OPINION OF THE COURT
On March 29, 1977, a Lancaster County jury found appellant guilty of one count of murder of the first degree and of another count of murder of the first degree, as a principal in the second degree. Appellant’s case was consolidated for trial with that of codefendants Dale Troop and Ronald Brown. The charges in this case arose out of a double slaying which occurred on August 2, 1969 when individuals armed with various firearms drove through the southeast section of Lancaster and fired shots into two occupied automobiles. 1 The trial court entered an opinion and order denying post-trial motions on April 12, 1979. On May 1, 1979, appellant was sentenced to two consecutive terms of life imprisonment. This direct appeal followed. We affirm the judgments of sentence.
We will first address appellant’s contention that the trial court erred in refusing to grant his various requests for a change of venue because of allegedly prejudicial publicity concerning this case. This Court has recently reviewed the law dealing with pre-trial publicity in a change of venue setting in
Commonwealth v. Casper,
Appellant is not in a position to assert the impropriety of the denial of his points for charge since no specific objections were raised following the charge. Pa.R.Crim.P. Rule 1119(b);
Commonwealth v. Brown,
It was not error for the trial court to refuse appellant’s motion to dismiss the charges because of the approximately seven years’ delay between the commission of the offense and the appellant’s arrest. This is substantially the same delay as in
Commonwealth v. Daniels,
Appellant further contends that the trial court erroneously dismissed his application for severance of counts and *539 defendants. With regard to the consolidation of the two murder offenses for trial, we note that
[t]he denial of a motion for severance is not an abuse of discretion if the facts and elements of the two crimes are easily separable in the minds of the jurors and if the crimes are such that the fact of commission of each crime would be admissible as evidence in a separate trial for the other.
Commonwealth v. Taylor,
Appellant presented several other arguments with regard to refusing challenges for cause, allowing out-of-court statements by a codefendant, dismissing his challenge to the array of the jury, as well as others. All of these arguments are without sufficient merit to warrant discussion.
Finally, appellant avers that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdicts because portions of the testimony of the chief prosecution witness, Dorothy Easley, contradicted that of the other Commonwealth witnesses. Variances in testimony, however, go to the credibility of the witnesses and not the sufficiency of the evidence.
Commonwealth v. Kahley,
Appellant’s reliance on
Commonwealth v. Bennett,
Judgments of sentence affirmed.
Notes
. The trial judge acknowledged that there was evidence that the killings were inspired by racial tension that existed in the City of Lancaster at that time. The victims in this case, Daniel Gebhard and Barry Kimmet, were both white. Appellant and his two codefendants are black.
