Gibson v. State

404 S.E.2d 781, 261 Ga. 313, 1991 Ga. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 10, 1991
DocketS91P0499
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 404 S.E.2d 781 (Gibson 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
Gibson v. State, 404 S.E.2d 781, 261 Ga. 313, 1991 Ga. LEXIS 291 (Ga. 1991).

Opinion

Fletcher, Justice.

Exzavious Lee Gibson was convicted by a Dodge County jury of murder and armed robbery. He was sentenced to death on the murder conviction and to life imprisonment for the armed robbery. We affirm the conviction and death sentence. 1

1. The victim operated a family-owned grocery store in Eastman. Late in the afternoon of February 2, 1990, Eastman’s chief, of police, driving by the store during a routine patrol, saw a crowd at the front entrance. A man ran to the chief’s car and reported there was blood all over the store and no one visible inside. The chief radioed for assistance and then approached the store. The main entrance was locked. A member of the victim’s family broke open a side door. The police chief entered the store and discovered the victim’s body “behind the counter and blood just totally everywhere.”

A man had been seen running away from the store. One of the women in the crowd recognized him and knew where he lived. She accompanied a police officer to the defendant’s home. Leaving her in the car, the police officer went to the door, knocked, and asked permission to enter. A woman answered, telling the officer to come in. He opened the door and immediately noticed drops of fresh blood on the floor in the living room. The officer asked the woman if anyone had run into the house. She answered “her grandson” and directed him to a bedroom down the hall. The officer went to the bedroom. Looking from the doorway, he saw bloody money under the bed. The officer went to the bed and looked under it, thinking the defendant might be hiding there, and saw the rest of the money (almost $500) and a wallet. He looked inside the wallet and determined that it belonged to the victim. Looking around, he saw some bloody clothes near a closet which fit the description of the clothing worn by the man seen running away from the store. The officer opened the closet door and found the defendant, “crouched down” and sweating profusely. He was arrested and taken to jail.

An autopsy was conducted on the body of the victim. He had *314 been cut numerous times; some of the cuts were very deep while others were shallow. The autopsist testified that he found 39 “stab and slash and superficial cut wounds on [the victim’s] body.” The knife blade had broken off in the vertebrae of the victim’s neck, severing the victim’s spinal cord and immediately paralyzing him from thé neck down. In the autopsist’s opinion, many of the superficial wounds in the front of the victim’s chest and neck were inflicted by what was left of the knife after it had broken off in the victim’s neck.

The defendant confessed shortly after he was arrested. He first gave a brief written statement in which he' acknowledged killing the victim, claiming he needed money for drugs. Later that evening, he gave a longer tape-recorded statement, in which he added that he had been in the store earlier that day and had used profanity in the presence of the victim, who had then lectured him about his behavior. The defendant stated that when he returned later, he intended not only to rob the victim but also “to hurt him” because “I didn’t like him.”

The evidence supports the conviction on both counts. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).

2. Citing Coleman v. Kemp, 778 F2d 1487 (11th Cir. 1985), the defendant argues the trial court erred by denying his motion for change of venue. We disagree. The Coleman case involved a trial in a county subjected to an overwhelming barrage of inflammatory pretrial publicity. The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that this media inundation gave rise to a presumption of prejudice to Coleman’s right to a fair trial in the county in which the crime occurred. The Court noted, however, that “the presumed prejudice standard is ‘rarely’ applicable.” Id. at 1490.

In this case, the defendant offered only three newspaper articles in support of his motion, consisting of a mere 11 lines in one column, 23 lines in another, and 20 in a third. This does not amount to a “barrage” of pretrial publicity as would give rise to a presumption of prejudice.

Where the presumed prejudice standard does not apply, the defendant can prevail on a motion for change of venue based on excessive pretrial publicity only if he can show actual prejudice “from the jury selection process itself — the voir dire examination and qualification of prospective jurors.” Lee v. State, 258 Ga. 82, 86 (365 SE2d 99) (1988).

Isaacs v. State, 259 Ga. 717, 726 (15) (386 SE2d 316) (1989). The trial court’s determination that the defendant had not shown actual prejudice and that the defendant could get a fair trial in Dodge County is supported by the record. There was no error.

*315 3. There is no statutory requirement that the state submit its requests to charge at least 24 hours before trial and the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the defendant’s motion to compel such submission. We note that the state did not submit any requested charges at trial.

4. The defendant failed to establish any necessity to exclude the news media from the pretrial hearings, and the trial court did not err by refusing to close the pretrial proceedings to the media. See R. W. Page Corp. v. Lumpkin, 249 Ga. 576 (292 SE2d 815) (1982).

5. The defendant contends the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress physical items — bloody money, bloody clothes, and the victim’s wallet — seized from the defendant’s bedroom. He contends there was no evidence that the arresting officer was authorized to enter his bedroom and that the defendant’s later consent to search, given after he was interrogated, was not preceded by Miranda warnings and was induced by an illegal entry into the defendant’s room and the defendant’s consequent perception that these items would be seized with or without his consent.

The defendant’s grandmother not only invited the arresting officer into her home, she told the officer the defendant was “in the far back bedroom” and the officer could “go on back and talk to him.” Thus, even pretermitting any question of “hot pursuit,” the officer was authorized to enter the defendant’s bedroom. 2 Williams v. State, 166 Ga. App. 798 (2) (305 SE2d 489) (1983). The defendant’s consent, then, was not tainted by an illegal entry. As to his other claim, the evidence shows the defendant was Mirandized at least twice the same evening he gave his consent. Moreover, he executed a written consent to search stating he had “been informed of my constitutional right. . . to refuse to consent to ... a search” of the premises. His consent to search was not invalid, and there was no error.

6. The defendant complains about the Attorney General’s response to his attempt to subpoena information in the possession of witnesses employed by the state crime laboratory. The Attorney General moved to quash the subpoenas, to assess costs, and to find the defendant’s attorney in contempt of court for filing the subpoenas.

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Bluebook (online)
404 S.E.2d 781, 261 Ga. 313, 1991 Ga. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-state-ga-1991.