Watts v. State ( 2022 )


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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
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    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: October 4, 2022
    S22A0754. WATTS v. THE STATE.
    BOGGS, Chief Justice.
    Appellant Ronregus Watts challenges his 2008 convictions for
    felony murder and other crimes in connection with the shooting
    death of Thomas Vinson. 1 Appellant contends that the evidence
    1Vinson was killed on December 22, 2006. On March 27, 2007, a Fulton
    County grand jury indicted Appellant, along with Jarmarvis Dixon, for malice
    murder, three counts of felony murder, armed robbery, hijacking a motor
    vehicle, burglary, two counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon,
    possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, financial transaction
    card theft, and two counts of financial transaction card fraud. Dixon was tried
    the week before Appellant, and we later affirmed his convictions. See Dixon v.
    State, 
    294 Ga. 40
     (
    751 SE2d 69
    ) (2013). Appellant pled guilty to the two counts
    of financial transaction card fraud, and at a trial from April 14 to 21, 2008, the
    jury acquitted him of malice murder but found him guilty of the remaining
    charges. The trial court sentenced Appellant to serve life in prison for felony
    murder based on aggravated assault for the shooting of Vinson, consecutive
    terms of 20 years each for hijacking a motor vehicle and aggravated assault for
    the pistol-whipping of Vinson, a consecutive term of five years for possession
    of a firearm during the commission of a felony, and a total of three years
    consecutive for the three financial transaction card convictions. The other two
    felony murder counts were vacated by operation of law, and the court merged
    the remaining counts for purposes of sentencing. The State did not file a cross-
    presented at trial was legally insufficient to support his convictions,
    and that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress his
    statement to the police and physical and testimonial evidence
    obtained as a result of his statement. As explained below, when
    properly viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdicts, the
    evidence was sufficient to support Appellant’s convictions, and the
    trial court did not err in denying his motion to suppress.
    Accordingly, we affirm.
    1.    Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the
    evidence at trial showed the following. In mid-October 2006,
    Appellant began dating Tiarra Neely, and two weeks later, he moved
    in with her and her two young children at her townhouse in the City
    of East Point. Neely’s cousin, Jarmarvis Dixon, spent three or four
    nights a week at Tiarra’s townhouse, sleeping on the sofa in the
    appeal challenging the court’s merger rulings, and we decline to exercise our
    discretion to review them on our own initiative. See Hood v. State, 
    303 Ga. 420
    ,
    424-425 (
    811 SE2d 392
    ) (2018). On May 12, 2008, Appellant filed a motion for
    new trial, which he amended with new counsel more than a decade later on
    November 15, 2018. On May 29, 2019, the trial court denied the motion.
    Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal, which he later amended, and the case
    was docketed in this Court for the April 2022 term and submitted for decision
    on the briefs.
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    living room, and the rest of the time he slept at the home of Tiarra’s
    younger sister, Shamika Neely.
    Sometime after dark on December 22, 2006, Appellant and
    Dixon left Tiarra’s townhouse wearing dark sweatshirts and went to
    the City of College Park, where they were walking along Hardin
    Avenue when Susan Mercer pulled up to her house and put on her
    blinker to indicate that she was turning into the driveway.
    Appellant and Dixon, who had their hoods up, “took their time”
    crossing Mercer’s driveway and then turned and looked at her in a
    way that gave her an uneasy feeling. Mercer pulled into her
    driveway, turned off her SUV, and gathered her things, but before
    getting out, she looked in the rearview mirror. Mercer saw either
    Appellant or Dixon standing behind her SUV with his legs apart, his
    hands in his sweatshirt, and a disturbing look on his face.
    Mercer, whose hands were shaking, put the keys back in the
    ignition, started the SUV, backed out quickly, and drove off the way
    that she came. Mercer used her cell phone to call her husband, who
    told her to go back to the house and that he would have a neighbor,
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    Ken Allen, meet her there. Mercer drove back home, parked in her
    driveway, and waited for Allen, who came over on foot and escorted
    her into the house. Before going inside, Mercer looked down the
    street, saw Appellant and Dixon walking in the direction of the
    rental house that Vinson and his wife owned, and said, “There they
    go.”
