OPINION
Appellant was indicted for “using and exhibiting a deadly weapon, to wit: a knife” in committing aggravated robbery. He was found guilty by a jury which also found true the allegations of prior convictions and assessed punishment at confinement for 35 years. In the eleventh ground of error appellant challenges sufficiency of the evidence adduced at trial to prove that *294 the knife was a deadly weapon. 1 The knife was not introduced at trial.
The victim, a clerk in a convenience store, testified that appellant attempted to purchase items but found himself seventy five cents short. After a brief silence appellant said, “What would you do if I said this was an armed robbery?” The victim did not know whether to take the “wobbly” and obviously drunken customer seriously, and pretended to be occupied with something under the .counter. Appellant said, “What do I have to do to prove it to you?”
At that point appellant displayed what the victim described as “something like a kitchen knife,” about six inches long. The prosecutor asked if the knife had a sharp edge, but the victim did not know and could only say that it had a point. The victim was not asked and did not say how long the blade was.
Appellant made no effort to stab or cut the victim in any way, but the clerk testified that he was afraid he might get stabbed. The prosecutor asked, “Did you think if he stabbed you, it would hurt you in some way?” The victim simply replied, “Make me bleed.”
A knife is not a deadly weapon per se.
Williamson v. State,
In
Alvarez v. State,
The evidence is insufficient to show that appellant used or exhibited a deadly weapon, thereby committing aggravated robbery as alleged in the indictment.
The judgment is reversed and remanded with instructions to enter a judgment of acquittal of aggravated robbery.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. In an untimely pro se supplemental brief appellant again attacks the sufficiency of the evidence of deadliness, pointing the Court more directly to appropriate authority.
