After a jury trial, Mark Steven Smith was found guilty of felony murder while in the commission of a robbery, robbery, and motor vehicle theft. Merging the robbery count into the felony murder count, the trial court sentenced Smith.to life imprisonment for the felony murder and to a consecutive term of 20 years for the motor vehicle theft. Smith’s motion for new trial was denied, and he appeals. 1
1. Construed most favorably for the State, the evidence shows
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that Smith and his co-defendant, Carlos Rutledge, accepted a ride from the victim, Keith Stapleton, who drove them to his hotel room. Upon learning of Stapleton’s sexual advances towards Rutledge, Smith became angry, hit and choked Stapleton, and demanded his car keys. Smith and Rutledge left in Stapleton’s rental car, and Stapleton was found dead in his hotel room the next afternoon. This evidence was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find Smith guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of felony murder while in the commission of a robbery and of motor vehicle theft.
Jackson v. Virginia,
2. Smith enumerates as error the admission into evidence of a “similar transaction.” The trial court held the requisite hearing and found that, in this case and in the similar transaction, Smith used an alias and solicited a ride from a victim late at night near a bar and, after some discussion of “a homosexual sexual encounter,” Smith violently robbed the victim, fled, and made strikingly similar statements upon arrest. Smith argues that the prior incident was not sufficiently similar because there, unlike here, he was alone and used a knife. However, Smith “erroneously focuses upon the differences between the prior and instant [transactions], rather than correctly focusing upon their similarities.”
Farley v. State,
Smith also complains that the notice of the prior incident did not refer to the fact that he tried to pull the knife from his pocket when he was arrested. Because this omission did not constitute a substantial difference as to a material fact, there was substantial compliance with the Uniform Superior Court Rules.
Houston v. State,
3. The trial court gave a limiting instruction regarding the rele
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vancy of the similar transaction evidence during its general charge to the jury. However, Smith contends that the trial court should have given such a limiting instruction immediately prior to admission of the similar transaction evidence and prior to the State’s mention thereof in its opening statement. Defense counsel did riot request limiting instructions at those points in the trial and, in the absence of a request, a trial court has no obligation to give a contemporaneous limiting instruction on similar transaction evidence.
State v. Hinson,
4. Smith contends that the trial court erred in refusing to give his requested charge on similar transactions. Smith’s requested charge stated only one of the purposes for which the similar transaction evidence was relevant. The instruction given by the trial court was limited to the three relevant purposes and, thus, “did not merely give a laundry list of all possible reasons for which similar transaction evidence may be considered.”
Jordan v. State,
5. Smith urges that the trial court erred in preventing him from eliciting testimony that Stapleton was HIV positive. Smith argues that this evidence would have supported his exculpatory theory that someone other than Smith had homosexual contact with Stapleton and killed him after discovering his HIV status. The trial court properly excluded evidence of Stapleton’s HIV status until such time as it became relevant.
Cofield v. State,
6. Smith further contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion in limine, asserting, on due process grounds, the inadmissibility of evidence of the State’s DNA testing of a small amount of material which was found under one of Stapleton’s fingernails and which was destroyed by the test. “[I]t has been held in this state that even though the tested substance is totally consumed during the testing process . . ., the absence of the tested material does not preclude admissibility of the test results. [Cit.]”
Spivey v. State,
170 Ga. App.
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196, 199 (
7. Smith also contends that the trial court erred in not allowing cross-examination of Rutledge’s brother about his arrest at a MARTA station. Georgia law does not permit impeachment of a witness by proof merely of his arrest.
Mobley v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The murder occurred on or about March 11, 1995. The grand jury returned its indictment on November 9, 1995. The jury found Smith guilty on September 5, 1997 and, on that same day, the trial court entered the judgments of conviction and sentences. Smith filed his motion for new trial on September 22, 1997 and amended it on January 30, 1998. The trial court denied that motion on February 5, 1998, and Smith filed his notice of appeal on March *69 4, 1998. The case was docketed in this Court on April 23, 1998, and the appeal was submitted for decision on June 15, 1998.
