Marvin Louis McWilliams appeals his conviction for felony murder in connection with the death of his wife, Jacqueline Andrews McWilliams. For the reasons that follow, we affirm. 1
Construed to support the verdict, the evidence showed that J acqueline McWilliams’s body was discovered in a stream on April 22, 1997. She had been strangled to death, and had some bruising and lacerations around her face. Investigators went to the house she shared with her husband, Marvin McWilliams, but no one answered. They left a card asking McWilliams to telephone them; he did so, and agreed to meet the investigators.
McWilliams at first said that he knew nothing about his wife’s death, and gave consent to search his car. When told that the search was for forensic evidence, he said that he wanted to tell the investigators what had occurred. He was then read his Miranda rights 2 and signed a waiver form; his statement was recorded. He said that the couple’s marriage had difficulties and that shortly after midnight on the morning of April 20, 1997, he returned home from work. The victim entered the home a few minutes later, and the couple argued; the victim became loud and overturned furniture, and struck McWil-liams. He grabbed her by the throat, and choked her until she fell limp to the floor; he continued to choke her. He then wrapped her body in *725 a blanket, placed it in the back of his vehicle, and drove around for a period of time. He then parked by the ravine in which she was found, carried the body in the blanket to the side of the ravine, lifted the blanket, and let the body roll into the ravine, and heard it hit the water.
1. The evidence was sufficient to enable a rational trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt that McWilliams committed the crime of felony murder while in the commission of aggravated assault.
Jackson v. Virginia,
2. The State introduced three photographs of the victim’s body to which McWilliams objected on the grounds that they were unnecessarily inflammatory and gruesome. He now enumerates as error the admission of one of the photographs. Although McWilliams characterizes this photograph as one taken after autopsy incisions, citing
Brown v. State,
3. McWilliams sought to introduce evidence of the victim’s history of illegal drug use and prostitution. At trial, he contended that the information was relevant to his defense of voluntary manslaughter, as these practices of the victim were a constant source of conflict in the couple’s marriage, and precipitated the argument during which McWilliams killed her. However, before this Court, he relies upon the principle that
a defendant may present evidence of a victim’s violent and turbulent character when the defendant can make a prima facie showing of justification: that the victim was the assailant, the defendant was assailed, and the defendant was honestly seeking to defend himself. [Cits.]
Lance v. State,
4. The trial court ruled that McWilliams could not introduce evidence that the victim’s autopsy revealed that she had cocaine metabolites in her blood and a blood alcohol level of 0.22. As previously stated, the general, although not universal, rule is that evidence implicating the character of a murder victim is irrelevant and inadmissible at trial. Id. In
Robinson v. State,
But McWilliams did offer such evidence. Outside the jury’s presence, the medical examiner testified that he had studied the literature on the subject, and stated that alcohol produces a sense of euphoria that stops the user’s inhibitions, that there is a euphoria associated with cocaine, and that a compound develops from the combination of the two that, in some people, produces strange behavior, including aggression. He also testified that a person under the influence of these substances could be combative or confrontational. 4 Thus, McWilliams produced proper evidence of a causal connection between the presence of cocaine and alcohol in the victim’s body and *727 the victim’s potential behavior. As that connection is relevant to the issue of provocation, the evidence should have been admitted.
However, although this evidence should have been admitted, the trial court’s failure to do so was not harmful. The jury was instructed on voluntary manslaughter, which is committed when one
causes the death of another human being under circumstances which would otherwise be murder and if he acts solely as the result of a sudden, violent, and irresistible passion resulting from serious provocation sufficient to excite such passion in a reasonable person; however, if there should have been an interval between the provocation and the killing sufficient for the voice of reason and humanity to be heard, of which the jury in all cases shall be the judge, the killing shall be attributed to deliberate revenge and be punished as murder.
OCGA § 16-5-2 (a). According to McWilliams’s testimony at trial, when he arrived at his home, he found that the victim had been drinking liquor. He inquired where she got the alcohol and discussed with her the fact that she was not to mix alcohol with the medication she had gotten in “rehab.” Thus, there was evidence placed before the jury that was essentially cumulative of the proffered testimony. See
Marshall v. State,
McWilliams also testified that prior to returning home the night of the killing, he stopped at a police station to find out if he could have the victim removed from the home, and was told he could not. He further testified that at his home the victim was verbally and physically aggressive toward him, and in the course of the confrontation, he choked her. McWilliams admitted that he continued to choke her after she fell to the floor, unconscious, but he did not testify to striking the victim; physical evidence showed that she suffered a black eye before her death. McWilliams attempted to hide the crime, both by disposing of the body and lying to investigating police officers.
Considering the evidence presented, and the evidence excluded, it is highly probable that the court’s error in excluding the proffered evidence did not contribute to the verdict, and thus the error was harmless. See
Jones v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Jacqueline Andrews McWilliams was killed on April 20, 1997. On June 10, 1997, a Richmond County grand jury indicted McWilliams for malice murder and felony murder while in the commission of aggravated assault. McWilliams was tried before a jury and found guilty of felony murder and acquitted of malice murder; his conviction was reversed in
McWilliams v. State,
See
Miranda v. Arizona,
McWilliams did not request a jury instruction on justification. Rather he sought charges on insanity and voluntary manslaughter. When arguing his request to introduce evidence of the victim’s history of drug use and prostitution, he specifically asserted to the trial court that “[t]he only argument we’re making to the jury is that he’s guilty of a lesser offense of manslaughter”; at no point did he contend that he had made a prima facie showing of justification.
The State contends that evidence that the victim had drugs in her body at the time of her death is relevant and admissible
only
“if the defendant can prove with some degree of certainty that the drugs caused the victim to be violent,” citing
Daniels v. State,
