Anjail Durriyyah Muhammad has been indicted on charges of malice murder, felony murder, aggravated battery, aggravated assault, and first-degree arson in connection with the death of Nodiana Antoine. The State has filed written notice of its intent to seek the death penalty. This Court granted Muhammad’s application for interim review and directed the parties to address whether the trial court erred in denying Muhammad’s motions concerning Georgia’s amended criminal discovery statute, OCGA § 17-16-1 et seq. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the trial court’s orders.
On July 20, 2004, two months after her indictment by the Cobb County grand jury, Muhammad elected to participate in the Criminal Procedure Discovery Act (“the Act”). See OCGA § 17-16-1 et seq. Following her decision to participate, the Act was amended by the “Criminal Justice Act of 2005” and a subsequent, untitled act. 2005 Ga. L., pp. 20-30, §§ 1-18; 2005 Ga. L., pp. 474-475, §§ 1, 2. An uncodified section of the Act made it applicable “to all trials which commence on or after July 1, 2005.” 2005 Ga. L., p. 29, § 17. Since Muhammad’s trial has not yet commenced, the trial court ruled that the amended version of the Act is applicable to Muhammad’s case. Muhammad contends the amendments are either unconstitutional as written or are inapplicable to her case.
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1. The majority of Muhammad’s assaults on the amended Act were decided adversely to her in this Court’s decision in
Stinski v. State,
2. Muhammad asserts the amendments to the Act violate her constitutionally-guaranteed right to effective assistance of counsel (see U. S. Const., Amend. VI; Ga. Const, of 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XIV) because defense counsel cannot effectively perform their constitutionally-mandated duty of investigating and preparing mitigating evidence for use in the sentencing phase while simultaneously being concerned with the possibility that such efforts will result in the discovery of evidence that is both harmful to the defendant and discoverable by the State. See
Strickland v. Washington,
The relevant portion of the amended Act
requires a defendant to produce, at or before the announcement of a guilt/innocence verdict, books, papers, documents, photographs, films, recordings, tangible objects, and audio and visual recordings and to allow inspection and photographing of buildings if the defendant intends to use any of these items as evidence in the sentencing phase. OCGA § 17-16-4 (b) (3) (A). A defendant must also disclose, at or before the guilt/innocence verdict, reports regarding any mental health examinations or other scientific tests that the defendant intends to introduce into evidence in the sentencing phase. OCGA § 17-16-4 (b) (3) (B). Finally, a defendant must disclose five days before trial the identity of witnesses the defendant intends to call at sentencing and must disclose at or before the guilt/innocence verdict any non-privileged statements of those witnesses [that relate to the subject matter of the testimony of such witnesses] that are in the defendant’s possession. OCGA§ 17-16-4 (b) (3) (C).
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(Emphasis supplied.)
Stinski,
supra,
Nothing in the Act requires the defendant to provide the prosecution with evidence from witnesses whom she will not call at the presentence hearing. Thus, the defendant retains control in identifying the individuals to whom the disclosure applies and may limit potentially harmful disclosure by calling only those witnesses who are likely to help her case. Counsel may freely investigate for mitigating evidence, knowing that the identity of any potentially harmful witness resulting from that investigation need only be produced to the State in reciprocal discovery should the defense decide to call that witness at the presentence hearing. The fact that a witness who may be helpful on one aspect of the case has given a statement containing some potentially damaging information presents the type of difficult tactical choice that trial attorneys routinely face. Such choices do not deny a defendant her right to effective assistance of counsel.
With regard to the requirement that the defendant disclose the identity of the witnesses the defendant intends to call at the presentence hearing five days before the start of the guilt/innocence trial, this Court has held that reciprocal discovery provisions requiring the defendant to disclose identities of all persons they intend to call as witnesses at trial and relevant written or recorded statements of all such witnesses do not violate a defendant’s right to effective representation of counsel.
State v. Lucious,
3. Muhammad also contends that the amended Act’s requirement that a defendant disclose any mitigating evidence she intends to introduce in the presentence hearing (OCGA § 17-16-4 (b) (3)) violates the privilege against self-incrimination guaranteed her by both the state and federal constitutions. See U. S. Const., Amend. V; Ga. Const, of 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XVI. 1 We disagree.
The Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination “protects against any disclosures which the witness reasonably believes could be used in a criminal prosecution or could lead to other evidence that might be so used.”
Kastigar v. United States,
(a) Requiring a defendant to produce at or before the guilt/innocence verdict the items of evidence as listed in OCGA § 17-16-4 (b) (3) (A) and (B) that she intends to introduce in the presentence hearing is not compelled self-incrimination. See
Williams v. Florida,
(b) Statements of witnesses the defendant intends to call to testify are
not
personal to the defendant. See
Nobles,
supra,
[t]he fact that these statements of third parties were elicited by a defense investigator on [defendant’s] behalf does not convert them into [defendant’s] personal communications. Requiring their production from the investigator therefore *252 would not in any sense compel [defendant] to be a witness against himself or extort communications from him.
We thus conclude that the Fifth Amendment privilege against compulsory self-incrimination, being personal to the defendant, does not extend to the testimony or statements of third parties called as witnesses at trial.
Nobles,
supra,
Georgia’s amended Act requires disclosure by the defense of “any statement of. . . witnesses [who the defendant intends to call in the presentence hearing] . . . that relates to the subject matter of the testimony of such witnesses.” OCGA § 17-16-4 (b) (3) (C). As used in the Act, “witness” does not include the defendant. OCGA § 17-16-1 (3). Thus, the statements the amended Act requires tobe disclosed are those of “third parties” within the meaning of
Nobles
and are therefore outside the scope of the self-incrimination clause.
Nobles,
supra,
Since the statements of witnesses the defendant intends to call are not personal to the defendant, the statutory requirement of disclosure of the statements of defense witnesses does not meet all of the four requirements necessary to implicate the self-incrimination clause of the federal and state constitutions. Consequently, the contention that the amended Act violates the self-incrimination clause because it requires the defense to disclose before the sentencing phase any statements of the witnesses it intends to call is without merit.
(c) In contrast to the statements of third-party witnesses, however, the disclosure of the list of witnesses the defendant intends to call in the presentence hearing is personal to the defendant because the defendant is the one who is required to create and turn over to the State the list of sentencing phase witnesses. See
Couch,
supra,
We conclude the trial court can exercise its discretion “to specify the time, place, and manner of making the discover/’ and to enter such orders as seem “just under the circumstances” (OCGA§ 17-16-6) when such concerns arise. Upon a proper invocation by the defendant, the trial court may conduct an appropriate proceeding to hear the matter and, where the defendant is able to show that pretrial disclosure of the witnesses she intends to call in the presentence hearing would violate her constitutional rights, a protective order or a continuance pending the completion of the guilt/innocence phase of the trial will provide a sufficient remedy. 2
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
“Similar to the right against self-incrimination guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Georgia’s right against self-incrimination is directed towards prohibiting the State’s use of coercion or compulsion to be a witness against oneself.”
Fantasia v. State,
Other states have also concluded that this method affords the most appropriate remedy for this and similar matters in the reciprocal discovery context. See
People v. Martinez,
