HENDERSON v. THE STATE (Two Cases) ( 2023 )


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    Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the
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    official text of the opinion.
    In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: August 21, 2023
    S23A0559. HENDERSON v. THE STATE.
    S23A0720. MASON v. THE STATE.
    PINSON, Justice.
    After a joint trial, Demetre Mason and Frankland Henderson
    were convicted of malice murder and other crimes in connection with
    the shooting deaths of Sonia Williams and Shaniqua Camacho. 1
    1 The shootings occurred in the early morning hours of May 19, 2014. On
    August 26, 2014, a DeKalb County grand jury returned an indictment against
    Mason, Henderson, and five co-defendants: Michael Jenkins, Malcolm Brown,
    Jaimee Harrell, Katrina Shardow, and Traon Turk. Mason and Henderson
    were each charged with malice murder of Williams (Count 1), felony murder of
    Williams predicated on aggravated assault (Count 2), aggravated assault of
    Williams (Count 3), malice murder of Camacho (Count 5), felony murder of
    Camacho predicated on aggravated assault (Count 6), aggravated assault of
    Camacho (Count 7), armed robbery (Count 17), hijacking (Count 19), and vio-
    lations of the Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act (“Gang Act”) and the
    Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act predicated on those
    charges (Counts 4, 8, 18, 20, and 21). The trial court ordered that Mason, Hen-
    derson, and Jenkins be tried separately on Counts 1-8 (the malice murder, fel-
    ony murder, aggravated assault, and Gang Act charges), and severed the re-
    maining counts and defendants. The remaining counts against Mason and
    Henderson were later nolle prossed.
    The case proceeded to a jury trial from April 16 to 26, 2018. Mason and
    On appeal, Mason contends that the evidence was not suffi-
    cient to support his convictions for malice murder, and that the trial
    court should have held a hearing to determine whether evidence
    that, a month before the murders, Mason stole a handgun that was
    used in the shootings was admissible under Rule 403. But the evi-
    dence was sufficient as a matter of due process to sustain his convic-
    tions, and the trial court properly applied Rule 403 to the evidence
    that he stole the handgun. So we affirm Mason’s convictions and
    Henderson were convicted on all counts. Jenkins was convicted of the aggra-
    vated assault and Gang Act charges, but the jury deadlocked on the malice
    murder and felony murder charges. His case is not part of this appeal.
    On June 14, 2018, Mason and Henderson were each sentenced to life in
    prison without parole for each of the two malice murder counts, to be served
    concurrently, and 15 years in prison for each of the two Gang Act counts, to be
    served consecutively, for a total sentence of life plus 30 years. The remaining
    counts merged for sentencing or were vacated by operation of law.
    Mason timely moved for a new trial through new counsel on July 5, 2018,
    and amended that motion on September 12, 2022. After a hearing, the trial
    court denied the motion on December 2, 2022. Mason filed a timely notice of
    appeal on December 19, 2022.
    Henderson filed a premature motion for new trial on May 29, 2018, be-
    fore the trial court issued the final sentencing order. That motion ripened upon
    entry of the final disposition on June 14, 2018. See Southall v. State, 
    300 Ga. 462
    , 464-468 (1) (
    796 SE2d 261
    ) (2017). Henderson later amended the motion,
    through new counsel, on September 13, 2022. After a hearing, the trial court
    denied the motion on December 2, 2022. Henderson filed a timely notice of ap-
    peal on December 22, 2022. Henderson’s case and Mason’s case were both dock-
    eted to the April 2023 term of this Court and submitted for decisions on the
    briefs. The cases have been consolidated for appeal.
    2
    sentence.
    In a separate appeal, Henderson raises six claims. He contends
    that the admission at trial of Mason’s out-of-court statement to po-
    lice violated Henderson’s rights under the Confrontation Clause of
    the Sixth Amendment; the trial court should have given an instruc-
    tion limiting how the jury could consider Mason’s out-of-court state-
    ment; the testimony of one witness for the prosecution, who he
    claimed was an accomplice, was insufficiently corroborated; the trial
    court should have excluded as hearsay testimony about statements
    from an associate of Henderson and Mason, because there was in-
    sufficient evidence to show that the statements were made in fur-
    therance of a conspiracy so as to fall within a hearsay exception; the
    trial court abused its discretion in denying Henderson’s motion to
    sever his case; and the trial court abused its discretion in admitting
    photos of Henderson making gang signs without proper authentica-
    tion.
    Each of Henderson’s claims fails. Admitting Mason’s out-of-
    3
    court statement did not violate the Confrontation Clause under Bru-
    ton v. United States, 
    391 U.S. 123
     (88 SCt 1620, 20 LE2d 476) (1968),
    because it did not, standing alone, directly implicate Henderson. See
    Pender v. State, 
    311 Ga. 98
    , 110-111 (2) (b) (
    856 SE2d 302
    ) (2021). It
    was not plain error to fail to give a limiting instruction about Ma-
    son’s out-of-court statement, because the absence of the instruction
    is unlikely to have affected the outcome of the trial. No corroboration
    was needed for the testimony of the witness Henderson claims was
    an accomplice, because there was ample evidence from which the
    jury could find that she was not an accomplice. The out-of-court
    statements of Henderson’s associate were properly admitted under
    the hearsay exception for statements in furtherance of a conspiracy
    because the evidence was sufficient to establish that Henderson and
    his associate conspired to commit the murders and to participate in
    a criminal street gang. The trial court was not required to sever Hen-
    derson’s trial, because there was little possibility of confusing evi-
    dence or law, there were no antagonistic defenses, and the evidence
    4
    admitted at the joint trial that might not have been admitted if Hen-
    derson was tried alone was not prejudicial enough to show a denial
    of due process. And, finally, the photos of Henderson making gang
    signs were not admitted in error because they were authenticated
    by a police investigator who was familiar with them.
    1. Recounted in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the ev-
    idence at trial showed the following.
    (a) In May 2014, Mason and Henderson were living on Maypop
    Lane in DeKalb County with Michael Jenkins, Jaimee Harrell,
    Katrina Shardow, Malcolm Brown, Frederick Rosenau, and Brandi
    Singleton. All except Singleton were members of the Nine Trey
    Gangsters, a subset of the Bloods gang. Singleton was not a gang
    member, but she was familiar with the gang and was in a sexual
    relationship with Brown. The highest ranking gang member in the
    house was Rosenau, followed by Brown, followed by Harwell. Below
    Harwell were Mason, Henderson, and Jenkins, who were all of the
    same rank.
    5
    On the night of May 18 to 19, 2014, Mason brought his girl-
    friend, Williams, and Williams’s friend, Camacho, to the house. Wil-
    liams had been there once before, and she and Brown did not get
    along. On this occasion, Mason, Williams, Camacho, Singleton,
    Rosenau, and Brown all went to an upstairs bedroom. Brown asked
    Mason why he kept bringing Williams over, since Williams had “too
    much mouth.” Brown began pulling at Williams’s clothing, hair, and
    body. Williams objected and told Brown that he was “acting like a
    b***h.” Brown replied, “Oh, I’m acting like a b***h.” Brown then left
    the room and went downstairs. Mason tried to leave with Williams
    at that point, but Rosenau told him they “[weren’t] going to leave
    like that.”
