ROBERTS v. THE STATE.
A17A1608
Court of Appeals of Georgia
January 25, 2018
DILLARD, Chief Judge.
FOURTH DIVISION. DILLARD, C. J., RAY and SELF, JJ. NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk‘s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
Following trial in the Superior Court of DeKalb County, a jury convicted Santee Roberts of one count of violating the
Later that same month, 79-year-old B. W. received a phone call and noticed that the caller identification feature on her phone indicated that the caller was “Georgia Power.” When B. W. answered the phone, the caller told her that there had been a problem with her last payment for her power bill and that she would have to repay the amount due immediately to avoid having her service disrupted. The caller then instructed B. W. to place her credit card and bank ATM card in an envelope, and an employee would arrive shortly to take the envelope to the local office to make payment on her behalf. B. W. did as directed, and a short time later, a young man came to her door, asked for the envelope, and left in a vehicle that was parked on the street. That same afternoon, B. W.‘s bank called to advise that her card had been used to make suspicious purchases.
All told, over the course of the spring and summer of 2009, approximately 71 victims, including 35 victims in DeKalb County, reported being targeted by the perpetrators of this Georgia Power ruse. And based on the victims’ subsequent reporting of these incidents, as early as the spring of 2009, a supervisor of security for Georgia Power and the Clayton and Fulton County Police Departments initiated
Following the arrest, the officers transported the woman to the local police precinct to interview her. And after conducting some research, the lead detective investigating the case determined that the woman‘s true identity was Santee Roberts. But before she could be interviewed, Roberts began complaining that she felt ill and needed medical attention. Thus, the detective called emergency medical personnel, who decided to transport Roberts to the hospital for treatment. After finishing some paperwork, the detective prepared to follow the ambulance to the hospital but was stopped by a female officer, who told him that she had just been in the women‘s
For the next few months, the detective and the Georgia Power security supervisor attempted to track down Roberts, but she proved to be elusive. Then, on August 14, 2009, 65-year-old F. S. was at her home in East Point, when she received a call from a female who claimed to be a representative of her gas company and informed her that her service was going to be cut off because she had failed to pay her last bill. The caller then told F. S. that this disruption could be avoided if she provided her credit-card information over the phone. But a few minutes later, a male voice came on the line and told F. S. that the transaction had not processed and that she should put her bank card in her mailbox for a representative to retrieve. F. S. told
Not long thereafter, an officer with the East Point Police Department arrived at F. S.‘s home and began interviewing her about the suspicious phone call. And while speaking with F. S. in her front yard, the officer noticed a white vehicle pull up to her mailbox. F. S. also noticed the vehicle and mentioned to the officer that it had driven by earlier and paused near her mailbox. Upon learning this, the officer immediately called for backup to block the streets leading in to F. S.‘s neighborhood. A few minutes later, the officer returned to his patrol car and began driving around the neighborhood looking for the white vehicle. Approximately one block over from F. S.‘s home, the officer spotted the vehicle parked in the driveway of another home and saw two females walk out from behind the house. Initially, the women denied being the occupants of the vehicle. But after the homeowner came outside and told the officer that he did not know the women, they admitted that they had been in the car but claimed that a man named Steve had been driving and that he had fled after parking. In response to the officer‘s questions, the women identified themselves as Tracy Jones and Joanne Brown, but their information did not match any persons in the GCIC database. Given these circumstances, the officer detained both of them for
After transporting the two women to the police precinct, a detective determined that the actual identity of the younger of the two was Roberts, and the older woman was identified as Charlene Merkerson. Both women then complained of feeling ill and requested medical treatment. Thus, the police called emergency personnel, who examined both women and recommended that Merkerson be taken to the hospital, as she was exhibiting signs of high blood pressure, but stated that Roberts‘s vitals were normal. Upon determining Roberts‘s identity, the detective arrested her, but Merkerson, at some point after being transported to the emergency room, fled and was never apprehended.
Thereafter, Roberts obtained new counsel and filed a motion for new trial, in which she argued, inter alia, that her trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance. Nevertheless, after a hearing on the matter, in which her trial counsel testified, the trial court denied Roberts‘s motion. This appeal follows.
1. We first address Roberts‘s rather general contention that the evidence was insufficient to support her convictions. And after consideration of this argument, we find that it lacks merit.
When a criminal conviction is appealed, the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, and the appellant no longer enjoys a presumption of innocence.3 And, of course, in evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence, we do not “weigh the evidence or determine witness credibility, but only determine whether a rational trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty of the charged offenses beyond a reasonable doubt.”4 Thus, the jury‘s verdict will be upheld so long as “there
Focusing first on the offenses that formed the predicate acts of the RICO violation, as well as separate counts on their own, at the time of the indictment,
A person commits the offense of financial transaction card fraud when with intent to defraud the issuer; a person or organization providing
money, goods, services, or anything else of value; or any other person, [she] . . . [o]btains money, goods, services, or anything else of value by . . . [p]resenting the financial transaction card without the authorization or permission of the cardholder[.]
