The defendant, Wilbur Robinson, appeals his conviction of armed robbery. Held:
1. Three witnesses identified Robinson as a participant in an armed robbery of the Handy Pantry on April 25,1981. This evidence is sufficient to enable any rational juror to find the existence of the offense of armed robbery beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia,
2. When the trial recessed for lunch, a deputy sheriff waited until the jurors were departing before handcuffing the defendant and taking him to lunch. The assistant district attorney saw the jurors were still in the hallway and spoke to the deputy sheriff who directed *380 the defendant into the jury room. Two female jurors had waited in the jury room to use the restroom. As soon as the deputy saw the two jurors he withdrew the defendant from the jury room and those jurors departed. Counsel for the defendant moved for a mistrial.
Only one of the jurors saw the defendant was in handcuffs. However, she told another juror what she had seen. Both jurors were examined individually, out of the presence of the other jurors. The witness that saw the defendant in handcuffs said this did not shock or frighten her and would not in any way influence her in this case. She was asked if she expected the defendant to be in handcuffs and responded in the affirmative. The juror who was told what had happened stated that the incident did shock her — “a little bit...” “The shocking thing was that he was coming into the jury room and in handcuffs.” She also stated she would expect the defendant to be in handcuffs and it would not prevent her from giving the defendant a completely fair and impartial trial.
A trial judge is responsible for the security of his courtroom, but a defendant has a right to be tried in an atmosphere free of partiality and innuendo created by the use of excessive security precautions.
Allen v. State,
3. Defendant alleges the trial court erred in denying his motion for mistrial following “a post-indictment courtroom lineup without counsel” which was conducted by the District Attorney. The facts gleaned from the trial court’s investigation of this matter reveal: *381 Following indictment, but prior to trial, the defendant and several other accused were brought to the courtroom and seated in the jury box. This was apparently an “arraignment calendar.” One witness who was under subpoena for the trial was present in the courtroom. The assistant district attorney stated “in her place” that she did not subpoena this witness to the “arraignment calendar.” While the defendant was in the jury box the assistant district attorney interviewed the witness and asked her: “Can you identify any of the robbers. I didn’t say: Look up there. And she said: Yeah, that one right up there, and pointed to the defendant. I did not conduct a lineup... I interviewed a witness. I state in my place I asked her what she did. I had to conduct my interview because I had been unable to reach her other than through her great aunt... leaving messages. And I sat out there on the bench discussing the case in its entirety ... I asked: How long did you stay there? The specific thing was: Can you identify any of the robbers, and she said yes there is one sitting there.”
While the witness was on the stand, the fact that she had identified defendant at an earlier date in another courtroom was revealed. She stated that her mother asked her if she saw “one of the people who robbed the store, and I said yes.” The defendant was in the jury box at that time with several other black males. The judge called his name and he stood up, but she had identified him to her mother before the judge called his name. The court recalled the witness after the motion for mistrial was made and questioned her as to the sequence of events. The witness stated that she was first questioned by her mother as to the identity of the robber and pointed him out. Then the judge called the defendant’s name and he stood up. After that she was questioned by the assistant district attorney and pointed him out again. The court was very careful in determining that her first identification — before the defendant’s response to the judge calling his name, was based on seeing him during the robbery. She was “positive about that.”
United States v. Wade,
First, we do not find that this was a line-up. It was not an officially orchestrated identification procedure conducted by the police or the prosecutor for the primary purpose of identification.
Prater v. State,
Under the facts of the instant case, we need only determine that the record supports the finding of the trial court that the witness “had an ample opportunity to observe the defendant at the store. Her testimony... is that is what she based her identification on” and even if this was a line-up and counsel was absent “the identification of the defendant by [the witness] was, I find, based on an independent *383 origin rather than upon any irregularity, and consequently is admissible.” This enumeration is without merit.
4. We find no error in the determination of the trial court that the witness Patterson, a polygrapher intern for the GBI, possessed sufficient expertise in his specialty to qualify as an expert. “ ‘It is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial judge as to whether a witness has such learning and experience in a particular art, science or profession as to entitle him to be deemed prima facie an expert.’
Barrow v. State,
5. The polygrapher composed 10 questions to be answered by the defendant. One of the controlled questions was: “Prior to this year, other than what you have been convicted of, have you every robbed . . . ?” Counsel objected before the question could be completed. It was not answered. A controlled question is required in each polygraph examination to evaluate a response to a relevant question. The court excluded the answer and instructed the jury that it was a controlled question, there is no evidence that this defendant has ever been convicted of any crime, and to disregard the question in their deliberations. We find no reversible error in the procedure followed. The jury was instructed to disregard. In view of the positive identification of the defendant as a participant in the robbery, it is highly probable that this extraneous unanswered question did not contribute to the conviction.
Johnson v. State,
6. We have thoroughly examined the remaining enumerations of error relating to the charge and find no merit to any of them.
Judgment affirmed.
