Court Opinion

ID: 9348868
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-20 15:01:57.105868+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:37.039330
License: Public Domain

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court
 Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the
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 official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

                                                  Decided: December 20, 2022

                      S22A1022. TURNER v. THE STATE.

       BOGGS, Chief Justice.

      Appellant Willie Lewis Turner II challenges his 2017

convictions for malice murder and possession of a firearm by a

convicted felon in connection with the shooting death of Travalas

Acres. 1 Appellant contends that the evidence against him was not

      1  The crimes occurred in the early morning hours of February 19, 2016.
On November 2, 2016, a Coweta County grand jury indicted Appellant for
malice murder, felony murder based on possession of a firearm by a convicted
felon, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Appellant’s initial trial
in May 2017 ended in a mistrial. At a trial from October 16 to 26, 2017, the
jury found him guilty on all counts. The trial court sentenced him to serve life
in prison for malice murder and a consecutive term of five years for possession
of a firearm by a convicted felon. Although the trial court purported to merge
the felony murder verdict for the purpose of sentencing, the felony murder
verdict was vacated by operation of law. See Manner v. State, 302 Ga. 877, 890-
891 (808 SE2d 681) (2017). Appellant filed a motion for new trial on October
27, 2017, which was amended with new counsel on August 18, 2020. The trial
court held an evidentiary hearing on May 11, 2021, and denied the motion on
October 29, 2021. Appellant filed timely notice of appeal. The case was
docketed in this Court to the August 2022 term and was submitted for a
decision on the briefs.
credible and therefore was legally insufficient to support his

convictions. However, when evaluating the sufficiency of the

evidence to satisfy constitutional due process, we do not assess the

credibility of the witnesses. When properly viewed in the light most

favorable to the jury’s verdicts, the evidence at trial was sufficient

to support Appellant’s convictions for malice murder and possession

of a firearm by a convicted felon. Accordingly, we affirm.

     1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the

evidence at trial showed the following. In the early morning hours

of February 19, 2016, Appellant was at an unlicensed neighborhood

bar in Newnan with Acres, Jonathan Allen, and Jemelle Moss,

Appellant’s cousin. Acres and Allen were good friends, but neither

was friends with Appellant. Nor were Allen and Moss good friends,

although Allen had used cocaine that night, which he purchased

from Moss. At around 12:20 a.m., the four men decided to ride

together to a bar in Atlanta. Before they left, Allen saw Moss hand

Appellant a Taurus Judge .410-caliber revolver that Allen had sold

Moss two weeks prior.

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     All four men got in Acres’ Kia Optima. Acres drove; Allen sat

in the front-passenger seat; and Appellant and Moss sat in the

backseat, with Appellant sitting behind Acres. As soon as the men

got in the car, Moss asked Acres why he went to Moss’ mother’s

house the previous night. Appellant suddenly joined in, demanding

to know, “Man, why did you go over to my auntie’s house?” Appellant

became increasingly hostile, eventually pulling out Moss’ revolver

and pointing it at the back of Acres’ head. Moss intervened,

Appellant put the gun away, and Acres started driving.

     At 12:34 a.m., Acres missed a turn for the interstate, and

Appellant pulled out Moss’ revolver and fired once into the back of

Acres’ head, killing him instantly. The car crashed into a telephone

pole in front of a bar, the Corner Tavern. The bar’s assistant

manager and security guard called 911 and ran to the car, where

they found Acres inside, unresponsive, with a bullet hole in the back

of his head.

     When the car crashed, Appellant, Allen, and Moss got out and

ran in different directions. Moss called his girlfriend, who

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immediately picked him up and took him home. Allen ran through

the woods to an apartment complex, where he told someone to call

911. The police came to the apartment complex, and Allen told them

that he was in a car with his friend Acres, Appellant, and another

man when Appellant pulled out a gun and shot Acres in the head

from the backseat. Allen described Appellant but claimed he did not

know the identity of the man sitting behind him (i.e., Moss), and he

also falsely claimed that Moss had “dreads.” Allen was then taken

to the police station, where he gave a video-recorded statement and

said he could not describe Moss’ appearance.

     Appellant called Amber Beasley, his child’s mother, and asked

her to come pick him up at a gas station. Beasley went to the gas

station, but Appellant did not show up. Beasley then went to the

home of her friend Annabelle Florence to ask for help. Between 12:37

a.m. and 3:11 a.m., Appellant and Beasley called each other 13

times. During those calls, Appellant told Beasley that he was in the

woods after shooting someone who tried to rob him. Upon realizing

that Beasley was not going to pick him up, Appellant took off his

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pants and shoes and hid them with his cell phone and Moss’ revolver

in the woods near where the shooting had occurred.

     At around 3:40 a.m., a police officer patrolling the area saw

Appellant, who appeared to be very cold, walking down the road and

wearing a camouflage jacket but no pants or shoes. The officer

approached Appellant and noticed that he matched Allen’s

description of the suspect. Appellant put his hands up and told the

officer that he had been robbed. The officer arrested Appellant and

drove him to the police station, where he gave a video-recorded

interview after waiving his Miranda rights. Appellant claimed,

among other things, that he was robbed at a nearby apartment

complex, and he described the path that he allegedly walked from

the complex to where he encountered the officer. A detective

reviewed footage from city surveillance cameras along the path

Appellant described but did not see Appellant on it.

     Within days of the shooting, Allen asked Moss to pay him $200

for not telling the police that Moss was in the car, and Moss paid

him. Appellant also spoke with Moss and asked him not to talk to

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the police, but on February 25, 2016, Moss went to the police station

and gave a video-recorded statement. Moss said that after Acres

missed a turn, Appellant shot Acres in the back of the head, the car

crashed, and then the three surviving men fled the scene of the

crash. Moss also stated that Appellant had pointed the gun at Acres

earlier in the car ride but put the gun away when Moss intervened.

