Osborne appeals his conviction of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.
Upon receiving information from an informant that the appellant was dealing in marijuana, Captain Wheeler of the Douglas County Sheriffs Department authorized the informant to arrange for an undercover purchase of marijuana from the appellant. The appellant was arrested when he appeared at the designated time and place for the transaction, and approximately three pounds of marijuana were seized from the trunk of his automobile. At trial, the appellant asserted the defense of entrapment. Held:
1. The appellant contends that the trial court erred in allowing him to be cross-examined regarding his post-arrest silence. The appellant testified on direct examination that he had been pressured into obtaining the marijuana by repeated requests from a co-worker and the co-worker’s wife. On cross-examination, the state’s attorney asked him why, upon exiting his car at the time of his arrest, he had not immediately divulged to the officers that he was the victim of a “setup.” He responded that he was “in shock” and “didn’t have time for anything.”
“The silence of an arrestee prior to his receipt of the
Miranda
warnings may be used by the State for purposes of impeachment.”
Lanham v. State,
2. The appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying his pre-trial motion to compel disclosure of the identity of the informant. The appellant testified during the trial that he believed the informant was the co-worker who had asked him to purchase the marijuana. In fact, the informant was the co-worker’s wife, who was thereafter called by the state as a rebuttal witness and thereby subjected to cross-examination by the appellant. The appellant has not suggested what he would have done differently had the identity of the informant been revealed to him earlier in the proceedings. It is axio
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matic that harm as well as error must be shown to authorize a reversal. See generally
Hazelrig v. State,
3. The appellant contends that the trial court erred in allowing the state to elicit testimony from the investigating officer and the informant to the effect that he was a known drug dealer. This testimony was received with a limiting instruction that it was to be considered only to explain the officer’s conduct and not as substantive proof of the appellant’s guilt.
OCGA § 24-3-2 provides that “[w]hen, in a legal investigation, information, conversations, letters and replies, and similar evidence are facts to explain conduct and ascertain motives, they shall be admitted not as hearsay but as original evidence.” However, in
Momon v. State,
4. The appellant contends that the trial court erred in admitting testimony concerning his previous arrest on an unrelated charge, which apparently had not resulted in any prosecution. The appellant elected to testify in his own behalf and on direct examination volunteered the following: “Fve never been convicted of anything and Fve never been in trouble before. . . .” During cross-examination, the state’s attorney asked the appellant whether that statement was truthful; and he replied that he felt it was. The prosecutor then asked if he considered it “trouble” to have been arrested for theft by receiving stolen property some two months prior to his arrest on the charge for which he was being tried. As the evidence concerning the prior arrest had the effect of impeaching the appellant’s testimony that he had never before been “in trouble,” we hold that it was properly admitted. See generally
Jones v. State,
5. Taken as a whole, the trial court’s charge on entrapment constituted a complete and correct statement of law. See
Turner v. State,
6. The appellant’s remaining enumerations of error concern the introduction of evidence regarding matters as to which the appellant himself elicited like testimony. “Assuming that the admission of [the] testimony was error, it was harmless because ‘other testimony to same effect and of like nature was introduced without objection.’ ”
Buffington v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
