This appeal is from Keith Allan Murray’s convictions for armed robbery (two counts); theft by taking a motor vehicle; impersonating a police officer; and possession of a firearm during commission of a crime. The evidence adduced at trial by the State authorized the jury *872 to find as fact the following events. While the robbery victims, a man and woman, sat in a parked car, a red Mustang automobile approached, departed, then returned at a high rate of speed and stopped in front of the victims’ car. Murray and his co-indictee Hooper got out of the car and, armed respectively with a rifle and a pistol, confronted the victims. Hooper claimed to be a narcotics officer and Murray told the female victim not to look at him. She testified at trial that she recognized Murray from riding the same school bus. Hooper took property from the male victim and then, even though Murray said the female victim had nothing, Hooper took property from the woman. When the robbers left, the victims followed the Mustang and got a license plate number which they supplied to the police. That car was later found abandoned with a pistol and rifle and one victim’s wallet in it. Sometime on the night of the robbery, a white pickup truck was stolen. Police officers watching a motel the next morning on a tip from Murray’s mother chased a white pickup truck they saw leaving the motel. The occupants, two men and a woman, abandoned the truck and ran. The woman, Gibson, was caught immediately and cooperated with the police. A 16-year-old runaway from Alabama, she told police officers that the red Mustang was hers, that she had waited in it while Hooper and Murray robbed a store in Alabama, that they had stayéd in the motel from which they were later seen fleeing, and that Hooper and Murray had left the motel in her car on the night of the robbery and returned in the white pickup truck they said they had stolen. For the purpose of establishing a similar transaction, two men from Alabama testified that two men robbed them in their store at the time and place indicated by Gibson.
1. Murray invoked this Court’s jurisdiction by contending that he had a right under the Georgia Constitution to meaningful allocution,
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which right was denied him by the mandate in OCGA § 17-10-6.1 of a sentence of at least ten years for armed robbery. However, under the principle that this Court will not decide constitutional issues if the case can be decided on other grounds
(Livingston v. State,
2. Murray contends on appeal that the admission of similar transaction testimony about the robbery in Alabama was error for two reasons. The first reason he asserts is that the “preponderance of the evidence” standard for admission of evidence of similar transactions denies due process and destroys the presumption of innocence because it places on the defendant a burden of showing that proffered similar transaction evidence is not admissible. Although the words “preponderance of the evidence” may lead to confusion, suggesting that comparison is an essential part of the process of weighing the evidence, the language of the statute makes it clear that there is an objective standard that does not require comparison: “ ‘Preponderance of evidence’ means that superior weight of evidence upon the issues involved, which, while not enough to free the mind wholly from a reasonable doubt, is yet sufficient to incline a reasonable and impartial mind to one side of the issue rather than to the other.” OCGA § 24-1-1 (5). Indeed, the Court of Appeals has held it error to give a jury instruction which invites comparison when one party has submitted no evidence on an issue.
Superior Paving v. Citadel Cement Corp.,
Contrary to Murray’s second argument, the evidence presented by the State was sufficient to show similarity of the offenses: both were robberies committed by two men, one of whom was armed with a pistol; in both cases there was an initial approach followed shortly by the robbery; and in both cases, the robbers ordered the victims not to look at them, and then took money from their persons. The fact that the only witness who identified Murray as one of the robbers in the earlier transaction was an accomplice does not render her testimony insufficient: the prohibition against the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice being sufficient to convict of a crime (OCGA § 24-4-8) does not govern the admissibility of other crimes evidence.
Turner v. State,
3. Murray enumerates as error the trial court’s jury charge on parties to a crime. His contention that the giving of the charge was erroneous because he was not informed in the indictment that he would be tried as a party to the crimes is without merit since there is no requirement that the indictment specify that the defendant is being tried as a party to the crime.
Wakily v. State,
4. Contrary to Murray’s argument, the evidence that his accomplice represented to the victims that he and Murray were police officers was sufficient to establish Murray’s guilt of the crime of impersonating a police officer. OCGA § 16-10-23 (“A person who falsely holds himself out as a peace officer . . . with intent to mislead another into believing that he is actually such officer commits the offense of impersonating an officer. . . .”); see also
Williams v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Allocution, is “the defendant’s right to speak before sentence is imposed.” [Cit.]... Allocution allows the defendant to speak in mitigation of sentence. [Cits.] It also “provides offenders the opportunity to contest any disputed factual bases for sentencing and to persuade the judge to choose a favored sentence alternative.” [Cit.] Additionally, allocution provides a defendant the opportunity to meaningfully participate in the sentencing process and to show that he or she is a “complex individual” and “not merely an object to be acted upon.” [Cit.]
State v. Chow,
