Randolph v. State ( 2023 )


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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: August 21, 2023
    S23A0636. RANDOLPH v. THE STATE.
    MCMILLIAN, Justice.
    In March 2016, a jury found James Lorenzo Randolph guilty of
    malice murder, armed robbery, and other crimes in connection with
    the armed robbery of Carlos Torres and Dennis Dixon and the
    shooting death of Rodney Castlin. 1 On appeal, Randolph asserts that
    1 Castlin was killed on December 7, 2000. In December 2014, a Cobb
    County grand jury indicted Randolph on charges of malice murder (Count 1),
    felony murder (Count 2), criminal attempt to commit armed robbery against
    Castlin (Count 3), two counts of armed robbery against Torres and Dixon,
    respectively (Counts 4 and 6), aggravated assault of Torres (Count 5), and
    possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (Count 7). At a trial
    in March 2016, a jury found Randolph guilty of all counts. The trial court
    sentenced Randolph to serve three consecutive life sentences in prison on
    Counts 1, 4, and 6. In addition, the trial court sentenced Randolph to serve ten
    years in prison on Count 3, twenty years on Count 5, and five years on Count
    7, with each sentence to be served consecutively for a total of three life
    sentences plus thirty-five years in confinement. Count 2 was vacated by
    operation of law. Randolph timely filed a motion for new trial, which he later
    amended through new counsel on October 14, 2022. Following a hearing, the
    trial court denied the motion for new trial on December 27, 2022. Randolph
    timely appealed, and the case was docketed to the April 2023 term of this Court
    and submitted for a decision on the briefs.
    the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions because the
    State failed to corroborate the testimony of an accomplice and that
    the trial court erred in admitting evidence of two other acts under
    OCGA § 24-4-404 (b). Because we conclude that the accomplice’s
    testimony was sufficiently corroborated by other evidence admitted
    at trial, that the trial court did not err in admitting one prior
    incident of armed robbery, and that any error in admitting the other
    incident (a home burglary) was harmless, we affirm.
    The evidence introduced at trial shows that on December 7,
    2000, Torres was working as a front desk clerk at a Wingate Inn in
    Kennesaw. Around 10:00 p.m., a man jumped over the front counter,
    pointed a gun at Torres, and said, “Give me the money.” Fearing that
    he would be shot, Torres held the hotel’s cash drawer out, and the
    man took the money from it. Castlin, who was working as the night
    manager and had been in the back office, came around the corner to
    see what was going on. The man asked Castlin if there was a safe,
    and Castlin told him there was not. The man, however, continued to
    point the gun at Castlin and repeatedly asked where the safe was.
    2
    The man then hit Torres in the head with the butt of the gun,
    causing him to fall to the ground and lose consciousness. When
    Torres awoke, he heard a gunshot and stood up in time to see
    someone jump over the counter and run out. Castlin was lying on
    the ground, bleeding from his chest. Torres later described the man
    as slim, about five feet and eleven inches or six feet tall, and wielding
    a black revolver. Torres was able to give a description of the shooter
    to a sketch artist, and the drawing was admitted at trial. Later at
    trial, a photograph showing what Randolph looked like in 2000 was
    also admitted.
    Dixon was a guest at the hotel that evening and was in the
    computer room of the lobby when he heard “a bunch of ruckus.”
    Dixon looked out to see two men dressed in black and wearing masks
    come through the front door. One of the men put his hands down on
    the front desk and jumped over it, while the other came into the
    computer room and ordered Dixon to get on the floor and to empty
    his pockets. Dixon did not see a weapon, but the man had his hand
    in his pocket like he was pointing something at Dixon. Fearing that
    3
    he could be shot, Dixon gave his money to the man. During this time,
    Dixon heard the other man say numerous times, “[O]pen the safe or
    I’m going to shoot you.” He then heard a gunshot and closed his eyes.
    After he heard the men run out of the hotel, Dixon hid for a time and
    then fled down the hall to the room of his traveling companion and
    called 911.
    LeeAnn Bennett, a supervising emergency room nurse, was
    also a guest at the hotel that night. When she heard someone yelling
    that someone had been shot, she ran out of her room and found
    Castlin lying on the floor behind the front desk with an apparent
    chest wound. His eyes were open, but he was not breathing
    regularly. She administered aid until EMTs arrived. Castlin was
    pronounced dead on arrival at a nearby hospital. A medical
    examiner concluded that Castlin’s cause of death was a gunshot
    wound to the chest.
