Eubanks v. State
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Opinion
317 Ga. 563 FINAL COPY
S23A0519. EUBANKS v. THE STATE.
PINSON, Justice.
Jessica Eubanks lived with her boyfriend, Shawn Hughes, and
Shawn’s sister, Amy Hughes, who had severe developmental disa-
bilities. Eubanks used heroin and methamphetamine and kept a
large supply of heroin in the home. One evening when Shawn was
out, Eubanks invited two people to the home to buy heroin. During
the transaction, which she conducted in the main part of the home,
some of the drug spilled “all over the place” and Eubanks tried to
clean it up. Then she went out, leaving Amy home alone. The next
morning Amy was found dead of heroin toxicity. After a jury trial,
Eubanks was convicted of felony murder.1
1 Amy died on the night of June 22-23, 2019. On March 9, 2020, a Forsyth
County grand jury indicted Eubanks for felony murder predicated on posses- sion of heroin with intent to distribute (Count I), possession of heroin with in- tent to distribute (Count II), felony murder predicated on possession of heroin (Count III), possession of heroin (Count IV), and two counts of possession of drug related objects (Counts V and VI).Eubanks pled not guilty and proceeded On appeal, Eubanks contends that (1) the evidence was insuf-
ficient to support her convictions for felony murder because the
predicate felony—possession of a controlled substance with intent to
distribute—was not inherently dangerous and did not proximately
cause Amy’s death; (2) the trial court erred by failing to instruct the
jury about circumstantial evidence, intent, accident, proximate
cause, criminal negligence, and the requirement that a predicate
crime for felony murder be inherently dangerous; (3) the trial court
should have granted her special demurrer because the indictment
lacked enough detail about the manner in which her possession or
distribution of heroin caused Amy’s death; (4) the trial court erred
by admitting a hearsay statement in which Amy said that Eubanks
to a jury trial, which was held from August 9 through August 13, 2021. Eu- banks was convicted on all counts. She was sentenced to life in prison on Count I and 12 months in prison on each of Counts V and VI, all to be served concur- rently. The remaining counts merged with Count I or were vacated by opera- tion of law. Through new counsel, Eubanks filed a timely motion for new trial on August 13, 2021, which she amended on August 4, 2022. The trial court denied the motion on October 17, 2022.Eubanks filed a timely notice of appeal on October 28, 2022. The case was docketed to the April 2023 term of this Court and orally argued on May 17, 2023. 2 was “mean” to her; and (5) the trial court erred by admitting a col-
lection of videos showing Amy in life.
Although Eubanks’s conviction tests the limits our felony-mur-
der statute places on that offense, we conclude based on our prece-
dent and the unusual facts of this case that the evidence was suffi-
cient to authorize her conviction. Eubanks’s possession of heroin
with intent to distribute was dangerous to human life under the cir-
cumstances of this case because it was foreseeable that keeping a
large amount of a deadly drug in a home where a highly vulnerable
person lived, and engaging in drug transactions in areas that person
could freely access, could lead to that person being fatally exposed
to the drug. See Williams v. State, 298 Ga. 208, 213 (2) (b) (779 SE2d
304) (2015) (jury was authorized to find that defendants who kept
supply of crack cocaine “inside a hole in the living room sofa” that
their young child could access created a foreseeable risk of death and
thus was authorized to find defendants guilty of felony murder
based on possession of cocaine with intent to distribute after the
child ingested the cocaine and died). The evidence authorized the
3 jury to conclude that just such an exposure, while Amy was left home
alone for hours with access to where Eubanks had spilled the heroin
during a drug transaction, was the proximate cause of her death.
And the evidence also authorized the jury to conclude that Amy’s
death was caused in the commission of the predicate felony, because
on the night Amy was fatally exposed to the heroin, Eubanks still
constructively possessed the drug in the home with the intent to dis-
tribute it.
Eubanks’s remaining claims fail, too. The trial court did not err
by failing to give the jury instructions that Eubanks now urges, be-
cause those instructions either were not warranted in this case or
addressed points of law that were substantially covered by other in-
structions. The indictment was constitutionally sufficient because it
informed Eubanks of the facts she must meet at trial—that she
caused Amy’s death by exposing her to heroin on June 23, 2019, in
the course of either possessing the drug or distributing it—and al-
lowed her to intelligently prepare her defense. Any error in admit-
4 ting Amy’s hearsay statement was harmless because it was cumula-
tive of other evidence and did not support the State’s theory of the
case. Finally, the “in-life” videos of Amy were probative evidence of
her vulnerable state, and their probative value was not substan-
tially outweighed by any danger of unfair prejudice.
Because Eubanks’s claims of error fail, we affirm her convic-
tions and sentence.
1. Amy was a 40-year-old woman with Down syndrome and an
IQ of 42. She needed help with certain basic life activities and was
not able to live on her own, so she lived with her brother, Shawn.
Shawn’s girlfriend, Eubanks, also lived in their home.
On the morning of June 22, 2019, Shawn went to the home of
some friends, the Millers, to help care for their children while they
were away. The plan was for Shawn to stay at the Millers’ house
from 9:00 a.m. on June 22 until around noon on June 23. Eubanks
would stay home with Amy on the morning of June 22, and then in
the afternoon would bring Amy to the Millers’ house, where Amy
would stay the night with Shawn.
5 But Eubanks never brought Amy to the Millers’ home. Instead,
Eubanks stayed at Shawn’s home with Amy throughout the after-
noon of June 22 and into the evening. In the early evening, Eubanks
invited a couple, Paul and Crystal (whose last names were not
given), to the home to buy some heroin from her. While Paul and
Crystal were in the common area of the home, Eubanks went into
the bathroom to inject some heroin herself. When she came out, Paul
had “the whole bundle” of Eubanks’s heroin in his hand—much more
than he and Crystal had agreed to buy. Eubanks fought with Paul,
and the bag of heroin broke. The drug “went flying all over the
place.” Eubanks tried to clean it up.
That same evening, a next-door neighbor, Matthew Rogers,
went over to Shawn’s house to let him know that Shawn’s dog was
running loose in the rain. Rogers could see through a glass panel on
the front door that the light was on in the living room and that pa-
pers were spread out on the floor in an unusual pattern. Nobody an-
swered the door when Rogers first knocked, but Rogers saw someone
poke their head out from the hallway, and then the lights went out.
6 Rogers returned to his own home and contacted Shawn, who told
him that he (Shawn) was not home but that Eubanks was. Rogers
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317 Ga. 563 FINAL COPY
S23A0519. EUBANKS v. THE STATE.
PINSON, Justice.
Jessica Eubanks lived with her boyfriend, Shawn Hughes, and
Shawn’s sister, Amy Hughes, who had severe developmental disa-
bilities. Eubanks used heroin and methamphetamine and kept a
large supply of heroin in the home. One evening when Shawn was
out, Eubanks invited two people to the home to buy heroin. During
the transaction, which she conducted in the main part of the home,
some of the drug spilled “all over the place” and Eubanks tried to
clean it up. Then she went out, leaving Amy home alone. The next
morning Amy was found dead of heroin toxicity. After a jury trial,
Eubanks was convicted of felony murder.1
1 Amy died on the night of June 22-23, 2019. On March 9, 2020, a Forsyth
County grand jury indicted Eubanks for felony murder predicated on posses- sion of heroin with intent to distribute (Count I), possession of heroin with in- tent to distribute (Count II), felony murder predicated on possession of heroin (Count III), possession of heroin (Count IV), and two counts of possession of drug related objects (Counts V and VI).Eubanks pled not guilty and proceeded On appeal, Eubanks contends that (1) the evidence was insuf-
ficient to support her convictions for felony murder because the
predicate felony—possession of a controlled substance with intent to
distribute—was not inherently dangerous and did not proximately
cause Amy’s death; (2) the trial court erred by failing to instruct the
jury about circumstantial evidence, intent, accident, proximate
cause, criminal negligence, and the requirement that a predicate
crime for felony murder be inherently dangerous; (3) the trial court
should have granted her special demurrer because the indictment
lacked enough detail about the manner in which her possession or
distribution of heroin caused Amy’s death; (4) the trial court erred
by admitting a hearsay statement in which Amy said that Eubanks
to a jury trial, which was held from August 9 through August 13, 2021. Eu- banks was convicted on all counts. She was sentenced to life in prison on Count I and 12 months in prison on each of Counts V and VI, all to be served concur- rently. The remaining counts merged with Count I or were vacated by opera- tion of law. Through new counsel, Eubanks filed a timely motion for new trial on August 13, 2021, which she amended on August 4, 2022. The trial court denied the motion on October 17, 2022.Eubanks filed a timely notice of appeal on October 28, 2022. The case was docketed to the April 2023 term of this Court and orally argued on May 17, 2023. 2 was “mean” to her; and (5) the trial court erred by admitting a col-
lection of videos showing Amy in life.
