Melvin Meadows was convicted of two counts of aggravated assault, and he contends here that the trial court erred in overruling his "objection to the lack of a proper chain of custody being established by the State in relation to a latent fingerprint card, allegedly bearing the fingerprints of the appellant.”
At trial Officer Frazier of the Rome Police Department testified that he "lifted” fingerprint impressions from the door handle of the automobile belonging to the victim Brown at the scene of one of the shootings. He further testified that he placed the impressions on a regulation fingerprint card and turned the card over to Detective Crabbe. Detective Crabbe testified that this latent fingerprint card, as well as a comparison card containing defendant’s inked fingerprint impressions, was retained in a filing cabinet in the identification room of the police department for safekeeping and then turned over by Crabbe to Officer Barnette for delivery to the crime information center. Barnette testified that he received the cards from Crabbe and delivered them to the center, and Larry Hankerson of the center testified that he received the cards from Barnette and performed the comparisons. Crabbe also testified that neither fingerprint card had been altered.
Defendant objected to this comparison and identification testimony on the grounds that "testimony had been introduced that [the latent fingerprint card] was in an open file for a period of time there in the police department, that such file was available to any detective working in that department. And I do not believe that a proper chain of custody has been established by the State.” The objection was overruled, and the correctness of that ruling is before us for review. Held:
We affirm. It is obvious that there is no gap in the chain of custody. What defendant seeks is that the state, in order to render the evidence admissible, be required to negate all possibilities of tampering or error while the card was in the filing cabinet. This is not the law. In
Patterson v. State,
In
Interstate Life &c. Co. v. Whitlock,
People v. Riser,
It should also be noted that a chain of custody question is not involved where distinct and recognizable objects are identified.
Starks v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
