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
Benton’s conviction and Benton’s subsequent guilty plea to a lesser
offense has no bearing on whether a rational jury could have found
Badie guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of murder.
Further, while we reversed Benton’s conviction because his
custodial statements were inadmissible under Miranda, we
affirmatively held that the evidence was otherwise constitutionally
sufficient to sustain his conviction for malice murder. Benton, 302
Ga. at 572. And where only one witness testified that Benton
participated in the shooting, id. at 575 n.8, three witnesses testified
to Badie’s presence or participation. Thus, neither our ruling in
Benton nor any subsequent developments cast doubt on the
constitutional sufficiency of Badie’s convictions.
(b) As best we can tell, Badie also appears to assert that he is
6 entitled to a new trial to present evidence that, following reversal of
Benton’s convictions, Benton pleaded guilty to the lesser offense of
voluntary manslaughter. Badie predicates this argument on our
decision in White v. State, where we held that a person charged
distinctly as an accessory to a crime may be entitled to present
evidence that the person charged distinctly as the principal was
acquitted of that same crime. 257 Ga. 236, 236 (1987). Badie reads
White to mean that, without evidence of Benton’s subsequent guilty
plea, Badie could not have received a fair trial and that he must be
retried so that a jury can hear that evidence.
Badie is mistaken. The defendant in White was “charged
distinctly and exclusively as an accessory to an identified principal,”
from which we concluded that the “theory of liability asserted by the
State necessarily [made] the factual guilt of the identified principal
an essential part of the case against the accessory.” Davis v. State,
296 Ga. 126, 129 (2014) (emphasis in original). But for a defendant
“simply … charged with murder,” we said, the State may “make out
its case against [the defendant] with proof beyond a reasonable
7 doubt that he was a party to that crime in any way,” whether as a
principal, an accessory to a co-defendant, or an accessory to an
unindicted third party. Davis, 296 Ga. at 128. See also OCGA § 16-
2-21 (“Any party to a crime who did not directly commit the crime
may be indicted, tried, convicted, and punished for commission of
the crime upon proof that the crime was committed and that he was
a party thereto, although the person claimed to have directly
committed the crime has not been prosecuted or convicted, has been
convicted of a different crime or degree of crime, or is not amenable
to justice or has been acquitted.”). Even under the theory articulated
in White, the guilt of a co-defendant “simply … charged with
murder” is not an element of another co-defendant’s conviction:
acquittal of one does not entitle the other to a retrial. See Davis, 296
Ga. at 128–29; OCGA § 16-2-21.
Here, Badie “simply was charged with murder.” See Davis, 296
Ga. at 128. So even assuming White were correctly decided,2 Badie’s
2 We do not suggest that White was correct, see Davis, 296 Ga. at 128 &
n.3, nor do we read Davis to conclude that a defendant “charged distinctly as
8 argument fails on its own terms—the State plainly did not have to
prove that Benton was guilty of murder as a principal in order to
prove that Badie was guilty as a party to the crime. See OCGA § 16-
2-21. See also Davis, 296 Ga. at 128–29. Benton’s post-trial guilty
plea to the lesser offense of voluntary manslaughter was thus
“inconsequential” to Badie’s guilt, he “is not entitled under White to
a new trial,” and this argument fails. Id at 129.
3. Badie next advances two related Confrontation Clause
claims regarding an out-of-court statement by co-defendant Benton.
At trial, the State introduced evidence of Benton’s custodial
interview. During that interview, Benton admitted to shooting at
Ramsay (in response to the four-wheeler incident) on two separate
occasions shortly before the fatal shooting; he denied involvement in
the shooting that killed Ramsay. The trial court did not instruct the
an accessory” would be entitled to a new trial following a guilty verdict in order to introduce evidence of the acquittal of another defendant “charged distinctly as a principal,” id. at 127–28. As relevant here, Davis held only that White— whether correct or not—did not apply to a defendant who “simply was charged with murder” rather than charged only as aiding and abetting another. Id. at 128. The same is true here, so we need not definitively evaluate White and Davis. 9 jury to consider the statement only against Benton, and Badie did
not request such an instruction.
Badie argues that the admission of co-defendant Benton’s
custodial statements at their joint trial violated Badie’s rights under
the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United
States Constitution pursuant to Bruton v. United States, 391 US 123
(1968). Badie also argues that, even if his Bruton rights were not
violated, admitting Benton’s statement without instructing the jury
to consider it only against Benton violated Badie’s Confrontation
Clause rights.
Because Badie did not raise either issue at trial, we review
them for plain error only. See Henderson, 317 Ga. 66, 77 n.3, 78
(2023); OCGA § 17-8-58. To prevail on this claim, then, Badie “must
show that the trial court made a legal error that was not
affirmatively waived, was clear and obvious, likely affected the
outcome of the trial, and seriously affected the fairness, integrity, or
public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Owens, 2026 WL 436319,
at *3 (quotation marks omitted). And if Badie fails to show any
10 prong, we need not consider the others. See James v. State, 321 Ga.
