This is a direct appeal from conviction by a jury of one count of criminal confinement, for which appellant received a sentence of twenty (20) years.
Appellant raises two issues on appеal: (1) whether the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for mistrial; and (2) whether the trial court errеd in giving State’s tendered Instruction Number 3 over his objection.
These are the facts from the record which tend tо support the determination of guilt. On September 12, 1984, two Lawrence County police officers responded to a call regarding a suspicious vehicle at a vacant house. The officers entered thе darkened house and appellant appeared and held a gun on one officer. The offiсer identified himself as a police officer. Appellant knew he was confronted by a police officer, but nevertheless ordered the officer to leave, or appellant would shoot him. The оfficers exited the house, and subsequently heard the other car start but then could not locate appellant, and had the other car impounded. The car was later removed without authorization from the impound lot and then reported stolen. On September 17, 1984, police observed the missing car and apprehended appellant as he fled from the car. A gun matching the description of the one appellant used to threaten the officer on September 12, 1984, was found the next day approximately thirty (30) feet from the place at which appellant was apprehended.
I
Appellant asserts the trial court erred in overruling his motion for mistrial following introduction by the State of evidence linking the gun in question to a 1982 burglary.
During direсt examination of State’s witness Officer Green, the following occurred:
Q. Were you able to determine the ownership of the gun?
A. Yes sir. After taking it back to the station we ran a number on the computer, make and so forth, and found it had been stolen in a burglary, I believe it was in the еight month of ’82, from a Lee Carr residence, would be on the east side of Mitchell.
Appellant moved for a mistrial alleging this testimony was an highly inflammatory evidentiary harpoon and improper evidence of a prior uncharged criminal act. The motion for mistrial was overruled following argument outside of the presence of the jury. The State then indicated it would not object to striking a portion of the comment and the jury reсeiving an admonishment. The trial judge responded to this suggestion by the State and said she did not wish to draw attention to the statement and did not feel the State had made a connection between the burglary and the appellant. Appellant at no time requested an admonishment be given to the jury.
The standard to be appliеd in determining whether an impropriety occurring during the course of the trial necessitates a granting of a mistriаl is whether the appellant was placed in a position of grave peril to which he otherwise wоuld
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not have been subjected.
Maldonado v. State
(1976),
Given the clеar and present danger which the use of this loaded gun posed to another human being, the impingement on thе appellant’s substantial rights from the jury’s knowledge of the gun’s stolen character is insufficient to warrant the granting оf a mistrial. This harpoon falls within the category in which there is a harm curable by an admonishment in light of the disparate differences between the implied and the charged crime.
Page v. State
(1980),
II
Appellant asserts the trial court erred in giving State’s tendered Instruction Number 3 which reads as follows:
Avoidance of arrest by the defendant may be considered by you as evidence of guilty knowledge and upon the issue of guilt of the defendant.
Appellant argues that the tendered instruction unduly focused the jury’s attention on the flight of thе appellant. There was evidence admitted concerning other offenses committed by the appellant and appellant contends the jury may have considered his possible flight from prosecution on these other offenses rather than focusing solely on the crime charged.
Flight from the scene of the crime is sufficient to warrant an instruction on flight.
Taylor v. State
(1984), Ind.,
The conviction is affirmed.
