State v. Carmie Josette Nelson ( 2023 )


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  •           THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
    In The Supreme Court
    The State, Respondent,
    v.
    Carmie Josette Nelson, Petitioner.
    Appellate Case No. 2021-001356
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Appeal from Charleston County
    J. C. Nicholson Jr., Circuit Court Judge
    Opinion No. 28171
    Heard May 17, 2023 – Filed August 9, 2023
    REVERSED
    Appellate Defender Sarah Elizabeth Shipe, of Columbia,
    for Petitioner.
    Attorney General Alan McCrory Wilson, Deputy Attorney
    General Donald J. Zelenka, Senior Assistant Deputy
    Attorney General Melody Jane Brown, and Assistant
    Attorney General Tommy Evans Jr., of Columbia; and
    Solicitor Scarlett Anne Wilson, of Charleston, all for
    Respondent.
    ACTING JUSTICE HEARN: The sole issue in this case is the admissibility of
    autopsy photos. A jury found Petitioner Carmie Nelson ("Carmie") guilty of
    murdering her roommate, and the trial court sentenced her to life imprisonment.
    Carmie appealed, arguing, inter alia, that the trial court erred in admitting gruesome
    autopsy photos in contravention of Rule 403, SCRE. The court of appeals, finding
    no error, affirmed in an unpublished opinion. State v. Nelson, Op. No. 2021-UP-330
    (S.C. Ct. App. filed Sept. 15, 2021). This Court granted Carmie's petition for a writ
    of certiorari, and we now reverse. The photos admitted here surpassed "the outer
    limits of what our law permits a jury to consider." State v. Torres, 
    390 S.C. 618
    ,
    624, 
    703 S.E.2d 226
    , 229 (2010).
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Carmie, a former Army nurse, married Daniel Nelson, also a former Army
    member, in 2001. The two often lived separately due to Carmie's work as a traveling
    nurse, and when they did reside together, their relationship was somewhat
    tumultuous. In 2015, while the Nelsons were living in Charleston, Daniel was
    convicted of criminal domestic violence (CDV) for attacking Carmie with a knife.
    Daniel received probation, and the two continued to live together at various hotels
    and a friend's home in Alabama. They returned to Charleston in 2016 but then
    separated, with Carmie living at a hotel and Daniel at a homeless camp on Rivers
    Avenue. Nevertheless, they still maintained a relationship, and Carmie used Daniel's
    Veterans Administration benefits to pay for her hotel.
    In January of 2017, Daniel was arrested for CDV against Carmie. While he
    was in jail, Carmie was kicked out of her hotel because Daniel stopped making the
    payments. Carmie, who suffered from addiction, then entered Palmetto Behavioral
    Health ("Palmetto"), a detox facility. It was at Palmetto where Carmie met Jordan
    Lum ("Victim"). Subsequently, Victim invited Carmie and her pets to move in with
    her in Summerville and live there rent-free.
    Although Carmie and Victim had originally "hit it off," Carmie soon became
    tired of Victim and began disparaging her in texts to Daniel, referring to her as a
    "psychotic bitch." According to Daniel, who testified at trial, Carmie wanted him to
    assault Victim and suggested they take Victim's designer clothes, sell them, and split
    the money. The relationship between Carmie and Victim continued to deteriorate,
    and on the morning of April 2, 2017, the date of Victim's murder, Daniel retrieved
    Carmie's truck from her previous hotel, intending to go to Victim's house. However,
    high on meth, crack, and alcohol, he crashed the truck on the way.
    Daniel and Carmie gave markedly different accounts of what transpired next.
    Daniel claimed that after his wreck, during one of several phone calls with Carmie,
    she asked him to come to Victim's home because she had just killed her and needed
    his help cleaning up the scene. Daniel explained he went, not only because he
    wanted to help her, but also because Carmie said she would drop the January 2017
    CDV charge against him and offered him "pills, alcohol, and sex." He testified
    Carmie told him she hit Victim over the head with a hammer while Victim was
    sleeping on the couch and then stabbed Victim in the neck and body because Victim
    was still moving. He stated Carmie claimed she killed Victim because Victim was
    holding her hostage and hitting Carmie's dog. Daniel noted that over the next several
    days, he and Carmie cleaned up the house, drank, took pills, and discussed what to
    do with Victim's body, which had been placed in a crate in the garage.
