Pearson v. State ( 2021 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: March 1, 2021
    S20A1539. PEARSON v. THE STATE.
    NAHMIAS, Presiding Justice.
    At his trial in September 2011, the jury found Appellant
    Gregory Pearson guilty of five counts of armed robbery, two counts
    of burglary, one count of aggravated assault, and six counts of
    possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony in
    connection with robberies in two motel rooms in Valdosta. In this
    appeal, he claims that his trial counsel provided ineffective
    assistance by failing to object to evidence of three witnesses’
    identification of Appellant at a roadside “showup.” He also raises a
    claim of trial court error and a claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel related to a surveillance video, because the video was
    authenticated by his accomplice, LaQuita Frazier, and Frazier
    identified him on the video. Finally, Appellant claims that the lack
    of a transcript of voir dire, opening statements, and closing
    arguments violates his constitutional right to due process. All of
    these claims are meritless, so we affirm.
    1. The evidence presented at Appellant’s trial showed the
    following. On the evening of May 9, 2010, Harold Damron, John
    Sparks, Aimee Ellis, Shonda Mathis, and Mathis’s two children were
    staying in a room at the Rodeway Inn in Valdosta. Around 9:15 p.m.,
    a man knocked on the door. When Damron answered the door, the
    man asked him for a cigarette. Damron gave him a Marlboro Light
    cigarette and turned back toward the room. The man then pointed a
    black handgun at Damron’s back and shoved Damron inside the
    room. The man waved his gun around, pointing it at everyone. He
    announced that he was robbing them and ordered them to give him
    all their money. He took some money from Damron, $3 from Sparks,
    and a $100 bill from Ellis’s purse. He also took keys for three
    vehicles, which he then used to search the victims’ vehicles in the
    parking lot as Damron and Ellis watched him from the motel
    window. After he was finished with the vehicles, he tried to get back
    2
    in the motel room, but when the victims refused to open the door, he
    left. They then called 911. When the police arrived, Ellis told them
    that the robber was a black man wearing a “white tank [top], hat,
    and white shorts and white shoes.”
    Around 9:40 p.m., Kevin McCafferty, Shannon Sheffield, and
    Ian Morrison, who had been out working together, returned to their
    rooms at the Quality Inn, which was next to the Rodeway Inn.
    McCafferty and Sheffield were sharing a room, and Morrison had a
    room next door. A man followed McCafferty and Sheffield into their
    room. He hit Sheffield in the head with a pistol, knocking Sheffield
    to the ground. The man then pointed his gun at them. Sheffield gave
    the man $15, and McCafferty, who “kept [his] eyes” on the man’s
    gun and face, gave him $10. The man left. McCafferty saw a Texas
    license plate on the man’s car.
    Around this time, a man knocked on Morrison’s door. Morrison
    pulled back the curtain of his window so he could see the man, who
    was wearing a white sleeveless shirt, a white hat, white shorts, and
    3
    white socks. 1 Morrison did not let him in. Morrison saw a small, teal-
    colored car with a Texas license plate backed into a space in the
    parking lot and a woman in a black outfit sitting in the driver’s seat.2
    After the woman said, “Come on, let’s go,” the man in white clothes
    got into the car and they drove away. McCafferty and Sheffield went
    to Morrison’s room to tell him about the robbery, and they called the
    police, providing a description of the car and license plate.
    Soon after, based on that description, police officers in nearby
    Florida pulled over the green Chevy Cavalier with a Texas license
    plate that LaQuita Frazier was driving with Appellant in the
    passenger seat. Frazier was wearing a black dress, and Appellant
    was wearing a white tank top, a white hat, white calf-length pants,
    and white shoes. Inside the car, there was a pack of Newport
    cigarettes, which Frazier later testified was the brand Appellant
    1 Morrison gave this description of the man’s complete outfit in his trial
    testimony. In his statement to the police immediately after the incident,
    Morrison mentioned only that the man was black and was wearing a white
    tank top and white hat. McCafferty and Sheffield described the robber to the
    police only as a “black man,” with no other specific details.
