Harvey v. State ( 2015 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: March 27, 2015
    S14A1646. HARVEY v. THE STATE.
    NAHMIAS, Justice.
    Appellant Kajul Harvey challenges the trial court’s denial of her plea in
    bar based on double jeopardy after her first trial for murder and other crimes
    ended in a mistrial. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion
    in determining that Appellant’s counsel violated the court’s pretrial ruling on a
    motion in limine and improperly referred to evidence that may well not be
    admissible when he referred to Appellant’s police interview during his opening
    statement, and the court also did not abuse its discretion in deciding that
    alternatives short of a mistrial were insufficient to cure the harm. Accordingly,
    we uphold the denial of the plea in bar. Our rejection of Appellant’s double
    jeopardy claim on the merits makes it unnecessary for us to decide whether the
    trial court erred in finding that the claim was frivolous and allowing her retrial
    to proceed. We therefore affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    1.       In February 2013, Appellant and her boyfriend, Latoris Grovner,
    were indicted for malice murder and other crimes in connection with the brutal
    beating death of Appellant’s mother and subsequent attempts to access her bank
    accounts in June 2011.1 Appellant had been interviewed by the police for
    several hours, and the interview was videotaped. On April 15, 2013, the first
    day of Appellant’s trial, the State filed a motion in limine to preclude “the
    defense from making opening statements that reference self[-]serving hearsay
    statements made by the defendant[]” or asking witnesses for the State or the
    defense any questions that reference such statements “until the door is opened
    by the State or until after the defendant testifies.”
    The trial court held a hearing on the motion, during which the prosecutor
    revealed that the State did not intend to introduce the videotape of Appellant’s
    police interview during its case-in-chief. At that point, Appellant’s attorney,
    assistant public defender Lloyd Matthews, indicated that he might seek to admit
    a redacted version of the interview, and the court asked the prosecutor, “What
    happens if . . . the defense puts that interview in . . . ?” The prosecutor
    1
    Grovner was tried separately and found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and other crimes.
    2
    responded that the State would object to any attempt by the defense to introduce
    Appellant’s police interview, directed the court’s attention to the State’s written
    motion, and argued, “as it relates to the interview, we don’t believe that it should
    be referenced.” Matthews urged the court to deny the State’s motion, explaining
    that in his view, as the evidence unfolded, it was “inevitable” that at least part
    of the interview would be played for the jury, and that “once [the jurors] find out
    there’s a video tape, they’re going to want to . . . see that video tape.”
    The trial court granted the motion in limine, saying:
    The third motion was about the self[-]serving hearsay in the
    defendant’s [police interview]. The State’s asking that that not be
    allowed to [be gone] into unless and until the defendant testifies.
    And I will instruct the parties not to go into any statements, any
    contents of her statements to the police until such time.
    A jury was then impaneled and sworn.
    The next morning, the State made its opening statement, making no
    reference to Appellant’s police interview. Matthews followed with the opening
    statement for Appellant, telling the jury as he began:
    [T]his case ultimately boils down to a case of a mistaken rush to
    judgement. . . . The police immediately glom onto my client as the
    co-perpetrator and they never deviate from their scenario. . . . I
    mean the . . . lead detective, Joanne Sutherland[,] and her fellow
    detectives . . . . This whole case is not a plan for the deceased[’s]
    3
    demise, but a rush to judgement to blame my client. Now when I
    say rush to judgement, that necessarily implies that something is
    being overlooked.
    Matthews reviewed what he said the evidence would show, telling the jury that
    there would be no evidence of a plan or conspiracy involving Appellant. He
    then said: “My client, on being interviewed by the police was very cooperative
    with the police. She submitted herself to several hours of interview –.”
    At that point, the prosecutor objected, and the court held a bench
    conference. The prosecutor argued:
    [T]he very fact that he’s referencing this interview and the fact that
    it existed is a violation of the self-serving [hearsay] motion that we
    had in reference to that interview. . . . [T]he mere fact that she gave
    one is in direct violation of the Motion in Limine.
    Matthews claimed that he understood the State’s motion as seeking to preclude
    him from mentioning the contents of Appellant’s statement to the police, not
    from referring to the fact that an interview had taken place. Matthews also
    claimed that Appellant would testify as part of the defense case, but the court
    observed, “that still doesn’t mean the interview comes in.” Matthews then said,
    “I wasn’t going to talk about the actual substance of the interview. I was just
    going to say that she was cooperative.”
