Anthony Todd Aaron v. State ( 2022 )


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  •                                 FIFTH DIVISION
    MCFADDEN, P. J.,
    GOBEIL and PINSON, JJ.
    NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
    physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
    days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
    https://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    June 7, 2022
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A22A0511. AARON v. THE STATE.
    PINSON, Judge.
    This appeal follows our remand of a previous appeal for further findings.
    Anthony Todd Aaron was found guilty by a jury of criminal attempt to commit malice
    murder and possession of a knife during the commission of a felony, as well as two
    counts of aggravated assault that were merged for sentencing purposes. In his initial
    appeal, Aaron contended that he had been deprived of his constitutional right to self-
    representation at trial, Faretta v. California, 
    422 U. S. 806
    , 835-36 (V) (95 SCt 2525,
    45 LE2d 562) (1975), but that the record did not reflect his unequivocal assertion of
    that right because a “pertinent albeit tiny portion of the trial transcript” from the
    morning of jury selection had been omitted. Because the transcript appeared to be
    incomplete, we remanded the case so the trial court could hold a hearing under
    OCGA § 5-6-41 (f) and (g) to “make the record conform to the truth.” Id. at (f). See
    Aaron v. State, ___ Ga. App. ___ (Case No. A20A2001, decided January 29, 2021)
    (unpublished) (“Aaron I”).
    On remand, the trial court held that hearing. Crediting the testimony of the
    court reporter and Aaron’s trial counsel, which was consistent with its own
    recollection, the court found that the transcript was not, in fact, incomplete. Although
    the transcript contained an error, the court found that the court reporter had
    “appropriately addressed” the error, and that the transcript “now accurately reflects”
    what transpired. The court then concluded that Aaron never made an unequivocal
    assertion of his right to represent himself. Therefore, the court held that its failure to
    hold a Faretta hearing was not error and did not entitle Aaron to a new trial.
    In this appeal, Aaron contends that the trial court erred on remand by (1)
    denying his post-hearing request for a second remand hearing to obtain additional
    testimony, and (2) failing to certify that the court was unable to recall what had
    transpired at the Jackson-Denno1 hearing on the day before jury selection, when
    Aaron now claims that he unequivocally asserted his right of self-representation. But
    Aaron was not entitled to a second hearing because he had the opportunity to obtain
    1
    Jackson v. Denno, 
    378 U. S. 368
     (84 SCt 1774, 12 LE2d 908) (1964).
    2
    the additional testimony at the first hearing, but declined to do so. And Aaron has
    failed to show any omission from the Jackson-Denno transcript that would warrant
    the certification he claims the trial court should have made. Aaron has shown no error
    in the trial court’s reconstruction of the transcript and has failed to point to any
    portion of the record that would establish an unequivocal assertion of his right to
    represent himself. We therefore affirm both the trial court’s post-remand order and
    Aaron’s judgment of conviction and sentence.
    Background
    (a) The Crimes and Convictions
    As we explained in Aaron’s initial appeal, the evidence at trial showed that
    Aaron choked and repeatedly stabbed the victim, his “on-again, off-again” romantic
    partner, with a kitchen knife. At his August 2018 trial, Aaron testified in his own
    defense and admitted to stabbing the victim, but claimed he had done so only to
    prevent her from taking his car and not with the intent to kill her. The jury found
    Aaron guilty of attempted murder, aggravated assault, and possession of a knife
    during the commission of a felony.
    (b) The Contested Trial Transcript and the First Appeal
    3
    In his initial appeal, Aaron contended that the trial court had improperly denied
    him the right to represent himself at trial. He pointed to a portion of the transcript that
    he claimed contained a gap, and he asserted that in that gap, he had unequivocally
    asserted his right to represent himself. That portion of the trial transcript is found at
    the beginning of a discussion on the first day of trial among the trial court, the
    prosecutor, Aaron’s trial counsel, and Aaron. After initial questioning of the venire,
    a brief recess had been taken, and the transcription resumed with trial counsel in mid-
    sentence. The transcript reads as follows:
    (Whereupon, the Court took a brief recess.)