    Allen told Mercer that he was going to get in his truck and go
    check out the two men walking down the street who had frightened
    her. Allen drove by Vinson’s rental house, where he saw Appellant
    and Dixon leaning against the porch railing. Vinson’s truck was in
    the carport, but Allen did not see Vinson. Allen drove four or five
    houses down, turned left, went around the block, and drove back up
    the street to the rental house. By that point, Vinson’s truck was
    parked on the street, and either Appellant or Dixon was sitting in
    the driver’s seat. Allen heard a loud noise from inside the rental
    house that sounded “like a two-by-four hitting against the cement”
    and saw either Appellant or Dixon run out of the house and across
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    the carport and jump in the open passenger-side door of Vinson’s
    truck. Appellant and Dixon then sped away in Vinson’s truck.
    Allen followed the truck for a brief time before calling 911 and
    reporting it as a stolen vehicle. Allen then returned to the rental
    house, where he noticed blood in the carport leading up to the door.
    Allen went inside the house, where he found Vinson lying dead on
    the laundry room floor from a close-range gunshot wound to the face.
    Allen called 911 again, and the police soon arrived. In addition to
    the gunshot wound, Vinson had blunt-force injuries to his ear and
    the back of his head.
    Appellant and Dixon abandoned Vinson’s truck at an
    apartment complex about three miles away from the rental house.
    Surveillance video from a nearby Kroger recorded less than an hour
    after the shooting showed Appellant and Dixon using one of Vinson’s
    credit cards to buy a carton of Newport cigarettes.
    A few days after the shooting, Dixon told his cousin Shamika
    that he “got some money” from “some dude” and produced Vinson’s
    obituary from his pocket. Dixon said that he and Appellant killed
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    Vinson, and he showed her a credit card that had Vinson’s name on
    it.
    On the day after Christmas, Appellant and Dixon returned to
    the same Kroger where they had been captured on video using one
    of Vinson’s credit cards, and they were again captured on video using
    one of Vinson’s credit cards to make a purchase. The police, who had
    put an alert on Vinson’s credit cards, responded to the Kroger while
    Appellant and Dixon were still there and took them to a police
    station, where they were interviewed that evening after being
    advised of their Miranda rights. See Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (86 SCt 1602, 16 LE2d 694) (1966). The police interviews of
    Appellant and Dixon were video recorded, but the recordings were
    not introduced into evidence at Appellant’s trial.
    When Appellant’s interview ended in the early morning hours
    of the day after the shooting, he led the police to Tiarra’s townhouse,
    and she signed a consent-to-search form. Downstairs, the police
    recovered two of Vinson’s checkbooks, a glove turned inside-out that
    appeared to match a glove found at Vinson’s rental house, and a pair
    6
    of blue jeans with blood splatter containing Vinson’s DNA. Upstairs,
    the police found a box of Newport cigarettes in a closet in the
    bedroom where Appellant and Tiarra slept.
    On the day after the search of the townhouse, a man who
    worked at a car wash on the same street as the Kroger where
    Appellant and Dixon were detained found Vinson’s wallet in a trash
    can and turned it over to the police. The police later recovered
    Vinson’s cell phone from a sewer on the same street.
    2.    Appellant contends that the evidence was legally
    insufficient to support the jury’s guilty verdicts.
    When we consider the sufficiency of the evidence as a
    matter of federal due process, our review is limited to
    whether the trial evidence, when viewed in the light most
    favorable to the verdicts, is sufficient to authorize a
    rational trier of fact to find the defendant guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt of the crimes of which he was convicted.
