The defendant appeals his conviction for burglary. Held:
1. The defendant’s first enumeration of error is that the Court erred “in requiring defendant’s Fifth Amendment privilege which he took during a questioning by police to be asserted before the jury.” The record does not sustain the defendant’s contention that he was required to assert his privilege in the presence of the jury. Instead, an examination of the transcript reveals that the defendant objected, after which a bench conference ensued out of the hearing of the jury, at which time the trial judge granted the defendant’s motion that there be no more testimony about the subject in question.
2. During the course of the trial, the State introduced into evidence, over the objection of the defendant, a transcript of a tape recording of the defеndant’s statement made to police officers. The statement in question contained inculpatory testimony in that the defendant admitted that he brоke into the office he was charged with burglarizing, and attempted to take therefrom certain stereo equipment.
At the time the transcript of thе tape recording was proffered, the defendant objected on the grounds that the proper foundation for the admission of such evidenсe had not been laid. The defendant, in urging the objection, set forth the seven requirements necessary to establish the proper foundation, as dеscribed in
Steve M. Solomon, Inc. v. Edgar,
Among the requirements for laying a proper foundation found in
Steve M. Solomon, Inc. v. Edgar,
In answer to a question by counsel for the defendant as to where the tape recording was (at the time of the trial), the witness for the State responded: “locked up in my desk drawer.” There was no testimony as to where the tape was kept or how it was preserved from thе time of the original taping up until the trial. On a technical basis, the State has failed to show the manner of preservation of the record. Howеver, in a case such as this where the transcript of the tape rather than the tape itself is introduced into evidence, and there is nothing to show that there were any changes made from the original tape, it would appear that this situation is similar to other “chain of custody” problems. Cаses having to do with the preservation of other real evidence have pointed out that the mere possibility of tampering is not enough.
Patterson v. State,
In the case sub judice, we find that the foundation established by the State was sufficiеnt to meet the spirit of the rule, if not the very precise requirements, set forth for cases involving introduction of statements made on mechanicаl transcription devices. See
Brooks v. State,
3. Counsel for the defendant requested that the following instruction be given to the jury: “To warrant a conviction on fingerprint evidence the fingerprint [sic] corresponding to those of the accused must have been found in the place where the crime was committed under such circumstances, that they could only have been impressed at the time when the crime was committed.”
The defendant objected tо the trial court’s refusal to give such request to charge, and assigned error in this Court to such refusal.
In
Pope v. State,
This Court held that where evidence of fingerprints was introduced (as is in the case sub judice) that such request to charge was proper and that it was error requiring the grant of a new trial to refuse tо give such requested instructions.
Pope v. State,
However, we must determine a second question, to wit: was the error committed in this case harmful to the defendant? It is a well established principle of law that any error in the refusal tо give a request to charge is harmless error, where the evidence demanded the verdict found.
Pennington v. State,
In order to constitute a confession, the statement of the accused must admit every material element of the crime charged against him.
Edwards v. State,
The crime of burglary is committed when “without authority, and with intent to commit a felony or theft therein, one enters or remains within the dwelling house of another or any other building.” Code Ann. § 26-1601 (Ga. L. 1968, pp. 1249, 1287; through 1980, p. 770). The defendant’s statеment admitted going to the building in question, removing a plexiglás window, placing that in the vehicle which he drove to the site, entering the building and removing stereo equipment and then leaving when the police arrived. This statement, therefore, admitted every material element of the crime charged against the defendant and stands unrefuted by any other evidence to the contrary.
Under the circumstances in the case sub judice, therefore, we cannot find that the failure to give the charge was such harmful error as to require the reversal of the judgment. See
Simmons v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
