1. The evidence authorized the verdict of guilty of robbery, for which the defendant was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment in the state penitentiary. Enumerated error 4 is without merit for this reason and others hereinafter stated.
2. It is not shown that the trial court erred in overruling defense counsel’s motion for a mistrial on the ground, in effect, that the State’s counsel, in his
unreported
argument to the jury,
may
have stated
in substance
that, in his opinion, there was no doubt of the defendant’s guilt. The prosecuting attorney has the right and duty to argue his version of what the evidence produced at the trial has proved.
O’Bryant v. State,
3. "Evidence as to the time when and the place where arrested, the manner of the arrest, how the accused was armed, and whether he resisted,
and all the circumstances connected with the arrest,
are proper matters to be submitted to the jury to be weighed by them for what they are worth.
Wayne v. State,
4. Enumerated error 3 complains that "the trial court erred in not suppressing evidence of the currency found on the defendant as the arrest and search was illegal and in violation of the defendant’s constitutional rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments of the Federal Constitution and similar provisions of the Georgia Constitution and in violation of”
Code Ann.
§ 27-308 (Ga. L. 1966, pp. 567, 570). The provisions of
Code Ann.
§ 27-308 are not applicable, for the reason that the entry into the apartment in which the defendant was arrested was not in the execution of a search warrant, since none was obtained. As for the defendant’s arrest, the trial court probably would have been authorized to find it occurred after probable cause. See
Mitchell v. State,
The trial court did not err in entering the judgment on the verdict.
Judgment affirmed.
