Brooks v. State

826 S.E.2d 45, 305 Ga. 600
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 11, 2019
DocketS18A1282
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 826 S.E.2d 45 (Brooks 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
Brooks v. State, 826 S.E.2d 45, 305 Ga. 600 (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

NAHMIAS, Presiding Justice.

**600Appellant Nicholas Brooks was convicted of felony murder and other crimes in connection with the shooting death of Jason Blount. Appellant contends that the evidence presented at his trial was legally insufficient to overcome his defense of coercion; that the **601prosecutor committed misconduct by introducing into evidence an edited version of Appellant's video-recorded police interview; and that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to object to the admission of the recording and by inadequately informing him of his right to testify. Appellant's claims are meritless, so we affirm.1 *481. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the evidence presented at trial showed the following. On the afternoon of April 5, 2010, Appellant did some flooring work at a trailer owned by David Colleps. After leaving Colleps's trailer, Appellant hung out and smoked methamphetamine with his acquaintance Kelly Williamson and her friend Michael Cossette, whom Appellant had met earlier **602that day, at a nearby trailer that belonged to a mutual friend identified only as "Carlos." Around 2:00 a.m., Appellant left briefly to get his pickup truck, returning to Carlos's with Williamson's sister Carrie. At some point, Appellant, Williamson, and Cossette went into a bedroom and began talking about how they needed money.

When Appellant and Williamson told Cossette that Colleps kept a lot of money and meth in his trailer, Cossette suggested that they rob Colleps, and Appellant told Cossette that he had just gotten out of prison and could be trusted. Appellant and Williamson, who also had been in Colleps's trailer, drew a diagram of the trailer on a piece of cardboard.2 The three planned that Williamson would be the getaway driver and Appellant would make sure that everyone in the trailer stayed on the floor while Cossette searched for money and meth. Appellant, Cossette, and Williamson then went to Williamson's house, where Cossette made a mask out of a pair of green sweatpants and Appellant made his own mask out of a black shirt.

Around 4:30 a.m., Williamson drove Appellant and Cossette to Colleps's trailer in Appellant's truck. Appellant and Cossette put on their masks, and after Cossette knocked loudly on the door of the trailer, Appellant kicked in the door, entered, and stood in the living room as Cossette followed him in brandishing a 9mm pistol. Colleps and his cousin fled through a bedroom window when they heard the assailants. His friend Jason Blount and Blount's fiancée were also staying in the trailer that night. Cossette ordered them to get down on the floor, and Blount's fiancée, who was in a hallway, complied. When Blount remained standing in the kitchen, Cossette hit him on the head with the pistol and began searching the trailer for money and meth. Blount then threw some tools that were strewn around the kitchen at Appellant, who was still standing in the living room. Cossette fired several rounds toward Blount, who was hit once in the chest. Cossette and Appellant then fled from the trailer.

Blount died moments later from his gunshot wound. His autopsy later showed that he had been shot by a 9mm pistol from a distance of several feet. Blount's fiancée was not injured; she could not identify the two intruders, but said that both were men wearing *49masks, one of which was green, and both men were armed with handguns.3 **603As Williamson drove Appellant and Cossette back to Carlos's trailer, Cossette took the two remaining bullets out of his pistol and threw them into the woods. Appellant and Williamson discussed parking Appellant's truck behind Carlos's trailer so no one would see it. Once in the trailer, Appellant told Cossette that he would burn both of the masks, and he ripped up the diagram of Colleps's trailer and put the pieces of the diagram and the two masks in a plastic bag. Cossette and Williamson then went to sleep while Appellant hung out in the living room with Carrie and Carlos.

Later that day, Williamson met with investigators, and she eventually gave them Appellant's and Cossette's names. Cossette was then arrested at a friend's house, where investigators found two firearms, one of which was Cossette's empty 9mm pistol. That evening, the investigators spotted Appellant driving his truck, but moments later, they found the truck abandoned. The next day, Appellant called an investigator and said that he was scared and hiding out in the Atlanta area with his stepmother; after he failed to turn himself in as requested, officers located and arrested him and his stepmother as they were leaving a motel in Locust Grove.

After his arrest, Appellant was interviewed; the State played a redacted version of the video recording of the interview for the jury. Appellant told the following story. In the bedroom of Carlos's trailer, Cossette pulled out a 9mm pistol and told Appellant and Williamson that "they [were] going to go rob somebody." When Appellant said he did not want to get involved, Cossette pointed his pistol at Appellant and told him that he "was going to f**king do it or [Cossette] was going to f**king kill [him]" and that Cossette knew where Appellant's kids lived. Appellant "didn't say nothing" because he "didn't know what to do; [he] was scared." Cossette wanted him to wear a green mask, but he decided to make a black mask for himself. When they arrived at Colleps's trailer, Cossette kicked in the door and hit Blount with his pistol, and Appellant, who was standing in the living room, told Blount, "I'm not going to do anything." Blount then threw a drill at Cossette, and Cossette fired a few rounds and shot Blount. Back at Carlos's, Cossette examined his pistol, which still had two bullets left in it, and told Appellant to get rid of the masks. Appellant put them in a plastic bag, along with a diagram of Colleps's trailer that Cossette and Williamson had drawn. When everyone fell asleep, Appellant left Carlos's and threw the plastic bag in a trash can outside of a friend's house. (Investigators later found the bag containing the green mask, the black mask, and the torn diagram in the trash can.) Appellant then hid from law enforcement because he was scared of what Cossette would do to him or his family.

**604Appellant did not testify at trial. Relying primarily on his interview, the defense theory was that Cossette had coerced Appellant into participating in the crimes. Cossette and Williamson both testified, however, that Cossette never threatened Appellant and never pointed his pistol at Appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
826 S.E.2d 45, 305 Ga. 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-state-ga-2019.