Kimbro v. State

317 Ga. 442
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 11, 2023
DocketS23A0678
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

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Bluebook
Kimbro v. State, 317 Ga. 442 (Ga. 2023).

Opinion

317 Ga. 442 FINAL COPY

S23A0678. KIMBRO v. THE STATE.

WARREN, Justice.

Appellant Torrey Kimbro was convicted of malice murder and

rape in connection with the strangling death of Diamond Shepherd.1

In this appeal, Kimbro contends that the evidence presented at his

trial was legally insufficient to support his convictions. He also

claims that the trial court erred in the following ways: by denying

his motion for new trial on the “general grounds” set forth in OCGA

§§ 5-5-20 and 5-5-21; by denying his motion for a continuance; by

denying his motion to dismiss his indictment; by denying his motion

1 Shepherd was killed on November 3, 2009. In April 2021, a Fulton

County grand jury indicted Kimbro for malice murder, two counts of felony murder, and rape. At a trial from November 30 to December 6, 2021, a jury found him guilty of all counts. The trial court sentenced him as a recidivist to serve life in prison without the possibility of parole for murder and a concurrent life sentence (to serve 25 years in prison and the remainder on probation) for rape. The felony murder counts were vacated by operation of law. Kimbro filed a timely motion for new trial, which he amended three times through new counsel. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied the motion in January 2023. Kimbro then filed a timely notice of appeal, which he later amended, and the case was docketed to the April 2023 term of this Court and submitted for a decision on the briefs. for a mistrial; and by overruling his objections to certain statements

that the prosecutor made during her closing argument. In addition,

he claims that his trial counsel provided constitutionally ineffective

assistance in several respects. As explained below, we affirm.

1. The evidence presented at Kimbro’s trial showed the

following. On November 3, 2009, Shepherd, who was 17 years old,

was staying in a motel room near Fulton Industrial Boulevard in

Atlanta with her boyfriend Edwin Perkins, Perkins’s cousin, and the

cousin’s girlfriend. Around 3:00 p.m., investigators responded to a

911 call from a maintenance worker at the motel, who found

Shepherd lying on her back on the floor of her room near the door,

dead. A towel was covering her face; her shirt and bra were pushed

up, exposing her breasts; her shorts were pulled down around her

right ankle, exposing her vagina; and her legs were spread apart.

Her purse was across her body, with the strap around her neck.

Unopened condoms were strewn nearby. The bed had been moved,

as if there had been a struggle. Investigators also observed “fluid

leaking” from Shepherd’s vagina.

2 Shepherd’s boyfriend, Perkins, testified that Shepherd often

had sex with men in exchange for money. He said that on the day

Shepherd was killed, he and his cousin left the motel around 7:00

a.m. to run errands. Shepherd called him from the motel room phone

around 12:00 or 12:30 p.m.2 When he arrived back at the motel room

with his cousin and the cousin’s girlfriend, they saw investigators in

the room and learned that Shepherd had been killed. The

maintenance worker who discovered Shepherd’s body testified that

around 12:00 or 12:30 p.m., he was working on the breezeway near

Shepherd’s room when she passed by with a man who was “shorter

than 6′2″” and “about 200 pounds” and had dreadlocks. The

maintenance worker thought that the man was planning to pay

Shepherd for sex. Shepherd asked the maintenance worker to let her

and the man into her room because her key was not working; the

maintenance worker let her in; and the man followed her. The

maintenance worker saw the man leave about 45 minutes later, but

2 During his interview with investigators on the day of the murder, Perkins said that Shepherd called him around 11:25 a.m. 3 he did not know if Shepherd left the room after that or if anyone else

came to the room.3

The medical examiner who performed Shepherd’s autopsy

found abrasions on her neck and an “impression” on the front and

side of her neck that was likely created by her purse strap being

tightened against her neck. The examiner ultimately concluded that

Shepherd died from asphyxia due to neck compression. The medical

examiner collected vaginal, cervical, and rectal swabs from

Shepherd.4 Investigators later determined that the swabs contained

male DNA; they then generated a profile from the male DNA and

uploaded the DNA profile to the Combined DNA Index System

3 The State did not argue that the man the maintenance worker saw was

Kimbro, whose appearance differed from the description that the maintenance worker gave. Indeed, a booking report and photos from Kimbro’s arrest on unrelated charges on December 21, 2009 (less than two months after Shepherd’s murder), which were admitted into evidence, showed that he was 5′6″ tall and weighed 145 pounds and that he was bald. The State asserted that the man the maintenance worker saw may have been Shepherd’s brother, who Shepherd’s mother testified was about 6′2″ tall, weighed 195 to 215 pounds, and had dreadlocks. As discussed more below, the defense argued that this man was likely Shepherd’s assailant.

4 The medical examiner testified that there were no acute injuries to

Shepherd’s genitals and that a sexual assault does not always result in such injuries. 4 (“CODIS”) in April 2010.

In September 2010, the GBI was notified that the DNA profile

that was uploaded to CODIS matched Kimbro. A GBI forensic

biologist then performed a comparison of the DNA profile and

Kimbro’s reference sample in CODIS and confirmed the match. The

GBI notified the lead detective for the case, who determined that

Kimbro was in prison for unrelated crimes. The detective testified

that although he believed he had probable cause to arrest Kimbro,

he never obtained an arrest warrant and did not continue to work

on the case, because Kimbro was already in prison and the detective

wanted to focus on “the other cases [he] had.” The case was

eventually classified as a “cold case.” In May 2017, an investigator

who was assigned to the “cold case” unit reviewed the case file and

obtained an arrest warrant for Kimbro; he was arrested in March

2020. Investigators then obtained a buccal swab from Kimbro and

performed additional DNA testing, which confirmed that the DNA

profile generated from the swabs matched Kimbro.

At trial, the State also presented evidence that on December

5 21, 2009 (less than two months after Shepherd’s murder), Kimbro

choked then 22-year-old Robertenette Gordon-Deaver in another

motel room in the same motel near Fulton Industrial Boulevard.

Gordon-Deaver testified that sometime between 8:00 and 10:00

p.m., she encountered Kimbro, whom she did not know, near the

motel, where she was staying, and he agreed to pay her for sex.

When they went inside her motel room, he sprayed mace in her face,

grabbed her neck with his hands, and choked her. She screamed for

help, and a security guard at the motel and a man who was staying

in a nearby room ran into Gordon-Deaver’s room, scuffled with

Kimbro, and eventually handcuffed him and called the police, who

arrested him.

Kimbro elected not to testify at trial, but he presented

testimony from a detective who reviewed the case in 2014 and

determined that there was not probable cause to arrest Kimbro,

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317 Ga. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimbro-v-state-ga-2023.