812, 818 (2025).
(a) When defendants are tried jointly, admission of one co-
defendant’s out-of-court statement can be “powerfully incriminating
against the [other] defendant[.]” Henderson, 317 Ga. at 76. And
“[t]he co-defendant whose statement is introduced has, and often
will assert, the right under the Fifth Amendment’s Self-
Incrimination Clause not to testify.” Id. at 75. So, the defendant
“who is implicated by the statement [is] unable to cross-examine the
witness who would testify against him—a clear-cut violation of the
defendant’s rights under the Confrontation Clause.” Id. “The
longstanding ‘solution’ to this Fifth Amendment-Sixth Amendment
conflict is a limiting instruction” that the jury consider the
statement only against the co-defendant. Id. But at a joint trial, a
“powerfully incriminating” statement creates too great a risk that
the jury would not follow an instruction to consider the statement
only against the co-defendant who made it. Id. at 76. So, under
Bruton, it must be excluded. Id. But only when a non-testifying co-
11 defendant’s statement incriminates the defendant “on its face” is
that statement “powerfully incriminating” and thus subject to
Bruton’s narrow exclusionary rule. Id. at 76–77 (quotation marks
omitted). Bruton does not apply to statements that become
incriminating only when “linked with evidence introduced later at
trial.” Id. at 76. But even if a non-testifying co-defendant’s statement
falls outside the Bruton rule, admission can still violate the
Confrontation Clause if the jury is not instructed to consider the
statement only against the non-testifying co-defendant. See id. at
78–79.
(b) Badie argues that admitting Benton’s statement violated
his Confrontation Clause rights under Bruton. But he concedes in
his appellate brief that Benton “did not explicitly name Badie in his
statement.” See Henderson, 317 Ga. at 77 (“We have consistently
held that Bruton excludes only a statement of a non-testifying co-
defendant that, standing alone, ‘directly inculpates’ the
defendant[.]”).The record confirms his concession: Benton simply
disclaimed responsibility for the killing and admitted to shooting at
12 Ramsay twice shortly before the crimes. That does not inculpate
Badie “on its face.” Id. at 76. Nor does it inculpate Badie by naming
an anonymous third party under circumstances obviously
suggesting Badie’s guilt. Cf. Gray v. Maryland, 532 US 185, 188–89,
193–95 (1998) (Bruton applies to statement redacting co-defendant’s
name when presented under circumstances “point[ing] directly” to
the defendant, as when a statement redacts the co-defendant’s name
but is followed by officer’s testimony that the statement led
immediately to that co-defendant’s arrest). Indeed, Benton’s
statement did not even mention an unnamed third party that the
jury could have inferred was Badie. In short, “nothing in the
statement itself” implicated Badie, see Henderson, 317 Ga. at 78,
and that is not enough to trigger Bruton’s protection, see Samia v.
United States, 599 US 635, 648–53 (2023) (distinguishing
statements that name a co-defendant or simply replace that name
with a conspicuous blank space from statements that implicate the
co-defendant only indirectly). See also Simpkins v. State, 303 Ga.
752, 755–56 (2018) (no Bruton violation when co-defendant’s
13 statement did not implicate the appellant directly and left open the
possibility of multiple other shooters besides appellant). This claim
fails because Badie has not shown clear and obvious legal error.
(c) Badie next argues that, even if the admission of Benton’s
statement did not violate Bruton, admitting the statement without
a limiting instruction telling the jury to consider that statement only
against Benton nevertheless violated Badie’s Confrontation Clause
rights.
Badie has identified a clear and obvious error that was not
affirmatively waived: the trial court should have instructed the jury
to consider Benton’s statement only against Benton. See Henderson,
317 Ga. at 78. But Badie has not satisfied the plain-error harm
prong—that the absence of a limiting instruction likely affected the
outcome of his trial. See Owens, 2026 WL 436319, at *3 (to establish
plain error, appellant must show, among other things, harm by
demonstrating that clear and obvious legal error likely affected the
outcome of the trial). Without Benton’s statement—which the State
barely mentioned in closing argument, and never in connection with
14 Badie—the evidence against Badie was quite strong: three
eyewitnesses placed him at the scene shortly before the shooting,
two of whom saw him with a gun and one of whom saw him fire that
gun at the victims. Considering that strong evidence, Benton’s
statement likely carried little (if any) weight—especially when the
statement inculpated Benton alone and said nothing about Badie’s
involvement, directly or inferentially. Badie offers no reason to
conclude otherwise. See Wilson v. State, 322 Ga. 76, 93 (on plain-
error review, defendant bears burden of making “an affirmative
showing that the error probably did affect the outcome below”
(quotation marks omitted)).