    2 Morrison testified that he had first noticed this car when he, Sheffield,
    and McCafferty drove into the parking lot because he travels frequently and
    he pays attention to his surroundings.
    4
    smoked; a single Marlboro cigarette; and a total of $152, including a
    $100 bill, which Ellis later testified was the one that had been taken
    from her based on the way it was folded.
    Valdosta police officers who had responded to the 911 calls
    from the motels told the robbery victims and Morrison that other
    officers had pulled someone over based on the description of the
    perpetrator’s vehicle, and asked if anyone could identify the robber.
    Ellis, McCafferty, and Morrison then went with the officers to the
    traffic stop.3 When Ellis, McCafferty, and Morrison arrived at the
    roadside where Appellant and Frazier’s car was pulled over, they
    were allowed to walk close to the vehicle in which Appellant was
    sitting to see if they could identify him. 4 Ellis and McCafferty
    identified Appellant as the man who had robbed them, and Morrison
    identified Appellant as the man who knocked on his door. Morrison
    3  Ellis testified that she volunteered to identify Appellant because she
    was certain that she could identify him, explaining, “I will never forget that
    face.”
    4 Neither Ellis nor Morrison testified about whether Appellant was in a
    police car, and McCafferty first testified that Appellant was in a police car but
    then testified that he could not remember. One of the officers who participated
    in Appellant’s arrest testified that Appellant was put in the back of another
    officer’s car.
    5
    was also shown Frazier and identified her as the woman who had
    been sitting in the car in the Quality Inn parking lot, and Morrison
    identified the car that the police had pulled over as the car that he
    had seen at the motel.
    At trial, Ellis and McCafferty, as well as the other three victims
    who testified (Damron, Sparks, and Sheffield), identified Appellant
    in court as the man who robbed them, and Morrison identified
    Appellant in court as the man who knocked on his door. Ellis
    testified that she was certain that the man she identified at the
    roadside showup was the robber, and all of the witnesses testified
    that they had no doubt or question that Appellant was the man that
    they saw at the motel. Damron and Morrison also specifically
    testified that their identifications were based on what they
    remembered from the night of the robberies, with Morrison adding,
    “You just don’t forget stuff like that.” Ellis and Damron testified that
    the lights were on in their motel room, so they were able to see
    Appellant well, and Ellis added that the parking lot was well-lit.
    Frazier, who had pled guilty to two counts of robbery and
    6
    agreed to testify against Appellant, told the jury the following. She
    and Appellant were driving on May 9, 2010, when Appellant said
    that he wanted to rob a woman Frazier knew. Appellant had a black
    handgun with him. When Frazier told Appellant that she did not
    know where his intended target lived, they went to a motel.
    Appellant got out of the car and returned after a short time. When
    he got back in the car, he pulled his gun out from under his clothes
    and put it on his lap. He told Frazier to drive a bit further. He saw
    someone unpacking a car and told Frazier to back up before the
    person got away. Appellant then got out of the car, and Frazier saw
    him hit the person with his gun. She yelled at Appellant to “come
    on.” As Appellant got into the car, Frazier saw a man looking out the
    window from another room. They then drove toward Jacksonville,
    Florida. When the police started to follow them, Appellant threw his
    gun out the car window.
    The gun was never recovered. Appellant did not testify at trial.
    The jury found Appellant guilty as charged, and the trial court
    sentenced him to serve life in prison plus five years and – after a
    7
    long delay – denied his motion for new trial. This appeal followed.
    2. As discussed above, Ellis, McCafferty, and Morrison
    identified Appellant at the roadside showup on the night of the
    crimes. Appellant’s trial counsel filed a pretrial motion to suppress
    testimony about the showup identifications, arguing that the
    procedure was “unduly suggestive,” “inherently unreliable,” and
    “likely [to] cause misidentification.” The record does not include an
    order ruling on the motion, however, and trial counsel did not
    mention the pretrial motion or otherwise object when the evidence
    of the showup identifications was admitted during the trial.
    Appellant argues that his trial counsel’s failure to secure a
    ruling on the suppression motion constituted ineffective assistance.