    (Whereupon, the proceedings resumed.)
    (Whereupon, the defendant was present in the courtroom.)
    [TRIAL COUNSEL] RICE: – be whether or not they would hold it
    against my client if he represented himself. And so if, [the prosecutor],
    doesn’t know whether to ask that question. And I was hoping I could
    pick the jury, and then he could make that decision, you know, about
    whether or not to make an opening and just take over. But I think they
    feel like – the State feels like that decision needs to be made –
    THE COURT: Well, so far he’s indicated that you’re representing him,
    and we’ve done everything to the effect that he’ll make the decision as
    to whether he’ll testify. So he hasn’t raised it again with me yet.
    4
    [TRIAL COUNSEL] RICE: Okay.
    THE COURT: So you cannot ask him. What do you care?
    [ASSISTANT DISTRICT ATTORNEY] PETERSON: The only issue
    I have, Your Honor – and I – I don’t know how you’ve perceived, kind
    of, what he says. Wiggins versus the State, which I’ve handed up, just
    says if he’s made an unequivocal statement saying he wishes to
    represent himself, it’s reversible error if we don’t go ahead and ask him
    the questions and ask him if he wants to represent himself. If it’s
    equivocal, then it’s not –
    THE COURT: I think it’s been equivocal because we had the whole
    discussion during the Jackson-Denno about the technicalities and we
    discussed yesterday some other stuff. Come on in. Have a seat.
    (Whereupon, the defendant entered the courtroom.)
    ...
    THE COURT: Okay. So, you know, you kind of beat around the bush
    a little bit about representing yourself. You saw the technicalities of
    Jackson versus Denno. Mr. Rice isn’t going anywhere, one way or the
    other. What do you want to actually do?
    DEFENDANT AARON: I’ll sit here and, you know –
    THE COURT: I mean, he’s got to listen to what you tell him, right? He
    works for you; you understand that?
    5
    DEFENDANT AARON: I hope so. I hope so. I hope so.
    THE COURT: He does.
    DEFENDANT AARON: I hope so.
    THE COURT: No, there’s no hope so. He works for you. You don’t
    have to like what he says, but he works for you.
    DEFENDANT AARON: He works for the State.
    THE COURT: No. He doesn’t work for the State. He’s not a yes-man
    though. . . .
    ...
    THE COURT: Okay. So I’m going to let him do voir dire. But you – if
    you have anything you want him to ask, you give it to him, okay?
    DEFENDANT AARON: Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: Okay. Is that okay with you, Mr. Rice?
    [TRIAL COUNSEL] RICE: Yes, sir.
    Following this exchange, the court brought the first panel of prospective jurors back
    into the courtroom and continued with voir dire.
    6
    In our opinion deciding the original appeal, we identified two issues that
    needed clarification on remand. The first issue was the content of any discussion that
    took place before the transcription picked up and in particular, whether Aaron had
    told the court at that time that he wanted to represent himself. The second issue,
    which relates to the first, was whether Aaron “was present in the courtroom” at the
    beginning of the exchange, as the transcript states, or whether he “entered the
    courtroom” in the middle of it, as the transcript also states. These two issues were
    relevant to the question whether Aaron had asserted his right to represent himself and,
    in turn, whether the court’s failure to hold a Faretta hearing entitled him to a new
    trial. So we remanded the case and directed the trial court to get to the bottom of these
    two issues. See OCGA § 5-6-41 (f) (providing that “[w]here any party contends that
    the transcript or record does not truly or fully disclose what transpired in the trial
    court and the parties are unable to agree thereon, the trial court shall set the matter
    down for a hearing . . . and resolve the difference so as to make the record conform
    to the truth”).
    (c) The Remand Hearing
    7
    At the hearing on remand, the court heard testimony from the court reporter
    who took down Aaron’s trial, Aaron’s trial counsel, and Aaron himself. The hearing
    was conducted by the same trial judge who had presided over the trial.