Although Eubanks’s conviction tests the limits our felony-mur-
der statute places on that offense, we conclude based on our prece-
dent and the unusual facts of this case that the evidence was suffi-
cient to authorize her conviction. Eubanks’s possession of heroin
with intent to distribute was dangerous to human life under the cir-
cumstances of this case because it was foreseeable that keeping a
large amount of a deadly drug in a home where a highly vulnerable
person lived, and engaging in drug transactions in areas that person
could freely access, could lead to that person being fatally exposed
to the drug. See Williams v. State, 298 Ga. 208, 213 (2) (b) (779 SE2d
304) (2015) (jury was authorized to find that defendants who kept
supply of crack cocaine “inside a hole in the living room sofa” that
their young child could access created a foreseeable risk of death and
thus was authorized to find defendants guilty of felony murder
based on possession of cocaine with intent to distribute after the
child ingested the cocaine and died). The evidence authorized the
3 jury to conclude that just such an exposure, while Amy was left home
alone for hours with access to where Eubanks had spilled the heroin
during a drug transaction, was the proximate cause of her death.
And the evidence also authorized the jury to conclude that Amy’s
death was caused in the commission of the predicate felony, because
on the night Amy was fatally exposed to the heroin, Eubanks still
constructively possessed the drug in the home with the intent to dis-
tribute it.
Eubanks’s remaining claims fail, too. The trial court did not err
by failing to give the jury instructions that Eubanks now urges, be-
cause those instructions either were not warranted in this case or
addressed points of law that were substantially covered by other in-
structions. The indictment was constitutionally sufficient because it
informed Eubanks of the facts she must meet at trial—that she
caused Amy’s death by exposing her to heroin on June 23, 2019, in
the course of either possessing the drug or distributing it—and al-
lowed her to intelligently prepare her defense. Any error in admit-
4 ting Amy’s hearsay statement was harmless because it was cumula-
tive of other evidence and did not support the State’s theory of the
case. Finally, the “in-life” videos of Amy were probative evidence of
her vulnerable state, and their probative value was not substan-
tially outweighed by any danger of unfair prejudice.
Because Eubanks’s claims of error fail, we affirm her convic-
tions and sentence.
1. Amy was a 40-year-old woman with Down syndrome and an
IQ of 42. She needed help with certain basic life activities and was
not able to live on her own, so she lived with her brother, Shawn.
Shawn’s girlfriend, Eubanks, also lived in their home.
On the morning of June 22, 2019, Shawn went to the home of
some friends, the Millers, to help care for their children while they
were away. The plan was for Shawn to stay at the Millers’ house
from 9:00 a.m. on June 22 until around noon on June 23. Eubanks
would stay home with Amy on the morning of June 22, and then in
the afternoon would bring Amy to the Millers’ house, where Amy
would stay the night with Shawn.
5 But Eubanks never brought Amy to the Millers’ home. Instead,
Eubanks stayed at Shawn’s home with Amy throughout the after-
noon of June 22 and into the evening. In the early evening, Eubanks
invited a couple, Paul and Crystal (whose last names were not
given), to the home to buy some heroin from her. While Paul and
Crystal were in the common area of the home, Eubanks went into
the bathroom to inject some heroin herself. When she came out, Paul
had “the whole bundle” of Eubanks’s heroin in his hand—much more
than he and Crystal had agreed to buy. Eubanks fought with Paul,
and the bag of heroin broke. The drug “went flying all over the
place.” Eubanks tried to clean it up.
That same evening, a next-door neighbor, Matthew Rogers,
went over to Shawn’s house to let him know that Shawn’s dog was
running loose in the rain. Rogers could see through a glass panel on
the front door that the light was on in the living room and that pa-
pers were spread out on the floor in an unusual pattern. Nobody an-
swered the door when Rogers first knocked, but Rogers saw someone
poke their head out from the hallway, and then the lights went out.
6 Rogers returned to his own home and contacted Shawn, who told
him that he (Shawn) was not home but that Eubanks was. Rogers
then returned to the Hugheses’ home at around 10:30 or 11:00 p.m.,
with his girlfriend, Michelle Clark, to try to return the dog. This
time, Eubanks answered the door. Rogers testified that Eubanks
was speaking in a “soft,” “dreamy” tone and that her eyes were
glassy. He returned the dog and then he and Clark went back to
their own house.
Later on the night of June 22, Eubanks left to join Shawn at
the Millers’ home. She did not bring Amy with her. When she ar-
rived, she told Shawn that Amy was asleep and that she had not
wanted to wake her. She also told Shawn about the altercation with
Paul and Crystal, and that some drugs had been “spilled on the ta-
ble,” but she had “cleaned it all up.” Shawn told Eubanks she had to
go home to be with Amy. Shawn then fell asleep on the Millers’ couch
while Eubanks was still there.
The next morning, on June 23, Shawn woke up at the Millers’
house to find that Eubanks was there, without Amy. He did not
7 think Eubanks had ever left, but Eubanks said later that she went
home and then came back before Shawn woke up. The two of them
waited for the Millers to come home, and then returned to Shawn’s
house. When they got home, Shawn found Amy lying on the floor of
her room. Her color “wasn’t good,” she was not breathing, and she
was unresponsive. Shawn called 911, but he testified that he knew
Amy was already dead.
At around 1:00 p.m., Forsyth County Sheriff’s deputies were
dispatched to the Hughes home. They found Amy lying on her back,
unresponsive and with no pulse. There was no evidence of trauma
to Amy’s body and no immediate indication of how she had died.
One of the deputies interviewed Eubanks. Eubanks seemed
nervous and emotional. She told the deputy that she had last seen
Amy the previous evening, before she went to the Millers’ house, and
then again when she returned later that night (after Shawn fell
asleep) between midnight and 1:00 a.m. Eubanks said that Amy had
been complaining of dizziness. The deputies concluded that Amy had
died of natural causes and left after 15 or 20 minutes. The coroner
8 on the scene, however, requested an autopsy given Amy’s relatively
young age and her sparse medical history.
About an hour later, the deputies were dispatched back to
Shawn’s house for a domestic disturbance. They found Eubanks and
Shawn arguing in the front yard. On this second call, Eubanks’s de-
meanor was quite different. She seemed paranoid, could not sit still,
and continually brushed her hair out of her face. Deputies believed
she was under the influence of drugs.
Eubanks consented to a search of her room for drugs or drug
paraphernalia. Deputies found syringes, spoons, and a powdery sub-
stance wrapped in foil. The spoon had a residue on it that was later
identified as heroin. Eubanks acknowledged that she used heroin
and methamphetamine, but she denied using any drugs that day.
The deputies did not make any arrests. However, one of the deputies
made a second request for an autopsy after seeing Eubanks’s
strange behavior and hearing reports that Amy had complained that
Eubanks was “mean” to her.
That same day, Shawn asked Eubanks to move out of his
9 house. She went to stay with her ex-husband, Kelly Durden, for a
few days. Right after Durden picked her up, Eubanks told him about
the night Amy died. Eubanks told Durden that “she had bought a
large quantity of heroin to resell to make some of Shawn’s money
back that she had been taking out of his account little by little.” She
described the altercation with Paul and Crystal, and she told him
she thought that Amy had eaten some of the heroin that she had
spilled during the struggle—that she had tried to clean it up, but
she “kept insisting that she was pretty sure that’s what happened.”
Durden contacted Shawn and told him that if Amy’s autopsy re-
vealed the presence of any toxins, he “might have some information.”
About a week after Amy died, Shawn’s next-door neighbors,
Rogers and Clark, along with another friend, went over to Shawn’s
house to help Shawn clean up and remove Eubanks’s belongings.
