After a jury trial, Lenburg Williams was convicted of two separate burglaries of commercial properties that occurred six days apart in the same neighborhood. He argues that the trial court improperly allowed three law enforcement officers to testify about statements that another trial witness made to them during their investigations, but Williams only objected to one instance of such testimony at trial and in that instance the trial court did not err in overruling his objection. Williams argues that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object to the remaining testimony, but some of that testimony was admissible and Williams has not shown he was prejudiced by his trial counsel’s failure to object to the rest of the challenged testimony. Accordingly, we affirm.
1. Facts.
The evidence at trial, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, showed thaton September 27,2011, Earnest Rankins encountered a burglar in the automobile repair shop where he worked. The burglar fled, taking some money. Rankins recognized the burglar as
Six days later, on October 3, Rankins spotted Williams entering a building on another commercial property in the neighborhood, and he saw a bicycle by the side of the road in front of that property. He called 911, and Officer G. E. Smith met him at a nearby street corner. Shortly thereafter, Williams approached on the bicycle, towing a cart containing scrap metal and copper pipes, and Officer Smith arrested him. Detective R. A. Johnston also responded to the 911 call, and he and Rankins took the items from Williams’s cart to the commercial property where Rankins had seen Williams. There, the owner of that property identified the items from Williams’s cart as her belongings, and she determined that someone had broken into the building on the property and taken some copper pipes from the basement.
2. Testimony to which Williams objected at trial.
Over Williams’s hearsay objection, the trial court allowed Officer Smith to testify that, when he met Rankins at the street corner on October 3, Rankins identified Williams as the man who had burglarized the automobile repair shop six days earlier. Officer Smith testified that Rankins told him the automobile repair shop had been “burglarized on a past date and time, and that that day [October 3] he saw the suspect and he pointed out the suspect to me.” The trial court allowed this testimony because it provided “the reason he responded” to the 911 call.
“Admission of evidence is a matter committed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and the trial court’s evidentiary decisions will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.” Allen v. State,
Former OCGA § 24-3-2
But even if Officer Smith’s testimony was hearsay rather than original evidence, “[i]t is well-settled that, although hearsay, a witnesses] testimony regarding another person’s out-of-court identification of the accused maybe admissible” where “the declarant testifies] and [is] available for cross-examination.” In the Interest of L. J. P., 277 Ga. 135, 135-136 (
3. Testimony to which Williams did not object at trial.
Williams also challenges the three officers’ testimony about “the remainder of Rankins’s out-of-court statements.” He did not object to this testimony at trial, but he argues on appeal that his trial counsel’s failure to object constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. To sustain this claim, Williams “must show both that counsel’s performance fell below a reasonable standard of conduct and that, but for counsel’s deficient performance, there is a reasonable probability the outcome of the trial would have been different.” Anthony v. State,
(a) Challenged testimony that was not improper.
(i) Officer Ritchie, who responded to the scene of the automobile repair shop burglary on September 27, testified that Rankins “gave [him] a description of a suspectf.]” In his appellate brief, Williams cites this as an example of hearsay testimony of a prior consistent statement that improperly bolstered Rankins’s later identification of him as the burglar and argues that it did not meet the requirements for the admission of a trial witness’s prior consistent statement articulated by our Supreme Court in Woodard v. State,
(ii) In her cross-examination of Officer Smith, defense counsel suggested that the officer arrested Williams without adequately investigating either burglary. On redirect, the state asked Officer Smith why he made the arrest, and the officer replied that Rankins “advised that [Williams]... was the suspect that — that burglarized [the automobile repair shop], and at that day and time, on [a nearby street], [Rankins] saw him riding a bicycle, and he positively identified him, and that was — that’s what I responded to.” Like the similar instance of Officer Smith’s testimony discussed in Division 2, supra, this testimony was admissible because Rankins testified and was cross-examined.
(b) Other testimony regarding Rankins’s statements to police officers.
Regarding the remaining instances where the police officers testified about statements that Rankins made to them, Officer Ritchie testified that Rankins told him he had come into contact with the automobile repair shop burglar, that the burglar had fled, and that the burglar had taken five dollars. And Detective Johnston, when
To establish prejudice, a defendant must demonstrate that “a reasonable probability exists that, but for counsel’s errors, the outcome of the trial would have been different.” Coleman v. State,
As discussed in Division 3 (a) (i), supra, Officer Ritchie’s statement that Rankins had given him a description of the automobile repair shop burglar was not hearsay. And the remaining portions of Officer Ritchie’s testimony about what Rankins told him — that Rankins had contact with the burglar, that the burglar fled, and that the burglar took money — concerned matters that Williams did not dispute at trial. Williams merely argued that he was not that burglar. Consequently, “any improper bolstering of [Rankins’s] testimony by [Officer Ritchie’s] hearsay testimony had no real effect on [Williams’s] conviction! ]” for the September 27 burglary. Johnson v. State,
As to the October 3 burglary, the state did not base its case primarily on the bolstered testimony that Rankins had seen Williams at the commercial property and believed the metal in Williams’s cart came from that property. It based its case primarily on the testimony of the property’s owner, who stated at trial that the property had been burglarized and that the items found in Williams’s cart belonged to her. Again, “any improper bolstering of [Rankins’s] testimony by [Detective Johnston’s] hearsay testimony had no real effect on [Williams’s] conviction[ ]” for the October 3 burglary. Johnson,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Former OCGA § 24-3-2 was in effect when this case was tried in 2012, but it since has been repealed and replaced with OCGA § 24-8-801 (c). See State v. Hodges,
