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A jury found Donald Swanson guilty of rape, kidnaping, aggravated sodomy, and false imprisonment. In his sole enumeration of error, Swanson claims the trial court erred in admitting evidence of a 1973 rape at his 1997 trial as similar transaction evidence because the prior rape was too remote in time to be relevant. Swanson does not dispute that he committed the prior rape, that the state used the prior rape for a legitimate purpose, or that the prior rape is sufficiently similar to the charged offense so that proof of the former tends to prove the latter.1 We find no error and affirm Swanson’s convictions. While the passage of time is one of the more important factors to weigh in considering the admissibility of similar transaction evidence, it is not wholly determinative.2 In fact, the lapse of time generally goes to the weight and credibility of the evidence, not to its admissibility.3 This is especially true where the accused spent part of the interval incarcerated.4

In the present case, the trial court noted that between the 1973 rape conviction and the 1995 incident at issue in this case, Swanson had three burglary convictions. From this evidence the trial court inferred that Swanson spent at least a few years incarcerated, and both the state and Swanson’s trial counsel noted at the hearing on Swanson’s motion for new trial that the record showed that Swanson received a ten year jail sentence for the 1973 rape, but did not serve all ten years because he was convicted of burglary in 1980. The fact that Swanson was incarcerated for at least some of the time lapse mitigates the length of the time lapse. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the similar transaction evidence at issue.

 
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