    The court reporter, Domenica Turchiarelli, first addressed the issue of Aaron’s
    presence in the courtroom. Turchiarelli testified that the parenthetical in the middle
    of the excerpt in question should have noted that the judge’s staff attorney—not “the
    defendant”—entered the courtroom in the middle of the discussion about Aaron’s
    representation. In other words, she explained that the transcript should reflect that
    Aaron was present at the time Turchiarelli began transcribing and at all other times
    during the exchange in question, and that it was the staff attorney who walked into
    the courtroom while that exchange was in progress.
    As to the purported missing portion of the transcript, Turchiarelli testified that
    neither she nor the trial judge had been in the courtroom during that part of the
    conversation and that she and the trial judge had entered the courtroom at the “exact
    same time,” at which time she immediately began recording:
    We had taken a brief recess. We then entered the courtroom at the exact
    same time. [The trial judge] took the bench, and I went through the side
    door of the courtroom. And, at that moment, [trial counsel] Rice was
    speaking to [Assistant District Attorney] Peterson. I went immediately
    8
    to my desk and began taking down. The Court addressed Mr. Rice and
    Ms. Peterson, and I did not know if what was about to be said would be
    something that needed to be on the record, so I immediately started
    taking down.
    She also testified that the transcript—which she verified against an audio recording
    before certifying it, and which she compared with her notes before testifying at the
    remand hearing—is complete and accurate and fully captures every instance in which
    Aaron addressed the trial judge.
    Aaron’s appointed trial counsel, Sanford Rice, testified that Aaron clearly
    “wanted to participate” actively in his own defense, but Aaron never unequivocally
    told him or the court that he wanted to represent himself. According to Rice, Aaron
    believed Rice was working for the State, so Aaron did not trust him and “wanted to
    basically use [him] as a hand puppet.” But “as far as being specific and certain that
    he wanted to try his case personally,” Rice testified that he “[did not] recall [Aaron]
    ever saying that.” Rice recalled that the trial judge asked Aaron at several points
    during the proceedings whether he wanted to take the lead: “So, [the judge] would,
    at each point, question [Aaron] about it, the motion, picking the jury, and the actual
    trial: What do you want to do?” Each time, Aaron demurred.
    9
    In reference to the exchange captured in the contested portion of the transcript,
    Rice explained:
    when [the judge] came in, I think [Aaron] was squabbling and saying
    some things, and so, I went over and discussed it with [the prosecutor].
    The Judge probably saw us. I think he might have called us up for a
    colloquy[.]
    When asked whether he had ever addressed the court off the record about Aaron’s
    being unhappy with his representation, Rice testified that he did not believe he had
    done so and that whatever he had communicated to the judge had been on the record.
    Aaron himself then testified, maintaining that he had clearly told the trial judge
    he wanted to represent himself. His testimony about when and how many times he
    had made that assertion, however, was inconsistent. On direct examination, Aaron
    testified that he told the court two different times that he wanted to represent himself
    on the day before voir dire began, when the trial court conducted his Jackson-Denno
    hearing. But on cross-examination, Aaron testified that the only time he had told the
    judge he wanted to represent himself was “right before” jury selection. Then, on
    redirect, Aaron again testified that he made that assertion the day before jury
    selection. And on recross, he shifted yet again to claiming that “I told the judge one
    or two times,” the first time being “before we picked the jury.” Aaron also admitted
    10
    that he had never filed any pro se motions asking the court to allow him to represent
    himself.
    After Aaron testified, the State closed its evidence. In doing so, the State
    decided not to call ADA Peterson, whose attendance the State had secured in case it
    was deemed necessary for her to testify. Aaron’s counsel then closed his evidence.
