Torres v. State , 297 Ga. 32 ( 2015 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: April 20, 2015
    S15A0396. TORRES v. THE STATE.
    HINES, Presiding Justice.
    Following the denial of his motion for new trial, as amended, Abel Torres
    appeals his convictions of malice murder, aggravated assault, false
    imprisonment, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony
    in connection with the fatal shooting of Fernando Gonzalez, and the assaults
    with a handgun and unlawful detentions of Hector Manuel Romero-Aguirre and
    Luis Ernesto Garcia-Cantun. Torres’s sole challenge is that his trial counsel
    provided ineffective assistance by not pursuing a mental health defense. For the
    reasons which follow, the challenge is without merit, and we affirm.1
    1
    The crimes occurred on April 26, 2008. On May 2, 2008, a Newton County grand jury
    returned a nine-count indictment against Torres: Count (1) - malice murder of Gonzalez; Count (2) -
    felony murder of Gonzalez while in the commission of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon;
    Count (3) - aggravated assault of Gonzalez with a deadly weapon; Count (4) - aggravated assault of
    Romero-Aguirre with a deadly weapon; Count (5) - aggravated assault of Garcia-Cantun with a
    deadly weapon; Count (6) - false imprisonment of Romero-Aguirre; Count (7) - false imprisonment
    of Garcia-Cantun; Count (8) - possession of a firearm during the commission of the felony of
    murder; and Count (9) - possession of a firearm during the commission of the felonies of the
    aggravated assaults and false imprisonments of Romero-Aguirre and Garcia-Cantun. Torres was tried
    before a jury August 29-31, 2011, and found guilty of all charges. He was sentenced to life in prison
    The evidence construed in favor of the verdicts showed the following. On
    April 26, 2008, Gonzalez was sharing his Newton County home with Torres,
    Romero-Aguirre, and Garcia-Cantun. Gonzalez, Romero-Aguirre, and Garcia-
    Cantun had bedrooms on the first floor, and Torres’s bedroom was on the
    second floor. Torres was staying at the house rent free. Torres always carried a
    chrome revolver tucked into his belt and kept a box of ammunition in his
    bedroom. None of the other men used handguns, and Torres’s revolver was the
    only weapon in the house.
    Gonzalez was known to always carry $500 - $600 in his wallet.                            A
    couple of days before April 26, 2008, Torres asked Gonzalez for money because
    Torres wanted to return to his family and he was not working and had no money
    on Count (1); 20 years in prison on Count (4), to be served consecutively to the sentence on Count
    (1); 20 years in prison on Count (5), to be served concurrently with the sentence on Count (4); 10
    years in prison on Count (6), to be served consecutively to the sentence on Count (4); 10 years in
    prison on Count (7), to be served concurrently with the sentence on Count (6); 5 years in prison on
    Count (8), to be served consecutively to the sentences on all counts; and 5 years in prison on Count
    (9), to be served concurrently with the sentence on Count (8). The verdict on Count (2) stood
    vacated by operation of law, and that on Count (3) merged for the purpose of sentencing. Trial
    counsel filed a motion for new trial on Torres’s behalf on October 4, 2011, and amended the motion
    on January 25, 2013. A second amended motion for new trial on Torres’s behalf was filed by new
    counsel on January 10, 2014. The motion for new trial, as amended, was denied on September 8,
    2014. A notice of appeal was filed on September 26, 2014. The appeal was docketed in this Court’s
    January 2015 term and submitted for decision on the briefs.
    2
    of his own. Gonzalez told Torres that he did not have any money to give him.
    All four men were home on April 26, 2008, and around midnight very
    loud music was heard playing from a home theater in the living room; this was
    followed by a series of gunshots.        Romero-Aguirre saw Torres leaving
    Gonzalez’s bedroom; Torres had a pistol in his hand. Torres told Romero-
    Aguirre and Garcia-Cantun that they “shouldn’t run,” and at gunpoint ordered
    them to sit down on the couch in the living room. Romero-Aguirre asked Torres
    about Gonzalez, and Torres “coldly” responded that Gonzalez was dead because
    he had lied to him. Torres told the two men that they were going to go with him,
    and then ordered them to get into a truck in the garage. When Torres then went
    to the front of the house to shut the door, Romero-Aguirre and Garcia-Cantun
    escaped in the truck; however, they got lost in the subdivision and drove past the
    house again. Torres was in the front yard as they passed by and pointed the
    handgun at them. The two men drove to the interstate to try and find a police
    officer. They found an officer, reported the shooting, and gave the officer a
    black bag belonging to Torres that they found in the truck. The men were
    transported back to Newton County, where they directed officers to Gonzalez’s
    home. Gonzalez’s body was found on the floor of the master bedroom; there
    3
    was a large amount of blood and it appeared that Gonzalez had been shot in the
    head and shoulder. Next to the body were four spent shell casings and one live
    unfired round. There was also a “waded up” five-dollar bill, some change, and
    a wallet strewn around the room. Gonzalez had sustained five gunshot wounds,
    to his head, arm, and back; the cause of death was two gunshot wounds to the
    head.