    Downstairs, Brown told Harwell and Shardow to “[g]o get” Wil-
    liams. Brown then returned to the bedroom with Harwell and Shar-
    dow, along with Henderson and Jenkins. Harwell moved aggres-
    sively toward Williams and threatened her. Williams responded
    that Harwell “wasn’t going to touch her.” Harwell hit Williams in
    6
    the face, and then Harwell and Shardow both began beating Wil-
    liams. Brown encouraged the beating. Mason did not intervene.
    After about ten minutes, Harwell and Shardow let Williams get
    up. Williams was “screaming and cursing” and asking Mason why
    he had not helped her. Harwell and Shardow then picked her up and
    dragged her down the stairs. Williams did not want to leave without
    her shoes and her purse, but Harwell and Shardow threw her out
    the front door. At that point, Camacho, Williams’s friend, tried to
    retrieve Williams’s belongings and to leave with Williams, but Har-
    well held onto Williams’s purse. Camacho told everyone it was “nice
    to meet them” and was allowed to leave.
    Outside the house, Williams had not left the property. She was
    pounding and kicking at the front door, screaming that she would
    “bring some GDs”—meaning Gangster Disciples, a gang that was
    not friendly with the Bloods—to “come and shoot up the place.”
    Brown told Mason, “You need to control your b****h.” Brown said
    that if Williams brought a group of Gangster Disciples to the house,
    there would be a problem. Eventually Williams stopped shouting
    7
    and pounding on the door, and she and Camacho left.
    Brown ordered Mason, Henderson, and Jenkins to go find the
    two women. Brown confirmed that the three were armed, and in-
    structed them, “Make sure that y’all do what y’all need to do and
    make sure that [Mason] does what he need to do because he acting
    like he in love.” The three men, all carrying guns, left in a car. Brown
    stayed back at the house, but he was in communication with the
    three while they were out, urging them to find Williams and
    Camacho and asking to be kept apprised of what Mason, in particu-
    lar, was doing.
    Five or ten minutes later, the three men returned. Henderson
    reported to Brown: “Yeah, we did that. They flatlined. It’s over with.”
    Brown asked several times if Henderson was sure that nobody would
    “come back to this door,” and Henderson kept repeating that “they
    flatlined” and “it was over with.”
    Brown instructed everyone to delete any pictures they had with
    Williams on Instagram. Harwell and Shardow riffled through Wil-
    liams’s purse and then burned it. The following day, Harwell and
    8
    Singleton threw away some of Williams’s other belongings at an el-
    ementary school down the street.
    (b) At 4:14 a.m. on May 19, 2014, Alyssia Smith, who lived near
    the house on Maypop Lane, was awakened by the sound of gunfire.
    Smith checked to make sure her children were safe and then went
    back to bed. The next morning, as she was walking to her car, Smith
    noticed two female bodies on the ground. Smith told her fiancé, and
    they called 911.
    The responding officers identified the victims as Williams and
    Camacho. A medical examiner later determined that both women
    had died from multiple gunshot wounds. A .40-caliber bullet and a
    .38-caliber bullet were recovered from Williams’s body. Officers also
    found seven spent Federal .40-caliber Smith & Wesson shell casings
    near the bodies.
    Investigating officers obtained Williams’s phone number from
    her family and requested her phone records. The records showed
    that on May 18 and May 19, Williams’s phone was in contact multi-
    ple times with a phone number ending in -5686. Officers learned
    9
    that the subscriber associated with the -5686 number was Mason.
    Officers also learned that on May 19—the day after the murders—
    the 5686 account was canceled and a new number was assigned to
    the same phone.
    Mason became a suspect. On May 30, he was arrested at the
    Maypop Lane home. A search of the home revealed a red bandana,
    a red notebook containing a written oath, and a number of electronic
    devices, including Mason’s phone. Officers then got a search warrant
    for Mason’s phone and learned that Mason had exchanged a series
    of text messages on May 19 with someone named “Turk.” Among
    those messages were an incoming text from Turk that read, “Who
    was it”; a reply from Mason’s phone saying, “She had to go Blood. I
    bust that a** four times each on Blood on DaMobb”; a message from
    Turk asking, “With what strap”; and Mason’s answer, “Mine.”
    Officers interviewed Mason. The interview was recorded, and
    some of it was played for the jury. Mason initially claimed that he
    had been in Florida on the night of the murders. But when police
    10
    confronted him with his text message exchange with Turk, his state-
    ment changed. Mason told police that he was ordered by Brown to
    kill Williams and Camacho. Mason denied actually shooting the vic-
    tims, but admitted he was at the scene as the driver.
    Separately, a few days before Mason’s arrest, Singleton came
    forward and told police what happened at the Maypop Lane home
    on the night of the murders. Based on the information from Single-
    ton, officers got arrest warrants for Henderson, Jenkins, and Brown.
    About two months after Singleton spoke to police, Mason called her
    and asked her not to testify in court.
    (c) At trial, the jury heard evidence about one of the murder
    weapons. No weapon was ever found, but Mason told police in his
    interview that one of the guns used in the shooting was stolen from
    Douglas County. A trial witness, Amber Diamond, testified that in
    April 2014 (about a month before the murders), she, Mason, and two
    other men—including co-indictee Traon Turk—had stolen a gun and
    ammunition from her ex-boyfriend’s house in Douglas County. The
    ex-boyfriend, Teddy Brucker, also testified at trial and confirmed
    11
    that his .40-caliber Ruger handgun was stolen from his Douglas
    County home in April 2014.
    Ballistics evidence connected Brucker’s gun to the murders.
    Brucker testified that he reported the theft of his gun to police. He
    also explained that when he bought the gun, it came with a pre-fired
    spent shell casing that could be used for comparison purposes.
    Brucker said he turned that spent shell casing over to police. Offic-
    ers later compared that casing to the spent shell casings that were
    recovered at the crime scene, and determined that they were fired
    from the same weapon.
    (d) Investigator Waine Pinckney, who was qualified as an ex-
    pert in street gangs, testified extensively at trial.
    Pinckney first explained generally about gang structure and
    culture. He said that within the larger Bloods gang were a number
    of subsets, including the subset involved in this case, the Nine Trey
    Gangsters. Nine Trey Gangsters, like other subsets of the Bloods,
    use the color red, and members sometimes signal their affiliation
    with a red “flag,” typically a bandana worn on the wrist or neck, or
    12
    in the left pocket. The gang has a distinct organizational structure.
    At the top is the “OG” or “godfather.” Below that are several “floors,”
    or levels of rank, known as the “fifth floor,” “fourth floor,” and so on.
    And below the floors are captains, sergeants, and foot soldiers. It is
    understood within the gang that a lower-ranking member must fol-
    low orders from a higher-ranking member.
    Pinckney also testified about the evidence of gang involvement
    in this case. He noted that Mason had tattoos that indicated his in-
    volvement in the Bloods, including a five-pointed star and the letters
    M-O-B, which stood for “member of Blood.” Photos of Mason showed
    him wearing a red bandana and making the gang sign “C-K,” which
    stands for “Crip killer,” referring to a rival gang of the Bloods. Other
    photos showed Henderson making Blood gang signs. In addition,
    notebooks recovered from inside the Maypop Lane home contained
    gang terminology and records of gang members’ attendance at meet-
    ings and payment of dues. Another notebook from the house con-
    tained a written oath swearing loyalty to the Nine Trey Gangsters;
    a similar oath was found in Mason’s cell phone. Text messages from
    13
    Mason’s phone shared gang information, including rules for mem-
    bership.