Among Eubanks’s things, they found a black bag containing needles,
a powder substance, and other drug paraphernalia, and Shawn re-
ported these findings to the police. The powder substance was later
determined to be heroin.
10 Several weeks later, the toxicology report from Amy’s autopsy
showed that her cause of death was heroin toxicity. It was undeter-
mined from the toxicology report how much heroin Amy took or how
it got into her system. Police told Shawn, who referred them to Kelly
Durden. Durden, in turn, recounted to police Eubanks’s story about
the attempted drug deal with Paul and Crystal and the spilled her-
oin. Eubanks was arrested and charged with Amy’s death.
2. Eubanks contends that the evidence was insufficient as a
matter of constitutional due process to support her conviction for fel-
ony murder. See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (III) (B) (99
SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979). We evaluate a due process challenge
to the sufficiency of the evidence by viewing the evidence presented
at trial in the light most favorable to the verdicts, and asking
whether any rational trier of fact could have found the defendant
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes of which she was con-
victed. See Peacock v. State, 314 Ga. 709, 714 (2) (b) (878 SE2d 247)
(2022). The “resolution of conflicts or inconsistencies in the evidence,
credibility of witnesses, and reasonable inferences to be derived from
11 the facts” are left to the jury. Perkins v. State, 313 Ga. 885, 891 (2)
(a) (873 SE2d 185) (2022) (citation and punctuation omitted).
Eubanks’s contentions about sufficiency center on certain lim-
itations on felony murder related to causation and foreseeability,
which are grounded in our felony-murder statute and our decisions
construing and applying it. To address her contentions, we first re-
view that law, and then we apply it to her case.
(a) Legal Principles
A person commits felony murder when, “in the commission of
a felony, he or she causes the death of another human being irre-
spective of malice.” OCGA § 16-5-1 (c). From this statutory language,
our decisional law has identified certain related prerequisites the
State must establish to convict a defendant of felony murder. Eu-
banks’s sufficiency arguments touch on three of these: First, the
predicate felony the defendant committed must be one from which
it was reasonably foreseeable that death could result. We have de-
scribed this as a requirement that the predicate felony was “inher-
ently dangerous.” Second, the death must have been the probable or
12 natural consequence of the defendant’s conduct, a concept known as
“proximate cause.” Third, in keeping with the statutory language,
the death must have been caused “in the commission of” the predi-
cate felony. Because our decisions have sometimes commingled
these related-but-distinct concepts, we briefly describe each of these
requirements in turn.
(i) Inherently Dangerous
The first requirement—that a felony must be “inherently dan-
gerous to human life”—is a “limitation on the type of felony that may
serve as an underlying felony for a felony murder conviction.” Hulme
v. State, 273 Ga. 676, 678 (1) (544 SE2d 138) (2001), overruled in
part on other grounds by State v. Jackson, 287 Ga. 646 (697 SE2d
757) (2010). This Court has reasoned that the “only rational func-
tion” of the felony-murder statute is to “deter the commission of a
dangerous or life-threatening felony.” Ford v. State, 262 Ga. 602, 603
(1) (423 SE2d 255) (1992) (citation and punctuation omitted). In line
with this reasoning, we have held that a felony cannot serve as a
13 predicate for felony murder unless it is “inherently dangerous to hu-
man life.” Wilson v. State, 315 Ga. 728, 733 (4) (883 SE2d 802) (2023)
(citation and punctuation omitted).
Felonies may be considered inherently dangerous if they either
are “dangerous per se,” or “by [their] circumstances create[ ] a fore-
seeable risk of death.” Wilson, 315 Ga. at 733 (4) (citation and punc-
tuation omitted); see Davis v. State, 290 Ga. 757, 760 (4) (725 SE2d
280) (2012). Some felonies, like aggravated assault, create a foresee-
able risk of death under almost any circumstances. See Sanders v.
State, 313 Ga. 191, 198-199 (3) (a) (iv) (869 SE2d 411) (2022); see
also, e.g., Lofton v. State, 309 Ga. 349, 353 (1) (846 SE2d 57) (2020)
(armed robbery); State v. Tiraboschi, 269 Ga. 812, 813 (504 SE2d
689) (1998) (felony fleeing). Others may or may not create a foresee-
able risk of death, depending on how they were committed. See Ford,
262 Ga. at 603 (1) (explaining that possession of a firearm by a pre-
viously convicted felon is not dangerous per se, but that “circum-
stances may well exist under which such a felony may be considered
dangerous”).
14 (ii) Proximate Cause
The second requirement, proximate cause, comes from the stat-
utory requirement that the person “causes the death” in the commis-
sion of a felony, OCGA § 16-5-1 (c) (emphasis added), and focuses on
the causal connection between the criminal conduct and the victim’s
death. Proximate cause is distinct from the requirement that the fel-
ony be inherently dangerous. As just explained, a felony is inher-
ently dangerous if it is committed in such a way that death is a rea-
sonably foreseeable consequence. See Wilson, 315 Ga. at 733 (4).
Proximate cause additionally requires that the death actually hap-
pened in a way that was a reasonably foreseeable result of the crim-
inal conduct—that is, the death must also have been a “probable or
natural consequence[ ]” of the criminal conduct. See Calhoun v.
State, 308 Ga. 146, 149 (2) (a) (839 SE2d 612) (2020) (citation and
punctuation omitted); Jackson, 287 Ga. at 648-652 (2). See also
Wayne R. LaFave, 2 Subst. Crim. L. § 14.5 (d) (3d ed.) (“A given cat-
egory of felony may be inherently dangerous, but it may still be that
15 the death which actually occurred has come about in such an ex-
traordinary way that as a matter of causation the defendant should
not be held accountable for the death.”).
Take armed robbery. Committing armed robbery with a gun is
inherently dangerous because it is reasonably foreseeable that
someone will be shot and killed in the course of the robbery. See
Lofton, 309 Ga. at 353 (1). If the victim was in fact shot and killed
by the defendant in the course of the robbery, proximate cause is
also satisfied, because one could reasonably foresee that a death
could be caused by an armed robbery in just that way. See, e.g., Perez
v. State, 316 Ga. 433, 438 (2) (888 SE2d 526) (2023) (defendant guilty
of felony murder based on armed robbery when he shot the victim
during the robbery). If, on the other hand, someone dies because he
tried to flee from the ongoing robbery by climbing from his third-
floor balcony to the balcony below, slipped, and fell thirty feet to the
ground, proximate cause would be a closer question. See Stafford v.
State, 312 Ga. 811 (865 SE2d 116) (2021) (affirming conviction for
felony murder predicated on burglary under those circumstances
16 where defendant did not challenge sufficiency of the evidence). In
that case, the defendant would be guilty of felony murder only if the
“intervening act”—the victim fleeing from his balcony and falling—
could “reasonably have been anticipated, apprehended, or foreseen
by the original wrong-doer.” Calhoun, 308 Ga. at 149 (2) (a) (citation
and punctuation omitted).2
What sorts of intervening acts are reasonably foreseeable?3
2 A notable treatise explains proximate cause through the lens of arson:
[I]t is clear that if A sets fire to B’s occupied house it is felony- murder if B or a member of his household or a fireman fighting the blaze is burned to death. While the chances may be all in favor of no one’s death by fire, these deaths are neither unforeseeable nor the result of abnormal happenings. Firemen usually put out house fires without getting killed, but the death of a fireman fighting such a blaze happens often enough that its occurrence does not greatly surprise us. So too we would not view it as abnormal if a brave stranger were to rush into the house in an attempt to save a trapped member of B’s household crying for help at an upstairs window, and if the stranger died in the fire this would also be fel- ony murder. On the other hand, it seems unlikely that the arsonist would be held guilty of felony murder if a looter entered the blazing building to steal whatever he could find or if a fireman were to fall off the fire truck on its way back to the fire station after putting out the conflagration. Wayne R. LaFave, The “proximate” or “legal” cause limitation, 2 Subst. Crim. L. § 14.5 (d) (3d ed.).
