Charles v. State ( 2023 )


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  •  NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court
    Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the
    opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any
    prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and
    official text of the opinion.
    In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: February 21, 2023
    S22A1080. CHARLES v. THE STATE.
    COLVIN, Justice.
    Fred Jason Charles appeals his convictions for malice murder
    and related offenses in connection with the July 2015 shooting death
    of Stephanie Daniel. 1 Charles argues that (1) the trial evidence was
    1 Daniel died on July 5 or 6, 2015. In March 2016, a Gordon County
    grand jury returned a 23-count indictment against Charles and co-defendant
    Christopher Reid Scoggins. Charles was charged with malice murder (Count
    1), felony murder predicated on aggravated assault (Count 2), felony murder
    predicated on possession of a firearm by a convicted felon (Count 3), aggravated
    assault (Count 5), two counts of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon
    (Counts 6 and 7), theft by taking (Count 10), conspiracy to commit arson in the
    second degree (Count 11), and possession of a firearm during commission of a
    felony (Counts 12 through 17). Co-defendant Scoggins was jointly charged in
    Counts 1, 2, 5, 10, and 11 and separately charged with felony murder
    predicated on possession of a firearm by a convicted felon (Count 4), possession
    of a firearm by a convicted felon (Counts 8 and 9), and possession of a firearm
    during commission of a felony (Counts 18 through 23). Before trial, Charles
    joined a motion filed by Scoggins to bifurcate trial on the counts premised on
    the defendants’ felon status, including the charges of felony murder and
    possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. After hearing arguments from the
    parties, the court denied the motion.
    At a September 2016 trial, the jury found Charles and Scoggins guilty
    constitutionally insufficient to support his convictions, (2) the trial
    court failed to appropriately question jurors regarding a potential
    issue of juror irregularity, (3) the trial court erred in denying his
    pretrial motion to bifurcate the trial and try separately the charges
    for which his status as a felon was material, and (4) trial counsel
    was ineffective for failing to object to the State using a felon-in-
    possession-of-a-firearm charge as a predicate for felony murder. For
    the reasons explained below, we affirm.
    1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury verdicts, the
    trial evidence showed the following. On July 5, 2015, Charles was
    living with his father, Herbert Charles (“Herbert”), at Herbert’s
    mobile home in Calhoun, Georgia.              Daniel, who was Charles’s
    on all counts. On October 6, 2016, the court sentenced Charles as a recidivist
    under OCGA § 17-10-7 (a) and (c) to life in prison without the possibility of
    parole for Count 1, five years concurrent to Count 1 for Count 6, ten years
    consecutive to Count 1 for Count 10, five years consecutive to Count 10 for
    Count 11, five years consecutive to Count 11 for Count 12, and five years
    concurrent to Count 12 for Count 16. The court merged for sentencing
    purposes or vacated by operation of law the remaining counts.
    Charles filed a motion for new trial on October 28, 2016, which he
    amended through new counsel on October 3, 2018, and January 28, 2022. On
    February 3, 2022, following a hearing, the court denied the motion for new trial
    as amended. Charles timely appealed. The case was docketed to our August
    2022 term and submitted for a decision on the briefs.
    2
    girlfriend, had been staying in Charles’s portion of the mobile home
    for several days, and Charles’s friend, Scoggins, was at the mobile
    home early in the day. Around noon, Charles and Scoggins drove
    Daniel’s Nissan Xterra down the road, stopping at a neighbor’s
    house so Charles could show him a revolver and ask where they
    could shoot it.    That evening, around 7:30 or 8:00, a different
    neighbor saw Daniel enter the mobile home. Shortly thereafter, the
    neighbor saw Charles throw a firecracker and then drive away in
    Daniel’s Xterra.
    Herbert went outside to retrieve his dog, who was afraid of
    fireworks. When he came back in, he saw Daniel lying on a bunch
    of clothes on the bed in Charles’s bedroom and asked if she was okay.
    Daniel did not respond, and Herbert “figured she had just went to
    sleep.” But when Charles and Scoggins returned, Herbert told them
    to check on her, at which point the two men went into Charles’s
    bedroom and “shut the door.”
    Later, Charles and Scoggins left together in Daniel’s Xterra.
    Between 9:21 and 11:00 p.m., Scoggins’s girlfriend called Scoggins
    3
    several times and overheard Scoggins tell Charles, “[D]on’t shoot
    yourself in the toe,” and, “[I]t’s loaded.”