    Based on all of that evidence, Pinckney concluded that Mason
    and Henderson were members of the Nine Trey Gangsters subset of
    the Bloods. Pinckney further concluded that the way that the crime
    was committed—with Brown ordering Mason, Henderson, and Jen-
    kins to carry out the killings—indicated that it was a gang activity.
    No defendant testified at trial.
    Case No. S23A0720
    2. Mason contends that the evidence at trial was constitution-
    ally insufficient to support his convictions for malice murder. See
    Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (III) (B) (99 SCt 2781, 61
    LE2d 560) (1979). We evaluate a due process challenge to the suffi-
    ciency of the evidence by viewing the evidence presented at trial in
    the light most favorable to the verdicts, and asking whether any ra-
    tional trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt of the crimes of which he was convicted. See Pea-
    cock v. State, 
    314 Ga. 709
    , 714 (2) (b) (
    878 SE2d 247
    ) (2022). “We
    14
    leave to the jury the resolution of conflicts or inconsistencies in the
    evidence, credibility of witnesses, and reasonable inferences to be
    derived from the facts.” Perkins v. State, 
    313 Ga. 885
    , 891 (2) (a) (
    873 SE2d 185
    ) (2022) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    A person is guilty of malice murder if “he unlawfully and with
    malice aforethought, either express or implied, causes the death of
    another human being.” OCGA § 16-5-1 (a). See also Welch v. State,
    
    306 Ga. 470
    , 473 (1) (
    831 SE2d 761
    ) (2019). A jury may find a de-
    fendant guilty of malice murder if the evidence shows beyond a rea-
    sonable doubt either that he directly committed the crime or that he
    was a “party thereto.” OCGA § 16-2-20 (a). A person is a party to a
    crime if, among other things, he aids or abets in its commission. Id.
    § (b) (3). See also Carter v. State, 
    314 Ga. 317
    , 319 (2) (a) (
    877 SE2d 170
    ) (2022). “[P]roof of a shared criminal intent with the actual per-
    petrator is necessary to establish that one is a party to the crime,”
    Sams v. State, 
    314 Ga. 306
    , 310 (2) (
    875 SE2d 757
    ) (2022) (citation
    and punctuation omitted), and the jury may infer a shared criminal
    intent from the defendant’s “presence, companionship, and conduct
    15
    before, during, and after the offense,” Jones v. State, 
    314 Ga. 214
    ,
    232 (3) (
    875 SE2d 737
    ) (2022) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    The evidence here was sufficient to support Mason’s convic-
    tions for malice murder. Mason admitted that he was at the scene of
    the shootings. He was connected to one of the murder weapons
    through his statement to police, ballistics evidence, and the testi-
    mony of Amber Diamond and Teddy Brucker. His text messages to
    Turk showed him bragging about the murders after the fact. And
    Singleton’s testimony narrated how Brown ordered Mason, Hender-
    son, and Jenkins to carry out the murders. Given that evidence, a
    rational jury was authorized to find beyond a reasonable doubt that
    Mason shot at least one of the victims and that he was a party to the
    shooting of the other victim. And even if Mason was merely the
    driver and did not personally shoot either victim, as he told police,
    the jury could find that he shared a criminal intent with the shoot-
    ers, particularly given his messages to Turk claiming that “She had
    to go” and “I bust that a** four times.” See, e.g., Meadows v. State,
    
    316 Ga. 22
    , 24-25 (2) (
    885 SE2d 780
    ) (2023) (evidence sufficient to
    16
    support conviction for malice murder when evidence showed that
    the defendant arranged to meet the victim at a certain location and
    went to that location with the victim and a third man, the victim
    was shot by either the defendant or the third man, the defendant
    fled the scene, and the defendant owned a gun consistent with the
    murder weapon); Jones, 314 Ga. at 232 (3) (evidence sufficient to
    support conviction for malice murder as party to the crime when ev-
    idence showed that the defendant belonged to a street gang and had
    a motive to kill the victim, was present at the scene of the shooting,
    and was in contact with the shooter before and after the crime). This
    claim therefore fails.
    3. Mason also contends that the trial court should not have ad-
    mitted evidence about Mason’s alleged theft of the .40-caliber hand-
    gun a month before the murders. In Mason’s view, the trial court
    failed to ensure that the probative value of the theft was not sub-
    stantially outweighed by its prejudicial effect. See OCGA § 24-4-403
    (“Rule 403”). We review a trial court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse
    of discretion. See Jones v. State, 
    305 Ga. 653
    , 655 (2) (
    827 SE2d 254
    )
    17
    (2019).
    Relevant evidence, although generally admissible, see OCGA
    § 24-4-402, may be excluded “if its probative value is substantially
    outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.” See OCGA § 24-4-
    403. But the exclusion of evidence under Rule 403 is “an extraordi-
    nary remedy that should be used only sparingly.” Wilson v. State,
    
    315 Ga. 728
    , 738 (8) (
    883 SE2d 802
    ) (2023) (citation and punctuation
    omitted). The “major function” of the rule is to “exclude matter of
    scant of cumulative probative force, dragged in by the heels for the
    sake of its prejudicial effect.” Hood v. State, 
    299 Ga. 95
    , 103 (4) (
    786 SE2d 648
    ) (2016) (cleaned up).
    Mason argues on appeal that the trial court should have con-
    ducted a “hearing” to determine whether the alleged theft of the
    handgun satisfied Rule 403. But nothing in the rule or our case law
    requires a hearing; the role of the trial court in applying Rule 403 is
    simply to “undertake in each case a considered evaluation of the
    proffered justification for the admission” of evidence and then “make
    an independent determination” whether the evidence satisfies the
    18
    rule. State v. Orr, 
    305 Ga. 729
    , 737 (3) (
    827 SE2d 892
    ) (2019) (cita-
    tion and punctuation omitted). And here the trial court did just that.
    When Mason tried to exclude the handgun theft, the trial court ruled
    that “any prejudice to [Mason] is far outweighed by the relevance
    that the issue may determine this evidence [of the alleged handgun
    theft] to have.” Although the trial court did not use the exact word-
    ing of Rule 403, its finding reflected the “considered determination”
    that the trial court had to make. See 
    id.
    And that determination under Rule 403 was not an abuse of
    the trial court’s discretion. Evidence that Mason stole the handgun
    was certainly probative, because it directly connected Mason to the
    murder weapon. See Jordan v. State, 
    313 Ga. 841
    , 845-845 (2) (b)
    (
    874 SE2d 67
    ) (2022) (evidence that machine gun and ammunition
    were stolen four months before murder, that they were the same
    caliber used in the murder, and that the defendant’s known associ-
    ate lived next door to where the burglary occurred, satisfied Rule
    403); Harris v. State, 
    313 Ga. 225
    , 233 (4) (
    869 SE2d 461
    ) (2022)
    (photo of defendant holding a type of gun that could have been used
    19
    in the charged crime a week before the shooting satisfied Rule 403).
