ORLANDO RAMIREZ v. THE STATE.
S17A1662
Supreme Court of Georgia
March 5, 2018
303 Ga. 232
GRANT, Justice.
FINAL COPY; Murdеr. Whitfield Superior Court. Before Judge Boyett. Micah J. Gates, for appellant. Herbert M. Poston, Jr., District Attorney; Christopher M. Carr, Attorney General, Patricia B. Attaway Burton, Deputy Attorney General, Paula K. Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Matthew D. O‘Brien, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
Orlando Ramirez appeals his convictions for malice murder, attempted murder, and other crimes associated with a shooting in which Bruno Rodriguez was killed and Daniel Maldonado-Flores was injured. In his sole enumeration of errоr, Ramirez argues that the trial court erred in excluding evidence of other incidents of criminal activity at the bar where the shooting took place. We disagree, and therefore affirm.1
I.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the evidence аdmitted at trial showed that in the early morning hours of March 23, 2014, Ramirez arrived at Las Delicias bar with his friend Fernando Resendiz and two others. Resendiz stayed in the car texting while Ramirez took Resendiz‘s .380 pistol from the console and attempted to enter the bar. Flores, who was working as a security guard checking identification at the door, blocked Ramirez‘s entry and asked for his identification. Ramirez first showed Flores a picture of Santa Muerte (Holy Death) and said in Spanish, “it‘s death.” Flores again asked for Ramirez‘s identificаtion, which Ramirez then produced, showing that he was 20 years old. Flores refused Ramirez entry into the bar for being underage.
Ramirez began shouting at Flores, took a step back, pulled out a gun, and pressed it against Flores‘s chest. Flores grabbed Ramirez‘s hand and the two men wrestled for the gun, which discharged into Flores‘s leg. The struggle for the gun continued into the parking lot and the gun discharged a second time, striking no one. Flores fell to the ground and another security guard, Rodriguez, rushed toward Ramirez. Rodriguez tried to get the gun from
Resendiz, who had driven away when the gunfire began, returned to the bar and picked uр Ramirez. Two other passengers in the car testified that Ramirez seemed excited, exclaimed that he wished he had had more bullets, threatened the passengers’ families if they told police, and said that he was happy about what happenеd because the security guard “deserved it.” Ramirez said that his brother had been “jumped” at Las Delicias and a security guard had left him lying there.2
II.
Ramirez claims error in the trial court‘s ruling excluding evidence of other incidents of criminal activity at Las Delicias bar. He sought to introduce police testimony about ten incidents at Las Delicias between November 2010 and April 2014, including one case of cocaine possession; several bar fights, including instances in which other bar security guards—not Flores or Rodriguez—tased or pepper sprayed fractious patrons; a robbery in the bar‘s restroom; a shot fired (without injury) in the parking lot after hours; and one occasion in which Rodriguez was cited for admitting an individual into the bar without first checking his identification. We find no error in the trial court‘s exclusion of the proffered evidence.
Ramirez sought to show that the dangerous, violent environment at Las Delicias influenced his state of mind and made his extremе reaction to perceived threats from Flores and Rodriguez reasonable under the circumstances. See
Moreover, to the extent that the bar‘s reputation for violent incidents influenced Ramirez‘s state of mind, that reрutation and its effect on Ramirez was well established through other evidence admitted at trial. Ramirez testified that although he had never been to Las Delicias before the night of the shooting, he had heard that the bar was a violent place, and that gang fights, drug use, and corrupt security guards were commonplace there. Ramirez was a member of the Surenos gang, and he testified that he was aware that a rival gang, the Tiny Winos, often went to Las Delicias and liked to “pick fights.” None of the other witnesses who аddressed the issue denied that the bar was a violent place, such that evidence of specific instances of violence could be relevant for impeachment purposes. To the contrary, Flores testified that bar fights and patrons throwing оr hitting others with bottles were frequent events. One police detective testified that members of the Surenos and the Tiny Winos gangs were often present at Las Delicias, and another detective testified that Ramirez‘s brother had been hospitalized after being badly beaten at the bar the month before the shooting. Thus, even if the proffered incidents had some marginal relevance to Ramirez‘s self-defense claim, any slight probative value
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Melton, P.J., and Blackwell, J., who concur in judgment only in Division 2.
