Larry Eugene Reynolds was tried and convicted . on three counts of armed robbery and two counts of carrying a pistol illegally. Prior to trial a motion to suppress certain evidence was overruled and upon the trial of the issues made by the indictments the defendant was convicted. A motion for new trial was overruled and the present appeal filed. Held:
l.The trial court did not err in overruling the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence obtained against the defendant, including lineup identification and evidence obtained as the result of a search with a warrant.
After armed robberies in December, 1972, and January, 1973, took place in Fulton County, Georgia, a DeKalb County investigator obtained information from an informant that the defendant and another had possession of jewelry, etc. obtained in the robbery of an elderly woman in Fulton County, Georgia. Subsequent investigation, including a photographic identification of the defendant by this victim, supported the information obtained from the informant and based upon such facts the search warrant was obtained and the evidence sought to be suppressed obtained. The search under the warrant was not illegal and the motion to suppress upon this ground was properly overruled. Compare
Campbell v. State,
Under decisions exemplified by
Griffin v. State,
2. During the course of voir dire examination of prospective jurors the defendant was precluded, upon objection from the state, from asking designated questions which sought to elicit the prospective jurors’ understanding of the law. As was held in
Whitlock v.
State,
3. Under the indictments here which charged the defendant with armed robbery a conviction of receiving stolen goods would not be authorized and it was not error to refuse to instruct the jury as to such lesser crimes as requested by the defendant. Compare
Plummer v. State,
Nor was it error to refuse to charge in the exact language requested on circumstantial evidence where a correct charge on such subject was given the jury.
4. It was not error to give in the charge the instructions approved in
Aiken v. State,
5. A comment by the assistant district attorney, while arguing the case to the jury that the defendant made an unsworn statement is not a comment on his failure to be sworn as prohibited by the Act of 1962 (Ga. L. 1962, pp. 133, 134; Code Ann. § 38-415);
Massey v. State,
6. The convictions upon the armed robbery counts were authorized by the evidence, and under decisions exemplified by
Ezzard v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