    As to prejudice, evidence of the theft may have been prejudicial to
    Mason—as all incriminating evidence is, see Morgan v. State, 
    307 Ga. 889
    , 897 (3) (c) (
    838 SE2d 878
    ) (2020) (noting that inculpatory
    evidence is “inherently prejudicial”)—but the question is whether
    there was a danger of unfair prejudice that substantially out-
    weighed probative value. Unfair prejudice generally refers to the
    tendency of evidence to “lure the factfinder into declaring guilt on a
    ground different from proof specific to the offense charged,” or to
    “suggest decision on an improper basis.” Old Chief v. United States,
    
    519 U.S. 172
    , 180 (II) (B) (1) (117 SCt 644, 136 LE2d 574) (1997)
    (citation and punctuation omitted). See also Wilson, 315 Ga. at 738
    (8). Here, unfair prejudice could have resulted if evidence of the
    handgun theft led the jury to believe that Mason had an immoral
    character or a propensity to commit crimes, and to convict him on
    that “improper basis.” But that possibility is small given the ample
    evidence that authorized the jury to convict Mason for permissible
    reasons. And again, the probative value of the handgun theft was
    20
    substantial: it related directly to the crime Mason was charged with
    committing. The trial court therefore did not abuse its discretion in
    admitting the evidence. 2
    Case No. S23A0559
    4. Henderson advances two related claims of error about Ma-
    son’s recorded out-of-court statement to police, an edited version of
    which was played at their joint trial. First, he claims that admitting
    the edited statement violated his Confrontation Clause rights under
    Bruton. Second, he claims that even if admitting the statement did
    2 In his brief, Mason also cites OCGA § 24-4-404 (b) (“Rule 404 (b)”),
    which limits the admissibility of evidence about a defendant’s other bad acts.
    It is not clear from the trial transcript whether the handgun theft was prof-
    fered or admitted as Rule 404 (b) evidence. Mason initially sought to prevent
    the State from introducing the handgun theft under Rule 404 (b) on the ground
    that the State had not filed the necessary pretrial notice. See OCGA § 24-4-404
    (b) (requiring the prosecution to “provide reasonable notice to the defense in
    advance of trial . . . of the general nature of any [Rule 404 (b)] evidence”). But
    the State argued that the theft of the handgun was intrinsic evidence, not sub-
    ject to Rule 404 (b), and the trial court suggested it agreed. Then, the trial
    court—in denying Mason’s motion in limine—found that “under 404 (b) and
    the balancing act [sic], any residual or any prejudice to [Mason] is far out-
    weighed by the relevance that the issue may determine this evidence to have.”
    But we need not decide whether the evidence properly came in under Rule 404
    (b) or as intrinsic evidence, because Mason’s arguments on appeal are limited
    to the question whether the trial court properly applied Rule 403.
    21
    not violate his rights under Bruton, admitting the statement with-
    out instructing the jury to consider the statement only against Ma-
    son violated his Confrontation Clause rights.
    (a) The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment guaran-
    tees a criminal defendant the right “to be confronted with the wit-
    nesses against him.” U.S. Const. amend. VI. This right is ordinarily
    satisfied by allowing the defendant to cross-examine a witness
    whose testimonial statements are admitted against him. See United
    States v. Owens, 
    484 U.S. 554
    , 558-559 (II) (108 SCt 838, 98 LE2d
    951) (1988); State v. Gilmore, 
    312 Ga. 289
    , 292-293 (2) (b) (
    862 SE2d 499
    ) (2021).
    But joint criminal trials introduce a complication. In a joint
    trial, the State may seek to present an incriminating out-of-court
    statement of a co-defendant. The complication? The co-defendant
    whose statement is introduced has, and often will assert, the right
    under the Fifth Amendment’s Self-Incrimination Clause not to tes-
    tify. See, e.g., Fitts v. State, 
    312 Ga. 134
    , 140 (2) (
    859 SE2d 79
    )
    (2021). But if the co-defendant asserts that right, the defendant who
    22
    is implicated by the statement would be unable to cross-examine the
    witness who would testify against him—a clear-cut violation of the
    defendant’s rights under the Confrontation Clause. See 
    id.
    The longstanding “solution” to this Fifth Amendment-Sixth
    Amendment conflict is a limiting instruction: The trial court admits
    the co-defendant’s statement but instructs the jury to consider it
    only against the co-defendant. With that instruction in place, the co-
    defendant “ordinarily . . . is not considered to be a witness ‘against’
    [the] defendant,” Samia v. United States, 
    599 U.S. __
    , __ (II) (143
    SCt 2004, 2012, __ LE2d __) (2023) (quoting Richardson v. Marsh,
    
    481 U.S. 200
    , 206 (II) (107 SCt 1702, 95 LE2d 176) (1987)), so the
    Confrontation Clause does not apply, and the statement may be ad-
    mitted.
    But it is not quite so simple. This limiting-instruction fix puts
    a great deal of faith in the jury’s ability to consider the co-defend-
    ant’s statement against the co-defendant, but to ignore it entirely
    when considering the guilt or innocence of the defendant. To be sure,
    23
    jurors are instructed all the time in our legal system to compart-
    mentalize in this way—to consider certain evidence only for specific
    purposes, see, e.g., Jones v. State, 
    311 Ga. 455
    , 462 & n.6 (3) (a) (
    858 SE2d 462
    ) (2021) (jury instructed to consider evidence of defendant’s
    other acts only to show intent), or to disregard evidence that they
    were not supposed to hear, see Meadows, 316 Ga. at 26 (4) (a) (jury
    instructed to disregard prosecutor’s remark that gun used in shoot-
    ing was not presented as evidence at trial); Gude v. State, 
    313 Ga. 859
    , 869-870 (5) (
    874 SE2d 84
    ) (2022) (jury instructed to disregard
    detective’s opinion that defendant’s alleged action was “cold”). And
    it is “the almost invariable assumption of the law that jurors follow
    their instructions.” Richardson, 481 U.S. at 206 (II). But only “al-
    most.” In Bruton, the U.S. Supreme Court explained that when the
    out-of-court statement of a co-defendant who “stands accused side-
    by-side with the defendant” is “powerfully incriminating” against
    the defendant in a joint trial, the “risk that the jury will not, or can-
    not, follow” a limiting instruction is too great. 391 U.S. at 135-136.
    In such cases, a limiting instruction is not an “adequate substitute
    24
    for [the defendant’s] constitutional right of cross-examination,” and
    so the admission of the co-defendant’s statement can violate the de-
    fendant’s Confrontation Clause rights. Id. at 126, 137.
    The Bruton rule, however, has proved narrow. In Richardson,
    the Court clarified that Bruton does not apply to a statement that
    “[i]s not incriminating on its face, but bec[omes] so only when linked
    with evidence introduced later at trial.” Richardson, 481 U.S. at 208
    (II). The Court reasoned that when a jury has to link such a state-
    ment with other evidence and then “infer” guilt, “it is a less valid
    generalization that the jury will not likely obey the instruction to
    disregard the evidence.” Id. And in Samia, the Court held that the
    Confrontation Clause “[i]s not violated by the admission of a nontes-
    tifying codefendant’s confession that [does] not directly inculpate the
    defendant and [i]s subject to a proper limiting instruction.” Samia,
    143 SCt at 2018 (no Confrontation Clause violation when an officer
    testified that Samia’s co-defendant confessed about “a time when the
    other person he was with pulled the trigger” and otherwise referred
    to an “other person,” and the trial court instructed the jury that the
    25
    co-defendant’s confession should be considered only against the co-
    defendant).
