Following a trial by jury, Elijah Ames Brittain was convicted of aggravated assault, kidnapping, and burglary. Brittain appeals these convictions, contending that the trial court erred by (1) denying a motion to complete the record, (2) admitting hearsay evidence under the doctrine of forfeiture by wrongdoing, (3) permitting similar-transaction evidence, and (4) denying his motion for new trial when he received ineffective assistance of counsel in numerous regards. For the reasons set forth infra, we affirm.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s guilty verdict,
Brittain told Jones that Brutus had gotten him into some trouble before forcing Jones to leave her baby, placing her in the trunk of a car, binding her with a phone cord to the point that ligature marks were left on her wrists four days later, and driving her to a secluded location in Cobb County. Evidence later established that Brittain was familiar with this part of Cobb County from previously committing a robbery in the area and because one of his girlfriends worked nearby.
Once they reached this location, Brittain tied Jones to a tree and threatened her life at gunpoint. At some point, Brittain decided to leave but indicated that he would return to kill Jones if he did not hear from Brutus within the next 30 minutes. Nevertheless, in the interim, Jones managed to escape and run to a nearby home, where the occupant allowed her to use his cell phone and drove her to a gas station to call 911.
Using her rescuer’s cell phone, Jones called various friends, explaining what had transpired and pleading with them to check on her child. Then, once at the gas station, Jones called 911 from a pay phone, the recording of which was played for the jury
Meanwhile, in response to Jones’s frantic calls, friends converged at her house to find her infant child alone and unharmed but lying on the bedroom floor. The home’s garage was left wide open and the door unlocked. Indeed, Jones’s husband, Brutus, had not been home since before Jones went to bed the previous night, and he was considered missing. But unbeknownst to either Jones or her friends at that time, just a few hours earlier around 4:45 a.m., Fulton County police responded to a report of a body in the roadway near the border with Clayton County. The body was later identified as that of Brutus Jones, who had been shot in the head. Brutus’s cell phone and keys were both missing, and although there were bloody tire tracks near the body, no vehicle was found in the immediate vicinity. Brutus’s vehicle, however, was recovered two days later, abandoned not far from the street where his body was found. The passenger-seat headrest was splattered with dried blood, and the garage-door remote was missing.
When law enforcement realized that Jones’s husband had been killed, some of her interviews with the various jurisdictions involved in the two investigations were videotaped. And during those interviews, she explained to law enforcement that Brittain had come by the couple’s home at approximately 10:35 on the night of the abduction and had rather ominously asked if he could look around the upstairs by suggesting that he was considering whether to rent a similar house. Jones also indicated that Brittain was driving a red Pontiac Grand Am that evening.
In the aftermath of all that transpired, Jones immediately moved out of the Clayton County residence she had shared with Brutus, and in fact moved five times within the next year out of fear. However, in June 2008, Jones — who was accompanied by a good friend — applied for food stamps through Fulton County DFCS, where one of Brittain’s paramours, Montessia Tinch, worked as a food-stamp processor. During her relationship with Brittain, Tinch frequently allowed him to use her car, a red Pontiac Grand Prix. And as part of Tinch’s job with DFCS, she could access an applicant’s home address.
Brittain’s prosecution for burglary, kidnapping, and aggravated assault related to the May 2007 abduction was stalled after Jones disappeared in 2008, but the case was reinvigorated and brought to trial after a cellmate came forward with information Brittain shared about Jones’s abduction, Brutus’s murder, and other cases that so greatly disturbed the cellmate that he felt compelled to approach law enforcement. At trial, in addition to corroborating much of Jones’s version of the abduction by providing details Brittain had shared, the cellmate also testified that Brittain claimed to have a five-step method to problem-solving, with step two being to “get rid” of the problem, even if that means murder.
Brittain was tried and convicted of the offenses related to the 2007 abduction, and this appeal follows. We will address Brittain’s claimed errors in turn, those being that the trial court erred by (1) denying a motion to complete the record, (2) admitting hearsay evidence under the doctrine of forfeiture
1. First, Brittain argues that the trial court erred in denying a motion to complete the record when various DVDs played for the jury at trial and entered into evidence as exhibits were not transcribed.
To begin with, the relevant motion and a subsequent order continuing the motion-for-new-trial hearing do not appear in the appellate record, but Brittain attached a copy of the motion and order as an exhibit to his brief. It is, of course, well established that exhibits attached to an appellate brief, but not appearing in the record transmitted by the trial court, “cannot be considered by this court and afford no basis for reversal.”