    In the early morning hours after the shooting, Torres was picked up by a
    taxi cab driver and the driver’s girlfriend, and Torres asked to be taken to the
    bus station in Atlanta. Torres agreed to pay the sixty-five dollar fare, and on the
    way to the bus station, he asked the couple to stop at a store and get him a bottle
    of water and a pre-paid mobile phone card. During the drive, Torres instructed
    the couple not to turn around and look at him. Torres asked the girlfriend if he
    would be asked for identification in order to purchase the bus ticket. Once at the
    bus station, Torres requested that the driver buy him a bus ticket, explaining that
    he did not have any identification. Torres gave the driver money to purchase for
    him a ticket to California, which the driver did. The bus ticket cost about $300.
    Torres also paid for the cab ride and gave the driver a $260 tip. After law
    enforcement officials determined that Torres was on a particular bus, Torres was
    4
    detained at the bus’s layover in Birmingham, Alabama. Blood was found on the
    pants Torres was wearing when he was apprehended, and a subsequent DNA
    examination of the blood revealed that it contained Gonzalez’s DNA profile.
    1. Torres has not enumerated as error that the evidence at trial was
    insufficient to sustain his convictions; nevertheless, this Court has reviewed the
    evidence and finds that it was sufficient to enable a rational trier of fact to find
    Torres guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes of which he was
    convicted. Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
     (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560)
    (1979).
    2. Torres contends that his trial counsel was ineffective because counsel
    “unreasonably eschewed a mental health defense, in light of [his] documented
    history of mental health related problems.”
    In order to prevail on such claim, Torres must satisfy the standard set forth
    in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984),
    that is, that his counsel's performance was deficient and that, but for the
    deficiency, there is a reasonable probability of a more favorable outcome at trial.
    Allen v. State, 
    293 Ga. 626
    , 627(2) (748 SE2d 881) (2013). For Torres to meet
    5
    the first prong of Strickland, he has to overcome the strong presumption that his
    trial counsel's performance fell within the wide range of reasonable professional
    conduct and that counsel’s decisions were the result of reasonable professional
    judgment, the reasonableness of which is judged from counsel's perspective at
    the time of trial and under the particular circumstances then existing in the case.
    
    Id.
     The second prong of Strickland requires that Torres show the reasonable
    probability that, absent any unprofessional errors on counsel's part, the result of
    his trial would have been different. 
    Id.
     We are to accept the trial court's factual
    findings and determinations as to credibility unless they are clearly erroneous,
    but we independently apply the legal principles to the facts. 
    Id.
    Following the motion-for-new-trial hearing, at which trial counsel was the
    sole testifying witness, the superior court entered its order denying Torres a new
    trial after concluding that trial counsel was not deficient in failing to present a
    mental health defense, and that any alleged deficient performance by counsel did
    not so prejudice Torres that there was the reasonable likelihood that, but for
    such alleged errors, there would have been a different outcome at trial.
    As a threshold matter, there is no dispute that Torres had some history of
    mental health problems. Indeed, following a court-ordered mental health
    6
    evaluation and a report by Dr. Hughey, a consent order issued on September 22,
    2009, finding Torres incompetent to stand trial. However, Torres’s mental
    health was reevaluated on January 21, 2011, by a forensic psychiatrist, Dr.
    Browning of Georgia Regional Hospital, who ultimately determined that Torres
    was then competent to stand trial and was criminally responsible at the time of
    his alleged commission of the murder and related crimes. In his report, Dr.
