Donna J. Coghlan was charged with driving under the influence (DUI), driving on the wrong side of the road, and reckless driving. At trial, the court directed a verdict of acquittal on the charge of driving on the wrong side of the road, and the jury found Coghlan not guilty of reckless driving, but guilty of DUI. In this appeal from her DUI conviction, Coghlan challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, argues that the trial court erred by allowing certain remarks during the state’s closing argument, and asserts that her sentence was the result of unconstitutional vindictiveness. We affirm.
1. Where, as here, the appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, “the relevant question is whether, after viewing 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.”
The only witnesses who testified at the trial were two police officers called by the state. Their testimony showed the following. At about 2:00 a.m. on September 16, 2006, a uniformed patrol officer in a marked police cruiser observed a vehicle being driven on the wrong side of the road. The officer initiated a traffic stop of the vehicle, and approached the driver, Coghlan, who was alone in the vehicle. Upon asking Coghlan for her driver’s license, the officer detected a “heavy odor of alcoholic beverage coming out of her person.” The officer told Coghlan to shut off the engine and to remain seated in her vehicle while he stepped away. Coghlan turned off the engine, and the officer walked back to his patrol cruiser, then summoned an officer who specialized in DUI investigation. But about two minutes later, Coghlan started her vehicle engine and drove away. With the lights and siren on his police cruiser activated, the officer pursued Coghlan. Coghlan stopped a few blocks down the road, and the officer walked to Coghlan. Within moments, a law enforcement
As the responding officer walked to the driver’s side of Coghlan’s vehicle, he began “smelling a strong odor of alcoholic beverage coming from the car and [Coghlan was] the only person in the car.” The officer asked Coghlan to exit the vehicle. That officer recalled at trial, “It seemed like she stumbled out of the car and was very unsteady on her feet.” Once Coghlan was out of her vehicle, the officer noticed an odor of alcoholic beverage that was “[v]ery strong coming from her breath.” The officer further described Coghlan’s speech: “It was slow. It was slurred. There were times I didn’t understand what she was saying. Not that I didn’t understand because I didn’t understand the words, it was just she would ramble on about different things that, you know, I wasn’t asking.” For example, the officer elaborated at trial, when he asked Coghlan whether she thought she should be driving, she answered something to the effect, “I don’t know ..., but I don’t want to impair myself,” which the officer discerned “makes no sense.” As another example, the officer described that Coghlan wanted to know why the police were following her. According to the officer, “nobody was following her. She didn’t quite understand that she was stopped for an infraction by another officer and because she left the [initial] scene, the officer had no choice but to go after her and stop her.” The officer asked Coghlan whether she was willing to submit to field sobriety tests; she initially said no, next asked the officer for advice, then wavered in her answer. The officer asked Coghlan why she had consumed alcoholic beverages and then driven a vehicle. She responded: “That’s a good question.”
Additionally, the officer recounted at trial that he had further observed Coghlan at the scene — her gait was unsteady, and her eyes were bloodshot and watery. Coghlan admitted to the officer having had “a little bit” to drink, later claiming to the officer that she had consumed two glasses of wine, both about eight or nine hours before she was stopped.
After testifying about his DUI training and his experience in patrolling a bar district where he routinely encountered intoxicated individuals, the officer testified that, based on his training and experience, along with his observations of Coghlan’s speech, actions, and demeanor and his detection of the odor of alcoholic beverage on her breath, he had formed the opinion that Coghlan was under the influence of alcohol to the extent that she was a less safe driver.
On appeal, Coghlan contends that the evidence was insufficient because the state adduced no evidence of field sobriety test results, nor any actual results of a test performed upon her blood, breath, or urine. There is no merit in her contention.
Methods of proof to show impairment may include evidence of (i) erratic driving behavior, (ii) refusal to [submit to state-administered chemical testing], and (iii) the officer’s own observations (such as smelling alcohol and observing strange behavior) and resulting opinion that the alcohol made it less safe for the defendant to drive. Here the State used all three methods.4
When the police officer initially stopped Coghlan, collected her license, and told her to turn off the vehicle engine and remain seated at the scene, Coghlan drove away — leaving behind both the officer and her driver’s license. When she was stopped by police soon thereafter and ordered to exit her vehicle, she stumbled out of it and thereafter was unsteady on her feet. Her eyes were bloodshot and watery. Her speech was slow and slurred. Her breath emitted a very strong odor of alcoholic beverage. She admitted having consumed alcoholic beverages earlier that evening. And instead of giving specific, coherent answers to several police questions, she “rambled on about different things.” The officer who was assigned to a DUI task force formed the opinion that Coghlan was under the influence of alcohol to the extent that it was less safe for her to drive.
