Williams v. State
Williams v. State
Opinion of the Court
*852Demarcio Williams appeals his convictions for murder and attempted armed robbery in connection with the shooting death of James Akridge.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, the evidence presented at trial shows the following. On June 28, 2010, the victim, James Akridge, was shot in his home in Wrightsville. He called 911. A patrolman with the Johnson County sheriff's office and an officer with the Wrightsville police department responded and heard Akridge inside, calling for help. When the responding officers gained entry, they found Akridge kneeling in front of a couch and slumped across the seat cushions. Akridge, who was white, told the patrolman that he had been shot; he identified his assailant only as "a black guy." Within an hour of calling 911, Akridge died as a result of a gunshot wound to his lower back. At that point, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation took over the investigation.
During the investigation, the GBI agent interviewed John Harris, who was a long-time friend of Williams. Harris disclosed that he had asked Williams, who is black, about rumors he was hearing that Williams had shot and killed "a white guy in Wrightsville." Williams told Harris that he and Jarvis Miller, who was known as "Jughead," met with a man in Wrightsville, supposedly for a drug deal but with the intention of robbing him. Williams told Harris that the man "was reaching around," Williams got scared, and he shot the man in the back, although he did not mean to shoot him. The GBI agent asked Harris if he would try to record a conversation with Williams on the same subject, and he agreed. Several days later, Harris spoke with Williams and secretly recorded the conversation. During that conversation, Williams confirmed several details consistent with their earlier conversation. Harris testified at Williams's trial, and the recorded conversation was also played for the jury.
Antonio Surrey, an acquaintance of Williams and Harris, testified that, sometime after the murder, he gave Williams a ride. During that ride, Williams told him that he and "Jughead" had gone to a man's house to rob him and, when the victim started fighting back, Williams panicked and shot him. Surrey also had a conversation with Williams and Harris together, when Williams said that he robbed and shot the man. Another witness, Robert Jackson, testified that, while he was confined in the same jail as Williams, Williams told him that he and "Miller" went to rob the victim; Miller told Williams that the victim got a good look at their faces; Williams told the victim to put his hands behind his back and get on his knees; the *853victim said, "please, don't kill me"; and Williams put the gun to his back and shot and killed him.
At trial, the State showed that, in the hour before Akridge called 911, he exchanged text messages with, and placed a telephone call to, numbers being used by Williams. Williams did not testify at trial.
1. Williams does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence. Nevertheless, as is our customary practice in murder cases, we have independently reviewed the record and conclude that the evidence was legally sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Williams was guilty of the crimes for which he was convicted. See Jackson v. Virginia ,
2. Williams contends he received ineffective assistance of counsel in several respects. To obtain relief based on ineffective assistance of counsel, an appellant must show both that his counsel's performance was constitutionally deficient and that this deficient performance prejudiced him. Strickland v. Washington ,
(a) Williams contends that his counsel was ineffective for failing to ask that a certain juror be removed for cause. The record shows that, during voir dire, defense counsel asked the venire whether anyone had "a close relative or a friend or a son that's a policeman or a GBI agent or an FBI agent or a marshal." One prospective juror responded that her husband and the Sheriff were second cousins and that the families were near neighbors. Asked whether that would affect her ability to listen to the evidence, she responded with uncertainty.
Williams contends that his counsel should have moved to strike the juror for cause pursuant to OCGA § 15-12-163 (b) (4), which provides, in pertinent part, that the State or the accused may object to a juror on the basis that "the juror is so near of kin to the prosecutor ... as to disqualify the juror by law from serving on the jury[.]"
(b) Williams contends his counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the State's motion to strike a juror for cause. The record shows that, at the end of voir dire, a prospective juror, R. M., approached the prosecutor and defense counsel and told them that she knew the girlfriend of Williams's accomplice, Jarvis Miller, and that she knew something about the case just from knowing the girlfriend. The State moved that she be struck. Defense counsel responded, "I don't care."
Williams contends that there was no evidence that R. M. had an opinion about the case that was so definite that it could not be changed by the evidence, and, therefore, counsel should have objected to the State's motion to strike R. M. for cause. It is well settled that a defendant has no vested interest in any particular juror, but rather is entitled only to a legal and impartial jury. Willis v. State ,
(c) Williams contends his counsel was ineffective for failing to object to a private communication between the trial judge and a juror. The record shows that, after the jury was selected, the judge informed the prosecutor and defense counsel that he intended to tell a juror who was pregnant that she should just raise her hand if she needed a restroom break and that he would very briefly stop the proceedings until she returned to the courtroom. Neither counsel objected. Williams contends that, because there is no record of what the judge and the juror spoke about, this Court must assume that the communication was prejudicial to him. As we have explained, a criminal defendant's constitutional right to be present at and to see and hear all the critical proceedings which are had against him "is a fundamental right and a foundational aspect of due process of law." Ward v. State ,
Nothing in the record in this case shows that the judge made any comment to the juror outside the presence of Williams and his counsel other than telling the juror to raise her hand if she needed a restroom break, a communication relating to the comfort and convenience of the jury. Thus, pretermitting any deficiency in counsel's performance, Williams failed to carry his burden *855of showing that defense counsel's failure to object prejudiced him. Waldrip v. State ,
(d) Williams contends that his counsel was ineffective for failing to object or move for mistrial due to the prosecutor's comment on the defendant's pre-arrest silence during the State's closing argument. Specifically, he cites to the statement, "the response that you get is a combination of silence, which under the law is attached agreement [sic
Even assuming that the rule in Mallory applies to the prosecutor's comment and that counsel performed deficiently by failing to raise an objection based on Mallory during the prosecutor's argument, we conclude that the failure to object likely did not contribute to the proceeding's outcome. The prosecutor's fleeting comment regarding Williams's failure to deny shooting Akridge came during his description of Williams's second, audio-recorded conversation with Harris about the shooting.