3 The idea of an “intervening act,” as we use that term here, is distinct
from that of an “intervening cause,” at least as that term is used in tort law. In tort law, an intervening cause, by definition, is an event that is not foreseeable
17 Generally, an intervening act is reasonably foreseeable if, among
other things, it “may ensue in the ordinary course of events,” Jack-
son, 287 Ga. at 651 (2) n.4 (quoting Cain v. State, 55 Ga. App. 376,
381-382 (190 SE 371) (1937)), or if it was “set in motion by the orig-
inal wrong-doer,” id. This would include intentional actions by some-
one other than the defendant who could reasonably be expected to
take that action in response to the criminal conduct. It is foreseea-
ble, for example, that in the course of a violent crime, deadly force
and therefore breaks the chain of proximate causation. See, e.g., City of Rich- mond Hill v. Maia, 301 Ga. 257, 259 (1) (800 SE2d 573) (2017) (“the well-es- tablished doctrine of intervening causes states that there can be no proximate cause where there has intervened between the act of the defendant and the injury to the plaintiff, an independent act or omission of someone other than the defendant, which was not foreseeable by defendant, was not triggered by defendant’s act, and which was sufficient of itself to cause the injury”) (citation and punctuation omitted). We have used the term “intervening cause” that way in the felony-murder context, too. See, e.g., Menzies v. State, 304 Ga. 156, 161 (II) (816 SE2d 638) (2018) (“Proximate causation imposes liability for the reasonably foreseeable results of criminal conduct if there is no sufficient, in- dependent, and unforeseen intervening cause.”) (citation and punctuation omitted). In contrast to that, here we refer to a causal force that is foreseeable and does not break the chain of causation, that is not directly part of the de- fendant’s conduct, and that contributes to the victim’s death. To distinguish this kind of causal force from an “intervening cause,” we use the term “inter- vening act.” See Calhoun, 308 Ga. at 149 (2) (a) (discussing “intervening act[s]” in this way). 18 will be used by an accomplice, see Davis, 290 Ga. at 760 (4) (defend-
ant guilty of felony murder when his brother fatally shot the person
from whom they were buying marijuana), the victim, see Robinson
v. State, 298 Ga. 455, 456, 458-459 (1) (782 SE2d 657) (2016) (de-
fendant guilty of felony murder when his accomplice was fatally shot
by a store owner they were attempting to rob), or law enforcement,
see Calhoun, 308 Ga. at 147, 150 (2) (a) (defendant who fled from
police in high-speed car chase was guilty of felony murder when po-
lice used a “PIT” maneuver to end the pursuit, the defendant
crashed, and his passenger was killed). Other intervening acts are
reasonably foreseeable even though they are not intended by the de-
fendant. Such foreseeable intervening acts can include causal forces
that relate mostly to the victim, like the victim being especially vul-
nerable to harm, see Eberhart v. State, 307 Ga. 254, 260 (1) (b), 261-
262 (2) (a) (835 SE2d 192) (2019) (defendant who repeatedly tased
victim was guilty of felony murder when victim died from “hyperten-
sive cardiovascular disease exacerbated by physical exertion and
‘conducted electrical stimulation’ from the application of the
19 TASERs”); see also Treadaway v. State, 308 Ga. 882, 885 (1) (843
SE2d 784) (2020) (“the offender takes her victim as she finds [her]”
(cleaned up)); or the victim suffering a medical complication as a re-
sult of the defendant’s conduct, see Harris v. State, 313 Ga. 653, 656-
657 (1) (b) (872 SE2d 732) (2022) (defendant who shot victim during
armed robbery was guilty of felony murder when, over a month after
robbery, victim died from blood clots caused by shooting); Franklin
v. State, 295 Ga. 204, 205-206 (1) (a) (758 SE2d 813) (2014) (defend-
ant who assaulted victim and put him in a vegetative state that ne-
cessitated a tracheal breathing tube was guilty of felony murder
when tracheal tube later dislodged and the victim died). And we
have said that accidents are reasonably foreseeable intervening acts
if they are “set in motion” by the original crime. See Skaggs v. State,
278 Ga. 19, 20 (1), 21 (3) (596 SE2d 159) (2004) (defendant who as-
saulted victim and caused him to fall and fatally hit his head on the
ground was guilty of felony murder because “the fall itself was the
direct and immediate result of” the assault and “[t]he only interven-
ing force was gravity”); Scott v. State, 252 Ga. 251, 251 (1) (313 SE2d
20 87) (1984) (defendant guilty of felony murder when he and his ac-
complice were building or transporting an explosive device and it
exploded, killing the accomplice).
In sum, proximate cause is satisfied for purposes of felony mur-
der when the death was a “reasonably foreseeable result[ ]” of the
criminal conduct at issue. Robinson, 298 Ga. at 458 (1) (citation and
punctuation omitted). This requirement is met even if the death had
an intervening act, so long as that intervening act was itself a rea-
sonably foreseeable consequence of the criminal conduct. See id.
(iii) “In the Commission of”
The third requirement—that the victim’s death must be caused
“in the commission of” the predicate felony, OCGA § 16-5-1 (c)—is
closely related to proximate cause in that it concerns the connection
between the felony and the death. But while proximate cause focuses
on whether the death was a reasonably foreseeable result of the
criminal conduct, the in-the-commission-of requirement asks
whether the cause of death was close enough in time and circum-
stances to the felony. See, e.g., Smith v. State, 307 Ga. 106, 113 (4)
21 (834 SE2d 750) (2019).4
We have said that a death is caused “in the commission of” a
predicate felony if the cause of death is “within the res gestae” of the
predicate felony. Lee v. State, 270 Ga. 798, 801 (4) (514 SE2d 1)
(1999) (citation and punctuation omitted).5 In plain English, this
4 Given how similar the “in the commission of” and proximate cause re-
quirements are, a set of facts that meets one of these requirements often will meet the other. For this reason, our decisions have sometimes conflated these requirements or addressed them together. See, e.g., Smith, 307 Ga. at 112-113 (4) (reasoning that the defendants’ assault of the victim was “not the immedi- ate cause” of the victim’s death in part because the assault was “attenuated in time, in place, and most significantly, in circumstance” from the shooting of the victim). That said, these requirements arise out of different language in our felony-murder statute, and as we explain, they focus on slightly different inquiries. So we do not rule out the possibility that a particular set of facts could meet one of these requirements while failing to meet the other.
5 Although we use the term “res gestae” here, we have largely abandoned
that term, and in other contexts we rarely ask whether something occurred within the res gestae of a crime. For instance, while the old Evidence Code allowed the State to “present evidence of the entire res gestae of the crime,” even if that evidence showed the commission of an additional uncharged crime, see Johnson v. State, 264 Ga. 456, 457 (1) (448 SE2d 177) (1994), the new Evi- dence Code does not use the term “res gestae,” see Johnson v. State, 292 Ga. 785, 789 (4) n.4 (741 SE2d 627) (2013), and admits evidence of an uncharged crime only for specific purposes, see OCGA § 24-4-404 (b). Our cases using the “res gestae” approach to the “in the commission” requirement remain good law, see Hood v. State, 303 Ga. 420, 422 (1) (b) (811 SE2d 392) (2018) (explaining that a murder may be committed in perpetration of a felony if it is committed within the res gestae of the felony), but it is simpler to say, as we do here, that the “in the commission” requirement means that the cause of death must be close enough in time and circumstances to the felony.
22 means that the predicate felony must “be at least concurrent with
[the homicide] in part, and be a part of it in an actual or material
sense.” Davis, 290 Ga. at 761 (5) (a).6 The cause of death does not
have to happen precisely during a felony to be “concurrent with [it]
in part.” Lee, 270 Ga. at 801 (4) (homicide “may be committed in the
commission of a felony, although it does not take place until after
the felony itself has been technically completed”) (citation and punc-
tuation omitted). But this statutory language limits how “attenu-
ated in time, in place, and most significantly, in circumstance” it can
6 The “at least concurrent in part” language was part of the pattern jury
instruction on felony murder at the time of Eubanks’s trial, see Wilson, 315 Ga. at 734-735 (5) & n.2 (noting that this language was included in the felony- murder pattern jury instruction in 2019), and that instruction was given in this case. However, the pattern jury instruction on felony murder no longer includes the “at least concurrent in part” language. The pattern instruction now states: You may find the Defendant guilty of felony murder if you believe that he/she caused the death of another person by commit- ting the felony of ____, regardless of whether he/she intended the death to occur. There must be some causal connection between the felony and the death. Felony murder is not established simply be- cause the death occurred at the same time as or shortly after the felony was attempted or committed. The felony must have directly caused the death or played a substantial and necessary part in causing the death, regardless of when the death ultimately oc- curred. Georgia Suggested Pattern Jury Instructions, Vol. II: Criminal Cases (4th ed. 2007, updated Jan. 2023) § 2.10.30. 23 be. Smith, 307 Ga. at 113 (4). See also Wayne R. LaFave, 2 Subst.