    (d) The Trial Court’s Order
    Following the hearing, the court issued an order finding that the transcript as
    originally certified was complete and that the error in the transcript had been
    corrected. Crediting the testimony of Rice and Turchiarelli and rejecting Aaron’s
    testimony as not credible and not consistent with the court’s own recollection, the
    court found that nothing was missing from the transcript and that Aaron had been
    present in the courtroom from the beginning of the contested exchange. The court
    also rejected Aaron’s “insinuat[ion]” that he had asked to represent himself on the day
    before trial before the start of the Jackson-Denno hearing, finding based on the
    hearing testimony and its own recollection that the transcript from that day’s
    proceedings—which reflects no such request—was accurate and complete. The court
    then concluded that the transcripts did not document Aaron having made any
    unequivocal assertion of his right to self-representation, and noting that the record
    11
    contains no other evidence—such as pro se motions or letters to the court—that
    Aaron ever told the court he wanted to represent himself. The court noted that it took
    seriously Aaron’s expressions of dissatisfaction with his counsel—particularly over
    counsel’s advice that he should not testify at trial—and thus engaged Aaron on
    several occasions about whether he wished to represent himself. But on none of these
    occasions, the court found, did Aaron ever express an unequivocal desire to proceed
    pro se. Thus, the trial court determined that no Faretta hearing was required. Aaron
    appealed.
    Discussion
    On appeal, Aaron contends that the trial court erred in reconstructing the trial
    transcript, and that he is therefore entitled to a new trial. See Johnson v. State, 
    302 Ga. 188
    , 191-92 (3) (805 SE2d 890) (2017) (“[A] defendant convicted of a crime has
    a right to appeal, and a defendant convicted of a felony has a right to a transcript of
    the trial to use in bringing that appeal. If an appellant is deprived of an adequate
    transcript, he has effectively been deprived of his right to appeal . . . [and] is therefore
    entitled to a new trial.” (citations omitted)). Code Section 5-6-41 (f) sets out the
    process by which trial courts resolve disputes about the correctness or completeness
    12
    of the trial transcript or record.2 When a transcript has been reconstructed under that
    process, the correctness of the transcript as determined by the trial court is “final and
    not subject to review.” OCGA § 5-6-41 (g). Accord Mosley v. State, 
    300 Ga. 521
    , 525
    (2) (796 SE2d 684) (2017) (“when the parties are unable to agree as to the correctness
    of . . . a supplemental transcript, the issue is to be decided by the trial judge, and such
    decision is final and not subject to review”). On the other hand, whether that
    transcript is “complete” is reviewable on appeal, and that review may include the
    2
    That Code section provides in full:
    Where any party contends that the transcript or record does not truly or
    fully disclose what transpired in the trial court and the parties are unable
    to agree thereon, the trial court shall set the matter down for a hearing
    with notice to both parties and resolve the difference so as to make the
    record conform to the truth. If anything material to either party is
    omitted from the record on appeal or is misstated therein, the parties by
    stipulation, or the trial court, either before or after the record is
    transmitted to the appellate court, on a proper suggestion or of its own
    initiative, may direct that the omission or misstatement shall be
    corrected and, if necessary, that a supplemental record shall be certified
    and transmitted by the clerk of the trial court. The trial court or the
    appellate court may at any time order the clerk of the trial court to send
    up any original papers or exhibits in the case, to be returned after final
    disposition of the appeal.
    13
    adequacy of the process used to recreate the transcript. See Bamberg v. State, 
    308 Ga. 340
    , 347 (2) (839 SE2d 640) (2020); Johnson, 
    302 Ga. at 194-95
     (3) (b) (holding that
    process for reconstructing missing trial transcript was insufficient to create a
    complete transcript and thus concluding that defendant was entitled to a new trial).
    With these limits on our review in mind, we turn to our review of the trial court’s
    reconstruction and Aaron’s specific contentions on appeal.
