Following a jury trial, Darnell Nowlin was convicted of kidnapping and armed robbery in Fayette County. He moved for a new trial, arguing that the trial court erred in admitting a pre-trial photo lineup that stemmed from a traffic stop found proper in Nowlin’s earlier appeal (affirmed by this Court) of a separate Gwinnett County conviction. See
Nowlin v. State,
Construed in favor of the verdict, the evidence showed that a male and female used a handgun to rob a movie theater in Fayette County. They forced the manager to go to the theater office and show them how to open the safe, and they then restrained the manager with plastic cords and duct tape. They took money from the safe and escaped. The manager and another employee positively identified Nowlin in a pre-trial photo lineup as the mále perpetrator.
Charged with kidnapping and armed robbery, Nowlin moved to suppress the pre-trial photo lineup on the ground that his photo was obtained through an illegal traffic stop by Gwinnett County police, which had resulted in Nowlin’s arrest and conviction for a similar robbery of a Gwinnett County movie theater. The trial court denied the motion, reasoning that this Court had already decided the appeal of the Gwinnett County conviction and held that the traffic stop was legal. See
Nowlin,
supra,
The jury found Nowlin guilty of the charged offenses, and Nowlin moved for a new trial on the ground that the photo lineups should have been suppressed. The court denied the motion, and Nowlin now appeals on the same ground.
Without deciding whether the taking of a facial photograph by police pursuant to an illegal stop falls within the Fourth Amendment guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures (see
Key v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