    To succeed on this claim, Appellant must show both that his trial
    counsel’s performance was professionally deficient, meaning that
    counsel performed in an “objectively unreasonable way considering
    all the circumstances and in light of prevailing professional norms,”
    and that Appellant suffered prejudice as a result, meaning that
    counsel’s error “likely affected the outcome of the trial.” Mosley v.
    8
    State, 
    307 Ga. 711
    , 720 (838 SE2d 289) (2020) (citations and
    punctuation omitted). See also Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984). We need not address
    both parts of this test if Appellant fails to prove one. See Mosley, 307
    Ga. at 720.
    Appellant correctly points out that this Court has said that “a
    one-on-one showup is inherently suggestive.” Butler v. State, 
    290 Ga. 412
    , 414 (721 SE2d 876) (2012) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    Nevertheless, evidence of an identification made during such a
    showup is inadmissible only if the showup procedure was
    impermissibly suggestive and there was a substantial likelihood of
    irreparable misidentification. See 
    id. at 415
    . See also Scruggs v.
    State, 
    309 Ga. App. 569
    , 576 (711 SE2d 86) (2011) (holding that a
    showup procedure was not impermissibly suggestive).
    We need not decide whether the showup procedure in this case
    was impermissibly suggestive, because even assuming that it was,
    Appellant has failed to show that there was a substantial likelihood
    of irreparable misidentification. See Butler, 
    290 Ga. at
    415
    9
    (explaining that if there was no substantial likelihood of irreparable
    misidentification, the reviewing court may pretermit the question of
    impermissible suggestiveness). Factors to be considered in
    evaluating     the    likelihood     of     misidentification    include     the
    opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the time of the
    crime, the witness’s degree of attention, the accuracy of the witness’s
    prior description, the level of certainty demonstrated by the witness
    at the identification, and the length of time between the crime and
    the showup. See, e.g., White v. State, 
    350 Ga. App. 218
    , 222-223 (828
    SE2d 445) (2019); Freeman v. State, 
    306 Ga. App. 783
    , 785 (703
    SE2d 368) (2010). See also Neil v. Biggers, 
    409 U.S. 188
    , 199-200 (93
    SCt 375, 34 LE2d 401) (1972).5
    5 In this Court’s 4-3 decision in Brodes v. State, 
    279 Ga. 435
     (614 SE2d
    766) (2005), the majority opinion, in considering the pattern jury instructions
    for criminal cases in Georgia courts, cited a “scientifically-documented lack of
    correlation between a witness’s certainty in his or her identification of someone
    as the perpetrator of a crime and the accuracy of that identification” in holding
    that trial courts should “refrain from informing jurors they may consider a
    witness’s level of certainty when instructing them on the factors that may be
    considered in deciding the reliability of that identification.” 
    Id. at 442
    .
    However, as indicated by the cases cited in the text above, Georgia courts have
    continued, as we are obliged to do on matters of federal constitutional law, to
    follow the holding of the United States Supreme Court in Neil that courts
    10
    In this case, the evidence indicates that the likelihood of
    irreparable misidentification was low. Ellis, McCafferty, and
    Morrison each had a good opportunity to view the perpetrator at
    their motel rooms and paid attention to him at that time. Ellis
    testified that the lights were on in her room and the parking lot was
    well-lit, so she was able to see Appellant well. McCafferty was held
    at gunpoint by Appellant and testified that he focused on Appellant’s
    face. And Morrison testified that he moved his curtain to look out
    the window when Appellant was at his door and generally paid close
    attention to his surroundings. All three witnesses indicated that
    they had no doubt that Appellant was the perpetrator, and although
    McCafferty and Morrison did not testify about their level of certainty
    at the time of the showup, Ellis testified that she had been certain
    that she correctly identified the robber. And the showup happened
    shortly after the crimes.
    Although      the   pre-showup       descriptions   given    by    Ellis,
    reviewing the admissibility of evidence of a showup identification as a matter
    of constitutional due process should consider “the level of certainty
    demonstrated by the witness at the confrontation.” 