2. Coghlan contends that the trial court erred by permitting the prosecutor to make certain remarks, citing three portions of the state’s closing argument.
(a) In one portion, Coghlan asserts, the state impermissibly disparaged defense counsel by stating that her attorney — who moments prior had delivered closing argument on her behalf — had employed a “smoke and mirrors” strategy. “Closing arguments are judged in the context in which they are made.”
The transcript shows that, at the beginning of the state’s closing argument, the prosecutor revealed that, earlier in his legal career, he had “[done] some criminal defense work. And by doing that work I found myself sometimes not addressing certain issues.” There were occasions, the prosecutor continued, when there was “a little smoke in the room; the more smoke that came in the room, the better for me. But what I want to do today is I want to just be this big ceiling fan and just suck out some of the smoke that’s in this room today.” The
[That officer] said the reason he stopped her was because she was driving on the wrong side of the street and he asked for a license and insurance and went back to his car, you know, told her to wait, told the Defendant to wait, and went back to his car to verify the information. Now, this is the part where as a defense attorney, that’s a very important part that I often overlooked. You see, [the defense attorney] in his closing, he did not mention the Defendant driving off while [that officer] had her license and her insurance. He told her not to go anywhere. He didn’t mention that [the officer] had put on his lights as well as his siren to pull the Defendant over. That’s sort of the smoke and mirror stand. Not only did [the officer] pull the Defendant over for driving on the wrong side of the road —
Defense counsel interposed,
Your Honor, I’m going to object to that because, again, she’s not charged with leaving the scene or eluding, that was misstating the evidence. That’s not what she’s charged with. The smoking mirror is an improper inference because it castigates bad intent on the defense for no reason in this case. That’s part of the evidence that he can’t use that type of analogy and make a personal attack on defense counsel.
The trial court ruled, “I don’t think his comments — I think they purport with the evidence, even though it may or may not have been charged. I think it’s permissible for him to draw attention to it.”
On appeal, Coghlan maintains that the prosecutor’s comments were not related to any evidence or lack of evidence, but were instead impermissible comments by the prosecutor against defense attorneys in general, as well as her trial attorney, specifically.
Without question, “counsel should adhere to the highest standards of professionalism and proper courtroom decorum,”
(b) With respect to the two remaining portions of the closing argument of which Coghlan complains, Coghlan failed to lodge any objections thereto, and consequently, failed to preserve those issues for purposes of appeal.
The Defendant made a choice and that choice was to get behind the wheel... putting not only her life in danger, but the life of any other citizen who was on the roads traveling or walking in danger also. And I ask that you deliver a guilty of — a verdict of guilty sending the message of relating to take responsibility just like thousands of other people have taken the responsibility for the charge. I ask that you find her guilty of DUI less safe, and by way of reckless driving, driving under the influence, wrong side of the road September 16, 2006. Thank you.
According to Coghlan, these remarks violated the prohibition against making golden rule arguments, because they implied that the jurors (as “citizen[s]”) were potential victims in this case.
Though it is improper for the state to make a golden rule argument, one that asks the jurors to place themselves in a victim’s position,
it is not improper for the state to appeal to the jury to convict for the safety of the community or to curb an epidemic of violence in the community. Nor is it improper for the prosecutor to emphasize to the jury its responsibility to enforce the law. The state’s argument in this case was not improper.18
(ii) Coghlan asserts that the prosecutor improperly injected his personal opinion into the state’s closing argument when he made the statement: “I think [the officer who stopped Coghlan] did the responsible thing by calling [a DUI task force officer] out to the scene to do a further investigation.” Coghlan relies on the principle that it is improper for counsel to state to the jury counsel’s personal belief as to
Despite the prosecutor’s phraseology, the statement is most reasonably seen as an attempt to draw an inference from the evidence.
