The sole question presented here by Benjamin J. Yancey’s appeal from an armed robbery conviction carrying a 20-year sentence, is whether the in-court identification of Yancey by the victim of the crime was properly admitted or whether, as Yancey contends, the in-court identification was fatally tainted by an illegal pre-trial show-up at which Yancey was displayed by the police to the victim at the police station, without an attorney.
Yancey was convicted of the November 27, 1972 armed robbery of the Sturkie Furniture Store. Mr. Carlisle, the store manager, testified that earlier that morning a Negro wearing a white hard hat came into the *168 store, saw Carlisle’s pistol, and looked around selecting furniture. He said he would be paid on Friday and would be back then with $100. Instead, he came back about 45 minutes or an hour later with Yancey who, he said, had let him borrow $50 for a down payment. Yancey spent some time with his back to a heater facing Carlisle under fluorescent lights while the first man maneuvered Carlisle into turning his back on Yancey. Yancey then put a gun to Carlisle’s back and initiated the robbery. Carlisle’s gun, watch and billfold were taken, as was money from the cash register, during a period of about 20 minutes. Carlisle testified that while he faced Yancey, Yancey fired a shot at him from about five feet making a small hole in his shirt but not wounding him.
Yancey was arrested on December 29, 1972. The record does not make it possible to determine the date, but at some time between the arrest and the indictment, January 15,1973 Carlisle was asked by police to come to the police station for an unspecified reason. While there he saw and identified Yancey, apparently through the glass door of a room in which Yancey was alone. Carlisle identified Yancey in court as the assailant, and also testified that "they didn’t tell me there was a man coming out that was suspicious of robbing me. When they brought the man out they said 'Have you ever seen that man before?’ and I said 'I sure have. I seen that man holding a gun on me. No doubt about it’ and my stomach drew up in knots when I glanced out and saw him there just like it did when he had that gun on me.”
The admission of the in-court identification is contended by Yancey in his sole enumeration to be reversible error.
United States v. Wade,
Applying this test to Yancey’s pre-indictment show-up, we find that Carlisle’s opportunity for about 20 minutes during the commission of the crime to observe Yancey was unimpaired, at 10:00 a.m. under fluorescent lighting; that Carlisle’s attention level was presumably very high since he was being subjected to an armed robbery and was for at least part of the time compelled to face the man who held the gun on him; that his trial-description of his degree of certainty at the time of the confrontation showed he had no doubt of the accuracy of
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his identification; and the time between crime and confrontation was only about one month. The record does not reflect Carlisle’s earlier description of his assailant, but the absence of this information is not determinative. We find that even though Yancey had no attorney present at the show-up, nonetheless the confrontation here passed the Neil v. Biggers tests to screen out substantial opportunity for misidentification, and none of Yancey’s rights were violated by the in-court identification of Yancey by Carlisle. There is no merit in the single enumeration of error. Accord
Griffin v. State,
No error appearing, the conviction will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