    1. We start with the trial court’s general process for reconstructing the
    transcript. The process for supplementing or reconstructing a transcript is generally
    adequate—and the reconstructed transcript is thus deemed complete—as long as a
    hearing is held and testimony about the content of the missing portion is adduced
    from those who were present during the proceedings in question. Compare Bamberg,
    308 Ga. at 345-46 (2) (reconstructed transcript was complete where court held
    hearing and State presented all five witnesses whose testimony was recorded in
    missing portion of transcript, as well as testimony of trial prosecutor and clerk of
    court, who both testified that witnesses’ current testimony was consistent with their
    recollection and contemporaneous notes); Mosley, 
    300 Ga. at 525
     (2) (reconstructed
    transcript was complete where court held hearing featuring testimony from three of
    the four witnesses whose testimony was in the missing transcript, as well as from the
    14
    prosecutor and defense counsel), with Johnson, 
    302 Ga. at 194-96
     (3) (b)
    (reconstructed transcript was not complete where it was prepared by the State solely
    from contemporaneous notes taken by the trial judge, the prosecutor, and a district
    attorney’s office investigator, and yielded a scant 14-page, double-spaced transcript
    “purporting to summarize a six-day trial and sentencing hearing”).
    Here, the trial court followed the required process. The court held a hearing and
    heard testimony from two of the three participants in the discussion at issue as well
    as the court reporter who took down the proceedings. See Bamberg, 308 Ga. at 345-
    46 (2); Mosley, 
    300 Ga. at 525
     (2). The contested portion of the transcript was, as
    Aaron admits, “tiny,” making it far easier to reconstruct than, say, several entire days
    of testimony. Cf. Johnson, 
    302 Ga. at 195
     (3) (b) (missing transcript covered six days
    of proceedings). The trial court was able to make credibility assessments of the three
    witnesses, see generally Riggins v. Stirgus, 
    319 Ga. App. 790
    , 790 (738 SE2d 635)
    (2013) (when trial court sits as trier of fact, “it is the sole arbiter of credibility”
    (citation and punctuation omitted)), and was also able to compare their testimony to
    the court’s own recollection of the proceedings. In short, we see no error in the
    general process the trial court used to reconstruct the transcript.
    15
    2. Aaron raises two specific issues with the trial court’s reconstruction effort:
    the court’s refusal to hold another hearing, and its failure to “certify” that it did not
    recall what happened at the Jackson-Denno hearing. We address each issue in turn.
    (a) Aaron first takes issue with the trial court’s refusal to hold a second remand
    hearing to allow him to call ADA Peterson to testify, a decision we review for abuse
    of discretion. See Walton v. State, 
    303 Ga. 11
    , 16 (4) (810 SE2d 134) (2018). Aaron
    contends that because the State, “without warning,” elected not to call ADA Peterson
    to testify at the initial remand hearing, the reconstruction of the transcript was
    necessarily incomplete. But he cites no authority (and we are aware of none) that
    requires the court to hear testimony from every trial participant to comply with OCGA
    § 5-6-41 (f). In fact, our Supreme Court has approved a transcript reconstructed with
    the testimony of fewer than all of the original testifying witnesses. See Mosley, 
    300 Ga. at 525
     (2).
    Moreover, Aaron actually had the opportunity to call ADA Peterson to testify
    at the original remand hearing, but he opted not to do so. Having squandered that
    opportunity, he cannot now complain that the process for reconstructing the transcript
    was flawed or that the transcript, as it now stands, is incomplete. See Bamberg, 308
    16
    Ga. at 349-50 (2) (where State presented witness testimony to reconstruct missing
    portion of transcript and defendants declined to call their own witnesses and
    otherwise “failed to avail themselves of the opportunity to participate,” they could not
    establish error, “even if the transcript theoretically could have been made more
    certain”). See generally Strozier v. State, 
    231 Ga. 140
    , 141 (1) (200 SE2d 762) (1973)
    (“a party cannot sit idly by and ignore what appears to him to be an injustice, in the
    hope of a favorable [outcome], and then complain when these hopes are denied him
    by an unfavorable one”). In short, we see no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s
    refusal to reopen the evidence in a second remand hearing.
    (b) Aaron also claims that the trial court erred by “failing to certify it was
    unable to recall what transpired” on the date of the Jackson-Denno hearing. But the
    court’s order, which states that the testimony at the remand hearing was consistent
    with its recollection, reflects that the court was able to recall the proceedings in
    question. Thus, the court had no basis for certifying that it was unable to recall what
    had transpired, and so this enumeration is meritless.
    Judgment affirmed. McFadden, P. J., and Gobeil, J., concur.
    17