Thomas Fly, acting pro se, was convicted of four counts of aggravated stalking. In his pro se appeal, he enumerates ten errors.
This case arose after Fly, then a co-worker of the victim, asked her to purchase theater tickets from him.
Price v. State,
Over the next several months, Fly continued to leave the victim increasingly invasive messages and presents, including a burglar alarm he left on her doorstep with a message that breaking into her home would be easy. It subsequently became apparent that Fly had access to the victim’s computer at her new job. The victim informed her supervisor, who learned that Fly was then working for a subcontractor. When Fly was discharged, he blamed the victim for telling her supervisor. He left the victim a note which said “be aware that you have got about a billion heart beats left . . . and your parents have no more than a few hundred million. . . .” Fly continued calling the victim and began sending numerous letters to the victim’s parents, brother, friends, and her former employer about his feelings for her.
In January 1993, he left her two letters and two $100 bills. One of the letters stated, “I hope you don’t have to die or nearly die to realize that I really cared about you and that maybe it is not in the past tense.” After receiving this, the victim changed her telephone number, but Fly continued to leave her messages at work. The letters *375 he sent made it clear that he was watching her house, going through her trash to obtain the addresses of her friends, and following her. The victim began burning her trash.
After subsequent letters established that Fly had tapped the victim’s phone, she swore out a warrant on eavesdropping charges and obtained a restraining order prohibiting Fly from contacting her. Three months later, Fly began leaving the victim phone messages with quotes from movies. Fly also contacted the victim’s mother, her friends, a co-worker, her minister, and the dean of her law school.
Fly pleaded guilty to the eavesdropping charges. One of the conditions of his probation was to refrain from contacting the victim. After several months, however, Fly sporadically resumed contact, leaving her songs about lies and death.
On June 6, 1994, Fly left several messages on the victim’s voice mail at work. Two of the messages were songs, including “Sympathy for the Devil.”
On June 12,1994, Fly left a message from a movie called “Fright Night” in which a young man is accused of killing a girl. This fright-, ened the victim so much she moved out of her apartment for a month, until Fly was arrested and jailed. During that month, Fly continued to leave her messages and packages and he contacted her friends.
On August 1, 1994, Fly sent the victim’s minister a letter from jail which enclosed a copy of a letter he had sent to the victim’s father. 1 This letter stated in part, “I have nothing but loathing and contempt and revulsion for [the victim] and anyone remotely like her. She is self interested [sic], vengeful, vindictive, and hateful and fundamentally dishonest. She is the only person with whom I have been personally acquainted that I can truly say I hate, and if she is my enemy it is only because she made me her enemy.” On August 19, 1994, the victim received a letter from Fly which included a cartoon and articles with references derogatory to lawyers.
After a hearing, Fly’s probation was reinstated on the condition that he leave the State and refrain from contacting the victim or anyone affiliated with her. Three months later, he left her a message and the victim again changed her phone number. Within a week, Fly left a cassette tape on the hood of her car during the night. Fly was arrested again, but he continued to send letters to the victim and her parents from jail. On May 11, 1995, Fly sent the victim an envelope of clippings with his bitter commentary about lawyers and the evils of the world. Held:
1. The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict,
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was sufficient to permit the jury to find all the essential elements of the crimes.
Jackson v. Virginia,
The record shows that Fly pleaded guilty to eavesdropping and possession of an eavesdropping device in December 1993. As a condition of his probation, Fly was ordered to refrain from any contact with the victim. The record establishes Fly’s long, escalating history of harassing and intimidating the victim, beginning in 1992, when he tapped her phone, invaded her office computer, and continued his unwelcome contact, evidence sufficient to establish Fly’s intent to harass and intimidate.
The remaining elements of Count 1 were established by the victim’s testimony that she received several telephone messages from Fly on June 6, 1994. The victim characterized these messages as “mean” and “threatening” in part because they implied that Fly was inescapable. Testimony of Fly’s prior contacts and the evidence of Fly’s conviction, joined with proof that Fly sent the victim an August 15, 1994, letter from jail which included, inter alia, a cartoon depicting an aspiring lawyer as a walking piece of feces, was sufficient to justify the verdict on Count 3. Testimony that Fly sent the victim a May 11, 1995 package of articles which included a cartoon on which Fly wrote, “I wonder why you lieyer [sic] sh..s (pardon the redundancy) consider bugging a phone such a horrendous crime!” was sufficient to warrant jury consideration of Count 4. 2 On another article in this package about a proposed exhibit at the Smithsonian which purportedly would have depicted Japan as a victim in World War II, Fly wrote racial epithets in reference to the judge who sentenced him on the eavesdropping case and sarcastically congratulated the victim on her great victory at Pearl Harbor, presumably a reference to her taking an aggressive stance while assuming the role of victim.
In isolation, none of the cartoons, clippings, or comments which provide the basis for Counts 3 and 4 would elicit reasonable fear of death or bodily harm. However, viewed in the context of Fly’s lengthy
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history of unhealthy, unremitting, and increasingly hostile communication with the victim, her friends, and acquaintances, we believe the issue of the reasonableness of the victim’s fear presented a jury question.
See Hall v. State,
2. Fly’s contentions that the aggravated stalking statute is unconstitutionally vague and over broad are foreclosed by
Johnson v. State,
3. We reject Fly’s claim that, while exercising his right to self-representation, he was denied due process by such events as the denial of bond and an inability, due to the conditions of his incarceration, to adequately prepare for trial. Even when insisting on the right to self-representation, the right to effective assistance of counsel does not entitle a defendant to bail.
Reedman v. State,
4. Admission of testimony regarding Fly’s conduct prior to the offenses and the enactment of the aggravated stalking statute was not error. Indeed, such evidence was vital to establish the elements of intent and the purpose of harassing and intimidating. Because the indictment addressed conduct which occurred after OCGA § 16-5-91 was enacted, this case lies beyond the ambit of the prohibitions
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against ex post facto prosecutions. See
Logan v. State,
5. The trial court did not err in determining that the history of prior contact between the parties did not constitute similar transaction evidence, but showed motive and intent. See
McTaggert v. State,
6. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding evidence from Fly’s eavesdropping case of tape recordings of conversations he tapped on the victim’s telephone.
Martin v. Williams,
7. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by refusing Fly funds for an investigator and expert witnesses.
Wilson v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
