Appellant was convicted of robbery1 and assault with a dangerous weapon2 growing out of the holdup of James R. Shanks, a D. C. Transit bus driver, in the early evening of November 9, 1967. The contention presented on appeal is that Shanks’ in-court identification of appellant as the perpetrator of those offenses was fatally tainted by a pretrial photographic identification.3 We disagree, and accordingly we affirm the conviction.
Shanks, alone in his lighted bus before turning around at the end of his route, saw a man, unknown to him, standing outside near the front door. Shanks opened the door and the man entered, asked Shanks to change a five dollar bill, and sat in a passenger seat. Shanks went to his chair for change, whereupon the man drew a pistol and demanded money. Shanks handed over his change carrier and a mint sack containing money and tokens. Just before leaving, the bandit reached into Shanks’ pocket and extracted a one dollar bill.
On the next morning, Shanks went to a precinct stationhouse and was handed 15 photographs for examination. After scrutini2:ing five, he declared that “this is the man right there, positively,” but was instructed “to look at the rest to make sure.” Shanks did so and remained firm in his original selection, which was a photograph of appellant.
At the trial, Shanks gave a detailed description of the man who had robbed him and identified appellant as that man. Appellant did not object to the identification but, on cross-examination of Shanks, elicited testimony concerning Shanks’ pretrial photographic identification in an obvious attempt to persuade the jury to discredit the in-court identification.4 Having failed in that effort,5 *1294appellant now asks us to hold that the latter identification was vitiated by the former.
Appellant does not argue for a right to representation by counsel at the time the photographs were shown to Shanks.6 Instead, he urges that the procedure utilized to produce the identification then made was so conducive to mistake as to amount to a deprivation of due process.7 Thus we must view “the totality of surrounding circumstances”8 and determine whether “the photographic identification procedure [is] so imper-missibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.”9 We apply that standard here and conclude that the identification process under assault did not.
There is no claim that the circumstances, following so serious a-breach of the law as occurred here, were not sufficiently exigent to justify an effort at photographic identification of the unknown guilty party. Nor are we persuaded that the circumstances surrounding Shanks’ pictorial identification of appellant as that party generated more than a minimal risk of misidentification.10 The uncontradicted evidence established conditions, existent when the robbery was perpetrated, that lent themselves to accurate identification of the robber. The bus was lighted, the robber was not masked, and he — and he alone— confronted Shanks at very close range over a period of three to four minutes. Shanks was able to furnish a detailed description of the robber’s physical features and attire, and was positive in both his photographic and his trial identifications. “[T]his was my first holdup,” he explained from the witness stand, “I don’t forget;” and, like Shanks, we think he had ample reason to remember.
Moreover, the examination of the photographs occurred freshly — as we have stated, on the morning after the robbery. There were, we repeat, 15 photographs in all, depicting males of various ages, and only one photograph of appellant was included in the group. Shanks examined five photographs before any identification was forthcoming, and after examination of the rest was firm in that identification, as he was to remain until the trial. There is nothing in the record to suggest that appellant’s photograph was highlighted in any way, or that its selection was in any way prompted. These circumstances considered, we hold that Shanks’ in-court identification did not impinge upon appellant’s due process rights.11
*1295We are mindful, nonetheless, of the hazards inherent in the use of photographs for purposes of identification, which appellant emphasizes, and of the consequent need for care whenever that process is employed. The opportunity for initial accurate observation is not always as good at it was here; where it is not, “[e]ven if the police subsequently follow the most correct photographic identification procedures and show [the witness] the pictures of a number of individuals without indicating whom they suspect, there is some danger that the witness may make an incorrect identification.”12 Such a danger — always a matter of degree related to the circumstances — may be reduced by controls on the number and types of photographs used, the physical characteristics of the individuals depicted, and the recurrence of the same photographed subject. But a danger of erroneous conviction lurks also in the possible inability of the accused to reconstruct the pictorial display — and consequently any unfairness in it — to which an identifying witness has been exposed.13 In the District of Columbia, the police department has responded admirably to a somewhat comparable though less difficult problem by photographing all lineups, thus providing a visual record for future reference by counsel and courts alike. The provision of a similar safeguard through maintenance of a record of photographs shown to perspective identifying witnesses could be a healthy contribution to the administration of the criminal law.
Affirmed.