Eric Lamont Dixon v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 11, 2013
DocketA12A2260
StatusPublished

This text of Eric Lamont Dixon v. State (Eric Lamont Dixon 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
Eric Lamont Dixon v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION BARNES, P. J., MCFADDEN and MCMILLIAN, 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. (Court of Appeals Rule 4 (b) and Rule 37 (b), February 21, 2008) http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

March 11, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A12A2260. DIXON v. THE STATE.

BARNES, Presiding Judge.

Following a bench trial, the trial court found Eric Lamont Dixon guilty of the

armed robbery of a Cherokee County convenience store and the aggravated assault

of one of its employees. The trial court denied Dixon’s motion for new trial, resulting

in this appeal.1 Dixon contends that the trial court erred in admitting similar

transaction evidence of five armed robberies committed in neighboring Bartow

County in which Dixon was one of the alleged perpetrators. He further contends that

1 We dismissed Dixon’s previous appeal, Case No. A12A1836, because his original motion for new trial had been untimely filed. The trial court thereafter granted Dixon leave to file an out-of-time appeal, and Dixon timely filed a second motion for new trial. It is from the denial of his second motion for new trial that Dixon now appeals. his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance. For the reasons discussed below, we

affirm.

The Cherokee County Robbery. Construed in favor of the trial court’s finding

of guilt,2 the evidence introduced at the bench trial showed that at approximately 6:30

a.m. on January 10, 2009, a male carrying a dark backpack with a distinctive white

design on the front and wielding a long kitchen knife entered a BP convenience store

located near Interstate 75 in Cherokee County. He wore a blue jacket, a dark hood,

a dark mask, dark gloves, jeans, and white tennis shoes.

Two employees, but no customers, were in the store at the time. The perpetrator

approached one of the employees in the bakery section of the store and, using his left

hand, touched her neck with the knife and demanded “all the money.” The second

employee intervened and told the perpetrator that he would give him the money, and

the perpetrator followed him to the cash register in the front of the store. When the

second employee opened the cash register, the perpetrator pulled the drawer out of

the register and dumped the money from it into his backpack. The perpetrator then

fled from the store.

2 See Hickman v. State, 311 Ga. App. 544, 545 (716 SE2d 597) (2011).

2 A detective with the Cobb County Police Department who was on his way

home drove up to the convenience store as the perpetrator fled from inside. The

detective drew his weapon and yelled for him to stop. The perpetrator ignored the

detective and ran behind a large mound of dirt where his getaway vehicle was

concealed. The detective then saw the perpetrator pull away in what appeared to be

“either a Honda or a Nissan” silver-colored, compact vehicle that was “nearly new”

and had horizontally aligned LED brake lights integrated into the trunk lid. While the

detective did not attempt to pursue the perpetrator, he could see from his vantage

point that the vehicle headed onto Interstate 75. The detective went back to the

convenience store and checked on the two employees, who were “emotionally shaken

by what had just occurred.”

After one of the employees called 911, law enforcement officers from

Cherokee County responded to the scene. The two store employees and the Cobb

County detective were unable to identify the masked perpetrator. Nevertheless, the

employees and detective could describe aspects of the clothing that the perpetrator

had been wearing. Additionally, video surveillance equipment from the store recorded

the robbery, and the perpetrator left behind footwear impressions in the mud near the

store.

3 The March 2, 2009 Arrest. The perpetrator of the Cherokee County robbery

was not caught immediately. However, on March 2, 2009, law enforcement officers

in neighboring Cobb County responded to a call of suspicious activity by two

individuals wearing dark clothing outside a Shell station located near Interstate 75.

The officers approached the two individuals, whom they identified as Defendant

Dixon and Cedric Boone. A pat-down revealed pellet guns, which looked like

handguns, on both men. Dixon told the officers that he and Boone were in the vicinity

because they were going to meet “some girl” at an apartment complex behind the

station. The officers then drove Dixon and Boone behind the station so that they

could show the officers where they planned to meet the woman, but no apartment

complex could be found there. Dixon at that point changed his story, claiming that “a

girl named Jessica” was supposed to meet them near the station, and that “a guy

named Bill” had dropped them off to meet her there. But Dixon did not know

Jessica’s telephone number.

Although Dixon claimed that he and Boone had been dropped off near the

Shell station, officers quickly discovered a vehicle registered to Boone located near

the store with the keys on the hood. The vehicle appeared to be positioned for quick

4 access to Interstate 75. After admitting that the vehicle belonged to Boone, Dixon and

Boone were arrested on charges of loitering and prowling outside the Shell station.

At the time of his arrest, Dixon had black gloves in his coat pocket and a black

ski mask rolled up on his head. He was wearing jeans and white tennis shoes, had a

blue fleece jacket, and possessed an empty, dark backpack with a distinctive white

design on the front of it.

In response to a be-on-the-lookout that had been issued, Cherokee County law

enforcement officers learned of the arrests and began investigating Dixon as a person

of interest in the Cherokee County robbery. In addition to discovering that the various

clothing items and distinctive backpack possessed by Dixon matched those of the

perpetrator seen on the video recording in the Cherokee County robbery and

described by the witnesses, investigators learned that Dixon (unlike Boone) was left-

handed, consistent with the perpetrator’s use of his left hand to wield the knife.

Investigators also discovered that Dixon’s girlfriend often allowed him to borrow her

Nissan Altima, which had horizontally aligned LED brake lights integrated into the

trunk lid, consistent with the vehicle seen by the Cobb County detective when the

perpetrator fled from the scene of the Cherokee County robbery. Moreover, the tennis

shoes worn by Dixon at the time of his arrest had treads on the bottom of them

5 consistent with the footwear impressions that had been taken from the mud near the

convenience store in Cherokee County. Based on this combined circumstantial

evidence, Dixon was indicted for the Cherokee County robbery and for aggravated

assault for threatening one of the store employees with the knife.

The Bartow County Robberies. In response to a separate be-on-the-lookout that

had been issued, Bartow County law enforcement officers also learned of Dixon and

Boone’s arrests and began to investigate them for a series of armed robberies that had

occurred there during the same time period. Specifically, two perpetrators had robbed

a Kangaroo convenience store on December 21, 2008; a Bojangles restaurant on

January 27, 2009; a Texaco convenience store on February 12, 2009; a second Texaco

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