Court Opinion

ID: 4698517
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-06-25 00:03:57.057038+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:05:54.042777
License: Public Domain

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

                                     Decided: June 24, 2021

                  S21P0078. YOUNG v. THE STATE.

      MELTON, Chief Justice.

      A jury found Rodney Renia Young guilty of the murder of Gary

Jones and related crimes. The jury declined in its guilt/innocence

phase verdict to find him “mentally retarded.” 1 At the conclusion of

the sentencing phase, the jury found multiple statutory aggravating

circumstances and sentenced Young to death for the murder. For

the reasons set forth below, we affirm Young’s convictions and

      1 The mental condition now referred to as “intellectual disability” in the
mental health profession and in Georgia law was previously, including at the
time of Young’s trial, referred to as “mental retardation.” See Hall v. Florida,
572 U. S. 701, 704 (I) (134 SCt 1986, 188 LE2d 1007) (2014) (noting the change
in terminology); OCGA § 17-7-131 (as amended in 2017 by Ga. L. 2017, p. 471,
§ 3). We use both terms in this opinion, using “intellectual disability” in our
discussions of the condition in general terms and using “mental retardation”
in our discussions, particularly in quotations, of the specific proceedings below
and the law that applied to them.
sentences.2

      1. Young had a seven-year relationship with Gary Jones’s

mother, Doris Jones, that was rife with arguments about money and

Young’s infidelity and included multiple breakups. After Young

came to visit Doris in Georgia in November 2007 and the pair

became engaged, Doris moved in with Young at his basement

apartment in Bridgeton, New Jersey, in January 2008. The couple

      2 The victim was killed on March 30, 2008. A Newton County grand jury
indicted Young on June 6, 2008, on one count of malice murder, two counts of
felony murder, one count of aggravated assault, and one count of burglary. On
August 7, 2008, the State filed written notice of its intent to seek the death
penalty. The trial began with jury selection on February 6, 2012. The jury
found Young guilty on all charges on February 17, 2012. On February 21, 2012,
the jury recommended a death sentence for the murder, and that same day the
trial court filed an order imposing a death sentence on the malice murder
count. On February 22, 2012, the trial court filed an order merging the felony
murders with the malice murder (although they were actually vacated by
operation of law, see Willis v. State, 304 Ga. 686, 686 n.1 (820 SE2d 640)
(2018)), merging the aggravated assault with the malice murder, and deferring
sentencing on the burglary. On March 9, 2012, the trial court filed an order
imposing a 20-year sentence for the burglary, to be served concurrently with
the death sentence. On March 5, 2012, Young filed a motion for new trial, and
he amended the motion on April 1, 2014, and September 5, 2017. Following
multiple hearings, the motion was denied on April 9, 2019. Young filed a notice
of appeal on June 6, 2019. An appeal was initially docketed in this Court on
December 11, 2019, as Case No. S20P0630; however, on December 19, 2019,
this Court struck the case from the docket and remanded it, directing the trial
court to ensure that the record was complete. Following this remand, the case
was redocketed to the term of this Court beginning in December 2020, and the
case was orally argued on March 23, 2021.
                                      2
argued in New Jersey, and Doris moved back to Georgia to once

again live with her son, Gary, in Covington. Young wrote Doris

multiple letters between January and March 2008, asking her to

return to him. On March 3, Young obtained approval from his

employer for time off on March 26 to 28. He subsequently contacted

his half-sister, whom he had never personally met and who lived in

Atlanta, and he told her that he was coming to see her while on

vacation. Prior to his trip, Young borrowed a GPS device from his

co-worker and obtained instructions on how to use it.

     On March 28, Doris received yet another letter from Young,

which she did not read immediately. When Doris awoke the next

day, laundry that she had washed the night before had been folded,

despite the fact that Gary had been staying with his girlfriend and

no one else was home. That same weekend, Doris noticed that the

laundry room window had a hole in it and that the screen on that

window was missing.      Testimony, cell phone records, and the

memory of the GPS device that Young borrowed all showed that,

from March 28 to 30, Young drove repeatedly from his half-sister’s

                                 3
home in Atlanta to the area of Gary’s home in Covington. A witness

testified that he gave a man with a New Jersey license plate

directions from Covington Square to Gary’s neighborhood; this

witness later identified Young from a photographic line-up as that

man.

       On March 30, Gary attended church with his girlfriend and

then returned home with a plan to meet his girlfriend later for

dinner. A little after 1:00 p.m. that day, Gary told his grandmother

on the telephone that he was arriving at his home and would call

her back in 15 minutes, which he never did. Doris discovered Gary’s

body in the home at approximately 11:20 p.m. that night and called

911. Gary was lying on his side on the floor in the dining room, and

he was tied to an overturned chair with duct tape, a telephone cord,

and fabric from some curtains. A bloody butcher knife and a bloody

hammer were found next to his body. The victim’s body had multiple

fractures to the skull, the left eye protruded from its socket, there

were sharp force injuries to the neck, head, and face, and there were

compression marks on the hands and legs indicating that the victim

                                 4
was alive while bound. Glass in a door leading into the dining room

from an outside patio had been shattered, and the home showed

signs of a struggle, with blood in the foyer, living room, and dining

room. The home had multiple writings on the walls, including the

following as recounted by an investigator: “ATL mob $25,000, dead

in 20 days, 20 days to get out of state or dead, the hit be on you, were

know what you drive, ATL m-o-b, I want my f***ing money, $25,000,

you work at GRNCS.” The writings were matched at trial to Young’s

handwriting, and investigators testified that they were unaware of

a gang called the “ATL mob.”

     Upon learning that Young had called her brother-in-law, Doris

called Young on the day after the murder. Young told Doris that he

would come to get her things and move her back to New Jersey and

that he had seen Gary in a dream asking him to take care of her.

Investigators interviewed Young in New Jersey on April 3, 2008; he

had two cuts on his right hand, and he denied traveling recently to

Georgia. A search of Young’s car yielded printed directions from

New Jersey to Covington and Doris’s ring that had been discovered

                                   5
missing from Gary’s home, and a search of Young’s basement

apartment in New Jersey yielded Gary’s cell phone and duct tape

that was matched to the duct tape used to bind Gary.

     Young presented evidence in the guilt/innocence phase in

support of a possible finding of “mental retardation” by the jury,

including testimony from staff members at his former high school

stating that he had been in special education, had been classified as

“educable mentally retarded” and therefore must have been tested

with an IQ of between 60 and 69, and had struggled intellectually in

academics and in sports.      However, Young did not present any

expert testimony regarding his alleged intellectual disability or any

actual IQ test results. The State countered Young’s evidence with

cross-examination and direct testimony showing Young’s ability to

function normally at work and in various other settings in life. The

State also presented testimony from an expert who, although he had

not evaluated Young and had not formed an opinion as to whether

Young was intellectually disabled, was able to testify about the

subject of intellectual disability in general terms.

                                   6
     After reviewing the record, we conclude that the evidence

presented in the guilt/innocence phase was sufficient to authorize a

rational trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Young

was guilty of all of the charges of which he was convicted and to find,

considering the conflicting testimony on the subject, that Young had

failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he was “mentally

retarded.” See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307, 319 (III) (B) (99

SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979) (providing the constitutional

standard for the review of the sufficiency of the evidence of a crime);

King v. State, 273 Ga. 258, 259 (1) (539 SE2d 783) (2000) (reviewing

the sufficiency of the evidence regarding alleged intellectual

disability); UAP IV (B) (2) (providing that, in all death penalty cases,

this Court will determine whether the verdicts are supported by the

evidence).

                            Pretrial Issues

     2.   We reject Young’s argument, including his arguments

specific to the practices of the prosecutor in his case, that Georgia’s

death penalty laws are unconstitutional in that they allegedly

                                   7
permit unfettered discretion to prosecutors in choosing whether or

not to seek the death penalty and thereby result in arbitrary and

capricious results. See Arrington v. State, 286 Ga. 335, 336-337 (4)

(687 SE2d 438) (2009); Walker v. State, 281 Ga. 157, 161 (6) (635

SE2d 740) (2006).

     3. The trial court properly refused Young’s attempt to plead

guilty but mentally retarded to his murder charge in exchange for a

life sentence, because the State objected to such a plea.           See

Stripling v. State, 289 Ga. 370, 376 (3) (711 SE2d 665) (2011).

     4. We reject Young’s arguments that he is entitled to a new

trial based on several alleged discovery violations by the State.

     (a) The record shows that the State disclosed the identity of

Wanda Wilcher as a potential sentencing phase witness but listed

her address as “private” because she had a restraining order against

Young. The prosecutor represented to the trial court that she would

have informed defense counsel of the witness’s address if counsel

had inquired. Under the circumstances, we conclude that the trial

court did not abuse its discretion in not finding any prejudice to

                                  8
Young or bad faith on the part of the prosecutor and, accordingly, in

allowing the witness to testify after first allowing defense counsel

an opportunity to interview the witness. See Wilkins v. State, 291

Ga. 483, 486-487 (5) (731 SE2d 346) (2012) (applying OCGA § 17-16-

6).

      (b) The record reveals that Young was aware well before trial

of recordings of certain conversations between him and Doris Jones

and, more importantly, that the State served him with the actual

recordings by the statutory deadline.

      (c) The trial court properly held that the State had no duty to

disclose the criminal histories of witnesses, because Young had

access to those records himself. See Jackson v. State, 306 Ga. 69, 89

(6) (d) (829 SE2d 142) (2019).

      (d) After initially noting from the bench that the issue, at least

at that time, was moot in light of the State’s representation that it

was aware of no such records, the trial court then also filed a written

order denying Young’s request for any psychiatric records of the

State’s witnesses based on its finding that “[n]o particularized

                                   9
showing of necessity for or even existence of these records ha[d] been

made.” We see no error. See King, 273 Ga. at 262-263 (11) (holding

that the defendant was not entitled to the psychiatric histories of

the State’s witnesses where he failed to show that the hypothetical

records were critical to his defense, that substantially similar

evidence was otherwise unavailable, and that the records were not

privileged); McMichen v. State, 265 Ga. 598, 611 (24) (458 SE2d 833)

(1995) (“In requesting the psychiatric histories of the state’s

witnesses, McMichen failed even to allege that such histories

existed.”).

     (e) The trial court properly declined to conduct an in camera

review of the personnel records of the law enforcement officers who

would testify at trial, because Young made no “specific showing of

need.” Cromartie v. State, 270 Ga. 780, 785-786 (12) (514 SE2d 205)

(1999).

     5. Young argues that the State’s use of funds from a victim

assistance account, see OCGA § 15-21-130 et seq., to reimburse four

witnesses for their lost wages without disclosing this fact to him at

                                 10
trial constituted unconstitutional evidence suppression because

evidence of the use of the funds would have served as impeachment

evidence. To succeed on an evidence suppression claim, a defendant

must establish four elements:      (1) the State possessed evidence

favorable to the defendant; (2) the defendant did not possess the

evidence and could not obtain it with reasonable diligence; (3) the

State suppressed the evidence; and (4) the suppression created a

reasonable probability of a different outcome of the trial.        See

McCray v. State, 301 Ga. 241, 246 (2) (c) (799 SE2d 206) (2017). The

trial court found that the first three elements had been satisfied, but

it correctly determined that Young’s claim failed on the fourth

element.

     As to the two witnesses at issue who testified regarding

Young’s guilt, their testimony showing his presence in Georgia at

the time of the murder was cumulative of multiple other

independent pieces of evidence showing that same fact. As to the

two witnesses at issue who testified regarding Young’s alleged

intellectual disability, the witnesses were his co-workers who stated

                                  11
merely that he had not been a problem employee, was a “good

operator,” and was punctual. Finally, as to the one witness at issue

who testified in the sentencing phase, the witness stated that Young

had physically abused her while they were dating, and she showed

the jury a scar on her face from that abuse; however, a certified copy

of a restraining order regarding this witness was independently

admitted into evidence, and similar testimony showing Young’s

abusive nature was presented through Doris Jones. We also note

that evidence regarding the State’s reimbursement of these

witnesses’ actual lost wages would not have been strong

impeachment evidence.      Pretermitting whether the other three

elements of this evidence suppression claim have been satisfied, we

hold that the trial court’s conclusion regarding the fourth element,

materiality, was not erroneous and that the overall claim was

therefore properly denied. See United States v. Payne, 63 F3d 1200,

1210-1211 (II) (A) (2) (2d Cir. 1995) (noting that the suppression of

impeachment evidence does not warrant a new trial where the

testimony of the witness who might have been impeached was

                                 12
corroborated by other evidence and holding that the evidence

presented at trial was “sufficiently strong” to support the appellate

court’s concluding that the suppression in the case “d[id] not

undermine [the appellate court’s] confidence in the outcome of the

trial” and that the suppressed evidence therefore was “not

material”). Cf. Schofield v. Palmer, 279 Ga. 848, 851 (1), 853 (3) (621

SE2d 726) (2005) (reaching a different conclusion where, unlike in

Young’s case where the witnesses enjoyed no actual gain but merely

received reimbursement of their lost wages, “the GBI paid [a

confidential informant] $500 for providing information implicating

[the defendant]”).

                      Issues Related to the Jury

     6. Young challenged the composition of both his grand jury

source list and his traverse jury source list. The trial court denied

both challenges, and we see no error.

     (a) (i) In his challenge to his grand jury source list, Young first

claimed that an underrepresentation of African-American persons

on the list violated both his statutory and constitutional rights. As

                                  13
in a previous case in which this Court denied relief, the undisputed

evidence in Young’s case

     showed that the jury commission in [Newton] County,
     pursuant to this Court’s directive in the Unified Appeal
     Procedure, attempted to balance the percentages of
     various cognizable groups of persons on the [relevant]
     jury source list to match the percentages of those groups
     of persons reported in the most-recently available
     Decennial Census.

Williams v. State, 287 Ga. 735, 735 (699 SE2d 25) (2010), superseded

by the Jury Composition Reform Act of 2011 as noted in Ellington v.

State, 292 Ga. 109, 118 (4) n.2 (735 SE2d 736) (2012), disapproved

on other grounds by Willis v. State, 304 Ga. 686, 706 (11) (a) n.3 (820

SE2d 640) (2018). See also Ricks v. State, 301 Ga. 171, 173 (1) (800

SE2d 307) (2017) (noting changes since Williams in the Code, in the

Unified Appeal Procedure, and in relevant rules). In Williams, the

then-established process for constructing the jury list had combined

with shifting demographics in Clayton County to result in a

disparity of 17.49 percentage points between the percentage of

African-American persons on the jury source list and the percentage

of African-American persons as shown in the 2000 Census. See

                                  14
Williams, 287 Ga. at 737-738 (2). In Young’s case, the disparity was

11.67 percentage points, or 11.37 percentage points if only the

numbers of citizens involved were considered. See Smith v. State,

275 Ga. 715, 721 (4) (571 SE2d 740) (2002) (stating regarding cases

where citizenship appears to be a significant factor: “When alleging

underrepresentation of a distinctive group, a defendant ‘must, to

establish a prima facie case, present data showing that the

percentage of persons in that group [on the jury list] is significantly

lower than the percentage eligible to serve on juries.’” (quoting

United States v. Artero, 121 F3d 1256, 1262 (III) (B) (9th Cir. 1997)

(emphasis supplied)). The trial court did not err in following this

Court’s binding case law on this issue, particularly our prior

holdings that the jury composition system then in place served “a

‘sufficiently significant state interest’ to rebut an otherwise-valid

prima facie [claim],” and thus denying this portion of Young’s

challenge to his grand jury. Williams, 287 Ga. at 738 (2) (quoting

Ramirez v. State, 276 Ga. 158, 162 (1) (c) (575 SE2d 462) (2003)).

                                  15
     (ii) Young’s challenge to his grand jury source list also included

an allegation of an underrepresentation of Hispanic persons.

Young’s expert testified that the Newton County jury commission

had not separately accounted for Hispanic persons on the relevant

jury certificate; however, the expert estimated the number of

Hispanic persons included on the source list by performing a search

for common Hispanic surnames.             The expert testified that, as

compared to census estimates of the population at the time of

Young’s indictment, Hispanic citizens were underrepresented on the

grand jury source list by an absolute disparity of 0.91 percentage

points. 3 See Smith, 275 Ga. at 721 (4). We note further that the

uncontested testimony of the expert also showed that, as compared

to the 2000 Census, the absolute disparity was 0.42 percentage

points. Based on our holdings in Williams and Ramirez, which are

discussed above, the figure based on the 2000 Census was the correct

one to consider; however, considering either figure, the trial court

     3 Young’s argument on appeal focuses on numbers of persons rather than
on percentages; however, the numbers alleged by Young in his brief align with
the percentages testified to by Young’s expert.
                                     16
did not err in concluding that no impermissible underrepresentation

had been shown. See id. at 723 (4); Morrow v. State, 272 Ga. 691,

695 (1) (532 SE2d 78) (2000).             Furthermore, even if an

underrepresentation had been shown, there would be no reversible

error, because Young did not even attempt to show in the trial court

that Hispanic persons were a cognizable group in Newton County, a

necessary part to his claim. See Smith, 275 Ga. at 718 (2) (holding

that whether a group is a cognizable group in a given county is a

matter of fact to be found by the trial court).

     (b) Regarding the traverse jury source list, the trial court

found, after discounting an obvious error on the jury certificate and

crediting the testimony of Young’s expert, that there was an

absolute disparity of 2.88 percentage points between the percentage

of Hispanic persons on the 2011 jury list as compared to the

percentage of Hispanic persons in the actual population in 2010.

The uncontested testimony of Young’s expert also showed that the

absolute disparity was 1.38 percentage points when only Hispanic

citizens were considered. Considering either figure, the trial court

                                  17
did not err in concluding that no impermissible underrepresentation

had been shown. See Smith, 275 Ga. at 723 (4); Morrow, 272 Ga. at

695 (1).

     7. The trial court did not err by refusing to compensate jurors

beyond the amount authorized by OCGA § 15-12-7 (a) (2).                  See

Stinski v. State, 286 Ga. 839, 846 (21) (691 SE2d 854) (2010).

     8. After Young moved the trial court to order the State to

disclose information about jurors concerning their possible

connections to the State or possible driving and arrest records, the

trial court accepted the representation from the State that it would

reveal any false answers by jurors known to it on such subjects

during voir dire. We see no error. See Stinski, 286 Ga. at 846 (23).

     9. Young argues that his right to be present was violated

during several bench conferences held during jury selection. 4

Although these bench conferences were not transcribed, despite the

trial court’s having granted Young’s motion that all bench

     4  In his brief in this Court, Young provides identical citations to the
record for two different jurors among the several he discusses. We have
reviewed the record as to both of these jurors.
                                     18
conferences   should   be,   the   trial   court   entered   an   order

reconstructing the record of what transpired, see OCGA § 5-6-41 (f)

(providing for supplementation of the record), and Young presented

testimony at his motion for new trial hearing on the matter. As

found by the trial court in its order denying the motion for new trial,

Young sat during jury selection at the defense table with his three

attorneys, he observed the voir dire, he remained at the defense

table with one of his attorneys during the bench conferences, and yet

he never objected to his absence from those bench conferences. The

attorney who remained with Young refused to disclose the nature of

their discussions, but Young testified that he and that lawyer did

engage in conversations.

