Both appellants were convicted in a joint trial of three counts of armed robbery. Additionally, appellant Newby was convicted of a fourth count of armed robbery and also pleaded guilty to the offense of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Both appellants appeal.
1. Appellants contend the evidence is not sufficient to support the verdicts. Appellant Walton made a written confession admitting that he robbed the manager of a Mrs. Winners’ restaurant on July 15, 1984. He was identified positively as one of the persons who committed two other robberies which occurred during the same month. Appellant Newby gave written statements to the police confessing to his participation in four robberies, three of them committed with Walton. All robberies were committed at gunpoint.
Although appellants presented alibi evidence, the weight of the evidence and credibility of witnesses are questions for determination by the jury.
Bryant v. State,
2. Appellant Newby contends the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress evidence of a gun found in Newby’s car. At a hearing on this motion it was disclosed that two police officers were on a stakeout of Newby’s apartment because Newby was a suspect in several recent armed robberies. The officers received a radio call that appellant may have been involved in an armed robbery of a Pizza Hut a few minutes earlier. A car matching the description of the car used in the robbery entered the apartment complex at a fast rate of speed and started backing into a parking space in front of Newby’s apartment. The officers blocked the car and ordered the four men in the *892 car to get out. The police observed the butt of a gun sticking out of a green bag under the front passenger seat of the car where appellant had been sitting, and seized the bag and weapon. They then searched the passenger compartment of the car and found another pistol further back under the same seat. Newby told the police that he owned the car and the gun in the bag was his. The four men were then taken to the police station. When the police learned that appellant was a convicted felon he was arrested. Both appellants testified at the hearing that the bag containing the gun was zipped closed and was all the way under the seat, not in plain view.
Newby argues that because there was no probable cause to stop appellant and he was not under arrest, the seizure of his gun was illegal and evidence relating to seizure of the gun was inadmissible. We do not agree. Newby was a suspect in a series of armed robberies and a car matching the description of appellant’s car had been used in an armed robbery a few minutes earlier. Thus, the police officers were authorized to detain appellant briefly under the holding in
Terry v. Ohio,
3. Appellant Walton contends the trial court erred by admitting into evidence his statement to police, made after he had requested an attorney to represent him. At a
Jackson-Denno
hearing
(Jackson v. Denno,
*893 Walton testified that he told both officers that he wanted to talk to his mother, who would get a lawyer for him, and at a magistrate’s hearing sometime between 12:00 and 1:00 p.m. the same day at which Riffe was present, but before he gave his statement to Riffe, he told the magistrate he wanted to postpone his hearing so he could get an attorney. Appellant also testified that while being interviewed by police he could have called his mother if he wanted to do so, and that he only gave a statement to Lieutenant Riffe because he was scared.
Walton contends that once he told the magistrate he wanted an attorney, it was improper for Lieutenant Riffe to question appellant, and therefore, his statement was inadmissible. Although the magistrate advised appellant of his right to be represented by an attorney at the magistrate’s hearing, the magistrate could not tell from a tape of the hearing or his own recollection if appellant asked to be represented by an attorney, or why the hearing was reset for a later date.
Factual and credibility determinations as to the voluntariness of a confession are normally made at a suppression hearing and must be accepted by appellate courts unless such determinations are clearly erroneous.
Moss v. State,
Judgments affirmed.
