Eubanks v. State

317 Ga. 563
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 24, 2023
DocketS23A0519
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 317 Ga. 563 (Eubanks v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eubanks v. State, 317 Ga. 563 (Ga. 2023).

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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