Ballinger, Warden v. Watkins

882 S.E.2d 312, 315 Ga. 369
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 20, 2022
DocketS22A1187
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 882 S.E.2d 312 (Ballinger, Warden v. Watkins) 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
Ballinger, Warden v. Watkins, 882 S.E.2d 312, 315 Ga. 369 (Ga. 2022).

Opinion

315 Ga. 369 FINAL COPY

S22A1187. BALLINGER v. WATKINS.

PINSON, Justice.

During Joseph Watkins’s murder trial, a juror conducted a

“drive test” during a break in deliberations to see whether the

defendant could have been physically present at the time and place

the victim was shot. The next day, the jury voted to convict Watkins

of felony murder and other crimes, and he was sentenced to life in

prison. Years later, Watkins’s counsel learned about the juror’s

misconduct and filed the habeas petition in this case. The habeas

court ultimately granted relief on the juror-misconduct claim and

two other grounds. We conclude that Watkins has shown that the

juror’s misconduct caused him actual prejudice—for at least that

juror, her drive test “proved” a key and heavily disputed piece of the

State’s burden of proof against Watkins—and we affirm the grant of

habeas relief on the juror-misconduct claim. 1. Background

(a) Trial and Convictions

(i) On January 11, 2000, Isaac Dawkins was shot once in the

head as he was driving his white pickup truck north on Highway 27

from Floyd College, south of Rome, Georgia. He died the next day.

The physical evidence of the crime was limited: a lead bullet core

recovered from Dawkins’s body during the autopsy, a 9mm cartridge

case found near the crime scene, and a bullet fragment found inside

Dawkins’s car that had markings consistent with having been fired

from a 9mm firearm. No firearm was found.

On the evening of the shooting, Wayne Benson was also driving

north on Highway 27. He noticed a small blue car driving erratically

and interacting with a white pickup truck about a half mile north of

Floyd College. After losing sight of the vehicles “[f]or a few minutes”

and traveling about a mile to a mile-and-a-half down the road,

Benson saw a “flash of some kind” before the white truck drove

across the median, into southbound traffic, and then onto the far

shoulder. Benson pulled over and called 911 to report the accident,

2 and emergency services were dispatched at 7:19 p.m. No one else

witnessed the incident or reported a vehicle interacting with the

white truck.1

(ii) During that same time, Watkins allegedly was at home in

northeast Floyd County, getting ready to drive to see his girlfriend,

who lived 45 minutes south in Cedartown. While getting into his

own white pickup truck, Watkins called his girlfriend at 7:15 p.m.

The call lasted for 4 minutes and 23 seconds and originated in an

area covered by the Kingston cell tower—the only cell tower that

covered Watkins’s house. Watkins’s girlfriend testified that he

arrived in his white pickup truck at her house—south of the crime

scene—around 8:00 p.m.

The parties’ expert witnesses agreed that Watkins’s cell phone

could not have been located at or near Floyd College when Watkins

1 One other witness, Barry Mullinax, a jailhouse informant who spent

time with Watkins’s co-defendant Mark Free at a diversion center, also claimed to have seen the accident, but his testimony not only was internally inconsistent but also contradicted a statement he previously gave to investigators after the accident; it appeared that he was actually describing a different shooting that occurred on Highway 20 West around the same time. 3 called his girlfriend at 7:15 p.m. because that area was not covered

by the Kingston cell tower. The parties’ experts relied on maps and

models of various cell towers in the area when explaining their

opinions to the jury. The maps, which included shaded areas

corresponding to the different cell towers, did not show the exact

bounds of the cell towers based on street names or the exact location

of the crime. Neither expert witness was able to provide an exact

street location where the Kingston cell tower’s coverage ended.

The State argued at trial that Watkins still could have been

physically present at the scene when Dawkins was shot (just before

Benson’s 911 call at 7:19 p.m.). The State explained that Watkins

could have made the phone call at 7:15 p.m. from the absolute last

point within the Kingston tower’s coverage while driving south

toward the crime scene,2 then turned around into the northbound

lanes (the direction in which Dawkins was traveling) and arrived at

2 Although the expert witnesses had not identified an exact point where

the Kingston cell tower’s coverage ended, the State pointed to the intersection of Chulio Road and Highway 411 as the starting point from where Watkins could have driven to the crime scene while calling his girlfriend. 4 the crime scene, all in the four minutes between the call to his

girlfriend and the emergency-services dispatch from Benson’s 911

call. Based on this theory, Watkins then would have needed to turn

around again to continue driving south to his girlfriend’s house and

arrive there within 45 minutes of the call he placed to her at 7:15

p.m. No evidence about distances or travel times between the

relevant locations was presented. The State’s theory also did not

account for the fact that Watkins arrived at his girlfriend’s house in

his white pickup truck but the only eyewitness saw a blue car

interact with Dawkins’s truck.

Defense counsel argued that Watkins’s phone call could not

have been initiated from where Benson saw the blue car first

interacting with Dawkins’s truck near Floyd College. Both parties’

expert witnesses agreed. Given the 7:15 p.m. phone call, defense

counsel argued that Watkins simply could not have been in the blue

car at the relevant times and locations.

(iii) The State’s theory of the case was that Watkins “despised

Isaac Dawkins” because Dawkins had dated Watkins’s ex-girlfriend,

5 and much of the testimony presented by the State concerned various

incidents and arguments between Dawkins and Watkins. The State

also presented testimony from a number of witnesses about

incriminating statements made by Watkins, but nearly all of those

witnesses were heavily impeached.3

The State also sought to link Watkins to Dawkins’s shooting by

presenting the jury with evidence about two deceased dogs. The first

dog was the Dawkins family’s pet, which was shot between the eyes

3 For example, Tiffany Sledge testified that Watkins said he “would get

that son-of-a-b***h, Isaac, if it was the last thing he had to do and kill him,” but she was Watkins’s former co-worker who the jury could have believed cut a deal to testify to benefit her boyfriend who was facing drug charges. Winford Ellis, a jailhouse informant, allegedly told the State earlier that Watkins was “laughing because [investigators] were out diving in Swan Lake all day, you know, dragging the lake” when Watkins said “[the murder weapon is] in a lake but it’s not in that lake,” but Ellis denied making these statements at trial and said he had made it all up. Corey Jacobs, who was in jail at the time of Watkins’s trial, said he overheard Watkins “just bragging about shooting Isaac” in a home improvement store’s parking lot, but he also said he attended Pepperell High School with Watkins, yet Watkins did not attend Pepperell. Josh Flemister had previously told police officers that Watkins told him to say that Watkins was with him all day the day of the shooting, but he testified at trial that he made that up, explaining that the police intimidated him because he was underage and drunk at the police station.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
882 S.E.2d 312, 315 Ga. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballinger-warden-v-watkins-ga-2022.