Williаm Oliver Dickerson (“defendant”) was convicted of murdering Mary Middleton (“victim”). Defendant appeals. We affirm.
Factual/Procedural Background
Victim was last seen alive on the evening of May 31,1996, in her Charleston home. She was 83 years old and lived by herself. Around 8:00 p.m. that evening, victim went next door to tell Chrisaundra Lockwood, her neighbor, that she had a telephone call at her house. Lockwood did not have a phone of her own so victim allowed her to take calls on her line. On the way back to her house, victim told Lockwood that she was talking in the backyard with a man who had gone to school with her son, but who she did not remember. While in the house, Lockwood observed victim talking in the backyard to a man in a green hospital shirt, which resembled a doctor’s shirt. When Lockwood left the house after the call, victim was still talking to the man.
At this same time, another one of victim’s neighbors, Quinnie Gailliard, observed victim in her backyard talking with an man she recognized as the defendant. She even asked her *394 husband at the time if he thought it was defendant talking to victim. Husband disagreed with her at the time that the man was defendant. Gailliard testified the man was standing near victim’s car in the backyard, looking at some damage to the vehicle.
Around 8:30 p.m. that evening, a few blocks аway from victim’s house, defendant approached Willie Gibbs, a friend defendant had grown up with, and asked him for a ride into the city. Once in the car, defendant asked Gibbs to take him to MUSC so he could get a key from his girlfriend, Sandra Jenkins, in order to change clothes. Gibbs refused and defendant told him that he needed tо change clothes because he and a friend had just killed a man in Mt. Pleasant. Defendant showed Gibbs that he had turned his pants' inside out to cover up the blood. In the car, Gibbs could see defendant’s pants legs were covered in blood. Defendant and Gibbs got into an argument and defendant got out of the car.
Soon after 11:00 p.m. that night, defendant knocked on Sandra Jenkins’ door. When she let him in the apartment, defendant was wearing a green hospital shirt and his pants on inside out. Even though the pants were reversed, Jenkins testified she could tell they were covered in blood. Defendant told Jenkins that he had beеn in a truck with a man and his girlfriend and the man had repeatedly stabbed the girlfriend and he did not know if she was alive or dead.
Jenkins was scared and asked defendant to leave. Defendant refused to leave and emptied his pockets onto her coffee table. In addition to a small amount of money, defendant also put a broach on the table that “somebody would wear to church.” Defendant then showered and put on some clothes that belonged to Jenkins’ son. He rolled up the green hospital scrub top and bloody pants and took them with him when he left.
The next morning, victim’s neighbors became concerned when she did not get her morning paper or open up her windows. Eventually one of the neighbors entered the house. Victim was found dead on the floor with her body naked from the waist down. The house had been ransacked. The neighbors called the police who arrived at the scene around 2:30 p.m. on June 1, 1996.
*395 The police found no signs of forced entry into the house. Victim had suffered 25 separate stab wounds on her head and neck, causing her to bleed to death. Two of the stab wounds had pierced victim’s carotid artery and jugular vein, both were fatal injuries. The medical examiner estimated the time of death at around 8:00 p.m. the previous evening.
The medical examiner characterized the victim’s death as an “overkill” murder. According to the medical examiner, “overkill” occurs when the murderer inflicts injuries much more severe than necessary to cause death. The mеdical examiner testified that she had only encountered “overkill” murders as the result of a lovers’ quarrel or when the killer had been high on drugs like cocaine. She also testified that expert literature on the subject of “overkill” murders reports that such killings often occur when the killer is high on drugs or motivated tо kill by sexual passion.
Investigators at the crime scene found defendant’s fingerprints all over the inside of victim’s house and on her belongings. Fingerprints were on a magazine in the living room, on one of victim’s purses, on victim’s dresser, on a plastic bag, and on a jewelry box in victim’s bedroom. The purse and jewelry bоx covered with defendant’s fingerprints had been emptied onto victim’s bed. The police also found defendant’s fingerprints on the car in victim’s backyard where Gailliard had testified that victim and the man were standing shortly before the murder.
Two days after the murder the police arrested defendant. On the day оf the murder, defendant had been living with his brother in a house located on the street directly behind victim’s house. Defendant had grown up in the neighborhood and attended school with victim’s son. He also told the police that he had never been inside victim’s house before. When arrested, defendant voluntarily gavе the following sworn statement to the police:
On Friday, which is May 31st, 1996, about 9:00 a.m. I went and picked up Lee in Ashleyville. We went to Mimi’s house in Shadowmoss to clean the garage. I came back to the area of the Hess Gas Station on Highway 61 about 5:00 or 6:00 p.m. and caught a rid [sic] to the North Area.