     Jury selection is a critical stage at which a defendant generally

is entitled to be present, including at bench conferences.         See

Murphy v. State, 299 Ga. 238, 240 (2) (787 SE2d 721) (2016);

Sammons v. State, 279 Ga. 386, 387 (2) (612 SE2d 785) (2005). But

see Heywood v. State, 292 Ga. 771, 774 (3) (743 SE2d 12) (2013)

(holding that a defendant has no right to be present when only legal

                                   19
arguments and logistical or procedural matters are discussed).

However, “the right to be present may be waived if the defendant

later acquiesces in the proceedings occurring in his absence,”

Jackson v. State, 278 Ga. 235, 237 (3) (599 SE2d 129) (2004) (citation

and punctuation omitted), and “[a]cquiescence may occur when

counsel makes no objection and a defendant remains silent after he

or she is made aware of the proceedings occurring in his or her

absence,” Murphy, 299 Ga. at 241 (2). And, in the absence of any

controlling authority to the contrary, we reject Young’s argument

that his right to be present could not have been waived simply

because this was a death penalty trial.

     The record shows that Young was present throughout all of the

voir dire, that he was present in the courtroom during each of the

bench conferences at issue here, that the purpose of each was

obvious from its inception or announced afterward by the trial court,

that the result of each was announced in open court, and that

neither Young nor his counsel ever objected.        Accordingly, we

conclude that the trial court did not err in concluding in its order

                                 20
that Young acquiesced in the waiver of his presence that was made

by his counsel. Cf. Champ v. State, 310 Ga. 832, 834-848 (2) (a, b, and

c) (854 SE2d 706) (2021) (remanding where the trial court had not ruled

on the defendant’s acquiescence in counsel’s waiver).

     10. We reaffirm our prior case law rejecting claims like Young’s

regarding the process of qualifying jurors based on their death

penalty views. See Willis, 304 Ga. at 694-695 (4).

     11. Young argues that the trial court erred by excusing three

prospective jurors based on their voir dire responses regarding their

willingness to consider a death sentence. As we have explained:

     [T]he     proper    standard      for    determining     the
     disqualification of a prospective juror based upon his
     views on capital punishment is whether the juror’s views
     would prevent or substantially impair the performance of
     his duties as a juror in accordance with his instructions
     and his oath. This standard does not require that a juror’s
     bias be proved with unmistakable clarity. Instead, the
     relevant inquiry on appeal is whether the trial court’s
     finding that a prospective juror is disqualified is
     supported by the record as a whole. An appellate court
     . . . must pay deference to the trial court’s determination.
     This deference encompasses the trial court’s resolution of
     any equivocations and conflicts in the prospective jurors’
     responses on voir dire. Whether to strike a juror for cause
     is within the discretion of the trial court and the trial
     court’s rulings are proper absent some manifest abuse of
                                   21
     discretion.

Humphreys v. State, 287 Ga. 63, 71-72 (5) (694 SE2d 316) (2010)

(citations and punctuation omitted), disapproved on other grounds

by Willis, 304 Ga. at 706 (11) (a) n.3. See also Willis, 304 Ga. at 698

(9) (“[T]he erroneous exclusion from the list from which a

defendant’s jury is selected of a single prospective juror based on his

or her purported unwillingness to consider a death sentence

mandates the reversal of a death sentence.”). After our careful

review of the voir dire of the jurors at issue, we conclude that the

trial court did not abuse its discretion by excusing them.

     12. Young also argues that the trial court erred by refusing to

excuse eight prospective jurors based on their voir dire responses

regarding the death penalty. First, applying the same standards set

forth in Division 11, and after our careful review of the voir dire of

the jurors in question, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse

its discretion.    See Humphreys, 287 Ga. at 72 (5) (“The same

standard applies to a court’s decision to qualify a prospective juror

over defendant’s objection.” (citation and punctuation omitted)).

                                  22
Furthermore, declining Young’s invitation to overrule our recent

holding to the contrary, we conclude that any error regarding these

jurors would have been harmless because none of them served on

the 12-person jury that rendered the verdicts in Young’s case. See

Willis, 304 Ga. at 701-707 (11).

     13. Young argues that the trial court improperly limited voir

dire regarding prospective jurors’ willingness to consider a sentence

less than death upon a conviction for murder, as distinguished from

cases where a complete defense has been proven or where only a

lesser crime has been proven. First, we conclude that this issue was

waived for the purposes of ordinary appellate review by Young’s

failure to object at the time of the announced limitations on his voir

dire. See Martin v. State, 298 Ga. 259, 278-279 (6) (d) (779 SE2d

342) (2015), disapproved on other grounds by Willis, 304 Ga. at 706

(11) (a) n.3; Braley v. State, 276 Ga. 47, 52 (18) (572 SE2d 583)

(2002).5 Furthermore, our review of the voir dire reveals that the

     5 In Martin, we explained that a special form of review applies to cases
where a death sentence has been imposed. We stated:

                                     23
trial court, rather than disallowing Young’s questions, simply

directed him to make his questions more focused, and we therefore

conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion.                See

Arrington, 286 Ga. at 338 (7) (“The scope of voir dire is generally a

matter for the trial court’s discretion.”).

      14. Young argues that the trial court improperly limited his

voir dire of one juror on the subject of the juror’s views on

intellectual disability. The trial court, after correctly noting that

similar questioning of the juror had already been allowed, simply

instructed Young to “rephrase [his] question” and specifically

authorized Young to “go into something more deeply” on the issue.

At that point, Young raised no objection to the trial court’s

instructions but instead stated: “[W]e’ll move on from that. We got

      This form of review in death penalty cases arises not from any
      ordinary appellate review principle; instead, it arises from the
      statutory mandate for this Court to ensure that no death sentence
      is “imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other
      arbitrary factor.” OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (1).
Martin, 298 Ga. at 278 (6) (d). We also explained that this special review
“include[s] a plenary review of the record” that “guards against any obvious
impropriety at trial, whether objected to or not, that in reasonable probability
led to the jury’s decision to impose a death sentence.” Id. at 279 (6) (d). We
conduct this special review below in Division 49.
                                      24
enough questions on that. . . .” Accordingly, we hold that this claim

has been waived for the purposes of ordinary appellate review. See

Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d); Braley, 276 Ga. at 52 (18).

Furthermore, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its

discretion. See Arrington, 286 Ga. at 338 (7) (“The scope of voir dire

is generally a matter for the trial court’s discretion.”).

            Issues Related to the Guilt/Innocence Phase

     15. There is no merit to Young’s argument that Georgia’s

murder statute, OCGA § 16-5-1, is unconstitutional. See Lamar v.

State, 278 Ga. 150, 155 (10) (598 SE2d 488) (2004).

     16. Young argues that his constitutional rights were violated

by the placement of an electronic stun belt on him during his trial.

Young filed a pretrial motion objecting to the use of such a stun belt

for security purposes at his trial, and the trial court ruled, with

Young present, that the issue was moot because no stun belt was

being used at the time. However, the trial court stated that it would

conduct a hearing on the issue if the use of a stun belt were

requested in the future. About halfway through the guilt/innocence

                                   25
phase of the trial, while the trial court, again in Young’s presence,

was hearing arguments regarding a juror who was afraid of Young,

the prosecutor stated: “[O]bviously [the juror] doesn’t know that Mr.

Young’s wearing a shock belt. . . .” The prosecutor’s statement was

then reinforced in the State’s brief filed in the trial court in response

to Young’s motion to remove this fearful juror. That brief stated:

“The jurors do not have the knowledge that the Court, State, and

Defendant have with respect to the ‘shock belt’ device that the

Defendant is wearing underneath his non jail-garb clothing.”

Although the defendant himself obviously was aware that he was

wearing the stun belt from the beginning and that defense counsel

were aware of it at least from the time of the hearing and the State’s

brief, no concern regarding the stun belt was ever raised by Young

or his counsel during the trial.

     After Young raised the issue of the stun belt for the first time

in his third amendment to his motion for new trial, the trial court

conducted a hearing on the matter. In its order denying the claim,

despite Young’s testimony at the hearing that the stun belt made

                                   26
him “uncomfortable” and “scared” and prevented him from speaking

directly to the two of his three attorneys who were seated farther

down the defense table, the trial court noted that Young also

“testified that the stun belt did not prevent him from speaking to or

conferring with his third attorney who sat next to him throughout

the trial.” The court also noted that this third attorney testified that

she indeed spoke to Young during the trial, and the court further

noted that the attorney “said nothing about any anxiety or

reluctance [on Young’s part] to speak with her.” Based on this

evidence, the trial court found that “there is no credible evidence

that the stun belt had any effect, adverse or otherwise, on the

defendant’s Sixth Amendment and due process rights to be present

at trial and to participate in his defense.”

     Furthermore, the trial court noted other testimony at the

hearing showing that the deputies who fitted Young with the stun

belt explained to Young “the operation of the stun belt and what

would have to occur before it was used,” explained to Young that he

“would be warned or given instructions before the belt was ever

                                  27
activated,” and explained to Young the circumstances that would

warrant the use of the stun belt, which did not include anything

about Young’s speaking to his attorneys. The court further noted

testimony showing that “care was taken to be sure the device did not

fit too tightly” and that Young “never complained . . . about the belt

being uncomfortable or preventing him from communicating with

his attorneys.” Based on these findings, the court finally concluded:

“The constitutional rights of the defendant to counsel and to

participate in his defense were not impacted by the use of the stun

belt.”

     As to any portion of this claim regarding the stun belt that is

related to the time period following the hearing regarding a fearful

juror in which the State specifically noted that Young was wearing

the belt, we conclude that the claim was waived for the purposes of

ordinary appellate review by Young’s failure to raise it. See Martin,

298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d); Weldon v. State, 297 Ga. 537, 541 (775

SE2d 522) (2015) (“Failure to raise the issue [regarding a stun belt]

deprives the trial court of the opportunity to take appropriate

                                 28
remedial action and waives appellate review of any alleged

impropriety.”). Cf. People v. Harris, 904 NE2d 1200, 1206-1207 (III)

(Ill. App. Ct. 2009) (holding that a similar issue was amenable to

that court’s plain error review, which is analogous to the review we

conduct below in the Sentence Review section of this opinion). To

the extent that this waiver might not apply to the time period prior

to the hearing regarding the fearful juror because defense counsel

were entitled to rely on the trial court’s original ruling that any use

of a stun belt would only follow a request for that security measure

and a hearing on the matter, we conclude, based on the trial court’s

findings in its order denying Young’s motion for new trial, that the

lack of such a hearing was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt and

therefore does not require a new trial. See Chapman v. California,

386 U. S. 18, 24 (III) (87 SCt 824, 17 LE2d 705) (1967) (holding that,

in general, constitutional violations require reversal unless found to

be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt).         Cf. United States v.

Durham, 287 F3d 1297, 1308-1309 (D) (11th Cir. 2002) (applying a

harmless beyond a reasonable doubt standard of review to a claim

                                  29
regarding a stun belt); State v. Bates, 125 P3d 42, 47 (Or. Ct. App.

2005) (concluding “that there is little likelihood that the verdict was

affected by any inhibition defendant may have experienced as a

result of being required to wear the stun belt” and “that any error

was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt”).6

      17. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying

Young’s motion in limine regarding testimony from Doris Jones

describing signs of a forced entry into the victim’s laundry room

prior to the day of the murder on grounds of relevance and the

allegedly speculative nature of that testimony, particularly in light

of the other evidence showing that Young had driven to the home

prior to the day of the murder. See Crozier v. State, 263 Ga. 866,

867 (2) (440 SE2d 635) (1994) (“Any evidence is relevant which

logically tends to prove or to disprove a material fact which is at

issue in the case, and every act or circumstance serving to elucidate

or to throw light upon a material issue or issues is relevant. . . . The

      6 We do not endorse, however, the State’s failure to comply with the
trial court’s pretrial order regarding the use of a shock belt.
                                     30
trial court has great discretion to determine relevancy and

materiality of evidence, and admission is favored in doubtful cases.”

(citation and punctuation omitted)). Insofar as Young’s additional

oral objection to the testimony also addressed a hearsay account of

the victim’s whereabouts on the night of the crime from his

girlfriend, we see no reversible error, because the testimony was

“cumulative of legally admissible evidence” from the girlfriend

herself. Wright v. State, 291 Ga. 869, 872 (3) (a) (734 SE2d 876)

(2012) (citation and punctuation omitted).

     18. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in applying the

former necessity exception to the hearsay rule to allow testimony

from Doris Jones regarding a statement that the victim had made to

her about a warning he had given to Young regarding Young’s

possibly “putting his hands on” her. See Jennings v. State, 288 Ga.

120, 121-122 (3) (702 SE2d 151) (2010).7

     7 We note that Young’s trial was not governed by Georgia’s current
Evidence Code, which took effect on January 1, 2013. See Parker v. State, 296
Ga. 586, 588 (1) (769 SE2d 329) (2015) (citing Ga. L. 2011, p. 99, § 101).

                                     31
     19. Young’s claim regarding the absence of a warrant to obtain

location data for his cell phone was waived for the purposes of

ordinary appellate review by his failure to raise the issue at trial.

See Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d). See also Carpenter v. United

States, __ U. S. __, __ (IV) (138 SCt 2206, 2222, 201 LE2d 507) (2018)

(addressing the privacy of cell phone location data).

     20. Young’s claim regarding the probative value versus the

prejudicial effect of a recorded 911 call from Doris Jones has been

waived for the purposes of ordinary appellate review by his failure

to object at trial. See Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d); Bryant v.

State, 288 Ga. 876, 887 (8) (c) (708 SE2d 362) (2011).

     21. Young argues that testimony from Doris Jones regarding

a statement from her sister recounting a report from a third person

about Young’s whereabouts during the crimes, along with certain

testimony from Annie Sampson, Sonny Goodson, Wesley Horne, Leo

Rivers, and Latrice Rivers, constituted improper hearsay testimony.

These claims were waived for the purposes of ordinary appellate

                                 32
review by Young’s failure to object at trial. 8 See Martin, 298 Ga. at

278-279 (6) (d); Bryant, 288 Ga. at 887 (8) (c).

     22. Young argues that an investigator gave speculative and

improper opinion testimony by stating that it would have been

“understandable” for Young to have been in Georgia and that it

would have been “natural” for Young freely to admit as much,

because, as Young had told the investigator, Young had been to

Georgia in the past. First, this issue was waived for the purposes of

ordinary appellate review by Young’s failure to object at trial. See

Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d); Bryant, 288 Ga. at 887 (8) (c).

And, in any event, the testimony was not improper. See Harris v.

     8  Young concedes that his hearsay argument regarding Annie Sampson
was not preserved for ordinary appellate review. Our own review of the record
reveals that the trial court’s order reconstructing portions of the record
concluded that a hearsay objection was raised in the bench conferences held
during Ms. Sampson’s testimony. See OCGA § 5-6-41 (f) (providing for
amendments to the record).           However, Young’s “Proposed Record
Reconstruction and Request for Hearing” stated that neither party could
“recall the substance of the objection,” and, in keeping with that
representation, the trial court made no finding regarding what the substance
of the hearsay objection might have concerned. Because there is no record of
what specific hearsay objection was raised or why it was denied, we accept
Young’s concession on appeal that the issue was not preserved for ordinary
appellate review.
                                     33
State, 279 Ga. 304, 305-306 (1) (612 SE2d 789) (2005)        (“A lay

witness may relate his or her opinion as to the existence of any fact

so long as the opinion is based upon the person’s own experiences

and observations, and so long as the matter referred to is within the

scope of the average juror’s knowledge.”).

     23. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting

photographs of the victim taken during his autopsy while medical

instruments were used to retract tissue in order to reveal relevant

injuries. See Brown v. State, 250 Ga. 862, 867 (5) (302 SE2d 347)

(1983) (“A photograph which depicts the victim after autopsy

incisions are made or after the state of the body is changed by

authorities or the pathologist will not be admissible unless

necessary to show some material fact which becomes apparent only

because of the autopsy.”), abrogated by the current Evidence Code

as stated in Venturino v. State, 306 Ga. 391, 396 (2) (b) (830 SE2d

110) (2019). See also Bunnell v. State, 292 Ga. 253, 258 (5) (735

SE2d 281) (2013) (noting a trial court’s discretion regarding autopsy

photographs); Simmons v. State, 291 Ga. 705, 711 (8) (b) (733 SE2d

                                 34
280) (2012) (addressing photographs taken during the use of medical

instruments such as forceps). This holding is not changed by the

fact that Young’s trial strategy included an admission of his guilt,

because the State was entitled to prove its case for guilt rather than

to rely on Young’s admissions. See Morgan v. State, 307 Ga. 889,

896 (3) (b) (838 SE2d 878) (2020) (“[A] criminal defendant may not

stipulate or admit his way out of the full evidentiary force of the case

as the State chooses to present it.” (citation and punctuation

omitted)).

     24. During the guilt/innocence phase, a witness testified that

she had been Young’s friend for over ten years and that their

relationship had at some points been sexual.           In addition to

corroborating several of the details of the State’s evidence regarding

Young’s whereabouts and cell phone calls near the time of the

murder, the witness also testified that Young came to her house on

the day following the murder after he got off work and that she then

saw him again later that night at his house.                  With no

contemporaneous objection from Young, the State asked her if she

                                  35
and Young had sex that night, and she answered affirmatively.

     After this testimony was concluded and after a lunch break,

defense counsel argued that the testimony about the witness and

Young having sex was improper because it was irrelevant to the

question of Young’s guilt. Defense counsel stated that Young was

not seeking a curative instruction but instead was asking that the

State be precluded from discussing the testimony about sex during

its closing argument in the guilt/innocence phase on the ground that

the testimony was irrelevant to the question of guilt but was highly

prejudicial. The trial court ruled:

     Well, I can see that it would be corroborative in terms of
     Ms. [Doris] Jones’ testimony about the defendant
     allegedly being unfaithful, that this would corroborate
     her perception of the nature of their relationship and why
     they would have arguments and to show that her
     testimony concerning his conduct, that would be evidence
     to support that her suspicions or her statements were
     well-founded. So I do find that it would have some
     corroborative value there. So in terms of just totally
     precluding them from arguing her testimony, I’m going to
     deny that request. I mean, anything can be argued in the
     wrong way. Anything can be – you can have incorrect
     argument, but I’m not going to preclude them from even
     mentioning it. They can’t use it just to attack the
     character or whatever, but to, for the proper purpose that

                                  36
     I just described.

We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ruling

on Young’s argument concerning the relevance of the witness’s

testimony to the question of guilt. See Spiller v. State, 282 Ga. 351,

354 (3) (647 SE2d 64) (2007) (holding that the trial court had not

abused its discretion in allowing a certain inference to be made in a

closing argument, because the “inference was a permissible one from

the evidence presented at trial”). See also Moore v. State, 295 Ga.

709, 714 (3) (763 SE2d 670) (2014) (addressing the propriety of

evidence that might incidentally place the character of the

defendant at issue but is otherwise relevant).

