Appellant was convicted of the felony murder of the two-year-old son of his girl friend. The felony underlying the conviction was cruelty to children. OCGA § 16-5-70. 1
1. The State presented evidence that shortly after the child was left in the care of appellant, appellant arrived at the home of the maternal grandmother seeking help to revive the unconscious child. Efforts to revive the child were unsuccessful and he died the following day, shortly after being removed from life support systems. In a statement to the investigating officer six days after the incident, appellant admitted shaking the child “real hard, back and forth, till he went limp.” The forensic pathologist who performed an autopsy on the victim testified that the child’s skull was not fractured but the brain was severely swollen and the classic signs of severe shaking were present: internal bruising on the interior portion of the scalp at the back of the head and hemorrhages along the length of the spinal cord and in the retinae of the eyes. The evidence was sufficient to authorize the jury to conclude that appellant was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of felony murder in the death of the child.
Jackson v. Virginia,
2. The trial court instructed the jury on the law of malice murder and felony murder, the offenses for which appellant was indicted, and the included offense of involuntary manslaughter.
2
Citing
Edge v. State,
Even if we were to assume that the charge complained of was a sequential charge, 4 our decision in Edge does not make invalid the *398 giving of such a charge in this case since this case involves involuntary rather than voluntary manslaughter. The sequential charge in Edge eliminated the jury’s full consideration of voluntary manslaughter and its concomitant mitigating factor of provoked passion. See OCGA § 16-5-2 (a). Involuntary manslaughter does not contain an element that mitigates a greater offense. See OCGA § 16-5-3 (a). The absence of a mitigating factor makes our holding in Edge inapplicable.
3. Appellant maintains error was committed when the trial court refused to grant appellant sufficient funds to hire the forensic pathologist of his choice to review the victim’s medical records. When it was informed that it would cost $2,500 to retain the pathologist appellant desired, the trial court authorized appellant to spend $1,200, with which he hired another pathologist. The Fourteenth Amendment’s due process guarantee of fundamental fairness requires that an indigent defendant be given “meaningful access to justice,” e.g., access to a competent expert necessary to an effective defense, but an indigent defendant does not have a constitutional right to the expert he prefers.
Ake v. Oklahoma,
In the case at bar, appellant does not argue that the allocated funds were not sufficient to employ an expert, or that the assistance of the expert employed was deficient due to insufficient funds. Instead, he argues that the trial court expressed bias against the expert of choice. We have reviewed the trial transcript and conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it refused to authorize funds sufficient for appellant to hire the expert he desired.
4. Appellant asserts error in the trial court’s purported failure to conduct an in camera inspection of the State’s file despite the request of counsel for appellant. See
Tribble v. State,
In the case at bar, appellant requested, and the trial court agreed to conduct, an in camera review of the State’s file. However, there is nothing in the record that reflects the trial court completed the task. In the absence of evidence that the trial court reviewed the State’s file, we remand the ca&e to the trial court for a post-trial examination of the file or, if a review has occurred, entry on the record of the result of that inspection. Cae Carpenter, supra; Hill, supra; and Tribble, supra, Div. 3. 5 Appellant may file a notice of appeal from the trial court’s ruling on remand.
Judgment affirmed in part and remanded with direction in part.
Notes
The crimes occurred on July 5, 1991, and the victim died the next day. Appellant was arrested on July 11, and indicted on January 24,1992. The trial took place on June 22,1992, and the jury returned its guilty verdict on June 26. Appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment on June 26, and his motion for new trial, filed on July 6, was denied on January 27, 1993. Appellant’s notice of appeal was filed February 22, the case was docketed in this court on May 19, and submitted for decision on July 2, 1993.
Appellant testified that he found the child unconscious in the bathtub and shook him in an effort to revive him.
Appellant takes issue with the following instruction, given by the trial court after making the jury aware of the three types of homicide involved:
If you do not believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of malice murder or felony murder, but you do believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of involuntary manslaughter, then you would be authorized to find the defendant guilty of involuntary manslaughter and, in that event, the form of the verdict would be. . . .
The essence of a sequential charge is judicial direction to consider possible verdicts in a particular sequence.
Head v. State,
a reasonable juror would have concluded that the court was instructing the jury that *398 it could consider [in] voluntary manslaughter only if it found [appellant] not guilty of malice murder and felony murder.
[Emphasis supplied.] Head v. State, supra at 799.
The State cites
Williams v. State,