    409 U.S. at 199
    .
    11
    McCafferty, and Morrison were not detailed, with all three
    witnesses giving the perpetrator’s race and gender and Ellis and
    Morrison mentioning some of his white clothing, nothing in those
    descriptions was inaccurate, and in any event the lack of detail alone
    does not require a finding of a substantial likelihood of
    misidentification. The totality of the circumstances does not show
    that the trial court would have found a substantial likelihood of
    misidentification. See, e.g., Butler, 
    290 Ga. at 415
     (holding that
    there   was    not   a   substantial    likelihood    of   irreparable
    misidentification when the victim “had [the] opportunity to view his
    attacker’s face and focused his attention thereon,” his description of
    the attacker was “‘fairly accurate,’” and there was less than an hour
    between the crime and the identification (citation omitted));
    Freeman, 306 Ga. App. at 785 (holding that there was not a
    substantial    likelihood     of    irreparable      misidentification,
    notwithstanding the victim’s initial description of the robber’s t-
    shirt color, when “the victim observed [the appellant] from ‘two or
    three feet away’ for several minutes while he was being robbed”; “the
    12
    area of the parking lot where the robbery occurred was well lit”; the
    showup happened less than 30 minutes after the incident; and the
    victim “expressed a high degree of certainty that [the appellant] was
    the man who robbed him”). “‘[H]aving failed to show that an
    objection to the identifications would have been successful,
    [Appellant] has failed to establish deficient performance by his trial
    counsel’” for not securing a ruling on counsel’s motion to suppress,
    so Appellant’s claim falters on the first prong of the ineffective-
    assistance test. Mosley, 307 Ga. at 721 (citation omitted).
    3. Appellant makes two arguments related to a surveillance
    video that was recorded on the evening of the robberies. When
    Frazier testified, the State introduced the video, which was recorded
    at a Best Western motel where Appellant and Frazier briefly
    stopped before the robberies to visit Appellant’s aunt. Frazier
    testified that the video reflected what happened there “exactly as
    [she] remember[ed] it,” with no “alterations or deletions.” Appellant
    objected to the admission of the video recording on the ground that
    Frazier was not a proper person to authenticate it. He argued that
    13
    the State needed to present the operator of the machine that
    recorded the video or a similar person. The trial court overruled
    Appellant’s objection, concluding that Frazier’s testimony that the
    video was a fair and accurate representation of what happened was
    sufficient.
    The video was then played for the jury. It shows a man wearing
    a yellow shirt and white pants and a woman in a black dress get out
    of a greenish-blue car, go inside a building, and return a short time
    later, with the woman getting in the driver’s side and the man
    getting in the passenger’s side of the car. The video does not clearly
    show their faces, but Frazier testified that she was the woman and
    Appellant was the man.
    (a) Appellant first renews his argument from trial that Frazier
    was not a proper person to authenticate the video. However, “[u]nder
    Georgia law, generally, a videotape is admissible where the operator
    of the machine which produced it, or one who personally witnessed
    the events recorded, testifies that the videotape accurately
    portrayed what the witness saw take place at the time the events
    14
    occurred.” Moore v. State, 
    305 Ga. 251
    , 255 (824 SE2d 377) (2019)
    (emphasis added; citation and punctuation omitted). 6 Frazier
    testified that she personally witnessed the events recorded and that
    the video accurately portrayed them. Thus, the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion in concluding that she properly authenticated
    the video. See id. at 256.
    (b) Appellant also argues that his trial counsel should have
    objected to Frazier’s identification of him as the man seen on the
    video because the jury should have been able to decide this question
    for itself. See Dawson v. State, 
    283 Ga. 315
    , 320 (658 SE2d 755)
    (2008) (“[I]t is improper to allow a witness to testify as to the identity
    of a person in a video or photograph when such opinion evidence
    tends only to establish a fact which average jurors could decide
    thinking for themselves and drawing their own conclusions.”
