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De La Cruz v. State
810 S.E.2d 84
Ga.
2018
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Background

  • Appellant Eduardo De La Cruz was convicted of malice murder for the 1995 killing of Brenda Gibbs after a jury trial; he was sentenced to life and filed a timely motion for new trial, amended in 2016; appeal followed.
  • Gibbs was found fatally bludgeoned in her workplace lab between about 4:00–5:00 a.m.; blunt instruments (a broken two-by-four and a metal conduit pipe) and blood evidence were recovered; fingernail clippings and a hair were preserved.
  • Evidence at trial showed a history of abuse by Appellant against Gibbs and statements by Appellant expressing a desire that she be killed and that he would take life insurance proceeds; coworkers observed them together at the plant shortly before the murder.
  • Forensic testing at trial: all blood at scene matched the victim; the fingerprint on the conduit pipe did not match Appellant; the hair was unsuitable for comparison; shoes of Appellant fluoresced under black light consistent with walking through phosphoric acid at the scene.
  • Appellant sought (1) to read prior sworn alibi testimony of an unavailable witness (Andres); (2) to present evidence implicating a third party (Otis Sanders); (3) to exclude hearsay admitted under the necessity exception; and (4) post-conviction DNA testing of fingernail clippings, the two-by-four, conduit pipe, and a hair. The trial and post-trial courts denied relief on these claims; the Supreme Court of Georgia affirmed.

Issues

Issue Appellant's Argument State's Argument Held
Admission of prior sworn testimony of unavailable alibi witness (Andres) Andres was unavailable (out of country); his prior testimony should be read to jury to supply alibi evidence No adequate showing of due diligence to prove unavailability; even if admissible, testimony would be cumulative and not exculpatory for the murder timeframe Denial affirmed: no showing of due diligence; exclusion harmless because Andres could not place Appellant at time of murder and testimony would be cumulative
Exclusion of evidence pointing to third party (Otis Sanders) Proffered testimony (via Leriche) would show Sanders gave a false alibi, abused Leriche, and threatened others—supporting inference Sanders committed murder Proffered facts do not connect Sanders to the crime scene or corpus delicti and only create bare suspicion Denial affirmed: evidence did not raise a reasonable inference of Appellant's innocence or directly connect Sanders to the killing
Admission of hearsay under necessity exception (statements by victim to Denise De La Cruz) Testimony of Denise about victim's statements of abuse lacked sufficient indicia of trustworthiness and should have been excluded Statements were admissible: declarant unavailable, statements corroborated by physical evidence and consistent circumstances providing trustworthiness Admission affirmed: Tippins’ observations were not hearsay; Denise’s statements met necessity and reliability requirements under governing precedent
Post-conviction DNA testing request (fingernails, two-by-four, conduit, hair) New "touch DNA" testing could identify another contributor and create reasonable probability of acquittal Physical evidence was known and introduced; prior forensic results showed no physical link to Appellant; Appellant failed to show testing would likely produce acquittal or that testing technology unavailability at trial was established Denial affirmed: statutory requirements unmet—no reasonable probability DNA testing would have changed verdict and Appellant failed to prove materiality/necessity

Key Cases Cited

  • Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307 (sufficiency of evidence standard for convictions)
  • Barker v. Wingo, 407 U.S. 514 (framework for assessing delay-related due process/speedy-trial claims)
  • Mancusi v. Stubbs, 408 U.S. 204 (unavailability of witnesses who permanently leave country)
  • Thomas v. State, 290 Ga. 653 (due diligence requirement for admitting prior testimony)
  • Gilreath v. State, 298 Ga. 670 (standard for admitting evidence suggesting another perpetrator)
  • Mills v. State, 287 Ga. 828 (necessity exception to hearsay; requirements including trustworthiness)
  • Glover v. State, 291 Ga. 152 (application of Barker factors to post-conviction delay)
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Case Details

Case Name: De La Cruz v. State
Court Name: Supreme Court of Georgia
Date Published: Feb 5, 2018
Citation: 810 S.E.2d 84
Docket Number: S17A1887
Court Abbreviation: Ga.