Dеnnis Lee Sharpe, Rusty Wiggins, Richard Shipman, and Steve Morrell Mobley (Appellants) were tried jointly for the malice murder of Keibu Scott. The jury found all of the Appellants guilty, and the trial court sentenced each to life imprisonment. Appellants filed separate motions for new trial, which the trial court denied in an extensive order. They also filed separate notices of appeal, and the cases have been consolidated for purposes of appellate review. 1
1. Construed most favorably in support of the verdicts, the evi *685 dence shows that Shipman was storing some drugs in a friend’s apartment in Lyons. Sсott, the murder victim, and another man broke into the apartment, pointed guns at the occupants, and stole the drugs. Shipman learned about the robbery and, a few days later, he and the three other Appellants took a taxi to Vidalia. There, Wiggins, Mobley, and Sharpe visited LaWanda Roundtree at her aрartment, and later Wiggins returned to that apartment alone. Shortly thereafter, the Appellants, one of whom had a handgun with a red laser sight, entered the apartment of Scott’s girlfriend and her sister, Tiffany Dixon, which was two doors down from Ms. Roundtree’s residence. Three of the Appellants took Scott out of the apartment into the woods, while a fourth stayed with Ms. Dixon for a short time. Subsequently, Scott was struck in the face and was shot twice with two different weapons. These injuries resulted in Scott’s death. Ms. Roundtree heard the gunshots soon after Wiggins’ second visit. Wiggins, Mobley, and Sharpe took a taxi back to Lyons, but Shipman called his girlfriend, Debra Toby, who drove him back home. During a police interview, Shipman acknowledged ownership of a handgun with a red laser sight and turned it over. Ms. Toby subsequently told police that Shipman admitted to her that Appellants had killed Scott. At trial, however, she recanted this statement and denied that Shipman made the admission. In disсussions with the police, Sharpe admitted his presence at the scene, but stated that he ran away before the shooting.
Appellants contend that the evidence showed no more than the presence of each of them at the scene of the crime, and was not sufficient for a jury to find them guilty аs parties to the crime of malice murder. However, the jury could infer from the conduct of Appellants throughout the day of the shooting that each of them aided and abetted in the murder or intentionally advised, encouraged, or counseled the others to commit that crime. See
Johnson v. State,
2. Appellants urge that the trial court erred in denying their motions for severance of the trials.
In a non-death penalty case, “ ‘(t)he defendant requesting a severance has the burden of making a clear showing of prejudice and a denial of due process in the absence of severance.’ ”
Butler v. State,
There was no danger of prejudicial evidentiary overlap, as Sharpe’s statements were the only evidence which was not admissible against all Appellants equally. The trial court protected the co-defendants by redacting Sharpe’s statements and informing the jury that the statements were admissible only against him.
Butler v. State,
supra at 447 (4);
Bryant v. State,
3. Relying upon
Johnson v. State,
4. Appellants also contend that the trial court erred in admitting, under the co-conspirator exception to the hearsay rule, the statements attributed to Shipman by Ms. Toby. The specific objection is that there were not sufficient indicia of reliability to ensure that their Sixth Amendment rights were not violated.
Appellants do not contend that the State failed to make a satisfactory prima facie showing of conspiracy. Instead, they focus on the credibility of Ms. Toby in light of her recantation. The appropriate inquiry, however, is the reliability of the statement of the co-conspirator deсlarant, rather than that of the testifying witness who was subject to cross-examination.
Copeland v. State,
5. Mobley, Sharpe, and Shipman enumerate as error the trial court’s denial of their motions for mistrial, on the ground that comments by Juror Curry during voir dire tainted the entire jury panel and prevented a fair trial. Curry stated that, before he retired from his employment with the county, he may have used “these boys” for work at thе jail. Mobley, Sharpe, and Shipman complain that this remark constituted both an indication of incarceration and a racial epithet. See
Kornegay v. State,
“The time for making a motion for mistrial is not ripe until the case has begun, and the trial does not begin until the jury has been impaneled and sworn.”
Ferguson v. State,
6. Sharpe and Shipman contend that the trial court improperly substituted “helps” for “aids or abets” in its charge on the principle of parties to a crime. OCGA § 16-2-20 (b) (3). In giving the contested charge, the trial court followed the specific language of the suggested pattern jury instruction. Strict adherence to the statutory language is not required, so long as the substance of the principle of law set forth is sufficiently imparted to the jury.
