DREWS v. THE STATE.
S17A1873
Supreme Court of Georgia
February 19, 2018
Reconsideration denied March 29, 2018
303 Ga. 441
BENHAM, Justice.
FINAL COPY; Murder. Bartow Superior Court. Before Judge Nelson. Veronica M. O‘Grady, for appellant. Rosemary M. Greene, District Attorney, Jana W. Allen, Assistant District Attorney; Christopher M. Carr, Attorney General, Patricia B. Attaway Burton, Deputy Attorney General, Paula K. Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Matthew B. Crowder, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
1. Appellant alleges the evidence was insufficient to show that he was an active participant in the crimes at bar. Viewed in a light most favorable to
Appellant testified he had consumed half a pint of rum and two shots of whiskey that night. He decided to go over to the house to get his dog. Since appellant did not have a vehicle, he had his friend Barrett Muhlenbruch pick him up from Derinda Rader‘s6 hotel and drive him and Rader to the house. Once they arrived, appellant exited Muhlenbruch‘s white truck and put his dog in the bed of the truck. Appellant said he then headed toward the house while Muhlenbruch and Rader eventually drove up the hill to visit a nearby neighbor.
Jamie Gatlin testified she heard appellant‘s voice and looked out of her bedroom door and saw appellant standing in the doorway to Ayers‘s room. Gatlin said appellant raised his voice. At that point, she closed her door and woke up Robert Miller. Soon thereafter, she said she heard hitting and kicking
Becky Sears testified she heard appellant attempting to kick in the door to her room on the porch. Because the door swung outward, appellant could not kick it in and so he eventually “snatched” the door open. Sears said appellant stood in the doorway holding a knife in his hand which was covered in blood. According to Sears, appellant said “Lucky‘s dead and it‘s all y‘all‘s f‘ing fault.” Appellant then attacked Warren with the knife. The two men started fighting, with the altercation moving from the porch into the living room of the house. Warren testified he beat the “dog crap out of” appellant until police arrived. Robert Miller also joined in the fight and was credited with taking the knife from appellant.
Meanwhile, Sears went to check on Ayers and found him sitting on his bed bent over, bleeding profusely. Sears screamed for assistance and then tried to stop the bleeding with towels. Gatlin entered the room and called 911 at Ayers‘s request. Sears left the house when Gatlin called 911 because she was the subject of an outstanding warrant. As she left the house, Sears said she saw
The first officer who arrived in response to Gatlin‘s 911 call broke up the fight and dragged appellant out of the house. Because Robert Miller told one of the police officers that money had been stolen from Ayers, appellant was searched, Muhlenbruch was detained and searched at the Coffmans’ house,9 and Muhlenbruch‘s truck was searched, but no money was ever found. Police recovered a bloody knife in a trash can in the kitchen, which is where Miller told police he placed the knife upon taking it from appellant. The knife later tested positive for appellant‘s blood DNA. Appellant testified that the knife was his, but he denied he was in possession of it on the night in question.10
When Ayers arrived at the hospital, he was conscious, had a normal brain scan, and was treated for the nine stab wounds he received to his body. Nevertheless, doctors intubated Ayers so that his airway would not be constricted by any swelling from the stab wounds to his neck. In spite of medical intervention, the trauma of being stabbed eventually caused a series of complications leading to Ayers‘s death on February 9, 2012. Ayers developed atrial fibrillation or an irregular heartbeat. This condition caused him to be susceptible to blood clots and, because of the stab wounds, doctors were unable to treat him with a blood thinner. Eventually, a blood clot developed in Ayers‘s heart and then broke free, traveling to his brain causing a “massive” stroke. The stroke rendered Ayers comatose and caused significant brain injury from which his treating physicians determined he would not recover. Ayers‘s
At trial, appellant took the witness stand in his own defense. He testified that after he exited Muhlenbruch‘s truck and began walking toward the house, he became angered at seeing the room on the porch, which had not been there when he was last at the house two-and-a-half weeks earlier. He stated he wanted to see who was behind “the wall” and so he pounded on the door and then opened it. He saw Sears reclined on the bed and Warren sitting on the bed. He said when he saw Warren he asked, “What the f**k are you doing here?” and then said, “No f**king way.” Appellant stated that Warren responded to him by asking him what he was going to do about it. At that point appellant said he headed toward the front door of the house, but could not remember exactly what happened next. He acknowledged there was a fight, testified that he was in and out of consciousness during the fight, and said that Warren beat him, Sears stomped on his back, and Miller hit him. He also stated that Miller asked him, “Where is the money?” Appellant denied ever seeing Ayers that night and said he learned of Ayers‘s death while in jail. Appellant
The jury was authorized to discredit appellant‘s testimony that he never saw Ayers on the night in question and to reject appellant‘s theory that Troyce Warren actually stabbed Ayers and that the other occupants of the house were in on it to steal money from Ayers. See Jones v. State, 302 Ga. 488 (1) (b) (807 SE2d 344) (2017). The evidence summarized above was otherwise sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes for which the jury returned verdicts of guilty. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).
