Summary
Birdsong, P. J., and Beasley, J., concur., Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Summary
Birdsong, P. J., and Beasley, J., concur., Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
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In count one of his indictment, McKinney was charged with first degree homicide by vehicle (OCGA
1. McKinney claims the evidence was insufficient to sustain a conviction for second degree vehicular homicide. OCGA
Viewed in favor of the verdict, the evidence shows that on September 11, 1989, at approximately 8:00 p.m. McKinney, who was driving his car, was following a car driven by his sister, Tina Profitt, along a wet, winding, two-lane mountain road. In an attempt to get his sister to stop her car, McKinney repeatedly pulled alongside Profitt's car in the on-coming lane of traffic, and bumped her car. When a car approached from the opposite direction, McKinney would pull back behind Profitt's car. McKinney was following closely behind his sister when they approached a curve in the road. Both cars were traveling in excess of the posted speed limit for negotiating the curve. A truck was coming around the curve in its proper lane from the opposite direction. The truck driver testified that as he came around the curve, he saw two cars, one following behind the other, coming at him head-on in his lane of traffic. The lead car, driven by Profitt, hit the truck head-on in the center of the on-coming traffic lane. McKinney's car, which did not impact with Profitt's car in the accident, subsequently crashed into the truck just over the centerline of the road alongside his sister's car. Tina Profitt died as a result of injuries she sustained in the accident.
2. McKinney argues that the trial court erred by admitting evidence of his blood test results because the State did not establish a chain of custody. The record shows blood was drawn from McKinney at a hospital on the night of the accident in the presence of a police officer. The blood was sealed, in the officer's presence, in two test tubes and labeled with the defendant's name. The officer took the sealed blood and gave it to another officer who, on the same night, mailed it to the State Crime Laboratory in Atlanta. The sealed and labeled blood arrived by mail at the State Crime Laboratory, where it tested positive for the presence of marijuana. The chain of custody was sufficiently established to permit introduction of the test results. Rucker v. State,
3. McKinney claims that evidence of the blood test results should have been excluded because the state failed to comply with the requirements of OCGA
Thompson, Fox, Jolliff, Chandler & Homans, David A. Fox, for appellant.
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