     While in the Coweta County jail in April 2017, Appellant told

Randarious Tenney, a fellow inmate and childhood friend, that after

hearing an exchange between Acres and Allen after Acres missed

the turn for the interstate, he believed that he and Moss were going

to be robbed. Appellant said that he pulled out the gun and shot

Acres in the back of the head, and he would have shot Allen if the

car had not crashed. Because Appellant also owed Tenney money for

a debt incurred while they were in jail together, Appellant told

Tenney where to find the clothes he hid in the woods after the

shooting, as Appellant had left cash with the clothes in addition to

Moss’   revolver.   Tenney   turned    this   information   over   to

investigators, who found Appellant’s shoes, phone, and pants, but

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not the gun or cash. Once Tenney got out of jail, Appellant called

and encouraged Tenney not to testify, and later threatened to hurt

Tenney the next time he saw Tenney. Also while in the Coweta

County jail, Appellant confessed to another inmate, Jacob Chapman,

that he shot Acres in the head, and Chapman provided a video-

recorded statement to police about that conversation. Appellant

then called Florence to tell her to “stay out of it,” which she took to

mean she should not testify at Appellant’s trial.

     At trial, Allen testified that Appellant shot Acres in the back of

the head after previously pointing the gun at him in the car. Allen

also testified that he lied about not knowing Moss because he, as a

convicted felon who sold Moss the gun used to shoot Acres, wanted

to distance himself from Moss. Moss initially testified that he did

not know anything about the shooting. However, after being told

that the defense theory was that Moss shot Acres, Moss testified

that Appellant shot Acres after previously pointing the gun at him

in the car. Tenney testified about what Appellant told him while in

custody in the Coweta County jail, but Chapman took the stand and

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refused to testify, so the State played a video of his police interview.

Florence testified that the night of the shooting, Beasley told her

that Appellant shot someone. The State played a video of Appellant’s

interview from the night of the shooting and entered into evidence a

certified copy of Appellant’s 2013 felony conviction for terroristic

threats. The medical examiner testified that Acres died by a gunshot

wound to the back of the head caused by a .410-caliber shotgun shell

being fired into the right side of his head from between three and six

inches away. A trace evidence expert testified that fibers from the

backseat of Acres’ car matched the camouflage jacket worn by

Appellant that night.

     Appellant elected not to testify in his own defense. In support

of the defense theory that Moss shot Acres, Appellant called one

witness who was not tendered as an expert and had no personal

knowledge of the shooting or crime scene. The witness had

photographed a Taurus Judge revolver being fired to document its

recoil and helped defense counsel measure the circumference of a

Kia Optima headrest.

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     2. Appellant contends that the evidence was insufficient to

support the jury’s verdicts because, even when viewed in the light

most favorable to those verdicts, no rational trier of fact could have

found Appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of malice murder

and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. We disagree.

     The proper standard of review for sufficiency of evidence as a

matter of constitutional due process is whether any rational trier of

fact could have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable

doubt. See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (99 SCt 2781, 61

LE2d 560) (1979). This Court views the evidence in the “light most

favorable to the verdict, with deference to the jury’s assessment of

the weight and credibility of the evidence.” Hayes v. State, 292 Ga.

506, 506 (739 SE2d 313) (2013) (citation omitted).

     Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, a rational

trier of fact could have found Appellant guilty on both counts. A

person commits malice murder “when he unlawfully and with malice

aforethought, either express or implied, causes the death of another

human being.” OCGA § 16-5-1 (a). “Receiv[ing], possess[ing], or

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transport[ing] a firearm” is a felony for a person “who has been

convicted of a felony by a court of this state.” OCGA § 16-11-131 (b).

Appellant does not dispute that his 2013 felony conviction for

terroristic threats made his subsequent possession of a gun illegal.

And numerous witnesses identified Appellant as having shot Acres.

Moreover, the night of the shooting, Beasley told Florence that

Appellant had shot someone after talking to Appellant on the phone.

While in the Coweta County jail, Appellant confessed to Chapman

and Tenney that he shot Acres, and he also told Tenney that the gun

could be found with the rest of his possessions in the woods. The two

other surviving occupants of the car, Allen and Moss, both testified

that Appellant shot Acres, with the shooting happening at close

range to the back of Acres’ head, a narrative supported by physical

evidence. And Allen and Moss also both testified that Appellant had

pointed the gun at Acres at least one other time in the car that

evening. See Felton v. State, 283 Ga. 242 (657 SE2d 850) (2008)

(finding evidence sufficient to support a malice murder conviction

where the defendant pointed a gun at the victim, left, and then

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returned and shot the victim). Appellant then pressured several

people not to testify against him. See Flannigan v. State, 305 Ga. 57,

62 (823 SE2d 743) (2019) (“In Georgia, ‘evidence of a defendant’s

attempt to influence or intimidate a witness can serve as

circumstantial evidence of guilt.’” (citation omitted)).

     Although Appellant argues that Allen and Moss were not

credible witnesses because they used drugs and lied at various

points during the investigation, “it is axiomatic that resolving

evidentiary conflicts and assessing witness credibility are within the

exclusive province of the jury.” Graves v. State, 298 Ga. 551, 553 (783

SE2d 891) (2016). Moreover, the evidence that Appellant shot Acres

was overwhelming. Thus, the evidence was sufficient as a matter of

constitutional due process for a rational trier of fact to have found

Appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of malice murder and

possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

     Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.

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