    Two days after Victim's death, Carmie drove the Victim's car to Harris Teeter
    and a liquor store to buy more cleaning supplies, beer, and liquor. According to
    Daniel, when she returned, things "went downhill quick." Because he and Carmie
    were frequently fighting, he decided to record their conversations on his phone to
    protect himself from being blamed for the murder. He surreptitiously recorded two
    conversations—the first was of Carmie talking about how he had wrecked her truck,
    and in the second, Carmie admitted to murdering Victim. Daniel testified that after
    he made the recordings, he packed up his things, left the house, and called 911 to
    report the murder.
    Carmie relayed a different version of events. She testified that when Daniel
    arrived at Victim's home, she went to take a shower to prepare to go out with Victim,
    having canceled her date with Daniel because he had wrecked her truck. Carmie
    stated she heard Victim screaming while she was in the shower, but she did not think
    anything of it because Victim often yelled at her cat or the neighbors. According to
    Carmie, when she left the bathroom, Victim was dead. Carmie claimed Daniel took
    her cell phone, disconnected the landlines, and held her hostage in Victim's house
    for multiple days by threatening her pets. She admitted going to Harris Teeter and
    a liquor store on April 4th, but claimed she did so at Daniel's request and because of
    his threat to harm her and her pets if she called the police. She also claimed Daniel
    forced her to make the cell phone recordings, threatening to harm one of the dogs if
    she refused.
    After Daniel called 911 and directed the police to Victim's home, police
    kicked open the door and placed Carmie in custody. The police found Victim's body
    in the crate in the garage as well as the murder weapon, a hammer. Carmie was
    arrested and subsequently indicted for murder.
    At Carmie's trial, the only contested issue was who had murdered Victim—
    Carmie or Daniel. During Carmie's counsel's opening statement, he stated:
    We agree that the victim . . . was brutally murdered. We agree that she
    had at least 90 wounds to her body. We agree with the prosecutor about
    her cause of death. We agree about where she was killed. We agree in
    general what the murder weapon was, and we agree that on April 4,
    2017, Daniel Nelson called police and reported a murder. . . . We
    disagree about one thing: Who killed her.
    In addition to his version of the Victim's murder, Daniel testified that prior
    thereto, Carmie had asked him to harass and assault Victim, even going so far as to
    start planning Victim's murder. According to Daniel, he never agreed to help Carmie
    kill Victim, but he admitted she might have believed he had agreed to do so. Daniel
    also admitted he had been charged with accessory after the fact of murder for his
    involvement in this case, and he had charges pending for the January 2017 CDV
    against Carmie, the unlawful use of 911, and filing a false report of a felony nature.
    He further conceded he had provided law enforcement with multiple versions of his
    involvement in Victim's murder in an attempt to try to make himself look less
    culpable, including telling 911 and the police that he did not know Carmie had killed
    Victim when she asked him to come help her clean the house and saying he did not
    know what he was cleaning up when he knew it was blood.
    The State also called the medical examiner who performed the autopsy on
    Victim, Dr. Nicholas Batalis. First, without the jury present, the State proffered Dr.
    Batalis's testimony regarding three of the State's exhibits, which were photos taken
    during Victim's autopsy. State's exhibits 75 and 76 are close-up photos of Victim's
    gruesome head and neck wounds, and they show partial decomposition of Victim's
    body. State's exhibit 77 depicts the victim lying on her stomach, showing stab
    wounds on her back and her swollen head, but it does not display the partial
    decomposition of Victim or her more gruesome wounds.
    Dr. Batalis testified the photos showed fatal, blunt force wounds on the
    Victim's head, where the "skull had been shattered away" and "[y]ou can actually
    see down to the brain there," which were consistent with the Victim being hit with a
    hammer. He also stated the photos showed several sharp force wounds on Victim's
    neck, namely that her throat had been cut. He noted the photos showed some "green
    discoloration" on Victim's head where Victim was decomposing. Dr. Batalis
    admitted he had a diagram of Victim's injuries which he made during her autopsy,
    and that he could testify and describe the wounds without the autopsy photos, but
    "the picture does a much better job of showing the feature, where the diagram is just
    an estimation." He stated his testimony as to his findings would remain the same
    with or without the pictures.