Furthermore, under the former version of
Turning to the RICO violation charge, at the time the indictment in this case issued,10
As previously mentioned, Count 1 of the indictment charged Roberts with violating the RICO Act by committing the overt acts of conspiracy to commit identity fraud, identity fraud, and financial-transaction-card fraud with respect to dozens of mostly elderly victims. Count 2 charged her with identity fraud, alleging that she “did
Here, as discussed in detail supra, the evidence showed that over the course of several months, Roberts, with Merkerson‘s assistance, participated in a scheme, in which she and her cohorts obtained elderly victims’ credit card, banking, and other financial and personal information by telephoning the victims, while posing as utility
2. Roberts also contends that the trial court erred in denying her motion to prohibit news media from taking still photographs in the courtroom during trial. Again, we disagree.
Here, during a hearing just prior to the start of her trial, Roberts moved to prohibit a local news organization from setting up a camera and microphones in the courtroom. Roberts argued generally that she believed cameras would have an adverse impact on the court. She also maintained that cameras would impact her due-process rights, claiming that she had been harassed and subjected to abuse by officers at the jail because they had been made aware, via media reports, that she was charged with defrauding elderly people. Nevertheless, the trial court denied her motion, finding that the reasons provided by Roberts did not outweigh the State‘s policy in favor of open judicial proceedings.
As previously noted, Roberts argues that the trial court‘s denial of her motion to bar cameras from the courtroom constituted error, but we disagree. Although
3. Roberts further contends that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence earlier indictments for, and her guilty pleas to, similar crimes in the Superior Court of Fulton County. Yet again, we disagree.
In this matter, just before the State rested its case, the State‘s prosecutor sought to admit into evidence two indictments from the Superior Court of Fulton County, in which Roberts had been similarly charged with identity fraud, financial-transaction-card fraud, and exploitation of an elder person, relating to some of the elderly victims
Roberts argues that the prejudice in admitting the Fulton County indictments and her guilty pleas into evidence far outweighed their probative value, and thus, such evidence should have been excluded. But the RICO statutory provisions provide for evidence under
In order to evaluate Roberts‘s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, we apply the two-pronged test established in Strickland v. Washington,22 which requires Roberts to show that her trial counsel‘s performance was “deficient and that the deficient performance so prejudiced [her] that there is a reasonable likelihood that, but for counsel‘s errors, the outcome of the trial would have been different.”23 In addition, there is a strong presumption that trial counsel‘s conduct falls within the broad range of reasonable professional conduct, and a criminal defendant must overcome this presumption.24 Unless clearly erroneous, this Court “will uphold a trial
(a) Failing to object to leading questions. During Roberts‘s trial, the State called as a witness the Fulton County Police Department detective who ultimately tracked down Roberts to the motel on Fulton Industrial Boulevard. And during the detective‘s direct testimony, the following colloquy with the State‘s prosecutor regarding his initial encounter with Roberts in the doorway of her motel room occurred:
Q. And at the point, did she identify herself?
A. Well, at that point, I identified myself as Detective Benefield, Fulton County Police, and asked for her name.
Q. What did she say?
A. The name that was given to us the first time was, I believe, Nadine Simmons.
Q. And after she identified herself as Nadine Simmons, what did you all do?
A. It‘s a common practice to try to establish the identity of the person. I asked if she had any ID. She stated no. Asked for a date of birth.
Q. Did she give a date of birth?
A. Yes, sir. Eventually. The first couple of times when we asked the question, the question was repeated back to us. What‘s your name? What‘s my name? What‘s your name? It was repeated. What‘s your date of birth? What‘s my date of birth? It‘s a common tactic we‘ve seen before. We finally got the date of birth. Once we got the name of Nadine Simmons and the date of birth that was given to us, we had our communications system run that name through the Georgia system, see if it came back to a valid person.
Q. When you said earlier that it was common for you to have someone repeat your question back to you, when this person was repeating the question back to you, did you get the impression that they didn‘t understand the question?
A. No, sir.
Q. What was your impression?
A. My experience as a law enforcement officer is usually when people are trying to think about something in the meantime, whether - sometimes it‘s an indicator that they‘re not being totally truthful. It‘s a stall tactic while they‘re trying to think up stuff as they go along. That‘s been my experience.
Q. Okay. And after you ran the name and the date of birth that was provided to you and you found that there was no person with that name and date of birth in the data system, what did y‘all do then?26
A. Advised her I needed to get some sort of ID. We then entered the room to make sure there were not additional people in that room, conducted a safety sweep.
Roberts‘s trial counsel lodged no objection to this testimony, but did conduct a lengthy cross-examination of the detective.
Roberts argues that the last question in the aforementioned exchange was leading, essentially allowed the State‘s prosecutor to testify, and that her trial counsel‘s failure to object constituted ineffective assistance. And during the hearing on Roberts‘s motion for new trial, her former trial counsel testified that perhaps he should have objected to the question. But counsel further testified that after reading
It is well established that as a general rule, “matters of reasonable trial strategy and tactics do not amount to ineffective assistance of counsel.”27 Specifically, an attorney‘s decision to “forego objecting to hearsay or to leading questions used to establish routine points constitutes reasonable trial strategy.”28 And here, counsel‘s supposition that he may not have objected to the question in order to avoid drawing further attention to the issue is certainly reasonable trial strategy, which we are not at liberty to second-guess.29 But even if trial counsel should have objected to the
For all these reasons, we affirm Roberts‘s convictions and the denial of her motion for new trial.
Judgment affirmed. Ray and Self, JJ., concur.
