PHIPPS, Presiding Judge.
After a bench trial in which the parties stipulated to the facts, Nicholas Snow appeals his conviction for criminal attempt to commit burglary in the first degree.
1. Snow contends that the evidence was insufficient to prove he intended to commit a theft. We disagree.
"As a general rule the state must, of necessity, rely on circumstantial evidence in proving intent. And the fact that the defendant may have failed in accomplishing his apparent purpose does not render a finding of criminal attempt to commit burglary improper."
The stipulated facts show that on October 4, 2010, at about 2:30 p.m., a homeowner arrived home to find a man walking quickly across her property on the back deck. The homeowner yelled "[H]ey, who are you and what are you on my back deck for[?]" The homeowner observed the man attempting to conceal a metal object by his side as he walked toward a vehicle parked in front of the house. The homeowner asked a woman in the vehicle what they were doing. The woman said that they were looking for an individual by a particular name who had told them to go to the back door of the house. The man arrived at the vehicle, entered, and said to the woman, "[L]et's go." The homeowner observed that the man was nervous and that he kept his head down. When the man and woman drove away, the homeowner called the police.
A police officer who was nearby stopped the vehicle. The woman told the officer that the man had asked her to take him to the homeowner's house to contact someone about some yard work. The woman stated that the man first went to the front door of the house and that when no one answered, he went to the back of the house. The man gave the police an account similar to the woman's. The officer issued a citation to the woman for an expired vehicle tag, then released her and the man.
A different officer who went to the house inspected the deck door and saw what he believed were fresh pry marks on the door knob and lock. The homeowner told the officer that she had to unlock the door to open it, and that nothing was missing from inside the house. The homeowner told the officer that the pry marks had not been on the door when she left her house that morning. The homeowner picked Snow (and the woman) out of a photographic lineup as the individuals she had seen when she arrived at her home that day.
The homeowner's neighbor was interviewed by police and said that he had seen Snow carrying a crowbar and walking from a vehicle to the top of the deck of the homeowner's house.
After Snow and the woman were arrested, the woman waived her Miranda
Snow had two prior convictions for theft by taking which were admitted in evidence as similar transactions.
The stipulated facts, even if characterized as circumstantial,
2. Snow contends that the trial court erred in failing to apply the rule of lenity and impose sentence as for the misdemeanor offense of criminal trespass. Snow argues that, even if the facts supported the finding of guilt, his conduct would satisfy the elements of both the crimes of criminal trespass and criminal attempt to commit first degree burglary, and under the rule of lenity, he was entitled to be sentenced to the lesser of the two penalties, that being the penalty for criminal trespass. We disagree.
Snow was indicted for one count of first degree burglary. The trial court found him guilty of criminal attempt to commit burglary in the first degree.
"[T]he essential requirement of the rule of lenity is that both crimes could be proved with the same evidence.... [T]hat a single act may, as a factual matter, violate more than one penal statute does not implicate the rule of lenity."
A person commits the offense of criminal trespass, in pertinent part, when he knowingly and without authority enters upon the land or premises of another person for an unlawful purpose.
The statutes do not define the same offense.
Judgment affirmed.
ELLINGTON, C.J., and DILLARD, J., concur.