    A crime scene investigator with the Cobb County Police
    Department collected a .22-caliber bullet from the scene and lifted
    fingerprints from the front counter, which were entered into a data
    4
    base that only included fingerprints from Georgia, and no
    fingerprint match was identified. The Cobb County Police
    Department continued to periodically run searches of the
    fingerprints over the years, and eventually, in July 2012, a search
    of the federal fingerprint database maintained by the FBI yielded a
    list of possible matches that included Randolph’s name. Following a
    manual comparison, a Cobb County Police Department fingerprint
    analyst determined that Randolph’s fingerprints matched the set of
    prints lifted from the hotel in 2000. The match was later confirmed
    by a retired GBI fingerprint expert. 2
    Cobb County Investigator John Dawes testified that in June
    2012, he spoke with a detective in Jacksonville, Florida, concerning
    information that the detective had obtained that he believed might
    be relevant to an old Cobb County case. The detective explained that
    2 At trial, Randolph’s counsel argued that Randolph could have left the
    fingerprints at some time prior to the shooting. However, the general manager
    for the Wingate Inn, which had just opened two weeks prior to the shooting,
    testified that Randolph was not an employee of the hotel, nor had he been a
    guest at the hotel. She also explained that the surfaces of the lobby, including
    the front desk counter, were cleaned several times each shift.
    5
    counsel for Ruel Brown, who was facing unrelated charges in
    Florida, had represented to him that Brown had information about
    a shooting that occurred in November or December 2000 at a hotel
    north of Atlanta with the word “Win” in the name. Dawes
    determined that Brown was likely referring to the unsolved shooting
    at the Wingate Inn in Kennesaw. Dawes eventually obtained a
    statement from Brown in September 2014, in which Brown
    identified Randolph as the shooter. Following his arrest in South
    Carolina for the murder of Castlin, Randolph called the mother of
    his child while detained in jail there and told her that “they got”
    him “for something fourteen years ago” and that his “life [was]
    changed now.” A recording of this phone call was played for the jury.
    Following a grant of immunity, Brown testified on behalf of the
    State at trial. 3 Brown explained that he had known Randolph since
    Randolph was 13 or 14 years old. In 2000, Brown lived in Columbia,
    South Carolina, but traveled back and forth to Atlanta as part of a
    3 At the time of trial, Brown was serving a 15-year federal prison
    sentence on sex trafficking charges.
    6
    sex trafficking ring he was involved in. In December 2000,
    Randolph, who was about six feet tall with a slender build at the
    time, 4 and another man, whom Brown refused to identify, wanted to
    come with Brown to Atlanta, and Brown agreed. Around 10:00 p.m.
    on December 7, 2000, the three men went to Cobb County for the
    purpose of robbing the Wingate Inn. Randolph, carrying Brown’s
    small-caliber handgun, and the third man went inside while Brown
    waited outside in the car, parked in a position where he could see
    into the lobby. Brown saw Randolph behind the counter with the
    gun pointed at a man who had his hands up. Brown saw the flash of
    the gun being fired and the man fall backward. Randolph and the
    third man, who had been out of view, ran out of the hotel and into
    Brown’s car, and Brown immediately drove off toward the interstate.
    Brown testified that he was really upset and “was kind of
    giving it to” Randolph because the shooting was not part of the plan.
    Randolph claimed that he had to shoot because the victim had been
    coming toward him. The three of them divided up the money that
    4 Brown testified that he weighed about 300 pounds in 2000.
    7
    they had stolen from the cash register and from Dixon. Brown
    initially wanted to drive straight to South Carolina, but decided that
    they should stay somewhere nearby so they could find out if the
    victim had died. Brown dropped the gun in a storm drain, and then
    the three men slept in the car while they waited for the morning
    newspaper to be delivered. The following morning, after reading
    that the victim had died, they returned to Columbia, South Carolina.
    The State also presented evidence of two prior offenses
    committed by Randolph. Jagdish Patel testified that on December 4,
    2000, three days before the shooting at the Wingate Inn, he was
    working at a Blimpie restaurant in Columbia, South Carolina when
    a man came in around 9:00 or 10:00 p.m. with a gun and said, “Give
    me the money. Otherwise I’ll shoot you.” The man then climbed over
    the counter and told Patel to lie down on the floor and asked where
    the safe was. When Patel told him there was no safe, the man
    demanded his wallet. The man then took the money from Patel’s
    wallet and the money in the cash register and ran out the back door.
