Miсhelle Garner Hall was convicted of malice murder and aggravated assault in the shooting death of her husband, Britt Hall. She appeals from the denial of her motion for new trial, 1 contending thаt the trial court erred by admitting similar transaction evidence *756 and prior consistent statements and by failing to charge on involuntary manslaughter. Finding no error, we affirm.
1. The evidence adduced at triаl authorized the jury to find that appellant was married to the victim and that the couple was experiencing stress as a result of serious financial difficulties. On July 30, 2008, appellant called 911 and stated that the victim had shot at her and then shot himself. There was medical testimony that the victim was shot in the chest from a distance between six and eight inches and died from this injury. The victim also sustained pre-mоrtem gunshot wounds to his thigh and the back of his left arm and had a bruise behind his right ear. The jury heard the audio recording of appellant’s 911 call and the video recorded statements she made to police officers, in which she initially reiterated her suicide statement but later claimed that, after a struggle in which the victim was accidentally shot in the leg, she got the weapon, left the house, tried to unload it, then returned inside where, during a final struggle in which the victim wrapped his arms around her and pulled her down, the gun discharged inflicting the chest wound. 2 The only other person in the home at the time of these events was appellant’s eight-year-old daughter, Alyssa Davis, who testified that, from her bedroom directly over the struggling couple, she heard the victim repeatedly tell appellant tо “put the gun down.”
Appellant, through her statements to police officers and ballistics testimony presented at trial, raised the defenses of justification and accident by claiming the victim was fаtally shot during her struggle with him to prevent him from killing her and then committing suicide. However, witness credibility as well as the question of justification are matters for the jury, which was free to reject the version of the events favorable to appellant. See
Roper v. State,
2. Appellant contends the trial court erred by admitting as similar transaction evidence the testimony of her former husbands, Davis and Hart, regarding acts of violence she perpetrated against them. These acts consisted of incidents in which appellant during times of stress struck оr kicked her then-spouse. Appellant urges that these prior batteries were inadmissible because they were not sufficiently similar so that proof of these independent crimes tended
*757
to establish the crimes charged. See
Lumpkin v. State,
Whеn considering the admissibility of similar transaction evidence, the proper focus is on the similarities, not the differences, between the separate crimes and the crimes in question.
Phillips v. State,
[i]n cases of domestic violence, prior incidents of abuse against fаmily members or sexual partners are more generally permitted because there is a logical connection between violent acts against two different persons with whom the aсcused had a similar emotional or intimate attachment.
(Footnote omitted.)
Thomas v. State,
Contrary to appellant’s further assertion, the 15- and 13-year lapses of time between the prior incidents and the crimes at issue here do not require exclusion of the evidence. See
Pareja v. State,
In reviewing the trial court’s dеcision to admit similar transaction evidence, “we must be mindful that this decision should be upheld unless it is an abuse of discretion. [Cit.]”
Pareja v. State,
supra,
3. Appellant contends the trial court errеd by admitting the prior *758 consistent statement by appellant’s daughter, Alyssa Davis. The transcript reveals that, during defense counsel’s cross-examination of the child, counsel elicited confirmation from Alyssa about certain information she had previously told her third-grade teacher and written in a journal the teacher had given her. The information included matters, e.g., that Alyssa had observed the victim punch appellant, that conflicted with Alyssa’s testimony at trial. Over objection, the State was allowed to play for the jury the audio recorded statement Alyssa gave to a police officer within hours after the victim’s death; this statement was consistent with Alyssa’s trial testimony.
A witness’s prior consistent statement is admissible only where: (1) the veracity of a witness’s trial testimony has been placed in issue at trial; (2) the witness is present at trial; and (3) the witness is available for cross-examination. A witness’s veracity is placed in issue so as to permit the introduction of a prior consistent statement if affirmative charges of recent fabrication, improper influence, or improper motive are raised during cross-examination.
(Punctuation and footnotes omitted.)
Duggan v. State,
4. In her final enumeration, appellant contends the trial court erred by refusing to give the jury her requested instruction on involuntary manslaughter, see OCGA § 16-5-3 (a), which she asserts was supported by her statements to police officers reflecting that she had engaged in reckless conduct, e.g., by mishandling the revolver in that she failed to properly unload it and by mistakenly ignoring the risk of bringing the revolver back inside the home in proximity of the victim while knowing him to be suicidal, homicidal or both. The offense of involuntary manslaughter in the commission of an unlawful act “requires evidence of an unintentional killing ‘by the commission of an unlawful act other than a felony.’.. . [Cit.]” (Emphasis omitted.)
Finley v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The crimes occurred on July 30, 2008. Hall was indicted January 5, 2009 in Coweta County on charges of malice murder, felony murder and family violence aggravated assault. She was found guilty of all charges on September 25, 2009 and was sentenced that day to life in prison for the malice murder conviction and a concurrent 20-year sentence for the family violence aggravated assault conviction. See OCGA § 16-5-21 (j) (family connection as essential elеment State must prove for conviction); see generally
Eidson v. State,
In her statements appellant did not expressly address the manner in which the arm wound to the victim was inflicted.
The transcript reflects that the four similar transaction instances involved appellant’s stress over an impending party that she was hosting; stress as a spouse was preparing to depart alone on a trip when aрpellant had also wanted to go; stress after learning that her spouse told another woman he no longer loved appellant; and stress when a divorced spouse returned for belongings from the marital home.