2. Next, in a very cursory argument, Brittain contends that the trial court erred in permitting the State to present “multiple hearsay” regarding Jones’s May 2007 abduction under the forfeiture-by-wrongdoing doctrine when there was no proof that the doctrine should apply.
Although Brittain makes vague reference to alleged hearsay statements by various
Additionally, Brittain appears to conflate arguments regarding his Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against him with the admission of certain hearsay evidence.
(a) Sixth Amendment Right to Confrontation. Prior to trial, the State filed a motion seeking to permit the admission of law enforcement’s videotaped interviews with Jones pursuant to the doctrine of forfeiture by wrongdoing. And following a hearing on this motion, the trial court determined that the State had shown by a preponderance of the evidence that Brittain procured Jones’s unavailability to testify at trial and ruled that the testimonial evidence would be admissible. Brittain appears to take issue with this determination.
Our analysis necessarily begins with the text of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which provides that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him.”
Nevertheless, in Giles v. California,
The Supreme Court of the United States first addressed the doctrine of forfeiture by wrongdoing in Reynolds v. United States,
In the case sub judice, the State sought permission to admit at trial Jones’s testimonial statements to law enforcement — which were memorialized in videotaped interviews — and sought to show that Brittain caused Jones’s 2008 disappearance in order to prohibit her from testifying against him. And at the hearing, the State presented the testimony of various friends, family members, and law-enforcement agents who described the circumstances of Jones’s 2008 disappearance.
This evidence shows that on the morning of June 28, 2008, Jones left her baby daughter with her best friend with the intent to return for the child later that morning; however, Jones never came back for her child and did not respond to numerous phone calls from the friend or the friend’s mother. The friend testified that neither was typical of Jones’s behavior and was instead quite unusual. The friend then went to Jones’s house around 2:30 p.m., just as Jones’s older daughter was returning home from school. There was neither an answer at the door to the home nor, again, to Jones’s phone, so the friend decided to call Jones’s mother (with whom Jones lived); but the mother had not heard from Jones either. The friend then picked up Jones’s oldest child from school. Again, it was Jones’s usual practice to pick her son up from school, but she had not done so on this particular day.
Then, upon returning to Jones’s residence, the friend and Jones’s mother entered the home. As they walked through the house, they began to notice things that were amiss in the usually tidy abode: knives lying out on the kitchen counter; a bedroom TV left turned on; an ironing board left out in Jones’s upstairs bedroom; an emergency trunk-release severed from a vehicle and sitting on the floor beside the ironing board; the baby’s stroller sitting in the garage (when it would normally be in the trunk of Jones’s missing car); and drops of blood in the garage and portions of the house, including leading upstairs and in a bathtub.
Law enforcement then arrived on the scene and observed these same things, in addition to a gunshot hole in the ceiling outside of Jones’s bedroom and a strange liquid leading from her room, down the stairs, and out into the garage.
Police immediately suspected Brittain, who was not incarcerated at the time, in Jones’s disappearance after speaking with her family and friends, and they linked Brittain to Tinch, who worked in the DFCS office where Jones had recently applied for food stamps. In addition to this testimony, the State also presented the testimony of Brittain’s former cellmate, who claimed that Brittain said he
At the hearing’s conclusion, the State asked that the trial court permit it to introduce into evidence at trial Jones’s statements to law-enforcement officers and her videotaped interviews. And finding by a preponderance of the evidence that Brittain had procured Jones’s absence for purposes of preventing her testimony, the trial court agreed. Accordingly, contrary to Brittain’s contentions that there was a lack of proof to show that the doctrine of forfeiture by wrongdoing should apply, the record reflects that the trial court was presented with ample evidence to support its finding by a preponderance of the evidence, and that finding was not clearly erroneous.
(b) Hearsay. In addition to the testimonial hearsay statements Jones made to law enforcement, at trial, the court also admitted nontestimonial hearsay statements Jones made to friends regarding her abduction by Brittain in 2007. Brittain appears to take issue with the admission of both the testimonial and nontestimonial hearsay under the forfeiture-by-wrongdoing exception.
Brittain’s case was tried in 2011, prior to the effective date of Georgia’s new Evidence Code.
Because OCGA § 24-8-804 (b) (5) is a procedural statute, it would apply to a retrial if
As discussed in Division 2 (a) supra, the trial court was not clearly erroneous in determining (by a preponderance of the evidence) that Brittain procured Jones’s unavailability for the purpose of preventing her testimony. And to the extent that Brittain argues that there was a lack of evidence of unavailability because the State did not attempt to subpoena Jones, we note that “[a] finding regarding the inaccessibility of a witness and a party’s diligence in searching for a witness lies within the sound discretion of the trial court, and, absent a manifest abuse of discretion, will not be disturbed on appeal.”
