Charles Edwin Mason v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 24, 2014
DocketA13A2296
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Charles Edwin Mason v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION BARNES, P. J., MILLER, and RAY, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

January 24, 2014

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A2296. MASON v. THE STATE.

BARNES, Presiding Judge.

A jury convicted Charles Edwin Mason of one count of burglary, one count of

criminal trespass, two counts of possession of tools for the commission of a crime,

one count of felony theft by taking, and two counts of forgery in the second degree.

The trial court denied his motion for new trial, resulting in the present appeal in

which Mason argues that the trial court erroneously denied his right to self-

representation and failed to discharge his trial counsel; that his trial counsel rendered

ineffective assistance; and that his prior convictions were improperly admitted for the

purpose of impeachment. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

“Following a criminal conviction, the defendant is no longer presumed

innocent, and we view the evidence in the light most favorable to sustain the verdict.”

Anthony v. State, 317 Ga. App. 807 (732 SE2d 845) (2012). Guided by this standard,

we turn to the evidence presented in this case. The Furnished Townhouse Break-In. In the early morning hours of June 21,

2011, police officers were dispatched to a residential address in Cobb County in

response to a security alarm that had been triggered. The address was for a furnished

model townhouse in a newly built subdivision. The responding officers discovered

that a side window to the townhouse had been pushed open and had glove prints on

it. Upon entering the townhouse, the officers noticed that a television had been

removed from a bracket on the living room wall and had been taken from the home.

In an upstairs bedroom, the officers noticed that another television had been moved,

as if someone had attempted to remove it from the wall bracket. Some of the bedding

from the master bedroom also had been taken.

When the officers continued their search outside the townhouse, they

discovered a flat screen television together with a pillow and comforter in the bushes.

The pillow and comforter matched the bedding that had been taken from the master

bedroom, and a salesperson employed by the subdivision developer who had an office

in the furnished townhouse identified the television as the one that had been mounted

on the living room wall. Believing that the perpetrator might still be in the area, more

officers and the tactical SWAT unit arrived to establish a perimeter around the

2 subdivision and to check neighboring townhouses. A K9 unit also arrived at the scene

but was unable to track a scent.

The Vacant Townhouse Break-In. As the tactical SWAT team searched a vacant

townhouse located a few doors down on the same road in the subdivision, they

noticed that a string to the attic door was swaying and that there was some insulation

on the carpet floor below the door. When one of the officers looked around the attic,

he noticed something red protruding from the white insulation. Believing that

someone was hiding underneath the insulation, the officer ordered the person to show

his hands. The person hiding in the insulation was Defendant Mason, who complied

with the officer’s directive and started to move toward him. As Mason approached

the officer, he stepped on the drywall between the wooden trusses and fell through

the ceiling into a bathtub right below the attic. Another officer immediately

apprehended Mason.

In the attic near where Mason had been hiding, officers found a ball cap, a pair

of work gloves, and a backpack. Inside the backpack were several items, including

a television power cord that fit the television found in the bushes and a pair of needle-

nose pliers. The weave and texture on the palms of the work gloves appeared

3 consistent with the prints found on the side window of the furnished townhouse that

had been burglarized.

Later that morning, the police were called back to the vacant townhouse to

retrieve additional items that had been discovered there. A project manager for the

subdivision had been repairing the bathroom in the townhouse and had discovered a

wallet, a personal check, and a set of keys underneath the insulation that had fallen

into the bathtub where Mason crashed through the ceiling. A second personal check

subsequently was found underneath the insulation by a worker repairing the drywall.

The wallet found in the bathtub contained the driver’s license of an individual

named Reginald Degraffenreaidt and a Strayer University identification card that had

his name but Mason’s photo on it. Further investigation revealed that Degraffenreaidt

did not know Mason, and that his wallet recently had been stolen from the armrest of

his vehicle.

The First Forged Check. The first check found in the bathtub belonged to an

individual named Brett Barksdale, who did not realize that his check was missing

until he was contacted by the police. Barksdale kept his checkbook in the glove

compartment of his car, and the missing check had been removed from the middle of

his checkbook. The check was made payable to Reginald Degraffenreaidt and was

4 signed, but Barksdale did not know Degraffenreaidt and the signature on the check

was not his. According to Barksdale, the check had been blank the last time it was in

his possession.

The Second Forged Check. The second check belonged to an individual named

Remy Bulbekian, who also did not realize that he was missing the check until

contacted by the police. The check had been removed from the middle of his

checkbook in his car. Like the first check, the second check was made payable to

Reginald Degraffenreaidt and was signed. Bulbekian testified that he did not know

Degraffenreaidt, the signature on the check was not his, and the check had been blank

the last time it was in his possession.

The Car, Tools, and Stolen Laptop Computer. After he was arrested and

informed of his rights, Mason told the police that his girlfriend had dropped him off

in the subdivision after they had fought. However, the detective assigned to the case

believed that the set of keys found underneath the insulation in the bathtub might

belong to a getaway car parked near the subdivision, which was gated and could not

be driven into at night. The detective took the keys with him to an apartment complex

located next to the subdivision and pressed the alarm activator on the key chain to see

if it matched any cars. The keys activated the alarm on a Nissan Sentra parked in the

5 complex approximately 200 to 300 feet from the furnished townhouse. The car was

registered to Mason’s girlfriend, and Mason later admitted that he had borrowed the

car from her on the night of the break-ins.

The detective had the car impounded and obtained a search warrant. While

executing the warrant, the police found a wallet in the driver’s side door containing

a driver’s license, Social Security card, and credit cards belonging to Mason. In the

trunk, the police found a crowbar, a pry bar, bolt cutters, a screwdriver, a set of hand

trucks, a laptop computer inside a bag, and a flat screen television wrapped in a

blanket.

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