Jointly indicted, Stevenson and Borum after a jury trial were found guilty of housebreaking and robbery. Both contend on appeal that the trial court erred in denying their respective motions for judgments of acquittal at the close of the Government’s case. Additionally, Borum contends that fingerprint evidence of his complicity was erroneously received because comparison had been based upon fingerprints retained after an earlier conviction which had been “set aside following his satisfying the conditions of his sentence under the Youth Offender” statute.1 The appeals have been consolidated for presentation in this court.
On July 2, 1965, one Davis received word, and presently confirmed that his house had been forcibly entered. Its contents were in great disarray, and many items of value had been stolen. Money had been taken from a metal box, from underneath a glass top on a bedside table, and from a tea canister. Davis knew neither appellant and had never given them permission to enter his home.
A Metropolitan Police Department expert on July 2, 1965 had removed several fingerprints from the various named objects, each of which had been in the Davis home for some three to twelve years. Three prints were identical to known fingerprints of the appellant Borum, two having been lifted from the metal box and the third from the bedside table glass. A fourth fingerprint identical to a known fingerprint of the appellant Stevenson, had been lifted from the bottom of the tea canister.
Stevenson has argued that his conviction can not be sustained since there was no showing that his fingerprint had been placed on the container on July 2, 1965 or that the container was located on the premises when the Stevenson print *592was superimposed.2 Thus, he contends, the evidence was insufficient to justify his conviction. The trial court instructed the jury that before a verdict of guilty could be returned, the jurors must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the housebreaking and robbery had occurred on July 2, 1965 as had been testified, and that Stevenson was one of those who had perpetrated the crimes.
An officer testified that when he arrived at the house about 10:30 in the morning of July 2, 1965, “Everything was strewn all over the house, there were things out all over the bed and in the living room.” He proceeded to lift fingerprints from various objects. Stevenson was arrested the following evening, and some two to three hours later was fingerprinted by the police. The officer compared the known prints thus secured with that taken from the tea canister. The prints were identical, the expert testified, and both were prints made by Stevenson. He argues now that the evidence was insufficient to permit a jury to return a guilty verdict. We do not agree. Stevenson did not testify, and there was no suggestion from any source3 that Stevenson on any account could have had legitimate access to the canister upon which his fingerprints had been found.
A like argument has been advanced by Stevenson’s brother-in-law, the appellant Borum. Like Stevenson, Borum did not testify.
Under correct instructions the jury was bound to weigh the evidence and from such facts as it might find, to draw appropriate inferences respecting the guilt of the appellants. It is abundantly clear that the jury properly might conclude that Davis’s house had been burglarized on July 2, 1965; that the thieves had left their fingerprints as found by the police; and that the identification of the two accused had been adequately established.
Fingerprint identification has long been recognized by the courts as entirely appropriate.4 The accuracy of fingerprint identification is a matter of common knowledge5 and no case has been cited, and we have found none, where identification so established 6 has been rejected.7 Under the circumstances here shown, the jury was fully justified in concluding that these two appellants *593in the course of their crime had impressed their fingerprints upon the objects described in a location to which the appellants had been accorded no lawful access. We reject the contentions of the respective appellants that the evidence was insufficient to establish their complicity, as charged.
Borum additionally has contended that enlarged photographs of Borum’s prints taken at the scene of the crime could not properly have been received in evidence, since identification of those prints had stemmed from similar prints acquired by the Government following Borum’s earlier arrest. The trial judge pointed out in colloquy with defense counsel that she did not agree that the Government is “not entitled to use the fingerprint because * * * [Borum’s] conviction under the Youth Corrections Act has been wiped out.” Over objection8 exhibits of Borum’s fingerprints taken on July 6, 1965 were then introduced.
Borum would have us say that the fingerprints which led to his identification when compared with those found in the Davis premises on July 2, 1965 were unlawfully used.9 He quite misreads the intendment as well as the language of the Federal Youth Corrections Act upon which he relies. 18 U.S.C. § 5006(h) (1964) defines “conviction” to mean “the judgment on a verdict or finding of guilty, a plea of guilty, or a plea of nolo contendere.” Section 5021(a) provides that upon
“the unconditional discharge by the division of a committed youth offender before the expiration of the maximum sentence imposed upon him, the conviction shall be automatically set aside and the division shall issue to the youth offender a certificate to that effect.” (Emphasis added.)
It is quite so that the Act is to be applied to one who may be deemed a fit subject for rehabilitation. In the event that the youthful offender by virtue of his own good conduct shall have satisfied the prescribed conditions, he may be spared the lifelong burden of a criminal record.10 Setting aside a “conviction” in accordance with the terms of the Act can obviously redound to the great advantage of the accused.11
But the Act calls for no more than that the “conviction” shall be set aside, the appropriate conditions having been met.
If a court finds that a youth offender will not derive benefit from treatment under the Youth Corrections Act, the court may sentence that offender under whatever penalty provision is otherwise applicable. On the other hand, that a judge may decide that a particular offender may possibly be amenable to rehabilitation in nowise eliminates the fact that in either event, the accused will have been arrested, booked, photo*594graphed and fingerprinted as an incident to his arrest.
We find no merit in the contention that the later setting aside of a conviction will obliterate the earlier consequences under discussion. We reject the Borum argument. Rather it is so that the Government here may properly have recourse to his fingerprints in furtherance of the congressional purpose 12 that Borum’s identification records be used for the detection and prosecution of crime. It follows that there was no error on the part of the trial judge in admitting in evidence the fingerprints taken in the instant ease even though Borum had been identified following their comparison with those obtained at the time of Borum’s earlier arrest.
The convictions herein considered are Affirmed.