After a jury trial, Denise Bellamy was convicted of robbery and simple battery. She appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in refusing to give her requested charge on theft by taking as a lesser included offense to robbery. But Bellamy’s co-defendant, Fakhrideen Abdul-Hakeem, admitted to facts establishing that he committed the greater offense of robbery, and Bellamy admitted to facts establishing that she was a party to that crime. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in denying her request for a charge on the lesser offense. We affirm.
The state presented evidence at trial showing that Bellamy and Abdul-Hakeem cornered victim Lawrence Miller as he sat in a parked vehicle, demanded money from him, dragged him out of the vehicle, hit him, took his wallet out of his jacket pocket, took money out of the wallet, and fled. They left him lying on the sidewalk, distraught and injured.
Bellamy and Abdul-Hakeem testified at trial to a different picture of their encounter with Miller. But even as they described it, the encounter was robbery. Bellamy and Abdul-Hakeem testified that Miller owed
Pertinently, the trial court instructed the jury on the charged offense of robbery by use of force. See OCGA § 16-8-40 (a) (1). It denied Bellamy’s request for an instruction on the lesser offense of theft by taking. See OCGA § 16-8-2. Bellamy argues that this was error.
“Where a case contains some evidence, no matter how slight, that shows that the defendant committed a lesser offense, then the court should charge the jury on that offense.” Edwards v. State,
There was uncontradicted evidence in this case that AbdulHakeem committed the greater offense of robbery. The state charged Abdul-Hakeem and Bellamy with robbery by use of force. A person commits that offense “where, with intent to commit theft, he takes property of another from the person or the immediate presence of another . . . [b]y use of force.” OCGA § 16-8-40 (a) (1).
Actual force in this method [of committing robbery] implies personal violence. If there is any injury done to the person, or if there is a struggle to retain possession of the property, before it is taken, it is the force sufficient for this method of robbery. Force, in the sense in which it is used in defining the offense of robbery by this method, consists in personal violence or that degree of force that is necessary to remove articles so attached to the person or clothing as to create resistance, however slight.
Franklin v. State,
Here, Abdul-Hakeem admitted to taking Miller’s wallet from his person and removing the money therefrom without Miller’s permission. His belief that he had a right to
Bellamy did not dispute any of Abdul-Hakeem’s admissions. And her own admissions demonstrated that she was concerned in the commission of the robbery that Abdul-Hakeem committed against Miller, making her a party to that crime. See OCGA § 16-2-20. Because these admissions, along with the undisputed evidence in the case, showed the completion of the greater offense of robbery, the trial court did not err in refusing to charge the jury on the lesser offense of theft by taking. See Jenkins,
Judgment affirmed.
