Along with Antonio Lowery, Inez Ottis and her brother Rudolph Ottis, the grand jury indicted Robert Floyd for the malice murders of seven-year-old Britney Ikharia and fifteen-year-old Bridgett Lee. The victims were the daughters of Barbara Jenkins. Ms. Jenkins and Ms. Ottis were mutually involved in the drug trade but, before the murders, their relationship ended acrimoniously. The State’s theory was that the four indictees went to Ms. Jenkins’s apartment to steal her drugs and money, and committed the murders because the children knew Ms. Ottis and could identify her. In his post-arrest statement, Floyd admitted that he stole a car and drove with the other three to Ms. Jenkins’s residence, but he denied that he left the automobile or participated in the homicides. Mr. Lowery pled guilty and offered to testify for the State. Thereafter, a jury convicted Ms. Ottis and her brother of both murders. On appeal, this Court affirmed their convictions and life sentences.
Ottis v. State,
1. Mr. Lowery testified against Floyd, and directly implicated him in the fatal stabbing of Bridgett. Floyd contends that the testimony was uncorroborated and, thus, insufficient to authorize his conviction for the murder. Corroboration “may consist entirely of circumstantial evidence, and evidence of the defendant’s conduct before and after the crime was committed may give rise to an inference that the defendant participated in the crime. [Cit.]”
Klinect v. State,
Mr. Lowery’s testimony implicating Floyd in the criminal conspiracy was corroborated by Floyd’s post-arrest statement, wherein he admitted supplying a stolen vehicle and driving with the others to Ms. Jenkins’s apartment to obtain drugs. See
Parkerson v. State,
The jury generally determines the weight of the corroborating evidence, and even slight evidence of corroboration connecting the accused to a crime is legally sufficient.
Edmond v. State,
2. On voir dire, Floyd moved unsuccessfully to strike for cause Dahil Goss because she was employed as a federal prosecutor. In
Beam v. State,
Floyd also relies upon
Hutcheson v. State,
3. Although two African-American women were seated on the jury, Floyd made a Batson motion because the State used peremptory strikes to excuse three others. The prosecutor provided reasons for exercising the strikes. The trial court found those explanations to be sufficiently race-neutral, and denied the Batson motion. On appeal, Floyd urges that his motion was meritorious because the State’s reasons were a pretext for racial discrimination in the selection of the jury.
All three of the prospective jurors expressed reservations about the death penalty. Their opposition to capital punishment was a neutral and case-related reason for employing the peremptory strikes,
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since the State did not withdraw its notice to seek imposition of that sentence until after the jury returned its guilty verdict. Although the prospective jurors’ conscientious aversion to the death penalty was not sufficient to require an excusal for cause, it was a valid, nonpretextual reason to justify the State’s use of a peremptory strike to remove them.
Tharpe v. State,
The State used a strike against one of the three for the additional reason that she had a close family member who had been prosecuted for selling drugs. “The criminal history of a prospective juror’s family is a sufficiently neutral reason to justify a peremptory strike. [Cits.]”
Jenkins v. State,
To prevail on his
Batson
challenge, Floyd “had the burden of proving that the State engaged in purposeful discrimination in the exercise of its peremptory strikes.”
Williams v. State,
4. Floyd asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by admitting into evidence numerous photographs of the victims and a videotape of the murder scene. Generally, pre-autopsy photographs are admissible to illustrate the nature and extent of a murder victim’s wounds and the location of the body at the crime scene.
Hayes v. State,
5. Over Floyd’s hearsay objection, the trial court allowed a prosecution witness to testify to a statement made by Mr. Ottis concerning *69 the crime. This issue is controlled by our holding in Ottis v. State, 269 Ga., supra at 154 (3) that the testimony is admissible as a declaration made by one conspirator against a co-conspirator during the course of the conspiracy.
6. Floyd enumerates as error the trial court’s failure to charge the jury that it was authorized to consider a witness’s prior inconsistent statement as substantive evidence. See
Gibbons v. State,
7. Floyd contends that the verdicts are inconsistent, because the evidence showed that he was guilty of both murders or not guilty of either. In
Milam v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The murder occurred on January 6, 1993. The grand jury returned the indictment against Floyd and the others on April 13,1995. The jury found Floyd guilty on November 21, 1996. Floyd filed a motion for new trial on December 12, 1996, and the trial court denied that motion on June 2,1999. On June 23,1999, Floyd filed his notice of appeal, and the case was docketed in this Court on August 27, 1999. Floyd submitted his appeal for decision on October 18,1999.