    4
    The State requested a mistrial, and the court sent out the jury so the court
    could hear further argument from counsel. After quoting the State’s motion in
    limine, the prosecutor argued that “by indicating that [Appellant] . . . spoke to
    the police for hours, that’s a direct reference.” Matthews reiterated his claim
    that he understood the State’s motion to mean that the prosecutor “did not want
    me to actually mention the content of the statements. I didn’t think . . . there
    was a big deal about whether I mentioned the fact that there was an interview.”
    As he had in the hearing before the motion was granted, Matthews again
    asserted that the fact of the police interview was “inevitably going to come out”
    once Appellant testified, because the State would then use her interview
    responses to impeach her testimony. Matthews added that even if he violated
    the court’s pretrial ruling, an instruction to the jury to disregard his remarks
    would be sufficient to cure any harm.
    The court responded to this suggested remedy by saying:
    [T]he jury has just heard that your client gave a three hour interview
    to the police. . . . You’ve just told the jury [Appellant] has been
    cooperative, she gave a lengthy interview to the police after I told
    you not to mention the interview, yesterday.
    5
    The prosecutor argued that a limiting instruction would be insufficient to cure
    the harm, because despite Matthews’s claim that Appellant would testify, the
    State could not compel her to do so, and if Appellant ultimately declined to take
    the stand during the defense case, then “what we have hanging out there is she’s
    been cooperative in reference to the police. That’s the point of a Motion in
    Limine and Mr. Matthews knows better.” The prosecutor added, “This is not the
    first time we’ve had a self-serving hearsay motion in this courtroom and it’s not
    the first time we’ve had one with Mr. Matthews. I think that was a direct act to
    violate the Motion in Limine and we would ask for a mistrial.”
    After a short recess to consider the matter, the trial court asked if either
    side had any additional input. The prosecutor said:
    The State has committed in the opening statement and based on trial
    strategy that the defendant’s self-serving statements would not be
    referenced. Their content was referenced [by Matthews] by
    indicating that [Appellant] was cooperative with the police, as well
    as the existence of that self-serving statement, which is in direct
    contravention of this Court’s ruling [on] the third Motion in Limine.
    And we don’t believe that a curative instruction would be sufficient
    . . . . [W]e don’t believe it’s [an] abuse of discretion to grant a
    mistrial when there has been affirmative conduct to mention it in
    opening statement. The bell has already been rung. And if the
    defendant decides not to testify, the State has an additional burden
    of proving why we didn’t present this . . . videotaped statement . . .
    that was referenced.
    6
    Matthews replied that he had “already committed to the jury that [Appellant] is
    going to testify,” asserted again that he thought that the court’s pretrial ruling
    only prevented him from mentioning the contents of the police interview, and
    requested that the court give a curative instruction, ask the jurors if any of them
    could not follow the instruction, and then go forward with the trial if no one
    raised a hand.
    The trial court found that Matthews’s remarks to the jury violated the
    ruling on the motion in limine and that a jury instruction would be insufficient
    to cure the harm, explaining:
    Although the jury has not heard any reference to the content of what
    [Appellant] said, they heard that she had been cooperative and made
    a statement. Spoke with police for . . . several hours. . . . [T]here
    was a Motion in Limine granted yesterday to – I said there would
    be no reference to that statement. And now – the jury has heard
    there is a statement. Even if the defendant testifies, there is no
    guarantee that that statement comes in. And there’s certainly no
    way that the Court can force her to testify if she chooses not to
    testify when we get to the defense’s portion of the trial. And then
    the jury is going to, I think, wonder, well, if she made a statement
    to the police, why haven’t we heard it. And if I tell them, well, I’ve
    excluded it, it seems to me that [the] natural inclination of the jury
    is to say, well, the police must have done wrong because they can’t
    get that interview in or something. Or they will start wondering
    why the interview doesn’t come in and they’ll say, well, the burden
    is on the State, the State didn’t produce this interview, what’s going
    on. And I just feel that it’s safer. I hate to grant a mistrial after
    7
    we’ve spent a day picking a jury, but I just don’t see how to un-ring
    that bell. I’m going to grant the State’s motion for mistrial.
