Thе main thrust of this appeal is directed to the contention that under the mandate of the Fourth Amendment, as also under
Code Ann.
§ 27-303, the seаrch warrant must particularly describe the things to be seized as otherwise it would be a mere general warrant and void; that from this it follows that items not described in the warrant do not come within its ambit and their introduction in evidence is reversible error. We do not have the problem discussed in
Strauss v. Stynchcombe,
The law is less clear where, in the process of an otherwise legal search of the premises for certain instrumentalities of crime (in this case, drugs and surgical instruments used in performing illegal abortions) the officers find exposed in plain view other articles which also constitute instrumentalities or evidence of the crime for which probable cause has been shown in the issuance of the warrant. It has many times been recognized the officers are not required to ignore that which is in plain view and readily obsеrvable
(Strauss v. Stynchcombe,
Where the prosecutor asked and received permission to havе a special agent of the State Examining Division present in the courtroom to help him with the trial of the case, the questiоn of his remaining after the rule for sequestration of witnesses was invoked was within the discretion of the trial court.
Jones v. State,
*208
The statement of the prosecutrix that she called the defendant bеcause she heard he was a doctor, and the statement of a police officer who signed an affidavit that he did sо on the basis of information received from a third party are not objectionable as hearsay. Code § 38-302.
The evidence оf the girl upon whom the abortion was performed, supported by that of her mother who accompanied her to the defendant’s office, amply supports the conviction. Since the defendant was tried on an indictment returned by the grand jury and the rеcord shows no objection to a nunc pro tunc entry on the arrest warrant and no facts upon which a finding of illegal detention could be made, enumerations of error 10 and 14 are not passed upon.
Judgment affirmed.