    Patel described the man as young, thin, and less than six feet tall. A
    8
    fingerprint located on the cash register was found to match
    Randolph’s, and Randolph pleaded guilty to armed robbery in
    connection with that incident and served a ten-year sentence.
    Edward McIntosh testified that on April 29, 2011, someone
    kicked in the door to his home in Columbia and stole several
    televisions, his wife’s jewelry, and a laptop. Fingerprints recovered
    from inside the home matched Randolph’s, and the Richland County
    Sheriff’s Department took out an arrest warrant for Randolph,
    which was still outstanding at the time of trial.
    1. Randolph contends that the evidence was insufficient to
    support his convictions because the State’s evidence was based in
    whole upon the testimony of Brown, an unindicted co-conspirator,
    and the testimony was not sufficiently corroborated under OCGA §
    24-14-8. We are not persuaded.
    Although “[t]he testimony of a single witness is generally
    sufficient to establish a fact,” Georgia statutory law provides that,
    in “felony cases where the only witness is an accomplice,” the
    witness’s testimony alone is not sufficient. OCGA § 24-14-8. “Thus,
    9
    when the only witness is an accomplice, corroborating evidence is
    required to support a guilty verdict,” Barber v. State, 
    314 Ga. 759
    ,
    763 (1) (
    879 SE2d 428
    ) (2022) (citation and punctuation omitted),
    and the jury was so instructed. However, “only slight evidence of
    corroboration is required,” and, as long as the corroborating
    evidence “directly connects the defendant to the crime or leads to the
    inference of guilt,” the corroboration may consist entirely of
    circumstantial evidence.” 
    Id.
     (citation and punctuation omitted).
    Here, the State showed that the physical description of the
    assailant with the gun who came into the hotel matched Randolph,
    whose fingerprint was found on the front-desk counter at the hotel,
    which had just opened two weeks prior and at which Randolph had
    been neither a guest nor an employee. The jury was also able to
    independently compare an artist’s sketch rendered based on Torres’s
    description with a photograph of Randolph taken in 2000. And while
    in jail in 2014, Randolph made incriminating statements that were
    played for the jury. This evidence was more than sufficient to
    corroborate Brown’s testimony as a matter of Georgia statutory
    10
    law. 5 See Poole v. State, 
    312 Ga. 515
    , 522 (
    863 SE2d 93
    ) (2021)
    (accomplice testimony sufficiently corroborated by physical evidence
    collected at the scene, along with other evidence); Johnson v. State,
    
    288 Ga. 803
    , 805-806 (2) (
    708 SE2d 331
    ) (2011) (jury was authorized
    to find that a witness’s physical description of the shooter matched
    that of the defendant and that the accomplice’s testimony was
    therefore sufficiently corroborated). Accordingly, this enumeration
    of error fails.
    2. Randolph also asserts that the trial court erred in admitting
    evidence of the 2000 armed robbery and the 2011 home burglary as
    other-acts evidence under OCGA § 24-4-404 (b) (“Rule 404 (b)”). To
    be admissible under Rule 404 (b), other-acts evidence must satisfy a
    three-part test:
    (1) the evidence is relevant to an issue in the case other
    than the defendant’s character, (2) the probative value is
    not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair
    prejudice as required by OCGA § 24-4-403 (“Rule 403”),
    and (3) there is sufficient proof for a jury to find by a
    5 Randolph does not assert that the evidence was insufficient as a matter
    of constitutional due process, so we do not address that issue. See Davenport
    v. State, 
    309 Ga. 385
    , 392 (4) (
    846 SE2d 83
    ) (2020) (holding that we no longer
    routinely review the sufficiency of the evidence in non-death penalty cases).
    11
    preponderance of the evidence that the defendant
    committed the prior act.
    Lowe v. State, 
    314 Ga. 788
    , 792 (2) (a) (
    879 SE2d 492
    ) (2022) (citation
    and punctuation omitted). “We review the trial court’s decision to
    admit evidence pursuant to Rule 404 (b) for a clear abuse of
    discretion.” Hood v. State, 
    309 Ga. 493
    , 499 (2) (
    847 SE2d 172
    )
    (2020).