    After discharging the jury, the court asked counsel about a new trial date.
    The prosecutor then moved to dismiss Appellant’s statutory speedy trial demand
    in light of the mistrial, and the court said, “I find that the mistrial induced by the
    defense’s conduct waives the speedy trial demand.” The retrial was set for
    about two months later, in June 2013.
    On April 26, Appellant filed a plea in bar, contending that double jeopardy
    barred her from being retried because there was no manifest necessity for the
    mistrial and the trial court failed to consider less drastic alternatives. On May
    6 and again on May 30, Appellant amended her plea to allege that the prosecutor
    had moved for a mistrial to “buy time” to buttress a weak case, noting that
    Appellant had filed a statutory speedy trial demand.
    On June 5, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing at which the
    prosecutor testified. During cross-examination by Matthews, the prosecutor
    said, “you [Matthews] not only referenced the fact that there was an interview
    given, you also referenced the contents by indicating that Appellant was
    cooperative during that interview.” Matthews asked if his telling the jury that
    8
    Appellant was “cooperative” could be interpreted as referring to something
    other than the contents of the police interview, and the prosecutor said “No,”
    that would not be a “fair interpretation.” The prosecutor also testified that she
    found it surprising that Matthews violated the court’s ruling on the motion in
    limine, “considering the fact that in this courtroom you and I have had that same
    motion and that’s never occurred.” The prosecutor added that the State had no
    reason to delay the trial because she had succeeded in persuading the trial court
    to exclude a defense expert witness; all the State’s witnesses were present and
    ready to testify; and “at that point our decision not to play that eight-hour
    interview had been revealed to the Defense in what we thought was a motion in
    limine that perhaps they were not expecting. So, no, in fact, we did not want the
    mistrial and none of our conduct caused it.”             The prosecutor said that
    Matthews’s statement to the jury that Appellant “had been cooperative with the
    police hamstrung our efforts to proceed” and that an instruction to disregard
    Matthews’s statement would be insufficient to cure the harm, because the jury
    would still wonder why, in its case-in-chief, the State did not produce the
    interview in which Appellant had allegedly cooperated with the police.
    At the end of the hearing, the trial court said:
    9
    [The jury] heard that a statement existed. And there’s a reference
    to what happened in the statement by saying that [Appellant was]
    cooperative. I agree with the State’s interpretation of that, too, that
    that is a reference to the contents. . . . I think that violates the
    Motion in Limine, the exclusion, to start dancing around it and
    saying, I know I can’t go into it, but I’m going to tell the jury that
    a statement was given. I’m going to tell the jury that she was
    cooperative.
    The court found that “[t]here has been no evidence that a delay benefits the
    State. There has been no evidence that the State did anything to induce a
    mistrial. In fact, it was done by Defense counsel.” The court also explained
    why it rejected Appellant’s proposed alternative to a mistrial:
    I didn’t know how to tell the jury, give them a curative instruction
    to disregard the Defense counsel’s statement that his client had
    made a statement to the police in which she had been very
    cooperative because then the State was put in a position of maybe
    trying to explain if there was a statement, why the jury doesn’t get
    to hear it. And I just felt like, as I said that day, that was a bell that
    could not be unrung.
    The next day, June 6, 2013, the court entered an order striking Appellant’s
    speedy trial demand based on its findings that Matthews violated the court’s
    ruling on the motion in limine and that the mistrial was caused by defense
    counsel’s conduct. Also on June 6, the court entered an order denying
    Appellant’s plea in bar, which included a finding that
    10
    the plea of double jeopardy is frivolous, in that the mistrial was not
    induced by the State but rather by defense counsel, . . . defense
    counsel acknowledges that the [court] has broad discretion in
    deciding whether to grant a mistrial, and [Appellant] has failed to
    produce any credible evidence that the State desired a mistrial or
    would benefit from the granting of same.
    Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal from the order denying her plea
    in bar, which is the appeal currently before this Court; she did not move for this
    Court to stay her retrial pending our decision on this appeal. Appellant was then
    retried, and on June 21, 2013, the jury found her guilty of the malice murder of
    her mother and other crimes. She has not yet been sentenced.2
    2
    The prosecutor and the trial court appear to have understood DeSouza v. State, 285 Ga.