    Carmie objected to the admission of autopsy photos, noting they were
    gruesome and would "inflame the passions of the jury," and that Batalis could testify
    using the diagram instead of the photos. The State asserted the photos were
    probative as to Victim's cause of death, would aid Dr. Batalis in describing the
    injuries to the jury, and were probative of malice. The trial court admitted the
    autopsy photos, "based on the doctor's testimony and the fact that he says it would
    help him show the jury the cause of death. . . . I think it does have some probative
    value. Probative value outweighs prejudicial value under 403."
    Dr. Batalis then testified as an expert witness in front of the jury, and the State
    introduced the three autopsy photos into evidence over Carmie's renewed objections.
    Dr. Batalis testified Victim died on either April 2 or April 3, 2017, and she had 113
    wounds to her head, neck, chest, and upper extremities. Dr. Batalis testified the
    blunt force trauma wounds to Victim's head were consistent with the Victim being
    struck by a hammer and were fatal, as was the sharp force injury to Victim's neck.
    He also explained Victim had nineteen stab wounds to her chest, which were
    consistent with being stabbed with a knife. Dr. Batalis opined Victim's cause of
    death was a combination of blunt force and sharp force wounds to her head, neck,
    and chest. Consequently, the jury heard a technical medical description. With or
    without the photos, Dr. Batalis nevertheless testified as to the gruesome nature of
    Victim's wounds. Thereafter, the jury convicted Carmie, and she was sentenced to
    life imprisonment.1
    DISCUSSION
    The sole issue before us is whether the court of appeals erred in affirming the
    admission of the autopsy photos over Carmie's Rule 403, SCRE, objection. Carmie
    sets forth several reasons why it was error to admit the autopsy photos, but the one
    we find most compelling is that the photos had little probative value as to any
    disputed fact in this case. Beginning with the opening statements at trial, it was clear
    that the only issue for the jury to decide was who killed Victim—Carmie or Daniel—
    1
    Daniel was indicted for accessory after the fact of murder, pled guilty, and received
    a five-year sentence.
    and that did not change throughout the trial. As we will discuss, the State always
    must prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt; however, the photos here provided
    little probative value as to any element of murder. Therefore, we hold it was error
    to admit the photos because their minimal probative value was substantially
    outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
    We begin our analysis by recognizing that the admission of evidence is
    addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and its ruling will not be disturbed
    in the absence of an abuse of discretion accompanied by prejudice. State v. Wise,
    
    359 S.C. 14
    , 21, 
    596 S.E.2d 475
    , 478 (2004). Under Rule 403, SCRE, relevant
    evidence may be excluded where its probative value is substantially outweighed by
    the danger of unfair prejudice. Moreover, "[I]t is well-established that photographs
    calculated to arouse the sympathies and prejudices of the jury are to be excluded if
    they are irrelevant or unnecessary to the issues at trial." State v. Jones, Op. No.
    28145 (S.C. filed Mar. 29, 2023) (Howard Adv. Sh. No. 12 at 23, 54) (quoting State
    v. Middleton, 
    288 S.C. 21
    , 24, 
    339 S.E.2d 692
    , 693 (1986)).
    Much of our case law surrounding the admission of gruesome autopsy photos
    and Rule 403, SCRE, arises in the context of the sentencing phase of a capital murder
    trial, where the scope of the probative value of such photos is necessarily broader.
    State v. Kornahrens, 
    290 S.C. 281
    , 289, 
    350 S.E.2d 180
    , 186 (1986) ("The trial judge
    is still required to balance the prejudicial effect of the photographs against their
    probative value. However, in the sentencing phase, the scope of the probative value
    is much broader."). By contrast, "[i]n the guilt phase of a trial, photographs of the
    murder victims should be excluded where the facts they are intended to show have
    been fully established by competent testimony." 
    Id.
     at 288–89, 350 S.E.2d at 185.
    Thus, while photographs may be inadmissible in the guilt phase of a trial, they are
    likely to be "relevant in the sentencing phase to show the circumstances of the crime
    and the character of the defendant." Id. at 289, 350 S.E.2d at 186; see State v.
    Rosemond, 
    335 S.C. 593
    , 597, 
    518 S.E.2d 588
    , 590 (1999) ("Photographs of a
    victim's body are admissible in the sentencing phase of a death penalty trial to show
    the circumstances of the crime and the character of the defendant.").
