Opinion
Aaron Tyler Langhorne was convicted of distributing heroin in violation of Code § 18.2-248 and conspiring to distribute heroin in violation of Code §§ 18.2-256 and 18.2-248. The trial court sentenced Langhorne in accordance with the jury verdicts to thirty years imprisonment and a $20,000 fine. Langhorne claims the trial court erred by: (1) admitting evidence that he failed to appear for trial when the case was originally scheduled; (2) admitting evidence that he attempted to flee from the police when they came to arrest him for not appearing at trial; (3) granting a jury instruction on flight; (4) admitting evidence that the police seized a pager from his residence when they arrested him; (5) refusing to admit his wife’s handwriting sample and by refusing to admit an incriminating statement which she allegedly made; (6) overruling a Batson challenge to the Commonwealth’s peremptory strike of juror Moseley; and (7) refusing to strike the evidence as insufficient to support his conviction. We hold that his contentions are without merit, and we affirm the convictions.
On November 16, 1988, Robert Sutton, an informant who had been working with the Richmond City Police, encountered Aaron Langhorne and his wife, Ardes, and told them he was interested in making a wholesale purchase of heroin. Sutton had known the Langhornes since the 1970s. Sutton told the Langhornes his money to buy drugs was at his home. Ardes drove him there. When they arrived, Sutton told Ardes he would not have the money available until that evening, and they arranged to meet later. Detective Randy Davis, an undercover agent who worked with Sutton, came to Sutton’s home in anticipation of the arranged meeting to provide him with money for the drug buy. After Sutton agreed to a price set by Ardes Langhorne, Detective Davis gave her $400. In return, Aaron Langhorne gave Sutton a plastic wrapper containing tin foil packets of heroin and quinine, a *100 common drug-cutting agent. After the drug sale, Aaron Langhorne gave Sutton a slip of paper with the telephone number to his pager, and he assigned Sutton the code number “50” so Sutton could “keep in touch.” Detective Davis testified that Aaron Langhorne wrote the number on the piece of paper. Sutton did not state who wrote the number, but only that Aaron Langhorne gave him the paper. Sutton testified that when he called the pager number and gave his code, Aaron Langhorne returned his call.
After Detective Davis had fiñished his undercover assignment and the Richmond grand jury had returned indictments, a Chesterfield County investigator arrested Langhorne and his wife on April 6, 1989, at their home. The investigator seized two pagers from the nightstand in the Langhornes’ bedroom; one of these pagers had the corresponding phone number which Langhorne had given to Sutton. The pagers were admitted into evidence over Langhorne’s objection that they were irrelevant and prejudicial.
Langhorne was first scheduled to be tried on these charges on July 6, 1989. He failed to appear for trial. A capias was issued for his arrest. He remained at large until arrested again on November 30, 1989. Langhorne was tried on February 12, 1990. Over Langhorne’s objection, the jury was told that Langhorne had failed to appear for his July 6, 1989, trial. The Commonwealth offered the evidence to prove flight from prosecution on the theory that it showed consciousness of guilt. Additionally, an officer of the Richmond City Police Department testified that on November 30, 1989, he stopped the operator of an automobile for a traffic violation. Aaron Langhorne, who was the front seat passenger, first gave the officer a false name and then jumped from the vehicle and attempted to flee. Langhorne objected that the evidence was prejudicial and outweighed any probative value to prove flight, particularly since the flight was remote in time and not necessarily related to the commission of these crimes. Langhorne argues that because he had multiple charges pending against him and was on Richmond’s top ten most wanted list, the jury could not clearly infer that he was attempting to escape because of his “consciousness of guilt” for these crimes.
Neither Aaron Langhorne nor his wife, Ardes, testified at his trial. The court was advised in camera that Ardes Langhorne had admitted to the police that she had been the one to write down the pager number for Sutton, contrary to the testimony of Detective *101 Davis. The court was told that she had provided the police a handwriting sample for comparative analysis. 1 Aaron Langhorne offered a separate handwriting sample of his wife into evidence for the jury to compare to the writing furnished Sutton. The trial court refused to allow the officer to testify that Ardes Langhorne admitted to him that she had written the pager number. The trial court based its ruling on the fact that Ardes Langhorne had not been called as a witness and, thus, the evidence was not relevant to impeach her credibility, nor was it admissible on some theory of an exception to the hearsay rule for an unavailable witness. The court refused to admit her handwriting sample for the jury to compare and refused to admit the results of the laboratory analysis which were inconclusive as to whether her exemplar matched the writing.
I. EVIDENCE OF FLIGHT
A. Failure to Appear for Trial
No reported Virginia cases have decided whether evidence that an accused failed to appear for trial is admissible to prove flight to avoid prosecution and, thus, is relevant as a circumstance tending to prove consciousness of guilt. Langhorne contends the trial court erred by allowing the jury to learn that he had failed to appear for his trial. He points out that failure to appear for trial amounted to evidence of another offense, a violation of Code § 18.2-248(B), and such evidence did nothing to prove any element of the charges against him.
As a general rule, only under limited circumstances may evidence of other offenses by an accused be admitted to prove the offense at bar.
Spencer
v.
Commonwealth,
Evidence of flight is “a circumstance proper to be laid before the jury as having a tendency to prove [a defendant’s] guilt.”
Allen
v.
United States,
B. Fleeing to Avoid Detection, Apprehension, or Arrest
Langhorne also objected to the evidence that he attempted to flee on November 20, 1989, when the police stopped the automobile in which he was riding. He claims that the remoteness in time of this incident to the occurrence of the crime and the fact that he had other charges pending against him, render the evidence irrelevant and, therefore, inadmissible. We disagree.
