Badie v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 17, 2026
DocketS26A0051
StatusPublished

This text of Badie v. State (Badie v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Badie v. State, (Ga. 2026).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

Decided: March 17, 2026

S26A0051. BADIE V. THE STATE.

BETHEL, Justice.

Maurice Badie appeals his conviction for the murder of

Christopher Ramsay and other crimes, all committed in connection

with a public gunfight. 1 On appeal, Badie argues that the evidence

1 The shooting occurred in the late hours of July 17, 2008. On October

28, 2008, a Fulton County grand jury jointly indicted Badie and Domonique Hodo for malice murder (Count 1), felony murder (Counts 2–3), aggravated assault (Counts 4–8), aggravated battery (Count 9), possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (Count 10), and one count each of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon (Counts 11 and 12). The grand jury also indicted Matthew Benton on Counts 1–2 and 4–10. The State dismissed Hodo’s charges before trial. Badie and Benton were tried jointly from June 14 to 21, 2010. The jury found both defendants guilty on all counts. The trial court sentenced Badie to serve life in prison for Count 1, a consecutive 20 years in prison on Count 5, a concurrent 20 years in prison on Counts 6, 7, and 9, and a consecutive 5 years in prison on Count 10. The remaining counts merged or were vacated by operation of law. The trial court sentenced Benton similarly. We previously reversed Benton’s convictions in Benton v. State, 302 Ga. 570, 570 & n.1 (2017) (reversing murder conviction based on custodial interview of defendant who did not understand Miranda rights). Badie timely moved for a new trial and amended the motion twice, in was constitutionally insufficient to support his conviction; that he is

entitled to a new trial so that he can present evidence of a co-

defendant’s successful appeal and subsequent guilty plea; that

admission of said co-defendant’s statements violated Badie’s

Confrontation Clause rights; that he received ineffective assistance

of counsel in two respects; and that the trial court should have

granted Badie a new trial on the general grounds. Each claim fails,

so we affirm.

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

evidence showed the following. Sometime on July 17, 2008, Ramsay

approached R.B., the younger brother of co-defendant Matthew

2019 and in 2024, the latter through new counsel. The trial court held a hearing on Badie’s motion and entered an order denying the motion on January 24, 2025. Badie filed a timely notice of appeal, and the case was docketed to this Court’s term beginning in December 2025 and submitted for a decision on the briefs. We note the long delay in resolving Badie’s appeal. The trial court apparently had not ruled on Badie’s first new trial motion, filed in 2010, when Badie amended that motion in 2019. And after Badie amended his new trial motion in 2019, he did not file a second amended motion until 2024. So we “reiterate that it is the duty of all those involved in the criminal justice system, including trial courts and prosecutors as well as defense counsel and defendants, to ensure that the appropriate post-conviction motions are filed, litigated, and decided without unnecessary delay.” Owens v. State, 303 Ga. 254, 258 (2018) (quotation marks omitted). 2 Benton, and asked to buy R.B.’s four-wheeler. R.B. declined, and

Ramsay responded by putting a gun in R.B.’s mouth. R.B. reported

the incident to Benton’s friends.

Later in the day, a group of men approached Ramsay. One said,

“You can draw a gun on a kid, how about [you] try to draw one on a

man[?]” Someone also said, “12:00 o’clock … we going to see how

much of a man … are you.” Later that night, shortly before midnight,

Ramsay and a group of friends were barbecuing outside a friend’s

apartment. Multiple gunmen emerged from several directions and

fired dozens of shots at Ramsay’s group. Ramsay was fatally shot in

the head; four others were injured. The shooters then fled the scene.

Multiple witnesses saw Badie near the scene before and during

the shooting. One saw him firing a gun toward the victims. Another

saw Badie seconds before the shooting, standing near the scene with

Benton and others. Badie was openly carrying a handgun and hid

behind a nearby truck upon making eye contact with that

eyewitness. And about 10 or 20 minutes before the shooting, a victim

saw Benton and Badie on a hill from which shots were later fired.

3 2. (a) Badie seems to suggest the evidence was constitutionally

insufficient to sustain his murder conviction. As best we can tell,

Badie believes that, because Benton subsequently pleaded guilty to

voluntary manslaughter, no rational trier of fact could find Badie

guilty as a party to the crime of Ramsay’s murder. Badie’s claim

fails.

“Evidence is constitutionally sufficient to sustain a conviction

if, when viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, any

rational trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty beyond a

reasonable doubt of the charged crime.” Owens v. State, ___ Ga. ___

(2026), S25A1229, slip op. at 8 (Ga. Feb. 17, 2026) (2026 WL 436319)

(quotation marks omitted). Conviction as a party to the crime

requires proof of “a common criminal intent, which the jury may

infer from the defendant’s presence, companionship, and conduct

with another perpetrator before, during, and after the crimes.” Sims

v. State, 321 Ga. 627, 629 (2025) (quotation marks omitted). And we

have repeatedly held that “participating in a gunfight in a crowded

area is enough to support a conviction for malice murder as a party

4 to the crime.” Id. at 630–31.

Here, three eyewitnesses placed Badie at the scene of Ramsay’s

murder. Two of those witnesses saw him with a gun. One witness

saw him fire that gun in Ramsay’s direction. The other witness saw

Badie hide behind a truck upon being spotted with the gun. And

Ramsay unquestionably died from a gunshot wound to the head.

Evidence that Badie “armed himself and subsequently discharged

his weapon during” the attack on Ramsay authorized a rational jury

to infer that Badie shared a common criminal intent with the other

shooters to engage in a gunfight, which killed one man and injured

four others. See id. (collecting similar cases). See also Williams v.

State, 313 Ga. 325, 327–28 (2022) (evidence of participation in fatal

shootout authorized conviction as party to the crime of malice

murder); Blackwell v. State, 302 Ga. 820, 821–22 (2018) (same). That

is enough for a rational trier of fact to find Badie guilty beyond a

reasonable doubt as party to the crime of murder.

Neither reversal of Benton’s conviction nor his subsequent plea

to voluntary manslaughter undermines that conclusion. The

5 constitutional sufficiency analysis considers “all the evidence

presented at trial.” Copeland v. State, 314 Ga. 44, 47 (2022)

(emphasis added, quotation marks omitted). Evidence not presented

at trial, much less post-trial procedural developments in a co-

defendant’s case, is irrelevant to that analysis. So our reversing

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Related

Bruton v. United States
391 U.S. 123 (Supreme Court, 1968)
White v. State
356 S.E.2d 875 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1987)
Davis v. State
765 S.E.2d 336 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2014)
Benton v. State
807 S.E.2d 450 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2017)
Green v. State
809 S.E.2d 738 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2018)
Samia v. United States
599 U.S. 635 (Supreme Court, 2023)
Simpkins v. State
303 Ga. 752 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2018)
Owens v. State
303 Ga. 254 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2018)
DELOACH v. THE STATE (And Vice Versa)
308 Ga. 283 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2020)
MORRIS v. THE STATE (Two Cases)
857 S.E.2d 454 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2021)
Copeland v. State
875 S.E.2d 636 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2022)
Williams v. State
869 S.E.2d 389 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2022)
HENDERSON v. THE STATE (Two Cases)
891 S.E.2d 884 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2023)
Clark v. State
883 S.E.2d 317 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2023)
James v. State
321 Ga. 812 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2025)
Sims v. State
321 Ga. 627 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2025)

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Badie v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/badie-v-state-ga-2026.