    This recent holding aligns with our Court’s prior precedent ap-
    plying Bruton. We have consistently held that Bruton excludes only
    a statement of a non-testifying co-defendant that, standing alone,
    “directly inculpates” the defendant, Simpkins v. State, 
    303 Ga. 752
    ,
    755 (II) (
    814 SE2d 289
    ) (2018) (quoting Thomas v. State, 
    300 Ga. 433
    , 439 (2) (a) (3) (
    796 SE2d 242
    ) (2017)), but not an out-of-court
    statement that does not incriminate the defendant unless “linked
    with other evidence at trial,” Simpkins, 303 Ga. at 756 (II) (citation
    and punctuation omitted); see Pender, 311 Ga. at 110-111 (2) (b)
    (statements that became incriminating about defendant only when
    linked with other evidence about defendant’s involvement in the
    crimes did not violate Bruton). That means that “[t]he fact that the
    jury might infer from the contents of the co-defendant’s statement
    in conjunction with other evidence, that the defendant was involved
    does not make the admission of the co-defendant’s statement a vio-
    lation of the Confrontation Clause.” Hanifa v. State, 
    269 Ga. 797
    ,
    26
    803-804 (2) (
    505 SE2d 731
    ) (1998), disapproved on other grounds by
    Clark v. State, 
    315 Ga. 423
     (
    883 SE2d 317
    ) (2023). So, for instance,
    a statement that refers to the declarant and “another individual”
    committing the crime does not violate Bruton’s rule, see Simpkins,
    303 Ga. at 756 (II), but a statement that refers to the defendant by
    nickname, refers to all other individuals by name, makes clear that
    one name has been redacted, and refers to the crime as having been
    committed by “someone” or “others” or “they,” could, see Hanifa, 
    269 Ga. at 804
     (2).
    (b) Turning to Henderson’s claims, we start with his Bruton
    claim. Particularly in the light of Samia, that claim fails. 3 Before
    trial, the State and trial counsel worked together to cut from Ma-
    3 The State contends that this claim should be reviewed only for plain
    error because it was not preserved for appellate review: although Henderson
    objected to the admission of Mason’s out-of-court statement at trial, he did not
    object on the same basis that he does now. The State further contends that
    Henderson’s claim fails under plain-error review because it was affirmatively
    waived, because Henderson did not renew his objection despite having several
    opportunities to do so. But we need not decide whether the claim was pre-
    served, not preserved, or even affirmatively waived because, for the reasons
    given in the text, the claim fails under either ordinary appellate review or plain
    error review.
    27
    son’s recorded statement any mention of his co-defendants (Hender-
    son and Jenkins) by name or nickname. What was left cannot be said
    to have “directly inculpated” Henderson, see Samia, 143 SCt at
    2018. As relevant here, Mason said that someone pointed a gun at
    him and “threatened for them to do it and me to drive.” And he said
    that “we had to go find” the two women, “we jumped in the car,” and,
    later, “[t]hey pulled behind me, there were like where the f**k y’all
    goin, turn back around . . . they told me to get out of the car, we got
    out of the car and then boom it happened.” So Mason described him-
    self and a number of unspecified other people carrying out the mur-
    ders, referring to “we,” “us,” “they,” or “them.” But nothing in the
    statement itself indicated that one of those other people was Hen-
    derson in particular, as opposed to any of the other gang members
    mentioned in the course of the trial (or, indeed, anyone else). Espe-
    cially compared to the co-defendant’s confession in Samia—which
    described only a single “other person” and thus could be more readily
    understood to refer to Samia specifically—Mason’s statement was
    28
    not directly inculpatory of Henderson to the degree required to es-
    tablish a violation of the Bruton rule. That the jury could have in-
    ferred that Mason was referring to Henderson based on Singleton’s
    testimony and the fact that Henderson was a co-defendant is not
    enough to violate his Confrontation Clause rights under Bruton. See
    Morris v. State, 
    311 Ga. 247
    , 255 (3) (
    857 SE2d 454
    ) (2021) (no Bru-
    ton violation when co-defendant’s out-of-court statement “only in-
    criminate[d] [defendant] when combined with other evidence pre-
    sented at trial”); Pender, 311 Ga. at 110-111 (2) (b); Simpkins, 303
    Ga. at 756 (II); Hanifa, 
    269 Ga. at 803-804
     (2). Henderson’s Bruton
    claim fails on the merits.
    (c) Henderson has a second Confrontation Clause claim. He
    contends that even if admitting the statement did not violate his
    rights under Bruton, it still violated his Confrontation Clause rights
    because the jury was never instructed to consider the statement only
    against Mason.
    Henderson did not ask for a limiting instruction at trial, so we
    review this claim only for plain error. See OCGA § 17-8-58 (b); Ash
    29
    v. State, 
    312 Ga. 771
    , 791 (5) (a) (
    865 SE2d 150
    ) (2021). To show
    plain error, a defendant has to show not merely error, but that the
    error (1) was not affirmatively waived, (2) was obvious beyond rea-
    sonable dispute, and (3) affected the appellant’s substantial rights,
    which ordinarily means showing that the error affected the outcome
    of the trial. See Moore v. State, 
    315 Ga. 263
    , 272-273 (4) (
    882 SE2d 227
    ) (2022). If those three requirements are satisfied, an appellate
    court has the discretion to remedy the error only if the error “seri-
    ously affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial
    proceedings.” 
    Id. at 273
     (4) (cleaned up).
    We agree that not giving a limiting instruction was error. As
    we recounted above, the longstanding practice of admitting a non-
    testifying co-defendant’s statement or confession in a joint trial
    avoids Confrontation Clause problems only because the trial court
    instructed the jury to consider it only against the co-defendant. See
    Samia, 143 SCt at 2018; Richardson, 481 U.S. at 211 (II); Colton v.
    State, 
    292 Ga. 509
    , 511 (2) (
    739 SE2d 380
    ) (2013) (“[a] co-defendant’s
    30
    statement meets the Confrontation Clause’s standard for admissi-
    bility when it does not refer to the existence of the defendant and is
    accompanied by instructions limiting its use to the case against the
    confessing co-defendant”) (citation and punctuation omitted; empha-
    sis added). Without that instruction, a co-defendant who makes a
    testimonial statement or gives a confession that incriminates the de-
    fendant remains a “witness against him,” and absent a chance to
    cross-examine the co-defendant, the defendant’s Confrontation
    Clause rights are violated. See Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 51-53 (III) (A), 68 (124 SCt 1354, 158 LE2d 177) (2004) (an out-
    of-court statement is a statement from a “witness” against the de-
    fendant—and thus subject to the Confrontation Clause—when it is
    “testimonial” in nature, which includes statements made during po-
    lice interrogations); Davis v. State, 
    272 Ga. 327
    , 331-332 (2) (
    528 SE2d 800
    ) (2000) (violation of Confrontation Clause to admit co-de-
    fendant’s out-of-court statement without limiting instruction even
    when defendant’s name was redacted); Hanifa, 
    269 Ga. at 801-802
    (2).