    Sometime after Charles and Scoggins left the mobile home,
    Herbert discovered that Daniel was still lying in the same place in
    Charles’s bedroom, and, upon seeing blood, he called 911. Officers
    responded and found Daniel dead with a bullet hole in her chest and
    blood on her arm. Officers also found a bullet hole in one of Charles’s
    bedroom windows, and a medical examiner testified that a wound
    on Daniel’s upper right arm was consistent with a graze from a
    bullet.
    In the early hours of July 6, Scoggins called his sister, Crystal
    Scoggins (“Crystal”), to ask for a ride. Crystal picked up Scoggins
    and Charles on a forestry road that intersected Manning Mill Road
    in the Strawberry Mountain area of Walker County, Georgia. At the
    end of the forestry road, officers later found a Nissan Xterra that
    had been burned down to the metal frame. A partial VIN number
    recovered from the Xterra matched that of Daniel’s vehicle.
    After picking up Charles and Scoggins, Crystal drove the men
    4
    back to her house, where Charles made a noose with a belt. Holding
    the noose in Crystal’s presence, he “dared [her] to say a word.” In
    the afternoon, Crystal and Scoggins dropped off Charles at a
    convenience store.    Later, an officer responding to a tip about
    Charles’s whereabouts located Charles hiding in the woods behind
    a trailer.
    At trial, a firearms examiner testified that a bullet recovered
    from Daniel’s body was likely fired from a revolver.        Although
    Herbert owned a revolver, the firearms examiner ruled out Herbert’s
    revolver as the source of the bullet that killed Daniel, and Herbert’s
    hands tested negative for gunpowder residue.
    2. Charles claims that “the evidence was insufficient to convict
    him on any count[ ] in the indictment” under Jackson v. Virginia,
    
    443 U.S. 307
     (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979). On appeal, it is the
    defendant’s burden to show that the trial evidence was insufficient
    as a matter of constitutional due process to support his convictions.
    See Davis v. State, 
    312 Ga. 870
    , 873 (1) n.2 (
    866 SE2d 390
    ) (2021)
    (affirming a defendant’s convictions where his “only” sufficiency
    5
    argument that the State failed to disprove his self-defense theory
    lacked merit and he “ha[d] not otherwise shown that the
    evidence supporting the child cruelty convictions was insufficient as
    a matter of constitutional due process”). See also United States v.
    Tantchev, 916 F3d 645, 650 (II) (A) (7th Cir. 2019) (“It is the
    defendant’s task to convince us of the insufficiency of the
    evidence[.]”); United States v. Mack, 729 F3d 594, 604 (II) (B) (6th
    Cir. 2013) (noting that “the defendant [must] carry [a] heavy burden
    to show that the evidence was insufficient”). When assessing the
    sufficiency of the evidence, “we view the evidence presented at trial
    in the light most favorable to the verdicts,” Drennon v. State, 
    314 Ga. 854
    , 861 (3) (
    880 SE2d 139
    ) (2022), and “we put aside any
    questions about conflicting evidence, the credibility of witnesses, or
    the weight of the evidence, leaving the resolution of such things to
    the discretion of the jury,” Davis, 312 Ga. at 872-873 (1) (citation
    and punctuation omitted). To prevail on a sufficiency challenge, a
    defendant must show that, even when the evidence is construed in
    the light most favorable to the verdicts, “[no] rational trier of fact
    6
    could have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    Davis, 312 Ga. at 872 (1). See also United States v. Griffin, 684 F3d
    691, 694 (II) (7th Cir. 2012) (“To prevail [on a claim that the evidence
    was insufficient to support a conviction, the defendant] must show
    that no rational trier of fact could have found that the government
    proved the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable
    doubt.”); United States v. Gaines, 295 F3d 293, 299-300 (II) (2d Cir.
    2002) (“To successfully challenge the sufficiency of the evidence
    underlying his conviction, [a] defendant bears the heavy burden of
    showing—when viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
    the government, and drawing all inferences in favor of the
    prosecution—that no rational trier of fact could have found him
    guilty.” (citation omitted)).
    Here, Charles has not carried his burden to show that the trial
    evidence was constitutionally insufficient to support his convictions.
