delivered the opinion of the Court.
On August 30, 1982, a jury found Derick Lynn Peterson guilty of capital murder in the commission of robbery while armed with a deadly weapon. In the second phase of the bifurcated trial, the jury fixed his punishment at death. The trial court confirmed the conviction and sentenced Peterson in accordance with the verdict. We have consolidated the mandatory review of the death sentence with Peterson’s appeal of his conviction and have given the case priority on our docket. Peterson seeks reversal of his conviction and remand for a new trial, or in the alternative, commutation of his sentence, to imprisonment for life.
About 6:00 p.m. on February 7, 1982, Howard Kauffman, an accountant, was counting receipts in the office of a Pantry Pride store. The top portion of the office enclosure was glass and Kauffman could be seen by customers and other employees in the store. Dwight Wilson, a cashier working 22 to 25 feet from the office, testified that he saw Kauffman kick the office door to prevent a man from entering, but the intruder opened the door, went to the upper level of the office, “grabbed a sack of money” from the desk, and came back down. As Kauffman stood facing him, the *293 man, who was undisguised, took out a gun, shot the accountant, and fled from the premises. Once the robber had entered the office, Kauffman offered no resistance. From photographs and lineups, Wilson subsequently identified Peterson as the assailant.
Wanda Scott, another cashier, saw the intruder force his way into the office. Kauffman stepped back, but the man shot him, reached for something, and ran from the store. She could not say what the man carried away with him. She identified Peterson as the killer after seeing him in a lineup.
Donald Thomas, another employee, had been talking to Kauffman through the office window before the shooting. He saw a man who had been standing nearby run into the office, seize a money bag lying on the desk, pull a gun, shoot Kauffman, and run from the store. Thomas was about five feet from Kauffman when the shooting occurred. Although Thomas conceded that he had picked two different suspects, one of whom was Peterson, from the first photographs shown to him, he identified Peterson from a photograph of a lineup.
Another witness identified Peterson as the driver of a car running at high speed that forced her automobile to the side of the road as she approached the store immediately after the shooting. Two other customers were in the store when they heard a gunshot. They identified Peterson as the man whom they then saw running away with a gun in his hand. They remembered having seen the same man standing outside before they entered the store.
The medical examiner testified that the cause of Kauffman’s death was a bullet wound to the abdomen; the bullet severed the iliac artery. There was evidence that extensive life-saving measures were used without success in an effort to revive him.
After the robbery, it was discovered that a bank money bag and more than $6,000 in cash and checks were missing from the store.
1. The Guilt Trial.
A. Admissibility of Photographs.
During the guilt trial, the Commonwealth offered in evidence as exhibits two color photographs of Kauffman taken after his death, one showing only his face and the other showing the entry wound in his abdomen made by the fatal bullet. The trial court admitted the photographs in evidence over Peterson’s objection that, since Kauffman’s identity and the cause of his death were not chai *294 lenged, the photographs were unnecessary and could only be used to inflame the jury.
The admission in evidence of photographs of a murder victim’s body is within the discretion of the trial court.
Whitley
v.
Commonwealth,
We held in
Clanton
v.
Commonwealth,
The Commonwealth had the burden of proving, inter alia, that the killing was willful, deliberate, and premeditated. The location of the entry wound might tend to support an inference that the killer did not shoot wildly in panic but drew his weapon and took aim before firing. There were only two photographs, neither of them gruesome nor more inflammatory than the testimony of the eyewitnesses who observed the killing. We find no abuse of discretion by the trial court in admitting the photographs.
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence.
Peterson, who offered no evidence, attacks the sufficiency of the Commonwealth’s evidence in two respects. First, he says the testimony of witnesses identifying him as the killer was too inconsistent to support his conviction. Second, he argues there was no evidence that the shooting was a willful, deliberate, and premeditated act. Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, we reject both contentions.
On brief, Peterson asserted that Wilson, Scott, and Thomas failed to identify him initially, that Wilson’s identification was based upon Peterson’s “hairline,” and Scott’s upon his “eyebrows and the fact that he was clean-shaven.” But each of these witnesses positively identified Peterson. The uncontradicted evidence showed that the store was brightly lighted, that Peterson wore no *295 mask, and that his face was plainly visible to the witnesses. Wilson identified Peterson from a photographic array four days after the crime, identified him again in two different lineups, and identified him at the preliminary hearing and at trial. Scott could not remember whether she made an identification from a photographic array, but a detective testified that she had identified Peterson in that manner. She also identified him in a lineup, at the preliminary hearing, and at trial. Thomas identified Peterson’s picture from a photograph of a lineup, and identified him at the preliminary hearing and at trial. It was for the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the evidence. There was ample evidence identifying Peterson as the criminal agent.
