Bowdery v. State

321 Ga. 890
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 24, 2025
DocketS25A0077
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 321 Ga. 890 (Bowdery 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
Bowdery v. State, 321 Ga. 890 (Ga. 2025).

Opinion

321 Ga. 890 FINAL COPY

S25A0077. BOWDERY v. THE STATE.

BETHEL, Justice.

A jury found Ryan Bowdery, Rashad Barber, and David

Wallace guilty of murder, aggravated assault, and related crimes in

connection with the shooting death of Darius Bottoms and the non-

fatal shooting of Jared Robinson. We previously affirmed the

convictions of Barber and Wallace.1 See Wallace v. State, 320 Ga.

1 The crimes occurred on June 13, 2014. In February 2015, a Fulton

County grand jury jointly indicted Bowdery, Barber, and Wallace for various crimes associated with Bottoms’s death. Specifically, the grand jury indicted Bowdery for participation in criminal street gang activity (Count 1), malice murder (Count 2), three counts of felony murder (Counts 3-5), two counts of aggravated assault (Counts 6, 7), criminal damage to property in the first degree (Count 8), criminal damage to property in the second degree (Count 9), and one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (Count 10). Bowdery, Barber, and Wallace were tried together before a jury in December 2017, and the jury found Bowdery guilty of all counts. The trial court sentenced Bowdery to serve life in prison with the possibility of parole for malice murder (Count 2), a consecutive five-year term for second-degree damage to property (Count 9), and a consecutive five-year term for firearm possession (Count 10). The remaining counts merged or were vacated by operation of law. Bowdery filed a timely motion for new trial, which he amended through new counsel. Following a hearing, the trial court entered an order denying the motion on January 17, 2024. Bowdery filed a timely notice of appeal, and the 272 (907 SE2d 657) (2024); Barber v. State, 314 Ga. 759 (879 SE2d

428) (2022). In this appeal, Bowdery contends that the evidence

corroborating the testimony of a witness who was an accomplice was

not sufficient under OCGA § 24-14-8. He also contends that the trial

court plainly erred in giving an incomplete instruction on accomplice

corroboration and that the trial court abused its discretion when it

failed to take remedial measures after Bowdery objected to the

State’s closing argument. As explained below, these enumerations

of error fail, and, therefore, we affirm.

State’s witness Kareasha Washington provided much of the

evidence related to the shooting and the circumstances leading up

to it. As set forth in the appeal in Barber’s case, and viewed in the

light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence showed the

following:

[I]n the days leading up to the June 13, 2014 shooting that resulted in Bottoms’s death, two rival gangs were involved in an ongoing dispute related, at least in part, to the recent decision by one gang member, Kareasha

case was docketed in this Court to the term beginning in December 2024 and submitted for a decision on the briefs.

2 Washington, to leave the “Billy Bad Asses Bloods” gang (the “Billy” gang) and join the “Neighborhood Bloods/Rolling Twenties Blood” gang (the “NHB” gang). Washington left the Billy gang because some members thought she was involved in the death of another member of the Billy gang. Barber and his co-defendants, David Wallace and Ryan Bowdery, were members of the NHB gang. . . . [T]he evidence showed that on June 6, 2014, a blue Acura was stolen four blocks from the area where Bottoms was shot. Although it was not established who stole the blue Acura, Washington admitted she and Wallace drove around in the stolen Acura for several days after it was taken. On June 9, 2014, a 2014 beige four- door Hyundai Elantra belonging to James Terrell, a friend of Barber’s stepfather, Jasen Williams, was stolen from in front of Williams’s home, where Barber lived until just a few weeks before Terrell’s Hyundai was stolen. Several hours later, shots were fired into a boarding house located on Sells Avenue, an area known to be part of the territory of the Billy gang. Shots were fired at the same boarding house two nights later, on June 12, 2014, at 4:20 a.m. Police, on this occasion, were able to recover three 9mm shell casings from outside the boarding house. On June 12, 2014, at about 6:20 p.m., Barber, Washington, Wallace, and a fourth person drove in the stolen Acura to the Arrowhead Pawn Shop in Clayton County. Video surveillance from the pawn shop shows Barber, Washington, and Wallace inside the pawn shop looking at guns while another shopper, Abert Moss, and her friend, Nashunta Thomas, did the same. Barber is seen on the video wearing jeans and a white tank top. The video also shows Barber, Washington, and Wallace leaving the pawn shop, followed shortly thereafter by Thomas and Moss, who had purchased a 9mm Jimenez

3 handgun. As Thomas sat in a car in the pawn shop parking lot with the gun Moss had just purchased, Wallace stuck a different gun in Thomas’s face and demanded the newly purchased 9mm handgun. Wallace then ran back to the blue Acura and fled with Barber, Washington, and the other person. Approximately five hours later, at 11:30 p.m. on June 12, 2014, Barber’s stepfather, Williams, was attacked outside his home and shot multiple times. Selena Barber, Rashad Barber’s mother, accompanied Williams to the hospital, but she did not tell Barber about the shooting because she was afraid of what Barber might do. She and Williams reported the shooting to the police, however, believing that it might be related to Barber’s dispute with the Billy gang. Within hours of Williams’s shooting, Barber learned that Williams had been shot, and he, Wallace, Washington, and Bowdery got together. The four drove around in the blue Acura with Washington in the driver’s seat, Wallace in the front passenger seat, and Bowdery and Barber, who Washington stated was carrying both a revolver and a 9mm handgun, sitting in the rear seats. According to Washington, she then made plans to meet with a friend who was a member of the Billy gang near Legacy Drive and Sells Avenue in Fulton County. Washington, Barber, Wallace, and Bowdery arrived early at the agreed-upon location, so Barber and Bowdery got out of the car. Washington and Wallace remained in the car until, a few minutes later, she heard Barber yell, “There go them Billies,” and she saw Barber and Bowdery run around the corner at the intersection of Legacy Drive and Sells Avenue. Washington then heard several gunshots, causing her to get out of the car and run away. Barber and Bowdery ran back to the stolen Acura, and Wallace, who was, by now, in the driver’s seat, followed

4 Washington and told her to get in the car. As they drove away, Washington heard Barber keep saying, “That was the Billy, that was the Billy who shot up my Mama’s house.” Theda Hall, who lived in a second-floor apartment near the corner of Legacy Drive and Sells Avenue, stepped onto her balcony in the early morning hours of June 13, 2014, and saw whom she described as two males sitting in the front seat of a vehicle parked near the corner of Legacy Drive and Sells Avenue. She saw another male standing outside the vehicle on the sidewalk, and a fourth male standing outside the vehicle in the shadows. According to Hall, the male standing near the vehicle, the one she referred to as the “shooter,” had a gun and was wearing jeans and a white shirt with thin straps across the shoulders. She described the shooter as being about 25-30 years old and approximately six feet tall with a muscular build, medium to medium-dark brown skin, “a little short haircut,” and possibly a mark or tattoo on his neck. Hall saw the shooter walk up to the corner of Legacy Drive and Sells Avenue while the car pulled forward, then heard some yelling, followed by several gunshots.

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321 Ga. 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowdery-v-state-ga-2025.