*396 In the North Areа, I got a bag of cocaine and a bag of heroin. I got high on Arbutus Street in the Height. I caught a ride back into Charleston and went to the same Hess Station and bought a quart of Old English Beer. This was about 1:00 a.m. I then walked back to Armstrong Avenue and crawled through the window of my brother’s house and went to sleep.
I got up аround 8:00 or 9:00 a.m. Saturday morning. I caught a ride to Tony’s Auto Repair on Highway 61 to check on my car and then to Shadowmoss. I then left Shadow-moss, and I went to the North Area again and got high. I came back to Armstrong Avenue again about 1:00 a.m. Sunday. Gopher took me to Tony’s and then to Shadow-moss. 1
At trial, defendant did nоt challenge the voluntariness of the statement, but moved to redact the references to his drug use. The judge allowed the entire statement to be read to the jury without any redactions. The jury convicted defendant and he has appealed. The issue before the Court is:
Did the trial judge err in allowing evidence of defendant’s drug use during the time frame in which the murder took place to be presented to the jury?
Law/Analysis
Defendant argues the trial court erred by not redacting, as improper evidence of prior bad acts, admissions of drug use contained in his statement to the police. We disagree.
Defendant’s admitted drug use during the time period of the murder is not improper character evidence because it was not being used to show a criminal propensity. It was introduced to identify defendant as the murderer. South Carolina law precludes evidence of a defendant’s prior bad acts tо prove the defendant’s guilt for the crime charged except to establish: (1) motive; (2) intent; (3) the absence of mistake or accident; (4) a common scheme or plan; or (5) the identity of the perpetrator. Rule 404(b), SCRE;
see also State v. King,
This Court has addressed several times the admissibility of evidence of a defendant’s drug use under
State v. Lyle,
In
State v. Smith,
In
State v. Bolden,
In
State v. Coleman,
While there was testimony that appellant appeared “wired” on the morning of the murder, there was no evidence to suggest appellant’s condition was the result of cocaine usе. Further, there was nothing in the record to support the inference that the victim and appellant were involved in a drug transaction. Evidence of appellant’s social use of cocaine was therefore incompetent to establish ... a motive for the murder. In fact, the only function оf this evidence was to demonstrate appellant’s bad character and social irresponsibility. The prejudice to appellant as a result of the admission of this evidence far outweighed its probative value, if any.
*399
Id.
at 60,
In
State v. Hough,
The testimony of the expert witness supports a logical relevance between defendant’s confessed drug use and the murder for which he is accused. The expert testified:
There are really two main situations that the literature cites and that I have also seen in my experience that you find overkill. One of them is an individual when they know the person, lover’s quarrel ... And the second situation is when the assailant is high on drugs, a stimulant such as cocaine. They’re just really going at it because they are under the influence of the drug. They are the two situations where we see overkill.
By introducing evidence of defendant’s cocaine use during the time frame in which the murder occurred and the testimony of the medical examiner regarding “overkill” murders, the State can show the defendant would be in the state of mind to commit an “overkill” murder. In this case, evidence of defendant’s cocaine use would serve to identify him as victim’s killer.
The evidence of defendant’s cocaine use also meets the standard of clear and convincing evidenсe. “The evidence of the prior bad acts must be clear and convincing to be admissible.”
State v. Adams,
Furthermore, we find the evidence of defendant’s drug use has probative value that оutweighs any prejudicial effect. “[E]ven though the evidence is clear and convincing and falls within a
Lyle
exception, it must be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice to the defendant.”
See
Rule 403, SCRE. Unfair prejudice means an undue tendency to suggest decision on an improper basis.
State v. Alexander,
Here, the prior bad act was not introduced to show a propensity for that type of сrime. The State did not argue the evidence that defendant committed a similar crime in the past meant he would be more likely to commit the same crime again.
See, e.g., State v. Hough,
Although not argued by the State, the evidence of defendant’s drug use in this case would also be admissible under the theory of
res gestae.
As stated in
State v. Adams,
Here ... the temporal proximity of the cocaine use to the robbery and murder is so close that one cannot deny that the coсaine use was so much a part of the “environment” of the crime that omitting the evidence of it would unnecessarily fragmentize the State’s case____ The use of the cocaine here was inextricably intertwined with the robbery and murder. Under these circumstances, such evidence was properly аdmitted as part of the res gestae of the crime.
In addition to finding the drug use evidence admissible under the theory of res gestae, the Adams court also found the evidence was properly admitted under Lyle. We believe the *401 evidence of defendant’s cocaine use in the current case would also be admissible on each basis.
Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, we AFFIRM defendant’s conviction.
Notes
. Arbutus Street is in a part of North Charleston.
. At trial the State argued: "The medical examiner will testify about the overkill, your Honor, as far as the multiple stab wounds to the head. That certainly could be something that would be viewed as while under the influence of drugs or certainly heroin.”