Crim. L. § 14.5 (f) (3d ed.) (noting that in applying the “in the com-
mission of” requirement, which has roots in the “common law felony-
murder rule,” the cases stress that “the homicide and the [predicate
felony] must be ‘closely connected in point of time, place and causal
relation.’”).
Also like proximate cause, the “in the commission of” inquiry is
fact-specific. Compare Westmoreland v. State, 287 Ga. 688, 689-690
(1) (699 SE2d 13) (2010) (death was caused “in the commission of” a
burglary when the defendant fled from the completed burglary in a
car and fatally struck another car) with Smith, 307 Ga. at 113 (4)
(death was not caused “in the commission of” aggravated assault
when the defendant assaulted the victim inside a nightclub, the
fighting stopped for several minutes, the victim left the club, and
then the defendant’s fellow gang member shot the victim outside).
(b) Application
Count I of the indictment—the only felony-murder count on
24 which Eubanks was sentenced—charged Eubanks with felony mur-
der predicated on possession of heroin with intent to distribute. The
indictment alleged that Eubanks caused Amy’s death “while in the
commission of the Possession of Heroin with Intent to Distribute . .
. by exposing said person to heroin while in the commission of the
distribution thereof.” Eubanks contends that the evidence was not
sufficient to convict her of felony murder based on this predicate fel-
ony because it did not establish the prerequisites we just discussed
above: that her felony was inherently dangerous; that her conduct
was a proximate cause of Amy’s death, or that Eubanks caused
Amy’s death “in the commission of” the felony. We take these re-
quirements one at a time.
As explained above, a felony may be considered “inherently
dangerous” to life per se, or dangerous to life based on the circum-
stances in a given case. So this requirement is addressed by as-
sessing the risks created by the “actual circumstances in which the
felony was committed.” Treadaway, 308 Ga. at 885 (1) (citation and
25 punctuation omitted). That assessment is particularly needed for
mere possession offenses, which in many cases could be considered
dangerous to life only based on the circumstances of a given case.
For example, merely possessing a stolen car, see OCGA § 16-8-7 (a)
(“[a] person commits the offense of theft by receiving stolen property
when he . . . retains stolen property which he knows or should know
was stolen”), may not be a per se danger to human life. But if a per-
son drives that stolen car at a high rate of speed in a residential
neighborhood and crashes it into another car, that particular pos-
session could create a foreseeable risk of death and thus serve as a
predicate for felony murder. See Turner v. State, 281 Ga. 487, 488-
489 (1) (a) (640 SE2d 25) (2007). See also Hines v. State, 276 Ga. 491,
493 (3) (578 SE2d 868) (2003) (defendant guilty of felony murder
based on possession of a firearm by a convicted felon when he used
the firearm to go hunting after drinking, fired at an unidentified
target at dusk through heavy foliage, and fatally shot his friend).
So too with drug-possession felonies. In the abstract, simple
possession of drugs may not be per se dangerous to human life, but
26 our precedent is clear that a person can possess an illegal substance
under circumstances that create a foreseeable risk of death. That
was the case in Stephens v. State, 303 Ga. 530 (813 SE2d 596) (2018),
and Williams, 298 Ga. 208, where we affirmed the felony-murder
convictions of a couple who sold crack cocaine out of their home after
their one-year-old child found their supply of the drug and ingested
a lethal dose. Williams, 298 Ga. at 213-214 (2) (b). Those defendants
typically kept their supply of crack cocaine “inside a hole in the liv-
ing room sofa,” which their child could reach, id. at 213 (2) (b), and
we reasoned “[t]hat the presence of cocaine within the reach of a
young child creates a risk of death is highly foreseeable,” id. at 213-
214 (2) (b). Thus, the defendants’ possession of crack cocaine with
intent to distribute was inherently dangerous to life “[u]nder the cir-
cumstances” of that case, and because the evidence supported the
“unmistakable conclusion” that the child ingested the drug “after
finding it in the place where [the defendants] stored it to sell to oth-
ers,” id. at 214 (2) (b), the evidence was sufficient to support their
convictions for felony murder. Id.
27 Williams is on all fours with this case, at least in the ways that
matter. The evidence here showed that Eubanks kept heroin, a le-
thal drug, in the home. She regularly used the drug herself and
brought it out of the place she stored it to sell to others on at least
one occasion. Amy, who also lived in and had access to the entire
home, did not know enough to avoid touching, eating, or otherwise
interacting with any heroin that she might find. Yet on the night of
June 22-23, Eubanks left Amy home alone for several hours after
Eubanks had not only carried out a drug deal in a common area of
the home, but spilled a large bag of drugs “all over the place.” Alt-
hough Eubanks was not known to regularly store her heroin any-
where other than her own room and claimed that she cleaned up the
drugs that had spilled, on that same evening, she was also observed
acting strangely, from which the jury could infer that she was under
the influence of drugs and that her ability to clean up or secure the
drugs was impaired. Indeed, soon after Amy was found dead, Eu-
banks told her ex-husband she thought that Amy had “gotten” some
of the heroin that she had spilled during the struggle, which could
28 happen only if the drugs that spilled had not been completely
cleaned up. So, just as in Williams, the evidence authorized the jury
to conclude that the defendant left potentially lethal drugs within
reach of a person who was uniquely vulnerable to the danger that
they would ingest or otherwise come into contact with the drugs, re-
sulting in her death. See Williams, 298 Ga. at 213-214 (2) (b). Under
these specific and unusual circumstances—a highly dangerous drug
left within the reach of an adult with Amy’s serious vulnerabilities,
who was left alone with it for several hours—the evidence supported
the jury’s conclusion that Eubanks’s possession of heroin with intent
to distribute created a foreseeable risk of death. See id.
Eubanks tries to distinguish Williams on the basis that the de-
fendants there could be said to have acted with “criminal negli-
gence,” while the evidence here supports only a conclusion that Eu-
banks caused Amy’s death either by accident or through ordinary
negligence. And, she points out, a “crime” in Georgia requires a vio-
lation of a statute by act or omission with “intention or criminal neg-
29 ligence.” OCGA § 16-2-1 (a). But our decisions construing and apply-
ing our felony-murder statute have not required separate consider-
ation of whether the defendant caused the death through “criminal
negligence.” Instead, the mens rea requirement of the statute is sat-
isfied when the defendant had “the intent to commit the underlying
felony,” Smith v. State, 301 Ga. 348, 351 (II) (801 SE2d 18) (2017),
and such felony was dangerous to life per se or under the circum-
stances. Together, these related requirements limit liability for fel-
ony murder to those cases in which the defendant intentionally com-
mitted a felony that she reasonably should have known could cause
someone’s death. When the State proves as much beyond a reasona-
ble doubt, a sufficient mens rea for felony murder is present. See
Ware v. State, 303 Ga. 847, 849 (II) (815 SE2d 837) (2018) (“felony
murder requires only that the defendant possessed the requisite
criminal intent to commit the underlying felony”) (citation and punc-
tuation omitted); Ford, 262 Ga. at 603 (1) (“[The] application of the
[felony murder] rule to felonies not foreseeably dangerous would be
unsound analytically because there is no logical basis for imputing
30 malice from the intent to commit a felony not dangerous to human
life.” (citation and punctuation omitted)).
(ii) Proximate Cause
As explained above, under the proximate-cause standard, lia-
bility may be imposed “for the reasonably foreseeable results of crim-
inal conduct if there is no sufficient, independent, and unforeseen
intervening cause.” Robinson, 298 Ga. at 458 (1) (cleaned up). As a
determination that requires “mixed considerations of logic, common
sense, justice, policy, and precedent,” whether proximate cause is
satisfied “is undeniably a jury question and is always to be deter-
mined on the facts of each case.” Id. (citation and punctuation omit-
ted).