    In Kornahrens, this Court found the trial court did not err in admitting autopsy
    photos during the sentencing phase of a capital murder trial because, "[They] showed
    what the defendant himself did to the bodies and nothing more. The appearance of
    the bodies as the defendant left them has not been altered by decomposition or by
    any other outside force." 290 S.C. at 288–89, 350 S.E.2d at 185–86. This court
    noted the autopsy photos "most likely would have been inadmissible in the guilt
    phase," but under the circumstances of the case, "they were relevant in the sentencing
    phase to show the circumstances of the crime and the character of the defendant."
    Id. at 289, 350 S.E.2d at 186.
    In Middleton, this Court concluded autopsy photographs showing a victim's
    scalp pulled away from her skull and the victim's vaginal cavity containing semen
    should have been excluded.2 
    288 S.C. at 24
    , 
    339 S.E.2d at 693
    . In reaching this
    finding, this Court noted the appellant offered to stipulate to the facts shown in the
    photos, but the State refused to accept the stipulation. 
    Id.
     On appeal, the State
    argued the photos were properly admitted to corroborate forensic testimony,
    demonstrate the violent nature of the murders in this case, and to corroborate the
    appellant's statements, but the appellant argued the photographs did not contain
    disputed information and this information could have been proven by other evidence.
    
    Id.
     The State admitted the photos "were not essential to the prosecution." 
    Id.
     In
    reversing, this Court noted appellant's offer to stipulate to the facts in the photos,
    that the information in the photos were not in dispute, and that the forensic
    pathologist's testimony "negated any arguable evidentiary value of the photographs."
    
    Id.
     Thus, this Court held, "[t]he prejudice created by the photographs clearly
    outweighed any evidentiary value." 
    Id.
    In Torres, this Court affirmed the trial court's decision to admit autopsy photos
    during the sentencing phase of a capital murder trial, noting the photos showed what
    the defendant did to the victim and went "straight to circumstances of the crime."
    
    390 S.C. at
    623–24, 
    703 S.E.2d at 229
    . This Court noted that while the photos were
    not "easy to view," the doctor who performed the victim's autopsy used the photos,
    including close-up photos of the victim's wounds, to "illustrate the number of
    injuries, location of the injuries, and manner in which the injuries were committed"
    and "to help identify the nature of each particular injury." Id. at 624, 
    703 S.E.2d at 229
    . Importantly, we took the opportunity to address "an area of growing concern
    to this Court," stating:
    The photographs at issue in this case, while admissible, are at the outer
    limits of what our law permits a jury to consider. . . . Today we strongly
    encourage all solicitors to refrain from pushing the envelope on
    admissibility in order to gain a victory which, in all likelihood, was
    already assured.
    2
    While Middleton was a capital murder case, it is unclear whether the autopsy photos
    were offered during the guilt phase or the sentencing phase of the trial.
    Id. at 624, 
    703 S.E.2d at 229
     (emphasis added).
    This Court recently considered the admissibility of gruesome autopsy photos
    during the sentencing phase of a capital murder trial in Jones. Op. No. 28145, at 53-
    59. In Jones, we held the trial court erred in admitting autopsy photos of the bodies
    of the defendant's children during the sentencing phase of the trial, noting the
    autopsy photos had no probative value because they did not depict (1) the children's
    bodies in the same condition Jones left them in due to severe decomposition and (2)
    strangulation or ligature marks on the children and, as such, did not corroborate the
    testimony of the medical examiner. Id. at 57. We concluded that, even if the photos
    had probative value to show Jones's character and how Jones had disposed of his
    children’s bodies, under Rule 403, SCRE, this probative value was substantially
    outweighed by the dangers of unfair prejudice. However, in Jones, the admission of
    the "horrific" photos was harmless because they did not contribute to the jury's
    decision to sentence Jones to death; instead, the admittedly horrific facts of the case
    did. Id. at 58–59.
    The admission of autopsy photographs has also been discussed in non-capital
    murder trials. In State v. Holder, the defendant alleged the trial court erred in
    admitting autopsy photographs in a homicide by child abuse case despite the
    testimony of the doctor who performed the autopsy that while he could explain the
    victim's internal injuries to the jury without the photos, "he was not sure if he could
    explain it to their understanding" without the photos. 
    382 S.C. 278
    , 290, 
    676 S.E.2d 690
    , 697 (2009). This Court affirmed the admission of the photos, noting they
    demonstrated the victim's injuries in a way the jury, which may have been unversed
    in medical issues, could easily understand. 