It was also a jury question whether the killing of Kauffman was willful, deliberate, and premeditated. The testimony of the three eyewitnesses was that Kauffman made no aggressive move towards Peterson but merely stood facing him in the office. Two of the witnesses said that Peterson had the money bag in his possession before he took out his gun and shot the victim. There was only one shot; the bullet was fired in a declining trajectory directly into Kauffman’s midsection. To establish premeditation, the intention to kill need only exist for a moment.
See Akers
v.
Commonwealth,
*296 II. The Penalty Trial.
A. Procedural Questions Barred by Contemporaneous Objection Rule.
1. Time for conducting the penalty trial.
On appeal, Peterson for the first time complains that the trial court erred in proceeding almost immediately from the guilt trial to the penalty trial. No contemporaneous objection was made. Indeed, the trial judge informed the jury, without objection, at the conclusion of the guilt phase of the trial, that opposing counsel and the defendant were ready to proceed in approximately ten minutes if this was satisfactory with the jury. We will not now notice Peterson’s objection. Rule 5:21.
2. Instruction No. 1A.
On appeal, Peterson for the first time objects to the granting of Instruction No. 1 A, which informed the jury in the language of Code § 19.2-264.4(C) that the death sentence could be based on the vileness of the crime or the dangerousness of the defendant as those terms are explicated in the statute. Peterson states correctly that there was no evidence of vileness in the crime. A death sentence based upon vileness is not supported by the evidence where the victim died almost instantaneously from a single gunshot wound.
Godfrey
v.
Georgia,
B. The Jury’s Inquiry About Parole.
After retiring to fix Peterson’s punishment, the jury returned to the courtroom and through its foreman asked the trial judge whether it was possible “to give a life sentence without parole.” The judge replied as follows:
The only response I can give you on that ... is that it’s the function of the jury, duty of the jury, to impose such *297 sentence as they consider just under the evidence and the instructions of the Court.
And you should not concern yourself with what may thereafter happen. It may not be a very satisfactory answer, but it’s the only one I can give you.
Peterson did not object to the answer. Rule 5:21. He concedes that under
Clanton
v.
Commonwealth,
C. Evidence of Other Crimes.
Peterson contends that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of other crimes for which he had been convicted but which were then pending on appeal. Conceding that under
Stamper
v.
Commonwealth,
Appeal of a criminal conviction does not affect the finality of the judgment, it only suspends execution of the sentence. Code § 19.2-319;
Hirschkop
v.
Commonwealth,
Code § 19.2-264.4 prescribes the evidence that may be admissible in the penalty trial of a capital murder case as including “the circumstances surrounding the offense, the history and background of the defendant,” as well as mitigating evidence. Under this broad statutory language, it is clear that more than the mere police record of the defendant may be introduced. Evidence is made admissible that would not be admissible in the guilt trial. Thus, in
Stamper,
the testimony of the victim of an earlier crime of violence was properly admitted to show the dangerousness of the defendant in that case.
In the present case, the Commonwealth presented the testimony of two victims of armed robberies of which Peterson had been convicted. Sheila Coffey testified that she was robbed at gunpoint at a Reveo store on January 15, 1982, by Peterson and an accomplice. She identified Peterson as the robber who held the gun on her. Garrie Anne Baize testified that she was working as a clerk at a Family Dollar store when she was robbed about 10:15 a.m. on February 8, 1982, the day after Kauffman was killed. She identified Peterson as the robber. Baize also related a threat made against her by Peterson at the conclusion of the preliminary hearing on the Family Dollar store charges against him. Her testimony was that as she was leaving the courtroom, Peterson, in handcuffs, told her, “I’ll remember you, and I’m going to get you, you [expletive deleted].”
In addition, Probation and Parole Officer Sharon Bonville testified to Peterson’s record as a juvenile and as an adult, including the offenses which Coffey and Baize described. Peterson’s juvenile record began in 1974 at age 12. In 1977, he was committed to juvenile detention for armed robbery. In 1979, when he was an adult, he was convicted of breaking and entering and grand larceny.
*299 D. Sufficiency of the Evidence.
Peterson says the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s finding that he was a continuing serious threat to society and the trial court erred, therefore, in not striking this evidence. We reject this contention. There was ample evidence to support the jury’s finding. Peterson’s criminal record and his threat to harm a witness who testified against him in another case show an unmistakable proclivity for violence and an obvious unwillingness to abide by the laws of the land. Moreover, the jury could properly consider the capital murder itself in assessing the probability that Peterson would continue to commit acts of violence. Indeed, the only evidence to the contrary was the testimony of Peterson’s mother that she had never known her son to be violent, had never seen him with a gun, and did not think he would commit other crimes if he were ever released.