    31
    But Henderson has not shown plain error because he has not
    shown that the lack of instruction likely affected the outcome of the
    trial. First, even without Mason’s out-of-court statement, the evi-
    dence against Henderson was quite strong. Singleton’s narrative
    testimony described in detail how Henderson, Mason, and Jenkins
    armed themselves and left the house to look for the victims, and
    how, when they returned, Henderson repeatedly assured Brown
    that the victims had “flatlined.” Singleton’s story was corroborated
    in part by Mason’s text messages to Turk. And Investigator Pinck-
    ney gave his expert opinion that Henderson was a member of the
    gang. Compared to that evidence, Mason’s statement was unlikely
    to have carried as much weight. For one thing, the statement did not
    obviously implicate Henderson: not only did Mason not mention
    Henderson by name or nickname, but his references to “they” and
    “them” reasonably could have referred to any of the other gang mem-
    bers who were known to the jury and were known to be involved in
    the killings. Moreover, the jury might have afforded less weight to
    Mason’s statement if it believed the statement was self-serving and
    32
    designed to minimize Mason’s own culpability. See Samia, 143 SCt
    at 2014 (II) (B) (noting that “jurors may cast a critical eye on accom-
    plice testimony—and, in particular, self-serving accomplice testi-
    mony . . . that accuses another of the most culpable conduct”). That
    is especially likely here, where Mason’s statement to police (in which
    he contended he was only the driver) was contradicted by his text
    messages to Turk (in which he boasted of committing at least one
    killing himself with his own gun).
    Given the otherwise strong case against Henderson, the admis-
    sion of Mason’s statement was unlikely to have affected the outcome
    of the trial, so Henderson’s claim of plain error fails. See Morris, 311
    Ga. at 256 (4) (assuming without deciding it was error to admit co-
    defendant’s out-of-court statement without a limiting instruction,
    the error likely did not affect the outcome of trial given that the
    statement did not directly identify the defendant and there was
    other substantial evidence of guilt); Lupoe v. State, 
    300 Ga. 233
    , 250
    (16) (
    794 SE2d 67
    ) (2016) (defendant did not show harm required for
    plain error from admission of testimony about the defendant’s gang
    33
    membership that may have violated the Confrontation Clause, in
    light of substantial other evidence of the defendant’s gang member-
    ship).
    6. Next, Henderson contends that there was not sufficient evi-
    dence to corroborate the testimony of Brandi Singleton, who he con-
    tends was an accomplice to the crimes. See OCGA § 24-14-8 (the tes-
    timony of a single witness is not sufficient to establish a fact when
    the witness is an accomplice); Payne v. State, 
    314 Ga. 322
    , 326 (1)
    (
    877 SE2d 202
    ) (2022) (“[A] jury may not rely solely on an accom-
    plice’s testimony to find any fact necessary to sustain a defendant’s
    felony conviction. Instead, the existence of any such fact must also
    be supported either by the testimony of an additional witness or by
    other, independent evidence that corroborates the accomplice’s tes-
    timony.”) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    (a) At trial, Singleton testified about her relationship to the
    Nine Trey Gangsters. She said that she was not a member of the
    gang, but that she had family who were members and so she was
    familiar with the gang’s culture. She came to stay at the Maypop
    34
    Lane house voluntarily and was in a sexual relationship with
    Brown. But she soon grew uncomfortable, and on the night of the
    murders she was trying, unsuccessfully, to get away. Several times
    that night, she texted with a man she described as her boyfriend (not
    Brown) because she wanted to leave. She did so in secret because
    she was afraid Brown would beat her up or kill her. She continued
    to text her boyfriend in the days after the murder. During that time
    she was not able to leave on her own because Brown kept a close
    watch on her: he took her phone, and he would not let her leave the
    house unless a member of the gang was with her. One time that Sin-
    gleton was allowed to leave the house with a gang member was the
    day after the murders, when she went with Harwell to throw away
    Williams’s belongings. Singleton testified that during that excursion
    she was nervous and “texting to get away.”
    Eventually, Singleton escaped by texting her boyfriend’s
    mother and asking the mother to send her a text pretending that
    something was wrong with Singleton’s son and asking Singleton to
    come to the hospital. When Singleton received that text, she used it
    35
    as a pretext to get a ride to the hospital, where she met her boy-
    friend’s mother and went with her instead of back to the Maypop
    Lane house.
    The trial court’s instructions to the jury included these
    charges:
    The testimony of [an] accomplice alone is not sufficient to
    warrant a conviction. The accomplice’s testimony must be
    supported by other evidence of some type and that evi-
    dence must be such as would lead to the inference of the
    guilt of the accused independent of the testimony of the
    accomplice.
    [...]
    The sufficiency of the supporting evidence of an accom-
    plice is a matter solely for you, the jury, to determine.
    Whether or not any witness was [an] accomplice is a ques-
    tion for you, the jury, to determine from the evidence in
    this case.
    (b) “The testimony of a single witness is generally sufficient to
    establish a fact.” OCGA § 24-14-8. But there is an exception to that
    general rule: in felony cases where the only witness is an accomplice,
    “the testimony of a single witness shall not be sufficient,” id. (em-
    phasis added), and “a jury may not rely solely on an accomplice’s
    36
    testimony to find any fact necessary to sustain a defendant’s convic-
    tion,” Payne, 314 Ga. at 326 (1). Whether or not a witness was an
    accomplice to the crime is a question for the jury to decide, as are
    any issues of credibility that might affect that finding. See Copeland
    v. State, 
    314 Ga. 44
    , 48 (2) (
    875 SE2d 636
    ) (2022). If the evidence at
    trial would authorize a properly instructed jury to find that a wit-
    ness was not an accomplice, that finding “eliminate[s] the need for
    corroboration under OCGA § 24-14-8,” and the witness’s testimony
    alone is sufficient. Id. (citation and punctuation omitted). This is
    true even if there is conflicting evidence as to whether the witness
    was an accomplice, see Johnson v. State, 
    311 Ga. 221
    , 225 (
    857 SE2d 463
    ) (2021) (“Despite some evidence to the contrary presented at [the
    defendant’s] trial, a properly instructed jury could have found that
    [a witness] was not an accomplice, and corroboration of his testi-
    mony therefore was not required.”), and even if the only evidence
    that a witness is not an accomplice is the witness’s own testimony,
    see Fisher v. State, 
    309 Ga. 814
    , 819 (2) (
    848 SE2d 434
    ) (2020)
    (properly charged jury was authorized to believe witness’s testimony
    37
    that he had no prior knowledge of crime, and thus to determine that
    witness was not an accomplice, which eliminated the need for cor-
    roboration).
    Here, Singleton was the only witness testifying to much of
    what happened at the house on Maypop Lane, but ample evidence
    authorized the jury to conclude that Singleton was not an accom-
    plice. She testified that she was not a member of the gang. She tes-
    tified extensively about her fear of the gang, and of Brown specifi-
    cally. She talked about how Brown controlled her movements and
    communications. And she detailed her days-long effort to get away,
    even while she had left with Harwell to throw away Williams’s be-
    longings. All of that authorized a conclusion that Singleton did not
    have a “shared criminal intent” with the defendants. See Sams, 314
    Ga. at 310 (2); Johnson, 311 Ga. at 225; Fisher, 309 Ga. at 819 (2).
