Troy Anthony Davis was convicted by a jury in Chatham County of murder, obstruction of a law enforcement officer, two counts of aggravated assault and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. He was sentenced to death for the murder. He appeals. We affirm. 1
1. At midnight on August 18, 1989, the victim, a police officer, reported for work as a security guard at the Greyhound bus station in Savannah, adjacent to a fast-food restaurant. As the restaurant was *6 closing, a fight broke out in which Davis struck a man with a pistol. The victim, wearing his police uniform — including badge, shoulder patches, gun belt, .38 revolver and nightstick — ran to the scene of the disturbance. Davis fled. When the victim ordered him to halt, Davis turned around and shot the victim. The victim fell to the ground. Davis, smiling, walked up to the stricken officer and shot him several more times. The officer’s gun was still in his holster.
The victim wore a bullet-proof vest, but the vest did not cover his sides and the fatal bullet entered the left side of his chest, penetrated his left lung and aorta, and came to rest at the back of his chest cavity. The officer was also shot in the left cheek and the right leg.
The next afternoon, Davis told a friend that he had been involved in an argument at the restaurant the previous evening and struck someone with a gun. He told the friend that when a police officer ran up, Davis shot him and that he went to the officer and “finished the job” because he knew the officer got a good look at his face when he shot him the first time.
After his arrest, Davis told a cellmate a similar story.
2. There is no merit to the defendant’s contention that he was not guilty of the felony offense of obstructing a law-enforcement officer “in the lawful discharge of his official duties” (OCGA § 16-10-24 (b)) because the officer was “moonlighting” as a security guard when he was shot.
Loumakis v. State,
3. The defendant contends it was error to deny his motion to sever the two aggravated assault counts — one based upon the defendant’s attack upon a customer at the restaurant which led to the victim’s intervention and death, and the other based on a shooting less than two hours earlier in which the defendant, using the same gun involved in the murder and the other aggravated assault, shot another person with whom he was angry.
A denial of severance is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard.
Booker v. State,
Here, all the offenses are connected: they occurred the same evening; the same gun was involved; the second assault was the reason the victim tried to arrest the defendant; and there was some evidence that one reason he shot the officer was because he was afraid he had been seen in the area where the first assault had occurred. The denial of severance was not an abuse of discretion.
Stewart v. State,
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4. The evidence supports the conviction on all counts.
Jackson v. Virginia,
5. Only 20 percent of the prospective jurors were excused for bias or prejudice arising from their knowledge of the case or of people involved in the case. The defendant has shown neither actual prejudice in the jury selection process nor the kind of extensive and inflammatory publicity that mandated a change of venue in our recent case of
Tyree v. State,
6. Death-penalty qualification of prospective jurors is not unconstitutional.
Ford v. State,
7. The trial court did not err by restricting voir dire examination about parole.
Isaacs v. State,
8. As we held in
Pope v. State,
9. The trial court’s determination that jurors Smith and Truitt were qualified to serve as jurors is within the deference due the trial court’s findings.
Jefferson v. State,
10. The jury which convicted Davis and sentenced him to death was comprised of seven blacks and five whites. Although intuitively it might be difficult to discern what a defendant has to complain about when he obtains a majority-black jury in a county that is sixty-four percent white, nevertheless the prosecutor did, as the defendant contends, exercise a disproportionate percentage of his strikes against African-Americans, using eight out of his ten allotted strikes against blacks (eighty percent) in selecting from a venire that was forty-three percent black (eighteen out of forty-two). Therefore, the trial court correctly sought the prosecutor’s explanation for his exercise of strikes. 3
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In this case, the prosecutor offered the kind of “concrete, tangible, race-neutral and neutrally-applied reasons” that are sufficient to rebut a prima facie case under
Batson v. Kentucky,
The prosecutor explained that he struck five of the eight because of their clear reluctance to impose a death sentence. As we have held:
A prospective juror’s conscientious aversion to the imposition of the death sentence is an adequate reason to justify a peremptory strike in a death-penalty case. [Cit.]
Tharpe v. State,
Of course, a prosecutor would not be justified in assuming a sentencing bias from the race of a juror any more than the prosecutor could assume a bias against the prosecution generally.
Batson v. Kentucky,
supra,
Another juror was struck because he testified the defendant “lived out in the area where some of my relatives live” and because he referred to the defendant by his first name even though he denied knowing him personally. As we said in
Hall v. State,
A reasonable suspicion about a prospective juror’s impartiality that falls short of justifying an excusal for cause might well justify the exercise of a peremptory strike.
