Bobby Lee Jones appeals his conviction for armed robbery.
The victim’s car overheated and she drove to a gasoline station which was not a full-service facility. Appellant approached and offered to help and persuaded her to drive around to a faucet so he could put water in the car. The victim sat in the driver’s seat with her feet outside and her door open. Appellant got in the passenger seat and grabbed her right arm with his left hand and with his other hand pointed a knife at her. He said: “Just get in the car and drive.” The victim started screaming; appellant gripped her harder and again ordered her to drive. The victim kept screaming and pulling her hand away. Finally, appellant let her go and she got out of her car; she saw him grab her purse and run away. She ran screaming into the station and the cashier called the police. The cashier did not see the robbery but she knew appellant and she saw him offer to help the victim with her car. The victim picked appellant from a photo lineup and at trial identified him as the armed robber.
*712 Appellant testified that he was at the scene and offered to help the victim; that he sat in the passenger seat and she agreed to give him a ride; that suddenly a man he knew as “Slim” reached across appellant’s lap; and that, wielding a butcher knife, Slim grabbed the victim’s purse and ran. Appellant testified that he ran because he had marijuana in his possession. Appellant enumerates four errors below. Held:
1. Appellant contends the trial court erred in allowing the State to introduce evidence of his character (see OCGA § 24-9-20) by permitting the prosecutor to trap him into revealing that he was on parole. He contends the prosecutor baited him by repeatedly asking why he ran, even after he testified that he ran because the victim was screaming and he had drugs on his person. The prosecutor asked whether it would have been logical for appellant to stay and give information about Slim; appellant said it would not. “Q. So it would have been smarter for you to run? A. Yes . . .1 don’t have anything to hide. I was already on parole, you know, so I did what I thought was best. ... I wasn’t going to stay there and catch a charge for something that I didn’t do. That’s why I ran. That’s my motive for running. If I hadn’t been on parole ... I would have easily just ran, ditch the reefer off, and came back and stood whatever would have happened. . . . But by being on parole, I wasn’t going to take no chances of doing it.”
Appellant cites three cases to prove the prosecution improperly forced him to admit he was on parole:
Muzquiz v. State,
The questioning in this case was directed at appellant’s reasons for his “flight,” which might have a bearing on the question of guilt. See
Renner v. State,
2. The trial court did not err in denying defendant’s motion for new trial oh grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel. To prevail on such a claim, appellant must show not only that trial counsel’s performance was deficient but also “ ‘that this deficient performance prejudiced his defense in that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s . . . errors, the outcome of the trial would have been different.’ ”
Yearby v. State,
3. The trial court did not err in reading twice to the jury the statutory definition of armed robbery. The instruction did not, merely by being repeated, tend to imply the court believed appellant guilty of the crime. The court advised the jury that no comment of the court was intended to express an opinion as to appellant’s guilt. The definitions of the lesser included offenses were also repeated; there was in fact no undue emphasis of the definition of armed robbery. There was no incorrect statement of the law and the jury charge was full and fair as to the presumption of innocence, proof of intent, and the State’s burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Brown v. State,
4. Appellant contends the trial court erred in failing to give a charge on appellant’s sole defense of mere presence, for “ ‘ [i]f an affirmative defense is raised by the evidence . . . the trial court must present the affirmative defense to the jury as part of the case in its charge, even absent a request.’ ”
Wainwright v. State,
5. The evidence is sufficient to enable a rational trier of fact to find appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crime of which he was convicted.
Jackson v. Virginia,
Judgment affirmed.
