Appellant was convicted on three counts of forgery and three counts of uttering and given concurrent sentences of six to 18 months on each count. He contends on appeal that the trial court erred in refusing to grant his motion for judgment of acquittal on the forgery counts and in giving the jury an instruction on aiding and abet *513 ting on those counts when he had been charged in the indictment solely as a principal and there was no evidence that someone other than defendant had committed the forgery. 1
There was evidence that appellant gave to three of his employees special police officer commissions that had been forged and instructed one of them not to let anyone “get a good look” at his commission, that in the opinion of an expert witness two of the commissions and appellant’s payroll checks were “quite probably” prepared by the
same
typewriter,
see
Long v. United States, D.C.App.,
Turning to the trial court’s aiding and abetting charge, the theory of the government’s case, as reflected in the indictment and the prosecutor’s opening statement, was that appellant had forged the commissions. However, after all the evidence had been adduced and the trial court was ready to instruct the jury, the prosecutor requested an aider and abettor instruction.
2
After first denying such a request the trial court so charged the jury. While a defendant may be charged and convicted as the principal even though the proof is that he was only an aider and abettor, Jones v. United States,
Reversed at to counts one, three and five; affirmed as to counts two, four and six.
Notes
. Appellant also complains that the evidence of uttering was insufficient but we deem this without merit after a review of the record.
. The prosecutor argued (JR. 674) :
Somebody had to make the document. The expert testified that they were made. Now it could well have been his [appellant’s] secretary or a person who had his orders to do such a document. That is, he might not have physically sat down and done the typing. (Emphasis added.)
