After a non-jury trial, appellant was convicted of shoplifting in violation of D.C. Code § 22-3813(a) (1986 Supp.). 1 On appeal he contends that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his conviction and that the prosecutor made an improper closing argument. We disagree and affirm.
The government’s only witness at trial was Anthony Christian, a private security guard. Mr. Christian testified that he was on duty in an F.W. Woolworth store when he saw appellant bent over in front of the cosmetics counter. Christian watched appellant as he tried to conceal a bottle of Jergens lotion inside his sock, under his left pants leg. Appellant was not moving toward the exit or toward any cash register. When Christian approached him, appellant dropped the bottle of lotion and started to run around the store, “hollering” and acting hysterical. Mr. Christian stopped him and placed him under arrest, then went back and picked up the bottle of lotion, which still bore the store’s price tag. Appellant gave a different version of what happened, but the trial court credited Christian’s testimony and found appellant
*702
guilty as charged. We hold that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the government,
2
was sufficient to prove appellant guilty of the crime of shoplifting.
Carnon v. United States,
We specifically reject appellant’s argument that the evidence established only an attempted shoplifting, which is not a crime.
See
D.C. Code § 22-3813(c) (1986 Supp.). The trial judge, in rejecting this same argument, ruled that a person could be guilty of the completed offense of shoplifting without leaving the store. We agree. “The fact that ... appellant was apprehended before he left the store did not absolve him.”
McRae v. United States,
Appellant also maintains that the prosecutor’s closing argument to the court was improper and requires reversal. In her summation to the court, the prosecutor referred to the fact that appellant was a regular customer of this particular Woolworth’s store and that the employees who knew him had not come forward to testify about the events leading to his arrest. These comments were what we have called a partial or incomplete missing witness argument. In
Arnold v. United States,
In addition, we note that this case was tried to the court without a jury. Since there is a presumption that a trial judge, in deciding a case, will disregard any inadmissible evidence and any improper argument, we could not possibly find reversible error here, even if we assumed that the prosecutor’s argument was otherwise improper.
See In re L.J.W.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. D.C.Code § 22-3813(a) provides in pertinent part:
A person commits the offense of shoplifting if, with intent to appropriate without complete payment any personal property of another that is offered for sale or with intent to defraud the owner of the value of the property, that person ... knowingly conceals or takes possession of any such property....
.
E.g., Byrd v. United States,
. The combination of appellant’s behavior and the presence of the store's price tag on the bottle of lotion established the second element, and the price tag itself established the third.
See Carmon v. United States, supra,
