Opinion by
Appellant, James Kinnard, was arrested on January 3, 1973, and charged with rape and robbery. The charges rose out of an incident which occurred on December 29, 1972, at approximately 7:35 P.M., when four men entered the book store in which a female clerk was working alone. One individual, wearing a green knit cap and tan jacket, entered the store slightly ahead of the others and asked the clerk if the store carried the book Hwoshima. The lighting in the store was quite good and the clerk was standing face-to-face with the man, so the clerk had ample opportunity to observe at least this particular individual. While the clerk was talking with this man, the other three approached her from behind and one of them placed a cold, hard, flat *137 object against her neck and instructed her to enter a more remote part of the store. The clerk was then raped by two of the men and money was taken from a cash register in the store. Five days after the crime, appellant was arrested while wearing a green knit cap and tan jacket. At the trial, the clerk positively identified appellant as the man who had first entered the store, though she was unable to say whether or not appellant was one of the men who actually raped her.
In a trial by jury, appellant was found guilty on May 17, 1973, of rape and robbery. Appellant filed a motion for a new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment, alleging that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, contrary to the weight of the evidence, contrary to law, and that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict. Pursuant to leave of Court, additional reasons were subsequently filed to support the motions. The motions were denied after argument before the Court en Banc, and appellant was sentenced on December 17, 1973, to consecutive terms of five to ten years on the rape conviction, and two and one-half to five years on the robbery conviction. The case is before us on direct appeal.
Though he failed to raise this issue in the lower court, appellant now argues that a pre-trial confrontation between the victim and himself was so unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification as to be a violation of due process. Appellant was exhibited to the victim at a line-up which included the three other men who were involved in the crime, plus four to six additional people. The victim was unable at that time to identify appellant as one of her attackers. At a subsequent preliminary hearing, appellant was brought into the magistrate’s office handcuffed to a man whom the victim had previously identified as having been involved in the crime. At this time, the victim identified appellant with these words: “I
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think this man on the end.”
1
When ashed on direct examination at the trial how certain she was that appellant was one of the men involved in the crime, the victim replied: “I am very certain this is the man who entered the booh store first.” On cross-examination, when ashed by appellant’s attorney about her identification of appellant at the preliminary hearing (“I think this man on the end”), the victim stated that she thought she had identified appellant “more strongly than that.” Instead of moving to have this identification testimony of the victim stricken from the record (alleging that the in-court identification was the result of an unduly suggestive, and hence unconstitutional, confrontation), appellant’s counsel apparently hoped that the jury would consider the evidence presented and find that the victim had been led by the prosecution into making a false identification. Absent a showing of incompetency or the presence of exceptional circumstances, neither of which we find here, counsel’s strategic decisions will be binding on his client.
Commonwealth v. Gambrell,
In further support of our decision, we cite
Henry v. Mississippi,
We turn now to the consideration of the issues properly raised in the Court below. Appellant first argues that the trial judge erred in permitting the prosecution to claim surprise and cross-examine its own witness, Arthur Cole, as to whether or not appellant was present at the time of the robbery and rape. The witness Cole, a co-defendant of appellant, had given a statement to the police some eleven days after the crime had been committed. In this statement (which had been typed by a police officer and signed by the witness) Cole indicated that appellant had in fact been present at the time the crime was committed. When called by the prosecution, however, to testify against appellant at trial, Cole testified that appellant had
not
been present. Over objection by the defense, the prosecution was permitted to claim surprise and to cross-examine Cole regarding the prior inconsistent statement. In
Commonwealth v. Conard,
Appellant further argues that the lower court erred in refusing to warn the witness Cole of Ms privilege against self-incrimination. As far back as 1912, our own Supreme Court said that “[t]he right of a witness to refuse to testify on the ground that Ms testimony may incriminate him, is a right personal to him alone. The person against whom the witness is called has no rights in relation to the matter.”
Commonwealth v. DeMasi,
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Appellant’s next argument is that the cap and jacket which he was wearing at the time he was arrested (January 3, 1973 — five days after the rape and robbery) were items of evidence “too remote in time to be of any probative value whatsoever”, and that these items therefore should not have been admitted into evidence over objection by the defense. We disagree. Shortly after the crime, the victim gave the police a description of her attackers, indicating that one of the men had been wearing a green knit cap, along with a tan coat or jacket. Testimony of the arresting officer indicated that the defendant was wearing, at the time of his arrest, the green knit cap and tan jacket which were admitted into evidence. We find that the hat and coat were properly put before the jury and were relevant to the issue of identification; the fact that appellant was arrested wearing this clothing
five days
after the crime affects only the weight, rather than the competency of the evidence. See
Commonwealth v. Ross,
Appellant also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. In brief, the evidence against appellant, viewed
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in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth,
Commonwealth v. Tabb,
Evidence is sufficient to support a conviction if, accepting as true all the evidence and all reasonable inferences arising therefrom upon which (if believed) the factfinder could properly have based its verdict, it is sufficient in law to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of the crime of which he was convicted.
Commonwealth v. Clark,
Appellant’s final argument is that his sentence of seven and one-half to fifteen years on the rape and rob
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bery charges was excessive. Though the Court has the power to modify an obviously-excessive sentence,
Commonwealth v. Zelnick,
The judgment will be affirmed.
Notes
There is no allegation that appellant was without counsel at the hearing.
The Rule in effect at the time of trial read (in pertinent part) : “(b) A motion for a new trial shall be in writing, and the grounds shall be specified .... Only the grounds so raised may be argued before the court.”
There is no allegation that the testimony of the witness Cole was not damaging to the prosecution’s case. See
Commonwealth v. Knudsen,