     Pursuant to the trial court’s ruling on relevance, the State

argued in its guilt/innocence phase closing argument, while arguing

how various behaviors that Young was capable of were relevant to

the various “adaptive functioning areas” used in considering a

possible finding of intellectual disability: “And the fact, again, that

he’s able to have this other relationship with another woman shows

that he is multi-faceted, and there’s a lot more to Rodney Young than

                                  37
what you’ve seen in this trial.” To the extent that Young argues on

appeal, in addition to the ground of relevance discussed above, that

the State’s argument regarding the issue of intellectual disability

was unconstitutional, we conclude that the issue was waived for the

purposes of ordinary appellate review by Young’s failure to make

this specific objection at trial. See Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6)

(d).

       25. Young argues that requiring him to prove his intellectual

disability beyond a reasonable doubt in order to be exempted from a

death sentence was unconstitutional. Seeing no clear direction in

the law to hold otherwise, we adhere to our prior decisions upholding

Georgia’s standard of proof.

       (a) In 1988, Georgia was the first state in the nation to enact

a statutory ban on the execution of intellectually disabled persons.

See OCGA § 17-7-131 (c) (3), (j) (as amended by Ga. L. 1988, p. 1003,

§ 1). In 1989, shortly after Georgia enacted this groundbreaking

statute, the United States Supreme Court held that there was no

similar protection in the United States Constitution. See Penry v.

                                  38
Lynaugh, 492 U. S. 302 (109 SCt 2934, 106 LE2d 256) (1989).

However, this Court held in 1989 that such a protection did exist

under the Georgia Constitution and accordingly extended the new

statutory protection to apply to persons tried in Georgia before the

statute’s effective date. See Fleming v. Zant, 259 Ga. 687, 690 (3)

(386 SE2d 339) (1989) (“[Penry] was based in great part on the

absence of any ‘national consensus’ against executing the mentally

retarded.   In contrast, the objective evidence indicates that a

consensus against execution of the mentally retarded does exist

among Georgians.”). This Court then further extended Georgia’s

protection of intellectually disabled persons to those who could have

but did not raise the issue at trial, concluding that allowing such

defaulted claims in a prisoner’s first state habeas proceeding was

necessary to prevent a possible miscarriage of justice. See Turpin v.

Hill, 269 Ga. 302, 303 (3) (b) (498 SE2d 52) (1998) (citing OCGA § 9-

14-48 (d)). In 2002, the United States Supreme Court, concluding

that a “national consensus” on the issue had developed in the 14

years since Georgia enacted its statutory protection for persons with

                                 39
intellectual disabilities, overruled Penry and announced that the

execution of intellectually disabled persons violated the United

States Constitution. Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U. S. 304, 316 (III) (122

SCt 2242, 153 LE2d 335) (2002). See id. at 321 (IV) (“Construing

and applying the Eighth Amendment in the light of our ‘evolving

standards of decency,’ we therefore conclude that such punishment

is excessive and that the [United States] Constitution ‘places a

substantive restriction on the State’s power to take the life’ of a

mentally retarded offender.” (quoting Ford v. Wainwright, 477 U. S.

399, 405 (II) (106 SCt 2595, 91 LE2d 335) (1986)).

      (b) While Georgia was the first state to ban the execution of

intellectually disabled persons, it has from the initial adoption of

that ban imposed a burden to prove intellectual disability on

defendants under a beyond a reasonable doubt standard.9 This

      9 The Georgia Code provides: “The defendant may be found ‘guilty but
with intellectual disability’ if the jury, or court acting as trier of facts, finds
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of the crime charged
and is intellectually disabled.” OCGA § 17-7-131 (c) (3) (as amended in 2017
to use the term “intellectual disability”). This Court has held: “[T]he plain
language of OCGA § 17-7-131 (c) (3) requires that the defendant prove his

                                        40
standard of proof has been challenged several times in this Court on

constitutional grounds, particularly in light of the fact that some

other states impose only a clear and convincing evidence standard

on defendants seeking to prove their intellectual disability and the

majority of states that still have the death penalty impose only a

preponderance of the evidence standard on defendants.                      See

Raulerson v. Warden, 928 F3d 987, 1013-1014 (I) (B) (11th Cir. 2019)

(Jordan, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (discussing

the varying standards of proof applied). This Court’s last published

decision upholding Georgia’s standard of proof was in Stripling v.

State in 2011. See 289 Ga. at 371 (1) (“We have previously addressed

this very issue, and we now reiterate our prior holding that Georgia’s

beyond a reasonable doubt standard is not unconstitutional.” (citing

mental retardation beyond a reasonable doubt. . . .” Burgess v. State, 264 Ga.
777, 789-790 (36) (450 SE2d 680) (1994). Although we initially directed that a
preponderance of the evidence standard should be applied to claims of
intellectual disability raised by habeas petitioners who had been tried prior to
the effective date of the statutory protection, our later case law has strongly
suggested that even those cases should also have employed the beyond a
reasonable doubt standard. See Hill, 269 Ga. at 303-304 (4).

                                      41
Head v. Hill, 277 Ga. 255, 260-263 (II) (B) (587 SE2d 613) (2003)).

     In Stripling, we explained:

     In addressing this issue previously, we first noted that,
     although the Supreme Court of the United States had
     recognized a constitutional right of mentally retarded
     defendants to be exempt from the death penalty, it had
     not directed the states to apply any particular burden of
     proof to claims of mental retardation. See Atkins v.
     Virginia, 536 U.S. 304 (122 SCt 2242, 153 LE2d 335)
     (2002) (identifying a national consensus against
     executing mentally retarded persons and holding that
     executing such persons was therefore unconstitutional).
     Instead, we noted that the Supreme Court “specifically
     left ‘“to the States the task of developing appropriate ways
     to enforce the (federal) constitutional restriction”’ on
     executing the mentally retarded.” Hill, 277 Ga. at 260 (II)
     (B) (quoting Atkins, 536 U. S. at 317 (III) (citation
     omitted)). See also Bobby v. Bies, __ U. S. __, __ (I) (129
     SC 2145, 2150 (I), 173 LEd2d 1173) (2009) (“Our opinion
     [in Atkins] did not provide definitive procedural or
     substantive guides for determining when a person who
     claims mental retardation ‘will be so impaired as to fall
     (within Atkins’ compass).’” (quoting Atkins, 536 U. S. at
     317 (III)). . . .

Stripling, 289 Ga. at 371-372 (1). We reaffirmed our prior holding

that claims of intellectual disability are more closely analogous to

claims of insanity, which the Supreme Court has held could be

subjected to a beyond a reasonable doubt standard, than they were

                                   42
to claims of incompetence to stand trial, which the Supreme Court

has held could not be subjected to a standard higher than a

preponderance of the evidence. See id. at 372 (1) (discussing Leland

v. Oregon, 343 U. S. 790 (72 SCt 1002, 96 LE 1302) (1952), and

Cooper v. Oklahoma, 517 U. S. 348 (116 SCt 1373, 134 LE2d 498)

(1996)).   We concluded our discussion regarding the purely

procedural aspect of the standards that we were reaffirming by

stating:

     Thus, in light of the specific statement by the Supreme
     Court that it had not established any particular
     procedural standards that must be applied to mental
     retardation, the similarity of mental retardation claims to
     claims of insanity at the time of the commission of crimes,
     and the persuasive effect of having sister states who have
     refused to declare the preponderance of the evidence
     standard to be constitutionally required, we held that
     Georgia’s beyond a reasonable doubt standard was not
     unconstitutional from a procedural point of view.

Id. at 372-373 (1).

     After concluding our analysis of Georgia’s standard of proof on

procedural grounds, we also reaffirmed our prior holding

     that Georgia’s beyond a reasonable doubt standard
     further served to define the category of mental

                                 43
     retardation within Georgia law and that, in [setting this
     standard], Georgia had not acted outside the bounds of
     the national consensus about the treatment of mentally
     retarded persons identified by the Supreme Court in
     Atkins.

Stripling, 289 Ga. at 373 (1). We further noted that “Georgia was

not alone in defining mental retardation through the use of a

heightened standard of proof at the time of Atkins” and that the

several states at that time applying a clear and convincing evidence

standard had been counted among the states forming a national

consensus. Stripling, 289 Ga. at 373 (1). We observed:

     [T]he Supreme Court noted as follows:

          To the extent there is serious disagreement
          about the execution of mentally retarded
          offenders, it is in determining which offenders
          are in fact retarded. . . . Not all people who
          claim to be mentally retarded will be so
          impaired as to fall within the range of mentally
          retarded offenders about whom there is a
          national consensus.

Id. at 374 (1) (quoting Atkins, 536 U. S. at 317 (III)). We concluded

this portion of our analysis by stating:

     Therefore, we reaffirm that Georgia’s statutory definition
     of mental retardation, with its requirement that only

                                  44
      mental deficiencies capable of proof beyond a reasonable
      doubt [qualify for protection], is not unconstitutional
      under Atkins.

Id.

      (c) (i)   First, Young assails our prior holdings affirming

Georgia’s beyond a reasonable doubt standard in reference to the

second portion of the analysis set forth in Stripling, which addressed

the matter from a more substantive perspective. The United States

Supreme Court has recently stated: “In Atkins v. Virginia, we held

that the Constitution ‘restrict[s] . . . the State’s power to take the life

of’ any intellectually disabled individual.” Moore v. Texas, __ U. S.

__, __ (II) (137 SCt 1039, 1048, 197 LE2d 416) (2017). Accordingly,

we disapprove anything in our prior decisions suggesting otherwise,

particularly those parts of our prior decisions suggesting that

“Georgia’s beyond a reasonable doubt standard further served to

define the category of mental retardation.” Stripling, 289 Ga. at 373

(1). See Atkins, 536 U. S. at 317 (III); Hill, 277 Ga. at 262 (II) (B).

See also Williams v. Cahill, 303 P3d 532, 550 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2013)

(Eckerstrom, P.J., dissenting) (“But this paragraph [from Atkins], by

                                    45
its terms, only invites states to develop ‘ways to enforce’ the

constitutional restriction imposed in Atkins.        No part of that

language suggests the states are likewise entrusted with the power

to redefine the substance of the constitutional restriction itself.”).

While we continue to take some guidance from the Supreme Court’s

observation that there is disagreement among the states “in

determining which offenders are in fact retarded,” we acknowledge

that this observation is relevant only to the procedures for

determining whether defendants are intellectually disabled and

that every state is constitutionally required to recognize prevailing

clinical definitions of intellectual disability in defining the category

of persons who are constitutionally protected, including those who

are “mildly mentally retarded.” Atkins, 536 U. S. at 308 (I), 317 (III).

See Moore, 137 SCt at 1049 (II) (“Hall indicated that being informed

by the medical community does not demand adherence to everything

stated in the latest medical guide. But neither does our precedent

license disregard of current medical standards.”); Hall v. Florida,

572 U. S. 701, 720-721 (III) (C) (134 SCt 1986, 188 LE2d 1007)

                                  46
(2014) (“If the States were to have complete autonomy to define

intellectual disability as they wished, the Court’s decision in Atkins

could become a nullity, and the Eighth Amendment’s protection of

human dignity would not become a reality. This Court thus reads

Atkins to provide substantial guidance on the definition of

intellectual disability.”). On this point, we emphasize that Georgia,

by statute and through case law, has always applied such prevailing

clinical standards. See, e.g., Stripling v. State, 261 Ga. 1, 4 (3) (b)

(401 SE2d 500) (1991). See also Hill v. Humphrey, 662 F3d 1335,

1352 (III) (D) (11th Cir. 2011) (“It is undisputed that Georgia’s

statutory definition of mental retardation is consistent with the

clinical definitions cited in Atkins.”).

     (ii) We turn now to the procedural issue that Young raises

regarding the constitutionality of Georgia’s standard of proof. On

this question, we begin and end with the Supreme Court’s statement

in Atkins that it “‘l[eft] to the States the task of developing

appropriate ways to enforce the [federal] constitutional restriction’”

on executing intellectually disabled persons. Atkins, 536 U. S. at

                                    47
317 (III) (quoting Ford, 477 U. S. at 416 (V) (A) (plurality portion of

opinion)). 10 We acknowledge that the states’ freedom to develop

appropriate procedures does not leave them unfettered from general

constitutional principles, but we conclude, despite Young’s

arguments to the contrary discussed below,11 that it does permit the

procedure that the Georgia General Assembly has chosen.

      First, Young argues that the Supreme Court’s recent decisions

in Hall v. Florida and Moore v. Texas require this Court’s

disapproval of Georgia’s beyond a reasonable doubt standard. See

Moore, 137 SCt 1039 (addressing the “wholly nonclinical” factors

      10  We again emphasize that the substantive question of intellectual
disability is not at issue here. As the Supreme Court has stated about its
principle of leaving to the states the responsibility for creating appropriate
procedures: “Fidelity to this important principle of federalism, however,
should not be construed to demean the substantive character of the federal
right at issue.” Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U. S. 190, 211 (III) (136 SCt 718,
193 LE2d 599) (2016). See People v. Vasquez, 84 P3d 1019, 1022 (III) (B) (1)
(Colo. 2004) (“Atkins placed a ‘substantive restriction on the State’s power to
take the life of a mentally retarded offender.’ Atkins, 536 U.S. at 321 (internal
quotation marks omitted) (emphasis added).            Far from announcing a
procedural rule, Atkins merely declared that the Eighth Amendment now
prohibits the execution of the mentally retarded. Id.”).

      11 We also consider here the parallel arguments made by the amici
curiae, The Arc of the United States, The Arc of Georgia, and the Georgia
Advocacy Office.
                                       48
that Texas applied); Hall, 572 U. S. 701 (addressing a “strict IQ score

cutoff” applied by Florida). We have considered these decisions

carefully, especially as discussed in this opinion regarding the

procedural question of Georgia’s standard of proof. However, we

note that they directly addressed only questions regarding the

substantive definition of intellectual disability and the requirement

that states must, as Georgia indisputably does, adhere to prevailing

clinical definitions of intellectual disability in fashioning such a

definition. Thus, if this Court’s precedents regarding the beyond a

reasonable doubt standard are somehow incorrect, it would not be

because of the core holding of Hall or Moore.

     Next, Young argues that this Court has previously relied on

inapposite case law from the United States Supreme Court in

upholding the beyond a reasonable doubt standard. As we noted

above, we have previously discussed the Supreme Court decisions of

Cooper v. Oklahoma and Leland v. Oregon as being relevant to our

evaluation of the constitutionality of Georgia’s beyond a reasonable

doubt standard. See Cooper, 517 U. S. 348; Leland, 343 U. S. 790.

                                  49
See also Stripling, 289 Ga. at 372 (1) (discussing Cooper and

Leland); Hill, 277 Ga. at 261 (II) (B) (same).     Despite Young’s

arguments that we should do otherwise, and although we

acknowledge that neither case is a perfect fit to answer the question

presented here, we continue to take more guidance from Leland

than from Cooper.

     In Cooper, the Supreme Court held as a matter of federal due

process that a defendant could not be required to prove his or her

incompetence to stand trial by clear and convincing evidence. See

Cooper, 517 U. S. at 350, 369 (V). Cf. id. at 355 (II) (“Our recent

decision in Medina v. California, 505 U.S. 437, 120 L. Ed. 2d 353,

112 S. Ct. 2572 (1992), establishes that a State may presume that

the defendant is competent and require him to shoulder the burden

of proving his incompetence by a preponderance of the evidence. Id.,

at 449.”). The Supreme Court noted that “[n]o one questions the

existence of the fundamental right” involved, id. at 354 (II), and we

conclude that in this regard Cooper is relevant to the issue of

intellectual disability, because the right of intellectually disabled

                                 50
persons not to be executed has also been made a clear constitutional

right. 12   Likewise, the issue in Cooper and the issue here both

involve consideration of the risks arising from a potentially

erroneous finding of fact. See id. at 362-368 (IV and V). 13 However,

the Supreme Court emphasized in Cooper the historical basis for the

right to not be tried while incompetent and the historical basis in

English and American common law for requiring defendants to

      12 We note here Young’s argument that this Court first deemed Leland
to be more persuasive than Cooper on the issue of a standard of proof for
intellectual disability prior to the Supreme Court’s announcement of the
relevant federal constitutional right. However, we point out that this Court
has already addressed this issue, and we remain mindful of it as we reach our
conclusions here. See Hill, 277 Ga. at 260 (II) (B) (“Now that the Georgia
exemption from death sentences for mentally retarded persons is paralleled by
a new federal exemption, we must determine whether, under the authority of
federal constitutional law, the beyond a reasonable doubt standard continues
to be an acceptable standard of proof to apply to mental retardation claims.”
(emphasis omitted)).

      13  We note here Young’s extensive argument regarding statistics
concerning claims of intellectual disability in Georgia; however, we agree with
the Eleventh Circuit in holding that statistics like Young’s are neither
complete nor constitutionally compelling. See Hill, 662 F3d at 1357 (F)
(“[E]ven if one were to consider the dissent’s skewed data, the fact remains that
reported cases in Georgia actually show that judges and juries do find
defendants guilty but mentally retarded under Georgia’s proof beyond a
reasonable doubt standard.”). It is important to note in this regard that cases
in which intellectually disabled persons are never charged with crimes, resolve
charges without a trial, or obtain a not guilty verdict from a jury would rarely
if ever result in reported judicial decisions and thus would not be included in
the statistics that Young offers here.
                                       51
prove their incompetence only by a preponderance of the evidence.

See id. at 354-360 (II and III). And it was in reference to this

historical basis for the right at issue that the Supreme Court noted

the fact that “[o]nly 4 of the 50 States” imposed the higher burden of

proof at issue. Id. at 360 (III). See also id. at 362 (III) (“The near-

uniform application of a standard that is more protective of the

defendant’s rights than Oklahoma’s clear and convincing evidence

rule supports our conclusion that the heightened standard offends a

principle of justice that is deeply ‘rooted in the traditions and

conscience of our people.’ Medina v. California, 505 U.S. at 445

(internal quotation marks omitted).”). In contrast, such historical

support is absent for claims of intellectual disability, as well

summarized by the Eleventh Circuit:

     In contrast, there is no historical right (in the Eighth
     Amendment or elsewhere) of a mentally retarded person
     not to be executed. And since the constitutional right
     itself is new, there is no historical tradition regarding the
     burden of proof as to that right. As recently as 1989,
     Penry refused to bar the execution of the mentally
     retarded. Atkins was based not on historical tradition or
     the Due Process Clause, but on the contemporary national
     consensus that reflected “the evolving standards of

                                  52
      decency” that informed the meaning of the Eighth
      Amendment. Atkins, 536 U.S. at 311-12, 122 S. Ct. at
      2247. Indeed, Georgia’s reasonable doubt standard for
      establishing a mental retardation exception to the death
      penalty, which was enacted twenty-three years ago, is the
      oldest such law in the nation. Although other states
      recently have employed either clear and convincing
      evidence or preponderance of evidence standards, no more
      lenient standard of proof predates Georgia’s.

