Mahdi v. State ( 2021 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: September 21, 2021
    S21A0740. MAHDI v. THE STATE.
    ELLINGTON, Justice.
    A Fayette County jury found Mustafa Mahdi guilty but
    mentally ill of the malice murder of John David Quincy III and
    guilty of possession of a knife during the commission of a felony.1 In
    1 Quincy was stabbed to death on March 24, 2014. On April 4, 2014, a
    Fayette County grand jury indicted Mahdi for malice murder (Count 2), felony
    murder (Count 1), aggravated assault (Count 3), and possession of a knife
    during the commission of a felony (Count 4). At a July 2018 trial, the jury found
    Mahdi guilty but mentally ill of malice murder, felony murder, and aggravated
    assault, and guilty of possession of a knife during the commission of a felony.
    The trial court sentenced Mahdi to life in prison for malice murder and to a
    consecutive sentence of five years in prison for the possession charge. The
    aggravated assault count merged into the malice murder conviction, and the
    felony murder count was vacated as a matter of law. See Malcolm v. State, 
    263 Ga. 369
    , 372 (4) (434 SE2d 479) (1993). Mahdi filed a motion for new trial on
    August 6, 2018, which was amended on January 24 and February 10, 2020.
    Following a hearing, the trial court denied Mahdi’s motion for a new trial, as
    amended, on March 19, 2020.
    Mahdi initially appealed his convictions through appointed counsel in
    Case No. S20A1414, but this Court struck that appeal from our docket and
    remanded the case to the trial court to hold a hearing on Mahdi’s request that
    appointed appellate counsel be removed from the case and that Mahdi be
    this pro se appeal, Mahdi broadly asserts that the trial court, as well
    as his trial and appellate counsel, violated his constitutional rights.
    We discern from these claims that Mahdi contends (1) the trial court
    violated his due process rights by allowing his trial attorneys to
    present an insanity defense against his wishes; (2) he received
    ineffective assistance of trial and motion-for-new trial counsel; and
    (3) his trial and motion counsel violated his right to conflict-free
    representation. We affirm for the reasons set forth below.
    The evidence at trial showed the following. In 2014, Mahdi
    lived with his grandmother, Blondyne Greer. On March 24, the day
    of Quincy’s death, Greer confronted then 17-year-old Mahdi about
    his misbehavior and failing grades. Upset that she was unable to
    handle Mahdi, Greer called her daughter, Darlene, and asked for
    help. Darlene told Greer that she would send her husband, Quincy,
    over to Greer’s house to pick up Mahdi.
    permitted to pursue his appeal pro se. Following a hearing, the trial court
    relieved appointed counsel from the case and allowed Mahdi to proceed pro se.
    Mahdi filed a timely notice of appeal, and the case was docketed to the April
    2021 term of this Court and submitted for a decision on the briefs.
    2
    When Quincy arrived at Greer’s house that evening, he told her
    that he was going to get some of Mahdi’s clothes and take Mahdi
    home with him. Greer testified that she “heard a scuffle” while she
    was in her bedroom, and when she went to the living room, she saw
    Quincy on the floor, struggling with Mahdi. When Greer realized
    that Quincy was wounded and bleeding, she tried to get Mahdi off of
    Quincy by beating Mahdi with her cane. She heard Quincy say,
    “You’re killing me Mustafa.” Greer phoned the police, and a City of
    Fayetteville police officer responded within minutes.
    The responding officer saw a bloody footprint on a rug inside
    the home. In the living room, he encountered Mahdi, who was
    standing over Quincy. Greer was cowering in a corner of the room.
    After a second officer arrived at the scene, Mahdi yelled, “I stabbed
    him. I stabbed him.” The officers arrested Mahdi and took him to
    the hospital, where he received stiches in one finger.
    Quincy was transported to a hospital, where he died. The
    medical examiner testified that Quincy suffered over 75 blunt- and
    sharp-force wounds to the neck, torso, extremities, head, and eyes,
    3
    including 11 deep stab wounds. Quincy died as a result of stab
    wounds to his neck and torso.
    Police officers recovered a steak knife from the living room
    where Quincy had been. The blood on the knife contained the DNA
    of both Quincy and Mahdi.
    Mahdi’s attorneys presented an insanity defense. Mahdi had
    begun acting strangely following the death of his mother in 2012.
