Glenn v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 16, 2017
DocketS17A0858
Status200

This text of Glenn v. State (Glenn 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
Glenn v. State, (Ga. 2017).

Opinion

302 Ga. 276 FINAL COPY

S17A0858. GLENN v. THE STATE.

GRANT, Justice.

A DeKalb County jury found appellant Delron Glenn guilty of malice

murder in connection with the shooting death of John Tanner.1 Glenn raises

four enumerations of error pertaining to his trial: (1) the trial court erred in

denying his motion in limine to prevent lay witness identification testimony;

The crimes occurred on February 3, 2015. On April 28, 2015, a DeKalb County grand jury indicted Glenn for malice murder, among other crimes. After a trial held August 17-21, 2015, the jury found Glenn guilty of malice murder, two counts of felony murder, one count of armed robbery, one count of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. The trial court sentenced Glenn to life in prison for the malice murder conviction and five years to be served consecutively for possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. The trial court vacated the remaining counts. Though the trial court’s nomenclature was incorrect, the result was proper. See Malcolm v. State, 263 Ga. 369, 371-372 (4)-(5) (434 SE2d 479) (1993). On August 28, 2015, Glenn filed a motion for new trial, which was amended with new counsel on March 16, 2016. Following a hearing on July 26, 2016, the trial court denied his motion on September 26, 2016. Glenn filed a timely notice of appeal, and the case was docketed in this Court to the April 2017 term and was orally argued on April 18, 2017. (2) the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the search of his

sister’s apartment because the magistrate judge lacked probable cause to

issue the search warrant; (3) the trial court erred in denying his motion to

suppress a cell phone seized during that search, and; (4) his trial counsel was

ineffective for failing to identify and redact references to Glenn’s gang

affiliation that were contained in a co-defendant’s videotaped statement

which was played for the jury. Finding no error, we affirm.

I.

The facts, in the light most favorable to the verdicts, show the

following. On February 3, 2015, John Tanner, accompanied by an unknown

female, went to an Affordable Inn motel. When he arrived at his room, he

encountered Denard Pryor, who was there with another man nicknamed

“Black.” Tanner left with Pryor to get a laptop out of Tanner’s car, which

was parked in the motel parking lot. Tanner then moved his car around the

corner of the building.

Meanwhile, Glenn’s ex-girlfriend, Teneshia Johnson, drove Glenn to

the same Affordable Inn motel. She dropped Glenn off at the back of the

motel, where he met his brother and eventual co-defendant, Calvin Glenn,

2 co-indictee Stanley Kitchens,2 and another man. When Tanner and Pryor

came around the corner in Tanner’s car, Pryor recognized the four men

standing in the parking lot. Calvin and his entourage, including Glenn, had

come to the motel to confront Tanner because Tanner allegedly owed Calvin

some money. When Calvin saw Tanner, Calvin became angry and said he

was going to “go handle this.” Glenn then asked Calvin to give him a gun.

Tanner was out of his car, with Calvin and Glenn following him, when

the two men began “roughing up” Tanner. Tanner then managed to get back

inside his car, but Calvin and Glenn followed Tanner to his car and

proceeded to steal Tanner’s briefcase, keys to his home, and an LG MS395

cell phone. During the “roughing up” and the robbery, witnesses heard a

gunshot. Calvin and Glenn then got out of Tanner’s car and ran away. Glenn

was spotted with a small silver gun in his hand as he ran. The men dropped a

red cell phone and a key ring during their flight.

In response to a 911 call, police arrived at the Affordable Inn shortly

after the shot was fired. They found a car that was still running with the door

open. Tanner was found unresponsive in the driver’s seat. Officers collected

a .25 caliber cartridge casing, a number of business cards, a video 2 Kitchens was indicted with the Glenn brothers but entered a guilty plea and testified at their trial. 3 surveillance recording, and several fingerprints from the crime scene.

Officers also noticed that Tanner’s cell phone holder was empty and that

there was an empty box for an LG MS395 phone in the car’s back seat.

Tanner died from a single .25 caliber gunshot wound to his abdomen; no

firearm connected to that casing or bullet was ever recovered.

The motel manager gave police the video surveillance recording that

captured Tanner’s last moments. The recording showed Tanner being taken

to the ground by two men on the car’s left side while two other men

ransacked the car from the right side. The manager thought she recognized

two of the people in the video, whom she knew by their nicknames “Fat” and

“Man.” “Fat” was later determined to be Pryor, and “Man” was later

determined to be Kitchens. The manager identified Kitchens because he

stuck his face into the camera and because he was known to her since he had

been banned from motel property. The video also showed Kitchens and three

other men fleeing the parking lot via a “cut path” that led to the Hidden

Woods apartments on the other side of the motel. A search of the path turned

up the key ring and red cell phone. Police issued a BOLO (be on the

lookout) notice describing the suspects; minutes later, Calvin was arrested

4 near the Hidden Woods apartments. The red phone turned out to belong to

Calvin.

Six days after the crime, Kitchens was arrested. He admitted to serving

as a lookout at the corner of the motel building, but pinned the murder on

Calvin and Glenn despite denying that he ever saw the actual shooting.

Kitchens identified the fourth male by the nickname “Red.” He told police

that Calvin went by the street name “Kirkwood,” while Glenn went by the

name “Uzi.” Kitchens illuminated a motive: money. Calvin had seen

Tanner at a nearby gas station earlier that day and became upset because

Tanner owed him money for drugs. Calvin called his brother to meet him

and confront Tanner over the money.

Johnson was shown the video recording, along with still photos, and

identified Glenn as being one of the men shown. She acknowledged, both

before and during trial, that she could not see his face well, but “could just

tell” the man in the video was Glenn. She, like Kitchens, denied being

present when the shooting occurred.

DeKalb County police arrested Glenn at his sister’s apartment. He had

resided there for two or three weeks. In addition to the arrest warrant issued

for Glenn, Detective Keith McQuilkin obtained a search warrant for the

5 apartment. The warrant is discussed more fully below in relation to one of

Glenn’s enumerations of error. Although the warrant did not include a cell

phone as one of the items to be seized, Detective McQuilkin seized an LG

MS395 cell phone from the floor of the apartment. At police headquarters,

he removed the cell phone’s battery and confirmed that the serial number

matched the serial number on the empty box that was found in the back seat

of Tanner’s car.

Prior to trial, Calvin and Glenn filed a motion in limine seeking to

block lay witnesses from identifying them as the two men shown on the

motel surveillance video or still photographs taken from that video. The trial

court denied the motion, and Pryor, Johnson, and Kitchens were all

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