Hill, 662 F3d at 1350-1351 (III) (C). See also Raulerson, 928 F3d at

1002 (III) (B) (2) (“Unlike the right at issue in Cooper, which has its

deep roots in our common-law heritage, there is no historical right

of an intellectually disabled person not to be executed.”).14

      We turn next to an examination of our prior decisions insofar

as they identified limited guidance on the constitutionality of

Georgia’s standard of proof in Leland. The United States Supreme

Court began its analysis in Leland by noting that there was at least

      14 We note that, if Cooper’s holding applied in this context with full force,
the laws of the states where a clear and convincing standard applies would also
be unconstitutional. See also Hill, 662 F3d at 1355 (III) (E) (“The effective
result of Hill’s argument, then, is that every state’s death penalty statute or
case law procedure is unconstitutional because none of them requires the state
to prove the absence of mental retardation beyond a reasonable doubt. Or, to
take Hill’s argument to its logical conclusion, beyond all doubt.”).

                                        53
some historical precedent supporting Oregon’s beyond a reasonable

doubt standard for insanity claims, noting the origin of Oregon’s

statutory rule in 1864, the announcement in 1843 in England of a

rule requiring such claims to be “clearly proved,” and the

requirement applied in “most of the nineteenth-century American

cases” that a defendant “‘clearly’ prove insanity.” Leland, 343 U. S.

at 796-797. The Court also noted that it had previously adopted a

rule, through its supervisory authority over the federal courts,

requiring an acquittal in federal prosecutions whenever “‘there is

reasonable doubt whether [the defendant] was capable in law of

committing crime,’” id. at 797 (quoting Davis v. United States, 160

U. S. 469, 484 (16 SCt 353, 40 LE 499) (1895)); however, the Court

emphasized that its holding in Davis “obviously establishes no

constitutional doctrine, but only the rule to be followed in federal

courts,” id.

     The Supreme Court in Leland noted the central fact at issue,

which was that “Oregon [wa]s the only state that require[d] the

accused, on a plea of insanity, to establish that defense beyond a

                                 54
reasonable doubt.” Leland, 343 U. S. at 798. The Court noted that

“[s]ome twenty states” required defendants “to establish [their]

insanity by a preponderance of the evidence or some similar

measure of persuasion.” Id. Nevertheless, the Court, in comparing

Oregon’s   beyond    a reasonable doubt        standard   with these

preponderance standards, held:

     While there is an evident distinction between these two
     rules as to the quantum of proof required, we see no
     practical difference of such magnitude as to be significant
     in determining the constitutional question we face here.

Id. And yet, while not “significant” to the ultimate question, the

Court stated, in words that warrant attention in Young’s case given

the number of American jurisdictions that employ standards of proof

for intellectual disability that are different from Georgia’s:

     The fact that a practice is followed by a large number of
     states is not conclusive in a decision as to whether that
     practice accords with due process, but it is plainly worth
     considering in determining whether the practice “offends
     some principle of justice so rooted in the traditions and
     conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental.”
     Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U.S. 97, 105 (1934).

Id. (emphasis supplied). See Raulerson, 928 F3d at 1013-1014 (I)

                                  55
(B) (Jordan, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (discussing

the various standards of proof applied in different jurisdictions).

      The Court, again noting its own contrary rule for the federal

courts, held regarding Oregon’s standard of proof:

      But “its procedure does not run afoul of the Fourteenth
      Amendment because another method may seem to our
      thinking to be fairer or wiser or to give a surer promise of
      protection to the prisoner at the bar.” Snyder v.
      Massachusetts, supra, at 105.

Leland, 343 U. S. at 799. The Court concluded:

      We are therefore reluctant to interfere with Oregon’s
      determination of its policy with respect to the burden of
      proof on the issue of sanity since we cannot say that policy
      violates generally accepted concepts of basic standards of
      justice.

Id.

      We note, in deciding the degree of guidance to be gained in

Young’s case from Leland, that Leland was not a case involving an

underlying right that the Supreme Court had specifically “held to be

secured to defendants in federal courts by the Bill of Rights.”

Leland, 343 U. S. at 798. See also Medina v. California, 505 U. S.

437, 449 (112 SCt 2572, 120 LE2d 353) (1992) (“Moreover, while the

                                  56
Due Process Clause affords an incompetent defendant the right not

to be tried, we have not said that the Constitution requires the

States to recognize the insanity defense.” (citations omitted)). But

we also note that the Supreme Court has since clarified that some

acceptable definition of insanity is constitutionally required. See

Kahler v. Kansas, __ U. S. __, __ (II) (A) (140 SCt 1021, 1028-1029,

206 LE2d 312) (2020) (“A State’s ‘insanity rule[ ] is substantially

open to state choice.’” (quoting Clark v. Arizona, 548 U. S. 735, 752

(II) (A) (126 SCt 2709, 165 LE2d 842) (2006))). See also id. at 1039

(II) (Breyer, J., dissenting) (“The Court contends that the historical

formulations of the insanity defense were so diverse, so contested,

as to make it impossible to discern a unified principle that Kansas’

approach offends. I disagree.”). In the end, while we see reason for

some circumspection in applying Leland, we also note that some

form of due process concerns regarding standards of proof were

clearly at issue in the case. Thus, although both the United States

Constitution and the Georgia Constitution now clearly protect

persons with intellectual disabilities from execution, we consider the

                                 57
due process analysis in Leland worthy of our consideration here,

particularly given our conclusion that intellectual disability “is

comparable to a claim of insanity at the time of the crime in that

both relieve a guilty person of at least some of the statutory penalty

to which he would otherwise be subject.” Hill, 277 Ga. at 261 (II)

(B).

       While identifying some guidance in Leland, we focus most

directly on the guidance given by the Supreme Court specifically on

the question at hand. As noted above, the Supreme Court in Atkins,

quoting Ford v. Wainwright, expressly “‘l[eft] to the States the task

of     developing   appropriate   ways   to   enforce   the   [federal]

constitutional restriction”’ on executing intellectually disabled

persons. Atkins, 536 U. S. at 317 (III) (quoting Ford, 477 U. S. at

416 (V) (A) (plurality portion of opinion)).      See also Jones v.

Mississippi, No. 18-1259, 2021 U.S. LEXIS 2110, at *26-27 (II) (B)

(Apr. 22, 2021) (“[A]s the Court explained in Montgomery, when ‘a

new substantive rule of constitutional law is established, this Court

is careful to limit the scope of any attendant procedural requirement

                                  58
to avoid intruding more than necessary upon the States’ sovereign

administration of their criminal justice systems.’” (quoting

Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U. S. 190, 211 (III) (136 SCt 718, 193

LE2d 599) (2016) (citing Ford, 477 U. S. at 416-417 (V) (A) (plurality

portion of opinion)))). The Supreme Court’s choice of Ford as a

lodestar makes sense, because Ford, like Atkins, addressed the

possible execution of a person with severe mental deficiencies that

significantly undermined the penological justifications for the

person’s execution.        The protection announced in Atkins was

centered on a defendant’s mental state at the time of his or her crime

and the time of his or her trial, while Ford was centered on a

condemned prisoner’s mental state at the time of his or her actual

execution. But the legal similarities between the two were clearly

what commended Ford to the Atkins Court. 15

      15 We note that Ford directly addressed the question of whether Ford had
a right to an evidentiary hearing on federal habeas review; however, both the
plurality opinion and the concurring opinion in that case clearly indicate that
the procedural due process necessary to enforce a clear Eighth Amendment
right was at the core of the analysis. See Ford, 477 U. S. at 410 (III) (plurality
portion of opinion) (“Once a substantive right or restriction is recognized in the

                                       59
      Like the Atkins Court did regarding intellectual disability, the

majority in Ford began with the conclusion that the execution of

mentally incompetent persons violated the Eighth Amendment. See

Ford, 477 U. S. at 401 (majority portion of opinion) (“For centuries

no jurisdiction has countenanced the execution of the insane, yet

this Court has never decided whether the Constitution forbids the

practice. Today we keep faith with our common-law heritage in

holding that it does.”). Thus, the Court’s decision to “leave to the

States the task of developing appropriate ways to enforce the

[federal] constitutional restriction” in Ford cannot be distinguished

from Young’s case based on the nature of the underlying right at

issue. Ford, 477 U. S. at 416 (V) (A) (plurality portion of opinion).

      Our task in applying Ford here is complicated somewhat by the

fact that the portion of Ford directly quoted in Atkins was concurred

Constitution, therefore, its enforcement is in no way confined to the
rudimentary process deemed inadequate in ages past.”); id. at 424 (II) (Powell,
J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (“At least in the context
of competency determinations prior to execution, this standard is no different
from the protection afforded by procedural due process. . . . Thus, the question
in this case is whether Florida’s procedures for determining petitioner’s sanity
comport with the requirements of due process.”).
                                      60
in by only a plurality of the Supreme Court. See Atkins, 536 U. S.

at 317 (III) (quoting Ford, 477 U. S. at 416 (V) (A) (plurality portion

of opinion)).    However, even assuming that the Atkins majority

meant to embrace the details of the Ford plurality’s reasoning to the

exclusion of the somewhat more accommodating reasoning in Ford’s

concurring opinion, we conclude that Ford supports our decision

here. 16 In concluding that Florida’s procedure was constitutionally

inadequate, the Ford plurality identified the following faults: “no

court played any role in the rejection of [Ford]’s claim of insanity”;

the decision was made “wholly within the executive branch, ex

      16 We note that the concurring opinion noted similar defects in Florida’s
procedures but differed with the plurality mainly by providing a prescription
for procedures that was even less restrictive on the states than the plurality’s
prescription. To that end, the concurring opinion stated:
      We need not determine the precise limits that due process imposes
      in this area.        In general, however, my view is that a
      constitutionally acceptable procedure may be far less formal than
      a trial. The State should provide an impartial officer or board that
      can receive evidence and argument from the prisoner’s counsel,
      including expert psychiatric evidence that may differ from the
      State’s own psychiatric examination.            Beyond these basic
      requirements, the States should have substantial leeway to
      determine what process best balances the various interests at
      stake. As long as basic fairness is observed, I would find due
      process satisfied. . . .
Ford, 477 U. S. at 427 (III) (Powell, J., concurring in part and concurring in the
judgment).
                                       61
parte”; the Governor had announced a policy of excluding all

advocacy on prisoners’ behalf; and the Governor refused to inform

Ford’s counsel whether he had considered the “written materials,

including the reports of the two other psychiatrists who had

examined Ford at greater length,” that the attorneys had submitted

on Ford’s behalf. Ford, 477 U. S. at 410 (III) (A), 412-413 (III) (C)

(plurality portions of opinion). The Ford plurality concluded: “That

this most cursory form of procedural review fails to achieve even the

minimal degree of reliability required for the protection of any

constitutional interest . . . is self-evident.” Id. at 413 (III) (plurality

portion of opinion). But none of these deficiencies identified by the

Ford plurality are even remotely at issue regarding Georgia’s

procedure for evaluating intellectual disability claims.

     Yet even though such glaring deficiencies did exist in Ford, the

Ford plurality nevertheless articulated this measured prescription:

     We do not here suggest that only a full trial on the issue
     of sanity will suffice to protect the federal interests; we
     leave to the State the task of developing appropriate ways
     to enforce the constitutional restriction upon its execution
     of sentences.

                                    62
Ford, 477 U. S. at 416-417 (V) (A) (plurality portion of opinion). The

plurality added this caution:

     [T]he lodestar of any effort to devise a procedure must be
     the overriding dual imperative of providing redress for
     those with substantial claims and of encouraging
     accuracy in the factfinding determination. The stakes are
     high, and the “evidence” will always be imprecise.

Id. at 417 (V) (A) (plurality portion of opinion). But its focus in

making this statement was on the availability of an “adversary

presentation of relevant information,” the “manner of selecting and

using the experts,” and the need for “neutral, sound, and

professional judgments” by those experts. Id. (“Fidelity to these

principles is the solemn obligation of a civilized society.”).

     The Ford plurality specifically disavowed requiring the full

panoply of procedures typically associated with a trial. See Ford,

417 U. S. at 416 (V) (A) (plurality portion of opinion) (“We do not

here suggest that only a full trial on the issue of sanity will

suffice. . . .”). Nevertheless, Georgia law does provide a right to a

full jury trial on the question of intellectual disability. Also critically

                                    63
absent from the Ford plurality’s discussion is any mention

whatsoever of a standard of proof to be applied to claims of

incompetence to be executed.17 And this omission in Ford of any

reference to a required standard of proof is all the more conspicuous

in light of the fact that it seems certain, given the facts recited in

Ford, that the Florida Governor had been completely unrestricted in

selecting a standard of proof in Ford’s case and that the plurality

was indeed unaware of what that selected standard of proof might

      17 In noting here the omission of any discussion in Ford of Florida’s
standard of proof for claims of incompetence to be executed, we acknowledge
Young’s argument regarding the inherent difficulties in assessing intellectual
disability. However, we note that the matter was addressed by the concurring
Justices in Ford but was considered by them as an additional reason to largely
leave choices regarding procedure to the states. See Ford, 477 U. S. at 426 (III)
(Powell, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (“Unlike issues
of historical fact, the question of petitioner’s sanity calls for a basically
subjective judgment.” (citing Addington v. Texas, 441 U. S. 418, 429-430 (III)
(B) (99 SCt 1804, 60 LE2d 323) (1979))); Hill, 662 F3d at 1354 (III) (D) (noting
that “Georgia has exercised [the] leeway” provided by Ford “by determining
that the risk of error due to malingering or other factors is substantial and that
there is a need for a robust burden of proof”). See also Heller v. Doe, 509 U. S.
312, 322 (III) (A) (113 SCt 2637, 125 LE2d 257) (1993) (acknowledging
Addington but crediting Kentucky’s assessment that the “‘risk of error’”
regarding a standard of proof for claims of intellectual disability was less than
it would be for claims of mental illness).

                                       64
have been.18

      We are not called upon here to make a pronouncement on the

wisdom of Georgia’s burden of proof from a policy perspective, and

to do so would be beyond this Court’s constitutional power. Instead,

we are called upon to apply the Georgia Constitution and the United

States Constitution. In light of the general discussion of due process

above, and especially in light of the clear delegation to the states by

Atkins, by reference to Ford, of much of the responsibility for

designing appropriate procedures, we hold that the standard of proof

for intellectual disability claims presently chosen by Georgia’s

General Assembly is not unconstitutional.

      26. Young argues that, as a matter of Georgia statutory law,

he should have been permitted to enter a plea of “guilty but mentally

      18We note here that Ford’s omission of any prescription for a particular
standard of proof was presumably made with the awareness of the fact,
highlighted by the dissent here in Young’s case in arguing that Georgia law
creates an “unacceptable risk,” that some risk inheres under any standard of
proof. See Hill, 662 F3d at 1354 (III) (E) (“A third critical flaw in Hill’s
argument is that a risk of error exists with any burden of proof.”). See also id.
at 1354 (III) (D) (noting that the Georgia General Assembly has “determin[ed]
that the risk of error due to malingering and other factors is substantial and
that there is a need for a robust burden of proof”).

                                       65
retarded” over the objection of the State and that the trial court

should then have held a hearing to determine if it would accept the

plea and sentence him to imprisonment for life. The relevant statute

provides:

     A plea of guilty but mentally ill at the time of the crime
     or a plea of guilty but mentally retarded shall not be
     accepted until the defendant has undergone examination
     by a licensed psychologist or psychiatrist and the court
     has examined the psychological or psychiatric reports,
     held a hearing on the issue of the defendant’s mental
     condition, and is satisfied that there is a factual basis that
     the defendant was mentally ill at the time of the offense
     or mentally retarded to which the plea is entered.

OCGA § 17-7-131 (b) (2) (prior to an amendment in 2017 adopting

the term “intellectual disability”).      However, we reaffirm the

soundness of our reasoning in Stripling, in which we held: “While

the trial court may allow for the entry of a plea of guilty but mentally

retarded by the defendant, the case would still go forward absent

the agreement of the State to a judgment on that plea without a

trial.” Stripling, 289 Ga. at 376 (3). The provision in the statute at

issue is analogous to the requirement in the Uniform Superior Court

Rules that a trial court must find a factual basis for a plea of guilty

                                  66
before accepting it, although the factual basis addressed in the

statute regarding intellectual disability appears designed to protect

only the interests of justice rather than the interests of the

defendant as well. See State v. Evans, 265 Ga. 332, 334 (2) (454

SE2d 468) (1995) (“The purpose of USCR 33.9 is to protect against

someone pleading guilty when that person may know what he has

done but may not know that those acts do not constitute the crime

with which he is charged.”). This provision does not undermine the

State’s entitlement “to have its full case adjudicated” where the

defendant seeks a sentence pursuant to a plea but the State insists

on seeking a greater sentence through a jury verdict. See Stripling,

289 Ga. at 376 (3).

     27. Young also argues that trying the questions of guilt and

intellectual disability together in the guilt/innocence phase violated

his constitutional rights. He acknowledges that this Court has held

otherwise. See King, 273 Ga. at 272 (27) (citing Palmer v. State, 271

Ga. 234, 237 (3) (517 SE2d 502) (1999)). See also Livingston v. State,

264 Ga. 402, 406 (3) (444 SE2d 748) (1994) (“While there may be

                                 67
advantages to a criminal defendant in having a trial apart from the

guilt-innocence phase on the issue of mental retardation, such a

change must come from the General Assembly.”).            However, he

argues that the creation by the United States Supreme Court of a

federal constitutional right of intellectually disabled persons not to

be executed, particularly considering recent decisions from that

Court applying that right, dictates a different holding now by this

Court.

     (a)    Much of Young’s argument here focuses on his

mischaracterization of a holding of the United States Supreme

Court. That Court held that whether a defendant could formulate

plans to commit his or her crimes or could conceal facts or lie relative

to his or her crimes should not be determinative of the question of

intellectual disability, but the Court did not hold that evidence of

such things was irrelevant to the question of whether a defendant is

intellectually disabled under professionally accepted standards. See

Moore v. Texas, __ U. S. __, __ (III) (139 SCt 666, 671-672, 203 LE2d

1) (2019) (stating that clinicians might find this type of evidence

                                  68
relevant and citing American Association on Intellectual and

Developmental Disabilities, Intellectual Disability:       Definition,

Classification, and Systems of Supports 44 (11th ed. 2010).

     Young also cites a psychological manual for the proposition

that there is insufficient “normative information” about crimes in

general to extrapolate conclusions regarding a defendant’s

intellectual disability from the manner in which the defendant has

carried out his or her crime. However, as with his characterization

of Supreme Court case law, Young concludes too much here.

Instead, we conclude that evidence regarding a defendant’s actions

during and around the time of a crime, although generally not

conclusive on the question, can be probative regarding whether a

defendant has deficits in specific adaptive behavior areas, just as his

or her previously observed actions in non-criminal settings might

similarly be probative on the question. See id.; Morrison v. State,

276 Ga. 829, 831 (2) (583 SE2d 873) (2003). Furthermore, we reach

this conclusion despite the fact that intellectual disability must have

an onset prior to the age of 18, because, as Young himself argues,

                                  69
intellectual disability is regarded by mental health professionals as

generally being a lifelong condition.