3. Citing language of the Sixth Amendment,
Notably, in contradiction of Court of Appeals Rule 25,
The applicable sentencing provision, OCGA § 40-6-391 (c) (1) (B), states in pertinent part: “Every person convicted of violating this Code section shall, upon a first . . . conviction ... be punished as follows: A period of imprisonment of not fewer than ten days nor more than 12 months, which period of imprisonment may, at the sole discretion of the judge, be suspended, stayed, or probated. . . .”
Although, before trial, the state apparently offered Coghlan a plea deal that provided for a 12-month sentence, with credit for time served and the balance probated, Coghlan rejected it. At the sentencing hearing, the state asked the trial court to impose upon her a 12-month sentence with 45 days to serve.
Coghlan’s attorney asserted that Coghlan had “no prior history”; further, he told the court that, after Coghlan discussed the underlying facts with him, he had suggested that she take certain steps “to make sure she didn’t have a problem.” The attorney stated that Coghlan had thereafter, for example, volunteered 100 hours of community service, attended a two-hour “MADD Victim Impact Panel,” and “[gone] in for alcohol screening all the way back in January of ’07 and followed the recommendation, which was to complete Risk Reduction.” Thus, Coghlan’s lawyer proposed, “I would ask the Court not to punish her. She spent a night in jail the night of this arrest and she has complied with everything I’ve asked her to do, evaluation, community service, everything.” ■
The final disposition order in this case shows that Coghlan was sentenced to twelve months, probated after service of two days, with credit for time served of one day. The record, including the transcript of the sentencing hearing, convinces us that the trial court permissibly exercised its discretion in sentencing Coghlan based on the evidence adduced against her. We discern no merit in Coghlan’s vague charge that the sentence imposed upon her was the result of unconstitutional vindictiveness.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Jackson v. Virginia,
See OCGA§ 40-5-67.1.
Coghlan’s lawyer acknowledged at trial that “[Coghlan] didn’t take the test.”
Duncan v. State,
Davis v. State,
See State v. Collier,
The trial court granted Coghlan’s motion in limine to exclude evidence of the sobriety evaluations.
See OCGA § 40-6-391 (a) (1) (“A person shall not drive or be in actual physical control of any moving vehicle while... [u]nder the influence of alcohol to the extent that it is less safe for the person to drive[.]”); Korponai v. State,
Adams v. State,
Gissendaner v. State,
Warren v. State,
Davis v. State,
See Duncan, supra (“In determining whether a driver is impaired by alcohol or other substances, the manner of his driving may be considered as a factor if there is evidence that he has consumed alcohol or drugs.”); Walczak v. State,
See Arrington v. State,
See Banks v. State,
Johnson v. State,
Braithwaite v. State,
Clark v. State,
Adams, supra at 302 (3) (e).
See McClain, supra at 384 (3) (b) (2) (concluding that, despite phraseology, prosecutor’s comments —• “[I]f that’s not malice murder I don’t know what is. The evidence of malice is as tight as a tick on a dog.” ■— can most reasonably be seen as an attempt to draw inferences from evidence); Carr v. State,
Carr, supra (citation omitted).
See McClain, supra (noting that the comment flagged by the appellant “was made after the prosecutor outlined the evidence showing [appellant’s] intent, and the remarks were clearly responsive to [appellant’s) argument that the state failed to prove malice”).
Adams, supra (finding that the prosecutor’s statements — “I suggest to you that everything Derrick Peters told you was credible” and that another witness “told you the truth” •— were permissible as conclusions the prosecutor wished the jury to draw from evidence); see Carr, supra; McClain, supra.
Specifically, Coghlan cites language of the Sixth Amendment that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed . . ..”
Specifically, Coghlan cites language of Ga. Const. Article I, Section I, Paragraph XI that “[i]n criminal cases, the defendant shall have a public and speedy trial by an impartial jury; and the jury shall be the judges of the law and the facts.”
See Court of Appeals Rule 25 (c) (providing that “[e]ach enumerated error shall be supported in the brief by specific reference to the record or transcript”).
See generally Prine v. State,
Aldalassi v. Drummond,
Walker v. State,
Chastain v. State,
See Richardson v. State,
