Terrence Terrell Beavers v. State
Terrence Terrell Beavers v. State
Opinion
Ellington, Presiding Judge. Under an indictment returned on November 19, 2015, Terence Beavers stands accused in the Superior Court of Cobb County of kidnapping, aggravated sodomy (two counts), and rape. Beavers filed a plea in bar, arguing that prosecution of the offenses, which involved a single attack twenty years earlier on March 26, 1994, was barred by the applicable statutes of limitation. After a hearing, the trial court rejected the plea in bar, based on a finding that the State had proved that the case falls within a Code section that tolls the statutory period of limitation applicable to certain offenses, including those charged in the subject indictment, "when deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) evidence is used to establish the identity of the accused[.]" OCGA § 17-3-1 (d). 1 We granted Beavers's application for interlocutory review. Because the General Assembly expressly provided that the Act that established the DNA-identification tolling provision would apply to crimes which occurred on or after July 1, 2002, we reverse.
"In criminal cases, the period of limitation runs from the commission of the offense to the date of the indictment. The burden is on the State to prove that a crime occurred within the applicable statute of limitation." (Citation and punctuation omitted.)
Flournoy v. State
,
Beavers contends that the DNA-identification tolling provision does not apply to these offenses because they occurred before July 1, *225 2002, and that the trial court therefore erred in rejecting his plea in bar.
When these offenses occurred on March 26, 1994, the offenses of kidnapping (other than kidnapping for ransom and kidnapping where the person kidnapped received bodily injury) and aggravated sodomy were punishable by imprisonment for not less than one nor more than twenty years. 4 Consequently, the statutory period of limitation for these offenses was four years. 5 Absent any tolling of the limitation period, no indictment on these offenses could be brought after March 26, 1998.
As to the rape charge, in March 1994, the offense of rape was punishable by death or by imprisonment for life, or by imprisonment for not less than one nor more than 20 years. 6 Initially, then, the statutory period of limitation for rape was seven years. 7 In 1996, before the seven-year period ran with regard to the rape charge in this case, the statutory period of limitation for forcible rape was lengthened to fifteen years, and it remains so today. 8 Absent any tolling, therefore, no indictment could be brought after March 26, 2009.
As noted above, the subject indictment was returned in November 2015. The indictment invoked the DNA-identification tolling provision, OCGA § 17-3-1 (d), 9 with the following coda:
TOLLING PROVISION
For each of the aforementioned counts of this Indictment to which the statute of limitations applies, [kidnapping, aggravated sodomy, and rape,] pursuant to OCGA § 17-3-1, the Grand Jurors aforesaid also find that deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) evidence was used to establish the identity of the accused ...; to wit: said accused was positively identified as having committed the aforementioned crimes by use of DNA results that were obtained on May 22, 2014. [ 10 ]
*226 We conclude, however, that the DNA-identification tolling provision did not apply in this case. As referenced above, the General Assembly expressly provided, in Section 2 of the Act that established the DNA-identification tolling provision, that the Act would "be effective on July 1, 2002, and apply to crimes which occur on or after July 1, 2002[.]" 11 The State's reliance on OCGA § 17-3-1 (d) is therefore futile with regard to crimes that occurred before the date specified in the 2002 Act. 12
The State disputes this, arguing that Section 2's effective date conflicted with language in the preamble to the Act identifying as the purpose of the Act "to provide that a prosecution for serious violent offenses may be commenced at any time under certain circumstances[.]"
13
There is no such conflict. That the offense at issue have occurred "on or after July 1, 2002" was plainly one of the "certain circumstances" expressly specified in the Act. At any rate, the preamble to an act, where the provisions of the preamble are not included in the body of the act, "is no part [of the act] and cannot control the plain meaning of the body of the act."
State v. Ware
,
*227
Under controlling authority, moreover, the person who committed a crime is not "unknown" within the terms of OCGA § 17-3-2 (2) simply because his identity has not been positively confirmed by forensic evidence. Rather, the person-unknown tolling exception applies only where "there is
no identified suspect
among the universe of all potential suspects." (Emphasis added.)
Jenkins v. State
,
The tolling exception to the statute of limitations cannot be based upon the subjective opinion of the district attorney as to whether there was enough evidence to file charges against a particular person. Otherwise, there would be tolling of the statute of limitations for routine investigation into a crime; the State could build a case against a non-murder suspect [ 18 ] for five or ten years and then file charges when it believes that it has obtained sufficient evidence by claiming that the statute of limitations was tolled until that moment. Such a broad interpretation of the tolling period would permit the exception to swallow the rule.
The State having failed to carry the burden of showing that a crime occurred within the applicable periods of limitation, the trial court erred when it denied Beavers's plea in bar.
Jenkins v. State
,
*228
State v. Boykin
,
Judgment reversed.
