Defendant-appellant was convicted of the offenses of operating an automobile under the influence and obstructing an officer. We affirm.
1. Appellant, submitting that the verdict against him was based entirely on his uncorroborated confession of guilt, contends that his conviction of driving under the influence was without sufficient evidentiary support as a matter of law. We must take issue with appellant’s contentions of error.
Defendant admitted to a state patrol officer that he was operating the vehicle at the time of the accident. This statement to the officer, however, did not include a confession that he had been driving while under the
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influence of intoxicants. Thus, his statement "was an admission only, albeit incriminating in nature, and not a confession of guilt.”
Stephens v. State,
2. Appellant urges that the evidence of his obstructive conduct was grounded solely on his resistance by argument
(see McCook v. State,
Although, as appellant contends, mere remonstrance is insufficient to support a conviction for obstructing an officer, the evidence adduced at trial showed more than defendant’s mere remonstrance.
There was direct testimony that defendant threw a metal object at the deputy assisting the arresting officer. There was also evidence that after the defendant had been placed under arrest, he refused to remain in the emergency room pursuant to the arresting officer’s instructions
(compare Ratliff v. State,
In view of the evidence presented at trial, we therefore conclude that a rational trier of fact could reasonably have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the offense of obstructing an officer. See, e.g.,
Smith v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