E. Presentence Review by the Trial Court.
The report required by Code § 19.2-264.5 was prepared and filed with the trial court by Probation and Parole Officer Bonville. This statute authorizes the trial court, after considering the report, to set aside the sentence of death and impose a sentence of life imprisonment. A hearing was conducted by the court on September 24, 1982, at which Bonville and two other witnesses testified in mitigation of punishment. Bonville stated that during the nine months Peterson spent in custody as a juvenile he “progressed fairly well,” and when he was released the detention authorities “thought he was doing well.” Bonville thought that Peterson needed vocational training and behavioral counselling.
Ann D. Clark, a neighbor, testified that she had known Peterson since he was nine or ten. She had always found him to be friendly and courteous, had never seen him carrying a weapon, and had never observed any violent behavior on his part. She was not aware of his criminal record.
Peterson’s mother testified that Peterson was six when she and her husband separated and Peterson was “somewhat” of a disciplinary problem when he was growing up. Stating that her son’s attitude improved after his detention as a juvenile, she asked the court to permit him to be rehabilitated rather than executed.
*300
Peterson says that his age, 21 years, was a mitigating circumstance requiring the trial court to set aside the death sentence. We agree with the Commonwealth that Peterson’s age does not
per se
preclude imposition of the death sentence. Age was merely a fact to be weighed by the jury. Thus, in
Giarratano
v.
Commonwealth,
At the same hearing, Peterson moved the court to set aside the death sentence because of certain after-discovered evidence upon which he had based a motion for a new trial on his Family Dollar conviction. On September 22, 1982, a hearing in that case was conducted on his motion and Peterson presented the testimony of two alibi witnesses. However, neither could say where Peterson was at the time of the Family Dollar robbery. The trial court, finding that the evidence would not have produced a different result, denied the motion. Nevertheless, Peterson argues that the jury in the present case should have had the benefit of the testimony of his alibi witnesses in the Family Dollar case. The trial court disagreed and overruled the motion. We hold that the court did not err in this ruling. The proffered evidence was irrelevant; it did not qualify as after-discovered evidence in the present case. Moreover, it was found by the trial court not even to qualify as after-discovered evidence justifying a new trial in the Family Dollar case.
At the conclusion of the hearing on September 24, the trial court confirmed the jury verdict and sentenced Peterson to death. The trial judge stated, before imposing sentence, that the jury verdict was “fully justified and supported by the evidence,” that the punishment fixed by the jury was just and appropriate, and that it was not reached by the jury “under the influence of passion, prejudice, or other arbitrary factors.” We hold that the trial court discharged its obligation under Code § 19.2-264.5 and did not abuse its discretion in imposing the death sentence in accordance with the jury verdict.
III. Sentence Review.
It is our duty under the provisions of Code § 17-110.1 to determine whether the death sentence was imposed under the influence of “passion, prejudice or any other arbitrary factor” or is *301 “excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant.”
There is nothing in the record to suggest that the death sentence was imposed under any improper influence. Peterson relies upon the rulings of the trial court admitting the photographs of the victim, granting Instruction No. 1A, admitting the testimony of Baize that Peterson threatened her for testifying against him, and admitting evidence of Peterson’s convictions of other crimes when those convictions were pending on appeal. We have heretofore demonstrated that Peterson’s challenges to these rulings were without merit.
As the record shows, Peterson was in constant difficulty with the juvenile authorities from an early age. As a juvenile he was committed to detention for armed robbery at age 15; as an adult he was convicted of breaking and entering and grand larceny. He was convicted of armed robbery and a related offense committed approximately three weeks before the shooting at the Pantry Pride store. He was convicted of armed robbery and a related offense committed the next day after the Kauffman slaying. He threatened a witness who testified against him. All this evidence, which the jury and the trial judge obviously accepted, showed Peterson to be a dangerous man who would probably commit other acts of violence if given any opportunity to do so. Accordingly, we hold that the death sentence was not influenced by any arbitrary factors.
If juries generally in this jurisdiction impose the death sentence for conduct similar to that of the defendant then the sentence is not excessive or disproportionate.
Quintana
v.
Commonwealth,
We have also affirmed the imposition of death sentences based upon both vileness of the capital murders and dangerousness of the defendants. In
Clanton,
for example, the defendant had previously been convicted of murder and of unlawful wounding.
From our examination of the record, and our comparison of Peterson’s record and history with those of other defendants in capital-murder cases, we conclude that juries generally in this jurisdiction impose the death sentence for conduct similar to that of Peterson. The sentence imposed in this case, therefore, is not excessive or disproportionate.
*303 We hold that the trial court committed no error in either the guilt or the penalty trial and we further hold, based on our independent review, that the sentence of death was properly imposed. Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.
Notes
The jury also found Peterson guilty of armed robbery and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony; the trial court entered judgment on the verdicts. Those convictions are not challenged in the present appeal.
