**136James Don Parker was tried by a Jones County jury and convicted of the murder of Alan Helmuth. Parker appeals, claiming that the trial court erred when it charged the jury and that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel. We see no reversible error and affirm.
*3161. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence shows that Parker and Helmuth were best friends and neighbors in rural Jones County, near Haddock. At the time of his death, Helmuth was 61 years of age, and he suffered from a variety of medical conditions, including gout, diabetes, and a lung disease that often left him short-winded and dizzy. Parker, who described himself as "a lot healthier and a lot younger" than Helmuth,
On the evening of February 10, 2014, Parker invited Helmuth to drink moonshine at Parker's house. Helmuth told his wife that he would not be gone for long, but he never returned. Around seven o'clock on the morning of February 11, Parker appeared at the home of another neighbor and asked that neighbor to "call the law." When police officers responded to Parker's home, they found Helmuth's body. He had been shot once in the forehead and once in the side of his face.
At his trial, Parker testified that he killed Helmuth in self-defense. By Parker's account, Helmuth was in good spirits when he came over, and he did not appear to be angry when Parker told him that he was not as tough as he used to be. As the men continued drinking, however, Helmuth's mood changed. According to Parker, Helmuth spoke of his need to demonstrate that he "really [was] a badass," and he then hit Parker in the face. Helmuth continued to hit Parker and eventually knocked him out. Up to that point, Parker said, he never hit back. When Parker came to, Helmuth was slapping him in the face and telling him to get up. When Parker did not respond, Helmuth kicked him and announced that the beating would continue until Parker stood. At that point, Parker stood, and Helmuth continued to beat him with his fists. Parker testified that he repeatedly tried to escape, but Helmuth blocked him each time. Finally, Parker said, Helmuth knocked him into his bedroom, where Parker was able to retrieve his Marlin .22-caliber lever-action rifle. (On cross-examination, Parker acknowledged that-at the time that he was in his bedroom getting the gun-Helmuth was approximately 15 feet away in the living room, and Parker testified that he "didn't think to" close or lock the door to his bedroom.)
*317Much of the physical and medical evidence is inconsistent with Parker's account. For example, photographs and testimony admitted at trial show that, when Parker was arrested and booked on the morning of February 11, he had only minor bruising and a few superficial cuts on his face (none of which required medical treatment other than cleaning). And he had no significant bruising or defensive injuries on his torso or arms consistent with being kicked or punched in the way he described.
Parker does not dispute that the evidence is sufficient to sustain his conviction. But consistent with our usual practice in murder cases, we independently have reviewed the record to assess the legal sufficiency of the evidence. We conclude that the evidence presented **138at trial, when viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Parker was guilty of murder. See Jackson v. Virginia,
2. Parker claims that the trial court erred when it charged the jury about how it should consider evidence of his good character. The trial court gave the pattern jury instruction on good character evidence, charging the jury as follows:
You have heard evidence of the character of the defendant in an effort to show that the defendant likely acted in keeping with such character or trait at pertinent times, or with reference to the issues of this case. This evidence has been offered in the form of opinion of other witnesses, reputation, and specific incidences of conduct of the defendant showing such trait. You should consider any such evidence along with all the other evidence in deciding whether or not you have a reasonable doubt about the guilt of the defendant.
See Georgia Suggested Pattern Jury Instructions, Vol. II: Criminal Cases (4th ed. 2007, updated Aug. 2018) § 1.37.10 (same). Parker argues that the pattern charge is inadequate because it does not include language that is required, he says, by State v. Hobbs,
3. Parker also challenges a charge in which the jury was instructed that "[a] person who fatally wounds another, even in self-defense, is not entitled to hasten the victim's death by continuing to pump bullets into the victim's body."
Parker also argues that the jury charge on hastening a death violated OCGA § 17-8-57 because it intimated that the trial judge believed that Parker had no reason to fire the second shot at Helmuth. But the trial court informed the jury that "[w]hat the facts are in this case is a matter solely for you, the jury, to determine," that "[a] person is justified in ... using force against another person when and to the extent he reasonably believes that such ... force is necessary to defend himself," and that "[t]he State has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not justified." There is no likelihood that the jury considered the charge on hastening a death as an indication that the trial court believed the State's theory that Parker was not in fear for his safety when he fired the second shot. See Scudder v. State,
4. Parker claims that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel when his lawyer failed to call an expert witness, strike a juror based upon his relationship with the Jones County Sheriff's Department, and sufficiently investigate the case. To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance, Parker must prove both that his lawyer's performance was deficient and that he was prejudiced by this deficient performance. Strickland v. Washington,
(b) Parker also maintains that his trial lawyer should have moved to strike one *320of the jurors for cause or exercised one of his peremptory challenges against that juror. During voir dire, juror C.G. acknowledged that, in his job as a high school principal, he interacted "almost day-to-day working with the Jones County Sheriff's Department" and that this interaction would place him "in a predicament" if he served on the jury.