(e) Williams contends his counsel entirely failed to subject the prosecution's case to meaningful adversarial testing such that prejudice should be presumed for the purposes of his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
Even if Williams's trial counsel failed to act as an advocate on the several occasions specified, Williams's assertion that his counsel entirely failed to subject the State's case to adversarial testing does not meet the stringent standard that merits a presumption of prejudice under Cronic , and therefore Strickland 's two-part test remains the appropriate standard to evaluate his claims of ineffective assistance. Wainwright v. State ,
Finally, even accepting for the sake of analysis that trial counsel erred in all five of the ways Williams alleges, he has not demonstrated a reasonable probability that the cumulative effect of counsel's alleged professional deficiencies affected the outcome of the proceeding. Accordingly, the trial court properly rejected Williams's ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Toomer v. State ,
3. Williams contends that the trial court erred in having private communications with a pregnant juror and that, in the absence of any record of what the judge said to the juror, the communication is presumed to be prejudicial as a matter of law. Williams waived any objection to the judge's proposed ex parte communication with the juror by failing to object at the time, Anthony v. State ,
4. Williams contends that the aggravated assaults charged in Counts 3 and 4, aggravated assault by shooting Akridge and by pointing the firearm at him, were not distinct, successive assaults, and, therefore, that the trial court erred in denying his motion for directed verdict on one of the counts. Although the jury found Williams guilty on both counts of aggravated assault, however, any error in the directed verdict ruling is moot, given that both aggravated assault verdicts merged with the murder conviction. Faust v. State ,
5. Williams contends that he is entitled to a new trial because the prosecutor improperly commented on his pre-arrest silence. Williams waived this claim of error by failing to object at the time of the comment. McClarin v. State ,
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur.
Akridge was killed on June 28, 2010. A Johnson County grand jury returned an indictment on October 27, 2010, charging Williams with malice murder, felony murder (predicated on aggravated assault), aggravated assault (shooting Akridge), aggravated assault (pointing a gun at Akridge), and criminal attempt to commit a felony (attempted armed robbery of Akridge). Following a November 7-15, 2011 trial, the jury found Williams guilty on all counts. On November 15, 2011, the trial court sentenced Williams to life imprisonment without parole for murder, 20 years for aggravated assault (pointing a gun at Akridge), to be served consecutively, and 10 years for attempted armed robbery, to be served concurrently. Trial counsel filed a motion for new trial on November 18, 2011. On November 14, 2012, the court entered an amended sentencing order, sentencing Williams to life imprisonment without parole for murder and 10 years for attempted armed robbery, to be served consecutively. The amended sentencing order indicated that the felony murder verdict and both the aggravated assault verdicts merged with the malice murder conviction, although the felony murder verdict was actually vacated as a matter of law. Stewart v. State ,
We note that Williams argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a directed verdict as to one of the counts of aggravated assault on a basis other than the sufficiency of the evidence. See Division 4, infra.
The record shows that the juror responded, "You know, I can't say for sure ... but I don't think it would [affect my ability to listen to the evidence]. ... I honestly can't say, you bring his name up [sic], how I would feel, honestly. I mean, that's the truth. ... [W]e don't socialize, no, but being in that situation, I couldn't tell you."
At the time of Williams's trial, "so near of kin" as to disqualify a juror by law from serving on a jury was defined by former OCGA § 15-12-135 (a) as being related "by consanguinity or affinity to any party interested in the result of the case or matter within the sixth degree as computed according to the civil law."
See Spence v. State ,
Viewing the comment in context, it appears that the prosecutor might have said "a tacit agreement." See n.8, infra.
Williams is correct that, because he was tried before the January 1, 2013 effective date of Georgia's new Evidence Code, the bright-line rule set out in Mallory applies to his case. Wright v. State ,
The prosecutor argued that, to induce Williams to repeat his earlier confession, Harris's tactic was to tell Williams that other people were trying to say that Williams was "the only one there ... that Jarvis Miller ... didn't have a gun, and he didn't want to kill the man and all of this." The prosecutor went on,
what's the defendant's response? The defendant's response is not 'I didn't participate in that.' The defendant's response is not ... 'what are you talking about?' ... No actually, the response that you get is a combination of silence, which under the law is attached agreement [sic], [and] correction on certain points[.] ... [The defendant's response was] along the lines of, "well, they're going to tell on me. Well, if I get caught, I'm going to tell on them, because that makes no sense, them sitting there talking about all of this, because when they're telling on me, they're telling on themselves, too, because they were involved, too," talking about Mr. Miller.
(Emphasis added.)
See Wallace v. State ,
See Strickland ,
The five instances occurred during the direct examinations of the GBI agent (twice), Harris (twice), and Jackson (once).
Cf. Carter v. State ,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WILLIAMS v. The STATE.
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published