    App. 201 (645 SE2d 684) (2007), to hold that where a defendant appeals the denial of a plea in bar
    and the trial court finds the plea to be frivolous, the trial may proceed, but the defendant may not be
    sentenced until the plea in bar appeal has been decided and the remittitur from that appeal is filed
    in the trial court. That reading of DeSouza’s holding is incorrect. The Court of Appeals held that
    the trial court did not err in proceeding with the defendant’s retrial during the pendency of his appeal
    from the denial of a plea in bar that was found to be frivolous. See 
    id. at 202-203.
    The court noted
    in passing that the defendant’s “sentence was not imposed until after the remittitur [from the plea
    appeal] was filed below,” 
    id. at 203,
    but the court did not hold that the supersedeas from the notice
    of appeal precluded the trial court from sentencing the defendant. Where a defendant files a notice
    of appeal challenging the denial of a plea in bar that the trial court finds to be frivolous or dilatory,
    the defendant may be retried, convicted, and sentenced despite the pendency of the defendant’s
    appeal. See Strickland v. State, 
    258 Ga. 764
    , 766 n.1 (373 SE2d 736) (1988) (suggesting that a
    merits appeal from a conviction and sentence and an appeal from the earlier denial of a plea in bar
    could be decided together if the General Assembly required an application to appeal the denial of
    a plea in bar, which could not happen if the plea in bar appeal prevented the trial court from entering
    an appealable final judgment sentencing the defendant). See also Baker v. State, 
    263 Ga. App. 462
    ,
    463-466 (588 SE2d 288) (2003) (deciding a challenge to the denial of a plea in bar that the trial court
    found to be frivolous in an appeal from the defendant’s convictions and sentence).
    11
    2.    Appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying her plea in
    bar for two reasons. First, she argues that her defense counsel did not violate the
    court’s pretrial ruling on the State’s motion in limine during his opening
    statement. Second, she argues that giving the jury a curative instruction would
    have been sufficient to remove any harm. As explained below, the trial court
    did not abuse its discretion in granting a mistrial, so the court properly denied
    Appellant’s plea in bar based on double jeopardy.
    (a)    The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment, which
    applies to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, says that “[n]o person
    shall be . . . subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or
    limb . . . .” U.S. Const. amend. V. Once a jury is impaneled and sworn,
    jeopardy attaches, and the defendant normally has a right to have her trial
    completed by that particular tribunal. See Pleas v. State, 
    268 Ga. 889
    , 890 (495
    SE2d 4) (1998); Fugitt v. State, 
    253 Ga. 311
    , 315 (319 SE2d 829) (1984).
    However, this right “‘is not paramount to the state’s equal right to a fair trial.’”
    Tubbs v. State, 
    276 Ga. 751
    , 754 (583 SE2d 853) (2003) (citation omitted). A
    defendant’s “valued right to have the trial concluded by a particular tribunal is
    sometimes subordinate to the public interest in affording the prosecutor one full
    12
    and fair opportunity to present his evidence to an impartial jury.” Arizona v.
    Washington, 
    434 U.S. 497
    , 505 (98 SCt 824, 54 LE2d 717) (1978).
    Accordingly, “in cases in which a mistrial has been declared prior to verdict, the
    conclusion that jeopardy has attached begins, rather than ends, the inquiry as to
    whether the Double Jeopardy Clause bars retrial.” Illinois v. Somerville, 
    410 U.S. 458
    , 467 (93 SCt 1066, 35 LE2d 425) (1973).3
    Trial courts may declare a mistrial over the defendant’s objection, without
    barring retrial, “‘whenever, in their opinion, taking all the circumstances into
    consideration, there is a manifest necessity’ for doing so.” Renico v. Lett, 
    559 U.S. 766
    , 773-774 (130 SCt 1855, 176 LE2d 678) (2010) (quoting United States
    v. Perez, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 579, 580 (6 LE 165) (1824)). The United States
    Supreme Court has clarified that “the ‘manifest necessity’ standard [established
    in Perez] ‘cannot be interpreted literally,’ and that a mistrial is appropriate when
    there is a ‘“high degree”’ of necessity.” 