Daniels v. State,
7. Sharpe and Shipman urge this Court to hold that OCGA § 16-2-20, the parties-to-a-crime statute, is unconstitutional. However, they did not raise this issue until thеir motions for new trial, and the trial court expressly and correctly refused to rule on the merits of that untimely constitutional challenge. “ A constitutional attack on a criminal statute of this state cannot be raised for the first time in a motion for new trial. [Cits.]’ ”
Shivers v. State,
8. With regard to Shipman’s
Batson
motiоn, the trial court ruled that he did not make a prima facie showing of racial discrimination. However, it nevertheless required the prosecutor to state the reasons for his three peremptory strikes of African-American jurors. Those reasons were that one juror knew several of the witnesses, another knew one of the Appellants, and the third juror or a member of her family had been represented by Mobley’s public defender. Shipman opines that these reasons were “contrived,” but does not explain why he so contends. The trial court determined that each of these reasons was racially neutrаl. Even assuming that Shipman established a prima facie case, the trial court was authorized to find that these reasons were neutral, non-racial, and, in the absence of any further showing by Shipman, fatal to his
Batson
claim.
Lyons v. State,
9. Shipman further contends that the admission of Sharpe’s redacted statements violated the holding in
Bruton v. United States,
*690
10. Shipman urges that the trial court erroneously interfered with the trial process by giving legal advice to Ms. Toby, by implying to her that a peijury charge might be brought against her, and by arranging for a lawyer to counsel with her. To the contrary, however, the triаl court was obligated to warn Ms. Toby about the possibility of peijury charges, and it appropriately provided an attorney to advise her.
Hester v. State,
After Ms. Toby’s testimony, the trial court instructed the jury that any portion of her testimony “that suggests a law violation that’s not the subject of this prosecution shall not be considered ... as incriminatory evidence against any defendant. . . .” Shipman urges that this instruction related to possible peijury by Ms. Toby and necessarily implied to the jury that her in-court testimony was unworthy of belief. In context, however, it is clear that the trial court was not commenting on Ms. Toby’s credibility, but on her references to criminal acts other than those specifically at issue in the case on trial.
Chapman v. State,
11. Shipman contends that the trial court erred in remanding all of the Appellants into custody in the later stages of trial, since the jury had observed them going freely to and from the courtroom during the first two days of trial. By failing to object to this change in custodial status at the time thereof, Shipman waived the right to assert any error on appeal. See
Wilkes v. State,
12. Shipman further asserts that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury as to the standard of proof for a conviction based on circumstantial evidence. OCGA § 24-4-6. It was not incumbent on the trial court to give such a charge, because Shipman did not make any request therefor and the State’s case rested on bоth circumstantial and direct evidence.
Harris v. State,
13. Shipman contends that the trial court erroneously charged on impeachment, since the State offered Ms. Toby’s prior statements as substantive evidence. Because the prior statements were inconsistent with Ms. Toby’s trial testimony, however, they were admissible as
both
impeaching and substantive evidence.
Berry v. State,
supra at 438 (1);
Render v. State,
14. Shipman also enumerates as error a comment made by the trial court during jury selection. However, he does not address this enumeration in his brief, entirely omitting both argument
and
any citation of authority in support thereof. Accordingly, we deem this enumeration of error as abandoned under Supreme Court Rule 22.
Felix v. State,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
The murder occurred on October 29, 1997. The grand jury returned its indictments on March 10,1998. The jury found Appellants guilty on May 20,1999 and, on the same day, the trial court entered the judgments of conviction and sentences. Shipman, Mobley, and Wiggins filed their motions for new trial on June 11, 17, and 19, 1999, respectively. Sharpe initially filed a notice of appeal on June 17, 1999, but then filed an out-of-time motion for new trial on October 1, 1999 with the trial court’s permission. Sharpe amended his motion for new trial on December 1, 1999, and Mobley and Shipman amended their motions for new trial on December 2, 1999. The trial court denied all motions for new trial on December 29, 1999. Sharpe, Wiggins, Shipman, and Mobley filed their notices of appeal on January 14,18, 24, and 27, 2000, respectively. The case was docketed in this Court on March 2, 2000 and orally argued on May 15, 2000.
