United States v. Theodous McNair

433 F.2d 1132, 140 U.S. App. D.C. 26, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9919
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 8, 1970
Docket22372_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 433 F.2d 1132 (United States v. Theodous McNair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. 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. Theodous McNair, 433 F.2d 1132, 140 U.S. App. D.C. 26, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9919 (D.C. Cir. 1970).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

A jury found appellant guilty as charged in an indictment containing single counts of robbery 1 and assault with a dangerous weapon. 2 Reversal is sought on grounds of (a) insufficiency of the evidence, (b) an identification proceeding conducted at his request in the courtroom under the auspices of the trial judge just before the trial began, and (c) the absence of indication by the record as to whether appellant was present when the judge considered with counsel an inquiry from the jury during deliberations and thereafter responded to the inquiry. We find no error requiring reversal, and therefore affirm.

I

A lone gunman approached Max Silverman on a parking lot, thrust a gun in his ribs, and demanded a box of money Silverman was carrying. As Silver-man raised his hands, the gun went off; following discharge of the gun, the bandit struck Silverman on the head with the gun, grabbed the box, and ran away. Silverman gave the police a de *1134 scription of his assailant and several times attempted unsuccessfully to effect an identification from photographs. More than five months later, he picked appellant’s picture from a group of eight color photographs. Neither then nor during the nearly six months thereafter while appellant awaited trial was a lineup identification of appellant undertaken.

When his case was called for trial, and before a jury was impaneled, appellant moved for a “lineup,” to be held in the courtroom under the supervision of the trial judge, at which Silverman’s ability to effect a face-to-face identification of appellant might be tested. The judge, after warning that there was danger inherent in such a course, 3 granted the request, and gave defense counsel a free hand in making the arrangements. On the next morning, four men of similar appearance, including appellant, all selected by defense counsel, were seated together in the courtroom. 4 Silverman was then brought in to view them and, in the presence of the judge and counsel on both sides, he thereupon identified appellant as the man who had held him up.

As a part of the Government’s case in chief, Silverman identified appellant from the witness stand, and related his prior identifications of appellant from the color photographs and in the courtroom. A police officer also testified to the photographic identification, and another Government witness implicated appellant and two others in a plot to rob Silverman, and in the division shortly after the robbery of a sum of money approximating that taken from Silver-man. The jury found unacceptable appellant’s denial of complicity in the affair.

Accepting the evidence in the light most favorable to the Government, 5 it is evident that appellant’s claim that it is insufficient to support the jury’s verdicts is unsustainable if Silverman’s in-trial identification and the testimonial references to its pretrial forerunners were properly received. Appellant does not challenge the fairness of either the photographic 6 or the courtroom identification, 7 but complains rather that never before his case was called for trial did the Government itself arrange for a lineup to test the photographic identification. He contends that, as a result, “defendant’s counsel was forced to conduct his own lineup,” and that somehow this worked a deprivation of due process.

We do not encounter any question as to whether a suspect is automatically entitled to a pretrial lineup, or whether an in-trial identification preceded by a nonsuggestive photographic identification is barred by an unused opportunity for a pretrial lineup. 8 The important *1135 fact here is that appellant demanded and was afforded just the sort of personal confrontation that an orthodox lineup would have provided. The group Silverman viewed in the courtroom was selected by defense counsel, the viewing was conducted under impeccable conditions, and we are unable to detect any unfairness in its execution. 9 Appellant ventures only the possibility that Silver-man may have seen appellant brought into the courtroom by a United States marshal, or that appellant may have inadvertently singled himself out by some display of nervous anxiety, but we find no basis whatever in the record for such speculation. Indeed, appellant’s able trial counsel informed the trial judge that he would “stipulate for the record, in my judgment as an attorney, it was fair,” and manifestly the judge, under whose supervision the viewing was conducted, was entirely satisfied. We conclude that appellant, having sought and obtained the courtroom confrontation in the face of ample warning as to the possible consequences, 10 is not in these circumstances in position to disown it. 11

We are mindful of the fact that Silverman’s photographic identification of appellant was made more than five months after the offenses in suit were committed, and that the courtroom lineup came nearly an additional six months later. We are not, however, prepared to say that, absent suggestivity in either, these transpirations were so necessarily fraught with possibilities of misidentification as to bar them, and the ensuing in-trial identification, from the evidence as a matter of law. We think the accuracy of Silverman’s identifications of appellant under the circumstances here was a question residing within the jury’s province, and that the trial judge was entirely right in leaving it there.

II

The final ground alleged for reversal is the failure of the record to reflect appellant’s presence in the courtroom when, after the jury had transmitted a written inquiry to the judge during the course of its deliberations, the judge took up with counsel the response to be made to the communication and thereafter gave that response to the jury. Silverman’s initial identification of appellant consisted, as we have said, in his selection of appellant from a group of eight color photographs, and the jury’s query was “[w]hen was colored picture of McNair taken (included in 8 shown to plaintiff).” In the courtroom, the judge, with counsel on both sides before him but with the jury absent, acknowledged receipt of the jury’s note and read it for the benefit of counsel. Then occurred the following:

THE COURT: I assume they mean complaining witness. I don’t recall any evidence—
[GOVERNMENT COUNSEL]: I don’t think there was any evidence.
THE COURT: I don’t recall any evidence received on the subject.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: No, Your Honor.
THE COURT: Was the picture received in evidence?
[GOVERNMENT COUNSEL]: No.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: No.

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Bluebook (online)
433 F.2d 1132, 140 U.S. App. D.C. 26, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-theodous-mcnair-cadc-1970.