     (b) We also are not persuaded by Young’s argument that trying

the questions of guilt and intellectual disability together prevented

him from being able to “embrace” evidence of his crimes that

arguably supported a finding of intellectual disability without

thereby undermining his defense as to his guilt. This argument is

somewhat surprising in light of Young’s arguments regarding the

alleged irrelevance of evidence regarding the crimes to a possible

finding that he lacked deficits in adaptive behaviors. In any case,

we conclude that defendants are not generally denied a fair

opportunity to present a defense regarding their alleged guilt by

having to address the evidence of that guilt alongside other evidence

that might be relevant to a finding of intellectual disability, and we

conclude as to Young specifically that he has failed to show that he

suffered any actual disability in presenting such a defense.

     (c)   Young argues that trying the questions of guilt and

intellectual disability together also wrongly suggested to the jury

                                 70
that a finding of intellectual disability would result in inadequate

punishment for the murder. As we discuss below in Division 34, the

trial court properly charged the jury in a manner that made clear

that, upon a finding of intellectual disability, Young would

nevertheless be placed in the custody of the Department of

Corrections.    Accordingly, we conclude that this argument is

unpersuasive.

     (d) Young also argues that trying the questions of guilt and

intellectual disability together deprived him of his ability to admit

his guilt, “contrary to his desire and explicit request to accept the

allegations of guilt.” However, as we make clear below in Division

29, it is untrue as a matter of fact that Young ever sought to plead

guilty to his charges other than as part of a plea bargain as to

sentencing, which, as we explained above in Division 26, the trial

court was not empowered to accept over the State’s objection.

     (e) In light of the foregoing discussion, and taking note of our

discussion above in Division 25 regarding what procedural

requirements are constitutionally required for intellectual disability

                                 71
claims, we conclude that the General Assembly’s chosen procedure

of trying intellectual disability claims together with the issue of guilt

is not unconstitutional. See Atkins, 536 U. S. at 317 (III) (“As was

our approach in Ford v. Wainwright, with regard to insanity, ‘we

leave to the States the task of developing appropriate ways to

enforce the constitutional restriction upon its execution of

sentences.’” (quoting Ford, 477 U. S. at 416 (V) (A) (plurality portion

of opinion))). Accordingly, we reaffirm this Court’s prior case law on

this issue. See King, 273 Ga. at 272 (27).

     28. Young argues that his constitutional rights were denied by

his being forced to speak to an expert witness designated by the trial

court as a precondition to presenting his own expert testimony in

support of his claim of intellectual disability. As discussed in detail

below, we conclude that the trial court had discretion in this matter,

but we further conclude that, because this claim was waived, we

need not determine whether that discretion was abused.

     (a) The circumstances concerning this claim began on June 2,

2011, when Young filed a notice regarding his intent to raise a

                                   72
mental health defense at trial. The notice stated: “[T]he defense

intends to raise the issue that the defendant or accused was insane,

mentally ill or mentally retarded at the time of the act or acts

charged against the accused.”

     On June 29, 2011, in response to this notice, the trial court

ordered an evaluation of Young regarding his competence to stand

trial and regarding his criminal responsibility as it related to the

“mental capacity to distinguish right from wrong” and any possible

“presence of a delusional compulsion.” On January 17, 2012, the

trial court conducted a hearing regarding the matter, and defense

counsel explained that Young had refused to speak to the expert

during the court-ordered evaluation, explaining that defense

counsel intended to argue at trial only intellectual disability and not

any other mental health claim and asserting that the facts of the

crimes were irrelevant to the question of intellectual disability. The

State countered that “the methods and manners and questions and

evaluations that are used” to evaluate possible intellectual disability

should be determined by the expert, that such an evaluation might

                                  73
need to include the circumstances of the crimes, that the trial court

had asked the expert to evaluate the general question of criminal

responsibility, and that any diagnosis of intellectual disability would

likely require the expert to consider and rule out other diagnoses.

The trial court indicated that it would issue another order for an

evaluation “for purposes of criminal responsibility and competency

to stand trial, with retardation as being the primary focus of that

evaluation.” The trial court then indicated its initial opinion that

any refusal of Young to answer questions put to him by the expert

would prevent his use of his own expert at trial, but it left the matter

somewhat in flux by stating: “So if we run up on that again, I’ll be

prepared to rule on it. We’ll have to just hear what is and is not

being answered by the defendant.” Young then asserted that the

statute    governing      intellectual    disability    claims     was

unconstitutional.   The trial court instructed defense counsel to

notify it if they had any concerns once the court issued its new

written order for an evaluation, and the court indicated that, if there

were concerns, it would conduct a hearing and “cross that bridge

                                  74
when we get there.”

     On January 17 and 23, 2012, Young filed motions claiming that

OCGA § 17-7-131 and Uniform Superior Court Rule 31.5 were

unconstitutional to the extent that they might require him to speak

to a mental health expert regarding the facts of the crimes. On

January 24, 2012, the trial court conducted another hearing on this

matter. The trial court maintained at the hearing that intellectual

disability was a continuing mental condition despite the fact that its

onset must be before the age of 18 for it to be given as a diagnosis,

that evidence of that condition throughout all of one’s life was

relevant to the question of whether one is intellectually disabled,

and that the facts of the crime therefore were also relevant to that

question. The trial court then issued an order for Young to be

evaluated by a mental health expert regarding his criminal

responsibility and his competence to stand trial. 19 On January 26

     19  With regard to this second order, which was issued after Young had
committed to the trial court that he would claim at trial only intellectual
disability and not insanity or incompetence, we query whether the order should
have omitted any reference to criminal responsibility and competence. While

                                     75
and 30, 2012, the trial court filed written orders denying Young’s

motions challenging OCGA § 17-7-131 and Uniform Superior Court

Rule 31.5. On January 30, 2012, Young filed a notice indicating that

he was withdrawing his previous notice of an intent to present

“testimony of an evaluating expert” at trial.

      (b) As the trial court correctly noted, and as we noted above in

Division 27 (a), this Court has held that

      evidence of a defendant’s crimes in a mental retardation
      trial may be admissible as probative evidence of the
      defendant’s intelligence if that evidence demonstrates his
      mental ability and adaptive skills, or is otherwise
      relevant to the question of whether he is mentally
      retarded.

Morrison, 276 Ga. at 831 (2). Cf. Moore, 139 SCt at 671-672 (III)

(stating that clinicians might find this type of evidence relevant).

We note, however, that in Morrison we relied on Zant v. Foster, in

which this Court held that, in determining the proper role of

evidence of a crime in a jury’s consideration of a claim of intellectual

we need not address this concern at length here, we recommend a
reexamination of Uniform Superior Court Rule 31.5 and the model order
provided in it, upon which the trial court’s order appears to have been based.
                                     76
disability, a trial court must exercise its discretion in weighing the

probative value of such evidence against “unfair prejudice.” Zant v.

Foster, 261 Ga. 450, 451-452 (4) (406 SE2d 74) (1991), overruled on

other grounds by State v. Patillo, 262 Ga. 259, 261 n.1 (417 SE2d

139) (1992).

     This Court has also held that a death penalty defendant who

wishes to support his or her claims at trial through expert mental

health testimony must submit to an examination by a mental health

expert selected by the State because of “‘the State’s overwhelming

difficulty in responding to the defense psychiatric testimony without

its own psychiatric examination of the accused.’” Jenkins v. State,

265 Ga. 539, 540-541 (3) (458 SE2d 477) (1995) (quoting Lynd v.

State, 262 Ga. 58, 64 (11) (414 SE2d 5) (1992) (citation and

punctuation omitted)). See also Nance v. State, 272 Ga. 217, 219-

220 (2) (526 SE2d 560) (2000) (citing Buchanan v. Kentucky, 483 U.

S. 402, 422 (III) (A) (107 SCt 2906, 97 LEd2d 336) (1987), and Estelle

v. Smith, 451 U. S. 454, 465 (II) (A) (2) (101 SCt 1866, 68 LE2d 359)

(1981), and holding that, “when a defendant must submit to a court-

                                 77
ordered mental health examination because he wishes to present

expert mental health testimony at his trial, the State expert may

only testify in rebuttal to the testimony of the defense expert or to

rebut the testimony of the defendant himself”). However, this Court

has also stated:

     In formulating the rule that a defendant in a case in
     which the State is seeking the death penalty must either
     cooperate in an evaluation by a mental health expert
     whose report will be given to the State or forfeit the right
     to present expert mental health testimony at trial, we
     have balanced the truth-seeking function of the courts,
     the defendant’s constitutionally-protected privilege
     against self-incrimination, and the State’s interest in
     having the ability to respond to the defendant’s expert
     mental health testimony with [its own] expert testimony.
     ...
     We have taken pains to ensure that the extent to which a
     defendant must waive his constitutionally-protected right
     to remain silent is no greater than is necessary to serve
     the purpose mandating the waiver: “to permit the State
     to formulate a response or a rebuttal to the testimony of
     the defendant’s mental health expert.”

State v. Johnson, 276 Ga. 78, 79 (2) (576 SE2d 831) (2003) (quoting

Nance, 272 Ga. at 219-220 (2)).

     In view of these prior holdings, we caution that a trial court

must exercise discretion in responding to a defense objection

                                  78
regarding the scope of questions to be asked in a court-ordered

mental health evaluation of alleged intellectual disability or in

responding to an objection to the scope of expert testimony based on

such an evaluation. We stress that an inquiry regarding the facts of

a defendant’s alleged crimes is not necessarily irrelevant in such an

evaluation by the State’s expert or the Court’s expert simply because

the defense and its own expert might think so. However, we also

note that the facts of the crime that would be relevant to alleged

intellectual disability often can be made known to a mental health

expert through sources other than the defendant’s own statements

and that a defendant often can be asked questions by an expert

regarding the defendant’s personal abilities as they relate to the

facts of the crimes without asking the defendant whether he or she

admits committing those crimes. 20            Nevertheless, we need not

      20 For example, the State argues that Young’s use of a GPS device to
navigate to the crime scene is evidence undermining his claim of intellectual
disability; however, we see no reason why Young could not have been asked by
the State’s expert generally about his ability to use a GPS device without being
asked to make a direct admission of guilt.

                                      79
consider whether the trial court properly exercised such discretion

in Young’s case, because, as we discuss below, we conclude that the

issue was waived.

      (c) On February 6, 2012, as jury selection was about to begin,

the District Attorney stated:

      [T]he state will agree not to use any of the statements that
      the defendant makes pertaining to what happened at the
      time of the crime in terms of proving his guilt or
      innocence, despite the fact that that handcuffs the state
      in using that evidence to prove whether or not he’s
      mentally retarded, we will put the defendant in a position
      now where the state will agree not to introduce any of that
      testimony and then let them still make the strategic
      choice that they want to make in terms of an expert.

The District Attorney further agreed that the trial court could order

its designated expert, who had already conducted an evaluation

without the benefit of any statements from Young about the crimes

and who had already submitted a report under seal, “not to ask any

questions about what Mr. Young did at the time of the offense.”21

      21 We note from our own review of the record that the expert’s sealed
report indicated that Young had refused to speak about the crimes at the
direction of his counsel, but we note that the expert was nevertheless able to
conduct psychological tests and to render an opinion, which was that Young
was not intellectually disabled.
                                     80
Young rejected the State’s offer based solely on the fact that it would

“prejudice[] the defense in [its] strategic decision making” to accept

the offer at that stage of the case; however, we note that Young made

no complaint regarding the availability of his own expert to testify

and made no motion for a continuance.               The State argued

persuasively in response that Young’s true motivation was the fact

that his own expert had tested his IQ as being 77, a fact that would

have been difficult to explain at trial. See Hall, 572 U. S. at 722 (III)

(D) (stating that “an individual with an IQ test score ‘between 70

and 75 or lower’ may show intellectual disability by presenting

additional evidence regarding difficulties in adaptive functioning”

(quoting Atkins, 536 U. S. at 309 n.5)); Raulerson, 928 F3d at 1008

(III) (C) (noting that “the Flynn effect adjusts for the empirical

observation that IQ scores are rising over time” but that “there is no

consensus about the Flynn effect among experts or among the

courts”). In any case, the trial court implicitly accepted the State’s

offer and explicitly noted Young’s rejection of that offer by stating:

“All right. We will note, of course, the state’s position as stated on

                                   81
the record. . . . [A]nd I will note the decision of the defense as to

how the mental retardation defense is to be asserted.” Accordingly,

we conclude that Young’s claim here has been waived for the

purposes of ordinary appellate review. See Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-

279 (6) (d).

     29. Young argues that he was forced to plead not guilty as a

condition of seeking a verdict of guilty but mentally retarded and

that such a requirement was unconstitutional and “prejudiced [him]

by creating a false impression for the jury, judicially-sanctioned,

that he did not accept responsibility and therefore felt no remorse.”

To the extent that Young is arguing that he was forced to plead not

guilty as a precondition of seeking a decision by a jury of whether he

was intellectually disabled, his claim is not supported factually by

the record.

     To support such a claim, Young relies on the transcript of a

pretrial hearing held on whether he was required to speak to the

State’s expert about the facts of the crime as a precondition to

presenting his own expert testimony on his alleged intellectual

                                 82
disability. However, a review of the full transcript reveals that

Young was not willing to plead guilty as part of a jury trial. Defense

counsel made comments indicating his hope that the jury would find

Young guilty but mentally retarded, but those comments never

communicated a desire to enter a non-negotiated guilty plea.

Instead, defense counsel stated: “I mean, essentially we would be

happy to do so [plead guilty] in exchange for a sentence that we could

agree upon.” We also note that Young never moved the trial court

to allow him to change the not guilty plea that he had entered and

signed on the indictment.      Indeed, even now on appeal, Young

admits that his goal at this hearing was not to enter a guilty plea in

advance of a jury trial, as he states: “In this case, defense counsel

urged the court to allow Young to enter a plea of Guilty But Mentally

Retarded in exchange for an agreed upon sentence.” Accordingly,

we conclude that Young never actually requested that he be allowed

to enter a non-negotiated plea of guilty, with or without an

associated claim of intellectual disability.

                                  83
     30.   Young argues that the trial court erred by excluding

testimony from three witnesses on the subject of his alleged

intellectual disability. We see no error.

     (a) During defense counsel’s direct examination of a social

worker from Young’s high school who had known Young and his

family since Young was a young child, defense counsel asked the

witness whether and how he had “ever come into the[] lives” of

Young’s brothers and sisters. The State objected that the testimony

sought was not relevant, and a bench conference was held and then

explained later in detail on the record by the trial court and the

parties.   Defense counsel explained that he had been seeking

testimony showing that Young’s siblings had been in special

education. Defense counsel conceded that it was “not universally

accepted” in the mental health profession that there was a genetic

component to intellectual disability, and it was not disputed that the

witness was not qualified to testify on the matter as an expert;

however, defense counsel argued that, “in the general community,

people are aware that certain diseases such as mental retardation,

                                  84
such as all different kinds of diseases, are genetic in nature.”

Nevertheless, defense counsel also stated immediately after the trial

court announced its ruling:      “I am certainly not making any

assertion that anyone in Mr. Young’s family is mentally retarded.”

Under these circumstances, we see no abuse of discretion in the trial

court’s sustaining the State’s objection. See Watson v. State, 278 Ga.

763, 771 (10) (604 SE2d 804) (2004) (holding that the question of

relevance is entrusted to a trial court’s discretion and holding: “The

proffered evidence in this case was too threadbare to be

admissible.”); cf. Wilson v. State, 233 Ga. 479, 481 (3) (211 SE2d 757)

(1975) (holding that it was not improper for a non-expert to testify

to a relevant factual matter within his personal knowledge).

     (b)   Pretermitting Young’s likely waiver of the issue, we

conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by refusing

to allow one of Young’s former high school coaches to provide

speculative testimony about what Young’s team members thought

of him or about whether the team members wished that they could

be present at Young’s trial. Instead, the trial court properly focused

                                  85
the witness’s attention on his personal observations regarding

Young’s interactions with his teammates. Cf. Mathis v. State, 291

Ga. 268, 270 (2) (728 SE2d 661) (2010) (addressing improper

testimony that “was based not on [the witness’s] personal knowledge

but rather on hearsay”).

     (c) Another of Young’s former high school coaches testified that

Norfolk State College had regularly given “the opportunity to

potential athletes to be admitted on a probationary status,” that

Young had “only lasted a short while” at the college, that “the idea

wasn’t so much for [Young] to be a four-year college graduate” but

instead “was to hopefully improve his situation and to get him out

of dodge,” that “Norfolk State was giving him an opportunity to try

to make it in school, to try to better himself,” but that “[f]ootball was

the whole idea.” However, when the witness began to explain in

more detail about what happened regarding the college when “they

br[ought] you in,” the State objected to “any sort of speculation about

this” but conceded that the witness “c[ould] testify to personal

knowledge about this situation.” Defense counsel replied, “Sure.”

                                   86
The trial court then stated that it was sustaining the objection and

directed defense counsel to “focus in a little more.” The witness then

testified:   “[Young] got in because we had a contact there who

recognized his football ability.” The State objected, stating that a

foundation should be shown for any personal knowledge of the

witness on the subject, and the trial court instructed defense counsel

to “go a little more foundational with that” and to “[a]llow the

witness to explain his knowledge and how he gained it and so forth.”

Defense counsel again replied, “Sure.” Pretermitting the possible

waiver of the issue by Young, we conclude that the trial court did

not abuse its discretion in the manner in which it handled the

State’s objections regarding this witness. Cf. Mathis, 291 Ga. at 270

(2).

       31. Young argues that the State presented testimony from

three of his co-workers at a food-canning company that the State

knew from Young’s employment records to be false. See Napue v.

Illinois, 360 U. S. 264, 269 (79 SCt 1173, 3 LE2d 1217) (1959). These

co-workers testified at trial in the State’s rebuttal case in the

                                 87
guilt/innocence phase, where Young’s alleged intellectual disability

was to be decided, that Young was “good at his job,” was one of the

“best operators” of the can-labeling equipment, was not “a problem

employee,” was “there every day, pretty much,” “seemed to do fine,”

“was at work on time and everything,” and was “always on time.”

From the 184 pages of Young’s employment records spanning ten

years, Young’s brief points to “three suspensions, one lasting an

entire week, twenty-nine unexcused absences, twenty-seven

violations for lateness, and two warnings,” to a notice of “poor job

performance because of inattention, neglect or other non-deliberate

actions,” and to a notice regarding Young’s third work suspension

indicating that he would be terminated if he had an additional

infraction.

     In his response brief, the Attorney General notes that this

“averages out to roughly a little less than three unexcused absences

and three violations for lateness per year.” Attempting to emphasize

the gravity of the negative notations in his work records, Young cites

the vague trial testimony of one of his co-workers that, “if you

                                 88
accumulate up to, like, eight points, you get your terminated [sic]

from the job.” But the jury was aware at trial that Young was never

terminated, and even now Young cites part of his work records

showing that eight points only warranted a suspension. We also

note that one of the co-workers testified that the point system “had

nothing to do with the labeling part of it,” which is borne out in the

records and suggests that there is no reason to doubt the co-workers’

testimony regarding Young’s ability to perform his assigned work.