    Renico, 559 U.S. at 774
    (citations
    omitted).
    3
    The double jeopardy provision of the Georgia Constitution makes explicit that a trial
    ending in a mistrial does not always bar retrial. See Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XVIII
    (“No person shall be put in jeopardy of life or liberty more than once for the same offense except
    when a new trial has been granted after conviction or in case of mistrial.”).
    13
    The decisions of this Court and the U.S. Supreme Court emphasize that
    whether the required degree of necessity for a mistrial has been shown is a
    matter best judged by the trial court. See, e.g., 
    Tubbs, 276 Ga. at 754-755
    (“[A]
    a trial court’s judgment about whether there was manifest necessity to grant a
    mistrial is entitled to great deference.’” (citation omitted)); 
    Renico, 559 U.S. at 774
    (“The decision whether to grant a mistrial is reserved to the ‘broad
    discretion’ of the trial judge, a point that ‘has been consistently reiterated in
    decisions of this Court.’” (citation omitted)). “The propriety of declaring a
    mistrial in the varying and often unique situations arising during the course of
    a criminal trial” cannot be determined by the application of any mechanical
    formula. 
    Somerville, 410 U.S. at 462
    . Moreover, “compelling institutional
    considerations” militate in favor of appellate deference to the trial judge’s
    evaluation of the impact of improper conduct on the jury. 
    Washington, 434 U.S. at 513
    . The trial judge
    has seen and heard the jurors during their voir dire examination. He
    is the judge most familiar with the evidence and the background of
    the case on trial. He has listened to the tone of the argument as it
    was delivered and has observed the apparent reaction of the jurors.
    In short, he is far more “conversant with the factors relevant to the
    determination” than any reviewing court can possibly be.
    14
    
    Id. at 513-514
    (citation omitted). Furthermore, “a criminal trial is, even in the
    best of circumstances, a complicated affair to manage,” United States v. Jorn,
    
    400 U.S. 470
    , 479 (91 SCt 547, 27 LE2d 543) (1971) (plurality opinion), and
    unless
    defense counsel are to be allowed an unfair advantage, the trial
    judge must have the power to declare a mistrial in appropriate cases.
    The interest in orderly, impartial procedure would be impaired if he
    were deterred from exercising that power by a concern that any time
    a reviewing court disagreed with his assessment of the trial situation
    a retrial would automatically be barred.
    
    Washington, 434 U.S. at 513
    .
    This is not to say, however, that a court must conclude that defense
    counsel unscrupulously sought an “unfair advantage” in order to declare a
    mistrial without barring retrial.
    Where inadmissible evidence is introduced or otherwise comes to
    the attention of the jury, and curative instructions cannot free the
    jury’s mind of prejudice, it is error not to declare a mistrial. This is
    true even where the action which brought the inadmissible evidence
    to the jury’s attention was unintentional, innocent, or unattributable
    to any party, as that fact does not make the evidence less
    inadmissible or less prejudicial.
    Varner v. State, 
    285 Ga. 334
    , 335 (676 SE2d 209) (2009) (citations omitted).
    Thus, a mistrial may be required not as a sanction for misconduct, but simply
    15
    because evidence was improperly put before the jury that could influence its
    decision.
    The trial judge “is not required to make explicit findings of ‘“manifest
    necessity”’ nor to ‘articulate on the record all the factors which informed the
    deliberate exercise of his discretion.’” 
    Renico, 559 U.S. at 775
    (citation
    omitted). However, the record must show that the trial court actually exercised
    its discretion. See 
    Washington, 434 U.S. at 514-516
    . See also 
    Jorn, 400 U.S. at 485
    , 487 (plurality opinion) (discussing the Court’s “conscious refusal” to
    channel trial courts’ exercise of their broad discretion to grant mistrials without
    barring retrial, but emphasizing that “that discretion must still be exercised”).
    For this reason, we have instructed trial courts to “give careful, deliberate, and
    studious consideration to whether the circumstances demand a mistrial, with a
    keen eye toward other, less drastic, alternatives, calling for a recess if necessary
    and feasible to guard against hasty mistakes.” Smith v. State, 
    263 Ga. 782
    , 783
    (439 SE2d 483) (1994). Where it is clear from the record that the trial court
    actually exercised its discretion in deciding to grant a mistrial, the Double
    Jeopardy Clause generally will not bar retrial. See Jenkins v. State, 
    294 Ga. 506
    , 509 (755 SE2d 138) (2014).
