Jacobs v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 1, 2025
DocketS25A0570
StatusPublished

This text of Jacobs v. State (Jacobs 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
Jacobs v. State, (Ga. 2025).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

Decided: July 1, 2025

S25A0570. JACOBS v. THE STATE.

ELLINGTON, Justice.

Steven Alford Jacobs appeals his convictions for malice murder

and other crimes in connection with the shooting death of Curtis

Pitts. 1 On appeal, Jacobs contends that the trial court violated his

1 The crimes occurred on or about September 21, 2018. On October 14,

2020, a Butts County grand jury returned an indictment charging Jacobs with malice murder (Count 1); felony murder (Counts 2-3); aggravated assault (Count 4); armed robbery (Count 5); possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (Counts 6-8); abandonment of a dead body (Count 9); and concealing the death of another (Count 10), in connection with the shooting death of Pitts. At the conclusion of a jury trial that began on November 7, 2022, the jury found Jacobs guilty on all counts. On November 9, 2022, the trial court sentenced Jacobs to life in prison without the possibility of parole for malice murder (Count 1). The trial court purported to merge the felony murder counts (Counts 2-3) into the malice murder conviction, but those counts were actually vacated by operation of law. See Hulett v. State, 296 Ga. 49, 53-55 (1), (2) (a) (766 SE2d 1) (2014). The trial court merged the aggravated assault count (Count 4) and armed robbery count (Count 5) into the malice murder conviction. The court imposed five-year prison terms for two of the counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (Counts 6 and 8), with Count 6 to run consecutively to Count 1 and Count 8 to run consecutively to Count 6. The court merged the other count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (Count 7) into Count 6. The court imposed a three- year prison term for the count of abandonment of a dead body (Count 9), to run consecutively to Count 8, and a ten-year prison term for concealing the death right to be present, under the Georgia Constitution, during a critical

phase of the proceedings against him by allowing the jury to view a

vehicle connected to the charges without him being present. For the

reasons explained below, we affirm.

Jacobs was arrested in connection with the shooting death of

Pitts and tried for the counts in the indictment. The evidence

presented at trial showed that, on the morning of September 21,

2018, Pitts was found, shot to death, only a few hours after he was

seen getting into a van driven by Emmanuel Nesbitt and in which

Jacobs was a passenger. A little after midnight on September 22,

2018, law enforcement conducted a traffic stop on the van, with

Nesbitt driving and Jacobs riding inside.

During a search of the van, officers located an eight-shot

revolver. The forensic evidence showed that Pitts had nine bullet-

of another (Count 10), to run consecutively to Count 9. Jacobs timely filed a motion for new trial on November 10, 2022, which was amended through new counsel on September 5, 2023. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied the motion for new trial on November 7, 2024. Jacobs timely filed a notice of appeal on December 2, 2024, and the case was docketed in this Court to the April 2025 term and submitted for a decision on the briefs.

2 entry wounds on his body, that four of the bullets collected and

tested were confirmed to have been fired from the revolver located

inside the van, and that Jacobs had gunshot residue on the pants he

had been wearing fewer than 24 hours after Pitts was found dead.

During the trial, crime scene investigator Audey Murphy

testified that he processed the van, and the State tendered into

evidence photographs of the van that Agent Murphy took. Butts

County Investigator Jeanette Riley testified that, after the van was

processed, it was towed to the parking lot behind the administrative

building of the courthouse, where the prosecutor, in the presence of

Investigator Riley, took photos of the van as it sat in the lot behind

the building on the morning of the second day of trial. Investigator

Riley testified that nothing had been changed, modified, moved, or

altered in the van except that law enforcement released some of the

items located within the van to its owner.

In open court—in the presence of Jacobs and the jury—the

State informed the court that the van was behind the building for

the jury to view, and the defense objected, stating that it did not

3 know if the van was “in the same exact condition as it was back in

2018.” The court stated that it was going to allow the jury to view

the van and instructed:

You’re going to see the vehicle. It’s going to have crime tape around it. Walk around it two or three times, whatever you think. You can carry your pads with you if you want to write notes. Nobody needs to question you about it. You’re not to ask any questions either. But you’re just getting a viewing of the vehicle. You’ll go out there right now.

After the jury returned from the viewing, the State tendered into

evidence the photographs of the van that the prosecutor had taken

that morning.

At the conclusion of the trial, the jury found Jacobs guilty on

all counts. Following Jacobs’s convictions, he filed a motion for new

trial, which was later amended by new counsel. At the hearing on

that motion, Jacobs testified that he was not given an opportunity

to be present when the jury viewed the van, that he did not have any

conversation with his attorney about the right to be present, and

that, if he had been aware of that right, he would have wanted to

attend the viewing and would have objected to not being allowed to

4 do so.

One of Jacobs’s trial attorneys, Devlin Cooper, testified at the

motion for new trial hearing that he remained in the courtroom with

Jacobs while his co-counsel, Ashley Cooper and Todd Stanage,

accompanied the jury for the viewing. Cooper specifically recalled

having a dialogue with the court about “what to do with Mr. Jacobs,

if he didn’t want to go view the van” because the court did not want

to leave him in the courtroom without a bailiff and did not want to

place him in the holding cell which the jurors would pass and see

him in confinement. Cooper testified that he talked with Jacobs

about viewing the van, informing Jacobs of his “right to go outside”

to be present when the jury was viewing the vehicle and suggesting

that “it would be useful for the jury to observe him paying attention.”

But Cooper testified that “[Jacobs] said no,” and Cooper believed

that Jacobs’s reaction suggested he “would be creeped out by the

thought of going out to see the van.” Cooper and the team “had two

or three conversations” with Jacobs about his opportunity to go with

the jury to view the van. Jacobs’s two other trial counsel attended

5 the jury viewing of the vehicle, and although neither had a personal

conversation with Jacobs about whether he would attend, one of the

two attorneys remembered that the team of attorneys had, at some

point, discussed the matter with him.

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Related

Hulett v. State
766 S.E.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2014)
Chance v. State
119 S.E. 303 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1923)
Hardy v. State
306 Ga. 654 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2019)
Reed v. State
878 S.E.2d 217 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2022)
Neal v. State
873 S.E.2d 209 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2022)

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Jacobs v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-state-ga-2025.