    Charles cites Jackson, asserts “that the State did not prove its
    charges beyond a reasonable doubt,” and “asks th[is] Court to
    reverse” his convictions. However, he has not articulated why he
    7
    contends that the trial evidence was insufficient to support his
    convictions, much less formulated an argument showing that the
    trial evidence failed to prove an essential element of any crime
    charged beyond a reasonable doubt. 2 See Willis v. State, 
    315 Ga. 19
    ,
    23 (2) & n.3 (
    880 SE2d 158
    ) (2022) (affirming a defendant’s
    convictions where the defendant “contend[ed] that the evidence was
    not sufficient to sustain his convictions” and “cite[d] Jackson v.
    Virginia, [but] ma[de] no argument about the constitutional
    sufficiency of the evidence” (citation omitted)). See also Davis, 312
    Ga. at 873 (1) (noting that “the jury’s verdict will be upheld” unless
    “there is [no] competent evidence . . . to support [a] fact necessary to
    make out the State’s case” (citation and punctuation omitted)).
    Accordingly, he has not carried his burden on appeal, and this claim
    fails. See Davis, 312 Ga. at 873 (1) n.2.
    2 The only argument that Charles makes at all is that “this Court reviews
    the sufficiency of the evidence sua sponte.” That argument is incorrect. As
    explained in Davenport v. State, 
    309 Ga. 385
     (
    846 SE2d 83
    ) (2020), we “end[ed]
    our practice of sua sponte review of the constitutional sufficiency of the
    evidence supporting convictions in appeals of non-death penalty murder
    cases,” starting with cases docketed to the December 2020 term of this Court.
    Id. at 386.
    8
    3. Charles argues that the trial court mishandled a potential
    issue of juror irregularity. The record shows that, following a 15-
    minute recess during Herbert’s testimony, the victim’s mother
    reported to a deputy that, during the break, a communication
    between her and Charles’s mother had occurred in the restroom.
    Addressing counsel outside the presence of the jury, the court
    reported:
    I was advised just a moment ago, during the break,
    apparently there were some jurors in the ladies restroom.
    That the victim[’]s mother was in the restroom and
    apparently the mother of one of the Defendant[]s. In
    which, the Court understands, the victim[’]s mother said
    something to the – or the defendant’s mother said
    something to the victim[’]s mother, apologizing for this
    happening. Which the Court assumes the jury heard,
    those members of the jury who were in the restroom at
    the time, heard that conversation.
    In response, Charles and Scoggins moved for a mistrial, arguing that
    any exposure to an apology was prejudicial because it could indicate
    guilt.
    The court then asked the victim’s mother to come forward and
    describe the conversation that had occurred in the restroom. She
    9
    stated that Charles’s mother “just said that she was sorry and she
    wished it could have been her.” When asked if there was “any
    conversation about what may have happened,” the victim’s mother
    nodded her head “negatively.”
    The court then asked Charles’s mother to come forward and
    describe the conversation she had with the victim’s mother.
    Charles’s mother said, “I just – she was crying and I just hugged her
    and told her that I was so sorry. And if I could have took her
    daughter[’]s place I would.” When asked if “[t]hat’s the total extent
    of the conversation,” Charles’s mother stated, “That was it.” The
    court asked “[h]ow many jurors were in the restroom at the time,”
    and Charles’s mother responded, “I didn’t know that there was any.
    I’m sorry. I thought they had all walked out. All I seen was her at
    the sink washing her hands, crying.”
    Charles’s counsel argued that “[w]e need to find out how many
    jurors were in there” because what Charles’s mother had said was
    “an indication of guilt.” The court stated that it was “sorry [the
    conversation had] happened” but that the court did not believe the
    10
    conversation caused prejudice warranting a mistrial because an
    “[e]xpression of sympathy, in and of itself for something that
    happened to someone, is not an expression of admission of guilt by
    your client” and would not give rise to “an inference [by] . . . a juror
    that that person is admitting that a defendant committed the offense
    for which [he is] being charged.”
    The court then brought the jury back in, and the following
    exchange occurred:
    THE COURT: Members of the jury, the Court has
    been advised that there is the possibility that some
    members of the jury may have overheard a conversation
    during the break, involving people not on the jury. The
    Court is concerned that if that – if there was a
    conversation overheard, that it would have an impact on
    that juror or those jurors that may have heard a
    conversation, to the extent that it would adversely impact
    that juror[’]s deliberations.