As will be discussed below, the DNA-identification tolling provision was created in 2002, initially codified as OCGA § 17-3-1 (c.1) (2002), and redesignated as subpart (d) of OCGA § 17-3-1 in 2012. See n. 9, infra.
See also
Scales v. State
,
See also
Duke v. State
,
OCGA § 16-5-40 (b) (1982) ("A person convicted of the offense of kidnapping shall be punished by imprisonment for not less than one nor more than 20 years, provided that a person convicted of the offense of kidnapping for ransom shall be punished by life imprisonment or by death and provided, further, that, if the person kidnapped shall have received bodily injury, the person convicted shall be punished by life imprisonment or by death."); Ga. L. 1982, p. 970 (Act. No. 158, § 1); OCGA § 16-6-2 (b) (1968) ("A person convicted of aggravated sodomy shall be punished by imprisonment for life or by imprisonment for not less than one nor more than 20 years."); Ga. L. 1968, p. 1249 (Act No. 259, § 1).
OCGA §§ 17-3-1 (1987) (Former Ga. Code. Ann. § 26-502) (a) ("A prosecution for murder may be commenced at anytime."), (b) ("Prosecution for other crimes punishable by death or life imprisonment must be commenced within seven years after the commission of the crime."), (c) ("Prosecution for felonies other than those specified in subsections (a) and (b) of this Code section must be commenced within four years after the commission of the crime, provided that prosecution for felonies committed against victims who are at the time of the commission of the offense under the age of 14 years must be commenced within seven years after the commission of the crime."); Ga. L. 1968, p. 1249 (Act No. 259; Ga. L. 1987, p. 330 (Act No. 51, § 1).) Absent any allegation that the victim was under 16 years of age on the date of the violation, as in this case, a tolling provision established in OCGA § 17-3-2.1 (1992) does not apply. See Ga. L. 1992, p. 2973 (Act No. 475, § 1).
OCGA § 16-6-1 (b) (former
OCGA § 17-3-1 (b) (1987) (quoted in n. 5, supra).
OCGA § 17-3-1 (b) (1996); Ga. L. 1996, p. 1115 (Act No. 265, § 4). See
Flournoy
,
The DNA-identification tolling provision was enacted as Ga. L. 2002, pp. 650-651 (Act No. 785, § 1) and initially codified as OCGA § 17-3-1 (c.1) (2002). In 2012, the General Assembly redesignated subpart (c.1) of OCGA § 17-3-1 as subpart (d). Ga. L. 2012, pp. (Act 709, § 4-1), effective July 1, 2012.
The record shows that Beavers provided buccal swabs in April 2014, in connection with being released from prison (on an unrelated conviction). Around the same time, in late March 2014, swabs of suspected semen taken from the victim's body immediately after the March 1994 assault were submitted to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation to be tested for male DNA. On April 21, 2014, the crime lab reported to the Marietta Police Department that the swabs revealed the presence of male DNA and that the samples would be submitted for DNA testing. On May 22, 2014, the crime lab reported to the Marietta Police Department that Beavers's DNA in the federal CODIS database matched that of the DNA evidence obtained from the victim's body in March 1994. See
Williams v. State
,
Ga. L. 2002, p. 651 (§ 2).
See
State v. Walker
,
Ga. L. 2002, p. 650 (Act 785, preamble).
Cf.
City of Marietta v. Summerour
,
OCGA § 17-3-2 (2) provides: "The period within which a prosecution must be commenced under Code Section 17-3-1 or other applicable statute does not include any period in which ... [t]he person committing the crime is unknown or the crime is unknown[.]"
The State concedes that Beavers's name was known to the Marietta Police Department and that he was identified as the suspect in police reports, but avers that "the police did not find him."
The record shows that the State first secured an indictment against Beavers in May 2015. In that indictment, the State alleged that the identity of the accused was not known to the State until July 11, 2014. After Beavers filed a plea in bar showing that he had been identified as the only suspect when the DNA evidence was collected shortly after the attack on the victim, the State returned to the Grand Jury and secured the subject indictment, premised on the DNA-identification tolling provision. The State abandoned the May 2015 indictment and the unknown-person tolling provision.
It has long been the rule in Georgia that there is no applicable statute of limitation for the offense of murder.
Wooten v. State
,
See also
State v. Boykin
,
With consternation we note that the May 22, 2014 GBI report suggests that Beavers's DNA profile that was matched to the DNA evidence taken from the victim's body in 1994 was derived-not from the buccal swabs collected in April 2014-but from buccal swabs collected from Beavers in some previous process, received by the crime lab in January 2001 , and presumably added to the CODIS database then. As noted above, the limitation period for rape did not expire until March 2009 . We must leave it to others to explain why the victim's rape kit was not submitted to be tested for male DNA until March 2014. The denial of justice to the victim from this delay surely shocks the conscience.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.