Cook v. State ( 2021 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: August 24, 2021
    S21A0568. COOK v. THE STATE.
    WARREN, Justice.
    Charles Cook was tried by a Fulton County jury and convicted
    of malice murder and other crimes in connection with the shooting
    death of Salanto Winfrey. On appeal, Cook contends that the trial
    court erred when it precluded him from presenting evidence of
    Winfrey’s prior violent acts toward third parties.                 Seeing no
    reversible error, we affirm. 1
    1 Winfrey was killed on November 2, 2012. On March 15, 2013, a Fulton
    County grand jury indicted Cook, charging him with malice murder, felony
    murder predicated on aggravated assault, felony murder predicated on
    possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, aggravated assault with a deadly
    weapon, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, and possession of a
    firearm during the commission of a felony. Cook was tried in June 2014, and
    a jury found him guilty of all counts. The trial court sentenced Cook to life in
    prison for malice murder and a consecutive five years in prison for possession
    of a firearm during the commission of a felony. The remaining counts were
    merged or vacated by operation of law. Cook was sentenced under the
    recidivist provisions of OCGA § 17-10-7 (a) and (c), and the trial court noted
    1. As relevant to this appeal, the evidence presented at trial
    showed the following.          Cook and Winfrey lived in separate
    apartments in a four-unit residential building. On the evening of
    November 2, 2012, the landlord visited the tenants of the building,
    and as he was talking to Cook in Cook’s apartment, Winfrey called
    Cook outside. The landlord testified that, when Cook went outside,
    Winfrey “started getting loud.” The landlord also came outside and
    heard Winfrey tell Cook to “mind your own business and pay your
    rent.” When Cook started to walk back to his apartment, Winfrey
    said, “It’s not going to happen the way it happened before.” Cook
    asked Winfrey to repeat himself, then went inside his own
    apartment and came out with a gun.
    At that point, Winfrey was sitting on the porch with his back
    to the building. The landlord testified that when Cook came out with
    that Cook’s sentence under those provisions “[in] effect” was life without
    parole. Cook filed a timely motion for new trial on June 26, 2014, and amended
    it through new counsel on June 28, 2019. After a hearing, the trial court denied
    the motion on October 2, 2019. Cook filed a timely notice of appeal, and this
    case was docketed in this Court for the April 2021 term and submitted for a
    decision on the briefs.
    2
    the gun, he had a “glassy-eyed” look and was “staring, just staring.
    He[] wasn’t staring at anything or anybody.” Cook then fired a shot
    at Winfrey, came down the steps, stood in front of Winfrey, and made
    some “taunting” statements, “something like what you got to say
    now, big boy?” Cook then shot Winfrey again, ran up the steps, came
    back down, and shot Winfrey a third time, after which Cook
    disappeared into his apartment. The landlord testified that he did
    not see Winfrey with a weapon, did not hear him say anything “to
    the effect that he was going to merk” Cook,2 and did not see him
    make any gestures toward Cook as if to attack him.
    Another account of the shooting came from a witness who had
    worked for Winfrey as a driver. Around the time of the shooting, the
    driver saw Winfrey go into Cook’s apartment and heard people
    arguing inside. Winfrey then came outside and sat with his back
    turned to Cook’s apartment. Cook exited the apartment and said,
    “Okay, you said you are going to merk me.” Cook then went back
    2 A witness testified that the word “merk,” in “certain neighborhoods in
    the area,” meant “I’m going to kill you or hurt you or do something to you.”
    3
    inside the apartment, came out with a pistol, fired at Winfrey’s head,
    stepped down two steps, and shot Winfrey again at point-blank
    range. Winfrey fell to the ground, but Cook went further down the
    stairs, stood over Winfrey, and fired again. After the shooting, Cook
    went back inside his apartment. The driver testified that he did not
    see anyone with a gun other than Cook, and he identified Cook in
    court as the shooter.
    Additional evidence presented at trial showed that when police
    officers arrived at the scene, they did not locate any weapons and
    did not receive any information from witnesses about Winfrey
    having a weapon. Within hours of the shooting, Cook was identified
    as a suspect and a warrant was issued for his arrest. Cook had fled
    the scene, however, and was not apprehended until December 17,
    2012. An autopsy revealed that Winfrey suffered two fatal gunshot
    wounds to his back and one gunshot wound to the back of his thigh.
    In addition to the evidence noted above, the State presented
    evidence of an earlier confrontation between Cook and Winfrey
    about a parking space. Cook’s cousin, Adrian Cook, testified that,
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    about three or four months before the shooting, he was in his
    apartment when he was alerted to a fight between Cook and
    Winfrey, where Winfrey was “jumping on [Cook].” When Adrian
    came outside, Winfrey was standing on the porch “cussing [and]
    saying different stuff about what he was going do. He was going to
    do this, do that.” The back of Cook’s head was “busted and it was
    bleeding real bad.” Upon seeing Adrian, Winfrey walked upstairs,
    retrieved a pistol, and came back downstairs, but then the landlord
    arrived, and the situation deescalated.    Asked about Winfrey’s
    general behavior and reputation, Adrian testified that Winfrey was
    a “pretty big guy,” had a “bully mentality,” and was “hustling
    dealing with guns and different other things.” Adrian had seen
    Winfrey with a gun on multiple occasions and even talked with Cook
    about moving out of the building due to Winfrey’s behavior.
