The appellant, Andrew Ross, Jr., was charged with aggravated robbery and capital murder. He was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. For his only point on appeal, Mr. Ross claims that the State failed to present substantial evidence to support his conviction. We disagree and affirm.
In the early morning hours of September 4, 1999, Robert Branscum, owner and operator of the Quality Liquor Store in Blytheville, was killed in the parking lot of that store. A nearby business owner testified that he heard about five gunshots around 1:30 a.m. on September 4. Officers arrived on the scene at approximately 6:00 a.m. and found Mr. Branscum’s body. He had been shot several times, and a later autopsy by the State Medical Examiner indicated that Mr. Branscum died as a result of gunshot wounds.
Around 2:30 a.m. on September 4, 1999, the Osceola police were called to the hospital in Osceola to investigate a patient suffering from a gunshot wound. The patient was Andrew Ross, Jr. When the police arrived, Mr. Ross was unclothed from the waist down due to the fact that he had been shot in the groin area. No one else in the room had similar wounds. A police officer found a pair of orange parachute pants only a few feet from Mr. Ross’s body. The orange pants had two holes in the front groin area that tested positive for trace elements indicating a bullet hole. The officer also discovered a ski mask inside the pants. Later, a t-shirt with a hole in the “front shirttail area” was found in Mr. Ross’s home. The trace-evidence examiner for the State Crime Laboratory found lead vapor residue around the hole in the t-shirt and testified that this finding would be consistent with the t-shirt being in “close proximity,” or “within a matter of feet,” of a firearm at the time of discharge.
Mr. Ross was arrested on September 26, 1999, at around 9:30 p.m. After being advised of his Miranda rights and waiving them, he gave two statements in which he admitted being present at the crime scene. In his first statement, Mr. Ross indicated that he did not know anything about the robbery until he drove by the liquor store and saw Carlos McFerrin run out in the street and flag him down. 1 In a subsequent statement given later that same night, he admitted that he had seen Carlos McFerrin and Bernard Johnson less than an hour prior to the incident and that he knew they were planning to “hit” Quality Liquor. He also acknowledged he had been “hanging around” with Mr. McFerrin prior to the robbery.
According to his second statement, Mr. Ross knew the robbery was in progress and decided to drive by the liquor store because he “got worried about Carlos [McFerrin].” When he arrived at the liquor store, Mr. McFerrin flagged him down and asked for a ride. At that point, Mr. Ross put his car in park and got out of the car “to see what’s going on.” Mr. Ross explained that, after he got out of his car at the crime scene, the victim came out of the liquor store and “proceeded to shoot.” He then saw both Mr. McFerrin and Mr. Johnson shoot the victim several times.
During both statements, Mr. Ross conceded that he had been shot in the groin by the victim. He told the police that the victim fired at him from the front of the liquor store and he “fell against [his] car,” which was parked out on the road. This account, however, was contrary to the evidence of lead vapor residue on his t-shirt that indicated a close-range discharge of the firearm. He also claimed that, after he had been shot in the groin and after the victim had been shot, Mr. McFerrin tried to give his gun and mask to Mr. Ross: “I told him I wouldn’t take the gun but I’d take the mask and I put it in my sweats and I drove off in the car.” 2 Furthermore, Mr. Ross stated that, after the incident, he asked his aunt to take him to the Osceola hospital, rather than the Blytheville hospital, because he did not want anyone to “think I had something to do with the shooting that’s over there by the liquor store.” His aunt, Rosetta Ross, testified at trial that Mr. McFerrin rode in the car with her, her daughter, and Mr. Ross as she drove to the hospital in Osceola. Her testimony, however, was contradicted by Mr. Ross, who told the police that Mr. McFerrin did not go with them to Osceola.
The evidence also indicated that Mr. McFerrin was arrested on the morning of the murder, and $1,400 in cash was found on his person. In addition, a -search of Mr. McFerrin’s sister’s residence revealed another $1,200 cash in a mattress. The two sets of bills were sequentially numbered. After Mr. McFerrin’s arrest, he directed officers to 1201 Ferrell Street in Blytheville, where two handguns were recovered in a floor furnace of an abandoned home. 3 One of the guns, a 9-millimeter Ruger, was identified by Mrs. Branscum as belonging to her husband. That gun had one expended round and one round jammed in the chamber. The other gun was a Ruger P89, or .357, which had five expended rounds. A DNA specialist at the State Crime Laboratory testified that Mr. Branscum’s blood was found on both guns.
