Glenn Elliott Haymer v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 27, 2013
DocketA13A1552
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Glenn Elliott Haymer v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION BARNES, P. J., MILLER, and RAY, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

August 27, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A1552. HAYMER v. THE STATE.

BARNES, Presiding Judge.

A jury convicted Glenn Elliott Haymer of voluntary manslaughter and

aggravated assault, and the trial court denied his motion for new trial. On appeal,

Haymer challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. He also contends that the trial

court made several impermissible comments during the trial, including a statement

during the defense’s cross-examination of a police detective indicating that it was

“quite all right” for police officers to provide false information to a suspect during a

custodial interview to “test” the suspect. Because the jury could have construed the

trial court’s statement as an expression of opinion on the evidence and on the

detective’s credibility, we must reverse and remand for a new trial. Construed in favor of the verdict,1 the evidence showed that the elderly victim

rented an upstairs garage apartment in Floyd County. Haymer knew the victim,

sometimes stayed in his apartment, and would smoke crack cocaine with him.

On the afternoon of April 4, 2011, a father and his son were driving down the

street in front of the victim’s garage apartment when they heard a loud crash. The

father turned in his seat and saw the victim coming head-first through a closed glass

window of the apartment. The window was located above a garage door,

approximately ten feet from the ground. Upon seeing the victim strike the ground, the

father and son immediately stopped their vehicle and ran to render aid. The father

called 911 and attempted to speak with the victim, but he was too injured to respond.

Through the apartment windows, the father and son saw someone’s shadow

move quickly from one side of the apartment to the other. The son heard a noise

coming from the back of the apartment, and he ran around the side of the building to

investigate. When he looked around the corner, the son saw a man, who was wearing

all black and carrying a black backpack, climbing out of another window of the

apartment. The son asked him, “[W]hy did [you] do that old man like that?” The man

responded that he had set the old man on fire and then fled from the scene.

1 See Bryan v. State, 271 Ga. App. 60 (1) (608 SE2d 648) (2004).

2 Emergency medical personnel and law enforcement arrived shortly thereafter.

The victim’s shirt was wet, and he appeared to be burned around his face and on his

chest under his shirt. The victim was transported to a local hospital, where further

examination revealed that he had suffered burns to approximately one-third of his

body. Because of the severity of his burns, he was transported by helicopter to a burn

center later that day. The victim, however, never recovered from his injuries and was

unable to speak with the police before his death.

Detectives assigned to the case searched the victim’s garage apartment after

securing a search warrant. Although the first responders initially had detected a

chemical odor, no flammable liquids were found in the apartment. There was no

evidence of an explosion or fire damage, other than a toilet paper roll that appeared

slightly burned. While the victim had tested negative for illegal drugs at the hospital,

four crack pipes were found in his apartment. A cell phone also was discovered in the

apartment, and a display screen on the phone indicated that it belonged to Haymer.

In addition to searching the apartment, the detectives interviewed the father and

son who had been at the scene, as well as a woman who contacted them. The woman

said that on the day of the incident, she had been smoking crack cocaine in a house

located a few doors down from the victim’s apartment. According to the woman,

3 there was a man whom she later identified as Haymer at the house smoking crack

cocaine as well. Haymer left the house at one point to get more drugs. He returned

about 15 to 30 minutes later, appearing agitated. The woman stated that Haymer, who

was wearing dark clothing and had a dark bag with him, said that an old man had

stolen his crack but that he “took care of him.” A few minutes later, the woman heard

sirens and left the house.

After being arrested and advised of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona, 384

U. S. 436 (86 SCt 1602, 16 LE2d 694) (1966), Haymer agreed to speak with the

detectives. During the interview, Haymer gave conflicting accounts of what had

transpired. Haymer ultimately admitted that he had been at the apartment that day, but

maintained that the victim was already burned when he got there and that the victim,

injured and incoherent, dove through the window of his own accord. Haymer said that

he then fled from the apartment with his backpack out of concern that he would be

falsely accused of causing the victim’s burns and his fall from the window.

Haymer was indicted for multiple offenses, including murder and aggravated

assault for burning the victim “with an unknown substance and source of ignition”

and causing him to fall from the apartment window. At trial, the State’s theory of the

case was that Haymer had gotten into an altercation with the victim over crack

4 cocaine, culminating in Haymer burning the victim with an unknown substance,

throwing him out of the window, and then fleeing from the scene with the unknown

substance in his backpack. The State relied on several witnesses to support its theory

of the case, including the detectives, the father and son, the woman who contacted the

detectives, the victim’s treating physicians, and the medical examiner. The State also

presented an audio recording of Haymer’s interview with the detectives.

In contrast, the defense’s theory of the case was that the victim was already

burned when Haymer arrived at the apartment and then jumped out of the window

because he was in a state of cocaine-induced “excited delirium.” The defense

presented an expert forensic pathologist who opined that this was a possible

explanation of what had occurred. In giving her opinion, the defense expert addressed

the negative urinalysis drug test performed on the victim at the hospital and explained

why, in her view, it did not eliminate the possibility of cocaine-induced excited

delirium. Additionally, the defense argued that the lack of forensic evidence of

chemicals or burn marks on the victim’s shirt indicated that the victim had put on his

shirt after being burned, which the defense maintained was consistent with its theory

that the victim had been injured before Haymer arrived at the apartment. The defense

further argued that there was no evidence of a struggle in the apartment and that the

5 father, son, and woman who testified to smoking crack cocaine with Haymer were all

convicted felons and thus were not credible witnesses. With respect to Haymer’s

conflicting statements to the detectives, the defense argued that both the detectives

and Haymer had been playing “the interrogation game,” that both withheld

information from each other and were “not showing their hands,” and that for this

reason Haymer did not initially “put it all out on the table” upon being interrogated.

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