The appellant Williams was found guilty of murder in the first degree, having shot and killed Pravin Patel in the perpetration of robbery at the Ritz Motel in Little Rock on November 28, 1980. The jury, finding that Williams was an habitual criminal with four or more previous felony convictions, sentenced him to life imprisonment. The two principal arguments for reversal stem from the trial court’s having permitted the State, in its refutation of Williams’s alibi defense, to prove on rebuttal that Williams had held up another person in the same vicinity a short time before the robbery at the Ritz Motel.
Patel was shot at the motel at about 10:30 or 11:00 p.m. A witness for the State saw Williams running from the motel *401with a gun in one hand and the cash drawer in the other. The witness noted the license number and other identifying features of Williams’s get-away car. That information led the police to Williams. The witness recognized the car when the police took him to it and also identified Williams in a line-up and at the trial. The sufficiency of the evidence is not in question.
In support of an alibi defense both Williams and his wife testified that he came home at about eight o’clock on the evening of the murder and remained there during the night except for a quick trip to buy beer at about nine o’clock. At an omnibus hearing the prosecution had announced its intention to call John Martin as a witness, but the judge did not then rule on the admissibility of Martin’s testimony.
The State, after the defense had rested, was allowed to introduce Martin’s testimony in rebuttal. Martin testified that at about ten o’clock on the evening of the murder, as he was closing up his place of employment seven or eight blocks from the Ritz Motel, Williams held him up at gunpoint and demanded that Martin hand over the money in the safe. Martin convinced Williams that he did not have a key to the safe nor any money on his person. Williams then said he was a policeman, just checking Martin out, and left. Thus the Martin incident and the murder took place in the same vicinity and during the time when Williams and his wife testified he was at home.
The admissibility of Martin’s testimony is not open to serious question. It was clearly relevant to disprove the alibi. In Nash v. State, 120 Ark. 157, 179 S.W. 159 (1915), we upheld the admissibility of evidence, introduced as part of the State’s case in chief to refute an alibi, that the defendant had committed another robbery at about the same time and in the same vicinity as the robbery on trial. There the trial judge gave a limiting instruction, explaining the purpose for which the testimony was presented. There was no request for such an instruction in this case; so the court was not required to give one. Chisum v. State, 273 Ark. 1, 616 S.W.2d 728 (1981). The admissibility of testimony about another crime, to rebut a defense of alibi, is uniformly recognized. *402Wharton’s Criminal Evidence, § 258 (13th ed., 1972); People v. Appleton, 1 Ill. App. 3d 9, 272 N.E.2d 397 (1971); Reed v. State, 481 S.W.2d 814 (Tex. Cr. App., 1972). Uniform Evidence Rule 404 (b), Ark. Stat. Ann. § 28-1001 (Repl. 1979), is to the same effect, because Martin’s testimony was relevant to disprove the alibi and was not offered merely to show Williams’s bad character.
It is argued that Martin should have been permitted to testify only that he saw Williams at the specified time and place, without saying that Williams confronted him with a gun. This argument is totally unrealistic. Had the testimony been so watered down, the jury would have received a false impression about the incident and might well have doubted whether Martin could identify a stranger whom he saw casually as he was closing up for the night. It was the very fact that Williams used a weapon in an attempt at robbery that would fix the incident in Martin’s memory and strongly support his identification of Williams. The probative value of that important fact heavily outweighed any prejudice to Williams from the proof that he had drawn a gun on Martin.
Second, in a related point it is argued that the prosecution should not have been allowed to ask Williams on cross-examination if he had not pulled a gun on Martin at about ten o’clock that evening. In view of the admissibility of Martin’s testimony, the question was within the broad latitude allowed on cross-examination to elicit facts contradicting Williams’s testimony on direct examination and therefore to attack his credibility. Huffman v. City of Hot Springs, 237 Ark. 756, 375 S.W.2d 795 (1964). Indeed, had the question not been asked, the jury might have thought that the prosecution had indicated some weakness in its position by failing to give Williams an opportunity to deny or explain the incident to be described by Martin on rebuttal.
Third, before the trial expert testimony was heard for a day and a half on the question whether a death-qualified jury is more likely to convict than one not so qualified. We agree with the trial judge’s conclusion that the expert testimony was not conclusive, and we adhere to our earlier *403position on this issue. Neal v. State, 270 Ark. 442, 447, 605 S.W.2d 421 (1980).
We find no reversible error in the points argued nor in the other rulings brought to our attention.
Affirmed.
Purtle, J., dissents.