I. Sufficiency of the Evidence
For his only point on appeal, Mr. Ross claims that the State failed to present substantial evidence to support his conviction for capital murder. During his trial, Mr. Ross made a motion for directed verdict at the end of the State’s case and renewed that motion at the close of trial. Both motions were denied. A motion for directed verdict is a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence. Britt v. State,
Circumstantial evidence may constitute substantial evidence to support a conviction. Gregory v. State,
Mr. Ross was convicted of capital murder pursuant to the felony-murder provision of the capital-murder statute. Under that statute, a person commits capital murder if:
(1) Acting alone or with one (1) or more other persons, he commits or attempts to commit. . . robbery . . . and in the course of and in furtherance of the felony, or in immediate flight therefrom, he or an accomplice causes the death of any person under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life.
Ark. Code Ann. § 5-10-101 (a) (Repl. 1997). The underlying felony is an essential element of a capital-felony murder charge. Flowers v. State,
In this case, Mr. Ross challenges the sufficiency of the evidence on grounds that the State failed to present substantial evidence that he committed or participated in the robbery. Specifically, he contends that there is no evidence that he ever owned, fired, or handled any of the weapons involved, and there is no evidence to connect him with any stolen property. His sufficiency challenge is without merit.
We have held that the presence of an accused in the proximity of a crime in a manner suggestive of joint participation is a relevant factor in determining an accomplice’s connection to a crime. Stewart v. State,
In Stewart, this court concluded there was sufficient evidence to uphold a conviction for aggravated robbery “[g]iven appellant’s knowledge that his associates contemplated a robbery, his admission that he arrived at the rest stop armed and loitered for about thirty minutes, his acknowledgment that he was in the bathroom [at the time the shooting took place], and testimony that appellant . . . fled with the group, and was later seen with a weapon.”
As previously set out above, Mr. Ross gave two statements that were not only internally inconsistent with each other, but were also inconsistent with other evidence and testimony offered by the State. It is well-settled that the credibility of witnesses is an issue for the jury and not this court. Bell v. State,
There was also evidence that, on at least one and possibly two occasions, Mr. Ross attempted to evade police. The police conducted a search of Mr. Ross’s home on September 7, 1999. No one was in the home at the time of the search, but an officer testified that a videotape of the movie Independence Day was playing when he and another officer entered the home. The officer who was familiar with the movie testified that the movie had not been playing very long, thereby suggesting that someone had been in the home and left quickly when the police arrived. The police visited Mr. Ross’s home a second time on September 26, 1999. On that occasion, an officer found Mr. Ross “hiding” in a bedroom. The officer testified that the lights in the room were off, and he noticed Mr. Ross’s legs “sticking out from a closet.” This evidence of an attempt to avoid detection and arrest could be considered by the jury as corroborative of guilt. Flowers v. State,
Finally, Mr. Ross asserts that the State failed to prove that a robbery occurred. Specifically, he contends there was no evidence that any property was taken from Mr. Branscum and thus, his capital-murder conviction must fail. Once again, his argument is without merit. A defendant may be convicted of robbery even if no property is actually taken — the emphasis is on the express or implied threat of physical harm to the victim. Harris v. State,
II. Arkansas Supreme Court Rule 4-3(h)
The transcript of the record in this case has been reviewed in accordance with our Rule 4-3 (h) which requires, in cases in which there is a sentence to fife imprisonment or death, that we review all prejudicial errors in accordance with Ark. Code Ann. § 16-91-113(a). None have been found.
Affirmed.
Notes
According to Mr. Ross’s first statement, he and his girlfriend and his sister were in the car when Mr. McFerrin flagged him down. Later, he claimed they were not in the car.
In his first statement, Mr. Ross denied having a ski mask in his pants even though one had been found inside his pants while he was a patient at the Osceola hospital.
Mr. McFerrin was also charged with Mr. Branscum’s murder and tried separately. This court recently affirmed his capital-murder conviction and fife sentence. McFerrin v. State,
