BOSTIC v. THE STATE (Two Cases)

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 30, 2025
DocketS25A0821, S25A0822
StatusPublished

This text of BOSTIC v. THE STATE (Two Cases) (BOSTIC v. THE STATE (Two Cases)) 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
BOSTIC v. THE STATE (Two Cases), (Ga. 2025).

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: September 30, 2025

S25A0821. BOSTIC v. THE STATE. S25A0822. WRIGHT v. THE STATE.

BETHEL, Justice.

A jury found Jerel Bostic and Timothy Wright guilty of felony

murder and other crimes in connection with the shooting death of

Jamichael Walker.1 Following the denial of their motions for new

1 The crimes occurred on March 27, 2019. In August 2021, an Emanuel

County grand jury jointly indicted Bostic, Wright, and Da’Korey Somerville for felony murder predicated on attempted armed robbery (Count 1), violation of the Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act (Count 2), armed robbery (Count 3), aggravated assault (Count 4), and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (Count 5). Bostic, Wright, and Somerville were tried together before a jury in December 2022. The jury found Wright and Somerville guilty of all charges. The jury found Bostic guilty on Counts 1-3, as well as a lesser-included offense on Count 4; Bostic was acquitted on Count 5. Somerville’s case is not part of this appeal. The trial court sentenced Wright to serve life in prison without the possibility of parole on Count 1, a concurrent 20-year sentence on Count 2, a concurrent sentence of life in prison on Count 3, and a consecutive 5-year sentence on Count 5. The trial court sentenced Bostic to serve life in prison on Count 1, a concurrent 20-year sentence on Count 2, and a concurrent sentence of life in prison on Count 3. Count 4 was merged. Bostic and Wright filed timely motions for new trial, which were later trial, they appeal. Bostic and Wright both challenge the sufficiency

of the evidence supporting their convictions. Both appellants also

assert that the trial court erred by denying their motions for new

trial on the general grounds and that the trial court erred in denying

their motions for directed verdicts. Bostic, for his part, also argues

that the trial court erred by admitting certain evidence against him

and that these errors cumulatively harmed him. For the reasons

that follow, we affirm.

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

evidence presented at trial showed the following. The crimes took

amended, and a hearing was held on the motions in June 2024. The State conceded that the evidence supporting the appellants’ convictions on Count 2, the Street Gang Act violation, was constitutionally insufficient, and the trial court purported to grant a new trial as to that count. But, of course, the court’s rationale for reversing those convictions bars retrial. See Jefferson v. State, 310 Ga. 725, 726 (2021) (“Although the trial court ‘granted’ [the appellant’s] motion [for new trial] as to the armed robbery convictions, the State is legally barred from retrying [him] on those counts given the court’s rationale for its decision. Once a reviewing court reverses a conviction solely for insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the jury’s verdict of guilty, double jeopardy bars retrial.” (citation and punctuation omitted)). The trial court denied the appellants’ motions as to their remaining convictions. Thereafter, on the State’s motion, the trial court entered an order of nolle prosequi on Count 2 as to both defendants. Bostic and Wright filed timely notices of appeal, and their cases were docketed to this Court’s April 2025 term. Bostic’s case, S25A0821, was orally argued on June 12, 2025. Wright’s case, S25A0822, was submitted for a decision on the briefs. 2 place outside a local game room at which Walker and, separately,

Wright and Da’Korey Somerville were all gambling. Walker was

shot multiple times outside the game room’s front door, and he died

at the scene. After the shooting, Walker’s phone was missing from

his person. Multiple witnesses observed the shooting from various

vantage points, and they testified at trial about what they saw.

Hubert Artis, Walker’s cousin, had exited the game room some

time before the shooting, going to his car parked outside. As he was

leaving the parking lot, Artis saw a fight start outside the game

room’s front door, though he could not determine how many people

were fighting or see who they were. When the fight broke apart, one

participant withdrew a pistol and shot another participant. Artis

testified that his friend Khalil Davis told him that he saw Bostic

“washing hi[m]self off” sometime after the shooting.

Timothy Clark, another cousin of Walker’s, was outside the

game room at the time of the shooting and testified that he knew

Wright and that Wright was the shooter. While he denied seeing

Bostic or Somerville, he observed that the guy “tussling” with

3 Walker looked like Bostic. A woman living in a nearby apartment

complex heard the shots and saw three men leaving the scene

together through the complex, though she could not see who they

were.

Walker’s acquaintance Ashia Gordon was parked outside the

game room with Laportia Johnson shortly before the shooting. While

there, Gordon saw Somerville and Bostic talking outside the game

room for a couple of minutes. As she and Johnson drove out of the

parking lot, Gordon saw a person exit the game room’s front door

and then saw Walker being pushed against a car as he exclaimed,

“Whoa, whoa, whoa, what’s going on?” Though Gordon could not see

exactly what transpired next, she recalled seeing people shoving

each other and then hearing gunshots as she and Johnson drove

away. Johnson confirmed that she and Gordon were in a parked

vehicle outside the game room, that she saw Walker outside the

game room with another person, and that she heard gunshots as

they drove away. Johnson denied seeing who any of the participants

were in the shooting and testified that she only heard rumors

4 afterward.

Sometime after the shooting, Jamie Walker, the victim’s

brother, met up with Johnson, who reported that she saw Bostic

fighting Walker outside the game room just before the shooting and

pointed Bostic out to Jamie as the person Walker was fighting. In

addition, Johnson told Jamie that she saw Wright shoot Walker.

According to Jamie, Johnson also told him that she was afraid to

report what she had seen to the police for concern that something

would happen to her family.

Investigators eventually met with Bostic for an interview and

collected a sample of his DNA. DNA collected from beneath Walker’s

fingernails matched the sample obtained from Bostic. When

interviewed by investigators, Bostic offered conflicting accounts of

his whereabouts at the time of the shooting. First, Bostic claimed

that he left the game room around 9:00 p.m., before the shooting.

But when confronted with the evidence of his DNA under Walker’s

fingernails, Bostic admitted that he was outside the game room at

the time of the shooting. He claimed, however, that he was walking

5 around the building toward the front when he heard gunshots ring

out and that he started running and ran into Walker, which, he

speculated, was how his DNA transferred.

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