    I’m going to ask the jury as a whole, to whether there
    is any member of this jury, that heard any conversation,
    any matter that may be related to this case, to which you
    would be unable to totally disregard, forget about it, and
    it have no bearing on your decisions.
    If there is any member of the jury who cannot do
    that, if you would please indicate to the Court.
    ALL JURORS: No response.
    11
    THE COURT: There is no member of the jury who
    indicated any conversation, if they overheard one, if the
    conversation was overheard, which would have any
    impact on their decision making process, so that they
    would not be able to totally disregard that remark. All
    right. Get your witness.
    A bench conference immediately followed this exchange,
    during which Charles’s counsel argued, “Your Honor, you asked if
    any conversation [occurred] that would impact the jurors, [but] I
    think the question is to ask[ ] if anybody overheard a conversation.”
    The court responded that it had “included that [language]. I said, if
    there was any juror who overheard any conversation, if any, did that
    conversation have any impact.”          The court then denied the
    defendants’ motion for mistrial, stating, “I think the [c]ourt[’]s
    instructions were appropriate.”
    We review a trial court’s denial of a motion for mistrial for
    abuse of discretion, “and the trial court’s exercise of [its] discretion
    will not be disturbed on appeal unless a mistrial is essential to
    preserve the defendant’s right to a fair trial.” Mitchell v. State, __
    Ga. __, __ (2) (
    882 SE2d 322
    ) (2022) (citation and punctuation
    12
    omitted). When reviewing a trial court’s “ultimate decision . . . for
    an abuse of discretion,” we review factual findings or credibility
    determinations underlying the court’s decision “only for clear error.”
    Harris v. State, 
    313 Ga. 872
    , 883 (5) (
    874 SE2d 73
    ) (2022)
    (addressing the standard of review for evidentiary rulings). See also
    Davis v. State, 
    306 Ga. 430
    , 433 (
    831 SE2d 804
    ) (2019) (reviewing
    “the trial court’s factual findings and credibility determinations” for
    “clear error” and the court’s ultimate denial of a motion to withdraw
    a guilty plea for “abuse of discretion”); State v. Hill, 
    295 Ga. 716
    ,
    718-719 (
    763 SE2d 675
    ) (2014) (concluding that the trial court had
    abused its discretion in granting a new trial in part because the
    “court clearly erred in regard to material factual findings”).
    “To set aside a jury verdict solely because of irregular jury
    conduct, a court must conclude that the conduct was so prejudicial
    that the verdict is inherently lacking in due process.” Harris v.
    State, 
    314 Ga. 51
    , 53 (2) (
    875 SE2d 649
    ) (2022) (citation and
    punctuation omitted).      “Any juror [irregularity] that has the
    potential to injure a defendant’s due process rights triggers [a]
    13
    presumption of prejudice,” and “the prosecution [must then carry]
    the burden of establishing beyond a reasonable doubt that no harm
    occurred.” Id. at 53-54 (2) (citations and punctuation omitted). “To
    establish that the juror [irregularity] was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt, the State must show based on the record evidence
    that there is no reasonable possibility that the juror [irregularity]
    contributed to the conviction.” Id. at 54 (2) (citation and punctuation
    omitted). As we have explained, “the State may carry this burden
    by establishing that the juror [irregularity] was an immaterial
    irregularity without opportunity for injury.” Mitchell, __ Ga. at __
    (2) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    On appeal, Charles argues that “the trial court abused its
    discretion in failing to inquire more specifically whether any jurors
    overheard the conversation and what impact it might have had on
    them.”   According to Charles, “the trial court offered a blanket
    instruction and asked if jurors could follow it” without determining
    “whether any of [the jurors] heard the conversation and what
    particular things they heard.” Charles further argues that, if jurors
    14
    overheard the conversation, they could have inferred from the
    apology and expression of remorse that Charles’s mother believed
    Charles had killed the victim.
    Charles is correct that the wording of the court’s yes-or-no
    question appears to have impaired the court’s ability to determine
    whether any juror overheard the restroom conversation and thus
    whether any juror irregularity might have occurred. The court’s
    question to the jurors was compound, asking them both whether
    they had overheard a conversation related to the case and whether
    they could disregard such a conversation. As a result, the jurors’
    lack of a response to the question might have indicated either that
    the jurors had not overheard the conversation in the restroom or
    that they had overheard the conversation but believed they could
    disregard what they heard.
