MEMORANDUM OPINION
The appellant, Donald Raymond Barrett, was convicted in Tulsa County District Court, Case No. CRF-81-3504, of Burglary in the Second Degree, After Former Conviction of Two or More Felonies, was sentenced to twenty (20) years’ imprisonment, and he appeals.
On Sunday, October 4, 1981, a suspect, positively identified in court as the appellant, broke and entered into Henshall’s Auto Parts store in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Police officers, who were dispatched to the scene when the store’s burglary alarm was tripped, observed the appellant inside the building. A metal bar not belonging to Henshall’s was found just inside the broken window that the appellant had used to gain entry. The manager of the store, Patrick Harrelson, was called to the store when the alarm sounded. He and a co-worker unlocked the front door and allowed a police officer to enter the building. A short while later, the appellant was found hiding on top of a bathroom inside the store and was apprehended.
In his only assignment of error, the appellant contends that his mere presence inside of the building, notwithstanding the State’s evidence establishing his breaking and entering, is insufficient to prove any “intent to steal,” a necessary element of the crime charged. We do not agree. This Court has held in
Robson v. State,
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment and sentence is AFFIRMED.
