PER CURIAM.
Defendant appeals from his conviction for disorderly persons shoplifting,
A judge and jury tried this case for three days between September and October 2012. The State produced testimony from a manager of Rite-Aid; a store security guard; and a police officer. Defendant testified on his own behalf. The judge admitted into evidence a receipt of the stolen goods, a transcript of the security guard's statement to the police, photos of the stolen items, and a Rite-Aid video of the incident. We discern the following facts from the evidence adduced at the trial.
The manager and security guard observed defendant, who appeared to be wearing two coats, enter Rite-Aid and walk towards the baby aisle. They watched defendant place merchandise into the pockets of one of the jackets. The manager, who was wearing a name-tag displaying his title, approached defendant, identified himself, and asked for the merchandise after recounting what he had seen defendant do. Defendant denied taking the items and exited Rite-Aid by running out of the store, dropping baby hygiene products that had been concealed under his coat. The security guard then called the police.
A police officer arrived and noticed someone matching defendant's description running within a few blocks of Rite-Aid. He approached defendant and arrested him as packaged deodorant and baby soap fell from defendant's coat. The officer brought defendant back to Rite-Aid, and returned the stolen merchandise.
Defendant elected to testify at the trial. He testified that he was present in the Rite-Aid and that he possessed the items that fell from his coat. Defendant explained, however, that he purchased the merchandise at a different Rite-Aid location.
The jury found defendant guilty. The judge sentenced defendant to ninety days of probation and imposed the appropriate fines and penalties.
On appeal, defendant makes the following argument:
A judgment of acquittal is governed by
In
As the Court recently reiterated, "[w]e review the record de novo in assessing whether the State presented sufficient evidence to defeat an acquittal motion."
Pursuant to
Giving the State the benefit of "all its favorable testimony as well as all of the favorable inferences which reasonably could be drawn therefrom,"
The manager and store security guard observed defendant standing in the baby aisle taking items off the shelf and placing them inside his jacket. Defendant then ran out of the store dropping some of the items after they approached him. The police apprehended defendant near the store while in possession of the unpurchased merchandise. The State therefore produced circumstantial evidence that defendant intended to deprive Rite-Aid of "the possession, use or benefit of [the] merchandise or convert[ed] the [merchandise] to [his use] without paying [Rite-Aid] the full retail value thereof."
After carefully considering the record and the briefs, we conclude that defendant's remaining arguments are "without sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion."
Affirmed.