Following a bench trial in juvenile court, D. T. appeals an adjudication of delinquency, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence and arguing that because he was promised to be taken home if he spoke to police, the juvenile court erred in admitting his statements to police as voluntary and as not induced by a hope of benefit. We hold that the evidence sufficed to sustain the adjudication in that the accomplice’s testimony identifying D. T. as a perpetrator was corroborated by D. T.’s own statements to police. Because the alleged benefit promised to D. T. (being taken home) was collateral to the charges against him, such does not constitute a benefit forbidden by law, and therefore the trial court properly admitted D. T.’s statements to police. Accordingly, we affirm.
1. When reviewing the sufficiency of evidence supporting a juvenile court’s adjudication, we apply the same standard of review used in criminal cases. See In the Interest of J. A. F.
So construed, the evidence shows that late one evening, a woman arrived home from work and, carrying her pocketbook, exited her car at the end of her driveway near the gate to her backyard. As she approached the gate to feed her cat, she was struck from behind and became disoriented. She came to her senses in the grass of her front yard, bleeding, bruised, and without her pocketbook. Abrasions on her arms and legs were consistent with being dragged along the driveway and ground. Shortly thereafter, D. T. (a minor) and two other young males were picked up by a female friend on a street near the crime scene; the friend saw them trying to bury a gun after they arrived home.
Within days, D. T. approached a school counselor and stated that he knew who committed the attack and robbery. The counselor placed him in contact with an officer, to whom D. T. told that the other two young men had attacked the woman and stolen her pocketbook. With D. T.’s mother’s consent, a second officer asked D. T. to ride with him in a car, telling D. T. and his mother that he would bring D. T. back when he was through with him. During the ride, D. T. confessed to the second officer that after he and the other two young men had unsuccessfully tried to burglarize a nearby business while carrying a gun, they decided to walk to the woman’s house to rob her, because D. T. had previously helped her unload stuff at her home and believed she was wealthy. He claimed that he only acted as the lookout while the other two young men attacked and robbed the woman. At D. T.’s request, this second officer took D. T. to the woman’s house, where D. T. apologized to the woman for the threesome’s having committed the crimes.
Charged with delinquency based on felony allegations of robbery, aggravated assault, and kidnapping, D. T. was tried in juvenile court, where one of his accomplices testified that D. T. personally committed the robbery, kidnapping, and aggravated assault (with the third young man) while the accomplice acted as lookout. Specifically, the accomplice stated on the stand and to police that D. T. and the third young man both struck her from behind, then jointly dragged her up the driveway and snatched her purse. Over D. T.’s objection and after a hearing, the court determined that D. T.’s own statements to police were voluntary and therefore admissible.
Finding that D. T. had committed the alleged crimes, the court adjudicated D. T. delinquent and sentenced him to confinement within a youth facility. We hold that the evidence sustained the court’s finding that D. T. committed the three crimes. With regard to aggravated assault, the evidence
D. T. complains, however, that the evidence of his involvement in these crimes came solely from his accomplice, and that OCGA § 24-4-8 required this testimony to be corroborated. See In the Interest of J. L.
The evidence sufficed to sustain the adjudication of delinquency.
2. Claiming his statements to police were given involuntarily, D. T. contends that the juvenile court erred in admitting those statements into evidence. D. T. does not contest that the statements met the nine-factor test for incriminating juvenile statements. See Hanifa v. State.
It is true that OCGA § 24-3-50 renders confessions inadmissible unless they are made voluntarily, “without being induced by another by the slightest hope of benefit. ...” However, the next Code section qualifies the meaning of this benefit, providing that “[t]he fact that a confession has been made under ... a promise of collateral benefit shall not exclude it.” OCGA § 24-3-51. Interpreting these two Code sections, the Supreme Court of Georgia in White v. State
This requirement — that the promise of a benefit must relate to the charge or sentence facing the suspect — caused this Court in Smith u. State
The trial court, which held a suppression hearing on this matter, did not clearly err in finding D. T.’s statements to police were voluntary. See Gibbs v. State
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In the Interest of J. A. F.,
In the Interest of J. L.,
Fowler v. State,
Dixon v. State,
In the Interest of C. L.,
Hanifa v. State,
White v. State,
Smith v. State,
Gibbs v. State,
