Appellant was tried before a jury on an indictment which charged him with rape, aggravated sodomy, and kidnapping with bodily injury. Verdicts of guilty were returned on all counts. Appellant appeals from the judgments of conviction and sentences entered by the trial court on the jury’s verdicts.
1. The trial court’s admission of evidence of appellant’s commission of four prior similar criminal acts is enumerated as error.
“Evidence of similar transactions or crimes is admissible when it is shown that the defendant is the perpetrator of-the similar offense, and there is sufficient similarity between the independent crime and the offense charged that proof of the former tends to prove the latter. [Cit.] Evidence of independent crimes has been admitted to show bent of mind and course of conduct, and has been most liberally extended in the area of sexual offenses. [Cit.] There was no question that appellant was the perpetrator of the similar offense [s], and the modus operandi of appellant was the same. Thus, such evidence was admissible to show appellant’s bent of mind .... [Cit.]”
Davis v. State,
Appellant’s reliance upon
Moore v. State,
2. The trial court did not err in allowing the arresting officers to give testimony concerning appellant’s attempt to flee at the time of
*643
his arrest. “ ((A)11 circumstances connected with the arrest of the defendant are admissible and may be weighed by the jury for whatever they are worth. [Cit.]’ [Cit.]”
Lanham v. State,
3. Appellant moved that he be discharged and acquitted for failure of the State to try him in a timely manner pursuant to his demand for trial under OCGA § 17-7-170. The trial court’s denial of this motion is enumerated as error.
On October 14, 1985, appellant did file a proper demand for trial in accordance with OCGA § 17-7-170. Thereafter, however, appellant not only filed a written withdrawal of his demand for trial on January 22, 1986, he also waived his demand for trial by seeking, each time his case was called for trial, a continuance for additional time within which to prepare his defense. See
Myron v. State,
4. The trial court’s refusal “to consider or exercise any discretion as to appellant’s timely filed Motion in Limine” is enumerated as error.
“The trial court has an absolute right to refuse to decide the admissibility of evidence, allegedly violative of some ordinary rule of evidence, prior to trial. [Cits.]”
State v. Johnston,
5. Appellant enumerates as error the trial court’s refusal to allow him to conduct a thorough and sifting cross-examination of the victim.
Appellant sought to cross-examine the victim concerning her former membership in or contacts with a motorcycle gang or club. Whether OCGA § 24-2-3, the Rape Shield Law, would render evidence of such contacts or membership on the part of the victim statutorily inadmissible (see
Myers v. State,
6. Appellant enumerates the general grounds with regard to his conviction for kidnapping with bodily injury. A thorough examination of the record reveals that, from the evidence produced at trial, a rational trior of fact could reasonably have found appellant guilty of the crime charged beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson v. Virginia,
Appellant further urges an evidentiary insufficiency to authorize his conviction for both kidnapping
with bodily injury
and for rape. This contention would have merit if the State had relied solely upon the evidence of appellant’s commission of a single act of rape to satisfy the “bodily harm” element of the kidnapping charge. See
Allen v. State,
7. The trial court charged the jury that it would be authorized to convict appellant of both rape and kidnapping with bodily injury. This charge is enumerated as error. Pursuant to our holding in Division 6, there was no error in so charging the jury.
Judgments affirmed.