    16
    (b)   Here, when defense counsel told the jury that Appellant was
    “very cooperative with the police” during an hours-long interview, the
    prosecutor promptly objected on the ground that this statement referenced
    evidence that was subject to a motion in limine, and the trial court held a bench
    conference to discuss the matter. When the prosecutor requested a mistrial, the
    court excused the jury and heard further arguments from defense counsel and the
    prosecutor concerning whether the court’s pretrial ruling had been violated and,
    if so, whether an alternative short of a mistrial would be sufficient to cure the
    harm so that the trial could proceed. In keeping with this Court’s direction in
    Smith, the trial court then called a recess to allow deliberate consideration of the
    State’s mistrial request and Matthews’s proposed alternative, and the court then
    heard additional argument from both sides after retaking the bench. Only then
    did the trial court grant the mistrial.
    Thus, the record demonstrates that in deciding whether to grant a mistrial,
    the trial court carefully and thoughtfully weighed the defendant’s right to have
    her trial completed against the public interest in affording the prosecution one
    full and fair opportunity to present its evidence to an impartial jury. Moreover,
    these matters were further argued, and the court’s reasoning further elaborated,
    17
    in the subsequent hearing and orders on Appellant’s statutory speedy trial
    demand and plea in bar. Accordingly, the question before us is not whether the
    trial court exercised its discretion to grant a mistrial with care and full
    deliberation or whether, with the benefit of hindsight, we would say that a
    mistrial was necessary. Our task is only to decide whether the trial court abused
    its broad discretion.
    (c)    Appellant argues that the trial court erred in concluding that
    Matthews violated the court’s ruling on the State’s motion in limine, because
    that ruling did not bar reference to the existence of her police interview as
    opposed to its specific contents. The day before Matthews made his opening
    statement, the court held a hearing on the State’s motion in limine, during which
    the prosecutor disclosed for the first time that the State did not intend to admit
    Appellant’s videotaped police interview in its case-in-chief. Matthews indicated
    that he thought that some portions of the interview were favorable to his client
    and that he might seek to introduce a redacted version of the videotape as part
    of the defense case. The prosecutor was adamant that the State would object to
    any attempt to introduce the videotape until after Appellant testified. Matthews
    resisted the State’s motion, seeking to preserve his ability to introduce portions
    18
    of the videotape and to refer to the interview in his opening statement and in
    questioning witnesses. The court ruled against Matthews by granting the motion
    in limine. See Sims v. State, 
    251 Ga. 877
    , 879 (311 SE2d 161) (1984) (“[T]he
    trial court has a sound discretion to control the content of the opening statement
    of either party, particularly with regard to matters of questionable
    admissibility.”).
    When the trial court’s oral ruling on the motion in limine is viewed in its
    full context, we cannot say that the court abused its discretion in concluding that
    its pretrial decision was understood by the court and by the parties as prohibiting
    Matthews from making any mention of Appellant’s police interview in his
    opening statement. See Saye v. Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co., 311 Ga.
    App. 74, 77 (714 SE2d 614) (2011) (holding that trial courts have discretion to
    decide whether litigation conduct violates a ruling on a motion in limine). One
    of the primary reasons that motions in limine are filed is “to prevent the mention
    by anyone, during the trial, of a certain item of evidence or area of inquiry until
    its admissibility can be determined during the course of the trial outside the
    presence of the jury.” State v. Johnston, 
    249 Ga. 413
    , 415 (291 SE2d 543)
    (1982) (emphasis deleted). Thus, a motion in limine serves as a warning shot
    19
    that a particular item or area of evidence will likely draw objection and may be
    deemed inadmissible. And at the hearing on the State’s motion, the prosecutor
    made it clear that the State did not intend to introduce the police interview and
    sought to prevent any reference to the interview unless and until Appellant took
    the witness stand. That obviously would not occur before opening statements
    and might not happen even if defense counsel promised that his client would
    testify, since the decision whether to testify is ultimately for the defendant to
    make, not her lawyer. See Spencer v. State, 
    287 Ga. 434
    , 439 (696 SE2d 617)
    (2010). The prosecutor obviously understood Matthews’s statement to be a
    violation of the court’s ruling, as indicated by her prompt objection as well as
    her later testimony. The prosecutor also indicated that she and Matthews had
    experience with this same motion in limine before the same judge in prior cases
    and Matthews had not violated it before.
