Lindsey v. State

760 S.E.2d 170, 295 Ga. 343, 2014 Fulton County D. Rep. 1547, 2014 WL 2702697, 2014 Ga. LEXIS 500
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 16, 2014
DocketS14A0441
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 760 S.E.2d 170 (Lindsey 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
Lindsey v. State, 760 S.E.2d 170, 295 Ga. 343, 2014 Fulton County D. Rep. 1547, 2014 WL 2702697, 2014 Ga. LEXIS 500 (Ga. 2014).

Opinion

HINES, Presiding Justice.

Lorenzo Dexter Lindsey appeals the denial of his motion for new trial, as amended, following his convictions for malice murder and criminal solicitation to commit murder in connection with the fatal shooting of Marcus Taylor. He challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, statements by the trial court, and the admission into *344 evidence of prior consistent statements by a witness for the prosecution. For the reasons that follow, the challenges are unavailing, and we affirm. 1

The evidence construed in favor of the verdicts showed the following. On August 11, 2002, Marcus Taylor was fatally shot in a Citgo store parking lot in Richmond County. Taylor had testified for the State against Lindsey at Lindsey’s two trials for the drive-by shooting and resulting death of 83-year-old Rosa Barnes. 2 While incarcerated and awaiting his second trial for Barnes’s murder, Lindsey began plotting with fellow inmates Lawton and Hankerson to kill Taylor, who was then also incarcerated. After the men were released from prison, the plot to kill Taylor continued. Lindsey attempted to recruit another individual, Antonio Tyler, to murder Taylor. Ultimately, Lawton agreed to kill Taylor, and Lindsey gave Hankerson the murder weapon and instructed him to give it to Lawton, which he did. Hankerson was present when Lawton approached Taylor at the Citgo store and shot him multiple times, fatally wounding Taylor in the torso and head. The murder weapon was returned to Lindsey. Lindsey gave Lawton money and drugs in payment for killing Taylor.

1. Lindsey contends that his conviction for criminal solicitation to commit murder must be reversed because the State failed to prove *345 beyond a reasonable doubt that Richmond County was the venue of the crime. However, that is not the case.

Venue is a matter of jurisdiction, which the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. State, 292 Ga. 685, 688 (740 SE2d 609) (2013). To meet that burden and establish venue, the State may use both direct and circumstantial evidence. Brinson v. State, 289 Ga. 150, 153 (2) (709 SE2d 789) (2011), citing Jones v. State, 272 Ga. 900, 902-903 (2) (537 SE2d 80) (2000). And, the State did so to establish that Lindsey criminally solicited the murder of Taylor, in part, in and around the Old Savannah Road neighborhood in Richmond County.

By the time of the present trial, Hankerson had died, so his testimony from Lindsey’s prior trial for the murder of Taylor was read into the record. That testimony established that Hankerson, Lawton, and Lindsey were all from the Augusta area, and that consequently, they were in the same clique in prison; that it was “a home boy thing,” in that “[t]he Augusta boys hang together”; the plan to kill Taylor began while the men were imprisoned and continued after their release and return home; Hankerson and Taylor, who was Hanker-son’s friend, were seen together at the Citgo station in Richmond County where Taylor was later fatally shot; after Lindsey learned of the encounter, he met with Hankerson on Old Savannah Road and expressed anger at Hankerson because Hankerson had not killed Taylor when he had the opportunity to do so; Lindsey told Hankerson that Hankerson “had gone soft . . . got weak,” that Lindsey was “through messing with [Hankerson],” and that he did not need Hankerson anymore because he “had a real killer on his team now”; Lindsey’s “real killer” was Antonio Tyler, who was present and part of this meeting to foster the plan to murder Taylor, which meeting took place on Old Savannah Road. Hankerson also testified that two days before Taylor’s murder, he, Lawton, and Lindsey had a conversation “at the basketball court located right behind Bussey Glass on Old Savannah Road” at which time Lawton stated that he would kill Taylor but did not have a gun to do so; that Hankerson and Lindsey then walked to a house in the Old Savannah Road neighborhood where another man gave Lindsey the pistol that ultimately was used to murder Taylor; and that Lindsey handed the pistol to Hankerson directing him to give it to Lawton because Lindsey did not want to then deal directly with Lawton as Lindsey worried that “Lawton might testify against him if any kind of slip-ups came up.”

A State’s witness, who at the time of the Barnes murder was an investigator with the Richmond County Sheriff’s Office, testified that the address where that fatal shooting occurred was in Richmond County in an area called “Old Savannah Road.” Later at trial, another *346 investigator with the Richmond County Sheriff’s Office testified that during the course of his investigation he met with Lawton at Lawton’s home, which was two to three miles from the Old Savannah Road neighborhood and was “still in Richmond County,” plainly indicating that the Old Savannah Road neighborhood was also in Richmond County.

The evidence was sufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that criminal solicitation to commit murder occurred in Richmond County.

2. Lindsey contends that his convictions must be reversed because the trial court wrongfully commented on the evidence when it announced to a panel of the venire that the indicted offense of malice murder occurred in Richmond County, thereby violating OCGA § 17-8-57. 3

Certainly it is error for the court in a criminal case to indicate any opinion as to the evidence or the guilt of the accused, but that is not what happened in this instance. The comments at issue 4 were made during the trial court’s preliminary instructions to the venire, in which the court made plain that it was explaining what was alleged in the indictment against Lindsey, not what had been proven in regard to Lindsey’s culpability for the crimes on trial. There was no violation of OCGA § 17-8-57. See Foster v. State, 290 Ga. 599, 600-601 (2) (723 SE2d 663) (2012); Linson v. State, 287 Ga. 881, 883-884 (2) (700 SE2d 394) (2010).

*347 3. Lindsey next contends that his convictions must be reversed because the evidence presented at trial to support the guilty verdicts was insufficient as it rested solely on the uncorroborated testimony of the accomplice, Hankerson. But, that is not so.

Former OCGA § 24-4-8, 5 applicable at the time of Lindsey’s trial, did require corroborating circumstances in a felony prosecution in which the only witness was an accomplice. 6

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Bluebook (online)
760 S.E.2d 170, 295 Ga. 343, 2014 Fulton County D. Rep. 1547, 2014 WL 2702697, 2014 Ga. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsey-v-state-ga-2014.