    Id.
     at 290–91, 676 S.E.2d at 697. This
    Court also noted while the photos were graphic, "there is no suggestion their
    admission had an undue tendency to suggest a decision on an improper basis." Id.
    at 291, 676 S.E.2d at 697; but see State v. Haselden, 
    353 S.C. 190
    , 
    577 S.E.2d 445
    (2003) (holding, based on Rule 403, SCRE, the admission of a photo of the victim's
    dilated anus during autopsy was error because it "did not go to the circumstances of
    the crime, the characteristics of the defendant, nor to the existence of aggravating
    circumstances . . . [t]he sole purpose of the photo was to insinuate that perhaps there
    was sexual abuse when, in fact, there was absolutely no evidence of such an
    assault").
    In State v. Collins, a defendant was tried for several crimes, including
    involuntary manslaughter, related to his unrestrained dogs mauling a ten-year-old
    child to death. 
    409 S.C. 524
    , 531–34, 
    763 S.E.2d 22
    , 26–28 (2014). The trial court
    allowed the admission of seven autopsy photos taken by the forensic pathologist. 
    Id.
    at 532–33, 
    763 S.E.2d at 27
    . In Collins, the "nature and extent" of the victim's
    injuries was disputed by the defendant, and the photos, while gruesome, clearly
    showed the Victim's injuries. Id. at 532-33, 533 n.3, 
    763 S.E.2d at
    27 n.3. Thus,
    this Court stated the photos should not be excluded on the ground they were
    gruesome when the photos were "highly probative, corroborative, and material in
    establishing the elements of the offenses charged; its probative value outweighed its
    potential prejudice; and the [court of appeals] should not have invaded the trial
    court's discretion in admitting this crucial evidence based on its emotional reaction
    to the subject matter presented." 
    Id.
     at 535–36, 
    763 S.E.2d at 28
    . Yet, a majority of
    this Court in Collins reasoned the admission of the photos was error, although two
    of us concluded the error was harmless. 
    Id.
     at 539–40, 
    763 S.E.2d at
    30–31.
    Nevertheless, we noted "this case was tried in 2009, prior to our decision in Torres,
    where we expressed our concern over the State's seeming practice of seeking
    admission of highly prejudicial and inflammatory autopsy photographs." Id. at 539,
    
    763 S.E.2d at 30
     (Kittredge, J., concurring).
    This case does not involve the admission of evidence during the sentencing
    phase of a capital murder trial; therefore, the trial court did not have broader
    discretion to allow evidence that would generally be inadmissible during the guilt
    phase of a trial. Our review of the jurisprudence in this area persuades us that this
    case follows those cases in which autopsy photos were admitted in error. This case
    is most similar to Middleton, wherein this Court noted the autopsy photographs in
    question had little, if any, evidentiary value because the information depicted in the
    photos was not in dispute and the scant evidentiary value they did contain was
    negated by the forensic examiner's testimony. 
    288 S.C. at 24
    , 
    339 S.E.2d at 693
    .
    First, much like in Middleton, the information gained from the autopsy photos
    was not in question. Here, the only issue was who murdered Victim: Carmie or
    Daniel. Carmie raised no argument that Victim was not murdered, no argument that
    Victim was not murdered in the way the State claimed–namely, being beaten in the
    head with a hammer, having her throat slit, and receiving several stab wounds to her
    chest—and no argument that Victim did not have around 100 wounds on her body.
    Notably, Carmie did not even cross-examine Dr. Batalis, who performed the
    autopsy.
    Second, as in Middleton, we believe the undisputed facts evidenced by the
    autopsy photos–the location, number, and type of wounds suffered by Victim and
    the inference of malice raised therefrom–could have been and were established by
    other convincing evidence. See Kornahrens, 290 S.C. at 288–89, 350 S.E.2d at 185
    ("In the guilt phase of a trial, photographs of the murder victims should be excluded
    where the facts they are intended to show have been fully established by competent
    testimony."). We agree with the State that even though these facts were undisputed,
    the State still had to prove how Victim was murdered and that Victim was murdered
    with malice. See 
    S.C. Code Ann. § 16-3-10
     (2023) (providing murder is "the killing
    of any person with malice aforethought, either express or implied").