    Cook’s primary defense strategy was to show that he shot
    Winfrey in self-defense or that, at most, the shooting amounted to
    voluntary manslaughter—a lesser offense of murder. To that end,
    Cook presented the testimony of Edgar Rivera, who lived across the
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    street from the building and observed the shooting. Rivera testified
    that, on the evening of the shooting, Winfrey started arguing with
    Cook and told Cook “that he was going to have him killed.” Winfrey
    then “went upstairs to where he lived and . . . got a gun and had it
    in his hood[ie].” Rivera testified:
    So I can hear them arguing and, you know, [Winfrey] kept
    telling [Cook] that you know he was going to have him
    killed or whatever. And [Cook] kept telling him to just
    chill out, you know, just let it go or whatever but for some
    reason he just wouldn’t walk away. So [Winfrey] kept his
    hands tucked in his hood[ie] the whole tim[e].
    “And the next thing I know,” Rivera said, “I just seen [Winfrey] kind
    of he jerked back trying to pull his hand out of his hood[ie] and that’s
    when the shooting started.”
    The defense also presented testimony about the parking-space
    confrontation Adrian had described. One of the defense witnesses
    testified that he recalled Winfrey “throwing [Cook] down and
    beating him up throwing him into a table and whatnot,” resulting in
    a “big ole bruise” to the back of Cook’s head. That witness also
    recalled Winfrey telling Cook that “it ain’t over” and that if he saw
    6
    Cook’s car parked in the space again, Winfrey “was going to do this
    and he was going to do that and you know.”           Another witness
    testified that Winfrey told Cook to move his car “out of the
    driveway,” challenged Cook to a fight, and “swung at” Cook, causing
    Cook to hit his head against a brick wall.
    Several defense witnesses also testified about Winfrey’s
    reputation for violence. One witness said that Winfrey “would use
    his size to try to intimidate people.” Another testified that Winfrey
    “used to talk to people real bad . . . in a real like vicious way about
    things that was going on around,” that Winfrey got “into a lot of
    fights with a lot of other people,” and that he “most definitely” had
    a reputation for carrying a gun. And a third testified that Winfrey
    “was violent,” would “put his hands on you,” and had a reputation
    for carrying a gun.
    2. In his sole enumeration of error, Cook contends that the trial
    court erred when it denied his request to present evidence of three
    separate instances of violence committed by Winfrey against third
    parties, namely, an incident where Winfrey slapped an elderly man
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    and threw him over a bannister, an incident where Winfrey struck
    “an older man” in the back with a rake, and an incident where
    Winfrey “punch[ed] a man in the face so hard that he did a
    backwards flip/fall off the porch.” This enumeration of error fails.
    Pretermitting whether the trial court erred when it excluded
    the proffered evidence, we conclude that any such error was
    harmless and presents no grounds for reversal. See Neuman v.
    State, 
    311 Ga. 83
    , 91 (856 SE2d 289) (2021) (“[E]ven where an abuse
    of discretion is shown, there are no grounds for reversal if the error
    did not affect a substantial right, and thus harm, the defendant.”)
    (citation and punctuation omitted). See also OCGA § 24-1-103 (a)
    (“Error shall not be predicated upon a ruling which admits or
    excludes evidence unless a substantial right of the party is
    affected[.]”). “The test for determining nonconstitutional harmless
    error is whether it is highly probable that the error did not
    contribute to the verdict.” Truett v. State, 
    311 Ga. 313
    , 318 (857
    SE2d 690) (2021) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    Here, the main import of the excluded evidence was to show
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    that Cook had reason to fear Winfrey and to believe that Winfrey
    would try to kill or hurt him.     But the jury had already heard
    abundant evidence supporting that aspect of Cook’s defense theory.
    Testimony from multiple witnesses showed that Winfrey had a
    reputation for being violent and aggressive, that he was known to
    carry a gun, that he previously physically assaulted Cook because of
    a disagreement about a parking space, and that he had threatened
    to kill Cook. In light of the specific evidence already presented in
    this case, the additional evidence Cook sought to admit about
    Winfrey acting violently toward third parties was essentially
    cumulative, and it is highly unlikely that such additional evidence
    would have had any effect on the verdict. See Peterson v. State, 
    274 Ga. 165
    , 168 (549 SE2d 387) (2001) (“In light of the substantial
    evidence of [victim]’s violent acts, it is highly probable that any
    additional evidence of prior violent acts would not affect the verdict,
    and any erroneous exclusion of that evidence was harmless.”);
    Sturkey v. State, 
    271 Ga. 572
    , 574 (522 SE2d 463) (1999) (error in
    excluding testimony that victim had threatened the defendant was
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    harmless because the jury heard “ample other evidence that [victim]
    was a violent person who had threatened the defendant”). See also
    Henderson v. State, 
    310 Ga. 708
    , 714 (854 SE2d 523) (2021)
    (exclusion of defendant’s testimony about a victim’s threat was
    harmless, in part because that testimony “added little if anything”
    to defendant’s other testimony about “more explicit threats”).
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S21A0568

Filed Date: 8/24/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/20/2021