A jury сonvicted Michael L. Thornton of two counts of distribution of more than one-half ounce but less than five pounds of marijuana, three counts of distribution of less than one-half ounce of marijuana, and one count of possession of marijuanа. The convictions arose from separate sales to a confidential informant, but all issues on appeal arise from only one of the transactions. The defendant contends that the trial court erred (1) in admitting evidence of other crimes, (2) in allowing the Commonwealth to make an improper rebuttal, and (8) in faffing to give a cautionary instruction. Finding no errоr, we affirm.
*828 A police special agent gave his informant $250 to purchase an ounce of marijuana and a gram of either methamphetamine or cocaine. The informant went to the defendant’s house and asked for those drugs. After аgreeing to the price, the defendant told the informant to leave the $250 and call him back in a day or two. The defendant did not anticipate any problem filling the order. Two days later the informant returned, but the defendant only gave him less than onе-half an ounce of marijuana. The defendant returned $200 in cash and remarked “that he’d had the other drugs available but had sold them the night before.”
The defendant moved for a mistrial arguing the reference to having sold drugs the night before was evidence of other crimes, inadmissible, and highly prejudicial. The trial court overruled the motion stating that the evidence was “all pаrts and parcel of the same transaction.”
“Where a course of criminal conduct is continuous and interwoven, consisting of a series of related crimes, the perpetrator has no right to have the evidence ‘sanitized’ so as tо deny the jury knowledge of all but the immediate crime for which he is on trial.”
Scott v. Commonwealth,
The evidence established, without objection, that the informant gave the defendant $250 for marijuana and either methamphetamine or cocaine. The defendant agreed to provide those drugs. Two days later, the defendant produced the marijuana but returned $200 in cash. The witness explained what happened when he met with the defendant and received only part of what he had ordered and the return of most of his purchase money. He rеcounted the defendant’s explanation as part of an uninterrupted narrative of their meeting. The *829 defendant’s statement that he had sold the other drugs the night before explained why he did not complete the sale as arranged. It was intimately connected with and arose out of the same transaction for which the defendant was on trial. The Commonwealth was entitled to explain that transaction.
Evidence of other crimes, which are “so intimately connected and blendеd with facts proving the commission of the offense charged,” may be admissible because “it cannot be separated with propriety.”
Sutphin v. Commonwealth,
The defendant also contends that the trial court erred in permitting the Commonwealth to make improper argument during rebuttal argument. The defendant was charged with two felonies and four misdemeanors but the total quantity of marijuana sold was only 1.78 ounces. Throughout the trial, the defense maintained the offense was not serious because the total quantity sold was small. In his closing argument, he again stressed the total quantity involved, an eighth of a pound, and he urged the jury “to put things in perspective.”
To that argument, the Commonwealth responded that eaсh time the informant sought to buy marijuana the defendant possessed it and sold it to him. The Commonwealth noted that the amount of mоney the informant offered determined the amount of marijuana sold. It pointed out that as the request increased in value the defendant provided the greater amounts. Breaking into, hyperbole, the Commonwealth concluded, “I guarantee you if they had $1,000 to buy pot -with and go see [the defendant], they’d have gotten $1,000 worth of pot.... So the quantity is based on what we had whеn we *830 started out. If we’d had $1,000, we’d be talking about pounds.”
The defendant objected that the Commonwealth was arguing a hypothеtical situation and that it was inappropriate for the Commonwealth to speculate about $1,000 worth of drugs. The trial court ruled that the Commonwealth was “within bounds” but asked him to “move off of it [because] [i]t could become argumentative,” and thе Commonwealth moved to a different argument.
The trial court has broad discretion to determine whether a closing argument is inappropriate.
See Canipe v. Commonwealth, 25
Va.App. 629, 639,
Upon a review of the record, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in overruling the objection to the Commonwealth’s rebuttal. The dеfendant has not alleged, nor is there any evidence, that he was prejudiced by the remark. The Commonwealth’s argument thаt the amount of marijuana purchased was dictated by the amount of money the informant had to offer directly respоnded to the defendant’s primary contention. Immediately upon ruling, the trial judge suggested that the Commonwealth move to a diffеrent argument, and the Commonwealth, realizing the suggestion was imperative, abandoned the topic. The trial court’s handling of the objection was an appropriate exercise of discretion. Because the trial court did not err, we need not address the argument that the trial court failed to give a cautionary instruction.
Accordingly, we affirm the defendant’s convictions.
Affirmed.
