Anthony Ernest White appeals his convictions on two counts of malicious wounding, two counts of the use of a firearm in the commission of a malicious wounding, one count of grand larceny, and one count of possession of a firearm after having been convicted of a felony. White contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion for a transcript at state expense of his first trial, which ended in a mistrial; by admitting into evidence a 9mm handgun and expert testimony regarding the gun; and by failing to strike the evidence as to the grand larceny charge. We hold that the trial court did not commit reversible error and we affirm the defendant’s convictions.
I. Transcript
After the defendant’s first trial was declared a mistrial because the jury was deadlocked, the trial court scheduled a second trial for September 28, 1994. On September 23, 1994, the defendant, an indigent, filed a motion for the court to provide him a transcript of the first trial. On September 26, the trial judge heard and denied the motion, stating, “the Court of Appeals might reverse me but I don’t [provide transcripts at state expense] because if he were paying his own way he probably wouldn’t have it done. If there is some conflict, material conflict, in the evidence which [the defendant] point[s] out, the Court Reporter will be here with her notes, so she can check her notes and find out.” In addition, the trial judge stated that, “I think the motion comes late ... I just don’t think a normal person could write that up that fast.”
“[A]bsent a showing of good cause for delay, a defendant may waive his right to a copy of mistrial transcripts if he does not timely request them so as to avoid disruption of the subsequently scheduled trial.”
United States v. Talbert,
The state must, as a matter of equal protection, provide an indigent defendant with the basic tools of an adequate defense, and there is no doubt that “the [sjtate must provide an indigent defendant with a transcript of prior proceedings when that transcript is needed for an effective defense.”
Anderson v. Commonwealth,
In
Britt,
the Supreme Court noted that the value of a transcript from the first trial “can ordinarily be assumed,” and that it is not necessary for a defendant to show “particularized need.”
Id.
at 228,
Here, the trial judge stated prior to trial that he would instruct the court reporter to have the notes from the first trial available during the second trial in the event material conflicts in testimony developed. This limited access to the reporter’s notes did not enable the defendant to use the notes prior to trial in preparation of “an effective defense.” As to whether a court reporter’s notes might be a sufficient alternative to a transcript, the Supreme Court observed in
Britt
that “[i]t appears that the reporter would at any time have read back to counsel his notes of the mistrial,
well in advance of the second trial.”
Although the trial judge erred by denying the defendant’s request for a copy of the transcript, we must determine whether the error was harmless.
See Tyler,
The defendant contends that Yvette Washington’s testimony at the second trial was more specific than her testimony at the first trial. For instance, he alleges that Washington was more specific about how many times the defendant visited her apartment on the night of the crimes, and she testified that the defendant told her that he had been in a scuffle with two “officers” as opposed to two “people.” Furthermore, the defendant notes that Washington did not testify at the first trial that she saw the defendant holding what appeared to be a gun clip.
Nevertheless, even had the purported discrepancies in Washington’s testimony been considered sufficient to impeach her,
1
the other evidence of the defendant’s guilt is overwhelming.
See Harrington v. California,
Although the first trial resulted in a hung jury, the record does not suggest that any “significant conflicts in the evidence” existed.
Schrum,
II. Handgun and Expert Testimony
The defendant, citing
Stevenson v. Commonwealth,
In
Stevenson,
a police officer testified that he went to Stevenson’s residence in Maryland and asked Stevenson’s wife to retrieve the clothing her husband wore the day of the murder. She gave clothing to the officer.
Id.
at 464,
The holding in Stevenson does not control this case. In Stevenson, the wife’s conduct in response to the officer’s request for the shirt Stevenson was wearing “formed the basis of the Commonwealth’s argument that [Stevenson] was wearing the shirt at the time the crime was committed.” Id. Her conduct in retrieving the shirt was an implied assertion that Stevenson was wearing the shirt on the night of the crime. Here, Brinkley testified that she arranged, at the defendant’s request, an exchange of a handgun for cocaine between the defendant and her neighbors and that upon request from the police she went to her neighbors and retrieved a handgun. While one may infer that the handgun Brinkley retrieved was the one the defendant had exchanged, that inference flows from all the circumstantial evidence in this case and not merely from the alleged hearsay, as was the case in Stevenson. Unlike Stevenson, the officers in this case did not testify that they asked Brinkley to retrieve the defendant’s gun. Brinkley did not testify that the neighbors said this was the defendant’s gun. Brinkley did not testify as to what she asked of the neighbors or what they said or did in response to *719 her request. She testified only that she obtained a 9mm handgun from them.
Circumstantial evidence, other than the neighbors’ act of giving the gun to Brinkley, connected the defendant with the 9mm handgun introduced into evidence. Both Officers Niedhammer and Hockman testified that the defendant shot them. Officer Niedhammer testified that during the scuffle with the defendant he discovered that his 9mm handgun was missing. Niedhammer also testified that he saw the defendant leaving the scene with a gun. Yvette Washington testified that shortly after the shootings she saw the defendant holding a gun clip. Brinkley testified that the defendant visited her apartment on the night the crimes were committed and asked her to contact her neighbors and arrange an exchange of a 9mm handgun for cocaine. After Brinkley arranged the exchange, the defendant went across the street to the neighbors’ house and returned several minutes later with cocaine.
The following morning, Brinkley retrieved a 9mm handgun from the neighbors with whom she had arranged the exchange. That gun was later identified as Niedhammer’s gun. The trier of fact did not have to rely on a nonverbal assertion by the neighbors to connect the defendant with the gun introduced at trial. Proof that Niedhammer’s gun was missing after the scuffle with the defendant, that the defendant was seen leaving the scene with a handgun, that the same evening the defendant arranged an exchange of a gun for drugs, and that Officer Niedhammer’s gun was retrieved from the persons who purportedly exchanged drugs for the gun, are circumstances which prove that the handgun admitted in evidence was taken by the defendant from Niedhammer. The trial court did not err by admitting the gun and the expert’s ballistics testimony that the gun was used to shoot Officer Niedhammer.
III. Sufficiency of the Evidence
After the jury returned the verdicts, the trial judge stated that he assumed the defendant was moving “to set the verdict
*720
aside [as] contrary to the law and evidence,” whereupon the trial judge overruled the motion. Although objection in this form is not sufficient to preserve a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence,
see
Rule 5A:18, it is well established that “[t]he purpose of Rule 5A:18 is to require a party to raise an issue in a timely fashion before the trial judge so the court has opportunity to address the issue and prevent unnecessary appeals.”
Brown v. Commonwealth,
“In considering the sufficiency of the evidence to support the convictions, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, granting to it all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom.”
Id.
at 480-81,
*721 For these reasons, we affirm the defendant’s convictions.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Defense counsel specifically questioned Washington about her failure to mention the gun clip at the first trial, which was the most significant discrepancy in her testimony. Therefore, although the court reporter’s notes were not a sufficient alternative device to the transcript, they did serve to mitigate the prejudice that resulted from the denial of the defendant’s equal protection right to the transcript.
