United States v. Julius West

486 F.2d 468, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 7298
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 1973
Docket72-1946
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 486 F.2d 468 (United States v. Julius West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Julius West, 486 F.2d 468, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 7298 (6th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

McCREE, Circuit Judge.

In this appeal from conviction of bank robbery, 1 use of a firearm to commit a felony against the United States, 2 and killing of a bank employee in the course of the robbery, 3 we are asked to determine whether the prosecution’s opening statement and its calling of a reluctant witness constitutes reversible error and whether two searches, one with and one without a warrant, were lawful. We affirm the judgment.-

On January 10, 1972, at approximately 1:30 p. m., a branch of the First National Bank of East Lansing, Michigan, an institution insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, was robbed of approximately $15,000 by a male posing as a female. The branch manager, a retired 62 year old former school teacher, struggled with the bandit in an attempt to prevent the. robbery and was fatally shot.

Appellant was arrested on January 12 and the grand jury returned a three-count indictment. Appellant moved to suppress evidence taken from his apartment pursuant to an alleged consent search on January 11 and another conducted the following day under the authority of a search warrant. The motion was denied and a jury trial ensued in which West was convicted on all counts. He received a twenty year sentence for the bank robbery, a ten year sentence for possession of a weapon in the perpetration of the robbery, and a life sentence for homicide. The sentences are to run concurrently. The proceeds of the robbery had not been recovered at the time of trial.

The government’s evidence, not affected by appellant’s charge of incompetency, follows.

In July or August 1971, appellant, in a conversation with his brother-in-law, said that the bank on Lake Lansing Road would be easy to rob because it was located in a secluded place. They discussed the feasibility of a robber disguising himself as a woman.

Julius West customarily wore a mous-tache and goatee, but on January 9, 1972, he was observed to be clean-shaven. On January 10, 1972, shortly before 2 p. m., an automobile, later found to be registered in the name of appellant’s wife, was driven into a service station on Lake Lansing Road in the vicinity of the bank. The automobile was unmistakably distinctive: a 1963 or 1964 green or dark blue Ford automobile with the headlights smashed in and the hood tied down by a piece of colored plastic string that was described as looking like a child’s jump rope. The driver was identified as a lady and she and the other occupant wore “large Afros”. They asked to have their water cheeked because the radiator was steaming. The attendant testified that the vehicle departed in the direction of the bank.

Other witnesses observed the same vehicle with two passengers on Lake Lansing Road at about this time. They described the occupants as colored, with “Afro hairdos”, and their attention was attracted by the damaged front end and the tied down hood. One of these witnesses saw the car parked in the bank parking lot shortly before 2 p. m, that day. He noticed that steam was escaping from its radiator and that a woman was attempting to tie the hood down with a ‘ multi-colored string. She spurned his offer of assistance. He observed that there was a passenger whom he thought to be a woman. Two of these witnesses later identified the same vehicle in the parking lot at appellant’s apartment.

The bank teller, the only other person besides the branch manager who was in *470 the bank before the bandit entered, testified that a man disguised as a woman and wearing a black and green tweed coat, a large “Afro” wig, earrings and black slacks, approximately five feet eight inches tall, clean-shaven with clear complexion and large lips, entered the bank at approximately 1:80 p. m. She described his actions and narrated the efforts of the manager to overpower the robber and how the manager was shot several times with a silver or aluminum colored handgun. Although she could not identify appellant at a showup or at the trial, she identified a coat that belonged to appellant’s wife as similar to the one worn by the robber.

Appellant’s brother’s common-law wife, Pauline Rogers, lived in the same building in which appellant’s apartment was situated. She testified that on the evening of January 10, she saw appellant holding a large number of $50 bills and other denominations and that he dropped some of the money. She recovered about $62 of the money he dropped and hid it on her person. She said that appellant boasted to his brother that he and. his wife had robbed a bank in East Lansing that day and that he had shot a man five times. He said that he was dressed as a woman with a natural wig, earrings, coat, big pocketbook and a slack suit. She identified a chrome or nickel-plated Smith & Wesson revolver as her husband’s gun and said that appellant had access to it. She said that on the evening of the robbery her husband'gave her the gun and that she hid it first in her niece’s backyard and later gave it to her brother to hide for her. Her brother, Andrew Perkins, buried the gun near Charlotte, Michigan, a neighboring community. Perkins later took law enforcement officers to the place where he had buried the gun and it was recovered. Ballistics tests established that the bullet removed from the body of the slain branch manager had been fired from the revolver recovered at Charlotte, Michigan.

Pauline Rogers also testified that appellant’s wife, her sister-in-law, gave her a coat earlier identified by the bank teller as one similar to that worn by the robber. Pauline Rogers first gave the coat to a girlfriend who returned it when she learned about its recent use. Then, she gave a man $10 to burn the coat or otherwise dispose of it but his attempt to burn it failed and he returned it. She later surrendered the coat to an FBI agent.

A fellow inmate testified that West, while he was in custody awaiting trial, told him, “they could not prove it was me because nobody could identify me.”

Undisputed laboratory tests revealed that a hair fiber found on the woman’s coat was similar to hair obtained from Julius West, and that two hairs found on the coat were similar to hair obtained from the head of the deceased branch manager. Also, fibers from the coat matched fibers found in the branch manager’s tie clasp, and fibers from the victim’s clothing matched fibers from the coat recovered from Pauline Rogers.

Appellant took the stand in his own behalf and testified that he had been suffering from an arthritic spinal condition on January 10 and that he had remained home alone and in bed all that day. He denied any involvement in the bank robbery and said that his wife’s black and green tweed coat had been stored in the basement of his apartment building and that he believed she had not been wearing it. He admitted that he wore a moustache and goatee before January 10, 1972, but explained that he shaved them off because he had acci-dently cut off one side of his moustache and that he removed the other half and his goatee when he became the object of ridicule with only a goatee. He admitted that the automobile that had been observed at the bank was registered in his wife’s name but stated that it belonged to his son-in-law who was too young to register it in his own name.

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Bluebook (online)
486 F.2d 468, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 7298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-julius-west-ca6-1973.