    And the jury was properly charged with the pattern jury instruc-
    tions on accomplice corroboration, including the charge that
    “[w]hether or not any witness was an accomplice is a question for
    you, the jury, to determine for the evidence in this case.” See
    38
    Copeland, 314 Ga. at 48 (2) (noting that that instruction was cor-
    rect). Given the proper instruction and the ample evidence support-
    ing a finding that Singleton was not an accomplice, no corroboration
    under OCGA § 24-14-8 was necessary. This claim thus fails.
    7. Henderson contends that the trial court abused its discretion
    by allowing Singleton to testify about certain things that Malcolm
    Brown said on the night of the murders. The trial court admitted
    Singleton’s testimony, over counsel’s objection, under OCGA § 24-8-
    801 (d) (2) (E) (“Rule 801 (d) (2) (E)”), which is the hearsay exception
    for statements made in furtherance of a conspiracy. Henderson now
    contends that the testimony should have been excluded because
    there was insufficient evidence of a conspiracy. He identifies ten of
    Brown’s remarks that, in his view, were admitted in error: (1) his
    comment to Mason that Williams had “too much mouth”; (2) his sar-
    castic retort to Williams that “Oh, I’m acting like a b***h”; (3) his
    direction to Mason to “control your b***h”; (4) his direction to the
    defendants to find Williams and Camacho; (5) his direction to make
    sure the defendants had guns; (6) his direction to “make sure that
    39
    y’all do what y’all need to do and make sure [Mason] does what he
    need to do because he acting like he in love”; (7) his request to the
    defendants to “make sure you let me know what [Mason] does”;
    (8) his instruction that “y’all need to find them”; (9) his question,
    “what is [Mason] doing”; and (10) his instruction, “they on foot.”
    Hearsay is “a statement, other than one made by the declarant
    while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove
    the truth of the matter asserted.” OCGA § 24-8-801 (c). Hearsay is
    generally inadmissible, but it may be admitted if any of several stat-
    utory exceptions applies. See id. § 802; Mosley v. State, 
    307 Ga. 711
    ,
    716 (3) (
    838 SE2d 289
    ) (2020). One of those exceptions is Rule 801
    (d) (2) (E), which allows for the admission of “[a] statement by a co-
    conspirator of a party during the course and in furtherance of the
    conspiracy, including a statement made during the concealment
    phase of a conspiracy.” OCGA § 24-8-801 (d) (2) (E). See Kemp v.
    State, 
    303 Ga. 385
    , 392 (2) (b) (
    810 SE2d 515
    ) (2018). To introduce
    hearsay under Rule 801 (d) (2) (E), the State must show by a pre-
    40
    ponderance of the evidence that a conspiracy existed, that the con-
    spiracy included both the declarant and the defendant against whom
    the statement is offered, and that the statement was made during
    the course of and in furtherance of the conspiracy. See Stafford v.
    State, 
    312 Ga. 811
    , 822 (5) (a) (
    865 SE2d 116
    ) (2021); Kemp, 303 Ga.
    at 392 (2) (b).4
    As with admissibility rulings generally, we review a trial
    court’s ruling to admit evidence under Rule 801 (d) (2) (E) for an
    abuse of discretion. See State v. Lane, 
    308 Ga. 10
    , 20 (3) (
    838 SE2d 808
    ) (2020). As part of this review, we accept a trial court’s factual
    findings unless they are clearly erroneous. See Kemp, 303 Ga. at 393
    (2) (b). And we have noted before that a trial court’s determination
    “whether a statement was made in furtherance of a conspiracy” is a
    factual finding reviewed for clear error. Id. Further, in reviewing
    that determination, “[w]e apply a liberal standard.” Id.
    A conspiracy is “an agreement between two or more persons to
    4 Although conspiracy is itself a crime, see OCGA § 16-4-8, a conspiracy
    need not be separately charged for a statement to be admissible under Rule
    801 (d) (2) (E). See OCGA § 24-8-801 (d) (2) (E); Kemp, 303 Ga. at 392 (2) (b).
    41
    commit a crime.” Jones v. State, 
    305 Ga. 750
    , 752 (2) (a) (
    827 SE2d 879
    ) (2019). When, as here, a defendant is charged under the Street
    Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act (“Gang Act”) with committing a
    crime in furtherance of the purposes of a criminal street gang, he
    may be part of two conspiracies: the immediate conspiracy to commit
    the crime, and the “larger criminal conspiracy” to participate in the
    gang. Chavers v. State, 
    304 Ga. 887
    , 893 (3) (
    823 SE2d 283
    ) (2019);
    Kemp, 303 Ga. at 393 (2) (b) (i). This is because a criminal street
    gang is essentially “a general conspiracy among several individuals
    to commit crimes.” Kemp, 303 Ga. at 394 (2) (b) (i). See also OCGA §
    16-15-3 (3) & (1) (J) (a “[c]riminal street gang” is “any organization,
    association, or group of three or more persons associated in fact,
    whether formal or informal, which engages in criminal gang activ-
    ity,” and “[c]riminal gang activity” includes, among other things, any
    crime involving violence or the possession or use of a weapon); Kemp,
    303 Ga. at 394 (2) (b) (i) (to show a violation of the Gang Act, the
    State must prove the existence of a criminal street gang and “the
    commission of a specific criminal act intended to further the gang’s
    42
    criminal purposes”). And because a criminal street gang is a kind of
    general conspiracy, “[m]anagement of or participation with others in
    that criminal street gang activity necessarily implies knowledge of
    the gang’s criminal activities and a specific intent to further its crim-
    inal purposes.” Rodriguez v. State, 
    284 Ga. 803
    , 807 (1) (
    671 SE2d 497
    ) (2009). So if a person is a member of a criminal street gang, his
    statements in furtherance of the gang’s criminal purposes are con-
    sidered statements in furtherance of the “larger conspiracy”—and
    thus could be admissible under Rule 801 (d) (2) (E), assuming the
    rule’s other requirements are satisfied.
    Most of Brown’s remarks that Henderson now challenges were
    clearly in furtherance of the conspiracy to murder Williams and
    Camacho and, by extension, of the “larger conspiracy” to participate
    in the Nine Trey Gangsters. The State presented ample evidence
    that Brown and Henderson were members of the Nine Trey Gang-
    sters, including Singleton’s testimony, Investigator Pinckney’s ex-
    pert opinion, and the photos of Henderson making gang signs. The
    State also presented evidence that killing Williams and Camacho
    43
    furthered the gang’s purposes: Singleton and Mason said Brown, a
    high-ranking member, ordered Henderson, Mason, and Jenkins, all
    lower-ranking members, to kill Williams and Camacho, and Single-
    ton and Pinckney both explained this was because Williams was
    threatening to bring Gangster Disciples, a rival of the Bloods, to the
    house. Many of Brown’s statements challenged here were direct in-
    structions to Henderson and his co-defendants to carry out that kill-
    ing: to arm themselves, find the women, and “do what y’all need to
    do.” And other statements were requests for confirmation that Ma-
    son was following those instructions. All of those remarks easily
    meet the “liberal standard” that applies in determining whether a
    hearsay statement is in furtherance of a conspiracy. See Kemp, 303
    Ga. at 393 (2) (b); Chavers, 
    304 Ga. at 893
     (3) (declarant’s statements
    targeting someone to be beaten or killed and telling a fellow gang
    member that the victim did not know “how real the s**t is about to
    get,” together with evidence that defendant was critical of the victim
    and spoke about killing violators of gang rules, that declarant and
    defendant were in gang, and that declarant met with defendant just
    44
    before defendant killed victim, showed that declarant and defendant
    conspired to murder victim and that they were part of “larger crim-
    inal conspiracy” to participate in the gang) (citation and punctuation
    omitted).
