CAMPBELL v. THE STATE (Four Cases)

907 S.E.2d 871, 320 Ga. 333
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 22, 2024
DocketS24A0578, S24A0580, S24A0581, S24A1180
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 907 S.E.2d 871 (CAMPBELL v. THE STATE (Four 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
CAMPBELL v. THE STATE (Four Cases), 907 S.E.2d 871, 320 Ga. 333 (Ga. 2024).

Opinion

320 Ga. 333 FINAL COPY

S24A0578. CAMPBELL v. THE STATE. S24A0580. SANDERS v. THE STATE. S24A0581. PARRISH v. THE STATE. S24A1180. SPEAKS v. THE STATE.

WARREN, Justice.

In November 2018, Jordan Campbell and Roderick Parrish

were convicted of felony murder and other crimes related to the

death of Rebecca Foley. At the same trial, Shacqeal Sanders and

Henry Speaks were convicted of malice murder and other crimes

related to the death of James Pastures and aggravated assault of

Maurice Harris. All four defendants were also convicted of gang-

related charges. They appeal their convictions. For the reasons

discussed below, we affirm in all four cases.1

1 Foley was killed in January 2013, and Pastures was killed and Harris

was assaulted in January 2015. In August 2016, a Chatham County grand jury indicted Campbell, Parrish, Sanders, Speaks, and Kevin Smith together in a 59-count indictment. (Smith’s case is not part of this appeal.) Campbell and Parrish were jointly charged with malice murder of Foley, two counts of felony murder based on aggravated assault, felony murder based on possession of a firearm by a first offender probationer, two counts of aggravated assault (with a deadly weapon and with intent to rob), two counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, and eight counts of violation of the Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act (the “Gang Act”) (based on each alleged count). Parrish was also charged with possession of a firearm by a first-offender probationer and violation of the Gang Act based on that crime. Sanders and Speaks were jointly charged with malice murder of Pastures, felony murder, two counts of conspiracy to commit murder (based on Pastures and Harris), two counts of aggravated assault, criminal attempt to commit murder (of Harris), five counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, and 12 counts of violations of the Gang Act. The defendants’ first trial resulted in a mistrial on October 26, after evidence was presented that one of the jurors was threatened by relatives of Campbell and Parrish. The case was then re-tried from October 29 to November 18, 2018. The jury found Campbell guilty on all counts, except malice murder and the related gang count, on which the jury could not reach a verdict. The jury found Parrish guilty on all counts except malice murder and the associated Gang Act count, on which the jury could not reach a verdict. The jury found Sanders guilty on all counts, except criminal attempt to commit a felony and two violations of the Gang Act, on which the jury could not reach a verdict. The jury found Speaks guilty on all counts except criminal attempt to commit a felony, one count of aggravated assault, two counts of possession of a firearm during a felony, and three Gang Act counts, on which the jury could not reach a verdict. All of the counts on which the jury could not reach a verdict were later nolle prossed. The defendants were sentenced in November and December 2018. The trial court sentenced Campbell to serve life without parole for one felony murder count, and a total of 65 additional years for the counts that were not vacated or merged. The court sentenced Parrish to serve life without parole for felony murder and an additional 75 years on the counts that were not vacated or merged. The court sentenced Sanders to serve life without parole for malice murder and an additional 105 years for the counts that were not vacated or merged. The court sentenced Speaks to serve life without parole for malice murder and an additional 70 years for the counts that were not vacated or merged. Each defendant filed a timely motion for new trial and amended it with new counsel. In January 2023, after evidentiary hearings, the trial court denied the motions filed by Campbell, Parrish, and Sanders. The court granted Speaks’s motion to be resentenced because the sentence for conspiracy to commit

2 1. The evidence presented at trial showed the following.

(a) Gang Evidence

Extensive testimony about the East Gangster Bloods (“EGB”)

gang, a subset of the Bloods gang, was presented. Sergeant Robert

Santoro testified that members of this gang commit crimes to make

money for the gang and “do violence” to “gain status within the

gang.” He explained that the gang “operates based off . . . violence,

fear, and intimidation,” and the gang members “share[ ] firearms

and weapons and they pass them from one to the other.”

Sergeant Santoro also testified that documents recovered from

EGB gang members indicated that Sanders and Speaks were high-

murder was outside of the statutory range, but denied the rest of his motion for new trial. Each defendant filed a timely notice of appeal. This Court dismissed Speaks’s first appeal as not ripe because although the trial court ruled that Speaks would be resentenced, the resentencing had not yet occurred. On remand, Speaks was resentenced to life with the possibility of parole for malice murder, ten years in prison for the conspiracy charge that did not merge and five years for the firearm possession count that was not merged or vacated; the sentences for the gang counts (15 years for each of the three counts that were not merged or vacated) were converted to probation. Speaks then filed a timely appeal. Campbell’s, Sanders’s, and Parrish’s cases were docketed to the April 2024 term of this Court; Speaks’s case was docketed to the August 2024 term. All of the cases were submitted for a decision on the briefs. We have consolidated these appeals for purposes of this opinion. 3 ranking members of the gang and that Campbell and Parrish were

members with no rank. Testimony and photographs also showed

that the defendants had gang-related tattoos, wore gang colors, and

displayed gang signs. In interviews with police officers, Campbell

and Parrish admitted that they were members of the Bloods gang,

and Parrish said that Smith and Pastures were members. Harris

testified that he, Campbell, Parrish, Smith, and Speaks were all in

the Bloods gang.

(b) Foley’s Murder

Shortly before 7:00 p.m. on January 21, 2013, Rebecca Foley

drove into the parking lot of her apartment building. Her boyfriend

arrived in his car “at least a couple minutes” later and saw her car

“up against” a parked car. He found her “laid over to the side” in the

driver’s seat of her car, and he called 911.2 Foley had been killed by

a gunshot to her back.

Two months later, in March 2013, two men in a car shot at

2 He made this 911 call at 6:55 p.m.

4 Samuel Barnes and then crashed into the back yard of Jennifer and

Timothy Parker’s house. Jennifer saw one man, whom she later

identified in a photo line-up and in court as Kevin Smith, get out of

the car after the crash carrying a gun. Smith asked Timothy to take

the gun. Timothy refused, but Jennifer gave Smith a plastic bag, and

Smith put the gun in the bag and tied it. After he tied it, Jennifer

noticed there was a smear of what appeared to be blood on the

outside of the bag. The second man, whom Jennifer later identified

in a photo line-up as Pastures, came out of the driver’s side of the

car and “banged” on the Parkers’ door, saying, “You didn’t see

nothing. . . . It was just me.” The police later arrested Smith and

Pastures. When police searched the area around the Parkers’ yard,

they found the plastic bag with the gun, which was a Taurus 585

.380-caliber. The blood on the bag matched Smith’s DNA. Through

forensic testing, police established that the gun matched the bullet

and shell casing found at the scene of Foley’s shooting two months

earlier.

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Bluebook (online)
907 S.E.2d 871, 320 Ga. 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-the-state-four-cases-ga-2024.