After C.G. acknowledged his relationship with law enforcement, he unequivocally agreed that he could "set everything aside and be a fair and impartial juror," and a motion to strike him for cause need not have been granted. See Burney v. State,
(c) Finally, Parker claims that his trial lawyer failed to sufficiently investigate his case. Had the lawyer done so, Parker says, he would have learned that Darryl Howell-whom the lawyer called as a character witness-could also have testified as a fact witness. At the hearing on Parker's motion for new trial, Howell testified that he was present at Parker's house soon after the first responders arrived and that he was shocked at Parker's condition. Howell said he had "seen some ass-whippings in [his] day, but that is the second worse one I ever saw." But Parker himself could have informed his lawyer about Howell's presence at his home (although there is no evidence that he did so), and a lawyer's performance is not deficient for failing to discover information that easily could have been provided by his client. See Strickland,
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur.
Helmuth was killed on February 10 or 11, 2014. In June 2014, a Jones County grand jury indicted Parker, charging him with two counts of murder (one count of malice murder and one count of felony murder). Parker was tried in January 2015, and the jury found him guilty on both counts. The trial court sentenced Parker to imprisonment for life for malice murder, and it purported to merge the felony murder into the malice murder, although the felony murder count actually was vacated by operation of law. See Malcolm v. State,
The record shows that Parker was 56 years of age, but evidence of his exact age does not appear to have been presented to the jury.
At trial, Parker and the State disputed the sequence in which the shots were fired. The State presented evidence that the first shot was to Helmuth's forehead, but Parker testified that the shot to the forehead came second. The State also presented evidence that neither of the shots would have been instantly fatal but that the shot to the forehead would have immobilized Helmuth.
The medical examiner testified that this bullet "went through the soft tissue of the left face, the left neck, and actually exited, and then immediately reentered the body, at the base of the left neck and continued into the chest. And the bullet went through and lodged in the left lung."
The trial court charged the jury about no duty to retreat.
This charge was crafted by the State based upon dicta contained in Brown v. State,
Parker explicitly consented to the charge before the initial charge, and he did not object after the initial charge. When the jury requested definitions of various terms soon after it began deliberations, it was Parker who requested that the "whole group" of charges (including the charge on hastening a death) be included in the recharge. As the trial judge listed the various charges that should be included in the recharge, Parker then added with respect to the charge on hastening a death: "I don't need that one again." But when Parker subsequently went over the charges that should be included and the trial court again commented that the charge on hastening a death should be given, Parker responded, "Yeah." And when the trial court summarized that the only changes to the recharge would be the removal of the charges on the form of the verdict and intoxication (without saying anything about the removal of the charge on hastening a death), Parker said, "Right," and he confirmed that he had no objections or concerns to the recharge both before and after it was given. We will assume without deciding that Parker did not affirmatively waive the alleged error. See Woodard v. State,
Parker also asserts that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel when his lawyer failed to object to the jury charge on hastening a death, as described in Division 3. But the "test for harm under plain error review is equivalent to the test in ineffective assistance of counsel cases for whether an attorney's deficient performance has resulted in prejudice of constitutional proportions." Martin v. State,
When discussing the "impossibility" of Parker's claim that Helmuth was standing when he was shot in the face, the prosecuting attorney also (twice) said in his closing argument that the only way Helmuth could have been standing is if he was bent at nearly a 90 degree angle, with his face down. This is not too different from the position that Parker's expert said Helmuth could have been in if he was shot while lunging at Parker.
The trial court made no finding about the credibility of the expert witness in its order denying Parker's motion for new trial. On appeal, it is difficult for us to determine how credible a jury would find the expert's testimony, especially given that the State's cross-examination of the expert at the hearing on Parker's motion for new trial consisted almost solely of getting the expert to admit that he believed it was possible that the killing happened in the way alleged by the State. We do note, however, that the expert's "re-enactment" illustration, which he used to argue that Helmuth could have been standing when he was shot in the face, illustrates a model with a bullet entering the face and exiting the lower jaw (but not the neck), whereas the medical examiner explicitly testified at trial that the bullet that entered Helmuth's face exited through the neck and did not exit through the lower jaw.
Those "lies" were: that Parker did not fight back (which was undermined by the medical/blood evidence and evidence that Helmuth's glasses, shoe, and hat had been knocked off before he was shot); that Helmuth prevented Parker from escaping (which was undermined by physical evidence at the crime scene); that Helmuth beat Parker throughout the house (which was undermined by evidence that nothing was disturbed in areas in which Parker claimed to have been beaten); that Helmuth knocked Parker into the bedroom (which was undermined by evidence that none of the items hanging in the small alcove outside the bedroom were disturbed); that Parker kept his .22 by his bed and not behind his bedroom door (which was undermined by evidence that the gun had left marks on the wall behind the bedroom door); that Helmuth was lunging at Parker when Parker shot him in the face (which goes to the expert's testimony about Helmuth's possible orientation when this shot was fired); and that Parker had no choice but to shoot Helmuth (which was undermined by evidence that Helmuth never entered the bedroom-or the alcove outside the bedroom-and that Helmuth was 15-20 feet away from Parker at the time that Parker went into the bedroom to get the .22).
It also appears that Parker's children had previously attended the high school where C.G. worked. But C.G. did not recall having known them, and Parker does not assert that C.G. was biased as a result of any (potential) relationship with Parker's children.
