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Dillard, Chief Judge.Following trial, a jury convicted Norris Kang Belcher of armed robbery, kidnapping with bodily injury, hijacking a motor vehicle, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, financial-transaction-card fraud, battery, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon during a crime. Belcher appeals from these convictions, arguing that (1) the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions, and (2) the trial court erred by permitting certain testimony. For the reasons set forth infra, we affirm.    Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s guilty verdict,[1] the record shows that on November 14, 2014, Belcher, while at his mother’s house, was overheard saying that he wanted to rob someone at gunpoint. And later that night, Belcher—along with co-defendants Shaquille Smith and Derrius Partee—went to a house party in Walton County, Georgia, where they encountered the victim playing a card game.At some point during the party, the victim left the card game to retrieve some money from his vehicle, and while doing so, he saw the three defendants outside. The victim then reentered the house and continued playing cards before suddenly hearing the alarm go off on his vehicle. When he went to turn off the alarm, the victim again saw the three defendants, who asked him whether it was his vehicle. After disengaging the alarm and returning to the card game, the victim, who suspected that something was amiss, informed a friend that he would be leaving shortly.[2]   When the victim returned to his car a final time in order to leave, he had around $200 to $300 that he won playing cards. And once again, he was approached by the defendants. They asked the victim for a ride, but he refused to give them one. At this point, the defendants forced the victim into the backseat of his vehicle at gunpoint. Belcher got into the backseat with the victim, while Smith sat in the front-passenger seat and Partee drove. During the drive, Belcher pointed the gun at the victim’s side and threatened to shoot him in the same place that he had been shot—telling the victim that he would “feel the same thing that [Belcher] felt.”The victim was then taken to another location under threats that he would be shot and with warnings not to “try anything.” While there, the defendants began to rummage through his car. The victim—whose phone had been destroyed by the defendants prior to being driven away from the house party—was severely beaten by the defendants, who took a variety of items from him (including his child’s social-security card and birth certificate). He was then forced back into his vehicle and driven by the defendants to a bank. There, Partee used the victim’s ATM card to withdraw money from the ATM, and the machine took photographs during the withdrawal.   After a visit to the bank, the defendants drove the victim to a deserted location where a struggle ensued inside of the vehicle. The victim managed to take possession of the firearm, but he was unable to fire it at his attackers. The scuffle then spilled out of the vehicle, and the victim was once again severely beaten by the defendants. The victim was forced back into the car again and driven back to the first location. The defendants then wiped down the vehicle and placed the victim into the trunk at gunpoint. He remained in the trunk while the defendants drove to a number of unidentified locations. When the victim was finally removed from the trunk, he was again beaten before being released with his car. The victim’s injuries were so severe that he threw up blood and was transported to a hospital via ambulance after successfully making it home to his mother’s house. He remained in the hospital overnight.The victim did not know Belcher and Smith before the night in question, but he knew Partee and subsequently recognized Belcher in a Facebook photograph. He later testified that he “knew for a fact” that the person in the picture was the individual who sat next to him in the backseat of the vehicle. The victim showed the    picture to law enforcement while he was still in the hospital, thus identifying Belcher as one of the perpetrators not long after the attack. Belcher was thereafter arrested, and law enforcement noticed his scar from a gunshot wound that matched the victim’s description. After his arrest, Belcher contacted an acquaintance and advised her that he had been arrested and told law enforcement that he was with her on the night of the incident, which she later testified was not true.Following a joint trial of the three defendants, Belcher was convicted of armed robbery, kidnapping with bodily injury, hijacking a motor vehicle, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, financial-transaction-card fraud, battery, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon during a crime. He now appeals from these convictions, following the denial of his motion for new trial.[3]When a criminal conviction is appealed, the appellant no longer enjoys a presumption of innocence.[4] And the relevant question is whether, after reviewing the   evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, “any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”[5] We do not weigh the evidence or determine witness credibility, and the jury’s verdict will be upheld so long as there is some competent evidence, even though contradicted, to support each fact necessary to make out the State’s case.[6] With these guiding principles in mind, we turn now to Belcher’s enumerations of error.1. Belcher argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions. We disagree.Belcher’s only argument as to the sufficiency of the evidence is that the “sole proof” of his involvement came from “the identification of the witness,” i.e., the victim’s identification of Belcher as the perpetrator who sat with him in the backseat of the car and threatened to shoot him in his side. Belcher argues that eyewitness identifications “have been cited as the source of 70% of the convictions overturned    for DNA evidence,” and he provides a web address for the Innocence Project as his only supporting citation. He continues to generally attack the victim’s identification of Belcher as the perpetrator, again providing no citation to binding legal authority.[7] But it is well established that the “testimony of a single witness is generally sufficient to establish a fact.”[8] And Belcher essentially asks this Court to second-guess the victim’s credibility. This, we will not do. As previously noted, this Court is not at liberty to weigh the evidence or determine witness credibility.[9] Instead, we will uphold a jury’s verdict so long as some competent evidence, even though contradicted, supports each fact necessary to prove the State’s case.[10]

 
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