2. Appellant contends trial counsel rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance when he failed to investigate allegations raised by a supplemental police report and attendant dashboard camera video. In order to prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, appellant
must show counsel‘s performance was deficient and that the deficient performance prejudiced him to the point that a reasonable probability exists that, but for counsel‘s errors, the outcome of the trial would have been different. A strong presumption exists that
counsel‘s conduct falls within the broad range of professional conduct.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Pruitt v. State, 282 Ga. 30 (4) (644 SE2d 837) (2007). If a defendant fails to meet his burden on one prong of the two-prong test, then the other prong need not be reviewed by the Court. Wright v. State, 291 Ga. 869 (2) (734 SE2d 876) (2012).
The record of the motion for new trial proceedings shows as follows. On August 26, 2012, Troyce Warren‘s estranged wife Molly Warren spoke with Deputy Lisa Fuller of the Bartow County Sheriff‘s Department. The meeting was recorded by the dashboard camera of Deputy Fuller‘s vehicle and memorialized in a report authored by Deputy Fuller. The report was placed in the investigative file regarding Ayers‘s death and provided to trial counsel as part of discovery. The video recording, on the other hand, was referenced by number in Deputy Fuller‘s report, but apparently a copy was not placed in the discovery file.12
During the conversation, Molly Warren played for Deputy Fuller a recorded cell phone conversation of herself and a woman named Tina James.
In the recording a female is stating they (Troyce [Warren] and Becky [Sears]) struck Lucky in the throat so he could not make noises. The female stated (Herbert) Drew[s] came in and said[,] [“L]ook what you have done.[“] The female was explaining how the police had Drew[s] on the ground looking for money and did not find it. The female stated Jamie [Gatlin] bought a car with the money.
In addition, Molly Warren told Deputy Fuller that she “guessed” James had this information because she lived at the house when the stabbing took place. Molly Warren admitted she had no firsthand information about the stabbing. In the video recording, an unidentified woman standing with Molly Warren can be heard accusing Sears and Warren of committing the crime for the money.
At the motion for new trial hearing, Molly Warren testified she had no recollection of the cell phone recording of James or of her meeting with Deputy Fuller. She stated that, at the time, she was mentally ill and angry at her estranged husband Troyce Warren. According to appellate counsel, James could not appear at the motion for new trial hearing because she had suffered a stroke that rendered her unable to communicate. Trial counsel testified he
Pretermitting whether counsel‘s performance was deficient for failing to investigate the matters raised in Deputy Fuller‘s report and the dashboard camera video, appellant has failed to show how he was prejudiced. The proffer appellant made at the motion for new trial hearing14 constituted inadmissible hearsay — even if Molly Warren could have recalled the telephone call with James and the meeting with Deputy Fuller, she admittedly had no firsthand knowledge of the events in question; and the trial record shows James neither lived in the house with Ayers nor witnessed the events of February 5, meaning she also had no firsthand knowledge of the events in question.15 The
3. Appellant contends the trial court erred when it refused to admit medical records indicating Troyce Warren was diagnosed with homicidal ideations sometime after February 5, 2012. Prior to trial, the State made a motion in limine to exclude all medical records unrelated to Warren‘s treatment for injuries sustained on February 5. The pretrial transcript reveals appellant posited no objection and the trial court granted the State‘s motion in limine. When Warren testified at trial, appellant sought to admit uncertified medical records16 showing that Warren had engaged in self-mutilation and had
As the trial record reflects, the trial court had concerns about the authenticity of the medical records and the fact that no one was present, namely the physician who diagnosed Warren, to testify about the diagnosis in question.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Grant, J., who concurs in judgment only in Division 3.
