Sandra Franklin appeals from the trial court’s order revoking four years of her probation on the basis that she committed the new felony offense of robbery. She claims there was insufficient evidence to support a finding that she committed the offense of robbery, and that the State violated her due process rights by failing to collect and preserve exculpatory evidence.
1. The revocation petition charged that, while Franklin was serving the probated portion of a sentence on a prior felony offense, she violated her probation when she committed the new offense of robbery in Clarke County on September 17, 2006. At the hearing on the revocation petition, the State produced evidence that, on the date alleged, two police officers were on patrol in Clarke County in the City of Athens at about 2:00 a.m. when they saw Franklin standing on a street corner in front of a man who appeared to be unsteady on his feet and extremely intoxicated. Because of prior incidents involving robbery of intoxicated victims, the officers were on the lookout for incidents of that nature. The officers observed that the man was leaning back against a trash container and that Franklin was reaching around the man’s waist and “patting his pockets and running her hands in his pockets.” One officer said that she “saw [Franklin’s] hand in his back pocket.” When the officers approached and told Franklin to step back, Franklin blurted out, “I was trying to help him. I didn’t rob anybody.” When Franklin stepped back from the man, the officers saw a wallet on the ground near Franklin. The driver’s license and credit cards in the wallet identified it as belonging to the intoxicated man. According to the officers, the man was so intoxicated at the time that, when Franklin moved away from him, he slumped down unconscious and unresponsive. The State presented no evidence that the intoxicated man resisted Franklin or was even aware of Franklin’s presence. The man involved in the incident testified at the revocation hearing that he remembered drinking alcoholic beverages in several bars and becoming “very intoxicated,” but that he had no memory of his encounter with Franklin. He testified that he did not know Franklin and that she did not have permission to remove or take his wallet.
Franklin argued at the hearing that the evidence produced by the State was insufficient to show that she committed the offense of robbery, as alleged in the revocation petition. Franklin contended that, even if there was circumstantial evidence that she took the man’s wallet from his pocket, the evidence did not establish robbery because the man was so intoxicated that he was unaware his wallet had been taken until he was informed of what had occurred at a later time. Franklin also argued that the circumstantial evidence was insufficient to show that she committed the lesser included offense of theft by taking. After considering the evidence and arguments, the trial court found that the evidence showed Franklin committed the felony offense of robbery and revoked four years of her probation.
We agree with Franklin’s contention that the evidence was insufficient to show the felony offense of robbery. As provided in OCGA § 16-8-40 (a),
[a] person commits the offense of robbery when, with intent to commit theft, he takes property of another from the person or the immediate presence of another: (1) By use of force; (2) By intimidation, by the use ofthreat or coercion, or by placing such person in fear of immediate serious bodily injury to himself or to another; or (3) By sudden snatching.
Under the statute, an essential element of all three methods of committing robbery is some form of force — actual physical force in the first method, or in the second method, constructive force supplied by intimidation, etc., or in the third method, force limited to that necessary to suddenly snatch property from a victim who had no time to react before the taking was completed. Robert E. Cleary, Jr., Kurtz Criminal Offenses and Defenses in Ga., Robbery (Sec. (II) (E)) (2006 ed.).
In the present case, the evidence did not show robbery by sudden snatching. But even if the evidence could be construed to show that Franklin applied no other force than that necessary to quickly grab the man’s wallet from his pocket, this method of robbery requires proof that the man was aware of the taking before it was completed.
King v. State,
Actual force [in this method] implies personal violence. If there is any injury done to the person, or if there is a struggle to retain possession of the property, before it is taken, it is the force [sufficient for this method of robbery]. Force, in the sense in which it is used in defining the offense of robbery [by this method], consists in personal violence or that degree of force that is necessary to remove articles so attached to the person or clothing as to create resistance, however slight.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.)
Henderson v. State,
The trial court revoked four years of Franklin’s probated sentence on the basis that a preponderance of the evidence showed that she committed the new felony offense of robbery, as alleged in the revocation petition. OCGA § 42-8-34.1 (b), (d);
Poole v. State,
2. Franklin contends that her due process rights were violated because the State failed to collect and preserve exculpatory evidence. The record shows that Franklin questioned the arresting officers as to why they did not take statements from witnesses at the scene of the arrest, and also questioned why the State did not present evidence, if it existed, from a camera surveillance system which she claims might have captured the events at issue on videotape. The only arguments made by Franklin in the trial court with respect to these issues went to the sufficiency of the State’s evidence or the weight of the evidence given possible bias against Franklin on the part of the arresting officers. Because the due process issue Franklin raises on appeal was not raised in the trial court, this claim presents nothing for appellate review.
Wallace v. State,
Judgment vacated and case remanded.
Notes
These circumstances are distinguished from those where a robber takes property without resistance from an unconscious or incapacitated victim who the robber has put into the helpless condition prior to the taking. In those cases, even though the victim is incapable of resisting when the property is taken, the actual force used by the robber prior to the taking to render the victim helpless is force essential to accomplish the subsequent taking and is sufficient to show the offense of robbery by use of force.
Young v. State,