    Here, following a pretrial hearing, the trial court entered an
    order admitting evidence of both the 2000 armed robbery and the
    2011 home burglary under Rule 404 (b) for the purposes of proving
    intent, motive, plan, or modus operandi. 6 In considering the issue
    again at the motion for new trial stage, the trial court determined
    that the 2000 armed robbery was relevant to show Randolph’s intent
    because he pleaded not guilty in this case and maintained his
    innocence throughout trial and that it was also relevant to show
    plan and modus operandi because of the similarities between the
    6 Although Randolph argues that the trial court improperly admitted the
    evidence to show identity, there is no indication in the record that the State
    sought to introduce the evidence for this purpose or that the trial court
    included identity as one of the limited purposes for admission of the evidence.
    12
    two robberies. Although the State conceded at the motion for new
    trial hearing that the 2011 home burglary evidence should not have
    been admitted, the trial court found that its admission was harmless
    in light of the overwhelming evidence against Randolph and because
    the error caused minimal prejudice, especially in light of the
    properly admitted 2000 armed robbery.
    (a) Randolph argues that evidence of the 2000 armed robbery was
    inadmissible under both the relevance and probative-value-versus-
    unfair-prejudice prongs of the Rule 404 (b) test.7 According to
    Randolph, the 2000 armed robbery was not relevant to show intent
    because it was not committed with the same state of mind as the
    charged murder in this case. This argument fails. Because Randolph
    entered a plea of not guilty to the armed robbery charges and did not
    otherwise take affirmative steps to remove intent as an issue, he
    made intent “a material issue” in this case. Hood, 309 Ga. at 499-
    500   (2)   (citation   and    punctuation      omitted).   Under     such
    7 Randolph does not challenge the third prong with respect to his 2000
    armed robbery conviction.
    13
    circumstances, “the State may prove intent by qualifying Rule 404
    (b) evidence.” Naples v. State, 
    308 Ga. 43
    , 51 (2) (e) (
    838 SE2d 780
    )
    (2020) (citation and punctuation omitted). Thus, the trial court did
    not abuse its discretion by ruling that the 2000 armed robbery was
    relevant to show that Randolph committed the armed robbery in this
    case with the same intent. See Olds v. State, 
    299 Ga. 65
    , 72 (2) (
    786 SE2d 633
     (2016) (“[E]vidence that an accused committed an
    intentional act generally is relevant to show . . . that the same
    defendant committed a similar act with the same sort of intent[.]”).
    See also Booth v. State, 
    301 Ga. 678
    , 683 (3) (
    804 SE2d 104
    ) (2017)
    (“[W]e may consider whether the other acts were relevant to the
    issue of intent on any of [the charged] offenses.”).
    And “in evaluating the probative value of other-acts evidence
    offered to prove intent, we consider the overall similarity between
    the other acts and the charged crimes, the other act’s temporal
    remoteness, and the prosecutorial need for the evidence.” Thomas v.
    State, 
    314 Ga. 681
    , 684 (1) (a) (
    878 SE2d 493
    ) (2022). Randolph
    focuses on the alleged dissimilarities between the 2000 armed
    14
    robbery and the armed robbery in this case to argue that the
    probative value of the other-acts evidence was substantially
    outweighed by its unfair prejudice. However, in both incidents
    Randolph robbed a business at night by vaulting over the counter to
    confront the employee with a small handgun and asking about a
    safe. And the two events occurred only three days apart. These
    similarities and temporal proximity between the two robberies
    demonstrate that the probative value of the 2000 armed robbery
    evidence to prove Randolph’s intent to commit the armed robbery in
    this case was significant. See, e.g., Hood, 309 Ga. at 501 (2) (evidence
    of other robbery was probative of defendant’s intent to participate in
    charged crimes of felony murder predicated on armed robbery,
    aggravated assault, and related crimes because of, inter alia,
    similarities between the incidents, which occurred less than four
    months apart from one another); Fleming v. State, 
    306 Ga. 240
    , 248
    (3) (b) (
    830 SE2d 129
    ) (2019) (the other-acts evidence had a high
    probative value because, inter alia, the other act had significant
    similarities and occurred within less than one year of the charged
    15
    crimes).
    Although the evidence of the 2000 armed robbery was certainly
    prejudicial to Randolph, its prejudicial value was fairly low, given
    that no one was physically harmed in the course of the robbery, and
    moreover, Rule 403 requires the balancing of the probative value of
    the evidence against the danger of unfair prejudice. “Rule 403’s
    exclusionary force is meant to be applied sparingly – primarily when
    the other-acts evidence has scant or cumulative probative force,
    dragged in by the heels for the sake of its prejudicial effect.”
