Appellant Joseph Tiger Prince was found guilty of malice murder in connection with the homicide of Edgar “Uncle Buddy” Reagan a/k/a Riggins, and was sentenced to life imprisonment without the *231 possibility of parole. 1 After reviewing the errors he asserts on appeal, we conclude none has merit and affirm the judgment of conviction.
1. The victim’s body was found in his Albany home on Dorsett Avenue on August 11, 1995, after neighbors had not seen him on his front porch where he normally spent a great deal of time. Police found the victim’s home to have been ransacked. The medical examiner who performed the autopsy testified the body had sustained over 55 stab wounds and slashes on the head, neck, back, chest, upper arms, and palms. One stab wound had punctured the subclavin vein in the victim’s neck and others had punctured his lungs and thoracic aorta, causing the victim to bleed to death. A neighbor testified the victim sold collard greens and cigarettes from his home. A friend of appellant testified appellant came to her home one August morning with a shaving kit full of cigarettes and money and told her he wanted to have a good time because he was going to get “locked up.” This witness and a former girlfriend of appellant testified appellant had a deep cut on his hand for which he refused medical attention. The former girlfriend testified that several days after she saw appellant and his wounded hand, appellant threatened to “cut” her “just like [he] cut that old [man] on Dorsett.” A bloodstained curtain at the victim’s home contained blood from two individuals, and a GBI DNA analyst who ran tests on the stains and known blood samples from appellant and the victim testified the stains were consistent with having been contributed by the victim and appellant. After being arrested and advised of his constitutional rights, appellant gave a 12-page handwritten statement to police and then, over the next several days, made two oral statements that were audiotaped by the investigating officers.
2
A convicted felon with charges pending in Dougherty County notified authorities a week before appellant’s 1999 trial that
*232
he had information about the case and, at trial, identified appellant as the man he saw running down the steps and around the side of the victim’s home the night the victim was killed in 1995. The evidence was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of malice murder.
Jackson v. Virginia,
2. Appellant complains the trial court erred in admitting appellant’s three custodial statements, asserting they were inadmissible because they were the product of an unlawful arrest, they were coerced, and they were given after appellant’s request for counsel was ignored. After holding three hearings at which testimony was given regarding appellant’s statements, the trial court found appellant had given four statements and ruled the first statement inadmissible because appellant had invoked his right to counsel, and the statements admitted at trial (the second, third, and fourth statements) admissible because appellant had initiated contact with the investigating officers, had been advised of his rights on each occasion, and had waived his rights freely and voluntarily.
The trial court makes findings of fact and credibility regarding the admissibility of a defendant’s inculpatory statements, and those determinations are upheld on appeal unless clearly erroneous.
Perry v. State,
Appellant also contends the statements were inadmissible because they were the product of an unlawful arrest not supported by probable cause.
3
See
State v. Harris,
3. Appellant contends trial counsel provided ineffective assistance of counsel. In order to prevail on such a claim, appellant “must show that counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficient performance so prejudiced the client that there is a reasonable likelihood that, but for counsel’s errors, the outcome of the trial would have been different. [Cits.]”
Chapman v. State,
Appellant maintains counsel performed deficiently when counsel failed to introduce at trial or during the Jackson-Denno hearing evidence of appellant’s mental incapacity. Appellant also contends counsel was deficient when counsel failed to strike a detention officer from the jury venire and then failed to seek that juror’s removal after the juror revealed during the trial that he, while serving as a detention officer in the facility holding appellant, had talked with appellant about the pre-trial progress of appellant’s case. At the hearing on appellant’s motion for new trial, appellant introduced a copy of a psychiatric report on appellant. In the report dated March 18, 1997, a psychiatrist opined that appellant was “in a state of cocaine intoxication and had perceptual disturbance that would fall under the legal term of insanity” both before and after the victim’s murder, and that “there was and still is a brain dementia, cocaine related, that accounts for his strange confession and denial of the murder.” Appellant’s trial counsel testified at the hearing that the psychiatrist and the report were not used at trial because the defense, after consulting with appellant, was proceeding under a theory of innocence rather than mental illness. Trial counsel characterized the presentation of evidence of mental illness while contending appellant did not commit the crime as “an insult to the jury” that would have “muddied the water.”
According to the American Bar Association’s Standards for Criminal Justice, endorsed by this Court in
Reid v. State,
*234 decisions which are to be made by the accused after full consultation with counsel are: (i) what plea to enter; (ii) whether to waive jury trial; (and) (iii) whether to testify. . . . What trial motions should be made, and all other strategic and tactical decisions are the exclusive province of the lawyer after consultation with [the] client.
