DOYLE, Judge.
Following a jury trial, Vandy Mack Daniels was convicted of armed robbery,
Viewed in favor of the verdict,
On March 7, 2006, a man wearing a ski mask with aluminum foil under it and carrying a silver revolver and a bank bag entered a Quick Stop convenience store in Millen, Georgia. The man screamed at the cashier, pointed the gun at her, demanding that she put money in the bank bag, and told her, "I ain't playing with you, bitch." The man "pull[ed] the hammer back two or three times," but the gun did not fire. The cashier handed the man money from three cash registers and a money bag containing dollar bills, the man ran out of and behind the store, and one of the employees chased him. Daniels was apprehended shortly thereafter, lying on the ground near railroad tracks. Police recovered from Daniels a chrome-plated revolver, gloves, two bank bags full of money, a ski mask, and an aluminum foil mask.
The GBI crime lab performed a ballistics analysis on the gun recovered from Daniels following the March 7 armed robbery at the Quick Stop, a bullet recovered from the Time Saver store, and the projectile recovered from Gardner's head. According to the firearms examiner, the bullet recovered from Gardner's head was fired from the revolver found next to Daniels following the subsequent Quick Stop robbery, and the bullet recovered from the Time Saver store was "probably" fired from the same revolver.
Daniels was charged with armed robbery, aggravated assault, kidnapping, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime. He was acquitted of kidnapping and convicted on the remaining counts. The trial court denied Daniels's subsequent motion for new trial, and this appeal followed.
1. Daniels argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his conviction because it merely showed that he possessed the gun from which the bullet recovered from Gardner's head was shot. He further contends that "[t]he reliable physical evidence—referring to the established fact that . . . Daniels is at least two inches taller than the suspect—in fact, contradicts the notion that. . . Daniels is that person." This enumeration is without merit.
Daniels's characterization of the evidence is incomplete. The State presented evidence that Daniels was apprehended immediately after the Quick Stop robbery, and he was found with a mask, bank bags containing money, and a gun; the bullet removed from Gardner's head following the Time Saver robbery the previous day was fired from the gun recovered next to Daniels after the Quick Stop robbery. In both incidents, the masked assailant ran into a convenience store, demanded money, told an employee that he was "not playing," pointed a gun at an employee, and pulled the trigger. Further, the jury viewed the video surveillance from the Time Saver robbery. This evidence was sufficient to support Daniels's conviction in this case.
2. Daniels contends that the trial court erred by requiring him to be shackled during the trial. We find no reversible error.
This case was initially scheduled for trial on July 18, 2007. Immediately after Daniels was brought into the courtroom from the holding cell, he got into an argument with trial counsel, and Daniels threatened to kill counsel when he was released from prison. The trial court relieved counsel, appointed new trial counsel, and rescheduled the trial for January 31, 2008.
Daniels was issued civilian clothing by the sheriff's department to wear during the rescheduled trial. Before the trial began, Daniels ripped the inseam of the pants from the crotch to the ankles, and he ripped all of the buttons off of his shirt. The sheriff's department arranged for a second set of civilian clothing, which Daniels wore into the courtroom during the trial court's preliminary instructions to the jury. Daniels returned to the holding cell, and when the deputy went into the cell to retrieve him, he found Daniels standing in his underwear with his shirt again ripped down the center. The deputy then gave Daniels a jail jumpsuit to wear, but Daniels ripped that as well. After testimony from the deputy and argument from the prosecutor and trial counsel,
When the jurors returned to the courtroom, the trial court instructed them that
Daniels maintains that the trial court abused its discretion by ordering him to be tried in shackles because he "was not a flight risk [and t]here was no evidence that he was physically combative or that—outside of his apparent animus toward the previous public defender—he was a threat to anyone."
"It is well established that `the accused, while in the presence of the jury, should be free of indicia of guilt such as wearing shackles or prison garb, or being surrounded by uniformed security personnel, or anything else that might infringe upon the presumption that he is innocent.'"
Here, Daniels was accused of shooting the victim in the head, and there was evidence that he attempted to shoot the employee in the subsequent robbery; he had threatened to kill his previous counsel in this case; he was involved in a physical altercation at the jail; and he repeatedly destroyed and removed his clothes in the holding cell during the trial, despite his assurances that he would stop doing so.
3. Daniels argues that the trial court erred by failing to merge his aggravated assault and armed robbery convictions as a matter of fact. We agree.
In the indictment, the State alleged that Daniels committed armed robbery by "unlawfully, with the intent to commit theft, [taking] property, to wit: U.S. currency, from the immediate presence of Chearica Gardner, by use of an offensive weapon, to wit: a .22 caliber RG revolver. . . ." The indictment charged Daniels with committing aggravated assault by "unlawfully mak[ing] an assault upon the person of Chearica Gardner, with intent to rob by pointing a .22 caliber RG revolver at said victim and demanding that she give him the money and then firing said weapon at her three times. . . ."
"To determine if the aggravated assault[ was a] lesser included offense[ ] of the armed robber[y], we apply the `required evidence' test set forth in Drinkard v. Walker.
Our Supreme Court has
Therefore, under Lucky, the aggravated assault with intent to rob conviction merged into the armed robbery conviction.
4. Our holding in Division 3 "moots [Daniels's] contention regarding the trial court's jury charge on aggravated assault."
Judgment affirmed in part and vacated in part, and case remanded for resentencing.
ELLINGTON, C.J., and MILLER, P.J., concur.