Burley v. State

888 S.E.2d 507, 316 Ga. 796
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 31, 2023
DocketS23A0322
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 888 S.E.2d 507 (Burley 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
Burley v. State, 888 S.E.2d 507, 316 Ga. 796 (Ga. 2023).

Opinion

316 Ga. 796 FINAL COPY

S23A0322. BURLEY v. THE STATE.

ELLINGTON, Justice.

A Calhoun County jury found Undrea Burley guilty of felony

murder in connection with the beating death of Joshua Brooks.1

Burley contends the trial court committed plain error by failing to

instruct the jury sua sponte on the elements of malice murder

1 On March 30, 2017, a Calhoun County grand jury indicted Undrea Burley and co-defendants Wesley Adams, Shakera Burns, and Demetrious Smith for offenses in connection with the beating death of Joshua Brooks, an inmate of Calhoun State Prison. In Count 1 of the indictment, Burley, Adams, Burns, and Smith were charged with felony murder predicated on aggravated assault (“irrespective of malice”); in Count 2, they were charged with aggravated assault “with intent to murder.” In Count 3, Burley, Adams, and Smith were charged with violating the Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. In Count 4, Smith was separately charged with violating the Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. The charges against Burns (a corrections officer) were severed, and she was to be tried separately. The jury acquitted Smith of all charges. The trial court directed a verdict of not guilty as to Count 3 of the indictment, and the jury found Adams and Burley guilty on Counts 1 and 2. At sentencing, the trial court merged Count 2 into Count 1. The trial court sentenced Burley to life in prison without the possibility of parole on Count 1. Burley filed a timely motion for a new trial on December 21, 2018, and amended it on September 12, 2019. The trial court denied the motion on September 14, 2020. Burley filed a notice of appeal on September 23, 2020, and the appeal was docketed in this Court to the term beginning in December 2022 and orally argued on March 29, 2023. because the indictment charged Burley and his co-defendants,

Wesley Adams and Demetrious Smith, with felony murder

predicated on “aggravated assault with intent to murder.” As

explained below, the trial court’s instructions concerning the

offenses of felony murder and aggravated assault with intent to

murder, though erroneous, did not constitute plain error requiring

reversal. Therefore, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

The evidence presented at trial showed the following. At about

9:00 p.m. on June 9, 2016, cell block H-1 of the Calhoun State Prison

was “put on lockdown” following a fight between inmates. Prison

surveillance video reveals that, as the lockdown began, inmates

Burley, Adams, and Brooks entered cell 107 of the H-1 block just

before the cell doors closed and locked. An hour and a half later,

Corrections Officer Shakera Burns can be seen slipping a note

beneath the door of cell 107. Security video recordings show that cell

107 — and all of the cells on cell block H-1 — remained locked from

9:00 p.m. on June 9 until shortly after noon the following day. A

video recording of the cell block shows that the inmates began

2 leaving their respective cells as soon as the cell doors opened at

12:12 p.m. on June 10. The video also shows several emergency

response officers entering the cell block to maintain order. At 1:03

p.m., after speaking with an inmate who approached him, a

corrections officer walked to and entered cell 107. Seconds later, the

officer called for the cell block to be locked down again.

One of the prison’s emergency response officers testified that

he was summoned to cell 107 after the cell block was put on

lockdown for the second time. Once there, he found Brooks on the

bottom bunk, “laying there stiff.” He concluded that Brooks was

dead because “rigor mortis had set in.” Nevertheless, prison medical

personnel moved Brooks’s body to the floor outside the cell and

began CPR. At about 4:00 p.m., agents of the Georgia Bureau of

Investigation arrived to investigate the death and to process the

crime scene.

GBI Agent Chris Samra testified that, when he arrived at the

cell block, he noticed that Brooks’s body, though clearly presenting

signs of “blunt force trauma, shoe prints, [and] numerous defensive

3 wounds,” was unusually clean and devoid of blood, leading him to

believe that “somebody cleaned the stuff up.” Agent Samra also

smelled “a strong odor of a cleaning agent,” which he suspected was

“Clorox” bleach, coming from inside cell 107. He observed that the

cell walls had been “wiped down.” While a forensic team processed

the cell, GBI agents reviewed the prison’s security video recordings.

The security video recordings, which were played for the jury,

showed that at 12:12 p.m. Burley and Adams emerged from cell 107

and stood together for a few moments, blocking the entrance to the

cell as corrections officers and inmates walked by them. Then, at

12:36 p.m. Adams took items from the cell and put them in a

trashcan. Moments later, co-defendant Smith joined Adams and

Burley and helped them mix cleaning solutions together in a bottle.

Adams took the bottle and returned to cell 107.

Inmate Brandon Walker testified that he spoke with Brooks

just before the lockdown and observed that Brooks appeared healthy

and uninjured. Inmate Jason White testified that he heard what he

assumed was Brooks being beaten throughout the night of June 9

4 by his cellmates, Adams and Burley. He also heard “a lot of

catcalling and hollers from other cells, [about] what to do to that boy

that night.” Inmate Demetrious Teague gave a statement to

investigators that Smith had ordered his fellow gang members,

Adams and Burley, to beat Brooks to death. At trial, however, he

denied having heard such orders.

Following the discovery of Brooks’s body in cell 107, Adams and

Burley were taken to separate cells. A corrections officer testified

that, as he walked Adams to a cell, Adams asked him if he was going

to be interviewed by an investigator. When the officer responded

“yes,” Adams volunteered that he, Burley, and Brooks had been

“wrestling” in cell 107 that night.

In cell 107, investigators identified several items that belonged

to Brooks, Burley, and Adams. They found blood-stained white

towels that smelled of bleach on top of a locker inside the cell. They

recovered a bottle containing a cloudy white liquid that also smelled

of bleach. They found blood residue throughout cell 107, including

on the walls, toilet, lockers, desks, door frame, radiator heater,

5 bunkbed, and bed ladder. The investigators also examined the

clothing Burley was wearing on June 10. Although his outer

garments were clean, they found bloodstains on Burley’s socks and

boxer shorts.

The investigators collected four bags containing items that

Adams had put in the trashcan. The bags contained damp clothing

and white bedsheets that smelled of bleach and had what appeared

to be bloodstains. The investigators identified Brooks’s blood-

spattered pants and Burley’s prison-issued pants, braided belt, and

blood-spattered white t-shirt. They also found a round, metal

combination lock inside a white sock — an item an officer testified

could be used as a weapon. Brooks’s personal items, other clothing,

and an identification card were also recovered from the bags of

trash. Although most of the blood samples analyzed were too

degraded by bleach for DNA-testing, investigators were able to

extract DNA from a bloodstain on Adams’s boot. That DNA sample

matched Brooks’s DNA profile.

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888 S.E.2d 507, 316 Ga. 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burley-v-state-ga-2023.