S19A0158. OUTLER v. THE STATE.
S19A0158
Supreme Court of Georgia
April 29, 2019
305 Ga. 701
BLACKWELL, Justice.
Cliftоn Leandre Outler was tried by a Jefferson County jury and convicted of murder, aggravated assault, armed robbery, and three counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, all in connection with the fatal shooting of Anthony Holmes. Outler appeals, contending that the State failed to present evidence legally sufficient to sustain his convictions, that the trial court erred when it allowed a prosecuting attorney to question a witness in the presence of the jury after the witness invoked his constitutional privilege against self-incrimination, аnd that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel. Upon our review of the record and the briefs, we find no merit in these claims of error, but we note that the aggravated assault should have merged with the murder and that Outler should have been convicted on only one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. Accordingly, we
1.
Viewed in the light most favorable tо the verdict, the evidence shows that Outler moved into Holmes‘s house in Dublin around the end of April 2011. Outler was from Wadley (a city south of Louisville in Jefferson County), and he was the only connection that Holmes had to Wadley. Holmes told members of his family that he and Outler were lovers, and — during their brief relationship —
On May 16, 2011, Holmes‘s decomposing body was found near a creek behind an unoccupied log cabin in Wadley. He had been shot in the head and repeatedly beaten with a blunt instrument. The medical examiner testified that Holmes could have survived the gunshot wound if he had received treatment but that a depression fracture to his skull, which was caused by the beating, would have been “devastating” and fatal.
Holmes had last been seen on the morning of May 11 in Dublin, аnd it appears that his and Outler‘s relationship had soured in the days preceding his disappearance. On May 9 and 10, Holmes had been looking at apartments in Macon so that he could leave Dublin (and Outler), and he had around $6,000 in cash that he planned to deposit in a new сhecking account. Meanwhile, Outler was apparently borrowing Holmes‘s car without permission, and on May 9, Outler provided his cousin Jeremy Reid with a check on Holmes‘s (old) checking account and asked Reid to cash it for him (although
While Holmes‘s activities after his May 10 conversation with the police officer are largely unknown, Outler was seen in numerous locations throughout Wadley on May 11. That afternoon, Outler and his brother Antoine Brown were picked up by Brown‘s girlfriend, who was accompanied by her niece and her niece‘s daughter. Outler directed the girlfriend to drive to the cabin by the creek where Holmes‘s body was later found. Outler went behind the cabin for around ten minutes before returning (without explanation) to the girlfriend‘s SUV. The girlfriend then drove Outler and Brown from
On May 18, police officers conducted a search of the home of Outler and Brown‘s mother, and they found clothes that had been soaked in bleach, two empty bottles of bleach, and sеveral .22-caliber bullets in a drawer. Soon thereafter, Brown told police that Outler had asked for his help to “hit a lick” and later said that he had committed a robbery and had to “off” someone. Phone records established that Holmes‘s phone was taken to Wadley on thе morning of May 11 and to Swainsboro that afternoon, with numerous calls made from that phone to Outler‘s friends and family, including 19 calls to Brown.
(a) Outler complains that the evidence presented at trial is insufficient to sustain his convictions because it was only circumstantial but failed to exсlude every reasonable hypothesis other than his guilt. See
At trial, Outler argued that it was Brown who killed Holmes. But there was no evidence that Brown ever met Holmes or had even been to Dublin (where Holmes lived). And Holmes‘s only connection to Wadley (where his body was found), was Outler, not Brown. In addition, within two weeks of moving in with Holmes, Outler asked
(b) Although the jury was authorized by the evidence to find Outler guilty of an aggravated assault upon Holmes with a firearm, the trial court erred when it failed to merge this aggravated assault with the murder. Merger generally is required when there is no deliberate interval between the non-fatal injury that forms the basis
We also conclude that the trial court erred when it convicted and sentenced Outler on three counts of possession of a firearm during the cоmmission of a felony. The indictment charged Outler with unlawfully possessing a firearm during the commission of the murder, armed robbery, and aggravated assault. But
where multiple crimes are committed together during the course of one continuous crime spree, a defendant may be convicted once for possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime as to every individual victim of the crime spree, as provided under
OCGA § 16-11-106 (b) (1) , and additionally once forfirearm possession for every crime enumerated in [paragraphs] (b) (2) through (5).
State v. Marlowe, 277 Ga. 383, 386 (2) (c) (589 SE2d 69) (2003). Here, the murder, armed robbery, and aggravated assаult were all part of one continuous crime spree involving a single victim, and Outler was not convicted of any crimes enumerated in paragraphs (b) (2)-(5) of
2.
Outler claims that his rights under the Confrontation Clause were violated when the prosecuting attorney continued quеstioning Reid about a statement that Reid had given to an investigator even after Reid invoked his privilege against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment. Outler asserts that this continued questioning essentially allowed the prosecuting attorney to testify for Reid about
In this case, however, the prosecuting attorney did not ask leading questions of Reid that allowed the State effectively to present the content of Reid‘s prior statement. Reid first invoked his privilege against self-incrimination when the prosecuting attorney asked Reid if he had lied when he told the investigator that he hаd seen Outler with Holmes on the morning of May 11. But by that
3.
Finally, Outler alleges that his trial counsel was ineffective when he failed to object to the redirect-examination of a witness about a “rumor” that the prosecuting attorney claimed to have heard. To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance, Outler must prove both that the performance of his lawyer was deficient and that
Here, after the witness at issue testified that Outler came to his house in Wadley on May 11, the prosecuting attorney said that there “was a rumor, and this is a rumor, . . . that Mr. Outler had
Decided April 29, 2019.
Murder. Jefferson Superior Court. Before Judge Palmer.
David J. Walker, for appellant.
S. Hayward Altman, District Attorney, Kelly A. Jenkins, Tony A. May, Assistant District Attorneys; Christopher M. Carr, Attorney General, Patricia B. Attaway Burton, Deputy Attorney General, Paula K. Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Michael A. Oldham, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
