Charles Dixon was convicted of the malice murder of Sundie Cutter and the trial court sentenced him to life imprisonment. Thereafter, Dixon filed a motion for new trial, which the trial court denied, and he appeals. 1
1. Appellant and the victim had a lengthy and tempestuous relationship. Shortly before the homicide, she ordered him out of the apartment they shared. On the night before she died, Ms. Cutter met another man and invited him to come home with her. He left in the early morning hours. At some point shortly thereafter, the murderer entered the victim’s bedroom, possibly by breaking the window. When discovered, the victim’s body was partially wrapped in a bedspread stained with a mixture of her and Dixon’s blood. She was strangled with a telephone cord. Two young children, one of whom was the son of Dixon and Ms. Cutter, witnessed the murder. They identified Dixon as the killer. While incarcerated, appellant made an incriminating admission to a fellow inmate, acknowledging that he strangled Ms. Cutter because she had been with another man.
Construed most strongly in favor of the verdict, the evidence is sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Dixon was guilty of the malice murder of Ms. Cutter.
Jackson v. Virginia,
2. Appellant contends that evidence of his prior difficulties with the victim was inadmissible because of a lack of similarity to the murder. Unlike similar transactions, prior difficulties do not implicate “‘independent acts or occurrences, but are connected acts or occurrences arising from the relationship between the same people
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involved in the prosecution and are related and connected by such nexus. (Cits.)’ [Cit.]”
Temple v. State,
[E]vidence of the defendant’s prior acts toward the victim, be it a prior assault, a quarrel, or a threat, is admissible when the defendant is accused of a criminal act against the victim, as the prior acts are evidence of the relationship between the victim and the defendant and may show the defendant’s motive, intent, and bent of mind in committing the act against the victim which results in the charges for which the defendant is being prosecuted. [Cits.]
Wall v. State,
3. Declarations made by the victim to investigating officers regarding her prior difficulties with appellant were admissible under the necessity exception to the hearsay rule.
Ward v. State,
4. The murder occurred in 1994, but appellant was not indicted until 1999 and he was not tried until 2000. During that period, several items of physical evidence, including the murder weapon, were disposed of in the normal course of business. Dixon contends that this destruction of the evidence was a violation of his due process rights. However, the failure to preserve evidence does not constitute a constitutional violation, unless it is shown that the missing evidence was potentially useful to the defense and was destroyed in bad faith on the part of the police.
Arizona v. Youngblood,
5. Appellant contends that trial counsel was ineffective. To prevail on that claim, he must show a deficiency in his attorney’s performance which was prejudicial to the defense.
Strickland v. Washington,
Dixon first contends that his lawyer failed to impeach several of the State’s witnesses by introducing the recorded statements they gave to investigating officers. Whether to impeach prosecution witnesses and how to do so are tactical decisions. See generally
Austin v. Carter,
Appellant also urges ineffectiveness in the failure to raise the destruction of physical evidence as a ground for dismissal. However, that would not have been successful, as nothing indicated that prosecutorial bad faith was a factor in the decision to dispose of the items. See Terrell v. State, supra. Although defense counsel did not raise any hearsay objection to introduction of all of the police reports, this too was proper since such an objection would be meritless. OCGA § 24-9-69; Ward v. State, supra; Nasworthy v. State, supra. Accordingly, there was not any prejudicial deficiency in counsel’s performance which would authorize reversal of the conviction.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The murder was committed on April 9, 1994. The grand jury indicted Dixon on February 17, 1999. The jury returned the guilty verdict on July 21, 2000 and, on the same day, the trial court entered a judgment of conviction and imposed the life sentence. Appellant filed a motion for new trial on August 1, 2000, which the trial court denied on November 27, 2001. He filed a notice of appeal on November 29, 2001, and the case was docketed in this Court on February 6, 2002. The appeal was submitted for decision on April 1, 2002.