    Nevertheless, under the circumstances, the court did not abuse
    its discretion by failing to determine whether jurors were exposed to
    the extra-judicial conversation between Charles’s mother and the
    victim’s mother. Through its questioning of the two mothers, the
    15
    court established that “the total extent” of the conversation in the
    restroom was limited to Charles’s mother stating that she “was so
    sorry” for the victim’s mother’s loss and that Charles’s mother would
    have traded “place[s]” with the victim if she could. The victim’s
    mother further confirmed that there was no discussion of “what may
    have happened” to the victim. Based on the record, we cannot say
    that the trial court clearly erred in finding that the extra-judicial
    statements were mere “[e]xpression[s] of sympathy” for what had
    happened to the victim, as opposed to an apology for any role Charles
    may have played in the victim’s death, and that the expressions of
    sympathy did not give rise to an inference that Charles’s mother
    believed Charles had “committed the offense[s] for which [he was]
    being charged.” It follows that any juror irregularity that might
    have occurred “was an immaterial irregularity without opportunity
    for injury” and thus that the record “establish[ed] beyond a
    reasonable doubt that no harm occurred.” Mitchell, __ Ga. at __ (2)
    (citations and punctuation omitted). Accordingly, the trial court did
    not abuse its discretion in denying Charles’s motion for a mistrial.
    16
    See id.
    4. Charles argues that the trial court erred in denying his
    pretrial motion to bifurcate the trial and try separately the charges
    for which his status as a felon was material (the felon-in-possession-
    of-a-firearm charges and felony-murder charge predicated on the
    felon-in-possession-of-a-firearm charges) and the remaining charges
    for which he was convicted (malice murder, theft by taking,
    conspiracy to commit arson in the second degree, and possession of
    a firearm during the commission of a felony). According to Charles,
    the court’s ruling violated his due process rights under the
    Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution because
    introducing “highly prejudicial” evidence of his prior felony
    convictions “relieve[d] the State of its burden to prove the charges
    through the facts of the case rather than through [his] bad
    character.” We disagree.
    In Head v. State, 
    253 Ga. 429
     (
    322 SE2d 228
    ) (1984), overruled
    in part on other grounds by Ross v. State, 
    279 Ga. 365
     (
    614 SE2d 31
    )
    (2005), this Court provided guidance for when trial courts should
    17
    grant a motion to bifurcate trial on a charge of possession of a
    firearm by a convicted felon and a more serious charge to “protect
    the rights of the accused” under the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment. 
    Id. at 431
     (3). If a felon-in-possession-of-
    a-firearm charge and a more serious charge are “unrelated,” we
    explained, the trial court must grant a motion to bifurcate trial on
    the two charges to avoid the possibility that the jury will be “unduly
    influenced by evidence of [the defendant’s] prior criminal record.”
    
    Id. at 431-432
     (2), (3) (a). But a different rule applies if the felon-in-
    possession-of-a-firearm charge “might be material to a more serious
    charge,” as in a case where “the possession charge might conceivably
    become the underlying felony to support a felony murder conviction
    on the malice murder count of the indictment.” 
    Id. at 432
     (3) (d). In
    such a case, the trial court should deny the motion to bifurcate and
    “instruct the jury that . . . they are permitted to receive evidence of
    prior convictions” only for the purpose of deciding whether the
    defendant is guilty of “the charge of possession” and any “lesser
    included offense” of “the more serious charge” for which “such
    18
    evidence might be material.” 
    Id.
     This Court has further held that a
    trial court does not err in denying a motion to bifurcate a felony-
    murder count from the rest of a defendant’s trial, where the felony-
    murder count is predicated on a felon-in-possession-of-a-firearm
    charge and the defendant is charged with both felony murder and
    malice murder of the same victim. See Tabor v. State, __ Ga. __, __
    (2) (a) (
    882 SE2d 329
    ) (2022) (“[A] trial court does not err in refusing
    to bifurcate the charge of possession of a firearm . . . where, as here,
    the possession charge was an underlying felony to a murder count
    of the indictment. . . . And, to the extent [that the defendant]
    contends      that      the      trial     court      should      have
    also bifurcated the felony murder count from the rest of his trial [for
    malice murder and other offenses], this claim also fails.” (citations
    and punctuation omitted)).