Upon reviewing the co-workers’ trial testimony and the ten years of

work records submitted by Young on motion for new trial, the trial

court found: “The defendant’s personnel records do not establish as

fact that the testimony of the defendant’s coworkers and supervisors

was knowingly and willfully false. . . .” We agree, and, therefore,

Young’s claim here fails.

     32. Young argues that the State made improper arguments

regarding his alleged intellectual disability. First, we hold that this

claim has been waived for the purposes of ordinary appellate review,

because Young did not raise any related objections at trial. See

                                  89
Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d). Second, as we discuss below, the

contested arguments were not improper.

      (a) Young contends that the State’s argument placed “undue

emphasis on Young’s perceived adaptive strengths, arguing that

relative strengths could overcome adaptive deficits,” and that the

State’s argument improperly relied on lay stereotypes. We disagree.

      We note that it was the psychiatrist presented by the State 22

who set forth the areas of adaptive skills “listed in the DSM-IV-TR,”

an authoritative text in the field of mental health, and who, using a

demonstrative exhibit without any objection from Young, explained

the areas of adaptive skills “utilized by the American Academy of

Mental Retardation.” 23 On cross-examination by Young, the State’s

psychiatrist also explained the three areas of adaptive skills used by

      22 The State’s psychiatrist, unlike the expert designated pretrial by the
trial court whose report remained under seal, testified that he had never
examined Young and had not reached a diagnosis regarding Young’s alleged
intellectual disability.

      23Young assails the appropriateness of the diagnostic questions listed on
this demonstrative exhibit. However, the State’s psychiatrist explained that
these questions were “some suggest[ed] questions that they have for looking at
those particular skills area[s].”
                                      90
the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental

Disabilities and the fact that a person would only need to have a

deficit in one of those three areas to qualify for a diagnosis of mental

retardation.

      Notably, as the State did later in its closing argument, Young

attempted in his cross-examination of the State’s psychiatrist to

emphasize specific things regarding Young’s past behaviors and

activities and how they might be relevant to the areas of adaptive

skills.   Even more notably, the State’s psychiatrist answered

affirmatively when Young asked whether “the DSM says that the

focus is on the deficits,” when Young asked whether, “if someone had

particular strengths in any of these [areas of adaptive skills], they

could still be classified as mentally retarded,” when Young asked if

it would be “irresponsible” to “ever say that[,] because [a person] can

do X, one thing, that they are not mentally retarded,” and when

Young asked whether “what you’re looking for is significant deficits

in at least two” of the areas of adaptive skills when considering the

list used by the AAMR. The State’s psychiatrist also described how

                                  91
intellectually disabled persons often “try to act normal” and engage

in “parroting behavior,” that some of them are able to interact

appropriately, that “they may not look mentally retarded on the

surface,” that they may appear “street smart,” and that they may be

able to do some tasks normally. See Moore, 139 SCt at 669 (I) (citing

Moore, 137 SCt at 1051-1052 (IV) (C) (1)) (holding that the procedure

for considering alleged intellectual disability must be based on the

medical community’s diagnostic standards).

     Having itself presented an expert who carefully explained the

proper analysis of areas of adaptive skills under prevailing

professional standards, the State gave a closing argument that

attempted to highlight various parts of the evidence showing

Young’s lack of deficits in those areas. Upon our review of the State’s

arguments at issue, we conclude that, although at times somewhat

impassioned, they were not improper. See Cullen v. Pinholster, 563

U. S. 170, 200 (III) (D) (1) n.19 (131 SCt 1388, 179 LE2d 557) (2011)

(noting that the prosecuting attorney cannot be expected to argue

the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendant); Ellington,

                                  92
292 Ga. at 143 (9) (c) (noting the latitude granted to the parties in

making their closing arguments), disapproved on other grounds by

Willis, 304 Ga. at 706 (11) (a) n.3.

     (b) As we explained in Division 27 (a), evidence regarding a

defendant’s actions during and around the time of a crime can be

probative on the question of whether a defendant lacks deficits in

specific areas of adaptive behavior. See Morrison, 276 Ga. at 831

(2). See also Moore, 139 SCt at 671-672 (III) (stating that clinicians

might find this type of evidence relevant). Accordingly, we hold that

the State did not act improperly by making arguments regarding

Young’s alleged intellectual disability based on the evidence of how

he carried out his crimes.

     (c) The State did not argue improperly by emphasizing the fact

that there were no records showing any specific IQ score for Young,

that the range of scores presumed by the school employees who

testified on Young’s behalf did not necessarily indicate intellectual

disability, and that any additional IQ test that might be given to

Young would “probably” show that, while not one of “the brightest

                                  93
bulbs on the tree,” Young was not intellectually disabled.        See

Ellington, 292 Ga. at 143 (9) (c) (noting the latitude granted to the

parties in making their closing arguments).

     33. Young argues that a particular juror tainted the jury with

extrajudicial evidence and that the jury engaged in premature

deliberations. As explained below, we reject both arguments.

     Young questioned the juror during voir dire about his

stepdaughter, and the juror disclosed that his stepdaughter had

“special needs,” that she was 19 years old but at times was like a 7

or 8 year old, that he had been her caretaker for 18 years, that her

need for special education became apparent at the age of 3 or 4 years

old, that she had been slow to learn to speak, that her disability was

not apparent from her physical appearance, and that she had been

diagnosed as brain damaged. Young did not move to have the juror

excused for cause.

     In support of this claim, which Young also raised in his motion

for new trial, he relies on the testimony of an alternate juror. See

Collins v. State, 308 Ga. 608, 610 (2) (842 SE2d 811) (2020) (noting

                                 94
that juror testimony is permitted regarding extraneous prejudicial

information). But see United States v. Siegelman, 467 FSupp.2d

1253, 1279 (M.D. Ala. 2006) (expressing doubt that juror testimony

regarding alleged premature deliberations is admissible).         The

alternate juror testified that the juror in question entered the jury

room after some testimony about intellectual disability, that he

appeared to be “agitated,” and that he stated to several other jurors

that “he knew what a disabled person was because his

[step]daughter was disabled and she had to have a lot of care.” The

alternate juror testified that the juror in question “didn’t actually

come out and say” that Young was not disabled, but she testified

that “it was basically like he could tell the difference between

someone that had a disability and one that didn’t,” and she

concluded, “I don’t think he felt like [Young] had one.” The alternate

juror testified that the juror in question was in the same corner of

the jury room and with the same few other jurors that he had been

with during other breaks, but she added that the juror was not loud,

that the other jurors did not gather around him, and that she never

                                 95
heard jurors, including those who were with the juror in question,

deliberating or expressing an opinion about whether or not Young

was intellectually disabled. In its order on Young’s motion for new

trial, the trial court found that the juror in question “was making

statements concerning his life experience that apparently touched

on the testimony he had just heard,” that doing so was

“understandable in light of his experience with his step daughter as

revealed to counsel in voir dire,” and that “[h]e expressed no opinion

on any trial issues such as guilt or innocence or the mental condition

of the defendant.” The trial court further found that “these issues

were not discussed, talked about, or deliberated” and concluded that

the matter did “not constitute premature deliberation.” The trial

court also concluded that the statements to several jurors by the

juror in question “d[id] not constitute extra judicial evidence.”

     (a) In light of the foregoing, we accept the trial court’s findings

of fact and agree with the trial court’s conclusion that no premature

deliberations occurred. See Sims v. State, 266 Ga. 417, 419-420 (3)

(467 SE2d 574) (1996).

                                  96
     (b) We also agree with the trial court’s conclusion that the

statements by the juror in question, which regarded matters that

were discussed at length by him in his voir dire, did not warrant a

new trial. See Martin, 298 Ga. at 292-294 (16) (“Having accepted

Juror Lemmond as a juror, Martin cannot now complain that her

knowledge drawn from her past employment assisted the other

jurors in considering the evidence and arguments made by the

parties at trial.”), disapproved on other grounds by Willis, 304 Ga.

at 706 (11) (a) n.3.

     34. The trial court charged the jury, in accordance with OCGA

§ 17-7-131 (b) (3) (C), that a verdict of guilty but mentally retarded

would result in Young’s being “placed in the custody of the

Department of Corrections,” which would monitor his “mental

health needs,” and that, “at the discretion of the Department of

Corrections,” he could be “referr[ed] for temporary hospitalization at

a facility operated by the Department of Behavioral Health and

Developmental Disabilities.” The trial court correctly refused to

include Young’s requested additional charge that, upon such a

                                 97
verdict, “the defendant w[ould] be sentenced to imprisonment for

life.” The charge as given was not misleading, because it clearly

stated that the DOC would have custody of Young. Furthermore,

this Court has held that charges prior to a guilty verdict generally

should not give any instruction regarding possible sentences. See

Patillo, 262 Ga. at 260. Although the charge prescribed by the Code

and given in Young’s case is a limited exception to this general rule

that is designed to prevent jurors from speculating about a

defendant’s “immediate release” upon a finding of mental

retardation, the additional charge requested by Young about a life

sentence would have simply drawn undue attention to the issue of

sentencing and would have raised questions such as whether or not

a life sentence would carry the possibility of parole.

     35. Young argues that the trial court erred by denying five

requests to charge on the subject of intellectual disability, and he

highlights in particular his requested charges that the jury could

find Young intellectually disabled even if it found adequate

functioning in some or many areas of adaptive functioning, that

                                  98
“[i]ndividuals may have capabilities and strengths that are

independent of their mental retardation,” and that such “abilities do

not exclude a diagnosis of mental retardation.”       The trial court

correctly instructed the jury on the statutory definition of “mental

retardation,” charging as follows:      “The term mentally retarded

means     having   significantly   subaverage   general    intellectual

functioning resulting in or associated with impairments in adaptive

behavior that became clear during the developmental period.” See

OCGA § 17-7-131 (a) (3) (prior to an amendment in 2017 adopting

the term “intellectual disability” and renumbering subdivisions);

OCGA § 17-7-131 (a) (2) (after the amendment in 2017). We agree

with the trial court that the additional, detailed charges requested

by Young, which were drawn from two professional texts and a

federal district court opinion, were not incorrect statements but

nevertheless were more matters of evidence rather than legal

principles suitable for jury charges. 24 Accordingly, we conclude that

     24We note that, through questioning both by the State on direct
examination and by Young on cross-examination, the State’s psychiatrist

                                   99
the trial court did not err in refusing to give them. See Massey v.

State, 270 Ga. 76, 78 (4) (c) (508 SE2d 149) (1998) (“It is axiomatic

that a trial court does not err in refusing to give a requested

instruction in the exact language requested where the charges given

in their totality substantially and adequately cover the principles

contained in the requested charge.”).

      36. Young made no objection to the trial court’s charging the

jury, according to OCGA § 16-2-3, that “[e]very person is presumed

to be of sound mind.” Therefore, his claim on appeal that the charge

should not have been given is subject to review only for whether

there was plain error that affected substantial rights and under our

Sentence Review below regarding Young’s death sentence.                   See

OCGA § 17-8-58 (b); Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d).

Nevertheless, we conclude that the trial court did not err under even

the ordinary standard of review, because the charge was entirely

consistent with the fact that, under Georgia law as we affirm it

testified about the same diagnostic principles that Young asked the trial court
to address in the jury charges.
                                     100
above, Young bore the burden of proving his alleged intellectual

disability.   See Medina, 505 U. S. at 452 (II) (“In light of our

determination that the allocation of the burden of proof to the

defendant does not offend due process, it is not difficult to dispose of

petitioner’s challenge to the presumption of competence imposed

[under California law].”).

     37. Young argues that the pre-printed verdict form used in the

guilt/innocence phase of his trial, coupled with the trial court’s

charges to the jury, would have misled the jury regarding its duties

in considering his alleged intellectual disability. See Rowland v.

State, 306 Ga. 59, 67-68 (6) (829 SE2d 81) (2019) (holding that a

verdict form should be considered in conjunction with the jury

charges); Rucker v. State, 270 Ga. 431, 435 (5) (510 SE2d 816) (1999)

(holding that the use of a verdict form is error if it “would mislead

jurors of reasonable understanding”). In Young’s case, the verdict

form and the jury charges made clear that the jury was to select, for

each of the charges in the indictment, only one of the three verdict

options: not guilty, guilty, or guilty but mentally retarded. The

                                  101
charges, read as a whole, also made clear that no verdict could be

reached and entered on the verdict form unless it was unanimous.

Furthermore, despite the trial court’s somewhat confusing

statement at one point that the jury should determine which of the

three verdicts applied if it found that Young was “suffering mental

retardation,” the charges as a whole indicated that the jury should

reach a unanimous conclusion regarding one option to the exclusion

of the other two.

      Finally, after first stating that the jury would have the “duty”

to find Young guilty but mentally retarded if it so found beyond a

reasonable doubt, the charges, in tracking the language of the

pattern jury charge, later stated as to each charge that the jury

would be “authorized” to enter such a verdict upon such a finding.

See Suggested Pattern Jury Instructions, Vol. II: Criminal Cases, §

3.80.50.25 However, in light of the clear charges to the jury that any

verdict must be unanimous and in light of a charge that individual

      25In identifying no reversible error, we do not suggest that this pattern
charge could not be improved.

                                     102
jurors “should never surrender an honest opinion in order to be

congenial or to reach a verdict,” we conclude that the jury would not

have been misled regarding its duties by the use of the word

“authorized.”26 Cf. Cheddersingh v. State, 290 Ga. 680, 681-682 (2)

(724 SE2d 366) (2012) (holding that a preprinted verdict form and

jury charges should be considered as a whole and concluding that

the verdict form might have led the jury to believe that it must

conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not

guilty in order to acquit).

      Young raised no objection to either the charges at issue or to

the verdict form. Therefore, the issues here are subject to review

only for whether there was plain error that affected substantial

rights and under our Sentence Review below regarding Young’s

death sentence. See OCGA § 17-8-58 (b); Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-

      26  Young argues that the jury’s notes to the trial court discussed in
Division 45 show that it struggled with the issue of his alleged intellectual
disability. Contrary to this argument, even assuming that such a fact is
relevant at all to evaluating the charges and verdict form, we conclude that
this fact shows that the jurors did indeed follow the trial court’s charge on not
surrendering individual opinions simply to reach a verdict.
                                      103
279 (6) (d). To show plain error, an appellant must show: (1) there

was no affirmative waiver; (2) the error was obvious; (3) the

instruction likely affected the outcome of the proceedings; and (4)

the error seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public

reputation of the judicial proceedings. See Beasley v. State, 305 Ga.

231, 236 (3) (824 SE2d 311) (2019). In light of the discussion above,

and pretermitting the questions of whether any error here was

affirmatively waived or should have been obvious to the trial court,

we conclude that the outcome in Young’s case was not likely affected

and that any error did not seriously affect the fairness, integrity, or

public reputation of his proceedings.

                Issues Related to the Sentencing Phase

     38.     We see no merit to Young’s arguments, including his

arguments regarding the decline in the frequency of death

sentences,     that   Georgia’s    death    penalty      statutes   are

unconstitutional in that they fail to sufficiently narrow the

categories of murder eligible for the death penalty and thereby

result in arbitrary and capricious death sentences. See Ellington,

                                  104
292 Ga. at 116 (3) (b), disapproved on other grounds by Willis, 304

Ga. at 706 (11) (a) n.3.

     39. Young argues that the trial court improperly closed the

courthouse during the sentencing phase and thereby violated his

constitutional rights. See Waller v. Georgia, 467 U. S. 39, 46 (II) (A)

(104 SCt 2210, 81 LE2d 31) (1984) (discussing the right to a public

trial). The day in question was a furlough day for county employees;

however, the trial court informed the parties that it would be having

court on the furlough day and that the courthouse would be open to

members of the public who wished to attend. On the furlough day,

the trial court noted on the record that bailiffs had been “instructed

at the front door that if anyone comes in looking for the, for a closed

office, to tell them, but the building is open to the public.” Young

did not object to holding the trial on the furlough day. Testimony

from officers confirmed that an entrance was open and that no one

was turned away. We conclude that this issue was waived for the

purposes of ordinary appellate review by Young’s failure to object in

the trial court. See Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d). Furthermore,

                                 105
the record supports the trial court’s finding that the courtroom

remained open with access freely available to the public. Cf. State

v. Brown, 293 Ga. 493, 493-496 (1) (748 SE2d 376) (2013)

(addressing a courthouse that was accessible only to persons with a

special relationship to court personnel).

     40.   Young argues that the trial court erred by overruling

certain objections to the State’s victim impact testimony. We have

held previously that victim impact testimony should not include

characterizations of the crime or the defendant and that it should

not include any statements regarding the appropriate sentence. See

Bryant, 288 Ga. at 895 (15) (a).       We have held that testimony

regarding the emotional impact on the victim’s family and the

community must be controlled within the trial court’s discretion but

is not categorically improper. See Walker v. State, 282 Ga. 774, 779-

780 (11) (653 SE2d 439) (2007), disapproved on other grounds by

Ledford v. State, 289 Ga. 70, 85 (14) (709 SE2d 239) (2011),

disapproved on other grounds by Willis, 304 Ga. at 706 (11) (a) n.3.

We have held that victim impact testimony should not encourage the

                                 106
jury to base its sentencing decision on factors such as “class or

wealth.” Livingston, 264 Ga. at 404 (1) (b). We have held that

“religious   references”   in   victim   impact   testimony   are   not

categorically prohibited but instead are entrusted to the trial court’s

discretion. Pickren v. State, 269 Ga. 453, 454-455 (1) (500 SE2d 566)

(1998). We have also held that victim impact testimony may include

evidence such as video recordings or photographs “of the victim

alive.” Tollette v. State, 280 Ga. 100, 105 (11) (621 SE2d 742) (2005).

Finally, we have held that “even some legitimate victim impact

evidence could inflame or unduly prejudice a jury if admitted in

excess.” Livingston, 264 Ga. at 404 (1) (b). Applying these various

principles, and pretermitting the fact that Young waived much of

this claim by failing to object or by failing to obtain rulings, we

conclude that the specific portions of the victim impact testimony

that Young complains about on appeal were not improper. See

Walker, 282 Ga. at 779 (11).

     41. Young argues that the trial court prevented him from

asking certain witnesses in the sentencing phase about the impact

                                  107
that Young’s execution would have on them. We conclude that, by

agreeing first to a general set of questions to be asked of witnesses

and then agreeing to additional questions to be asked of close family

members, Young waived this claim for the purposes of ordinary

appellate review.     See Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d).

Furthermore, we conclude that the trial court’s approach to this

matter was not an abuse of discretion, because the court accepted

the fact that a witness with especially intimate knowledge of a

defendant can sometimes shed light on the defendant’s character by

asking for mercy and by testifying about how the loss of the

defendant would affect the witness personally and thus permitted

some questions on the matter, while it also set reasonable limits on

which witnesses were in a suitable position to give such testimony.

See Bryant, 288 Ga. at 899 (16) (holding that “mitigating evidence

that does not focus on the character, background, or offense of the

particular defendant on trial is properly excluded”); Barnes v. State,

269 Ga. 345, 359 (27) (496 SE2d 674) (1998) (“In Georgia, mitigation

evidence that relates to the individual defendant and not to the

                                 108
death penalty in general is admissible.”); Childs v. State, 257 Ga.