Here, the evidence authorized the jury to conclude that Eu-
banks’s conduct proximately caused Amy’s death. It was uncon-
tested that Eubanks brought and kept a large amount of a lethal
drug into a home where a severely developmentally disabled person
lived and that Eubanks conducted a transaction for the drug, which
31 led to it spilling “all over the place” in an area to which that vulner-
able person had free access. Amy’s exposure to the heroin was a rea-
sonably foreseeable consequence of this conduct. Keeping a danger-
ous drug in the home and bringing it out in the open risked exposing
a person with Amy’s vulnerabilities, and conducting a drug transac-
tion in the home heightened that risk given the separate danger that
drug transactions will lead to disagreements (and, too often, vio-
lence). Cf. Wilson, 315 Ga. at 733-734 (4) (recognizing that violence
is foreseeable when transacting in illegal drugs); Davis, 290 Ga. at
760-761 (4) (same). That risk of exposure bore out here: Eubanks
and Paul fought over the drugs and spilled them. And although Eu-
banks claimed that she tried to clean up the drugs that had scattered
all over the common area, the jury could have inferred that Eubanks
left some of the heroin behind, especially since there was evidence
that she was likely under the influence herself at the time, and Eu-
banks herself told someone after Amy’s death that she was worried
that Amy had in fact come into contact with the spilled heroin. Fi-
nally, even if Amy later finding the heroin and ingesting it was an
32 “intervening act,” the jury could have concluded that this was a rea-
sonably foreseeable result of conducting a transaction for the drug
in a common area of a house where a person with Amy’s severe vul-
nerabilities lived, spilling the drug all over an area she could freely
access, and then leaving her home alone for several hours. See Wil-
liams, 298 Ga. at 213-214 (2) (b). See also Eberhart, 307 Ga. at 260
(1) (b), 261-262 (2) (a) (victim’s vulnerability to harm can be foresee-
able); Treadaway, 308 Ga. at 885 (1) (“the offender takes her victim
as she finds [her]” (cleaned up)). In short, the evidence authorized
the jury to conclude that Amy’s death was a reasonably foreseeable
result of Eubanks’s criminal conduct.
Finally, the evidence authorized the jury to conclude that Eu-
banks caused Amy’s death “in the commission of” the predicate fel-
ony—that is, sufficiently close in time, place, and circumstance to
Eubanks’s possession of heroin with the intent to distribute it. See
Hood v. State, 303 Ga. 420, 423-424 (1) (b) (811 SE2d 392) (2018)
(affirming felony-murder conviction when victim’s death was
33 “closely related temporally and spatially to Appellant’s felony of pos-
session with intent to distribute cocaine”); Wilson, 315 Ga. at 734-
735 (5) & n.2. A person commits the offense of possession with intent
to distribute by possessing a controlled substance with the intent to
distribute it; no actual distribution is necessary. OCGA § 16-13-30
(b). See also Calloway v. State, 303 Ga. 48, 56 (2) (b) (810 SE2d 105)
(2018) (“The proof necessary to establish possession with intent to
distribute is (1) possession of a controlled substance and (2) the in-
tent to distribute it.”). So Eubanks was committing this offense, for
purposes of felony murder, for as long as she possessed heroin and
intended to distribute it. The evidence authorized the jury, which
was instructed about constructive possession, to conclude that she
possessed heroin the entire time she kept some in her room and in-
side a black bag. See Lebis v. State, 302 Ga. 750, 753 (II) (808 SE2d
724) (2017) (“if a person has both the power and the intention at a
given time to exercise dominion or control over a thing, then the per-
son is in constructive possession of that thing” (cleaned up)). The
34 evidence also supported a conclusion that Eubanks’s intent to dis-
tribute heroin continued through and beyond her transaction with
Paul and Crystal on the night of June 22-23: she bought the heroin
to resell it, and she did not intend to sell all of it to Paul and Crystal
(she was angry that Paul had grabbed her entire supply, that is,
more than she wanted to sell them at the time). And as discussed
above, the evidence supported a conclusion that Amy’s death was
caused during that same timeframe, in the home where Eubanks
possessed the heroin, by being exposed to the heroin in that home.
Given this evidence, the jury was authorized to conclude that Eu-
banks caused Amy’s death on the night of June 22-23 “in the com-
mission” of possession with intent to distribute.
Eubanks contends that she did not cause Amy’s death “in the
commission” of her felony because her death did not happen “‘within
the res gestae’ of the sale to Paul and Crystal.” Eubanks points out
that the indictment alleged that Eubanks caused Amy’s death spe-
cifically by “exposing” Amy to heroin “while in the commission of the
distribution thereof.” But the State did not have to prove that Amy
35 died precisely during Eubanks’s distribution of heroin to meet the
“in the commission of” requirement: it had to prove only that the
cause of death was sufficiently connected in time, place, and circum-
stance with Eubanks’s possession with intent to distribute. See
Hood, 303 Ga. at 423-424 (1) (b); Cooper v. State, 286 Ga. 66, 67 (2)
(685 SE2d 285) (2009) (“There is no requirement that the victim
must die during the commission of the underlying felony under a
felony-murder indictment. OCGA § 16-5-1 (c), defining felony mur-
der, requires that the death need only be caused by an injury which
occurred during the res gestae of the felony.” (citation and punctua-
tion omitted)). And as we just explained, the evidence authorized
that conclusion. See, e.g., Skaggs, 278 Ga. at 20 (1) (defendant guilty
of felony murder for striking the victim, even though the victim ac-
tually died not from the defendant’s blows but from injuries sus-
tained when he fell to the ground as a result of being struck).
(c) In reaching the conclusion here that the evidence was suffi-
cient to support Eubanks’s conviction for felony murder, we are
36 mindful that reasonable people may disagree about whether some-
one should be charged with and punished for murder when the evi-
dence does not show an intent to harm (much less kill) the victim,
but only that someone sold drugs out of her home. But that norma-
tive question is not one that a court has the power to resolve. Our
limited role in considering the sufficiency of the evidence as a matter
of due process is to determine whether the evidence, viewed in the
light most favorable to the verdict, authorized the jury to find the
defendant guilty of the statutory offense she was charged with. See
Peacock, 314 Ga. at 714-715 (2) (b). Although the conviction here
tests the limits put in place by our felony-murder statute, we are
constrained to conclude that the evidence authorized Eubanks’s con-
viction for felony murder as that statutory offense has been con-
strued and applied.
That said, we reiterate here the longstanding limitations on
felony murder that are grounded in the felony-murder statute. As
relevant to Eubanks’s arguments here, a conviction for felony mur-
der must be predicated on the defendant having committed a felony
37 that is dangerous to life, either per se or under the circumstances of
that case. See Wilson, 315 Ga. at 733 (4). The defendant’s conduct
must have been the proximate cause of the death that resulted. See
Calhoun, 308 Ga. at 149 (2) (a). And the defendant must have caused
that death “in the commission of”—sufficiently close in time, place
and circumstance to—the felony. See Wilson, 315 Ga. at 734-735 (5)
& n.2; Hood, 303 Ga. at 423-424 (1) (b). If the evidence in a given
case does not support the conclusion that the State proved any one
of these requirements beyond a reasonable doubt, a conviction for
felony murder is not authorized.
3. Eubanks next raises a number of contentions about the trial
court’s jury instructions. Some of those contentions were raised be-
low and others were not. Because different standards of review ap-
ply, we address those that were not raised below followed by those
that were.
(a) Eubanks contends that the trial court erred by failing to
specifically instruct the jury that a predicate felony for felony mur-
der must be inherently dangerous. She also contends the court
38 should have given instructions on criminal negligence and accident,
and an additional instruction on circumstantial evidence. She did
not ask for any of these instructions below, so we review this claim
only for plain error. See OCGA § 17-8-58 (b); Ash v. State, 312 Ga.
771, 791 (5) (a) (865 SE2d 150) (2021). “To show plain error, an ap-
pellant must show that (1) the alleged error was not affirmatively
waived, (2) it was obvious beyond reasonable dispute, and (3) it af-
fected the appellant’s substantial rights, which ordinarily means
showing that it affected the outcome of the trial.” Johnson v. State,
316 Ga. 672, 686 (6) (889 SE2d 914) (2023) (citation and punctuation
omitted). If those three requirements are satisfied, the appellate
court “has the discretion to remedy the error only if the error seri-
ously affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial
proceedings.” Moore v. State, 315 Ga. 263, 273 (4) (882 SE2d 227)
(2022) (cleaned up).
