On March 11, 1976, the Jefferson County Grand Jury returned two separate indictments charging the appellant, Alvin Manuel Harris, with four counts of robbery in the first degree, KRS 515.020. The first indictment, No. 156342, accused him of robbing a Gulf service station located at 2007 South Seventh Street, Louisville, on December 28, 1975, and a grocery store, the Itty Bitty Food Market, also located in Louisville, on January 14, 1976. The second indictment, No. 156343, charged appellant with robbing a Gulf service station located at 2701 Broadway in Louisville twice, once on December 31, 1975, and again on January 15, 1976. The charges were consolidated for trial. Harris was acquitted of the December 28, 1975, robbery of the service station, but convicted of the three remaining charges. He was sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment for the grocery store robbery, and ten years each for the other offenses, all of which were to run concurrently. Three assignments of error are raised by his appeal.
Appellant initially alleges the trial court committed reversible error by consolidating the four charged offenses for trial. We disagree. Under RCr 6.18, 9.12 and 9.16, offenses which are similar in character or are based on the same acts connected
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together or constituting parts of a common scheme or plan may, within the discretion of the trial court, be joined for trial.
Edwards v. Commonwealth,
Ky.,
Appellant next argues the trial court erred by failing to conduct an eviden-tiary hearing outside the presence of the jury to determine whether an in-court identification of him by an employe of one of the service stations appellant was accused of robbing was tainted by a pretrial photographic identification of him by this same witness. As in our recent decision of
Ray v. Commonwealth,
Ky.,
Appellant’s final claim of error concerns the trial court’s refusal to submit to the jury precautionary instructions concerning the use it could make of evidence of appellant’s prior conviction for forgery, which evidence was presented on direct examination of the appellant by his trial counsel. In accordance with our decision in
Cotton v. Commonwealth,
Ky.,
The judgment is affirmed.
