Randolph v. State

538 S.E.2d 139, 246 Ga. App. 141, 2000 Fulton County D. Rep. 3479, 2000 Ga. App. LEXIS 988
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 8, 2000
DocketA00A1603
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 538 S.E.2d 139 (Randolph 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
Randolph v. State, 538 S.E.2d 139, 246 Ga. App. 141, 2000 Fulton County D. Rep. 3479, 2000 Ga. App. LEXIS 988 (Ga. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Barnes, Judge.

A jury convicted Glenn Anthony Randolph of aggravated assault, false imprisonment, possession of a gun while committing a crime, and three counts of armed robbery. The trial court sentenced Ran *142 dolph to serve a total of 30 years, followed by 30 years on probation. He enumerates five errors on appeal, arguing that the trial court erred (1) in failing to merge two of the armed robbery convictions for sentencing purposes; (2) in refusing to charge the jury on impeachment by an inconsistent statement; (3) in denying his motion to suppress the fruits of an illegal search and seizure; (4) in admitting a victim’s identification testimony; and (5) in allowing the state to comment improperly on Randolph’s failure to testify. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for resentencing.

We view the evidence on appeal in the light most favorable to the verdict and no longer presume the defendant is innocent. We do not weigh the evidence or decide the witnesses’ credibility, but only determine if the evidence is sufficient to sustain the convictions. Taylor v. State, 226 Ga. App. 254, 255 (485 SE2d 830) (1997).

The evidence at trial established that two men wearing masks robbed an Auto Zone store at gunpoint. One of the men forced the manager to open the store safe and place approximately $1,400 in bills and rolled coins into a plastic bag. Meanwhile, the other robber pistol-whipped a customer, forced employees and customers to drop to the floor, and then made them get up and go into the back of the store, where the first man robbed the manager and a customer of their wallets. The robbers left through the front door, and after a short period of time, two of the Auto Zone employees went out the back door and circled around the building toward the front.

One of the employees saw the robbers leaving with a third man in a brown, four-door Buick. That employee, who testified that he had watched one of the robbers closely the entire time he was in the store, saw the robber pull off his mask as the car drove off. “I looked dead in his face and he looked at me,” he testified. He was 100 percent sure that Randolph was the robber he later identified in a photographic lineup, adding “I’ll never forget [those] eyes in my life.”

A short time later that afternoon, Marietta Police Officer Thomas stopped a green Ford Escort for speeding. The officer testified that he followed the car for about a mile at 65 mph in a 35-mph zone. Once the officer turned his lights on, the Escort driver slowed to 30 or 35 mph. The officer saw a lot of movement among the four people inside, which in his experience indicated that the occupants were trying to conceal something. The car finally stopped, and the driver, who was Randolph, handed the officer his license. Randolph stepped out of the car and consented to Officer Thomas’s request to search it. The officer called for backup because he could not search the car with the other three occupants inside and patted down Randolph to check for weapons. The officer felt two rolls of nickels in Randolph’s pocket and, with Randolph’s permission, removed and *143 examined them. The nickels were shrink-wrapped in plastic, as if they had come from a bank or a store, which Officer Thomas testified was unusual. He returned the coins to Randolph and waited for additional officers to arrive.

When the backup arrived, the other passengers, Antavius Pitts, Sherief Chapman, and Charles Cooks, got out of the car and were separated. When patting down Cooks, one of the officers felt a plastic bulge in his crotch area, and he and Officer Thomas asked Cooks what it was. Cooks insisted several times that he had nothing in his crotch area, but the officers retrieved a brown plastic garbage bag from his pants containing $1,342 cash. Cooks then explained that he had won the money gambling and had not wanted to tell the officers about it because he did not want them to steal his money. The officers seized the money in order to begin condemnation proceedings based on Cooks’s statement that the currency constituted gambling proceeds. Randolph, Pitts, and Chapman denied knowing anything about the money.

Based on the large sum of money and the occupants’ movements inside the car after he activated his blue lights, Officer Thomas suspected the car might contain narcotics. A canine unit arrived and a thorough search uncovered no contraband, but because of several recent armed robberies in the area, Officer Thomas took pictures of the four men. He then gave Randolph a speeding ticket and released him, along with Pitts and Cooks. Chapman was taken into custody pursuant to an unrelated arrest warrant.

A detective testified that he prepared photographic lineups that included pictures of the four men and showed them to the only Auto Zone victim who had seen any of the robbers’ faces. The victim positively identified Randolph at the photo lineup in approximately four seconds, although he could not identify any of the other men.

Cooks testified for the State after pleading guilty to robbery, false imprisonment, and aggravated assault, for which he was sentenced to serve ten years in confinement and ten years on probation. On the morning of the Auto Zone robbery, he testified, Randolph and two other men picked him up in a stolen Buick. Randolph and another man had guns with them. The four men bought and smoked some marijuana, then Randolph said that he, Pitts, and Chapman were going “to go take care of some business,” meaning they were going to get some money. The three men left and returned thirty to forty minutes later, then left again because, as Randolph said, they had not finished their job. When the three men returned the second time, Randolph told Cooks, “Let’s go,” and the four men left in a green Ford Escort. Cooks did not know what happened to the stolen Buick. When the police began signaling the Escort to pull over, Randolph told Cooks to grab the bag of money under his seat and put it *144 in his pants. Cooks admitted that he knew the money was illegal, though he did not know exactly where it came from. He explained that he hid it in his pants because he was trying to look out for his friends and he did not want anyone to go to jail. Once Randolph, Cooks, and Pitts were back on the road after the traffic stop and search, Randolph told Cooks the money had come from the Auto Zone robbery.

1. Randolph argues that his convictions for two of the armed robbery counts should merge and, therefore, the trial court erred in sentencing him separately for those counts. Count 1 accuses Randolph of using a handgun on September 15, 1997, to take from Glenn Jeffries $1,352 belonging to Auto Zone, and Count 5 accuses him of using a handgun on September 15, 1997, to take from Jeffries a wallet belonging to him. The State argues that, because Randolph robbed the victim of Auto Zone’s money at one end of the store, then robbed him of his wallet at the other end of the store, the two incidents were sufficiently separated by time and place as to constitute two separate robberies. We disagree.

Robbery is a crime against possession, and is not affected by concepts of ownership. Similarly, one may only rob a person, and not a corporate entity, or an object such as a cash drawer.

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Bluebook (online)
538 S.E.2d 139, 246 Ga. App. 141, 2000 Fulton County D. Rep. 3479, 2000 Ga. App. LEXIS 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randolph-v-state-gactapp-2000.