Id. It is undisputed that appellant entered a plea of not guilty after consulting with his attorneys. Counsel’s decision not to use evidence of appellant’s purported cocaine intoxication that conflicted with appellant’s plea of not guilty is a matter of trial strategy within the exclusive province of the lawyer after consultation with the client, and falls within the bounds of reasonable professional conduct. See
Jenkins v. State,
Trial counsel testified on the motion for new trial that he could not speak to the failure to use the psychiatric opinion at the
JacksonDenno
hearing because he did not represent appellant at the time of the
Jackson-Denno
hearing. Trial co-counsel, who was a member of the defense team at the time of the
Jackson-Denno
hearing, testified she had not been aware of the existence of the psychiatric report until the day before the hearing on the motion for new trial. Trial counsel at the time of the
Jackson-Denno
hearing who might have known about the psychiatric report did not testify on the motion for new trial. Consequently, appellant did not make the necessary affirmative showing that the failure to use the psychiatric report at the
Jackson-Denno
hearing was deficient performance on the part of trial counsel and not the result of conscious and deliberate trial strategy.
Morgan v. State,
Appellant’s second example of purported ineffective assistance of counsel concerns the presence on the jury of a detention officer stationed in the jail where appellant was housed prior to trial. After the close of the evidence, the trial court, faced with an allegation that certain jurors had not disclosed “prior dealings with or knowledge of or friendship with the defendant,” conducted individualized exami *235 nations of each juror. 4 During his interview, the juror/detention officer acknowledged he had interacted with appellant at his job prior to trial by supervising the inmate and talking with appellant about appellant having filed motions and how things went in court when appellant made court appearances. The juror stated he had not formed any feelings about the case prior to trial and there was nothing that would affect his ability to be fair and impartial based on the evidence presented at trial.
At the hearing on the motion for new trial, trial counsel testified he had noted on his jury selection sheet during voir dire that the venireman worked at the jail and knew the defendant, the two investigating officers, and the attorney’s law partner, and that the attorney had drawn a question mark on the sheet under the juror’s information, signifying he had some concern about the venireman and wanted to talk to appellant about him. The attorney testified his failure to strike the venireman indicated appellant “had no problem with him and I had no problem with him either . . . a lot of time if a juror knows a defendant, sometimes that can work in your favor. . . .” The attorney characterized that his decision to keep the venireman on the jury panel was a matter of trial strategy. Trial co-counsel recalled at the hearing on the motion for new trial the juror as having had “very limited” contact with appellant, and surmised that the only reason the juror would have remained on the jury was because appellant believed he would be favorable.
Relying on
Kirkland v. State,
4. Lastly, appellant contends the trial court erred when it did not sua sponte remove the detention officer/juror once the court was made aware of the juror’s relationship with appellant and the juror’s prior knowledge of the case.
“If at any time, whether before or after final submission of the case to the jury, a juror dies, becomes ill, upon other good cause shown to the court is found to be unable to perform his duty, or is discharged for other legal cause, the first alternate juror shall take the place of the first juror becoming incapacitated. . . .” OCGA § 15-12-172. The statute gives the trial court general authority to dismiss a juror and replace the dismissed juror with an alternate.
Reynolds v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The crime occurred on August 10, 1995, and appellant was arrested on August 25, 1995, for refusing to submit to a polygraph examination, a condition of probation imposed for an earlier conviction. The Dougherty County grand jury returned a true bill of indictment charging appellant with malice murder on October 12, 1995. Appellant’s trial commenced on January 11,1999, and concluded on January 13 with the jury’s return' of a guilty verdict and the filing of appellant’s sentence. His motion for new trial, filed February 3, 1999, and amended by appellate counsel on August 15, 2002, was the subject of a hearing held on April 24, 2002, and was denied by order entered October 21, 2002. That order was set aside due to failure to notify defense counsel of its entry and, on April 1, 2003, the trial court entered an amended order denying the amended motion for new trial. A notice of appeal was filed on April 1, and the case was docketed in this Court on April 9. Oral argument was heard on July 15, 2003.
The audiotapes were played to the jury and transcripts of the contents were provided to the jury. The court reporter did not transcribe the tapes as they were played to the jury and the tapes have not been made a part of the appellate record. According to appellant’s brief, appellant admitted in the first audiotaped statement that he was present when the victim was killed and, in the second audiotaped statement, admitted he had killed the victim.
Our review of the record has not found this to be a ground raised in the trial court for suppression of the statements, and there is no testimony in the pre-trial hearings on this ground. Consequently, the trial court’s ruling does not refer to this ground and makes no finding on this ground. Compare
Monroe v. State,
Based on. the information gathered during these examinations, an alternate juror was dismissed.