    Browning determined, inter alia, that although Torres was undoubtedly
    experiencing psychotic symptoms at the time of his admission to the hospital,
    it was unclear “if Schizophrenia is responsible or if Mr. Torres’s fifteen year
    history of regular marijuana usage caused the psychosis that was evident at the
    time of his admission,” and however, that it was clear that “Torres was faking
    at least some of his psychotic symptoms during his hospitalization.” Following
    Dr. Browning’s evaluation, Torres’s trial counsel requested an independent
    examination to be conducted by Dr. Ryback in July 2011. After receipt of a
    draft of Dr. Ryback’s report, which apparently contained the opinion that Torres
    was “not criminally responsible,” the following morning trial counsel sent Dr.
    Ryback an email informing him that a mental health defense would not be
    pursued in Torres’s case.
    7
    Torres argues that trial counsel’s apparent rapid rejection of Dr. Ryback’s
    opinion suggests that counsel did not properly and adequately contemplate Dr.
    Ryback’s findings and the possibility of a mental health defense, and that it was
    objectively unreasonable that counsel would forgo such option when counsel’s
    own expert provided exculpating information and the issue was abandoned
    without further exploration. But, that was not shown to be the case.
    To begin with, Dr. Ryback’s report was never admitted into evidence at
    the hearing on the motion for new trial, as amended, nor was Dr. Ryback called
    to testify. The sole witness was trial counsel who testified: she personally
    reviewed Torres’s mental health evaluations from Georgia Regional Hospital
    and his subsequent evaluation by Dr. Ryback; the basis of Dr. Ryback’s finding
    that Torres was not criminally responsible was his diagnosis of borderline
    mental retardation rather than any sort of compulsion on the part of Torres or an
    inability on the part of Torres to tell right from wrong; counsel did not pursue
    a defense based on Dr. Ryback’s report because she believed that the report
    would not overcome the evaluations from Dr. Browning and other doctors at
    Georgia Regional Hospital inasmuch as they            were based on extended
    observation of Torres, and as to Torres’s criminal responsibility, the evaluations
    8
    included reference to Torres’s voluntary drug use as causing any delusions; such
    evaluations did not find that Torres was unable to tell right from wrong; counsel
    was concerned that a mental health defense would be undercut by evidence of
    Torres’s voluntary intoxication; she discussed possible defenses with Torres;
    and after consultation with Torres, it was decided that his defense would be that
    he did not commit the crimes, i.e., that either Romero-Aguirre or Garcia-Cantun
    killed Gonzalez.2
    Torres failed to show that trial counsel’s strategic choice not to pursue a
    mental health defense was deficient. Strickland v. Washington, 
    supra.
     The
    superior court was entitled to credit trial counsel's uncontroverted testimony
    that Torres’s defense was selected after consultation with Torres, and that Dr.
    Ryback’s report would not have aided the defense. Jimmerson v. State, 
    289 Ga. 364
    , 368 (2) (a) (711 SE2d 660) (2011). A strategic choice which is made after
    thoughtful consideration will generally not support a claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel. Freeman v. State, 
    295 Ga. 820
    , 825 (4) (764 SE2d 390)
    2
    Following the murder, Romero-Aguirre and Garcia-Cantun went to Mexico. Romero-
    Aguirre came back to the United States to testify as a State’s witness; Garcia-Cantun could not be
    located. At trial, the defense argued that the two men sought out police in order to frame Torres for
    the murder.
    9
    (2014). What is more, an insanity defense, or indeed, any mental health defense
    would have necessitated Torres admitting to committing the criminal acts; he
    could not simultaneously assert such a defense and a credible defense that he
    was not the perpetrator. Boykins v. State, 
    294 Ga. 277
    , 279 (2) (751 SE2d 811)
    (2013). The fact that in hindsight Torres now questions the efficacy of the
    chosen defense strategy does not establish ineffective assistance. Jimmerson v.
    State, supra at 368 (2) (a). Simply, there is no valid basis upon which to
    conclude that the strategic choice of a defense at trial fell below reasonable
    professional norms, and therefore, Torres’s ineffectiveness claim must fail.3
    Boykins v. State, supra at 279 (2).
    Judgments affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    3
    Inasmuch as Torres has failed to demonstrate the deficient performance of trial counsel, as
    required by Strickland v. Washington, it is unnecessary for this Court to examine the “prejudice”
    prong of the Strickland test. Boykins v. State, supra at 279 (2).
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S15A0396

Citation Numbers: 297 Ga. 32, 771 S.E.2d 894, 2015 Ga. LEXIS 236

Judges: Hines

Filed Date: 4/20/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024