39 Eubanks has not established that the trial court committed ob-
vious error in failing to give any of these instructions.7 The trial
court did not specifically instruct the jury that a predicate felony
must be inherently dangerous, but “such an instruction is not re-
quired, even when requested.” Wilson, 315 Ga. at 735 (5). See also
7 The court properly defined felony murder for the jury, explaining that
“[a] person also commits the crime of murder when, in the commission of a felony, that person causes the death of another human being, with or without malice.” The court also defined the alleged predicate drug-possession felonies. Then it gave the following instructions: If you find and believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defend- ant committed the homicide alleged in this bill of indictment at the time the defendant was engaged in the commission of the felony of possession of heroin, then you would be authorized to find the de- fendant guilty of murder, whether the homicide was intended or not. In order for a homicide to have been done in the commission of this particular felony, there must be some connection between the felony and the homicide. The homicide must have been done in carrying out the unlawful act and not collateral to it. It is not enough that the homicide occurred soon or presently after the fel- ony was attempted or committed. There must be such a legal rela- tionship between the homicide and the felony so as to cause you to find that the homicide occurred before the felony was at end or be- fore any attempt to avoid conviction or arrest for the felony. The felony must have a legal relationship to the homicide, be at least concurrent with it in part, and be a part of it in an actual and ma- terial sense. A homicide is committed in the carrying out of a felony when it is committed by the accused while engaged in the perfor- mance of any act required for the full execution of a felony. 40 State v. Kelly, 290 Ga. 29, 34 (2) (b) (718 SE2d 232) (2011) (explain-
ing that “our case law runs contrary to” the notion that a trial court
must “instruct the jury explicitly that it must find as an element of
the felony murder that the underlying felony . . . was committed in
a manner that created a foreseeable risk of death”). As for the in-
structions on accident and criminal negligence, Eubanks grounds
her arguments for those instructions in her assertion that the State
must separately prove that Eubanks caused Amy’s death intention-
ally or through “criminal negligence” to convict her for felony mur-
der. But as we explained above, proof of the intent to commit an un-
derlying felony that was inherently dangerous to life under the cir-
cumstances is enough to establish the mens rea for felony murder.
See Wilson, 315 Ga. at 733 (4); Ware, 303 Ga. at 849 (II). Eubanks
makes no argument here that the evidence would have supported a
finding that she accidentally or through criminal negligence pos-
sessed heroin with the intent to distribute it.
Finally, Eubanks contends that the trial court’s instruction on
circumstantial evidence was incomplete. The trial court gave the
41 pattern instruction on direct and circumstantial evidence, which in-
forms jurors that “[y]ou would be authorized to convict only if the
evidence, whether direct, circumstantial, or both, excludes all rea-
sonable theories of innocence and proves the guilt of the accused be-
yond a reasonable doubt.” See Georgia Suggested Pattern Jury In-
structions, Vol. II: Criminal Cases (4th ed. 2007, updated Jan. 2023)
§ 1.30.20. Eubanks says the court also should have told the jury that
the State had to disprove any theory of innocence supported by the
evidence. See OCGA § 24-14-6 (“To warrant a conviction on circum-
stantial evidence, the proved facts shall not only be consistent with
the hypothesis of guilt, but shall exclude every other reasonable hy-
pothesis save that of the guilt of the accused.”).
Not including an instruction about “disproving” theories of in-
nocence was not error. The jury was already told that it could convict
only if the evidence “excludes all reasonable theories of innocence,”
and it was told that the State must prove Eubanks’s guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt. Those instructions effectively conveyed the point
that the State was required to disprove reasonable hypotheses of
42 Eubanks’s innocence. When a requested jury instruction adds no es-
sential point of law to the existing instructions, it is not error for the
trial court to decline to give it. See Wilson, 315 Ga. at 737-738 (7);
Francis v. State, 296 Ga. 190, 194 (2) (766 SE2d 52) (2014) (“A trial
court does not abuse its discretion in refusing to give a jury charge
in the exact language requested when the charge given substantially
covers the correct principles of law.” (citation and punctuation omit-
ted)).
(b) Eubanks contends that the trial court erred by declining to
give her requested jury instructions on the definition of a crime. “We
review de novo a properly preserved claim that a trial court erred in
refusing to instruct the jury on an applicable principle of law.” Wil-
son, 315 Ga. at 734 (5).
Eubanks asked for the pattern jury instruction on the defini-
tion of a crime. The pattern instruction explains that “[a] crime is a
violation of a statute of this state in which there is a joint operation
of an act (or omission to act) and intention (or criminal negligence).”
See Georgia Suggested Pattern Jury Instructions, Vol. II: Criminal
43 Cases (4th ed. 2007, updated Jan. 2023) § 1.40.10. The trial court’s
actual instruction tracked the pattern instruction exactly, except
that it omitted the parentheticals, “(or omission to act)” and “(or
criminal negligence).” Eubanks argues that because those parenthe-
ticals were omitted, the jury instruction did not conform to the evi-
dence, because the only way Eubanks could be guilty of a felony mur-
der charge was through criminal negligence. But again, that is not
so. As we explained above, the intent to commit an underlying felony
that was inherently dangerous to life under the circumstances suf-
fices as the mens rea for felony murder, see Wilson, 315 Ga. at 733
(4); Ware, 303 Ga. at 849 (II), and Eubanks makes no argument that
the evidence would have supported a finding that she committed her
predicate felonies through criminal negligence. This claim of error
fails.
4. Eubanks contends that the trial court erred by denying her
special demurrer to the indictment because the indictment did not
adequately inform her of the time and manner in which she was al-
44 leged to have exposed Amy to heroin.8 “We review a ruling on a spe-
cial demurrer de novo to determine the legal sufficiency of the alle-
gations in the indictment.” Wilson, 315 Ga. at 732 (3) (citation and
punctuation omitted).
Count I of the indictment charged Eubanks with felony murder
for causing Amy’s death on June 23, 2019, “while in the commission
of the Possession of Heroin with Intent to Distribute . . . by exposing
said person to heroin while in the commission of the distribution
thereof.” Count III charged her with felony murder for causing
Amy’s death on June 23, 2019, “while in the commission of the Pos-
session of Heroin . . . by exposing said person to heroin while in the
possession thereof.” Counts II and IV charged her with, respectively,
possessing heroin with intent to distribute and possessing heroin,
all on June 23, 2019.
8 Eubanks also challenges the indictment on grounds that she did not
raise below, including that Count I was duplicitous and that the indictment did not allege that she knowingly possessed heroin. Those arguments are not preserved for appeal. See Hinkson v. State, 310 Ga. 388, 395 (3) (850 SE2d 41) (2020) (special demurrer claims must be brought before trial or they are waived); id. at 397-398 (4) (general demurrer claims that are not timely as- serted through an appropriate vehicle in the trial court are not preserved for review). 45 The purpose of an indictment is to “allow the defendant to pre-
pare his defense intelligently and to protect him from double jeop-
ardy.” Sanders, 313 Ga. at 195 (3) (citation and punctuation omit-
ted). To satisfy due process, an indictment must “contain all the es-
sential elements of the crime” and must “notify the accused of what
factual allegations he must defend in court.” Jackson v. State, 301
Ga. 137, 139-140 (1) (800 SE2d 356) (2017) (citation and punctuation
omitted). So the test for whether an indictment is constitutionally
sufficient is not whether it might be made more definite and certain,
but only whether it “sufficiently apprises the defendant of what he
must be prepared to meet, and, in case any other proceedings are
taken against him for a similar offense, whether the record shows
with accuracy to what extent he may plead a former acquittal or
conviction.” Sanders, 313 Ga. at 195 (3) (citation and punctuation
omitted). The State need not allege all the details of the crime in an
indictment so long as the allegations contain enough detail to “allow
a defendant to prepare his defense intelligently.” Bullard v. State,
307 Ga. 482, 486-487 (2) (837 SE2d 348) (2019) (cleaned up).
46 Eubanks’s indictment met that standard. The State charged
Eubanks in the predicate counts with possessing heroin and intend-
ing to distribute it on June 23, 2019, and it charged her in the felony-
murder counts with “exposing” Amy to heroin on that date, either
while distributing the drug (Count I) or while she possessed it
(Count III). The State did not allege precisely how or when Amy was
“exposed,” but doing so was not required to satisfy due process. See
Bullard, 307 Ga. at 486-487 (2). Read as a whole, as it must be, see
Sanders, 313 Ga. at 196 (3) (a) (ii), the indictment charged Eubanks
with causing Amy’s death by exposing her to the drug on June 23,
while Eubanks possessed or distributed it. Those allegations were
specific enough to allow Eubanks to prepare an intelligent defense.
