Aрpellant was convicted, after trial by jury, of two counts of armed robbery. D.C. Code 1973, §§ 22-2901, -3202. On appeal she asserts that the trial court erred in permitting joinder оf the two robbery counts under Super.Ct.Cr.R. 8(a), in denying her motion for severance of the counts under Super.Ct.Cr.R. 14, and in denying her motion for judgment of acquittal at the clоse of the government’s case in chief. We affirm.
The government’s evidence at trial showed that there were two armed robberies of cab drivers on January 4, 1976. The first robbery occurred at about 3:15 p. m. when two women asked the cab driver to take them to 72 Bates Street, N. W. One of the women, identified by the driver as Audrеy Lawrence, appellant’s codefendant at trial, 1 sat in the front seat, next to the driver; the other, who was never identified, sat behind the driver. On arriving at their destination, Audrey Lawrence pointed a .38 *18 caliber pistol at the driver and demanded that he “give it up” while the woman in the back seat immobilized the driver (by pulling his jаcket down around his arms) and rifled his pockets, taking money and other valuables. They then ordered the driver from the cab and drove away in it.
The second robbery occurred approximately seven hours later, about 10:00 p. m., when two women approached another cab and asked the driver to take them to “First and Bates.” One woman, identified at trial as Audrey Lawrence, took the front seat, next to the driver; the other, identified as appellant, toоk the back seat, behind the driver. On arrival, the driver was directed to proceed about two-thirds of the way down Bates Street and stop, which he did. After inquiring about the fare, Audrey Lawrence, in the front seat, drew a .38 caliber pistol, pointed it at the driver, and announced, “This is a stickup. Gimme your money! Gimme your wallet!” The drivеr complied with the first demand but did not have a wallet. He also complied with a demand for the keys to the cab by removing them from the ignition and handing them to appellant, in the back seat, who proceeded to rifle his pockets. At this juncture, the driver saw a police cruiser approaching from the rеar and began to sound his horn. The police officers stopped and, when the driver said that the women were robbing him, arrested both women. A .38 caliber pistol was found beneath the front seat of the cab. 2
Joinder of the two robbery counts in the same indictment was proper “if the offenses charged . . are of the same or similar character . . . .” Super.Ct. Cr.R. 8(a). There can be no question that the two robberies charged here fit that description.
See, e. g., Coleman v. United States,
D.C.App.,
While misjoinder is error as a matter of law, “a refusal to grant severance is error only if it is an abuse of discretion.”
Blunt v. United States,
Evidence that appellant сommitted the second robbery is probative of the government’s charge that she committed the first robbery since the circumstances of the two were sо similar and so proximate in time as to tend to establish her identity.
United States v. McCray,
Evidence of the first robbery is not probative of any element of the govеrnment’s case against appellant in the second robbery, for that evidence, standing alone, did not tend to implicate appellant as a participant in the first robbery. That evidence would, however, have been probative of Lawrence’s intent to commit the second robbery since Lawrence was identified as a participant in the first robbery. Appellant does not, as noted, object to her joint trial with Lawrence. We must, thereforе, consider whether the potential prejudice to appellant occasioned by admission of this evidence is diminished by the directness and simplicity of the evidence as it related to each offense,
Drew v. United States, supra
at 17,
Appellant also asserts that the evidеnce relating to the first robbery was insufficient to sustain her conviction. We disagree. The government’s evidence tended to show that the two robberies of сab drivers took place within seven hours, in the same city block, by two women, one of whom was Lawrence; that in each instance Lawrence was in thе front seat while her accomplice, identified as appellant in the second robbery, was in the back seat; that Lawrence used a .38 caliber pistol in each robbery while her accomplice rifled the victim’s clothes; and that in each case the victim was deprived of the use of the сab as well as of money and other personal items. This evidence, while circumstantial, was sufficient for “a reasonable person [to] find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Williams v. United States,
D.C.App.,
The judgment of conviction is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant does not assert that she was improperly joined with Lawrence for trial.
. The defenses of appellant and Lawrеnce added nothing to the government’s case. Each presented an alibi defense to the first robbery. The second robbery, they testified, was in fact an attempted armed robbery of them by the cab driver when they said that they did not have the fare and would not, as demanded, pay with sex.
. See note 2 supra.