    Here, the trial court abided by this Court’s guidance in Head
    and its progeny. Because felon-in-possession-of-a-firearm charges
    served as “the underlying felon[ies] to support a felony murder
    conviction,” they were “material to a more serious charge,” and Head
    19
    required that the court deny the motion to bifurcate. Head, 
    253 Ga. at 432
     (3) (d). See also Tabor, __ Ga. at __ (2) (a).
    Further, the trial court faithfully complied with Head’s
    directive that a court denying a motion to bifurcate under such
    circumstances “instruct the jury that . . . they are permitted to
    receive evidence of prior convictions” for the limited purpose of
    deciding whether the defendant was guilty of charges for which
    “such evidence might be material.” Head, 
    253 Ga. at 432
     (3) (d).
    Specifically, when the State admitted certified copies of the
    defendants’ convictions at trial, the court told the jurors that “you
    may consider this evidence only in so far as it may relate to the
    required element of a conviction of a felony, for the offenses as
    alleged in the Indictment, in Counts 3, 4, 6, 7, 8 and 9, and not for
    any other Count or any other purpose.” 3 During its jury charge, the
    court gave the same instruction again.
    3Counts 3 and 4 charged Charles and Scoggins, respectively, with felony
    murder predicated on possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Counts 6
    and 7 charged Charles with being a felon in possession of a firearm, and Counts
    8 and 9 charged Scoggins with being a felon in possession of a firearm.
    20
    Charles contends that we should reconsider the rule
    announced in Head—that a felon-in-possession-of-a-firearm charge
    should not be bifurcated when it is material to a more serious
    charge—because the jury’s consideration of a defendant’s felony
    status “incurably injects bad character evidence into the jury’s
    consideration.” However, Charles has failed to explain why giving
    a limiting instruction in accordance with Head’s directive did not
    cure any prejudice that might have arisen from admission of his
    prior convictions. The trial court gave two limiting instructions—
    both of which directed the jury not to consider evidence of Charles’s
    prior convictions when deciding the charges for which his status as
    a felon was not material—and “the jury is presumed to follow the
    instructions of the trial court absent clear evidence to the contrary.”
    See Ash v. State, 
    312 Ga. 771
    , 781 (2) (
    865 SE2d 150
    ) (2021).
    Accordingly, this enumeration of error fails. 4
    4Charles also argues that permitting the State to “us[e] possession of a
    firearm by a convicted felon as the underlying felony in [his] felony murder
    count,” and allowing the State to try together counts of being a felon in
    possession of a firearm and felony murder, violated his due process rights. This
    21
    5. Finally, Charles argues that trial counsel was ineffective for
    failing “to object to the use of possession of a firearm by a convicted
    felon as the underlying offense for felony murder” because including
    the felon-in-possession charges as predicate offenses for felony
    murder violated his “Fourteenth Amendment right to a fair trial” on
    the felony-murder count, and because, when testifying at the
    motion-for-new-trial hearing, trial counsel provided “no reason or
    explanation for his failure to object.” This claim is moot, however,
    because Charles’s convictions for felony murder were vacated by
    operation of law. See Powell v. State, 
    291 Ga. 743
    , 749 (3) (
    733 SE2d 294
    ) (2012) (holding that an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim
    is so, Charles argues, because using a felon-in-possession charge as a predicate
    for felony murder “inextricably link[ed] [his] felon[ ] status under the
    possession count to the felony murder charge” and thereby required the jury to
    consider prejudicial character evidence when determining whether he was
    guilty of felony murder. These arguments focus only on how the felon-in-
    possession counts affected the related felony-murder count, not on any broader
    effect that the felon-in-possession counts had on the jury’s consideration of the
    charges as a whole. However, these arguments are moot because, after Charles
    was convicted of malice murder, the felony-murder count premised on being a
    felon in possession of a firearm was vacated by operation of law. See Johnson
    v. State, 
    313 Ga. 698
    , 699 n.2 (
    873 SE2d 123
    ) (2022) (“Because the felony
    murder count was vacated by operation of law, [the defendant’s] contention as
    to this offense is moot.”).
    22
    based on counsel’s failure to object to an alleged constructive
    amendment of an indictment charging felony murder and
    aggravated assault was moot “because the convictions for felony
    murder and aggravated assault were either vacated by operation of
    law or merged into the malice murder conviction”).
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    23