Following a trial by jury, Charles Earl Owens was convicted on two counts of robbery by sudden snatching. On appeal, Owens contends that (1) the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions, (2) trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance for a number of reasons, and (3) the trial court erred in failing to determine whether Owens and his trial counsel had a conflict of interest. Because Owens’s trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance of counsel, we reverse his convictions.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict,
Three days later, on February 9, 2009, at approximately 6:00 a.m., a man entered a Gwinnett County convenience store and asked the operator whether he could use the restroom. When the operator responded that the restroom was out of order, the man uttered profanities and made as if to leave; however, he reentered the store after walking outside and covering his face with a pair of pantyhose. The man kept one hand in his pocket, jumped on the counter top, demanded that the operator open the register and give him money, and advised the operator that he had a gun and would shoot if his demands were not met. Once the register
With no leads in the Waffle House incident, law enforcement decided to air surveillance video on the local news in the hope that a viewer could identify a suspect. After the video aired on February 18, a law-enforcement officer from Cobb County called and identified Owens. Thereafter, law enforcement conducted research on Owens, contacted a probation officer who was familiar with him, and sent her still shots from the Waffle House surveillance video, from which she too opined that Owens was the perpetrator. Law enforcement eventually connected the two robberies on the belief that, due to certain similarities, they were committed by the same person.
Warrants were then issued for Owens’s arrest, which were served at a residence he shared with other individuals. A search warrant was executed after Owens’s arrest, and police impounded a vehicle to which Owens had access but which was registered to someone else. Inside the vehicle, officers discovered a firearm. An officer also seized the shoes Owens wore after recognizing the tread pattern from the investigation. A subsequent comparison of the shoes to the print lifted at the crime scene revealed similar wear, pattern, and size, but the expert forensic examiner could not positively identify Owens’s shoes as an exact match due to a lack of more detailed features (e.g., cuts, scratches, and nicks within the pattern).
Owens was thereafter indicted on one count of robbery by sudden snatching
1. Owens contends that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to object to improper opinion testimony as to the identity of the perpetrator. We agree.
In general, when a defendant claims that he received ineffective assistance of counsel, he has the burden of establishing that “(1) his attorney’s representation in specified instances fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and (2) there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
In the case sub judice, Owens takes issue with his trial counsel’s failure to, inter alia, object to the testimony by the Cobb County law-enforcement officer and the probation officer, who opined that Owens was the perpetrator in the surveillance video from the Waffle House incident. The first witness testified that she had known Owens for about five years and that she recognized him in the video “by his mannerisms, the way he walked.” The second witness testified that she had “no question” that Owens was the individual in the surveillance footage. And when questioned as to why, she responded that she had seen Owens about two weeks prior and recognized his face, although she denied that there was anything distinctive or characteristic about his face. She also did not recall the individual in the surveillance
In a motion for new trial, Owens argued that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the above testimony because it was inadmissible opinion evidence concerning the identity of the perpetrator in the Waffle House surveillance tape. At the hearing on the motion, his former trial counsel testified that she had no strategic or tactical reason for not objecting. In ruling against Owens, the trial court determined that the testimony was admissible and relevant, and that counsel was not ineffective for failing to object. Specifically, the trial court found that the two witnesses “had independent prior contact with [Owens] and knew him from this prior interaction,” and that the witnesses “had knowledge outside of the ken of the jurors and properly testified why they believed they recognized [Owens] in the surveillance videos [sic].” At least as to the second witness, the probation officer, the trial court’s ruling was erroneous.
It is well established in our case law that it is improper to allow a witness to “testify as to the identity of a person in a video or photograph when such opinion evidence tends only to establish a fact which average jurors could decide thinking for themselves and drawing their own conclusions.”
should be admitted for the jury’s consideration only if there is some basis for concluding that the witness is more likely to correctly identify the defendant from the [video or] photograph than is the jury, as when the witness is familiar with the defendant’s appearance around the time a surveillance [video or] photograph was taken and the defendant’s appearance has changed prior to trial, or when the witness knows about some other distinctive but presently inaccessible characteristic of the defendant’s appearance.8
Thus, a witness’s familiarity with the defendant, in and of itself, “does not make his or her identification testimony based on a video or photograph admissible.”
And here, there was no evidence that the perpetrator’s face was obscured by a mask or that Owens’s appearance had changed prior to trial. Although the State argues that the perpetrator in the surveillance video wore sunglasses and a hat, we have rejected a similar argument in the past,
Indeed, this inadmissible testimony went to the heart of Owens’s defense of misidentification and, thus, because counsel’s failure to object was due to a “misapprehension of the law rather than any unwise choices of trial tactics and strategy, we conclude that [Owens’s] trial counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.”
Although there was other evidence tending to identify Owens as the perpetrator, it was limited to the brief, aforementioned testimony of the Cobb County law-enforcement officer; a recording of a jailhouse telephone call in which Owens spoke to his roommate and discussed how the roommate had “pulled one” with regard to ‘Tot-toms’’;
Suffice it to say, the determination that the perpetrator depicted in the surveillance videos was in fact Owens was a question for the jury. Owens’s trial counsel, however, permitted the jury’s decision in that regard to be made contextually with unequivocal, inadmissible testimony that Owens was the person depicted in the surveillance video.
2. Although we reverse on the issue of ineffective assistance of counsel, we disagree with Owens’s contention that the evidence was insufficient to sustain convictions
A person commits the offense of robbery by sudden snatching when he or she “with intent to commit theft, . . . takes property of another from the person or the immediate presence of another... [b]y sudden snatching.”
3. Given our holding in Division 1, we need not address Owens’s remaining enumerations of error.
Judgment reversed and case remanded.
Notes
See, e.g., Smith v. State,
OCGA § 16-8-40 (a) (3).
OCGA § 16-8-41 (a).
The jury convicted Owens of the lesser-included offense of robbery by sudden snatching on the armed-robbery count.
Grimes v. State,
Id.
Dawson v. State,
Grimes,
Grimes,
See id. (rejecting State’s argument that identification testimony was admissible when perpetrator’s head was covered and photographs were grainy). Compare Roberts v. State,
Compare Dawson,
See Bradford v. State,
See Grimes, 291 Ga. App. at 592 (2); see also Mitchell v. State,
Grimes,
Id. (punctuation omitted).
The State argues that the jury could have inferred from this recording that Owens and his roommate were speaking in code, and that the roommate had discarded the distinctive pants worn by the perpetrator during the robberies.
See Grimes,
See id.; see also Wadlington v. State,
Grimes,
OCGA § 16-8-40 (a) (3).
See, e.g., Sweet v. State,