243, 256 (19) (b) (357 SE2d 48) (1987) (holding that, “although a

defendant may present witnesses who know and care for him and

are willing on that basis to ask for mercy on his behalf, a defendant

may not present witnesses to testify merely to their religious or

philosophical attitudes about the death penalty”); Romine v. State,

251 Ga. 208, 217 (11) (305 SE2d 93) (1983) (“Ralph’s testimony that

he did not wish to see his grandson die would have been admissible

in mitigation. . . .”).

      42. Young argues that it was unconstitutional for his jury to

consider alleged non-statutory aggravating circumstances without

being instructed that such circumstances must be found beyond a

reasonable doubt. First, this specific issue was not raised in the trial

court and therefore has been waived for the purposes of ordinary

appellate review.         See Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d).

Furthermore, contrary to Young’s argument, “the finding of a non-

statutory    aggravating     circumstance   does   not   increase   the

defendant’s maximum potential punishment” and therefore does not

                                   109
have to be found beyond a reasonable doubt. Ellington, 292 Ga. at

116-117 (3) (d) (citing Ring v. Arizona, 536 U. S. 584, 609 (II) (122

SCt 2428, 153 LE2d 556) (2002)), disapproved on other grounds by

Willis, 304 Ga. at 706 (11) (a) n.3.

     43. We reject Young’s invitation to overrule our precedent

holding that this Court’s proportionality review under OCGA § 17-

10-35 (c) (3) can never “‘increase . . . the maximum punishment’” and

therefore does not have to be performed by a jury under the beyond

a reasonable doubt standard. Willis, 304 Ga. at 693 (3) (c) (citation

omitted).

     44. During sentencing phase deliberations, the jury sent the

trial court a note asking if there is “an automatic appeal when the

death penalty is given,” and the trial court responded: “You are to

decide this case based upon the evidence, the law and the

instructions given to you. You are not to concern yourselves with

matters of this nature.” Young’s complaint regarding this response

was waived for the purposes of ordinary appellate review by Young’s

failure to object at trial. See Martin, 298 Ga. at 278-279 (6) (d).

                                  110
Furthermore, we conclude that the trial court’s response was not

unconstitutional as Young argues, because it did not suggest that

“the responsibility for determining the appropriateness of the

defendant’s death rest[ed] elsewhere.” Caldwell v. Mississippi, 472

U. S. 320, 329 (III) (105 SCt 2633, 86 LE2d 231) (1985) (reversing

where the prosecutor argued that any death sentence would be

reviewed by the appellate court for correctness).

     45. Young argues that the trial court erred regarding two other

notes from the jury during its sentencing phase deliberations. As

explained below, we see no error.

     (a)   About an hour and 45 minutes into sentencing phase

deliberations, a juror sent a note to the trial court stating: “I am

asking to be dismiss [sic] as a juror. I have lots of questions and due

to those I cann’t [sic] say yes to death penalty.” The trial court did

not abuse its discretion by refusing Young’s request to declare a jury

deadlock and impose a sentence of life without parole, as it was not

clear at this early stage that additional deliberations would be

fruitless. The trial court also did not abuse its discretion by refusing

                                  111
Young’s request “that the Court instruct the juror that each person’s

individual, moral assessment is to be respected.” Instead, the trial

court acted properly in simply letting the jury continue to deliberate

under the court’s original instructions, when there was no reason for

the court to believe that the juror had misunderstood them, while

announcing that it would take further action if the jury later notified

the court of a deadlock. See Porras v. State, 295 Ga. 412, 419-420

(3) (761 SE2d 6) (2014) (holding that a trial court did not err by

ordering the jury to continue deliberating). Cf. Anderson v. State,

262 Ga. 26, 27 (1) (c) (413 SE2d 732) (1992) (“The record in this case

indicates that the jury was confused about the charge. No remedial

instruction was given. . . .”).

     (b) Later, the jury sent a note informing the trial court that it

was deadlocked eleven to one in favor of a death sentence and

asking, “What is the next step?” At that point, which was after less

than four hours of deliberations, the trial court properly charged the

jury consistently with this Court’s suggested modified Allen charge

for such circumstances, instructing them (1) that each juror must

                                  112
agree in order for the jury to return a verdict, (2) that jurors have a

duty to consult one another, (3) that each juror must decide the case

for himself or herself, (4) that a juror should not hesitate to

reexamine his or her views and change an opinion if convinced that

it is erroneous, and (5) that no juror should surrender his or her

views solely based on other jurors’ opinions or for the mere purpose

of returning a verdict. See Romine v. State, 256 Ga. 521, 527 (1) (d)

(350 SE2d 446) (1986). See also Allen v. United States, 164 U. S. 492

(17 SCt 154, 41 LE 528) (1896).          We disagree with Young’s

contention that the charge given was coercive or improperly singled

out the one juror who had not voted for death, even accounting for

the fact that the jury had volunteered in its note the nature and

breakdown of its deadlock. Cf. Smith v. State, 302 Ga. 717, 721 (2)

(808 SE2d 661) (2017) (providing guidance on determining if an

Allen charge was coercive).

     46. We reject Young’s argument that his right to be present

was denied in the sentencing phase during bench conferences in

which the juror notes regarding an alleged jury deadlock were

                                 113
discussed. We conclude that the trial court did not err in its order

denying Young’s motion for new trial in concluding that he was

aware of the subject matter of the bench conferences, that the

decisions made at them were announced in open court, that Young

never personally voiced any concerns, and, accordingly, that Young

personally acquiesced in the waiver of his presence that was made

by his counsel.    Cf. Champ, 310 Ga. at 834-848 (2) (a, b, and c)

(remanding where the trial court had not ruled on the defendant’s

acquiescence in counsel’s waiver).

                           Appellate Issues

     47. Young argues that he is entitled to a new trial because a

photograph of him as an infant or toddler was admitted at trial but

is not included in the appellate record, despite the best efforts of his

counsel on remand from this Court to complete the record, including

a trip to New Jersey. First, Young has failed to show why he could

not have obtained an adequate description of the photograph, with

or without an intervening trip to New Jersey, in an order from the

trial court pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-41 (f). Second, we conclude that

                                     114
a photograph of Young as a very young child would not assist our

appellate review. See West v. State, 306 Ga. 783, 787 (2) (833 SE2d

501) (2019); Brockman v. State, 292 Ga. 707, 716 (5) (b) (739 SE2d

332) (2013) (denying relief where the defendant failed to show that

he was harmed or prevented from raising any viable issue on appeal

by the omission from the record of four exhibits, including three

mitigation photographs).

     48. Young argues that his convictions and sentences should be

reversed based on a cumulative error analysis. Pretermitting the

question of how suitable the various issues are for such a review and

what rule this Court should adopt in that regard in the future, we

hold that the cumulative effect of the several instances of

constitutional violations and trial court error that we have assumed

to exist above does not warrant relief under any rule that we might

adopt. See State v. Lane, 308 Ga. 10, 14 (1), 17-18 (1), 21-22 (4) (838

SE2d 808) (2020) (holding that “Georgia courts . . . should consider

collectively the prejudicial effect of trial court errors and any

deficient performance by counsel — at least where those errors by

                                 115
the court and counsel involve evidentiary issues” but declining to

decide “exactly how multiple standards may interact under

cumulative review of different types of errors”). 27

                             Sentence Review

      49.   Upon our review of the entire record, especially those

portions relevant to the matters noted above that were waived for

the purposes of ordinary appellate review, we conclude that the

sentence of death in this case was not imposed under the influence

of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor. See OCGA § 17-

10-35 (c) (1).    See also Martin, 298 Ga. at 279 (6) (d) (stating

regarding this Court’s review under OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (1): “That

plenary review guards against any obvious impropriety at trial,

whether objected to or not, that in reasonable probability led to the

jury’s decision to impose a death sentence.”).

      50.   In its sentencing verdict, the jury found as statutory

aggravating circumstances that the murder was committed while

       Our analysis here includes the issues addressed in Divisions 5, 16, and
      27

37. However, we reiterate that we are not announcing here a rule regarding
what types of error should be considered cumulatively.
                                     116
Young was engaged in the commission of burglary and aggravated

battery and that the murder was outrageously or wantonly vile,

horrible, or inhuman in that it involved torture and aggravated

battery to the victim before death and involved the defendant’s

depravity of mind. See OCGA § 17-10-30 (b) (2), (7). Upon our

review of the record, we conclude that the evidence presented at trial

was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find beyond a

reasonable doubt the existence of these statutory aggravating

circumstances. See Ring, 536 U. S. 584, passim; Jackson, 443 U. S.

at 319 (III) (B); OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (2) (requiring a review of the

statutory aggravating circumstances found by the jury); UAP IV (B)

(2) (providing that, in all death penalty cases, this Court will

determine whether the verdicts are supported by the evidence).

     51. The Georgia Code requires this Court, in the direct appeal

of a death sentence, to determine “[w]hether the sentence of death

is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar

cases, considering both the crime and the defendant.” OCGA § 17-

10-35 (c) (3). As discussed below, we reject Young’s arguments that

                                 117
our proportionality review is unconstitutional or otherwise

improper, we reject his claim that he is categorically exempt from a

death sentence based on his claim of intellectual disability, and we

conclude   that   his   death   sentence   is   not     disproportionate

punishment.

     (a)    Contrary     to   Young’s   arguments,       “[t]his   Court’s

proportionality review is not inadequate under statutory or

constitutional standards,” Ellington, 292 Ga. at 117 (3) (e),

disapproved on other grounds by Willis, 304 Ga. at 706 n.3, and

there is no need for this Court to remand this case to the trial court

for further proceedings regarding this issue.         In support of this

holding, we set forth our reasoning regarding Young’s specific

arguments in more detail below.

     (i) As this Court has explained previously, our proportionality

review

     concerns whether the death penalty ‘is excessive per se’ or
     if the death penalty is ‘only rarely imposed . . . or
     substantially out of line’ for the type of crime involved and
     not whether there ever have been sentences less than
     death imposed for similar crimes.

                                 118
Gissendaner, 272 Ga. at 717 (19) (a) (citations omitted).

Furthermore, as noted previously in a concurrence to the affirmance

of the soundness of this Court’s proportionality review:

     The Court does not determine whether the death sentence
     under review represents a large or small percentage of
     sentences in factually comparable cases. Rather, the
     Court examines the sentence on appeal to ensure that it
     is not an anomaly or aberration.

Terrell v. State, 276 Ga. 34, 46 (572 SE2d 595) (2002) (Fletcher, C.J.,

concurring).   Thus, an argument like Young’s highlighting the

infrequency of death sentences in Georgia, particularly regarding

cases involving crimes that are arguably somewhat similar to his

and defendants that are arguably somewhat similar to him, “while

not irrelevant, cannot alone compel a finding of unlawful

disproportionality.” Gissendaner, 272 Ga. at 717 (19) (a). Instead,

“[t]his Court views a particular crime against the backdrop of all

similar cases in Georgia in determining if a given sentence is

excessive per se or substantially out of line.” Id. (emphasis supplied).

We reaffirm these aspects of our proportionality review.

                                  119
      (ii) We reaffirm this Court’s previous holding that, “[b]ecause

it is a jury’s reaction to the evidence before it that concerns this

Court in its proportionality review, it is irrelevant if the sentences

in the cases used for comparison were already at the time, or later

are, reversed for reasons unrelated to the juries’ reactions to the

evidence.” Davis v. Turpin, 273 Ga. 244, 246 (2) (539 SE2d 129)

(2000).28

      (iii)   We disagree with Young’s assertion that this Court’s

partial reliance in its proportionality review on some cases that are

not as recent as others in itself renders this Court’s proportionality

review inadequate.

      (iv) The Georgia Code provides that this Court

      shall be authorized to employ an appropriate staff and
      such methods to compile such data as are deemed by the
      Chief Justice to be appropriate and relevant to the
      statutory questions concerning the validity of the

      28 Young cites one particular case that he claims this Court cited in its
proportionality reviews in several other defendants’ direct appeals but was
later vacated on habeas review on grounds that arguably affect the question of
proportionality regardless of the correctness of our reasoning in Davis; Young’s
point is unpersuasive, however, because his proportionality review is being
conducted here on its own merits. We are also unpersuaded by Young’s
arguments that are based on a 2007 newspaper article that takes a different
view than we did in Davis.
                                      120
     sentence reviewed in accordance with Code Section 17-10-
     35.

OCGA § 17-10-37 (b) (as amended by Ga. L. 2010, p. 420, § 2). In a

case where this Court affirms a death sentence, the role of the

“compil[ation] of] such data,” id., is reflected in this Court’s

published decision, including in an appendix providing “a reference

to those similar cases which [this Court] took into consideration,”

OCGA § 17-10-35 (e). See also OCGA § 17-10-35 (e) (2) (directing

this Court to provide the trial court, for resentencing purposes, with

“[t]he records of those similar cases” cited by this Court in its opinion

and with “the extracts prepared as provided for in subsection (a) of

Code Section 17-10-37” in any case where this Court sets aside a

death sentence on proportionality grounds).               This Court’s

proportionality review complies with statutory requirements

regarding its consideration of relevant data, and we hold that this

Court’s practices regarding those data are not unconstitutional. In

light of this holding, we decline Young’s invitation to remand this

case for further evidentiary development regarding this issue,

                                  121
including his request to probe this Court’s internal deliberative

processes via an Open Records Act request directed at this Court

and via subpoenas directed to this Court’s staff. Cf. UAP IV (B) (1)

(providing for this Court to direct the trial court to conduct whatever

further proceedings this Court deems necessary to allow a full

review on appeal).

     (v) Finally, Young complains that it is “unfair” that he will not

have access to this Court’s reasoning regarding the proportionality

of his death sentence prior to the issuance of this opinion, after

which his only remaining remedy in this Court will be a motion for

reconsideration. In rejecting this argument, we note that a similar

difficulty presents itself to all unsuccessful appellants in this Court,

regardless of the issue decided on appeal.

     (b) Young argues that he belongs to a class of persons, namely

persons with intellectual disability, who are categorically exempt

from the death penalty under the United States Constitution and

the Georgia Constitution and that this Court should enforce that

exemption through this Court’s proportionality review in his case,

                                  122
see OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (3), or through other unspecified authority.

Although we have previously held that the execution of an

intellectually   disabled   person      would   violate   the   Georgia

Constitution, see Fleming, 259 Ga. at 690 (3), we see no

constitutional infirmity in the General Assembly’s determination

that the issue of whether a defendant is categorically exempt from

the death penalty based on intellectual disability should be decided

by a jury, rather than by this Court, subject only to this Court’s

review of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s verdict.

But cf. Hill, 269 Ga. at 303-304 (3 and 4) (holding that, where alleged

intellectual disability was not determined by a jury at trial despite

the statutory provision allowing for such a claim at that stage, a

habeas court may consider alleged intellectual disability under the

miscarriage of justice exception to the procedural default rule).

Nevertheless, we do consider Young’s evidence of alleged intellectual

disability falling short of the categorical exemption here in our

proportionality review, because we are directed by law to consider

“the crime and the defendant.” OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (3).

                                  123
     (c) The evidence in this case shows that, after weeks of careful

planning, Young ruthlessly executed the prolonged attack on and

brutal murder of his former fiancée’s son for the purpose of

manipulating his former fiancée into resuming a relationship with

him and returning to live with him. Considering both the crime and

the defendant, including the evidence of his intellectual difficulties,

we conclude that the death sentence imposed for the murder in this

case is not disproportionate punishment within the meaning of

Georgia law. See OCGA § 17-10-35 (c) (3); Gissendaner, 272 Ga. at

716-717 (19) (a) (holding that this Court’s statutorily mandated

proportionality review concerns whether a particular death sentence

“is excessive per se” or is “substantially out of line”).   The cases

cited in the Appendix support our conclusion, because each shows a

jury’s willingness to impose a death sentence for the deliberate,

unprovoked commission of a murder during the commission of a

burglary, see OCGA § 17-10-30 (b) (2), or a murder that was

“outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible, or inhuman,” see OCGA §

17-10-30 (b) (7). See OCGA § 17-10-35 (e). See also Barrett v. State,

                                 124
292 Ga. 160, 190 (4) (733 SE2d 304) (2012) (explaining that seldom,

if ever, will the facts surrounding two death penalty cases be entirely

alike and that this Court is not required to find identical cases for

comparison in its proportionality review); Ross v. State, 233 Ga. 361,

366-367 (2) (211 SE2d 356) (1974) (“It is the reaction of the sentencer

to the evidence before it which concerns this court and which defines

the limits which sentencers in past cases have tolerated. . . .”).

     Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Nahmias, P. J., and
Boggs and Peterson, JJ., who concur specially, Warren, J., who concurs in
judgment only, and Bethel, J., who dissents.

                              APPENDIX

Spears v. State, 296 Ga. 598 (769 SE2d 337) (2015), disapproved on
other grounds by Willis v. State, 304 Ga. 686, 706 (11) (a) n.3 (820
SE2d 640) (2018); Barrett v. State, 292 Ga. 160 (733 SE2d 304)
(2012); Ledford v. State, 289 Ga. 70 (709 SE2d 239) (2011),
disapproved on other grounds by Willis, 304 Ga. at 706 (11) (a) n.3;
Arrington v. State, 286 Ga. 335 (687 SE2d 438) (2009); Walker v.
State, 282 Ga. 774 (653 SE2d 439) (2007) (relevant to Young’s case
despite the fact that the convictions and sentences were later
vacated for reasons unrelated to the jury’s reaction to the evidence
before it, see Humphrey v. Walker, 294 Ga. 855 (757 SE2d 68) (2014),
disapproved on other grounds by Ledford, 289 Ga. at 85 (14),
disapproved on other grounds by Willis, 304 Ga. at 706 (11) (a) n.3));
Lewis v. State, 277 Ga. 534 (592 SE2d 405) (2004) (relevant to
Young’s case despite the fact that the death sentence was later
vacated for reasons unrelated to the jury’s reaction to the evidence
before it, see Hall v. Lewis, 286 Ga. 767, 767-768, 781 (II) (692 SE2d
                                   125
580) (2010)); Sallie v. State, 276 Ga. 506 (578 SE2d 444) (2003);
Braley v. State, 276 Ga. 47 (572 SE2d 583) (2002); Terrell v. State,
276 Ga. 34 (572 SE2d 595) (2002); Fults v. State, 274 Ga. 82 (548
SE2d 315) (2001); McPherson v. State, 274 Ga. 444 (553 SE2d 569)
(2001) (relevant to Young’s case despite the fact that the death
sentence was later vacated for reasons unrelated to the jury’s
reaction to the evidence before it, see Hall v. McPherson, 284 Ga.
219, 220 (663 SE2d 659) (2008)); King v. State, 273 Ga. 258 (539
SE2d 783) (2000); Jones v. State, 273 Ga. 231 (539 SE2d 154) (2000),
overruled on other grounds by State v. Lane, 308 Ga. 10, 23 (838
SE2d 808) (2020); Drane v. State, 271 Ga. 849 (523 SE2d 301) (1999),
265 Ga. 255 (455 SE2d 27) (1995); Jones v. State, 267 Ga. 592 (481
SE2d 821) (1997).