    Greer testified that Mahdi did not like Quincy, whom Mahdi accused
    of “sexually harassing” him. A clinical psychologist, Dr. Robert
    Shaffer,   opined   that   Mahdi       was   suffering   from   paranoid
    schizophrenia, including delusions that persons intended to sexually
    violate him or were actively sexually violating him. Shaffer testified
    that Mahdi believed that Quincy was going to kill or rape him on the
    night that he stabbed Quincy. In Shaffer’s opinion, Mahdi’s belief
    that he was in imminent danger was the result of his delusion.
    Mahdi did not testify at trial.
    After the State presented rebuttal witnesses, forensic
    psychologist Dr. Darcy Shore testified as a court’s witness.
    4
    According to Dr. Shore, she had evaluated Mahdi pursuant to the
    court’s order and found no presence of a mental illness in Mahdi.
    1. Mahdi contends that the trial court violated his right to due
    process under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution because “the Court clearly saw [him] directly state that
    he was under no delusion[, and the Court] certainly could have ruled
    that [he] did not qualify for the insanity defense[,] . . . yet [the Court]
    opt[ed] to move forward[.]” To support this claim, Mahdi points to
    an ex parte discussion during the trial among himself, the trial
    court, and his two trial attorneys. During that proceeding, the court
    advised Mahdi of his right to testify and asked his attorneys to
    discuss with him whether testifying at trial was in his best interest.
    The court then allowed trial counsel to put on the record at the ex
    parte hearing any advice that they had given Mahdi. One of Mahdi’s
    trial attorneys stated that both attorneys had advised Mahdi not to
    testify. Counsel explained, among other concerns, that he
    anticipated such testimony would provide direct evidence that
    Quincy had molested Mahdi. Counsel assessed that such testimony
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    would make it more likely that the trial court would charge the jury
    on revenge for a prior wrong and would also make it more difficult
    for the defense to argue to the jury that there was no evidence that
    Mahdi had acted out of revenge.
    Following counsel’s statement, Mahdi told the trial court that
    the “claims of [his] molestation [by Quincy] . . . are the central focus
    of [his] defense.” Mahdi also represented to the court that he had
    only realized during opening statements that his attorneys would
    maintain that “there is no objective evidence that any of these sexual
    abuses happened.” The trial court asked Mahdi to discuss with his
    attorneys further whether he should testify and to reflect carefully
    on that decision. Mahdi later acknowledged that he had freely and
    voluntarily decided not to testify.
    Mahdi’s due process claim was not raised and ruled on below.
    Accordingly, this argument is not preserved for review on appeal.
    See, e.g., Hampton v. State, 
    308 Ga. 797
    , 804 (3) (a) (843 SE2d 542)
    (2020); Willis v. State, 
    304 Ga. 686
    , 695 (6) (820 SE2d 640) (2018);
    Atkinson v. State, 
    301 Ga. 518
    , 522 (3) (801 SE2d 833) (2017).
    6
    2. Mahdi asserts several claims of ineffective assistance of trial
    and motion-for-new-trial counsel. To show ineffective assistance of
    counsel, Mahdi “must prove both that his lawyer’s performance was
    professionally deficient and that he was prejudiced as a result.”
    Styles v. State, 
    309 Ga. 463
    , 471 (5) (847 SE2d 325) (2020) (citation
    and punctuation omitted). See also Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U. S. 668
    , 687 (III) (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984). If Mahdi
    “fails to prove one element of this test, we need not address the other
    element.” Styles, 309 Ga. at 471 (5) (citation omitted).
    (a) Mahdi argues that his trial counsel was ineffective (1) in
    not moving for a mistrial when, during the ex parte hearing, Mahdi
    asserted that he was not delusional and (2) in pursuing an insanity
    defense. “Claims of trial counsel ineffectiveness must be raised at
    the earliest practicable opportunity.” Terrell v. State, 
    300 Ga. 81
    , 86-
    87 (3) (793 SE2d 411) (2016) (citations omitted). Mahdi’s motion
    counsel asserted numerous claims of trial counsel ineffectiveness
    through amendments to Mahdi’s motion for new trial, and the trial
    court ruled that those claims were without merit. Although afforded
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    the opportunity to raise claims of ineffective assistance of trial
    counsel through motion counsel, Mahdi did not then raise the
    specific claims of ineffectiveness at issue in this appeal. Accordingly,
    these claims “are procedurally barred for failure to assert them at
    the first practicable opportunity.” Bedford v. State, 
    311 Ga. 329
    , 338
    (5) (c) (857 SE2d 708) (2021).