The trial court was authorized to conclude that such is the case here. That the juror, whose relatives lived in the same area as the defendant, referred to the defendant by his first name might mean nothing, but the prosecutor’s suspicions were not unreasonable.
A seventh juror was struck because he testified he used to work with the defendant’s mother and aunt, and he admitted that knowing them would affect his “ability to reach a fair decision in the case.” The last juror was struck because the police came to her house to *9 arrest her son for burglary and because her daughter “got into a rash of shoplifting” and was receiving psychiatric treatment for her problem. The prosecutor had legitimate, neutral and non-racial reasons to strike these two jurors. Ibid.
The record supports the trial court’s determination that the state successfully rebutted the prima facie case.
11. The state is under a duty to reveal any understanding or agreement with a witness concerning criminal charges pending against that witness.
Patillo v. State,
12. There was no error in the admission of photographs of the victim.
Love v. State,
13. Our death penalty laws are not unconstitutional for any reason alleged.
14. There was no error in requiring defense mitigation witnesses to testify subject to cross-examination and not allowing the defense merely to introduce in evidence written letters from family members and neighbors.
Green v. Georgia,
15. Although at one point in its charge the court referred to finding statutory aggravating circumstances “beyond a reasonable doubt” without mentioning the additional requirement of unanimity, the court’s charge contained numerous references to the unanimity requirement. The jury could not have been misled. 5
16. The jury found two statutory aggravating circumstances:
(1) The offense of murder was committed against a peace officer while engaged in the performance of his official duties and (2) the murder was outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible or inhuman, in that it involved aggravated battery to the victim prior to the death of the victim.
Record, p. 2717. See OCGA § 17-10-30 (b) (7) and (b) (8). The evidence shows that the victim, wearing his official uniform, in the course of his official duties, ordered the defendant to halt as the latter
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fled after committing an aggravated assault. Instead of halting, the defendant shot the victim in the face, seriously disfiguring it. He then walked up to the victim as he lay on the ground and inflicted the fatal wound to the chest. The evidence supports the statutory aggravating circumstances found by the jury. OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (2); see OCGA § 16-5-24 (a);
Davis v. State,
17. Davis contends his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to certain evidence and charges, for not requesting certain jury charges, and for not recalling a witness for additional cross-examination. The record supports the trial court’s determination that Davis has shown neither deficient attorney performance nor actual prejudice and, therefore, has failed to show he was denied effective assistance of counsel.
Ferrell v. State,
18. We do not find that the sentence of death was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice or other arbitrary factor. OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (1). The death sentence in this case is neither excessive nor disproportionate to penalties imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant. OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (3). The similar cases listed in the Appendix support the imposition of a death sentence in this case.
Judgment affirmed.
Appendix.
Hill v. State,
Notes
The crime occurred on August 19, 1989. The trial began August 19, 1991 and ended August 30. Davis filed a motion for new trial. Soon thereafter, Davis’ trial attorneys were appointed to represent him on appeal, while a new attorney was appointed to review the record for effective assistance of counsel. On March 16, 1992, the trial court denied the motion for new trial on all grounds, including the ineffective assistance of counsel claim raised by the new attorney. In Case No. S92P1187, Davis, represented by the new attorney, appeals from the denial of his motion for new trial as to the ineffectiveness claims. In Case No. S92P1186, Davis, represented by trial counsel, appeals from the denial of the motion for new trial on all other grounds. Since the two cases are essentially one appeal from the judgment below, they were consolidated for oral argument on October 13, 1992, and for decision.
A significant factor in our disposition of the Tyree case was that the district attorney and various law enforcement officers were largely responsible for much of the inflammatory publicity. This case does not involve the “fanning of flames” by persons who ought to know better.
Especially since the U. S. Supreme Court made it clear in
Georgia v. McCollum,
One initially stated she would automatically vote for life. Although she withdrew from that position, she remained adamant that she preferred life and was “not really in favor of’ the death penalty. Another testified that “as a Christian” he did not believe he could “choose” a death sentence. The remaining three gave similar answers.
We note that these five jurors represent a relatively small percentage of the total number of black prospective jurors.
The state argues that the poll of the jury shows that its verdict was unanimous. We do not decide whether the results of the jury poll could substitute adequately for an omission to charge the unanimity requirement.
