Rene Rodriguez was tried before a jury and found guilty of robbery by sudden snatching and felony obstruction of a police officer. He appeals from the judgments of conviction and sentences entered by the trial court on the jury’s verdicts of guilt.
1. The indictment alleged felony obstruction of a police officer pursuant to OCGA § 16-10-24 (b), in that Rodriguez resisted arrest and offered to do violence by brandishing a knife at the officer. As a lesser included offense, the trial court charged the jury on misdemeanor obstruction pursuant to OCGA § 16-10-24 (a). In this regard, the trial court charged the jury that “Flight or attempted flight, after a command to halt, may constitute the offense of obstruction of an
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officer.” Appellant enumerates this jury instruction as error, contending that such a charge on flight is prohibited under the binding authority of
Renner v. State,
The charge was an accurate statement of the law regarding misdemeanor obstruction of an officer, under present OCGA § 16-10-24 (a).
Tankersley v. State,
2. “The trial judge . . . may, of [its] own volition and in [its] discretion, charge on a lesser crime of that included in the indictment or accusation.”
State v. Stonaker,
3. In a portion of a recharge to the jury, explaining the possible forms of the verdict, the trial court stated: “If you do not believe he is guilty of count number II of the greater offense and you further do not believe that he is guilty of count number II of the lesser offense, then the form of your verdict would be,
you will have to believe that beyond a reasonable doubt, of course,
and if that be your verdict, the form of your verdict would be ‘we the jury, find the defendant not guilty of count number II.’ ” Error is assigned to the italicized portion of this excerpt from the charge. However, we have reviewed the charge in its totality, including repeated accurate statements of the State’s unalterable obligation to prove each and every element of the crimes beyond a reasonable doubt, and the presumption of innocence. The isolated statement now objected to is a palpable slip of the tongue. “Standing alone, we think that the excerpt complained of does appear to be not only erroneous, but harmful; but after carefully looking at the [entire] charge as we have, and considering the part
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complained of in conjunction with the whole charge, we can not agree that the accused was injured by it. . . .We can not bring ourselves to believe that the jury in this case, composed as it was of upright and intelligent [citizens], did not fully understand from the entire charge that it was their duty to acquit the [appellant] if all of the facts and circumstances of the case . . . were not sufficient to satisfy their minds of his guilt. . . beyond a reasonable doubt. . . . [A] mere verbal inaccuracy in a charge, resulting from a palpable ‘slip of the tongue,’ which clearly did not mislead or confuse the jury is not cause for a new trial. [Cits.]”
Siegel v. State,
4. Six months prior to the events for which appellant was on trial, he had entered a guilty plea to felony-grade obstruction of an officer, in that he resisted arrest by wrestling the officer to the ground. The admission of this prior offense into evidence as a similar transaction is enumerated as error, on the sole ground that it is not sufficiently similar to demonstrate a logical connection to a disputed issue in the instant prosecution.
(a) The State gave timely written notice of its intent to introduce evidence of appellant’s guilty plea to felony-grade obstruction. After the hearing mandated by Uniform Superior Court Rule 31.1 (B), the trial court made the following determination on the record: “[T]he court has to make findings; number one, a similar transaction is being introduced for the proper, specific purpose, which the court so finds; that the defendant on trial was the person who committed the similar transaction and that there is sufficient connection or similarity between the similar transactions and the offense charged so that proof of the similar event tends to prove the latter, and the court makes a finding on each of those.” Although no enumeration of error is predicated upon any alleged procedural deficiency or irregularity, we note for the benefit of the bench and bar that the notice of intent to introduce evidence of similar crimes should clearly specify the proper purpose for which introduction of such evidence is sought, “as an exception to the general rule of inadmissibility. [Cit.]”
Hightower v. State,
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(b) It is, however, clear from the trial court’s three limiting instructions that appellant’s guilty plea for obstructing an officer was admitted for the limited purposes of showing course of conduct and intent. Appellant correctly notes that any geographic similarity between the two offenses is a mere superficial circumstance which fails to shed light on appellant’s course of conduct or intent in this case.
Smith v. State,
Judgments affirmed.