    However, we believe Dr. Batalis's testimony regarding the extent of Victim's
    injuries and Victim's cause of death established both how Victim was killed and that
    Victim was killed with malice. See State v. Kelsey, 
    331 S.C. 50
    , 62, 
    502 S.E.2d 63
    ,
    69 (1998) ("'Malice' is the wrongful intent to injure another and indicates a wicked
    or depraved spirit intent on doing wrong."). Dr. Batalis testified Victim had 113
    wounds to her head, neck, chest, and upper extremities, including fatal blunt force
    trauma wounds to the head consistent with the Victim being struck by a hammer, a
    fatal sharp force injury to Victim's neck, and nineteen stab wounds to her chest
    consistent with being stabbed with a knife. Dr. Batalis opined Victim's cause of
    death was a combination of the blunt force and sharp force wounds to her head, neck,
    and chest. Dr. Batalis also stated he had a diagram he could use to show the jury the
    approximate locations and type of wounds suffered by the Victim, and his testimony
    as to Victim's cause of death would not change based on his ability to use the autopsy
    photos. 3 Thus, we believe Dr. Batalis's testimony as to Victim's 113 injuries could
    have properly established how Victim was killed and that Victim was killed with
    malice, negating the evidentiary value to be gained from the autopsy photos just as
    in Middleton. We note the State also established malice by introducing (1) Carmie's
    disparaging texts about Victim in the days preceding Victim's murder; (2) Daniel's
    testimony that Carmie had asked him to harass and assault Victim, and that Carmie
    had been planning to murder Victim; and (3) the recorded statement of Carmie
    saying she attacked Victim while she was on the couch and kept beating her after
    she fell to the ground.
    3
    We acknowledge Dr. Batalis testified he believed the autopsy photos would better
    help the jury understand Victim's injuries than just his testimony and diagram similar
    to the medical examiner in Holder. 382 S.C. at 290–91, 676 S.E.2d at 697.
    However, we believe this case is distinguishable from Holder because, unlike the
    injuries in Holder which required the jury to understand the internal injuries suffered
    by the victim, 382 S.C. at 290–91, 676 S.E.2d at 697, we believe an average juror
    could understand just from Dr. Batalis's testimony that Victim died as a result of
    being bludgeoned in the head with a hammer, having her throat cut, and being
    stabbed multiple times in the chest.
    In response to the State's argument the autopsy photos corroborated Daniel's
    testimony and therefore aided the jury in deciding whether he or Carmie was telling
    the truth about who murdered Victim, we note these photos provide no insight as to
    who killed Victim. Thus, we do not believe the autopsy photos corroborate Daniel's
    testimony that Carmie killed Victim. Under a Rule 403, SCRE, analysis, the photos
    had limited probative value. In this instance, where the photos were not needed to
    prove an issue in the case, the State should have heeded our warning in Torres to
    resist pushing the envelope on admissibility to gain a victory which was likely
    already assured.
    The admission of these excessively gruesome autopsy photos unnecessarily
    created the potential for the jury to convict Carmie of the murder based on inflamed
    emotions in a case where the jury was provided with undisputed evidence as to how
    Victim died, as well as ample evidence that she had been killed with malice, whether
    by Carmie or Daniel. See Jones, Op. No. 28145, at 23, 54 ("[I]t is well-established
    that photographs calculated to arouse the sympathies and prejudices of the jury are
    to be excluded if they are irrelevant or unnecessary to the issues at trial." (quoting
    Middleton, 
    288 S.C. at 24
    , 
    339 S.E.2d at 693
    )). The potential for a verdict based on
    emotion was amplified by the fact the jury was informed that Daniel had also been
    charged in connection with this case but only faced an accessory after the fact of
    murder charge.
    If this were a case such as Collins where the nature of the victim's injuries was
    in dispute or a case where there was no other convincing evidence of malice or the
    manner in which the victim died, then the photos may have had sufficient probative
    value to warrant their admission. In that scenario, while undeniably gruesome, the
    probative value of the photos may not have been substantially outweighed by the
    danger of unfair prejudice under Rule 403, SCRE. Nevertheless, here, there was
    minimal probative value in the photos because the issues of malice and how Victim
    was killed were not in dispute. Other convincing evidence established malice and
    how Victim was killed, thereby eliminating the photos' probative value. Thus, we
    believe the danger of unfair prejudice substantially outweighed any minimal
    probative value of the autopsy photos in this case. See Rule 403, SCRE.
    Accordingly, we believe the trial court erred in admitting the photos, and the court
    of appeals erred in affirming that decision.
    REVERSED.
    KITTREDGE, Acting Chief Justice, FEW, HILL, JJ., and Acting Justice
    Jean H. Toal, concur.