Emer J. Wilson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 28, 2025
DocketA25A1269
StatusPublished

This text of Emer J. Wilson v. State (Emer J. Wilson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emer J. Wilson v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION BROWN, C. J., BARNES, P. J., and WATKINS, J.

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. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

October 28, 2025

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia .A-2̀5A1269. WILSON v. THE STATE.

BROWN, Chief Judge.

Following a jury trial, Emer Wilson was convicted of aggravated sodomy, three

counts of child molestation, and cruelty to children in the first degree.1 Wilson filed

a motion for new trial, which the trial court denied. She appeals from the trial court’s

order, asserting that her trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance of counsel when

he failed to procure witness Brandi Hurst for trial, that the trial court erred by failing

to compel Hurst’s attendance at the motion for new trial hearing, and that the forensic

expert witness bolstered the credibility of the victim. We find no error and affirm.

1 Three other defendants were also charged with sexual offenses against the victim, including her parents, Rachel Merrell and Dillon Godfrey, and Jason Hendricks, but they are not parties to this appeal. “On appeal from a criminal conviction, a defendant no longer enjoys the

presumption of innocence, and the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to

the guilty verdict.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Anderson v. State, 348 Ga.

App. 322 (822 SE2d 684) (2018). So viewed, Ashley Bramlett, who was employed

with the Gilmer County Department of Family and Children Services (“DFCS” or

the “Department”), testified that the Department first became involved with the

children in July of 2019, when Wilson, the children’s maternal grandmother, called

law enforcement to report that the children’s mother had shown up and tried to take

R. M. M., the victim herein, and her siblings, T. B. and E. M.2 The children had been

removed from their mother’s custody in July 2019, and had been placed in the home

of their maternal great-grandmother, M. M., with whom Wilson lived. The children

lived with them until November 2020. Bramlett was a supervisor at the time and was

familiar with both the children’s mother and Wilson, as both had an extensive history

with the Department.

In November, 2020, Brandi Hurst, the previous foster care supervisor, who had

become the case manager in November 2019, left the Department, and Bramlett took

2 The mother had a fourth child, R. M., who was removed from her custody at birth due to the presence of drugs in his urine. 2 over the case as the foster care supervisor. Bramlett remained in a supervisory role but

assigned the case to Ashley Bryant and instructed her to meet the families,

placements, children, and “collaterals.”3

Bryant testified that she became involved on November 1, 2020, when the kids

were five (T. B.), four (R. M. M.), and three years old (E. M.) and five days old (R.

M.), and the plan was to give M. M. guardianship of the children. On November 4,

however, Tammy Ledford, who was the director of the daycare center where R. M.

M. and E. M. were students, contacted Bryant to report that R. M. M. and E. M. said

that they were living with their mom, who, at that time, was only allowed supervised

visits by DFCS. Bryant visited T. B., who confirmed that they were living with their

mom and told her he had not been sleeping well. Bryant testified that T. B. had very

dark circles under his eyes, very red ears, and looked very defeated. Bryant also visited

R. M. M. and she, too, confirmed that the children were living with their mom. The

children were removed from the great-grandmother’s home on November 12, 2020.

Because there was no foster home that could take all three children, E. M. and R. M.

M. were placed with Rebecca Scott, and T. B., with a paternal relative.

3 “Collaterals” referred to other people who were in contact with the children. 3 Scott testified that she picked R. M. M. and E. M. up from daycare on

November 12, 2020, and that they looked rough and were sad. Scott described R. M.

M. as very spunky, sweet, intelligent, extremely shy, and very mature. Scott testified

that although R. M. M. was only four years old at the time, she was very

knowledgeable about the female body and talked very openly about her brother’s penis

and her vagina during bed time.

In March of 2021, R. M. M. told Scott that things happened at her Nana’s

house (referring to Wilson), including “bad guys” taking her outside and doing things

to her. Scott immediately called Bryant, who advised Scott to document what R. M.

M. was saying but not to question her. As a result of R. M. M.’s disclosure, Bryant

scheduled a forensic interview. Scott took R. M. M. to three forensic interviews and

a medical exam and observed that R. M. M. seemed unaffected during the forensic

medical exam. The pediatric nurse practitioner who performed the exam testified that

she saw no evidence of injury and explained that only ten percent of examinations

reveal injuries. She also explained that with younger children, the chance to collect

DNA or evidential samples is best during the first three days after contact because

young children heal so quickly due to vascularization.

4 Jana Crump, who fostered T. B., testified that he was very aggressive towards

her children and would hit them whenever he was frustrated and used very foul

language. On one occasion, she walked into her sons’ room, noticed that T. B.’s

underwear was turned sideways, and when she asked what happened, her son told her

“[T. B.] was kissing my butt,” and T. B. told her “Well, I was making [the son] kiss

my dinger,” which is the term they used for penis. When she asked T. B. where he

had seen that before, he told her he had seen his mother do that. T. B. also told Crump

that he had nightmares about the four defendants and that he and R. M. M. were

forced to touch each other.

Lisa Broussard, the forensic interviewer and state’s expert witness, explained

the process and barriers to disclosure and discussed the family dynamics that come

into play when an abuser is a family member. When Broussard went over anatomical

drawings with R. M. M., the child described the male genitalia as a “penis” and the

female genitalia as the “tee-tee spot.” Broussard first interviewed R. M. M. on April

27, 2021, when she was four years old. The interview was published for the jury, along

with two other forensic interviews Broussard conducted with R. M. M. During the

first interview, R. M. M. disclosed that both co-defendants Dillon and Jason “tee-teed

5 on her leg” and Dillon “stuck his penis in her tee-tee spot,” and Nana watched them

do it. When she asked Nana to make them stop, she told her it was okay for them to

do it. R. M. M. also disclosed that Wilson took off her clothes and put her “tee-tee

spot on [R. M. M.’s] tee-tee spot” and “tee-teed on [the child’s] tee-tee spot.”

In the second interview a week later, R. M. M. told her that “Nana made me

touch [T. B.’s] penis.” She stood and demonstrated, stating “Nana caught my hand

and put my hand on [T.B.’s] tee-tee spot.” R. M. M. also said that Wilson made her

put her mouth on Wilson’s vagina, demonstrating as if she were putting her head

between her own legs, that “[t]he smell was yucky or gross,” and that Wilson made

her put her hand on Wilson’s vagina.

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Emer J. Wilson v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emer-j-wilson-v-state-gactapp-2025.