Gibbs v. State

757 S.E.2d 842, 295 Ga. 92, 2014 Fulton County D. Rep. 1185, 2014 WL 1588206, 2014 Ga. LEXIS 295
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 22, 2014
DocketS14A0230
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 757 S.E.2d 842 (Gibbs 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
Gibbs v. State, 757 S.E.2d 842, 295 Ga. 92, 2014 Fulton County D. Rep. 1185, 2014 WL 1588206, 2014 Ga. LEXIS 295 (Ga. 2014).

Opinion

HINES, Presiding Justice.

Following the denial of his motion for new trial, as amended, Carl Gibbs appeals his convictions for malice murder, armed robbery, and two counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime in connection with the fatal beating and shooting of Judson Pilcher Boyd. His sole challenge is that the evidence was insufficient to convict him of the crimes. The evidentiary challenge is without merit; however, it was error to sentence Gibbs on both of the firearm possession counts. Accordingly, we affirm in part, and vacate in part. 1

The evidence construed to support the verdicts showed the following. Between 9:00 and 9:40 p.m. on January 9, 2009, several residents of Fairmont Street in Augusta heard their neighbor, Gibbs’s mother Margaret Gibbs (“Margaret”), screaming for help. Margaret lived with her longtime boyfriend, 68-year-old Judson Pilcher Boyd. *93 Around 8:30 p.m., before hearing Margaret’s screams for help, a neighbor saw a car, either a Crown Victoria or a Grand Marquis, parked near Boyd’s home. Responding to Margaret’s cries for help, the neighbors entered the home and found Boyd’s body; a bullet hole in Boyd’s head was visible. Boyd died as the result of blunt force injury and a close-range gunshot to the head.

Police arrived on the scene to find Boyd’s body lying behind a recliner; one of his pockets was pulled out, as if someone had reached into the pocket and taken its contents. Boyd routinely carried large amounts of cash, but only family members were aware of this fact. The recliner was covered in blood, and there was blood spatter on “just about every surface” in the L-shaped living room area. Otherwise the home was neat and there was no sign that it had been ransacked, nor were there any signs of forced entry. Anine millimeter shell casing was found under the dining room table and an open and empty box for a nine millimeter pistol was discovered on top of a bed in a rear bedroom near a night stand with its drawer open.

As part of the investigation of the crime scene, Margaret’s car was searched and in it were found two large sandwich bags filled with a form of the prescription drug Percocet and shoe boxes containing approximately $66,000 in cash. When Gibbs was arrested, he had a sandwich bag in his jacket pocket, consistent with the bags of pills found at Boyd’s residence and filled with various prescription pills, including Percocet. Also in the jacket was $1,715 in cash with one bill bearing a bloodstain. When taken into custody, Gibbs’s hands were bruised and one hand had a slight cut.

Around 4:00 or 5:00 p.m. on the day Boyd was killed, Gibbs and his girlfriend, Sherry Bailey, drove Bailey’s Grand Marquis to a bar located about a mile from Boyd’s home. Gibbs had not worked in a few weeks, and he then did not have much money. About 6:00 or 7:00 p.m., Gibbs left the bar in the Grand Marquis and did not return until 8:30 or 9:00 p.m. Gibbs told Bailey that he was going to South Carolina, although he later admitted this was untrue.

At the time of the crimes, Gibbs was living with Bailey. Bailey consented to a search of her residence, and the police found a pair of bloodstained jeans belonging to Gibbs. Bloodstains were also found on various parts of the Grand Marquis. A DNA analysis confirmed that Boyd’s blood matched the bloodstains on the jeans and those in the car’s driver’s seat. Processing of Gibbs’s bloodstained jeans revealed that it bore “impact stains,” which result from blood “flying through the air” and landing on the jeans. An expert in bloodstain pattern analysis examined photographs of both the crime scene and Gibbs’s jeans. At trial, the expert testified that the fatal incident began by Boyd being beaten behind the recliner, with the attack *94 progressing to the recliner, causing it to fall backwards to the floor; Boyd was then still alive and was on the floor behind the recliner where he sustained more blows and then the fatal gunshot wound. The expert further testified that the bloodstains on Gibbs’s jeans were primarily of medium and high velocity; that medium velocity stains could be caused only by significant blunt force trauma; that both medium and high velocity impact stains could not be created without the application of a significant amount of force; and that shaking blood off one’s hands would produce only low velocity impact stains.

Gibbs testified at trial that the cash found on him at the time of his arrest was money he had earned from construction work and had hidden from Bailey in the trunk of his car so that Bailey would not spend it; that the bruising or scratches found on his hands were the result of roofing work he had done a couple of weeks prior to the crimes; he left the bar in the early part of the evening of the fatal shooting to go to Boyd’s residence to “check on” Boyd and then to “get [himself] a couple of Percocets and go back to the bar”; when he went inside the residence, he found Boyd lying in the living room; he “got on [his] hands and knees” to see if he could help Boyd; he checked Boyd’s wrist for a pulse, and put his ear to Boyd’s chest and his hand under Boyd’s nose to try and detect a heartbeat or breathing; after determining Boyd was dead, he fled the scene and did not call police because he had an outstanding “probation warrant,” and there was blood on his clothes, and money and drugs at the scene, so he was scared he would be blamed for the death and go to jail; he took the Percocet pills with him because he did not want Boyd to be known as a drug dealer; and the blood on his jeans was the result of his kneeling on the floor by Boyd, and his shaking the blood from his hands and wiping them on the jeans.

1. Gibbs contends that the weight of the evidence was not sufficient to convict him of either malice murder or felony murder because the State failed to prove that he was Boyd’s killer in that: there was evidence of previous break-ins at Boyd’s residence, and thus, the jury could have concluded that an unknown party committed the crimes; according to one investigator’s testimony, the bloodstains on his jeans could have resulted from someone shaking blood off their hands; because the bloodstain pattern expert examined only photographs of the jeans, the expert’s conclusion that the stains could not have occurred from shaking blood off one’s hands is not reliable; the bloodstains could have been affected if the jeans were “balled-up” before the blood dried, and there was no awareness by the expert that the jeans had been “balled-up” or whether the blood dried before that happened; Gibbs was cooperative with law enforcement *95 and had an explanation for why he had not called police; and although there was a gun missing from the crime scene, it was not found in Gibbs’s home or car and the State did not produce a murder weapon. But, Gibbs’s arguments are unavailing.

First, this Court does not weigh the evidence on appeal or resolve conflicts in trial testimony, rather the job of this Court is, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdicts, to determine whether a rational trier of fact could have found the defendant/appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Browder v. State, 294 Ga. 188, 191 (1) (751 SE2d 354) (2013).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
757 S.E.2d 842, 295 Ga. 92, 2014 Fulton County D. Rep. 1185, 2014 WL 1588206, 2014 Ga. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-state-ga-2014.