    (b) Mahdi also contends that he received ineffective assistance
    of motion-for-new-trial counsel. In that respect, Mahdi argues that
    his motion counsel was ineffective for not claiming that his trial
    counsel was ineffective in (1) pursuing an insanity defense and (2)
    not fully explaining the insanity defense to him. Mahdi posits that
    his motion counsel should have questioned trial counsel about these
    issues at the motion-for-new-trial hearing.
    Mahdi’s motion counsel was appointed to act as his appellate
    counsel following the trial. Motion counsel filed amendments to the
    motion for new trial filed by trial counsel, represented Mahdi at the
    motion hearing, and filed a notice of appeal to this Court after the
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    trial court denied Mahdi’s motion for new trial. As we noted above, 2
    this Court remanded that appeal to the trial court to consider
    Mahdi’s request that appointed appellate counsel be removed from
    the case and that Mahdi be permitted to pursue his appeal pro se.
    On remand, the trial court relieved motion counsel from his
    appointment as Mahdi’s appellate counsel and allowed Mahdi to
    proceed with this appeal pro se. Mahdi then asked the trial court for
    leave to file a second motion for new trial, but the trial court denied
    that request.
    Given this case’s procedural posture, this appeal is the first
    practicable opportunity for Mahdi to assert that his motion counsel
    was ineffective. “Generally, when a preserved ineffective assistance
    of counsel claim is raised for the first time on appeal, we must
    remand for an evidentiary hearing on the issue.” Anthony v. State,
    
    302 Ga. 546
    , 554 (V) (807 SE2d 891) (2017) (citation and punctuation
    omitted). However, this Court does “not allow a defendant to
    resuscitate a specific claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel
    2   See footnote 1.
    9
    that was not raised at the motion-for-new-trial stage by recasting
    the claim on appeal as one of ineffective assistance of motion-for-
    new-trial counsel for failing to raise the specific claim of trial
    counsel’s ineffectiveness.” Bedford, 311 Ga. at 339 (5) (c). Mahdi’s
    claims of ineffective assistance of motion counsel hinge on motion
    counsel’s    failure    to   raise    specific    claims    of   trial   counsel
    ineffectiveness at the motion-for-new-trial stage. “If [Mahdi] wishes
    to pursue a claim that his motion-for-new-trial counsel was
    ineffective in this regard, he must do so through a petition for a writ
    of habeas corpus.” Id. at 339 (5) (c).
    3. Mahdi also claims that a conflict existed between “trial
    counsel/appellate counsel strategy and defense testimony,” 3 such
    that “trial and appellate counsel also violated the counsel without
    conflict” protections of the Sixth Amendment. Pretermitting
    whether these claims are preserved for appellate review, Mahdi
    3 As we noted in Division 1, Mahdi did not testify at trial. In his appellate
    brief, Mahdi cites the transcript of his testimony at the hearing on the motion
    for new trial in support of his conflict claims. Mahdi testified at that hearing
    that he had been molested by Quincy and was not delusional.
    10
    provides no support for his proposition that an alleged conflict based
    on his counsels’ “strategy” rises to the level of an actual conflict of
    interest for the purposes of the Sixth Amendment. See White v.
    State, 
    287 Ga. 713
    , 722 (4) (a) (699 SE2d 291) (2010) (“The question
    of whether an attorney labors under an actual conflict of interest for
    purposes of the Sixth Amendment generally arises when the
    purported conflict stems from the attorney’s representation of
    multiple defendants concurrently [or] when the attorney’s duty of
    loyalty to his client conflicts with the attorney’s duty to the
    attorney’s employer.”) (citations omitted). His ill-defined argument
    is at best a matter of theory or speculation. See Henry v. State, 
    269 Ga. 851
    , 854 (3) (507 SE2d 419) (1998) (For a criminal defendant to
    show counsel was ineffective due to a conflict of interest, “the conflict
    of interest must be palpable and have a substantial basis in fact. A
    theoretical or speculative conflict will not impugn a conviction . . .
    which is supported by competent evidence.”) (citation and
    punctuation omitted). Thus, the claim lacks merit. See 
    id.
     See also
    State v. Abernathy, 
    289 Ga. 603
    , 604 (715 SE2d 48) (2011) (“[A]
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    defendant asserting ineffective assistance of counsel based on an
    actual conflict of interest must demonstrate that the conflict of
    interest existed and that it significantly affected counsel’s
    performance.”) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    12