Summary
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part; case remanded for resentencing. Birdsong, C. J., and Banke, P. J., concur.
Summary
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part; case remanded for resentencing. Birdsong, C. J., and Banke, P. J., concur.
Text
William M. Bristow, for appellant.
Defendant appeals his conviction of armed robbery, OCGA
1. Before evidence of an independent crime is admissible to show motive, intent, plan, identity, bent of mind or course of conduct, two principal conditions must be met: 1) there must be evidence that defendant was the perpetrator; 2) there must be sufficient similarity or logical connection between the independent crime and offense charged so that proof of the former tends to prove the latter. State v. Johnson,
The victim, an elderly white female, had just returned to her home from shopping and had gone inside. She answered the doorbell and found defendant standing there. He grabbed and threw her to the floor, demanding the jewelry she was wearing and her pocketbook. He rummaged through her house and forced her at gunpoint into a closet. He then fled after taking some $15,000 to $20,000 in jewelry and money.
The other crimes were robberies and were related by three victims. The differences which defendant points out are: two of the victims had not been shopping; two were robbed at later hours; one was robbed on Friday; defendant did not enter the homes of two of the victims.
The alleged differences are not decisive when the similarities are considered. In all instances, the crimes were committed against elderly white females who had just returned to their premises by automobile and who were forcibly pushed to the ground or floor and robbed of their jewelry and money by a single individual. Two of the other offenses were committed within a week either way of the indicted offense and the third was seven months earlier, one involved the use of a gun and another occurred when defendant gained access into the victim's home. Considered as a whole, each of the instances of robbery were sufficiently like the indicted crime to meet the threshold for admission. Nelson v. State,
2. OCGA
Where the sentence is within the limits established by law, this court may not control the discretion of the trial court in imposing punishment. Clark v. State,
Thomas J. Charron, District Attorney, William R. Pardue, Nancy I. Jordan, Assistant District Attorneys, for appellee.
Notes:
1. An incident which would constitute another offense, established by evidence at the
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