S16A0377. MYERS v. THE STATE.
S16A0377
Supreme Court of Georgia
July 5, 2016
299 Ga. 409 | 788 S.E.2d 451
BENHAM, Justice.
BENHAM, Justice.
Appellant Dwayne Tavares Myers appeals his convictions for the felony murder of Edward Davidson and related crimes he committed with his confederates Justin Baughns and Anthony Fuller.1 We affirm for the reasons set forth below.
1. Appellant contends the evidence was insufficient to convict him for a burglary that took place at 502 Rust Wood Drive in Athens-Clarke County on or about November 26, 2012.
(a) Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to upholding the jury‘s verdicts, the evidence showed that late on November 26, 2012, and continuing into the midnight hour of November 27, 2012, three men entered the home of Charlotte and Edward Davidson located at 400 Jefferson River Road in Athens-Clarke County. During the incident, Charlotte hid in her bedroom, but her husband Edward confronted the intruders and was shot. Edward went into cardiac arrest on the way to the hospital and died of five gunshot
In the course of their investigation, the police determined that during a two-week period in November 2012, appellant and his cohorts Fuller, who was a juvenile at the time, and Baughns participated in a series of at least eleven burglaries in Athens-Clarke County. The perpetrators would go out at night, kick in and/or pry open the doors and/or windows of residences, and steal items such as flat screen televisions, gaming systems, and other items that could be sold easily for cash at a pawn shop. The evidence showed that Baughns would typically drive Fuller and/or appellant to residences within a few miles’ radius of where the Davidson murder took place and where Myers and Fuller lived;2 Fuller3 and/or appellant would break into the houses and steal the items; and Baughns would later sell the stolen items at a local pawn shop.4
In addition to the Davidson murder, appellant was linked directly to at least two of the ten remaining burglaries.5 The first occurred in the early morning hours of November 24, 2012, when a man kicked in the door of Katherine DeGiorgi‘s home at 263 Arch Street in Athens-Clarke County and entered her bedroom, but fled when she discovered him. A surveillance camera recorded the man breaking into the residence and his flight from the scene by entering a car driven by someone else. Authorities eventually determined that the man in the surveillance tape was appellant and the car he entered appeared to be the 1995 Geo Prizm owned by Baughns.
At about 6:30 a.m. on November 27, 2012, Larry Fredericks, who lived at 502 Rust Wood Drive, came home from work6 to find his front and back doors open and his front porch light broken. The front door had been kicked in and had pry marks on it as if someone had tried to open it with a flat tool. Fredericks discovered that several items were missing, including a flat screen television, a motorcycle helmet, and a Kal-Tec .32 handgun with six rounds of ammunition. As to the handgun, Fredericks advised the authorities that he had used it for target practice and was able to direct them to the area where he would practice. The authorities were able to recover a projectile from the target practice area. The ballistics expert testified that the .32 projectile recovered from the target practice area was fired from the same gun as the .32 projectiles extracted from Edward Davidson‘s body. The authorities were also able to lift a shoe impression from the doors of the house. Although inconclusive, a forensic expert testified the shoe impression taken from the scene featured the same pattern as the shoes appellant was wearing when arrested.
About two weeks after these incidents, an officer stopped appellant on the street because the officer believed appellant looked like the person on the video of the burglary
Authorities also received information about appellant‘s involvement in the Davidson murder from two witnesses who came forward during the investigation of the Davidson murder. Marco Ellison, who knew appellant from a previous stay in jail and who also knew Baughns, told authorities and testified at trial that, sometime after the Davidson shooting, appellant had attempted to sell him the .32 caliber gun allegedly used in that incident.9 Police thereafter put a recording device on Ellison and had Ellison record a conversation with appellant. In the recorded conversation, appellant told Ellison that Baughns had been driving on the night of the Davidson murder, that appellant was supposed to be the lookout during the burglary, that a “young dude” (Fuller) had done the shooting, that the group intended to steal flat screen televisions, and that appellant disposed of the gun.10 Maurice Mitchell, who was appellant‘s cellmate after appellant‘s arrest, testified that appellant told him a similar story about the Davidson burglary, but appellant added more detail including admitting that he had kicked in the door of the Davidson residence, confirming that the victim had a knife, confirming that the victim struggled with the “juvenile” (Fuller) prior to the shooting, confirming that the weapon used was a .32 caliber gun, and admitting that he had thrown the gun away in “some water.” At the time Mitchell came forward with this information, the police had not released any information to the public about the knife or what caliber handgun was used in the shooting.
(b) Based on the evidence summarized above, a juror could find beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant participated in the burglary at 502 Rust Wood Drive. See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979). Specifically, appellant made admissions linking himself to the Davidson murder which transpired shortly after the 502 Rust Wood Drive burglary. The evidence showed the gun used to kill Davidson was the same gun stolen from 502 Rust Wood Drive and was the same gun appellant admittedly threw away. The pattern on the soles of the shoes appellant was wearing at the time he was arrested was consistent with the shoe impression authorities collected from a door that was kicked in at 502 Rust Wood Drive. Also, a few days before the burglary at 502 Rust Wood Drive and the murder at 400 Jefferson River Road, appellant was seen on video kicking in the door at 263 Arch Street and entering the home without permission. Appellant‘s actions during the Arch Street burglary were consistent with the modus operandi of the burglary at 502 Rust Wood Drive, as well as the physical evidence at that location (i.e., the shoe impression matching appellant‘s shoes). Appellant also admitted to kicking in the door at the Davidson residence. Based on this evidence, a factfinder could reasonably conclude that appellant participated in the burglary at 502 Rust Wood Drive. As such, appellant‘s enumeration of error challenging the sufficiency of the evidence as to this burglary is without merit.
(c) The evidence was otherwise sufficient to convict appellant of the crimes for which he was charged. Jackson v. Virginia, supra.
2. Appellant alleges the trial court erred when it gave a charge on conspiracy over his objection.11 According to appellant, there was no evidence that he was ever part of a conspiracy with Baughns and Fuller; however, the evidence summarized herein at Division 1 (a), supra, belies this assertion. The State introduced ample evidence that appellant was involved in a conspiracy to burgle homes in Athens-Clarke County. Some of this evidence included evidence of
3. Finally, appellant complains the trial court erred when it gave a charge on fingerprint evidence because the fingerprint evidence only concerned appellant‘s cohort Fuller. Since appellant failed to raise any objection to the fingerprint charge in the trial court, the giving of the charge may only be reviewed for plain error. See
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
DECIDED JULY 5, 2016.
Debra K. Jefferson, for appellant.
Kenneth W. Mauldin, District Attorney, Brian V. Patterson, Anthony Volkodav, Jr., Assistant District Attorneys; Samuel S. Olens, Attorney General, Patricia B. Attaway Burton, Deputy Attorney General, Paula K. Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Aimee F. Sobhani, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