As for the testimony of the cellmate regarding the information Brittain shared with him (which Brittain seems to contend was inadmissible hearsay), we note that this testimony was admissible because “a defendant’s incriminating statement is admissible when it constitutes an admission against the defendant’s penal interest [and] a defendant’s declaration against penal interest is the admission of a party-opponent.”
Finally, although Brittain contends that the State only introduced hearsay evidence to establish similar transactions at trial, this contention is likewise without merit for the reasons explained infra.
3. Next, Brittain argues that the trial court erred by admitting evidence of similar transactions “in the absence of proof that [he] was connected to the alleged similar transactions and in the absence of the other incidents being similar.” And parsing through appellant’s brief and this specific enumeration of error (which, yet again, is bereft of any citation to authority or the record), it appears that Brittain also contends that the trial court erred in permitting the State to present evidence of similar transactions by proffer in lieu of witness testimony. Once again, we disagree.
The record reflects that the State filed notice of its intent to introduce evidence of various similar transactions, including the 2006 murder, kidnapping, and aggravated assault of Octavia Atkins and the 2007 breaking and entering into the home of Samiah Blake. The State sought to introduce these incidents to show “course of conduct, bent of mind, plan, scheme, motive, identity, intent, and lack of mistake.” Similar-transaction evidence was admissible under our former Evidence Code if the State showed that
(1) it [sought] to introduce the evidence not to raise an improper inference as to the accused’s character, but for some appropriate purpose which has been deemed to be an exception to the general rule of inadmissibility; (2) there [was] sufficient evidence to establish that the accused committed the independent offense or act; and (3) there [was] a sufficient connection or similarity between the independent offense or act and the crime charged so that proof of the former tends to prove the latter.44
Prior to Brittain’s trial for Jones’s 2007 abduction, the trial court conducted a hearing at which it permitted the State to introduce by proffer the facts of two similar transactions. Then, at the conclusion of each proffer, the trial court determined that the facts were sufficiently similar to those at issue in the prosecution for burglary, aggravated assault, and kidnapping of Jones.
First, as to Brittain’s argument that the trial court erred by permitting the State to present pre-trial evidence of the similar transactions by proffer (as opposed to witness testimony), we have previously rejected the argument that such a pre-trial procedure is erroneous when a defendant has the opportunity to cross-examine similar-transaction witnesses at trial.
(a) Octavia Atkins. At the pre-trial hearing, the State proffered evidence regarding the murder, kidnapping, and aggravated assault of Octavia Atkins in Forsyth County in August 2006, less than one year prior to Jones’s May 2007 abduction. The State’s proffer showed that Atkins was the girlfriend of Dandre Shabazz, who — like Brutus Jones — was a member of Brittain’s restaurant-robbery crew. Shabazz was taken into custody in 2006 and made an agreement with Brittain that Brittain would provide Atkins with money during his incarceration.
In August 2006, Atkins’s nude body was found in an abandoned Forsyth County home with (1) ligature/strangulation marks about her neck, (2) her feet covered in mud, and (3) her body dirtied with foliage. And just a few days before the discovery of her body, she received a portion of the money Brittain promised. DNA evidence recovered from the body could not exclude Brittain as a suspect, and the location of her body was not far from the scene of a restaurant robbery Brittain allegedly committed with Atkins’s boyfriend. Additionally, Atkins’s vehicle was later found one mile from Brittain’s home. At trial, the State established all of these facts by the testimony of Shabazz
The trial court appropriately determined that the facts of the Atkins murder were sufficiently similar to the abduction of Jones in that both cases involved the kidnapping of a significant other of a member of Brittain’s restaurant-robbing crew, both victims were left with ligature marks, and both were taken to secluded wooded areas.
(b) Samiah Blake. As to Samiah Blake, at the pre-trial hearing, the State proffered evidence regarding an incident in which Brittain broke into her home to confront her. Specifically, the State showed that between March and April 2007 (not long before Jones’s 2007 abduction), Brittain was romantically involved with Blake. Early one morning during that time period, while alone, Blake suddenly encountered Brittain in her home.
Brittain confronted Blake with a handgun, and she was unsure of how he had obtained access to her home, though it was later determined that he had hidden in and descended from her attic. At trial, Blake testified to these facts and also to the fact that Brittain told her that he came in through the basement before hiding in her attic, presumably all night.
Following the State’s proffer, the trial court found the incident sufficiently similar and, in doing so, the trial court did not err. Indeed, both incidents involved victims known to Brittain, his surreptitious entry into their homes during early morning hours, and confrontations with a handgun.
