John Willie Curry appeals from his convictions of rape and kidnapping. He contends that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict and that the trial court erred in admitting certain photographic evidence, in denying him the opportunity to impeach the victim by asking her about her alleged cocaine use hours before she met Curry, and in questioning the victim in order to prove an element of the state’s case. Because each of his contentions is without merit, we affirm the convictions.
1. On appeal, the evidence must be construed in a light most favorable to the verdict, and the appellant no longer enjoys the presumption of innocence; this court does not weigh the evidence or determine witness credibility but only determines whether the evidence is sufficient under the standard set out in Jackson v. Virginia.
Viewed most favorably to the verdict, the evidence shows that on March 8, 1995, at about 11:30 p.m., the victim was walking home when a car pulled up alongside her and stopped. Curry, the driver, started talking to the victim. The victim assumed that Curry knew her because he was asking her about her relatives, whom he apparently knew. Curry offered to drive the victim to her home, which was about a block away. The victim, thinking Curry was a friend of the family, accepted the offer. The door on the passenger’s side did not open, so she entered the car on the driver’s side.
When Curry drove past the victim’s street, she asked him where he was going. He said “I know where you live,” but then continued driving and turned off onto a dirt road. Curry told her he was facing two life sentences in prison and did not care what happened to him and that if she wanted to see her children again, she would do what he said. Curry said he had a shovel in the trunk and that he could kill her and nobody would ever know she had been out there. The victim
An emergency room physician testified that he examined the victim the morning of the crimes and found that she had abrasions and contusions on her breasts, neck and back and redness in the vaginal area. A rape kit was prepared and sent with the victim’s clothing to the State Crime Laboratory for analysis.
A forensic serologist from the crime laboratory testified that slides taken during the examination of the victim revealed the presence of sperm. He noted that the victim’s pants had human blood on them and were heavily soiled, and her underpants were soiled and torn.
Curry testified on his own behalf, giving a very different description of the encounter. He testified that the victim approached his car that night and when he said he was “out here to have some fun,” she said she wanted to have some fun, too, and got into the car. As he drove her to the dirt road, he mentioned that he had only $10, to which she replied “okay.” They made small talk; she took off her clothes; and they had sex. As they were leaving, the victim told him not to take her home yet. They went back to the dirt road and had sex again. Curry hit his head on the uncovered overhead light in the car as they were having sex, and his head started bleeding. He wiped the blood on the victim’s pants. When they finished having sex, Curry gave the victim $10. She asked him to take her to buy crack cocaine, but he took her home instead.
As Curry points out, his version of events is in stark contrast with the victim’s. It is well settled, though, that the jury is to assess the credibility of the witnesses, resolve any conflicts in the evidence, and come to a determination of the facts.
2. Curry raises two enumerations regarding the trial court’s admission of photographic evidence.
(a) He argues the trial court should not have admitted Exhibits 10 and 11 because they were no different from photographs already admitted as Exhibits 3 through 8. Exhibits 3 through 8 are photographs taken of the victim at the hospital hours after the incident. According to the trial testimony, the pictures show abrasions and scars about the victim’s neck, ear, chest, arm and back.
Exhibits 10 and 11 are photographs the sheriff’s department took of the victim a few days later. The sheriff asked the victim to return to the department four days after the incident so investigators could check for
The complaint that photographs of the injured victim are duplicative is not a ground to exclude them from evidence. Photographs which are material and relevant to any issue are admissible even if they may be duplicative.
(b) Curry also challenges the admission of Exhibit 13, a photograph showing bruises and scabs on the victim’s ear. Curry complains that the picture was taken four days after the alleged rape and that, because investigators did not mention or take photographs depicting such injuries in the initial examination, the injuries might have been inflicted during the four-day interim period. This argument presents no ground for reversal.
The victim testified that Curry pulled and pinched her ears in order to restrain her while he had sexual intercourse with her. The sheriff testified that, while he noticed no injuries to her ear on the morning of the incident, the victim told him that morning that Curry had pulled her ears, and he added that the ear injury shown in Exhibit 13 was consistent with what she told him. Whether the injury to the victim’s ear as shown in the photograph occurred in the manner described by the victim or in some other manner goes to the weight of the evidence, not its admissibility. The ultimate weight and believability of the evidence were left to the jury, as they should have been.
3. Curry argues that the trial court should have permitted him to impeach the victim by calling witnesses to show that she used crack cocaine on the day of the incident, before she encountered Curry. This enumeration presents no basis for reversal.
The state filed a pretrial motion in limine seeking to prevent Curry from introducing evidence showing that the victim consumed cocaine shortly before she met Curry. Curry argued that the evidence was admissible to show the victim’s state of mind at the time of the occurrence and to impeach her credibility. The court reserved ruling on the motion and, just before trial started, handed both attorneys a copy of a case, apparently Dunton v. State,
During cross-examination, Curry asked the victim if she had consumed any drugs or alcohol on the day of the incident. The victim testified that she smoked a marijuana cigarette and drank four beers and a shot of gin that day. Curry then asked if she had consumed any other drug or alcohol, to which she replied: “Not as I can remember, no.” It is this statement Curry sought to impeach with evidence that she also smoked crack cocaine on that day.
A witness may be impeached by disproving facts testified to by her.
Nonetheless, even if the evidence should have been admitted, the question remains whether the exclusion of this impeachment evidence was harmful error requiring a reversal and a new trial.
4. Curry argues that the trial court “aligned itself with the prosecution” by attempting to prove an essential element of the state’s case, namely by asking the victim whether Curry’s penis penetrated her vagina. Although a trial judge is prohibited from expressing or intimating his opinion as to what has or has not been proved, the judge does have the right to ask a question or series of questions of any witness for the purpose of developing the truth of the case.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
See Adams v. State,
Williams v. State,
See generally Gulley v. State,
The appellate record contains only poor-quality photocopies of the photographs admitted at trial. Therefore, we rely on the trial testimony to tell us what is depicted in the pictures.
Dukes v. State,
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Martin v. State,
See Jackson v. State,
See id.
See generally Thomas v. State,
See generally OCGA § 5-6-30.
OCGA § 24-9-82.
OCGA § 24-2-3; see generally Raines v. State,
Brown v. State,
See Letlow v. State,
Letlow, supra at 343.
See id.; Dukes, supra at 307-308 (2); see generally Watson v. State,
Dixon v. State,
See Dixon, supra.