Admittedly, the Supreme Court has expressed doubt as to the probative value of flight evidence.
See Wong Sun
v.
United States,
Due to the fact that flight evidence is sometimes ambiguous, courts at times assert that such evidence is of questionable probative value unless the inferences of guilt that accompany the particular facts associated with it are strong. . . .A *103 court will generally scrutinize the facts of each case to determine whether the jury should be given an opportunity to draw on [sic] inference of guilt from the defendant’s flight.
United States v. Martinez,
“The flight need not immediately follow the commission of the crime since the defendant may be suspected and become aware of the suspicion at a later date.”
Hope,
*104
Because the evidence of flight was properly admitted, the trial court did not err by granting a jury instruction on flight.
See Stewart v.
Commonwealth,
The intentional flight of a defendant immediately after the commission of a crime or after he is accused of a crime that has been committed is not, of course, sufficient evidence in itself to establish his guilt, but is a fact which, if proved, may be considered by the jury in the light of all other evidence in the case in determining the guilt or innocence, whether or not evidence of flight shows a consciousness of guilt and the significance to be attached to any such evidence are matters exclusively within the province of the jury. In considering any evidence of flight, the jury should consider the motive which prompted it.
The trial court’s instruction on flight was correct and complete.
See Smith,
ii. other Evidentiary rulings
The trial court admitted into evidence testimony of the arresting officer that he seized two pagers from Langhorne’s bedroom nightstand and testimony that Langhorne had written the number for one of the pagers on a piece of paper which he gave to Sutton. The piece of paper bearing the pager number was admitted into evidence. Langhorne objected to the admissibility of the evidence of the pagers and paper with the recorded number on the ground that the evidence was irrelevant and prejudicial. He contends that the evidence did not show that the pager was used in any way by him and that its admission merely suggested a clandestine network. In addition, Langhorne points out that, before trial, Ardes Langhorne told the police that she, not her husband, had written the pager number and that she had given the police a handwriting sample for comparison. Detective Davis acknowledged that a writing sample had been taken from Ardes Langhorne and not from her husband. The trial court was further informed that the results of a handwriting analysis between Ardes Langhorne’s handwriting exemplar and the pager number written on the paper had proven inconclusive. Langhorne contends that, even if the court properly *105 allowed the evidence of the pager and the piece of paper bearing the pager number into evidence, the statement by his wife to the police officer that she wrote the number was admissible as a declaration against penal interest. Langhorne further contends that the fact that the police took a writing sample from her and not from him and the inconclusive results of the handwriting comparison were admissible because they, too, were relevant to show that she had not been excluded as the author. Langhorne contends that his wife’s statement was admissible to refute the Commonwealth’s evidence that he wrote the number of the pager on the paper.
We hold that the trial court did not err by admitting the testimony of the arresting officer that he seized two pagers from Langhorne’s nightstand and the testimony that Langhorne had written the number for one pager on a piece of paper which he had given to Sutton. “Evidence is relevant in the trial of a case if it has any tendency to establish a fact which is properly at issue.”
Wise
v.
Commonwealth,
We further hold that the court did not err in excluding the testimony of a police officer that Ardes Langhorne had admitted to the police that she wrote the number of the pager on the piece of paper which her husband had given to Sutton. The evidence was hearsay. Langhorne contends that it is admissible as a declaration against penal interest. However, we hold that the statement does not fall within a recognized hearsay exception. The Commonwealth relies on
Ellison
v.
Commonwealth,
Furthermore, Ardes Langhorne’s statement that she, rather than her husband, wrote the number had such minimal probative value that its exclusion, even had it been error, was harmless. The unrefuted evidence showed that Aaron Langhorne gave the paper with the pager number to Sutton at the completion of the heroin transaction and that Sutton later called the number and was able to contact Langhorne. The inconclusive test results would merely show that Ardes Langhorne may have written the number. This information does not tend to exonerate Aaron Langhorne from his involvement in the heroin transaction in light of the other evidence against him. While the information may have provided the jury with the opportunity to question the credibility of Sutton and Detective Davis, this conclusion is speculative at best and is insufficient to render the evidence admissible, since the jurors had ample other opportunity to analyze credibility throughout the trial.
The admission of evidence is left to the sound discretion of the trial court and will be disturbed on appeal only upon a showing of abuse of discretion.
Blain
v.
Commonwealth,
*107 III. BATSON CHALLENGE
The Commonwealth used all four of its peremptory challenges to eliminate black members of the jury panel. The Commonwealth’s attorney offered race-neutral explanations for those strikes. Langhorne takes no issue with three of the strikes: two of the persons had criminal records, and the third had a brother with criminal charges pending against him involving Detective Carter, a narcotics investigator who would be testifying in Langhorne’s case. Langhorne claims, however, that the Commonwealth’s reason for striking the fourth member of the panel was too nebulous to overcome the presumption from
Batson
v. Kentucky,
“For purposes of this appeal we assume, without deciding, that [Langhorne] made out a
prima facie
case of purposeful discrimination by the Commonwealth.”
Taitano
v.
Commonwealth,
Batson requires the trial judge to evaluate the credibility of the asserted reasons based upon the totality of the circumstances of ttíe case, as reflected in the record. . . . Moreover, “[t]he explanation offered for striking each black juror must be evaluated in light of the explanations offered for the prosecutor’s other peremptory strikes.”
Jackson,
IV. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
When the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a criminal conviction is challenged on appeal, the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, granting to it all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom, and the jury’s verdict will not be disturbed unless it is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.
Traverso
v.
Commonwealth,
Affirmed.
Baker, J., and Benton, J., concurred.
Notes
The laboratory analysis comparing the handwriting to the slip of paper with the pager number proved inconclusive.
