Rodney Lamont Andrews was found guilty of felony murder and aggravated assault in connection with the fatal shooting of Rico Rozier in the parking lot of a fast-food restaurant shortly after the restaurant had closed for the night. 1
Appellant and the victim were each аt the restaurant in order to provide transportation to different restaurant employees. Appellant was waiting inside the glаss-walled building, while the victim was sitting in his car. As they performed their closing duties inside the restaurant, the male employees teased the female employee about the victim, her boyfriend. When the female employee left, appellant held the door open for her and called her boyfriend a “punk.” The victim heard the epithet and responded angrily. Words were exchanged bеtween appellant and the victim. The victim exited his vehicle and, as he placed a key in the car trunk lock, promised to show appellant “who the punk is.” At that point, appellant pulled a handgun from his pants and shot the victim in the back. Appellаnt ran to where the victim lay on his stomach and shot him three more times in the back before fleeing the scene.
1. Appellant maintains that the evidence was not sufficient to authorize his conviction since the State did not disprove his evidence that his action was justified.
“[A] person is justified in using force which is intended or likely to cause death or great bodily harm only if he reasonably believеs that such force is necessary to prevent death or great bodily injury to himself. . . .” OCGA § 16-3-21 (a). To establish justification, a defendant must show the circumstances were such as to excite the fears of a reasonable person that his safety was in danger.
Wetta v. State,
2. Appellant next takes issue with the trial court’s admission of similar transaction evidence. “[Ejvidence of an indeрendent offense or act committed by the accused is highly and inherently prejudicial, raising as it does, an inference that an аccused who acted in a certain manner on one occasion is likely to have acted in the same or in a similar mаnner on another occasion. . .
Williams v. State,
The evidence presented by the State at the hearing held pursuаnt to Uniform Superior Court Rule 31.3 (b) established that, in 1991, at age 15, appellant pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter in connection with the shooting death of a female acquaintance. A witness at the Rule 31.3 hearing testified that appellant believed the 1991 victim had set him up to be the victim of a robbery during which he had been beaten badly, and that he had purchased a gun threatening to kill her. The shooting оccurred in appellant’s room in an apartment leased by the witness. Appellant testified at the hearing that the 1991 shooting wаs an accident. The State argued that the 1991 act was similar to the crime for which appellant was being tried in that each homicide was committed with a handgun after little conversation in the early morning hours of a fall day, and that each time appеllant was captured a short distance away after leaving the scene. The trial court found that the State sought to introduce the evidence for a proper purpose; that appellant committed the 1991 shooting; and that the transactions were sufficiently similar to authorize admission of evidence concerning the 1991 shooting.
Appellant takes issue only with the trial court’s finding that the 1991 shooting was sufficiently similar to the 1994 incident for which
appellant was being tried. The incidents were similar in that each involved a viсtim who took some action which caused appellant to react by firing a weapon, each time with fatal consеquences. “Since appellant claimed [he acted in] self-defense, evidence of previous unprovoked attаcks was relevant to show malice, intent, motive, and bent of mind.”
Gentry v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The crimes occurred on September 10, 1994. Appellant was arrested within hours of the shooting and was indicted January 6, 1995. His trial commenced on May 30, 1995, and concluded with the return of guilty verdicts on Junе 2. Appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment for the felony murder conviction and a concurrent 20-year term for the aggravated assault conviction. His motion for new trial, filed June 29, 1995 and amended September 12, was denied February 14, 1996. Appellant filed a Notice of Appeal on February 29; his appeal was docketed in this Court on May 28, and oral argument was heard on September 10, 1996.
