Bobby Spradley appeals from the judgment entered after a jury found him guilty of two counts of armed robbery, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, possession of a controlled substance, obstruction, failure to stop, no license, reckless driving, and fleeing and eluding. Spradley claims the trial court erred in denying his plea in bar on the grounds of former jeopardy and in its charge to the jury. We find no reversible error and affirm.
This case arose when an anonymous caller reported to 911 that she heard a shot fired and saw two men in a white Chevette or Chevelle in front of her house, one of whom had a gun. Officers responding to the call saw a white Chevelle pull into a gas station and followed. When police approached the car after it stopped, Spradley, who was driving, sped off. Officers chased the car, and it ended up in a vacant lot. Spradley and co-defendant Shaun Frazier jumped out and ran. After a brief chase, police caught both men and arrested them. Police found a wallet belonging to Tracy Lundy in the car and also found cocaine on Spradley, who admitted that it was his.
The officer called Lundy who said that he and his brother-in-law had been robbed earlier in the evening but decided not to call the police. Both Lundy and his brother-in-law identified Spradley and Frazier as the men who robbed them.
At the time of the first trial, the 911 caller was still refusing to testify, and Spradley filed a motion in limine to exclude the content of the 911 call. Before the start of trial, the judge held a hearing on the motion and then granted it, stating: “Right now, I am sustaining the motion in limine as to the content of anything that’s in that report.” The prosecutor then said: ‘Your Honor, I would like to be clear on your ruling. We would like to have Detective Best testify that he was looking for a white Chevelle or Chevette as a result of a dis *341 patch that he got.” Defense counsel objected, and the trial court stated: “I’m going to allow it. ... I will allow him to testify that he was instructed to look out for a white Chevelle.”
The jury was called in, and the prosecutor began her opening statement. During the statement, the prosecutor said: “And while they were on this Olympic detail, they got a dispatch on the radio, telling them to look out for a white Chevelle or white Chevette that was involved in a ‘shots fired’ call.”
Defense counsel objected to the prosecutor’s statement that police were responding to a “shots fired” call and moved for a mistrial, which the court granted. Spradley then filed a plea in bar, moving the court to dismiss the indictment on grounds of double jeopardy. The court denied the motion, and Spradley was tried and found guilty on all counts. Spradley now appeals, claiming it was error not to grant his plea of former jeopardy.
1. The primary purpose of the Double Jeopardy Clause is to prohibit the retrial of a criminal defendant where the prosecution has, at the initial trial, produced insufficient evidence to sustain a conviction. See, e.g.,
Burks v. United States,
Spradley claims the prosecutor intended to goad him into moving for a mistrial in order to obtain a more favorable chance for a guilty verdict on retrial. He points out that the court had just refused to admit the State’s similar transaction evidence and had also refused to allow the State to describe the 911 call. In addition, when the case was retried at a later date, the State’s first three witnesses were the woman who made the 911 call, the dispatcher who took the call and the officer in charge of the 911 tapes. At the time of the first trial, the anonymous 911 caller had not agreed to testify, and therefore, none of this evidence could have been introduced. Thus, Spradley argues the prosecutor deliberately ignored the court’s instruction not to mention the substance of the 911 call in order to force a motion for mistrial because she thought she had a better chance for a guilty verdict on retrial.
The prosecutor said she had not deliberately disobeyed the court’s order but “thought that I could address it in that manner.” The prosecutor also asked if they could strike another jury immediately. At the time, the trial court stated that it did not believe the prosecutor’s mistake was deliberate. At the hearing on the plea in bar, the prosecutor again stated that she did not intend to goad the defense into requesting a mistrial and that she was prepared to go to trial.
Spradley argues that this case is similar to
Wilson v. State,
This case, however, more closely resembles
Haralson v. State,
Likewise, in this case, the trial court could have reached the opposite result. But, there was evidence that the prosecutor did not intend to cause a mistrial in order to gain a delay and was prepared to try the case again immediately. Therefore, because the trial court’s finding of fact was authorized by the evidence in the record, we conclude that the trial court properly denied Spradley’s plea in bar on the grounds of double jeopardy. Haralson, supra at 121.
2. Spradley also argues that the trial court erred in charging the jury and in answering a jury question on unanimous verdicts. During its charge, the court instructed the jury on the elements of armed robbery and the lesser included offense of robbery and the requirement that the verdict be unanimous and gave an explanation of the verdict form. After the charge, the jury sent out a question during deliberations, and the court responded as follows:
Let me read the question for the record and then I’ll answer it. The question is, do we have to be unanimous on armed robbery or robbery to not be a hung jury? And the answer is, you have to be unanimous, whatever your verdict is, which way it goes on anything, it has to be unanimous, that is, agreed to by all of you. Does that answer the question?
Spradley argues that the charge and the answer to the jury’s question somehow required the jury to first reach a unanimous verdict on the greater offense before it could consider the lesser included offense. We disagree.
Spradley cites
Cantrell v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
