A jury found Richard Lester Sealey guilty of the malice murders of John and Fannie Mae Tubner and 17 related crimes. The jury recommended a death sentence for the murders, after finding beyond a reasonable doubt that the murders were both outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible, or inhuman in that they involved the torture of the victims, depravity of mind, and the aggravated battery of the victims, that the murders were both committed for the purpose of receiving money or any other thing of monetary value, that the murder of Mr. Tubner was committed while Sealey was engaged in the capital felonies of armed robbery and aggravated battery, and that the murder of Ms. Tubner was committed while Sealey was engaged in the capital felonies of armed robbery, aggravated battery, and kidnapping with bodily injury. See OCGA § 17-10-30 (b) (2), (4), and (7). The trial court sentenced Sealey to death and terms of imprisonment. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm Sealey’s convictions and sentences. 1
1. The evidence at the guilt/innocence phase, construed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, showed the following. Sealey contacted his friend Gregory Fahie by telephone asking for a ride. Fahie asked his friend, Wajaka Battiste, to drive to Sealey’s motel and then to drive Fahie and Fahie’s juvenile girlfriend, Deandrea *618 Carter, to Carter’s grandparents’ house. Upon arriving at Carter’s grandparents’ house, Sealey, Carter, and Fahie went inside, while Battiste waited in the car listening to music. While he was in a downstairs bathroom, Fahie first heard a loud noise and then heard Carter knocking on the bathroom door and stating that Sealey was “tripping.” Fahie exited the bathroom and observed Mr. Tubner lying in a pool of blood and Sealey holding Ms. Tubner down and wielding a handgun he had taken from Mr. Tubner. Sealey dragged Ms. Tubner, who had been bound with duct tape, to an upstairs bedroom. Sealey instructed Fahie to search for money, however, when no money was discovered, Sealey instructed Carter to heat a fireplace poker with which Sealey tortured Ms. Tubner in an effort to force her to reveal where she kept her money. Sealey then instructed Carter to find a hammer so he could kill the victims. Carter returned with an ax. Sealey struck Ms. Tubner multiple times in the head with the ax and then went downstairs and did the same to Mr. Tubner, who had crawled a short distance across the living room. Once back in Battiste’s automobile, Sealey stated that he “had to do it” because the victims had seen their faces and further stated that the victims deserved to die because they had mistreated Carter’s mother in the past. Sealey instructed Battiste never to reveal that he had seen Sealey and then added, “I will out your lights.”
The evidence presented in the guilt/innocence phase included the testimony of Fahie and Battiste, Mr. Tubner’s handgun and jewelry that had been discovered in Sealey’s motel room, and testimony about the detection of protein residue consistent with blood on the floor and sink of Sealey’s motel bathroom. Upon our review of the entire record, we conclude that the evidence presented in the guilt/ innocence phase was sufficient to authorize rational jurors to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Sealey was guilty on all counts.
Jackson v. Virginia,
Pre-Trial
2.
Sealey contends that his indictment was invalid under Georgia statutory law because the jury commissioners excluded some persons from grand jury service based on their levels of education in an attempt to comply with the statutory directive that grand jurors be selected from “the most experienced, intelligent, and upright citizens of the county.” OCGA § 15-12-40 (a) (1). Contrary to Sealey’s statement in his oral argument that the jury commissioners required a high school education for grand jury service, our review of the record reveals that Sealey failed to present evidence clearly showing what educational requirement was applied. In fact, the testimony actually elicited indicated nothing more specific than that the commissioners
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had required prospective grand jurors to “have a third-grade education or something.” The testimony also indicated that each prospective grand juror removed as a candidate for the grand jury source list was replaced with a candidate from the same race and sex categories. Under the facts in evidence in this case, we decline to depart from our previous position that, unlike
constitutional
requirements, “ ‘the
statutory
procedures for creating the [grand jury] list are merely directory,’ and do not create a basis for sustaining challenges to the array.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Frazier v. State,
3. Sealey further contends that the source lists from which his grand and traverse juries were drawn unlawfully under-represented Hispanic persons. This claim must fail on appeal, as Sealey failed to present evidence showing Hispanic persons constituted a cognizable group in the county or any evidence establishing either the existence of actual under-representation or the degree thereof.
