Lopez v. State

557 S.E.2d 1, 252 Ga. App. 681
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 30, 2000
DocketA01A1614
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 557 S.E.2d 1 (Lopez v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lopez v. State, 557 S.E.2d 1, 252 Ga. App. 681 (Ga. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

Smith, Presiding Judge.

Vincent Lopez was indicted by an Appling County grand jury on one count of armed robbery. He was convicted, his amended motion for new trial was denied, and he appeals, asserting five enumerations of error.1 Finding no error, we affirm.

1. In two enumerations of error, Lopez raises the general grounds. The parties agree that the State’s case rests upon circumstantial evidence.

Proof by direct evidence, however, is not required. A conviction may be based upon circumstantial evidence if the proved facts are not only consistent with the hypothesis of guilt, but exclude every other reasonable hypothesis but the guilt of the accused. OCGA § 24-4-6. When the evidence meets this test, circumstantial evidence is as probative as direct evidence, and whether this burden has been met is a question for the jury. When the jury is authorized to find that the evidence, though circumstantial, excluded every reasonable hypothesis except the defendant’s guilt, the verdict will not be disturbed unless the verdict is insupportable as a matter of law. Further, while circumstantial evidence must exclude every other reasonable hypothesis but the defendant’s guilt, the evidence need not exclude every inference or hypothesis.

(Citations and punctuation omitted; emphasis in original.) Hayes v. State, 249 Ga. App. 857, 860 (1) (549 SE2d 813) (2001).

[682]*682Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, the record shows that on December 5, 1999, about 7:30 p.m., a convenience store employee was robbed by a masked man wielding a knife. The robber was wearing a dark-colored hood or hat over his head, a dark blue and white bandanna around his face, dark trousers, a blue and white sweater, and gloves. The victim also noticed that he had a “dark colored complexion” and was “small-built.” In addition to taking approximately $3,000 from the store, the robber also took the victim’s purse.

A witness testified that as she was preparing to enter the convenience store, she saw a man leave the store with something like a purse or a bag under his arm. She immediately suspected that “something was wrong” because the man was “bundled up” although it was “not that cold out here.” He was wearing a knit hat pulled down over his face and a sweater pulled up so his face was concealed. He walked around the corner of the building toward Lennox Road, which runs along the side of the convenience store. The cashier signaled that she had been robbed, and the witness called 911. When the witness drove to the store down Lennox Road, she did not see any cars parked on the side of the road near the store.

Another witness lived approximately three miles from the scene of the robbery and next to another convenience store. Shortly before 6:00 p.m. on the day of the robbery, this witness saw a car parked across from his wife’s fish pond in a pine thicket between his home and the store. He went out and asked the driver what he was doing there, and the driver responded that they were “squirrel hunting” although the witness saw no firearms in the car. The witness told the driver to leave. He observed that the driver was a dark-skinned man and that two children or teenagers were with him. Later that day, this witness gave the sheriff’s department a description of the car, including three of its license plate characters. His description of the occupants matched a description of the individuals who had been sitting under a tree near the store that was robbed. From the information provided by this witness, a deputy sheriff identified a car owned by one of Lopez’s relatives. The deputies located the car on the same evening, and the relative gave them permission to search it. During the search, the deputies found a black toboggan hat, a pair of cloth gloves, and a blue and white bandanna hidden behind the armrest in the backseat. Lopez was at his relative’s home with his fiancée and his children when the officers arrived that evening. Based on information his relative provided, the officers arrested Lopez.

At trial, the victim was shown the hat, gloves, and bandanna obtained by the officers. She testified that the bandanna had the same print as that worn by the robber. She could not identify the black hat as the one worn by the robber; she remembered only that it [683]*683was dark in color. The gloves looked familiar. The eyewitness was shown the hat found by the officers and testified that the robber used “a hat like that.” Lopez’s fiancée offered an explanation for the presence of the hat, gloves, and bandanna in the car, claiming that she owned the gloves and bandanna and left them in the car “all the time” and that the hat belonged to her cousin.

While the dissent correctly points out that Lopez did not testify at trial, he did give two statements that were admitted into evidence and recounted his version of events on the evening of the robbery. At trial, a deputy summarized an oral statement Lopez gave less than six hours after the robbery as follows:

[E]arlier today he and his two boys . . . went back to the BP station, which is the U. S. 1 Convenience Store, where the car broke down and wouldn’t crank. This was around three p.m. . . . They finally got the car cranked back up and they come back to town. He put the boys out. He went back uptown, picked up another subject that he call “Poo-Poo.” They drove out in the country and “Poo-Poo” told him to stop at this store, so he said he pulled alongside of the store next to Lennox Road — didn’t pull into the store, he pulled up side of the road there on Lennox Road. He said the boy went into the store and he came back out and he said he jumped in the back seat of the car and told him — said he had a bag under his arm and he jumped in the back seat of the car and he left. And he said they continued on down Lennox Road and then turned back right on Ten Mile and went back home. He said he didn’t know that the boy was going to rob the store.

The defendant also stated that he thought “Poo-Poo” had stolen some beer.

After learning that “Poo-Poo” was James Wicker, the officers interviewed Wicker and searched his home. Wicker testified at trial, denying participation in the robbery and stating that he did not even see Lopez on the night in question. A deputy also testified that Wicker had an alibi for the evening of the robbery and that he personally verified the alibi by interviewing Wicker’s alibi witness “without him [Wicker] being able to contact her.”2

[684]*684The next day, a Georgia Bureau of Investigation agent interviewed Lopez. At trial, this agent summarized Lopez’s oral statement as follows:

Said he was driving his vehicle Sunday evening . . . and he was riding around and he met up with James Wicker and James Wicker got into the car with him. They were riding around. Mr. Wicker asked him to head out to the country. On the way out to the country they stopped at the — or Mr. Wicker asked Mr. Lopez to take a right by the BP store which is U. S. Number 1 Convenience Store. Mr. Wicker advised that he was going to use the bathroom and get something from the store. Mr. Lopez stated that he did not park right in front in the parking lot, he parked next to the road on the side of the road next to the road of the store while Mr. Wicker went inside. Some time afterwards Mr.

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Lopez v. State
557 S.E.2d 1 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
557 S.E.2d 1, 252 Ga. App. 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopez-v-state-gactapp-2000.