    Moreover, Appellant concedes that the ruling on the State’s motion in
    limine explicitly prohibited any reference to the contents of Appellant’s police
    interview. As the trial court explained during the June 5 hearing, and as the
    prosecutor had argued just before the mistrial was granted, Matthews violated
    this prohibition when he told the jury that the police interviewed Appellant for
    20
    several hours and that she was supposedly “very cooperative with the police”
    during the interview.4 Considering that the trial court was able to evaluate the
    tone, demeanor, and credibility of defense counsel during the hearing on the
    motion in limine, when he made the disputed statement during his opening, and
    when he argued that he did not knowingly violate the pretrial ruling – something
    we cannot do from the cold record on appeal – we cannot say that the trial court
    abused its discretion in finding that its ruling was violated.
    In addition, even if the pretrial ruling was imprecise and Matthews’s
    violation of the ruling was not the most blatant, the trial court could decide that
    evidence that was unlikely to be admitted and prejudicial to the State had been
    placed before the jury during opening statements. Under these circumstances,
    the court had discretion to decide that it was better to start over with a new trial
    instead of waiting to see if the disputed evidence came in after days of testimony
    and having to declare a mistrial then if the evidence was never admitted. See
    
    Varner, 285 Ga. at 335
    (explaining that a mistrial may be granted, without
    4
    In its oral ruling at trial on the State’s mistrial request, the trial court said that “the jury has
    not heard any reference to the content of what [Appellant] said,” but the court’s later discussions
    indicate that by “content” it was referring there to the specific things Appellant said during the
    interview.
    21
    barring retrial, even though the action that brought the inadmissible evidence to
    the jury’s attention was “unintentional, innocent, or unattributable to any party,
    as that fact does not make the evidence less inadmissible or less prejudicial”).
    (d)    Appellant also argues that, even if Matthews improperly
    referred to her police interview, the trial court erred in determining that a
    curative instruction would be insufficient to cure any harm to the State. “[A]
    trial judge’s decision to declare a mistrial based on his assessment of the
    prejudicial impact of improper argument is entitled to great deference” on
    appeal, 
    Washington, 434 U.S. at 514
    , and we will affirm the trial court’s
    rejection of possible alternatives to a mistrial “‘if reasonable judges could differ
    about the proper disposition.’” 
    Tubbs, 276 Ga. at 754
    (citation omitted).
    Here, the trial judge not only heard and saw the way in which Matthews
    made the improper comments to the jury, but also had the opportunity to observe
    the jury’s reaction to them.
    An improper opening statement unquestionably tends to frustrate
    the public interest in having a just judgment reached by an impartial
    tribunal. Indeed, such statements create a risk, often not present in
    the individual juror bias situation, that the entire panel may be
    tainted. The trial judge, of course, may instruct the jury to disregard
    the improper comment. In extreme cases, he may discipline
    counsel, or even remove him from the trial . . . . Those actions,
    22
    however, will not necessarily remove the risk of bias that may be
    created by improper argument.
    
    Washington, 434 U.S. at 512-513
    (footnote omitted). As noted above, one of
    the primary purposes of a motion in limine is to prevent the other side from
    making any reference to certain evidence until that evidence is actually
    determined to be admissible at trial. As explained in Black’s Law Dictionary
    (10th ed. 2014):
    Typically, a party makes this motion when it believes that mere
    mention of the evidence during trial would be highly prejudicial and
    could not be remedied by an instruction to disregard. If, after the
    motion is granted, the opposing party mentions or attempts to offer
    the evidence in the jury’s presence, a mistrial may be ordered.
