In 2000, defendant Byron Joseph Dorsey, Jr. was accused of aggravated assault, battery, aggravated sodomy, and rape. At the Hall County jury trial, the defendant’s former wife and victim, a woman with whom he had continued to live after being divorced, testified that the defendant picked her up from a Gainesville hotel *34 where she spent the night with two male strangers, took her to their residence, beat her, and, while holding a knife on her, forced her to sodomize him orally and to submit to anal and vaginal intercourse with him. A Hall County jury convicted the defendant of one count of aggravated assault and one count of battery only. The defendant was sentenced concurrently to twenty years confinement, to serve six, and the remainder probated. Held:
1. After the events in issue occurred, the victim was admitted to a shelter for battered women. On direct examination of the shelter’s intake clerk and over the defendant’s objection, the trial court allowed the State to introduce the victim’s statement on admission as to what brought her to the shelter — this as consistent with her testimony on direct.
Cuzzort v. State,
Defendant’s claim to the contrary notwithstanding, defendant’s cross-examination of the victim shows that he challenged her testimony on direct as inconsistent with what she told police and defense counsel in earlier interviews and as colored by the degree to which she had been intoxicated while at the Gainesville hotel and the morning after. In doing so, the defendant, in effect, challenged the victim’s trial testimony as recently fabricated. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in admitting the victim’s prior consistent statement.
Blackmon v. State,
2. Further, the defendant argues that the trial court erred in allowing the jury to rehear that portion of the shelter intake clerk’s testimony recounting the prior consistent statement of the victim, set
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out infra, without reading back his cross-examination thereon. We are unpersuaded. It has long been settled that “[t]he jury should be permitted to limit what they rehear to what they desire to rehear, absent special circumstances which might work an injustice.
Byrd v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
