an ample opportunity to view her assailant during the commission of the crime. As the trial court and the state appellate court found, although the area where the attack took place was not very well-lighted, the victim saw her attacker three times during the commission of the crime. Also, the record reveals that throughout the encounter, she was highly attentive to what was going on around her. As the state court noted, the victim refused to characterize herself as upset or despondent before the assault, and there is no indication that anything distracted her attention while the attack was occurring. It is true that the description that the victim gave of her attacker was not very detailed as to his height and weight. However, she did state that he was “very large” and “huge,” and that he was a clean-shaven black man with a short afro haircut. Moreover, the state trial judge, after observing her on the stand, discounted these minor discrepancies and deficiencies in the description as “human nature.” Tr. at 157. There is no dispute that Mr. Montgomery substantially met that description at the time of his arrest. The victim was also highly certain of her identification. At the time of her interview at the hospital she stated that she was sure that she could identify her attacker again. Significantly, the victim also did not identify anyone as her assailant when she viewed the first police line-up.
Conclusion
On the basis of the record before us, which we have examined thoroughly, we are convinced that the district court correctly determined that the state court proceedings conformed to the mandates of the federal Constitution. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Apparently, at that time the Chicago Police Department had a standard procedure requiring police officers to retain a record of all loose photographs shown to a witness. Appellant’s Br. at 16-17 and Appendix "B."
. According to the Appellate Court of Illinois,
The police on November 20, 1976, began surveillance of the area where the rape had occurred. Two women police officers acted as streetwalking decoys while other officers covered them. On November 20, between 1:20 and 4 a.m., the police observed the defendant following a decoy on three separate occasions. Because of persons or cars appearing each time, the defendant abandoned his pursuit. This surveillance continued each day through November 27, 1976.
People v. Montgomery,
. In support of this argument, he cites two cases from the Fifth Circuit and one from Pennsylvania that presumed that photographic identifications were suggestive when the police failed to preserve the photographs that were displayed.
See Branch v. Estelle,
. We note that two other circuits have indicated their agreement with this analysis.
See Kordenbrock v. Scroggy,
.
As the district court noted, “under Illinois law, photographs need not be produced in order to prove or disprove suggestiveness.”
Montgomery,
No. 88 C 9250, mem. op. at 8 n. 4,
