420 P.2d 821 | Colo. | 1966
The plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was tried by a jury and convicted of the crimes of aggravated robbery and conspiracy to commit robbery. From the judgment of the trial court, the defendant brings this writ of error.
Defendant first contends that the transcribed questions propounded to him and the answers which he gave, offered into evidence as People’s Exhibit A, were erroneously admitted for the reason that the transcribed document was not signed by the defendant. At the trial a hearings’ reporter for the Denver Police Department testified as to the oral conversations in a question-and-answer form between Detective Lopez and the defendant. The reporter further testified that she took the notes in shorthand and accurately transcribed them into typewritten form. Detective Lopez also testified as to the answers of the defendant made to the questions propounded and that such questions were accurately transcribed by the stenographer. There was sufficient testimony that the answers contained in People’s Exhibit A were made as the free and voluntary act of the defendant.
The admissibility of a voluntary confession given in the presence of a stenographer who took the oral conversation in shorthand and subsequently reduced the
The defendant further contends that statements made by him at the time of his arrest were inadmissible for the reason that they were involuntarily made. From the record it appears that at the time of the defendant’s arrest he was playing cards in a room with three other persons, and that the arresting officers then entered the room and told the defendant that he was under arrest. The defendant said, “They,” referring to the other men present, “didn’t have anything to do with it or know anything about it.” One of the detectives then stated, “Do you know why we are here?”; to which the de
The instant case, on its facts, does not come within the Escobedo rule. The statements of the defendant were his voluntary spontaneous comments made at the time of his arrest, and we have dealt with the law under such facts in Maes v. People, 160 Colo. 528, 418 P.2d 891; LaBlanc v. People, 160 Colo. 575, 418 P.2d 888; Ballay v. People, 160 Colo. 309, 419 P.2d 446.
As to the other points in the summary of argument of the defendant, we find that they are without merit. The record shows that there was sufficient corroborating evidence, apart from the confession, to submit the count of conspiracy to the jury; we further find that there was sufficient, if not overwhelming, proof as to the identity of the defendant; and, lastly, that these questions were properly submitted to the jury for their determination.
The judgment is affirmed.