    (citation and punctuation omitted)). The video in this case, however,
    does not clearly show the man’s face, so it would have been difficult
    6 This standard was developed under Georgia’s former Evidence Code,
    which applied at the time of Appellant’s trial in 2011, and it was carried
    forward into the current Evidence Code. See Moore, 305 Ga. at 255 n.4.
    15
    for the jurors to identify the man. See id. at 321. By contrast,
    Frazier, who was very familiar with Appellant, was a witness to the
    events in the video, so her testimony was not based merely on her
    opinion of who she saw on the video, but also on her recollection of
    what she experienced in the parking lot. Thus, her identification of
    Appellant was admissible, see id. at 319-320, and Appellant’s trial
    counsel did not perform deficiently by failing to object to it, see
    Mosley, 307 Ga. at 721.
    4. Finally, Appellant argues that the lack of a transcript of his
    trial’s juror voir dire, opening statements, and closing arguments
    violates his due process rights under the United States and Georgia
    Constitutions because – he asserts – he cannot supplement the
    transcript to support his claims of ineffective assistance of trial
    counsel. Under OCGA § 17-8-5 (a), “[t]he arguments of counsel at
    trial are not required to be transcribed,” and “[v]oir dire is not
    required to be transcribed unless the prosecution is seeking the
    death penalty.” Dunlap v. State, 
    291 Ga. 51
    , 53 (727 SE2d 468)
    (2012). See also State v. Graham, 
    246 Ga. 341
    , 341-342 (271 SE2d
    16
    627) (1980) (holding that a materially identical predecessor of OCGA
    § 17-8-5 (a) did not require voir dire to be transcribed in non-death
    penalty cases).7
    If a defendant wants those parts of the trial transcribed, he
    may make a specific request. See, e.g., Allen v. State, ___ Ga. ___,
    ___ (851 SE2d 541, 550) (2020) (“[I]f a defendant wants a more
    complete record of voir dire, he must make a specific request to that
    effect.”). If, as in this case, the defendant does not make such a
    request and there is no transcript of voir dire, opening statements,
    or closing arguments, but the defendant believes that a transcript of
    those parts of the trial is necessary for his appeal, he may utilize the
    statutory process for supplementing a trial transcript found in
    OCGA § 5-6-41 (f) and (g). See Bryant v. State, 
    309 Ga. App. 649
    , 650
    n.2 (710 SE2d 854) (2011) (noting that voir dire was not transcribed,
    but the record was supplemented pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-41 (f) to
    7 OCGA § 17-8-5 (a) says in pertinent part: “On the trial of all felonies
    the presiding judge shall have the testimony taken down and, when directed
    by the judge, the court reporter shall exactly and truly record or take
    stenographic notes of the testimony and proceedings in the case, except the
    argument of counsel.”
    17
    include information about dismissed jurors). See also Stiles v. State,
    
    264 Ga. 446
    , 448 (448 SE2d 172) (1994) (holding that the appellant
    failed to demonstrate that a juror did not honestly answer a question
    during voir dire because “voir dire was not reported and appellant
    did not complete the record pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-41”).
    Appellant argues that the lack of a transcript of voir dire,
    opening statements, and closing arguments in this case violates his
    due process rights because he cannot pursue supplementation under
    OCGA § 5-6-41. This argument is premised on his assertion that
    because he seeks to raise claims of ineffective assistance of trial
    counsel, his trial counsel cannot participate in the creation of a
    supplemental transcript. However, this Court has rejected that
    premise:
    [The] contention that trial counsel could not be expected
    to assist appellate counsel because “trial counsel cannot
    be made to assert his own ineffectiveness” is without
    merit. Trial counsel would have been aiding in the
    reconstruction of the transcript, not using the transcript
    to demonstrate any error. . . . Moreover, in many of this
    Court’s prior decisions on a reconstructed record, a
    defendant’s trial counsel testified as part of the efforts at
    reconstruction, whether by affidavit or at a hearing held
    18
    for that purpose.
    Bamberg v. State, 
    308 Ga. 340
    , 350 n.9 (839 SE2d 640) (2020). Thus,
    Appellant’s constitutional claim is meritless.
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    19