We did conclude in Benton that the Miranda violation was not
harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. 302 Ga. at 575 n.8. But that
was because Benton’s statement “provided substantial supporting
evidence of [his] guilt,” id., so its improper admission into evidence
may have made a meaningful difference in Benton’s trial. Benton’s
harm determination, however, does not apply here. Unlike co-
defendant Benton, multiple eyewitnesses identified Badie either as
15 a shooter or as part of the group suspected of carrying out the
shooting. And where Benton’s statement provided “substantial”
evidence of his guilt, id., it provided little—if any—evidence of
Badie’s guilt. Plus, Benton’s harm determination required the State
to prove that a preserved Miranda violation was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt; this harm determination requires Badie to show
that an unpreserved Confrontation Clause error likely affected the
outcome. He has not carried that burden, so this claim fails under
the third prong of plain error review. See Henderson, 317 Ga. at 79–
80. See also, e.g., Morris v. State, 311 Ga. 247, 256 (2021) (rejecting
plain error claim based on lack of Confrontation Clause limiting
instruction when statement did not directly identify defendant and
substantial other evidence supported defendant’s guilt).
4. Badie next argues that he received ineffective assistance of
counsel when trial counsel failed to request a limiting instruction
regarding Benton’s statement and when trial counsel failed to move
to sever Badie’s trial from Benton’s. Demonstrating ineffective
assistance of counsel requires a defendant to show both that his trial
16 counsel performed deficiently and that said deficiency prejudiced his
defense. Momon v. State, 322 Ga. 848, 850 (2025). Deficiency
requires the defendant to “show that his attorney performed at trial
in an objectively unreasonable way considering all the
circumstances and in light of prevailing professional norms.” Id.
(quotation marks omitted). This inquiry “focuses on the objective
reasonableness of counsel’s performance, not counsel’s subjective
state of mind.” Id. (cleaned up). And prejudice requires the
defendant to “show a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different.” Id. (quotation marks omitted). Demonstrating ineffective
assistance is a “high bar,” and if a defendant fails to show either
prong, we need not consider the other. Id. (quotation marks omitted).
(a) Badie’s first ineffectiveness claim—that trial counsel should
have requested a limiting instruction for Benton’s statement—fails
because we have already concluded that the absence of such an
instruction was unlikely to have affected the outcome of Badie’s
trial. The “test for prejudice in the ineffective assistance analysis is
17 equivalent to the test for harm in plain error review.” Clark v. State,
315 Ga. 423, 442 (2023) (quotation marks omitted). We concluded
above that the absence of a limiting instruction did not harm Badie,
so any presumed deficiency caused no prejudice, and this claim fails.
(b) Badie’s second ineffectiveness claim also fails because he
has not shown that not moving to sever Badie’s trial from Benton’s
was objectively unreasonable. Whether to move for severance is
presumptively strategic. Green v. State, 302 Ga. 816, 819 (2018).
Badie argues that it would have been more advantageous to be tried
separately because Benton’s statement exculpated Benton and left
Badie as the only party on trial for Ramsay’s murder.
But an objectively reasonable attorney could have made the
strategic decision not to seek severance under these circumstances.
The State had difficulty finding witnesses to testify against the co-
defendants and other suspected shooters. The State decided not to
try co-indictee Domonique Hodo shortly before trial because one
witness recanted his identification of Hodo. And, as Badie points out
elsewhere in his brief, the State lacked ballistic and forensic
18 evidence linking Badie to the shooting. Badie’s attorney could have
strategically decided to force the State to proceed to trial, rather
than give the State more time to develop its case by locating
additional witnesses or securing additional kinds of evidence. See
DeLoach v. State, 308 Ga. 283, 288–90 (2020) (counsel’s strategic
decision not to seek severance because he believed his client was
“better served” by proceeding to trial and emphasizing gaps in
State’s case “rather than risking giving the State additional time to
strengthen its case” was reasonable and, thus, not deficient
performance). We therefore cannot say that no reasonable attorney
would have failed to move to sever Badie’s trial from Benton’s.
Benton has failed to show that trial counsel performed deficiently in
this respect, and this enumeration fails.
5. Finally, Badie argues that the trial court should have
granted him a new trial because, he says, the verdict was “contrary
to evidence and the principles of justice and equity,” OCGA § 5-5-20,
and “decidedly and strongly against the weight of the evidence,”
OCGA § 5-5-21. But a trial court’s decision to grant or deny a new
19 trial based on these statutes—the general grounds—“is left to the
sole discretion of the trial court; our role on appeal is limited to
determining whether the trial court exercised that discretion.”
Welsch v. State, 2026 WL 271367, at *4 (quotation marks omitted).
The record shows that the trial court clearly did so here, so there is
nothing for us to review. Id.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.