    Hounkpatin v. State, 
    313 Ga. 789
    , 796 (2) (a) (
    873 SE2d 201
    ) (2022)
    (citation and punctuation omitted). Given the probative value of the
    other-acts evidence here weighed against the relatively low danger
    of unfair prejudice, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    admitting evidence of the 2000 armed robbery. See 
    id.
           Having
    determined that the evidence was admissible as to intent, we need
    not examine whether it was also admissible as to motive, plan, or
    modus operandi. See Bradshaw v. State, 
    296 Ga. 650
    , 657 (3) n.5
    16
    (
    769 SE2d 892
    ) (2015). 8
    (b) On appeal, the State concedes that the 2011 home burglary
    should not have been admitted under Rule 404 (b). Assuming
    without deciding that the trial court abused its discretion in
    admitting evidence of the 2011 home burglary, this evidentiary error
    warrants reversal only if it was harmful. See Morrell v. State, 
    313 Ga. 247
    , 261 (2) (c) (
    869 SE2d 447
    ) (2022) (“It is fundamental that
    harm as well as error must be shown for reversal.”). “The test for
    determining nonconstitutional harmless error is whether it is highly
    probable that the error did not contribute to the verdict.” Thomas,
    314 Ga. at 686 (1) (c) (citation omitted). In making this
    determination, “we review the record de novo, and we weigh the
    evidence as we would expect reasonable jurors to have done so as
    opposed to viewing it all in the light most favorable to the jury’s
    verdict.” Id. (citation omitted).
    8  We note also that Randolph has not challenged the trial court’s
    instruction regarding the purposes for which the other-acts evidence could be
    considered.
    17
    Here, several witnesses gave relatively brief testimony about
    the incident that was not especially prejudicial, given that, again,
    no one was physically harmed in the course of the burglary, 9 and the
    State made no mention of it during closing argument. 10 See Stafford
    v. State, 
    312 Ga. 811
    , 817 (2) (b) (
    865 SE2d 116
    ) (2021) (any error in
    admission of Rule 404 (b) evidence was harmless in part because the
    State did not mention or rely on the evidence in closing argument);
    Taylor v. State, 
    306 Ga. 277
    , 283 (2) (
    830 SE2d 90
    ) (2019) (any error
    in admitting Rule 404 (b) evidence was harmless where the State
    spent a minimal amount of time eliciting evidence concerning the
    incident and made no mention of it during its closing argument). In
    addition, the other evidence in this case – including Brown’s
    testimony that Randolph was the shooter, the presence of
    9 The homeowner did not identify Randolph, but testified that he had not
    given him permission to enter his home. Two witnesses testified as to their
    collection and analysis of the fingerprints found in the home that matched
    Randolph’s. A final witness briefly testified regarding the warrant for
    Randolph’s arrest, which remained open.
    10 Although Randolph argues that the jury was told that he had not been
    arrested or punished in connection with the burglary, the jury was also told
    that the arrest warrant was still active, meaning that he could still face
    punishment in South Carolina.
    18
    Randolph’s fingerprint at the scene, and the properly admitted 2000
    armed robbery evidence – was strong. See Priester v. State, 
    316 Ga. 133
    , 137 (2) (
    886 SE2d 805
    ) (2023) (erroneously admitted Rule 404
    (b) evidence not harmful where the properly admitted evidence
    against the defendant was strong).
    The record also shows that the trial court twice instructed the
    jury that it could only consider the other-acts evidence for the
    limited Rule 404 (b) purposes; that it could not conclude from the
    evidence that Randolph had a propensity to commit crimes; and that
    Randolph was on trial only for the charges listed in the indictment.
    Thus, Randolph cannot show that it is highly probable that any error
    in admitting the 2011 home burglary evidence contributed to the
    jury’s verdict, and this enumeration of error fails. See Pritchett v.
    State, 
    314 Ga. 767
    , 780 (2) (c) (
    879 SE2d 436
    ) (2022) (concluding
    erroneous admission of other-acts evidence was harmless in part
    because, in considering whether the admission of other-acts
    evidence was harmless, “we presume that the jury followed [the trial
    court’s] instructions and did not use the other-acts evidence
    19
    improperly to support that [Appellant] had a propensity towards
    violence”).
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    20