Indeed, that conclusion is supported by the defenses that Eubanks
asserted: among other things, she elicited on cross-examination that
neither Shawn nor the deputies saw any drugs in the house on the
day Amy’s body was found, which could support a defense that the
drugs were not in Amy’s reach, and she elicited from the medical
examiner that it was not clear how heroin got into Amy’s system or
47 exactly when she died.
The indictment also protected Eubanks against the dangers of
double jeopardy in a possible future proceeding. The indictment in-
formed her that the charges arose out of conduct that resulted in
Amy’s death, stated the nature of that conduct, and set out the date
on which the conduct took place. Given all that, “it cannot reasona-
bly be argued that [she] is not protected from the dangers of double
jeopardy.” State v. Grube, 293 Ga. 257, 262 (2) (744 SE2d 1) (2013)
(indictment sufficient to protect against double jeopardy when it
specified the conduct being charged, identified the victim, and
named the date on which the conduct took place).
In sum, Eubanks’s indictment, although not very detailed, was
constitutionally sufficient, and so this claim of error fails. See, e.g.,
Funck v. State, 296 Ga. 371, 373 (1) & n.3 (768 SE2d 468) (2015)
(indictment that charged defendant with felony murder for causing
the victim’s death while in the commission of attempt to possess co-
caine “by striking him with a vehicle” was constitutionally suffi-
cient); State v. Wyatt, 295 Ga. 257, 261 (2) (a), 266 (3) (759 SE2d 500)
48 (2014) (indictment that charged defendant with aggravated assault
by assaulting victim “with an object the exact nature of which is un-
known to the members of the Grand Jury, which when used offen-
sively against another person is likely to result in serious bodily in-
jury” was constitutionally sufficient). Compare Kimbrough v. State,
300 Ga. 878, 882-883 (3) (799 SE2d 229) (2017) (indictment not con-
stitutionally sufficient when it did not allege how the defendants
were associated with an enterprise, whether the enterprise was licit
or illicit, or how the defendants’ alleged racketeering activities re-
lated to the enterprise).
5. Eubanks next contends that the trial court abused its discre-
tion by admitting a hearsay statement from Amy that Eubanks was
“mean” to her. The statement was admitted over objection through
the testimony of Lisa Bennett, the director of an adult educational
program for adults with mental disabilities that Amy attended. Ben-
nett was asked about Amy’s ability to express emotions. Bennett tes-
tified that Amy once told her, “Jessica mean,” and when she asked
what Amy meant, Amy replied, “I not know.”
49 Assuming without deciding that it was an abuse of discretion
to admit Amy’s statement through Bennett, any error was harmless.
A non-constitutional error is harmless if it was “highly probable that
the alleged error did not contribute to the verdict.” Head v. State,
316 Ga. 406, 416 (3) (888 SE2d 473) (2023). Under this standard,
admitting inadmissible evidence can be harmless if “substantial, cu-
mulative, legally admissible evidence of the same fact is introduced.”
Id. at 417 (3) (citation and punctuation omitted). In determining
whether an error was harmless, “we review the record de novo, and
we weigh the evidence as we would expect reasonable jurors to have
done so.” Middlebrooks v. State, 315 Ga. 671, 684 (1) (884 SE2d 318)
(2023) (citation and punctuation omitted).
The admission of Amy’s remark that Eubanks was “mean” to
her was harmless because it did not relate to the State’s theory of
the case and because it was cumulative of other evidence that Amy
and Eubanks did not have a warm relationship. The State never ar-
gued that Eubanks intended to harm Amy or that she caused her
death out of antipathy toward her, nor did it need to: the only intent
50 the State had to prove was Eubanks’s intent to possess heroin and
that she intended to distribute it. And even if Amy’s remark might
have colored the jury’s view of Eubanks, it was largely cumulative
of other evidence that she and Eubanks did not get along. Shawn
described their relationship as “cool” and indifferent, and said that
when Eubanks was around, Amy would usually be in her room. And
one of Amy’s former caretakers testified that after Eubanks moved
into the house, Amy was more timid and reserved and less happy-
go-lucky, at least when she was at home. Given that other evidence
and that the State’s theory of the case did not involve showing that
Eubanks intended to harm Amy, it is highly probable that Amy’s
comment about Eubanks being “mean” to her did not affect the ver-
dict. See Head, 316 Ga. at 416 (3).
6. Finally, Eubanks contends that the trial court abused its dis-
cretion by admitting four videos of Amy during life. The videos,
which were shown at trial, lasted a total of two minutes and twenty
seconds and depicted Amy learning the pledge of allegiance, visiting
a pet store, playing softball, and hugging a new purse. The State
51 argued that the videos would show Amy’s level of cognitive skill and
hand-eye coordination. But in Eubanks’s view, the videos were not
relevant and were introduced only to play on the jury’s sympathies.
We review a trial court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.
See Jones v. State, 305 Ga. 653, 655 (2) (827 SE2d 254) (2019).
Relevant evidence is “evidence having any tendency to make
the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination
of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without
the evidence.” OCGA § 24-4-401. Relevant evidence is generally ad-
missible, see OCGA § 24-4-402, but it may be excluded “if its proba-
tive value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prej-
udice,” OCGA § 24-4-403 (“Rule 403”). Evidence carries a danger of
“unfair prejudice” if it has a tendency to “lure the factfinder into de-
claring guilt on a ground different from proof specific to the offense
charged,” or to “suggest decision on an improper basis.” Old Chief v.
United States, 519 U.S. 172, 180 (II) (B) (1) (117 SCt 644, 136 LE2d
574) (1997) (citation and punctuation omitted). See also Wilson, 315
Ga. at 738 (8). But the exclusion of evidence under Rule 403 is “an
52 extraordinary remedy that should be used only sparingly.” Id. (cita-
tion and punctuation omitted). The “major function” of the rule is to
“exclude matter of scant or cumulative probative force, dragged in
by the heels for the sake of its prejudicial effect.” Hood v. State, 299
Ga. 95, 103 (4) (786 SE2d 648) (2016) (cleaned up).
Here, the videos of Amy were relevant to show her limited cog-
nitive development. That was an important fact because, as we ex-
plained above, the State needed to show how Eubanks’s possession
of heroin could proximately cause Amy’s death. See Wilson, 315 Ga.
at 733 (4). The “in-life” videos helped the State do that, because
Amy’s vulnerability was a major reason it was possible for her to
come in contact with and ingest a lethal dose of heroin without
knowing any better. To be sure, the videos also likely played on the
jury’s sympathies, and they may have carried a danger of prejudice.
But they were not very prejudicial: they showed Amy doing very nor-
mal activities, and they took up less than two and a half minutes of
trial time. And they had clear probative value, and so were not
“dragged in by the heels for the sake of [their] prejudicial effect.”
53 Hood, 299 Ga. at 103 (4) (citation and punctuation omitted). The
trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting them. See Jones,
305 Ga. at 655 (2).
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except LaGrua, J., who concurs specially in part.
LAGRUA, Justice, concurring specially in part.
I concur fully in the judgment and in Divisions 1, 2 (a), 2 (b), 3,
4, 5, and 6. But I do not agree with all that is said in Division 2 (c),
so I concur specially in that part of the opinion.
Decided October 24, 2023.
Murder. Forsyth Superior Court. Before Judge Dickinson.
Clark & Towne, David E. Clark, Jessica R. Towne, for appel-
lant.
Penny A. Penn, District Attorney, Caroline Yi, Assistant District
Attorney; Christopher M. Carr, Attorney General, Beth A. Burton,
Deputy Attorney General, Paula K. Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney
General, Meghan H. Hill, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
317 Ga. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eubanks-v-state-ga-2023.