4. Finally, Brittain contends that he received ineffective assistance of counsel in numerous regards. But before addressing his contentions, we note that, in general, when a defendant claims that his trial counsel was ineffective, he has the burden of establishing that “(1) his attorney’s representation in specified instances fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and (2) there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
(a) Abandoned arguments. In the portion of Brittain’s appellate brief devoted to his claim of having received ineffective assistance of counsel, he lists eleven instances in which he contends that trial counsel performed deficiently, including five inexplicable subparts to one of these instances. However, most of Brittain’s contentions arise to no more than a list of short, vague, conclusory statements.
(b) Failure to cross-examine cellmate regarding first-offender sentences. Brittain gives slightly more attention to his argument that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to cross-examine a former cellmate regarding the fact that he had twice been sentenced as a first offender. Nevertheless, he fails to establish that counsel rendered ineffective assistance in this regard.
The record reflects that Brittain’s cellmate pleaded guilty in 2004 to possessing less than one ounce of marijuana, a misdemean- or,
Accordingly, for all of the foregoing reasons, we affirm Brittain’s convictions.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
See, e.g., Muse v. State,
There are indications in the record that the rescuer, who did not testify, was concerned about becoming overly involved in Jones’s plight after she arrived disheveled at his home in the early-morning hours.
When Brittain was brought to trial in 2011, an investigating officer testified that Tinch was still employed with DFCS and that law enforcement was still working with DFCS’s legal department in an effort to obtain electronic records that would definitively show whether or not Tinch had accessed Jones’s address. Nevertheless, the officer also testified that when law enforcement first spoke to Tinch in 2008, she was evasive and in fact attempted to surreptitiously leave the premises before speaking with them after her supervisors summoned her to do so. Tinch did testify, however, that food-stamp applicants must provide a home address.
In a separate enumeration of error, in which he cites no authority and makes only vague and conclusory statements, Brittain contends that the trial court erred in denying a motion for mistrial based on the various errors he alleges in his other enumerations. For all of the reasons given in the various divisions of this opinion that address his other enumerations of error, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying a motion for mistrial, and we need not address this enumeration further. See Boyd v. State,
Taylor v. State,
See Graham v. State,
See Hightower v. State,
See, e.g., Porras v. State,
Adams v. State,
Adams,
See generally Yancey v. State,
U. S. Const, amend. VI.
Crawford v. Washington,
Id. at 59 (IV).
Id. at 53 (III) (A). We note that 911 calls, or portions of 911 calls, can also fall under the category of “testimonial statements,” depending on a determination as to the primary purpose for the call. See Michigan v. Bryant,
Id. at 359 (II) (A).
Id.; see also id. at 361 (II) (B) (“The manner in which the rule was applied makes plain that unconfronted testimony would not be admitted without a showing that the defendant intended to prevent a witness from testifying.”); id. at 365 (II) (B) (“But as the evidence amply shows, the ‘wrong’ and the ‘evil Practices’ to which these statements referred was conduct designed to prevent a witness from testifying.”).
Giles,
Giles,
Davis,
See id.
At trial, law enforcement further testified that the liquid was consistent with starch used in ironing, and Jones’s iron was missing from the home. As such, law enforcement believed that Jones had been bound with the iron’s cord.
See United States v. Montague,
See Ga. L. 2011, p. 99, § 101 (explaining that the provisions of Georgia’s new Evidence Code “apply to any motion made or hearing or trial commenced on or after” January 1, 2013).
The State argues that the trial court admitted nontestimonial hearsay not under the forfeiture-by-wrongdoing doctrine but instead under the exception of res gestae when it permitted Jones’s friends to testify regarding statements she made during early-morning calls to ask that they check on her child. Brittain makes no argument in this regard, but we note that those calls to Jones’s friends were made prior to her 911 call, which Brittain stipulated to having been made at or near the time of the incident. See supra note 15. Suffice it to say, it is difficult to imagine how Brittain could stipulate to the 911 call having been made at or near the time of the incident in question but then somehow argue that frantic calls to friends made before the 911 call were not also made at or near the time of the incident in question. See former OCGA § 24-3-3 (“Declarations accompanying an act, or so nearly connected therewith in time as to be free from all suspicion of device or afterthought, shall be admissible in evidence as part of the res gestae.”). Nevertheless, even if Jones’s statements to friends were not properly admitted as res gestae, her statements to them that Brittain had kidnapped her were cumulative of the 911 call. See Miller v. State,
But see Yancey,
See OCGA § 24-8-804 (b) (5); see generally Ronald L. Carlson & Michael Scott, Carlson on Evidence 509-14 (2d ed. 2014) (discussing the forfeiture exception to the hearsay rule in Georgia’s new Evidence Code); Paul S. Milich, Georgia Rules of Evidence § 19:35 (2014) (same).
