I
On 29 December 1980 at about 4:30 a.m. Robin Wellington was awakened in her bedroom by a man, whom she identified as defendant, who was holding a razor to her throat. He told her not to move. Defendant was also armed with a gun. He forced Wellington to perform fellatio on him. After the oral sex act had been completed, defendant put a nylon stocking over his head and forced Wellington out of bed and into the living room, where Angela Moore was sleeping. Defendant woke Moore up and told her that he would blow her away if she resisted. The two women were forced to remove their clothing, and defendant touched their brеasts and genital areas.
Defendant told Wellington that he had entered the house by placing an oil drum under the bathroom window, breaking the window and cutting the Venetian blinds. He told them not to report the incident. After defendant left, Wellington discovered that the bathroom window had been broken and the blinds torn. *276 When Wellington had gone to bed that night the window and blinds were undamaged.
Wellington reported the incident to the police two days later. She identified her assailant by name and gave a detailed description of him. Although Wellington positively identified defendant as the man who had broken into her home and assaulted her, Moore was unаble to make a positive identification.
Defendant presented three character witnesses who testified to his good character.
At the close of the evidence the case was submitted to the jury, which returned the verdicts set out above.
II
Defendant first assigns error to the identification of a letter received by Wellington nearly a year prior to the offenses charged. During direct examination Wellington identified a document marked as State’s Exhibit Number 1 as a letter she had received in January of 1980. She testified that at the time she received it she did not know who had written it. Later in the State’s case, the trial judge ruled that the letter was inadmissible, and the letter was never shown nor were its contents related to the jury.
Defendant argues that the trial judge’s failure to suppress the earlier references to the letter at thе time he ruled that the letter itself was inadmissible constitutes reversible error. We disagree for two reasons. First, defendant failed to preserve his objection by moving to strike the earlier testimony at the time the lеtter was ruled inadmissible and, second, defendant has not met his burden of proving that failure to suppress the contested evidence prejudiced him.
The testimony of Wellington concerning the letter had no aрparent relevance to the case unless and until the letter was somehow linked or “connected up” to defendant. Wellington’s testimony was properly admitted pending the admission of evidence that would tie the letter to defendant.
See State v. Black,
Even were we to conclude that defendant had not waived his objection to this evidentiary matter, he would still have to show that he was prejudiced, ie., that there is a reasonable possibility that a different result would have been reached had the alleged error nоt been committed. G.S. § 15A-1443(a) (1978). He has not met that burden here. Wellington testified only that she had received a letter in January of 1980 and that she did not then know who had sent it. Defendant argues that the jurors were likely to have dеduced that defendant had sent the letter and that they were likely to have speculated about the letter’s contents to defendant’s prejudice. We refuse to indulge in the presumption, based on Wellingtоn’s testimony that she had received a letter from an unknown person, that the jurors would range so far afield in their beliefs as to what the evidence showed. Wellington’s positive identification of defendant and overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt compels the conclusion that there is no reasonable possibility that a different result would have been reached had the letter never been shown to the witness.
Ill
During cross-examination of State witness Wellington, defendant sought to discredit her identification testimony by questioning the sufficiency of the lighting in the bedroom where the assault occurred and by questioning Wellington’s eyesight. Additionаlly, he sought to introduce into evidence the lamp which provided the only light in Wellington’s bedroom and a picture of Wellington wearing glasses. The trial judge refused to admit these exhibits into evidence becausе they were tendered during the presentation of the State’s case. Defendant contends that the trial court’s refusal to allow these exhibits into evidence during the cross-examination of the State’s witness сonstitutes an abuse of discretion and entitles him to a new trial.
Defendant accepts the general rule that a criminal defendant has no right to introduce exhibits into evidence during the presentation of thе State’s case,
State v. Knight,
Temple
stands for the proposition that the order of presentation or proof at a criminal trial is a rule of practice, not of law, and may be altered when the trial court, in its discretiоn, considers a departure necessary to promote justice.
See also State v. Britt,
The “designed effect” of the exhibits proffered by defendant was to attack Wellington’s identification testimony. Defendant elicited on cross-examination of Wellington an admission that the only light in her bedroom on the night of the burglary was a small lamp with a blue bulb positioned about twenty feet from her bed and that defendant stood so that only one side of his face was illuminated. Wеllington also identified a picture of herself wearing glasses but claimed that they were “shades,” nonprescription sunglasses. It appears to us that defendant was fully able to assail Wellington’s identification testimony through cross-examination and we perceive no prejudice to his defense by requiring him to wait his turn to introduce the exhibits and pass them to the jury. We conclude that the trial court’s decision not to allоw the defense exhibits during the State’s case was well within its discretion. Defendant’s failure to introduce these exhibits during presentation of his defense was his own choice, and not a source of error.
*279 IV
Defendant also alleges error in the trial court’s instructions on first degree burglary. He contends that by instructing the jury that defendant must have intended “to commit rape and/or first degree sexual offense” at the time of the breaking and entering, the trial court denied defendant his constitutional right to a unanimous jury verdict.
The North Carolina Constitution guarantees a criminal defendant the right to a unanimous verdict. N.C. Const, art. I, § 24;
accord, State v. Williams,
While defendant’s argument is not unreasonable, we are not persuaded. The trial court repeatedly instructed the jury that its verdict must be unanimous. When the charge is rеad as a whole, as it must be, it is obvious that the trial court conveyed to the jury that the verdicts must be unanimous as to every essential element and that the instruction containing the disjunctive was a shorthand statement thаt the jurors must all find that defendant had the intent to commit rape or that they must all agree that defendant had the intent to commit a first degree sexual offense. While defendant is correct as to the technical meaning of the instruction, this Court must neither forget nor discount the common sense and understanding of the trial court and the jurors. From our examination of the charge we are satisfied that defendant was not deprived of his constitutional right to a unanimous jury verdict.
V
In his closing argument to the jury the district attorney noted that defendant had not produced any alibi witnesses and stated, “Where are the witnesses who can put him anywherе *280 else?” Defendant assigns error to this statement and argues that it amounted to an impermissible comment on defendant’s failure to testify. Although defendant admits that the prosecutor did not comment directly on defеndant’s silence, he argues that the absence of any indication in the evidence that there existed any alibi witnesses amounts to a comment on defendant’s failure to place himself away from the scene of the crime.
We are not persuaded. Although the defendant’s failure to take the stand and deny the charges may not be the subject of comment, the defendant’s failure to produce exculpatory evidence or to contradict evidence presented by the State may properly be brought to the jury’s attention by the State in its closing argument.
State v. Tilley,
VI
In conclusion, we find that defendant had a fair trial free from prejudicial error.
No error.
