Appellant was convicted by jury on counts of robbery, rape and burglary. He was sentenced to ten to 25 years for robbery, 21 years for rape and ten to 20 years for burglary. Appellant only challenges the convictions for rape and robbery on appeal.
The record discloses the victim was a 62 year old woman. She was awakened in her home by a noise. When she investigated she encountered the appellant standing in the hall of her home. He informed her that he wanted her money and told her to go into the bedroom where he disrobed her and raped her. The evidence showed the appellant had entered the home through a basement window he had forced opened. His fingerprints were found in several locations in the home. A medical examination of the victim showed that she had been raped.
Appellant first claims there is insufficient evidence to sustain a conviction of rape. This Court has consistently held it does not weigh the evidence or determine the credibility of the witnesses. This is the province of the jury. This Court will review the evidence to
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determine if any reasonable inference may be drawn to support the verdict of the jury.
Henderson
v.
State,
(1976)
Appellant next claims there was insufficient evidence to sustain the verdict on robbery because the State failed to prove that the appellant perpetrated the robbery by violence or putting the appellant in fear. In view of the above-recited evidence we hold that his allegation in this regard is wholly without merit.
Finally appellant argues that the trial court erred in permitting the State to cross-examine him concerning other crimes which he was alleged to have committed. The questioned cross-examination concerned the appellant’s denial that he had broken into the victim’s
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home at the time alleged. He claimed that he had broken into this same home a year before, in an apparent attempt to explain his fingerprints within the victim’s home. This Court has held that when the defendant takes the witness stand in his own defense, his credibility, like that of any witness, is subject to interrogation. Interrogation is limited in that the State cannot inquire into specific acts of misconduct other than prior convictions which conform to the rule in
Ashton
v.
Anderson,
(1972)
The trial court is in all things affirmed.
DeBruler, Hunter, Pivarnik and Prentice, JJ., concur.
Note. — Reported at