Ramirez v. State,
4. Sealey argues that the entire office of the district attorney should have been disqualified because one assistant district attorney, while previously in private practice, had represented Sealey in two unrelated criminal cases. Because the record confirms that the assistant district attorney was properly “screened from any direct or indirect participation” in Sealey’s prosecution in this case, the trial court did not err in allowing other members of the district attorney’s office to continue in the case.
Frazier,
Jury Selection
5. Upon our review of juror Delgado’s entire voir dire, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by limiting questions regarding legal terms and questions appearing to seek a prejudgment of the case.
Sallie v. State,
6. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in disallowing questions to jurors Martinez and Chambers that were unrelated to possible juror bias and that attempted to elicit speculative responses from the jurors about how they might conduct themselves injury deliberations. Id.
7. A defendant is entitled to a full panel of qualified jurors from which the jury will be selected by the use of peremptory strikes.
Lance v. State,
8. Sealey contends that the trial court erred by excusing jurors Trousdale, Adams, Barretto, Wyatt, Neal, Harris, Mosley, and Seise for reasons of personal hardship. Upon our review of the record, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion, which it possessed in addition to its statutory duty to grant excusáis under certain circumstances, in excusing those jurors.
Gulley v. State,
9. Our review of the record does not support Sealey’s contention that the trial court conducted voir dire in a biased manner. See
King v. State,
Guilt/Innocence Phase
10. The trial court did not err in excluding evidence regarding a polygraph examination administered to Sherrie Tubner, Carter’s aunt. The fact that Ms. Tubner entered into a stipulation with the State as to the admissibility of the results of her polygraph examination in any proceeding against
her
is irrelevant to the admissibility of those results in Sealey’s trial, and Sealey had no similar stipulation with the State of his own regarding those results.
Rucker v. State,
11. The trial court did not err in refusing to bifurcate the possession of a firearm by a convicted felon charge from the remaining charges, because it was possible that the jury would, as they ulti
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mately did, convict Sealey of felony murder with the possession crime serving as the underlying felony.
Jones v. State,
Sentencing Phase
12. The trial court did not err in admitting evidence in the sentencing phase showing that Sealey had illegally used a man’s credit card shortly after the man’s murder. “[R]eliable evidence of bad character and of past crimes is admissible in the sentencing phase of a death penalty trial.”
Braley v. State,
Sentence Review
13. The evidence presented at trial was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of the statutory aggravating circumstances in this case. OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (2);
Jackson,
14. Upon our review of the record, we conclude that the sentences of death in this case were not imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor. OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (1).
15. Considering both the defendant and the clearly egregious facts of this torture and double murder case, we conclude that Sealey’s death sentences are not excessive or disproportionate punishment as compared to the penalty imposed in similar cases. OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (3). The cases appearing in the Appendix support this conclusion in that each involved a multiple murder.
Judgment affirmed.
Appendix.
Arevalo v. State,
Notes
The crimes occurred on January 23, 2000. Sealey was indicted by a Clayton County grand jury on February 7, 2001, on two counts of malice murder, fourteen counts of felony murder, two counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime, and one count of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. The State filed written notice of its intent to seek the death penalty on February 8, 2001. The trial began on August 12, 2002, the jury convicted Sealey on all counts on August 23, 2002, and the jury recommended a death sentence for the murders on August 27, 2002. The trial court imposed death sentences for the two malice murders and imposed three five-year prison terms to rim consecutively to the death sentences and concurrently with each other for the two counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime and the one count of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. The trial court properly imposed no sentences on the felony murder convictions, which are vacated as a matter of law.
Malcolm v. State,