OCGA § 24-8-804 (b) (5).
See Murphy v. Murphy,
See Mortimer v. State, 100 So3d 99, 101-04 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2012) (holding that even though trial court erroneously applied common law rule of forfeiture by wrongdoing to admit hearsay testimony otherwise inadmissible under evidence code, there was no reversible error because evidence code had since been amended to codify the common law rule). See generally United States v. Natson, 469 FSupp.2d 1243, 1250 (B) (M.D. Ga. 2006) (discussing Federal Rule of Evidence 804 (b) (6) and explaining that “if it is established that the party, through wrongdoing, procured the unavailability of the witness, that party has forfeited his right to assert hearsay objections to the admission of the unavailable witness’ prior statements”).
Carter v. State,
Cf. Carter,
Bryant v. State,
See Griffin v. State,
See Miller,
See Miller,
For the same reasons, Brittain’s separate enumeration that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to obj ect to the similar-transaction evidence or pre-trial hearing procedure is without merit. See, e.g., Porras,
Matthews v. State,
See, e.g., Sheppard v. State,
Miller,
Miller,
Lowe v. State,
To the extent that there was inadmissible hearsay testimony as to statements Brutus Jones made regarding Brittain’s involvement with Shabazz, these statements were merely cumulative of Shabazz’s own testimony as to his criminal involvement with Brittain and the agreement that Brittain would fund Atkins during Shabazz’s incarceration. See Miller,
At the pre-trial hearing, the State indicated that cell-phone records would show that just prior to going missing, Atkins and Brittain were in the same vicinity. Although it does not appear that the State established this fact at trial, the State presented other evidence to connect Brittain to the crime, including testimony that Brittain backtracked on his initial denial of having contact with Atkins after he was confronted with the fact that her car was discovered near his home; that Brittain told law enforcement that there were “rumors” about him killing Atkins and dumping her in the woods (when the location of her body was not common knowledge); and that when robbing restaurants, Brittain used a high-powered drill and special gel to break into safes, and Atkins’s body was found lying in a gel-like substance.
See Kimbrough v. State,
See Evans v. State,
See Alexander v. State,
Muldrow v. State,
Muldrow,
These include, very generally, Brittain’s arguments regarding trial counsel’s alleged failure to file defensive motions, pursue an alibi defense, file a motion to “reveal the deal” offered to the cellmate, object to certain testimony from the cellmate, object to hearsay testimony, interview Brittain’s former cellmate, locate Jones’s rescuers, speak with Jones’s leasing agent, and compel or subpoena certain records.
See Court of Appeals Rule 25 (a) (3) (providing that part three of appellant’s brief “shall contain the argument and citation of authorities” and “a concise statement of the applicable standard of review with supporting authority for each issue presented in the brief”); see also Court of Appeals Rule 25 (c) (2) (providing that “[a]ny enumeration of error which is not supported in the brief by citation of authority or argument may be deemed abandoned”).
Towry,
See Goodman,
See OCGA § 16-13-2 (b) (“[A]ny person who is charged with possession of marijuana, which possession is of one ounce or less, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and punished by imprisonment for a period not to exceed 12 months or a fine not to exceed $1,000.00, or both, or public works not to exceed 12 months.”).
See OCGA § 16-13-2 (a) (“Whenever any person who has not previously been convicted of any offense under Article 2 or Article 3 of this chapter or of any statute of the United States or of any state relating to narcotic drugs, marijuana, or stimulant, depressant, or hallucinogenic drugs, pleads guilty to or is found guilty of possession of a narcotic drug, marijuana, or stimulant, depressant, or hallucinogenic drug, the court may without entering a judgment of guilt and with the consent of such person defer further proceedings and place him on probation upon such reasonable terms and conditions as the court may require . ...”).
See OCGA § 42-8-60 (a) (1), (2) (“Upon a verdict or plea of guilty or a plea of nolo contendere, but before an adjudication of guilt, in the case of a defendant who has not been previously convicted of a felony, the court may, without entering a judgment of guilt and with the consent of the defendant... [d] efer further proceeding and place the defendant on probation as provided by law; or... [sjentence the defendant to a term of confinement as provided by law.”).
See State v. Stinson,
Cf. Smith v. State,
See Smith v. State,