                                126
                S21P0078. YOUNG v. THE STATE.

     NAHMIAS, Presiding Justice, concurring specially.

     With the one exception that I discuss below, I am fairly

confident that the Court reaches the right result on all of the issues

presented in this case, so I concur in the judgment upholding

Young’s convictions and sentences, including his death sentence. I

am less sure about everything the plurality opinion says, or fails to

say, about each of the issues presented. I do not fault the author of

the plurality opinion for that, because the opinion has to try to

explain its reasoning regarding the 50 enumerations of error (many

with subparts) raised in Young’s 466-page principal brief (which was

supplemented by another 76 pages of argument in a reply brief), and

the Court must decide this case (along with our many other second-

term cases) by July 2 to comply with our state Constitution’s unique

“two-term rule.” See Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. VI, Sec. IX, Par. II (“The

Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals shall dispose of every case

at the term for which it is entered on the court’s docket for hearing

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or at the next term.”).

     This Court has not (yet) imposed a page limit on briefs in death

penalty cases. See Supreme Court Rule 20 (3). Compare id. (1) and

(2) (imposing a 50-page limit for principal briefs in other criminal

cases and a 30-page limit in civil cases). Young presents several

substantial issues, but it is difficult to identify the wheat among all

the chaff, and even the chaff must be addressed. Indeed, the

plurality opinion might be 250 pages long if it dealt with every issue

in detail (and if this Court had time to do so). Because Young has

chosen to present his appeal in this way, I join only the result of the

plurality opinion, without necessarily agreeing with every bit of its

analysis.

     The issue that is closest, as evidenced by Justice Bethel’s

dissent, and as to which I have the least confidence in the result, is

the continued viability, under the Eighth Amendment of the United

States Constitution, of Georgia’s unique statute placing on the

defendant the burden of proving his intellectual disability beyond a

reasonable doubt. See OCGA § 17-7-131 (c) (3). As the plurality

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opinion recounts, in 1988, the people of this State, acting through

their elected representatives, were the first in the nation to take the

humane step of prohibiting the execution of intellectually disabled

criminal defendants. See id. (j) (prohibiting the imposition of the

death penalty after a finding of intellectual disability). Not long

thereafter, this Court, and then the United States Supreme Court,

constitutionalized that prohibition using the doctrine that applies

the “cruel and unusual punishments” constitutional text based on

“evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing

society.” See Fleming v. Zant, 259 Ga. 687, 689-690 (386 SE2d 339)

(1989); Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 312, 321 (122 SCt 2242, 153

LE2d 335) (2002).

     That doctrine, which does not purport to be founded on the

original public meaning of the constitutional text, allows judges to

outlaw punishments based on their judicial conceptions of what

contemporary “decency” requires. See Atkins, 536 U.S. at 337

(Scalia, J., dissenting) (explaining that the rule adopted by the

majority opinion “find[s] no support in the text or history of the

                                 129
Eighth Amendment”); Conley v. Pate, 305 Ga. 333, 339-341 (825

SE2d 135) (2019) (Peterson, J., concurring) (explaining that the

majority opinion in Fleming departed without explanation from “the

history and context of the Georgia Constitution, as well as over 100

years of Georgia precedent,” to adopt the “evolving standards of

decency” doctrine from the United States Supreme Court case law).

I say “judicial conceptions,” because although judges applying this

doctrine often purport to be reflecting the views of contemporary

American (or Georgian) society, the cases often disregard the best

evidence of those views, which is contemporary legislation enacted

by the people’s elected representatives. 29

      29 Perhaps the most telling example of this is the United States Supreme
Court’s 5-4 decision in Kennedy v. Louisiana, 554 U.S. 407 (128 SCt 2641, 171
LE2d 525) (2008), which prohibited under all circumstances the death penalty
for rape of a child not resulting in the child’s death. See id. at 421. The majority
then stuck to that position even when the Court was advised in a motion for
rehearing that only two years before, Congress had enacted (by vote of 374-41
in the House and 95-0 in the Senate) and the President had signed a law
authorizing the death penalty for members of the military who rape a child.
See Kennedy v. Louisiana, 554 U.S. 945, 946-948 (129 SCt 1, 171 LE2d 932)
(2008) (statement of Kennedy, J., respecting the denial of rehearing); id. at 948-
950 (statement of Scalia, J., respecting the denial of rehearing). Justice Scalia,
who had dissented, explained why he was not voting to grant rehearing as
follows:

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      Consequently, when we enter the realm of Eighth Amendment

“evolving standards of decency,” if there is not a holding from a

United States Supreme Court case directly on point, a lower court

trying to understand what validly enacted state laws that Court will

decide the United States Constitution has morphed to nullify

requires guessing about what the majority of Justices currently

serving on that Court will decide when a particular new issue is

presented to them. The Atkins majority explained that “[n]ot all

       I am voting against the petition for rehearing because the views of
       the American people on the death penalty for child rape were, to
       tell the truth, irrelevant to the majority’s decision in this case. The
       majority opinion, after an unpersuasive attempt to show that a
       consensus against the penalty existed, in the end came down to
       this: “[T]he Constitution contemplates that in the end our own
       judgment will be brought to bear on the question of the
       acceptability of the death penalty under the Eighth Amendment.”
       554 U.S. [at 434]. Of course the Constitution contemplates no such
       thing; the proposed Eighth Amendment would have been laughed
       to scorn if it had read “no criminal penalty shall be imposed which
       the Supreme Court deems unacceptable.” But that is what the
       majority opinion said, and there is no reason to believe that
       absence of a national consensus would provoke second thoughts.
Id. at 948-949. The dissent in Fleming similarly explained that in holding that
the death penalty for the intellectually disabled was prohibited by the Georgia
Constitution based primarily on the enactment of OCGA § 17-7-131, the
majority disregarded the limitations and prospective-only application of that
statute enacted by the people’s representatives. See Fleming, 259 Ga. at 691-
701 (Smith, J., dissenting).
                                     131
people who claim to be mentally retarded will be so impaired as to

fall within the range of mentally retarded offenders about whom

there is a national consensus,” and asserted that the Court would

therefore “leave to the State[s] the task of developing appropriate

ways to enforce the constitutional restriction upon [their] execution

of sentences.” Atkins, 536 U.S. at 317 (citation and punctuation

omitted). Taking heed of those statements, this Court held in Head

v. Hill, 277 Ga. 255, 260-263 (587 SE2d 613) (2003), and reiterated

in Stripling v. State, 289 Ga. 370, 371-374 (711 SE2d 665) (2011),

that Georgia’s beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard of proof for

claims of intellectual disability (in conjunction with other

procedures protecting the intellectually disabled from death

sentences) does not violate the Eighth Amendment. And the en banc

United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that

our decisions on this issue were not contrary to clearly established

federal law. See Hill v. Humphrey, 662 F3d 1335, 1337-1338 (11th

Cir. 2011) (en banc), cert. denied, 566 U.S. 1041 (132 SCt 2727, 183

LE2d 80) (2012).

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     Thereafter, however, in Hall v. Florida, 572 U.S. 701 (134 SCt

1986, 188 LE2d 1007) (2014), and Moore v. Texas, 581 U.S. ___ (137

SCt 1039, 197 LE2d 416) (2017), the majority on the United States

Supreme Court began to constrain the leeway that the states

appeared to have been given regarding how intellectual disability

may be determined. The holdings of those two cases do not address

what standard of proof may be used to evaluate an intellectual

disability claim, and thus they plainly do not affect Georgia’s law.

But as Justice Bethel explains in his dissent, some of the reasoning

of the cases, particularly their disapproval of state measures that

“‘creat[e] an unacceptable risk that persons with intellectual

disability will be executed,’” Moore, 137 SCt at 1044 (quoting Hall,

572 U.S. at 704), certainly casts doubt on this State’s uniquely high

standard of proof.

     The reasoning of the United States Supreme Court’s decisions

does not bind lower courts, however; only the holdings govern. Cf.

Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/American Express, Inc., 490 U.S.

477, 484 (109 SCt 1917, 104 LE2d 526) (1989) (explaining that even

                                133
when the holding of a Supreme Court case appears to be

contradicted by the reasoning of another line of decisions, the

holding rather than the subsequent reasoning is binding on lower

courts). And particularly in this area of “evolving standards of

decency,” in which it all comes down to whether five Justices decide

to “evolve” the Eighth Amendment a little more, it is risky to rely on

reasoning alone. Indeed, this Court just experienced that pitfall in

another area of “evolving” Eighth Amendment jurisprudence – the

imposition of life without parole sentences on defendants convicted

of murders committed when they were juveniles.

     Since the death penalty for juveniles was outlawed by the 5-4

decision in Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 578 (125 SCt 1183, 161

LE2d 1) (2005), the clear trend line of the United States Supreme

Court’s cases in this area (all decided by narrow margins) was to

restrict the states’ authority to punish juveniles. In particular, the

reasoning of the Court’s 6-3 majority opinion in Montgomery v.

Louisiana, 577 U.S. 190 (136 SCt 718, 193 LE2d 599) (2016), seemed

to make it clear that before a juvenile murderer could be sentenced

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to life without parole, the sentencer must consider more than just

the defendant’s youth and its attendant characteristics; there must

be a specific determination that the defendant is one of those “rarest

of   juvenile   offenders . . . whose   crimes   reflect   permanent

incorrigibility.” Id. at 208-212. This Court and other lower courts

relied on that reasoning to require such a determination. See Veal

v. State, 298 Ga. 691, 702-703 (784 SE2d 403) (2016). See also, e.g.,

Malvo v. Mathena, 893 F3d 265, 275 (4th Cir. 2018); Commonwealth

v. Batts, 163 A3d 410, 459 (Pa. 2017). But then the composition of

the United States Supreme Court changed, and just a few weeks ago

that Court held, by a 6-3 margin, that notwithstanding most of what

the Montgomery majority opinion said, that decision does not require

a specific finding of permanent incorrigibility. See Jones v.

Mississippi, 593 U.S. ___ (141 SCt 1307, 1311, 209 LE2d 390) (2021).

See also Holmes v. State, Case No. S21A0377, slip. op. at 11-17

(decided June 1, 2021). Both the three dissenters and Justice

Thomas (who concurred in the judgment based on his view that

Montgomery was wrongly decided) criticized the majority opinion for

                                 135
disregarding Montgomery’s logic and reasoning. See Jones, 141 SCt

at 1323, 1326-1328 (Thomas, J., concurring in the judgment); id. at

1330-1337 (Sotomayor, J., dissenting).

     Jones demonstrates that courts like mine should be cautious in

deciding Eighth Amendment cases based on aspects of the

reasoning, rather than the square holdings, of the United States

Supreme Court’s “evolving standards of decency” decisions, and

should be wary of trying to predict which way those holdings are

trending. If I had to guess today, I would say that it is likely that if

the United States Supreme Court, as currently comprised, is called

on to decide whether Georgia’s beyond-a-reasonable-doubt-standard

for proof of intellectual disability violates the Eighth Amendment, a

majority of the Justices would not extend the holdings of Hall and

Moore to strike down our State’s statute, notwithstanding the

reasoning of the majority opinions in those two cases.

     Of course I (and the majority of this Court) could be wrong.

Young is welcome to seek certiorari from the United States Supreme

Court to have that Court tell us that we are wrong; I would

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obediently accept and forthrightly apply such a decision. Young and

his advocates are also welcome to try to persuade the people of

Georgia, through their elected representatives, to revisit OCGA §

17-7-131 (c) (3) in light of the extensive developments in the science

of intellectual disability and the law in this area since that statute

was enacted more than three decades ago; if the General Assembly

takes a further humane step with regard to criminal defendants who

are potentially intellectually disabled, I would embrace that change.

In the meantime, however, I see no compelling reason for this Court

to overrule our well-established precedent on this issue.

     I am authorized to state that Justice Boggs and Justice

Peterson join this special concurrence.

                                 137
                S21P0078. YOUNG v. THE STATE.

     BETHEL, Justice., dissenting

     “[T]he Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the [United

States] Constitution forbid the execution of persons with intellectual

disability.” Hall v. Florida, 572 U. S. 701, 704 (I) (134 SCt 1986, 188

LE2d 1007) (2014) (citing Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U. S. 304, 321 (IV)

(122 SCt 2242, 153 LE2d 335) (2002)). However, before a person can

access this constitutional protection, Georgia requires that the

person first prove that he or she is intellectually disabled beyond a

reasonable doubt. See OCGA § 17-7-131 (c) (3), (j). As others have

before him, Young argues that Georgia’s law is unconstitutional.

See, e.g., Stripling v. State, 289 Ga. 370, 371-374 (1) (711 SE2d 665)

(2011); Head v. Hill, 277 Ga. 255, 260 (II) (B) (587 SE2d 613) (2003)

(rejecting habeas court decision that beyond-a-reasonable-doubt

standard is unconstitutional under Atkins because “nothing in

Atkins instructs the states to apply any particular standard of proof

to [intellectual disability] claims”). But Young suggests that

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subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States cast

doubt on Stripling and Head and compel a different conclusion. I

agree.

     In Atkins, the Supreme Court of the United States determined

that the United States Constitution prohibits the execution of

intellectually disabled persons. See 536 U. S. at 321 (IV). When this

constitutional protection was identified, its contours were not

particularly well-defined, and it appeared that the individual states

were to be responsible for defining and safeguarding this right. See

id. at 317 (III) (“[W]e leave to the States the task of developing

appropriate ways to enforce the constitutional restriction upon their

execution of sentences.” (citation and punctuation omitted)); see also

Bobby v. Bies, 556 U. S. 825, 831 (I) (129 SCt 2145, 173 LE2d 1173)

(2009) (“Our opinion [in Atkins] did not provide definitive procedural

or substantive guides for determining when a person who claims

[intellectual disability] will be so impaired as to fall within Atkins’

compass. We left to the States the task of developing appropriate

ways to enforce the constitutional restriction.” (citation and

                                 139
punctuation omitted)). Since then, however, we have learned that

States are not authorized to enforce legislative rules or judicial tests

that by design or operation create “an unacceptable risk that

persons with intellectual disability will be executed.” Hall, 572 U. S.

at 704 (I); see also Moore v. Texas, __ U. S. __ (137 SCt 1039, 1051

(IV) (C) (1), 197 LE2d 416) (2017).

     In Hall, Florida’s rule precluding a finding of intellectual

disability for any person scoring over 70 on an IQ test failed

constitutional review because it created “an unacceptable risk that

persons with intellectual disability will be executed.” Hall, 572 U. S.

at 704 (I). The “rigid” statutory rule in Hall was deemed

unacceptable by the Supreme Court, in part because the strict rule

failed to consider the margin of error and variability inherent in IQ

testing, and thus disregarded established medical practice. See id.

at 713-714 (III) (A).

     Likewise, in Moore, the seven-factor test established by Texas

courts to evaluate intellectual disability was found to be deficient

because “by design and in operation,” the Texas test created “‘an

                                  140
unacceptable risk that persons with intellectual disability will be

executed.’” Moore, 137 SCt at 1051 (IV) (C) (1) (citing Hall, 572 U. S.

at 701). More specifically, the Supreme Court determined that the

Texas test failed to protect those with mild levels of intellectual

disability from execution. See id. This was impermissible because

“the entire category of intellectually disabled offenders” is

constitutionally protected from execution. (Citation, punctuation,

and emphasis omitted.) Id.

     The question before us, then, is whether Georgia’s requirement

that a defendant prove his or her own intellectual disability beyond

a reasonable doubt creates “an unacceptable risk that an

intellectually disabled person will be executed.” Hall, 572 U. S. at

704 (I). Here, the existence of such a risk seems plain.

     Obviously, some portion of persons who are actually

intellectually disabled would, nevertheless, find it difficult to prove

that fact in a judicial proceeding under any standard of proof. See

Raulerson v. Warden, 928 F3d 987, 1015, 1016 (I) (C) (11th Cir.

2019) (“Intellectual disability is an inherently imprecise and

                                 141
partially subjective diagnosis. . . . Given that intellectual disability

disputes will always involve conflicting expert testimony, there will

always be a basis for rejecting an intellectual disability claim.”)

(Jordan, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part); see also Hill

v. Humphrey, 662 F3d 1335, 1367 (I) (11th Cir. 2011) (Barkett, J.,

dissenting) (“[M]ental retardation spans a spectrum of intellectual

impairment[.]”). There is a risk of failure in every effort to divine

truth through a judicial proceeding. Employing the highest burden

of proof in our system of justice, however, significantly increases the

risk of an offender with an actual intellectual disability being

executed because he or she is unable to meet the high standard of

proof.30 Under Georgia’s standard, a meaningful portion of

intellectually disabled offenders are effectively excluded from the

constitutional protection recognized in Atkins. See Humphrey, 662

      30 Indeed, the beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard employed in criminal
proceedings has been described in the legal community as a societal preference
for acquitting guilty people rather than risking incarceration of the innocent.
See, e.g., In re Winship, 397 U. S. 358, 372 (90 SCt 1068, 25 LE2d 368) (1970)
(Harlan, J., concurring) (“I view the requirement of proof beyond a reasonable
doubt in a criminal case as bottomed on a fundamental value determination of
our society that it is far worse to convict an innocent man than to let a guilty
man go free.”).
                                      142
F3d at 1365-1366 (Barkett, J., dissenting) (noting that the State

does not “have unfettered discretion to establish procedures that

through their natural operation will deprive the vast majority of

[intellectually disabled] offenders of their Eighth Amendment right

not to be executed”). The United States Constitution protects all

intellectually disabled offenders from execution under Atkins, and

Georgia’s standard “effectively limits the constitutional right

protected in Atkins to only those who [suffer from severe or profound

intellectual disability]” such that their disability is not subject to any

real dispute or doubt. Id. at 1365-1377. But as the Supreme Court

has determined, the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments must

afford protection to an offender whose disability is less obvious or

profound. See Moore, 137 SCt at 1051 (IV) (C) (1).

     Further, when the standard of proof is beyond a reasonable

doubt, an individual juror who merely believes the defendant to be

probably or even clearly intellectually disabled would still be

authorized to join a sentence of death if any part of their mind was

wavering, unsettled, or unsatisfied that the defendant had proven

                                   143
intellectual disability. We know that a rigid cutoff for IQ that does

not account for variability and margin of error in the test is

unreasonable. See Hall, 572 U. S. at 713-714 (III) (A). Likewise, we

know that employing a test that exposes those with mild intellectual

disabilities to a greater risk of execution is unreasonable. See Moore,

137 SCt at 1051 (IV) (C) (1). With these truths in mind, then, it

seems plain to me that requiring the highest burden of proof known

to our judicial system is also unreasonable because it fails to protect

intellectually disabled persons who are unable to prove that fact

beyond a reasonable doubt. Accordingly, while I concur in the

balance of the Chief Justice’s opinion, I respectfully dissent with

respect to Division 25. Thus, I would vacate the trial court’s

judgment and remand the case for a new jury trial on the sole

question of intellectual disability and for resentencing consistent

with the result of that trial, or for other constitutionally agreeable

proceedings.

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