Appellant Samuel Nathaniel Belmar was convicted of malice murder in connection with the homicide of Savalas Cousar and appeals the judgment of conviction entered against him. 1 Finding no reversible error to have been committed, we affirm the conviction.
*796 On Saturday, April 22, 2000, the body of Savalas Cousar was found partially covered by a blanket in the reclined passenger seat of his car which was parked with its engine running in the parking lot of a DeKalb County elementary school. The forensic pathologist who performed an autopsy on the body determined the victim had been shot in the face by a shotgun from a distance of two-six inches. The shotgun slug and cardboard wadding had passed through the victim’s skull and were found in a kerchief worn on his head. The day after the body was discovered, a shotgun consistent with the slug and wadding was found by children in the backyard of the home of the girlfriend of appellant Samuel Nathaniel Belmar. The owner of that shotgun testified he had given it to appellant for safekeeping. Appellant’s girlfriend initially told police appellant had been with her the evening the victim was last seen alive but, upon further questioning, admitted she had not been with him and had lied to police at appellant’s request. The girlfriend testified appellant came to her home Saturday morning and told her he had killed someone he believed had drugged appellant’s drink and robbed appellant at a local club. Appellant did not name the person, but identified the purported robber as the man who had accompanied him to the club Friday evening. The girlfriend stated appellant told her he had awakened in the club, found his companion in the club’s parking lot, and had driven the companion’s car to the nearby school where he shot the companion in the face with a “gauge” while the victim was sleeping.
A family friend of appellant testified appellant had asked her to tell police he had been with her the entire weekend the victim was killed. When threatened with the possibility of a perjury prosecution, the witness told police appellant had visited her home on Sunday morning and had told her he believed he had killed someone. In a noncustodial statement to investigating officers, appellant admitted he and the victim had worked together for about a week, with appellant serving as the victim’s job trainer; the victim had given him a ride to his girlfriend’s home at the end of the workday on Friday; the victim invited appellant to go to a club with him that evening; and the victim went home to shower and dress for the evening out.
1. The evidence presented by the State was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find appellant guilty of malice murder beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson v. Virginia,
*797 2. Appellant contends the trial court committed reversible error when, pursuant to the “necessity” exception to the rule against the admission of hearsay, it permitted the victim’s mother to testify to the contents of a statement made to her by the victim. Over defense objection, the victim’s mother testified the victim had told her the evening before his body was found that he was going to a club with a co-worker.
Two requirements must be met in order for a trial court to admit hearsay under the “necessity” exception: “necessity” and “particularized guarantees of trustworthiness.”
Ward v. State,
Whether testimony was accompanied by particular guarantees of trustworthiness is a matter for the trial court’s discretion.
Myers v. State,
The erroneous admission of hearsay testimony is not reversible error where the hearsay is cumulative of legally admissible evidence of the same fact.
Myers v. State,
supra,
3. Appellant also takes issue with the admission into evidence of a photograph of appellant’s right upper back displaying a tattoo reading “12 gauge” and containing rectangular shapes which the assistant district attorney described as “totally unfamiliar” and “meaningless” to her. The photo was the subject of appellant’s motion in limine, to which the State responded the photo was relevant because the killing was done with a 12-gauge shotgun and was probative of appellant’s state of mind and his motive. Over objection, the trial court admitted the photo, finding it relevant since the case involved allegations the perpetrator used a 12-gauge shotgun and ruling the photo not “unreasonably prejudicial.” On appeal, appellant argues the admission of the photo served no purpose other than to suggest he committed the crime because a 12-gauge shotgun was the murder weapon. The State maintains the tattoo reflected appellant’s state of mind regarding 12-gauge shotguns and that his actions were motivated by his access to and attachment to 12-gauge shotguns.
We have upheld the admission of a photograph of a tattoo on the body of the defendant when it is evidence of a possible motive for the crime
(Allen v. State,
Evidence of tattoos has been rejected as irrelevant when identification of the defendant was not an issue
(State v. Steele,
In the case at bar, the evidence of appellant’s tattoo did not corroborate any testimony regarding the identity of the killer and, contrary to the State’s assertion, there was no evidence the victim was killed because appellant had an attachment to 12-gauge weapons. Rather, the State established at trial that appellant killed the victim because appellant believed the victim had drugged and robbed him.
2
In essence, the State used the evidence of appellant’s tattoo to establish for the jury that the appellant must have killed the victim
*800
because the victim was killed with a 12-gauge shotgun and the tattoo showed appellant had a propensity to use a 12-gauge shotgun. To show a defendant has a propensity for certain behavior, the State may introduce evidence of the defendant’s prior similar behavior.
Cotton v. State,
The trial court’s error requires a new trial unless it is “ ‘highly probable that the error did not contribute to the judgment.’ ”
Johnson v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The victim’s body was found on April 22, 2000. The DeKalb County grand jury returned a true bill of indictment against appellant, charging him with malice murder, felony murder (aggravated assault) and armed robbery in the July 2000 term. Appellant’s trial commenced July 26, 2001, and concluded on July 31 with the jury’s return of its guilty verdicts on the murder counts after the trial court had directed a verdict of acquittal on the armed robbery *796 charge. Appellant’s sentence of life imprisonment was initially imposed July 31 and was amended on August 3. His motion for new trial, filedAugust 31,2001, was denied April 22,2005. A notice of appeal was filed timely on May 20, 2005, and the appeal was submitted for decision on the briefs.
There was also the suggestion at trial that appellant killed the victim in order to obtain the victim’s gold necklace. In fact, appellant was charged in the indictment with armed robbery of the victim, with the gold chain being the property allegedly taken from the victim. However, the trial court directed a verdict of acquittal on this charge at the close of the evidence.
