Benjamin Morris Jackson appeals the jury verdict convicting him of burglary, possession of burglary tools, and aggravated assault. Held:
1. Appellant’s enumeration based on the general grounds is without merit. The evidence shows without dispute that appellant was with Frederick Sistaire and apparently remained in Sistaire’s car while Sistaire burglarized an apartment. Police Officer G. C. Pitts, responding promptly to a call from a witness, gave chase to the burglary vehicle; on seeing the police car and flashing blue lights, appellant told Sistaire: “God, man, step on it.” After a harrowing high speed chase for several miles down 1-85, during which the Sistaire vehicle attempted to run Officer Pitts’ vehicle into the retaining wall, the Sistaire vehicle stopped and he and appellant fled. Officer Pitts testified that during the chase he clearly saw the appellant, who was in the passenger seat, turn and point a blue steel revolver in his direction and make motions as if attempting to fire (the blue steel revolver stolen in the burglary did not have bullets in it). Officer Pitts
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identified Jackson in custody and at trial. A long-handled screwdriver (which the officer testified would have made the indentations found in the victim’s apartment door) was found in Sistaire’s car between the center console and passenger’s seat. A reasonable trier of fact could rationally have found from this evidence proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Boyd v. State,
2. The trial court did not err in denying appellant’s motion for directed verdict as to the count for possession of tools for the commission of a crime. Appellant contends that, in the face of his contentions that the car belonged to Sistaire who had only picked up the appellant about an hour earlier and that he did not know the screwdriver was in the car, the state failed to show he actually possessed the screwdriver or was the only one who could have put it under the seat. But the state’s evidence in this case was sufficient to find appellant guilty of the burglary beyond a reasonable doubt, and the jury obviously concluded that he was. Viewing all the evidence, especially including evidence that the screwdriver was found next to the passenger seat, most favorably to the prosecution, a rational trier of fact could find the essential elements of possession of burglary tools beyond a reasonable doubt.
Lee v. State,
3. Finally, there is no merit in the appellant’s contention the trial court committed reversible error in failing to charge on “knowledgeable possession.” (See
Tift v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