    Here, as the court explained in granting the State’s request for a mistrial
    and again later in the hearing on the plea in bar, if Appellant elected not to
    testify after the State concluded its case-in-chief, the jury would be left to
    wonder why they never heard the hours-long interview that defense counsel had
    referenced at the outset of the trial, during which Appellant was allegedly “very
    cooperative with the police.” This scenario would be particularly damaging to
    the State, which had the burden to prove Appellant’s guilt to the jury beyond a
    reasonable doubt. It was not unreasonable in this situation for the trial court to
    23
    conclude that it could not “un-ring that bell” simply by instructing the jury to
    disregard defense counsel’s reference. Indeed, by explaining or implying that
    the interview was inadmissible, the court could have raised the inference that the
    police rather than defense counsel had done something wrong – reinforcing the
    theme of defense counsel’s opening that the police had conducted an improper
    investigation.
    (e)    For these reasons, the trial court did not abuse its discretion
    in granting a mistrial, Appellant’s right against double jeopardy was not
    violated, and the court therefore properly denied her plea in bar.
    3.    Appellant also contends that the trial court erred in finding that her
    double jeopardy plea was frivolous and therefore allowing her retrial to proceed
    despite her notice of appeal from the order denying her plea. Citing Rielli v.
    Oliver, 
    170 Ga. App. 699
    , 700 (318 SE2d 173) (1984), which in turn “adopt[ed]
    the rationale of [United States v. Dunbar, 611 F2d 985 (5th Cir. 1980) (en
    banc)],” this Court has held that a trial court retains jurisdiction to try a
    defendant, despite her filing of a notice of appeal from the denial of a motion for
    discharge and acquittal on double jeopardy grounds, where the trial court makes
    24
    a written finding that the motion was frivolous and dilatory. See 
    Strickland, 258 Ga. at 766
    .
    Appellant did not file a motion in this Court to stay her retrial pending our
    decision in this appeal of the denial of her plea in bar based on double jeopardy.
    See Dunbar, 611 F2d at 989 (explaining that appellate courts are “empowered
    to protect the defendant’s double jeopardy rights by staying proceedings below
    pending appeal or by issuing a writ of mandamus or prohibition” (citation
    omitted)). See also Prather v. State, 
    303 Ga. App. 374
    , 376 (693 SE2d 546)
    (2010) (noting, in the defendant’s appeal from the denial of his plea in bar, that
    the Court of Appeals granted his emergency motion to stay his retrial pending
    the outcome of the appeal); 
    DeSouza, 285 Ga. App. at 202
    (noting, in the
    defendant’s appeal from his convictions after retrial following a mistrial, that the
    Court of Appeals considered and denied his emergency motion to stay his retrial
    pending the outcome of his plea in bar appeal). And as explained by the
    Eleventh Circuit, under the procedure set forth in Dunbar:
    If the [trial] court makes written findings that a double jeopardy
    claim is frivolous or dilatory, then the [notice of] appeal does not
    divest the [trial] court of jurisdiction, thus permitting the retrial to
    proceed. The double jeopardy claim is properly heard on appeal
    from the defendant’s conviction on retrial. If the appellate court
    25
    rejects the double jeopardy claim on the merits, the jurisdiction of
    the [trial] court with respect to the retrial is affirmed, without the
    necessity of examining whether or not the double jeopardy claim
    was in fact frivolous. This procedure adequately protects
    defendant’s double jeopardy interest in not running the gauntlet of
    a second trial because the defendant may seek an appellate stay of
    the retrial in connection with the interlocutory appeal . . . .
    United States v. Farmer, 923 F2d 1557, 1565 (11th Cir. 1991) (citing Dunbar,
    611 F2d at 989).
    Viewed in another way, if a defendant fails to obtain an appellate stay of
    a trial court’s ruling that her double jeopardy claim is frivolous, and she is then
    retried and convicted, the only real question is whether her double jeopardy
    claim is meritorious. If so, she is entitled to a reversal of her conviction; the
    harm of enduring the retrial cannot be eradicated. And if her double jeopardy
    claim is not meritorious – even if it was not entirely frivolous – then she
    properly faced a retrial; requiring a third trial due to an erroneous ruling as to
    frivolousness would be a bizarre remedy to cure a double-jeopardy-related error.
    In sum, Appellant’s failure to obtain an appellate stay of her retrial to
    allow review, before the retrial occurred, of her challenge to the trial court’s
    ruling that her double jeopardy plea was frivolous renders that issue irrelevant.
    26
    We need only decide whether Appellant’s plea in bar was properly denied, as
    we have done in Division 2 above.
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    27