    See Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (99 SCt 2781,
    61 LE2d 560) (1979).
    Moore v. State, 
    311 Ga. 506
    , 508 (
    858 SE2d 676
    ) (2021) (citation and
    punctuation omitted). We put aside any questions about conflicting
    evidence, the credibility of the witnesses, or the weight of the
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    evidence, leaving the resolution of such matters to the discretion of
    the jury. See 
    id. at 509
    . Moreover, “[w]hen we consider sufficiency,
    we consider all the evidence admitted at trial, regardless of whether
    the trial court erred in admitting some of that evidence.” Davenport
    v. State, 
    309 Ga. 385
    , 397 (
    846 SE2d 83
    ) (2020) (citation omitted;
    emphasis in original). See also McDaniel v. Brown, 
    558 U.S. 120
    ,
    131 (130 SCt 665, 175 LE2d 582) (2010).
    When properly viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s
    verdicts, the evidence presented at trial and summarized above was
    sufficient as a matter of constitutional due process to authorize a
    rational jury to find Appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,
    either as a principal or as a party to the crimes. See Jackson, 
    443 U.S. at 319
    . See also OCGA § 16-2-20 (defining parties to a crime);
    Dickey v. State, 
    313 Ga. 593
    , 597 (
    872 SE2d 297
    ) (2022) (“[T]he jury
    may infer a common criminal intent from the defendant’s presence,
    companionship, and conduct with another perpetrator before,
    during, and after the crimes.”).
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    3.    Appellant also contends that the trial court erred in
    denying his motion to suppress his statement to the police and the
    evidence to which his statement led, namely, the physical evidence
    recovered from Tiarra’s townhouse and Tiarra and Shamika Neely’s
    testimony at trial. Appellant cites former OCGA § 24-3-50, which
    applied to his 2008 trial and said, with emphasis added: “To make a
    confession admissible, it must have been made voluntarily, without
    being induced by another by the slightest hope of benefit or remotest
    fear of injury.” 2 Appellant claims that the police induced his
    statement by threatening him with the death penalty and impliedly
    promising him that if he confessed, the death penalty would be
    taken off the table, which he argues constituted an improper hope of
    benefit requiring the exclusion not only of his statement, but all the
    evidence to which his statement led under the “fruit of the poisonous
    2  Former OCGA § 24-3-50 and its companion provision, former OCGA
    § 24-3-51, were carried forward without substantive change into Georgia’s new
    Evidence Code, which took effect on January 1, 2013. See OCGA §§ 24-8-824
    and 24-8-825. See also Brown v. State, 
    290 Ga. 865
    , 868-869 & n.1 (
    725 SE2d 320
    ) (2012) (discussing former OCGA §§ 24-3-50 and 24-3-51).
    9
    tree” doctrine. See generally Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 484-488 (83 SCt 407, 9 LE2d 441) (1963) (discussing the “fruits”
    extension of the exclusionary rule). This claim fails for at least two
    reasons.3
    First, we have repeatedly held that informing a murder suspect
    that “the crime is potentially punishable by death is simply an
    explanation of the seriousness of his situation” that does not render
    his statement inadmissible under former OCGA § 24-3-50. Funes v.
    State, 
    289 Ga. 793
    , 797 (
    716 SE2d 183
    ) (2011) (citation and internal
    punctuation omitted). The record shows that nothing more than that
    occurred here. Second, the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine does
    not apply to violations of former OCGA § 24-3-50. See State v.
    Chulpayev, 
    296 Ga. 764
    , 783-784 (
    770 SE2d 808
    ) (2015). Thus, even
    if Appellant’s statement to the police had been induced by an
    improper hope of benefit – and the record shows that it was not –
    the trial court still would have acted properly in denying his motion
    3 As noted above, Appellant’s video-recorded statement to the police was
    not introduced into evidence at his trial. Thus, any error in denying his motion
    to suppress as to the video-recorded statement itself was harmless.
    10
    to suppress with regard to the physical and testimonial evidence
    that he claims was obtained as a result of his statement.
    Accordingly, the trial court did not err in denying Appellant’s motion
    to suppress on the basis of former OCGA § 24-3-50.
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
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