    Certain of Brown’s statements arguably were not in further-
    ance of any conspiracy. His remark that Williams had “too much
    mouth” and his sarcastic retort to Williams that “Oh, I’m acting like
    a b***h” were unrelated either to the murders or to participation in
    the Nine Trey Gangsters. But those statements were not hearsay,
    because they were not offered to prove the truth of the matters as-
    serted. See OCGA § 24-8-801 (c). Because they were not hearsay,
    they did not need to qualify for a hearsay exception to be admissible,
    and Henderson does not object to Brown’s statements on any other
    basis.
    Because each of the statements Henderson challenges was ei-
    ther in furtherance of a conspiracy and thus admissible under Rule
    801 (d (2) (E), or not hearsay at all, his claim that these statements
    were inadmissible hearsay fails.
    45
    8. Henderson contends that the trial court should have granted
    his pretrial motion to sever his trial from the trials of his co-defend-
    ants. We review the denial of a motion to sever for abuse of discre-
    tion. See Collins v. State, 
    312 Ga. 727
    , 736 (4) (
    864 SE2d 85
    ) (2021).
    When two or more defendants are indicted jointly for a capital
    felony where the death penalty has been waived, for a non-capital
    felony, or for a misdemeanor, the defendants can be tried together
    or separately in the discretion of the trial court. See OCGA § 17-8-4
    (a). A trial court has “broad discretion” to grant or deny a motion for
    severance. Sillah v. State, 
    315 Ga. 741
    , 750 (3) (
    883 SE2d 756
    )
    (2023). When ruling on the motion to sever, a trial court should con-
    sider three factors: “(1) the likelihood of confusion of the evidence
    and law; (2) the possibility that evidence against one defendant may
    be considered against the other defendant; and (3) the presence or
    absence of antagonistic defenses.” Collins, 312 Ga. at 735 (4) (cita-
    tion and punctuation omitted). To show that severance is required,
    the defendant must do more than point to the presence of antagonis-
    tic defenses or the possibility that he has a better chance of acquittal
    46
    in a separate trial. See id. Rather, he must show that “a joint trial
    was so prejudicial as to amount to a denial of his right to due pro-
    cess.” Hurston v. State, 
    310 Ga. 818
    , 826 (3) (a) (
    854 SE2d 745
    )
    (2021) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    Here, the first and third factors weighed against severing the
    trials. The jury was not likely to be confused about the evidence or
    the law because all three co-defendants—Henderson, Mason, and
    Jenkins—were accused of the same conduct, and the State argued
    that they acted together in committing the crimes. See Sillah, 315
    Ga. at 750 (3) (severance not necessary when, among other things,
    “the law and evidence were substantially the same for all of” the
    gang-member co-defendants); Collins, 312 Ga. at 736 (4) (confusion
    of evidence and law unlikely because “the three co-defendants were
    charged with the same offenses stemming from the same incident
    with largely the same evidence”) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    For the same reason, there were no antagonistic defenses at trial.
    The three co-defendants were accused of the same conduct, and none
    of their defenses were inconsistent or relied on blaming one another.
    47
    See Collins, 312 Ga. at 737 (4) (severance not required when there
    was “sufficient evidence of a common scheme or plan to commit a
    criminal offense”) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    The second factor is closer. The State’s case against Henderson
    was not quite as strong as its case against Mason, both as to the
    murders and as to membership in the gang. Some of the evidence
    against Mason, like his text messages with Turk or the gang-related
    information from his phone, might not have been admitted at a trial
    of Henderson alone. And it is conceivable that some of that evidence,
    particularly about Mason’s gang connections, might have been im-
    puted to Henderson.
    But that is not enough to require severance. “[T]he fact that
    the evidence as to one of the co-defendants is stronger does not de-
    mand a finding that the denial of a severance motion is an abuse of
    discretion” when, as here, “there is evidence showing that the de-
    fendants acted in concert.” Smith v. State, 
    308 Ga. 81
    , 86-87 (2) (
    839 SE2d 630
    ) (2020) (citation and punctuation omitted). See also OCGA
    § 16-2-20 (explaining party-to-the-crime liability). And the State
    48
    presented independent evidence that Henderson was a gang mem-
    ber (Singleton’s testimony, Investigator Pinckney’s expert opinion,
    the photos of Henderson making gang signs) and that he was in-
    volved in the murders (Singleton’s testimony), all of which still
    would have been admissible had Henderson been tried alone. Given
    all of this, even if Henderson may have had a better chance of ac-
    quittal in a solo trial, he has not shown that his “joint trial was so
    prejudicial as to amount to a denial of his right to due process.”
    Hurston, 310 Ga. at 826 (3) (a). See Collins, 312 Ga. at 735 (4). The
    trial court thus did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion to
    sever.
    9. Finally, Henderson contends that the trial court abused its
    discretion by admitting photos of Henderson making gang signs be-
    cause they were not properly authenticated. Authentication is re-
    viewed for abuse of discretion. See Harris v. State, 
    313 Ga. 872
    , 880
    (4) (
    874 SE2d 73
    ) (2022).
    During Investigator Pinckney’s testimony, the State sought to
    introduce photos that showed Henderson making gang signs, either
    49
    alone or with his co-defendants. Pinckney initially testified that he
    recognized the photos as coming from “a social media account,” that
    some came from the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department in
    North Carolina, and that he recognized the people in them. Defense
    counsel objected that there was a lack of foundation and identifica-
    tion for the photos. Pinckney then testified that he recognized the
    photos and that he recognized the people in them.
    Evidence like photos may be authenticated with evidence “suf-
    ficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what its
    proponent claims.” OCGA § 24-9-901 (a). Authentication may be
    achieved through any means that satisfies that statutory standard.
    See Nicholson v. State, 
    307 Ga. 466
    , 475 (5) (
    837 SE2d 362
    ) (2019).
    That can include the “[t]estimony of a witness with knowledge that
    a matter is what it is claimed to be.” OCGA § 24-9-901 (b) (1). See
    McCammon v. State, 
    306 Ga. 516
    , 522-523 (3) (
    832 SE2d 396
    ) (2019).
    When authenticating evidence, the proponent must “present evi-
    dence sufficient to make out a prima facie case that the proffered
    evidence is what it purports to be.” McCammon, 306 Ga. at 523 (3)
    50
    (citation omitted). Once that prima facie case is established, the ev-
    idence is admitted, “and the ultimate question of authenticity is de-
    cided by the jury.” Id. (citation omitted). These rules apply to elec-
    tronic documents the same as they do to any others. See Nicholson,
    307 Ga. at 475 (5).
    The photos here were authenticated by Investigator Pinckney,
    who testified that he was familiar with them and with the people in
    them. See OCGA § 24-9-901 (b) (1); McCammon, 306 Ga. at 522-523
    (3). That established a prima facie case of authenticity that allowed
    the photos to be admitted. See OCGA § 24-9-901 (a); McCammon,
    306 Ga. at 523 (3). The ultimate question of authenticity was then
    for the jury. See McCammon, 306 Ga. at 523 (3). Thus, the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the photos, and so this
    claim fails.
    Judgments affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    51