Gresham v. State

566 S.E.2d 380, 255 Ga. App. 625, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 1702, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 717
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 4, 2002
DocketA02A0612
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 566 S.E.2d 380 (Gresham 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
Gresham v. State, 566 S.E.2d 380, 255 Ga. App. 625, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 1702, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 717 (Ga. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Ruffin, Judge.

A jury found Darrin Gresham guilty of rape, simple battery, attempted kidnapping, theft by bringing a stolen vehicle into the state, burglary, and three counts of aggravated assault. Gresham appeals, challenging several evidentiary rulings and the sufficiency of the evidence supporting one of his aggravated assault convictions. For reasons that follow, we affirm.

Viewed in favor of the verdict, 1 the evidence shows that the victim was Gresham’s former girlfriend. In September 1995, following a physically abusive two-year relationship, the victim moved from Virginia to Georgia to live with her father.

In January 1996, Gresham paid the victim a surprise visit in Georgia. He showed up at the victim’s workplace in a mall and told her that he wanted them to get back together. The victim, afraid to be alone with Gresham, agreed to meet him at a restaurant the next day. After the meeting, as the victim was walking to a bus stop to go home, Gresham accompanied her and insisted that she go with him to his motel room. The victim refused, and Gresham followed her onto the bus where he continued to badger her about going to his motel room. At the end of her bus ride, the victim’s father picked her up, and Gresham went his own way.

The following morning, after her father had left the house, the victim saw Gresham emerge from a wooded area in back of the house. She confronted Gresham, and he asked her to loan him some money. When the victim refused, Gresham requested to use the phone. Afraid to let Gresham in the house, the victim handed him a cell phone to use outside. According to the victim, the next thing she knew, Gresham “pulled open the screen door and forced his way in.” The victim ran into the kitchen to call the police, but Gresham caught her. Gresham wrapped neckties that he had brought with him tightly around the victim’s neck, pulled her to the floor, hit her with *626 his fists, and kicked her. Grabbing the neckties, Gresham dragged the victim into the living room, threatened to kill her and her father, and ordered her to remove her clothes. After further beating the victim, Gresham dragged her into her bedroom, where he twice forced intercourse, and then took her money. Gresham eventually left the house, and the victim called the police.

Gresham went to the Washington, D.C., area for a short time, where he continued to harass the victim and her family by telephone. On February 16, 1996, Gresham returned to the victim’s workplace in Georgia. As the victim was walking through a parking garage, Gresham drove up, got out of his car, and told the victim that he had a gun and would shoot her if she screamed. Although the victim believed Gresham had a gun, she screamed anyway. Gresham then grabbed the victim and attempted to drag her into the car and take her purse. When the victim resisted, Gresham started punching her. Two men, who heard the victim’s cries for help, came to her aid. As one of the men approached, Gresham got back in the car and attempted to run over the victim and her rescuer before driving away.

After police arrived, a lookout bulletin was posted for the car Gresham was driving. About one and one-half hours later, Officer Jeffery Adcock spotted the car and arrested Gresham. Adcock searched Gresham, found no weapons, and put him in the back of the patrol car. Another officer then told Gresham “that there was an outstanding warrant for his arrest [a]nd that [they] would take him up to the Felony Against Persons Office ... so [they] could talk to him there.” According to the officer, Gresham responded that “he would tell [them] where the gun was if he [was allowed to] talk[ ] to [the victim].” The officer told Gresham that “it was impossible and it would be [in] his best interest not to talk until [they] reached the office.”

As Officer Adcock was driving Gresham to the police station, Gresham started a conversation about “sports, football and baseball.” Adcock testified that,

as we talked, I told [Gresham] several times that if he wanted to talk, he could talk to a detective. And he spoke anyhow. . . . And on the way, he asked me if he ran, when I stopped him, would I have shot him. And I told him it depended. And he asked me if he had reached his hands into his pockets, would I have shot him. And I told him it depended. And he asked me if I would have shot to kill him. And I said it depended. And he said, I should have put my hands in my pockets. And then he told me it was just a matter of time.

Adcock stated that he did not ask any questions to elicit Gresham’s statements.

*627 After arriving at the police station, Gresham was informed of his Miranda 2 rights. Gresham gave a statement in which he denied raping the victim and maintained that he was not attempting to kidnap the victim from the parking garage, but merely wanted to talk to her.

Among the items found in the car Gresham was driving when he was arrested were a knife, pawnshop receipts, and two notes written by Gresham. The first note, which was addressed to the victim, read that, “by now you are feeling comfortable and safe mainly because the devil is gone.” Gresham further wrote that he was “tired of this person who sees blood when he sleeps or can’t control the berserk rage within himself” and that he “was afraid of what [he will] do or how [he will] do it to next [sic].” The second note, addressed to the police, stated in part: “since you guys are reading this . . . with any luck I am dead. Seems only fair that someone with my love for revenge against anyone who rebels against my love how violent I can be. Riding down here [to Georgia] the only thing I thought about was killing [the victim] and anyone who got in my way.”

1. Gresham asserts that the trial court erred in prohibiting him from testifying about the reason he visited the victim in January 1996. Outside the jury’s presence, Gresham proffered the following explanation:

She told me [on the telephone in December that] she was pregnant and that I need to come down [to Georgia] or send money so that she could ... go see an OBGYN. ... I said, ... I don’t have that much money [,] [b]ut I’ll come down there [,] . . . because I’m not going to send you no money so you can have another abortion. ... So we decided when I was going to come.

The prosecutor objected to the admission of this testimony, arguing that it impermissibly put the victim’s character in evidence. Gresham responded that the testimony was relevant to show “his motivation for being in the state and meeting with [the victim].” The trial court sustained the objection, finding that Gresham’s motivation for being in Georgia was irrelevant to the crimes charged. We agree.

The trial court had discretion to exclude the testimony, and we will not reverse its decision absent an abuse of that discretion. 3 Although Gresham continues to argue that the testimony was relevant to show his motive for coming to Georgia, he has not shown, and *628

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Bluebook (online)
566 S.E.2d 380, 255 Ga. App. 625, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 1702, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gresham-v-state-gactapp-2002.