Lopez v. State

857 S.E.2d 467, 311 Ga. 269
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 5, 2021
DocketS21A0322
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 857 S.E.2d 467 (Lopez 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
Lopez v. State, 857 S.E.2d 467, 311 Ga. 269 (Ga. 2021).

Opinion

311 Ga. 269 FINAL COPY

S21A0322. LOPEZ v. THE STATE.

PETERSON, Justice.

Fernando Lopez appeals his conviction for malice murder for

the stabbing death of Corey Williams.1 Lopez argues that the trial

court admitted improper hearsay evidence against him: Williams’s

dying statements describing the stabbing and his assailant and

Williams’s statements describing his previous and intended future

drug sales with Lopez. But the statements about the attack were

admissible under the excited utterance hearsay exception, most of

1 The crimes took place on January 26, 2012. On December 13, 2016, a

DeKalb County grand jury indicted Lopez, charging him with malice murder, felony murder predicated on aggravated assault, and aggravated assault. The aggravated assault count was ultimately dismissed as untimely under the four- year statute of limitation. After a trial held on November 26 to 30, 2018, a jury found Lopez guilty of malice murder and felony murder. The trial court sentenced Lopez to life in prison with the possibility of parole for the malice murder charge. The felony murder charge was vacated by operation of law. On December 20, 2018, Lopez filed a motion for new trial, which he amended on February 10, 2020. The trial court denied his motion in an order entered on August 25, 2020. Lopez filed a timely notice of appeal, and the case was docketed to this Court’s term beginning in December 2020 and submitted for a decision on the briefs. the statements about drug sales were admissible under the residual

hearsay exception, and the admission of the remaining statement

about drug sales was harmless. We affirm.

The evidence presented at trial showed the following. On

January 26, 2012, Corey Williams was sitting in the driver’s seat of

his car when he was stabbed by someone sitting in the passenger

seat area. Williams drove two streets over and pulled up to three

men: Dusty Smith, Aaron Bales, and Jacob Christmas. Williams

blew his horn and called to them, yelling repeatedly that “Migo” or

“Amigo” had stabbed him and asking them to call an ambulance. He

had wounds to his arms and chest and acted like he was in pain, and

there was a significant amount of blood on his chest and on the

driver’s side of the car. There also was a duffel bag in the rear

passenger seat that Williams said belonged to Migo.

The men called 911 at 3:02 p.m., and Officer Brandon Mitchell

arrived five to ten minutes later. Officer Mitchell rendered first aid

and tried to calm Williams to keep him from going into shock,

because Williams was “breathing pretty heavy and was obviously

2 very [shaken] up,” and he was starting to wheeze. Williams

described his assailant to Officer Mitchell as a Hispanic male known

as “Amigo.” Williams told Officer Mitchell and the other men that

he had given his assailant a ride from the store for $40, but that as

his passenger was reaching into the back of the car to retrieve his

duffel bag, he stabbed Williams, screamed “mother f****r,” and ran

away. Williams died later that day from the stab wound to his chest.

Kenyatta Kitchen, a relative of Williams, identified Lopez in a

photographic lineup as the person he saw get into the front

passenger side of Williams’s car and place his bag in the back

passenger side approximately 20 minutes before Williams was

stabbed. Fingerprints on paperwork in the duffel bag left in

Williams’s car matched Lopez’s fingerprints, which were already on

file. No other person’s fingerprints were found on the paperwork.

Police obtained a warrant for Lopez but were unable to locate him

until September 2016, when he was arrested. DNA in buccal swabs

obtained from Lopez matched DNA samples taken from a pair of

underwear and a comb found in the duffel bag.

3 At Lopez’s trial, Yolanda Sawyer, who had been friends with

Williams for approximately 20 years prior to his death, testified that

she and others, including Lopez, regularly used drugs in the

apartment of a man known as “Mr. Peewee.” Sawyer had known

Lopez for ten years prior to the stabbing, but only as “Migo” or

“Amigo.” Two days before Williams was killed, Lopez returned to the

area after a lengthy absence and used drugs in Peewee’s apartment.

Williams went in and out of Peewee’s apartment many times while

Lopez was there, and the day before the stabbing, Sawyer overheard

Williams say that Migo owed him money. Sawyer assumed the debt

was for drugs because Williams had previously sold drugs to both

her and Lopez. The same day, she saw Williams and Lopez talking

together as they entered Peewee’s apartment.

Kitchen had known Williams for ten years and testified that he

and Williams typically saw each other every day. Kitchen testified

that he knew Lopez “on and off” for five or six years prior to the

stabbing, but only by the nicknames “Amigo” or “Migo.” Lopez had a

pattern of returning to Williams’s area of town for a week or two

4 after being absent for months or more. Two days before Williams

died, Williams told Kitchen that Migo was back in town and

“spending money,” meaning that Lopez was buying drugs from

Williams, and Kitchen observed Lopez going in and out of Peewee’s

apartment.

D’Metri Johnson testified that he and Williams had known

each other for more than ten years and were “very close” friends who

saw each other every day and sold cocaine in the same area. The day

before Williams’s death, Williams told Johnson that he had a

customer named “Migo” who spent a large amount of money on

drugs and that Williams significantly overcharged Migo for the

drugs. On the day Williams died, he called Johnson at

approximately 2:00 p.m., asked if Migo was outside, described what

Migo was wearing, and asked Johnson if he would drive Migo to

Williams’s house so that Migo could pay the money he owed

Williams and purchase more cocaine from him. Johnson saw a

person matching Williams’s description of Migo sitting on a stoop

but said he was unable to drive Migo, so Williams told Johnson he

5 would pick up Migo himself. Johnson left his apartment, and when

he returned at approximately 2:40 p.m., Migo was no longer there.

Johnson also testified that Williams called him at 3:00 p.m.,

saying that “Migo stabbed me” or “tried to kill me.” Johnson asked

Williams where he was, but Williams was speaking with someone in

the background and did not respond. Johnson hung up and tried to

call back, but Williams did not answer. Williams’s cell phone log

revealed that on the day of the stabbing, he called Johnson at 2:08

p.m., Johnson called Williams at 2:16 p.m., Williams called Johnson

again at 3:00 p.m., and Williams later missed two calls from Johnson

at 3:07 and at 3:08 p.m.

1. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting Williams’s statements about the attack under the excited utterance hearsay exception.

Lopez argues that the trial court erred in admitting Williams’s

statements regarding the stabbing under the excited utterance

hearsay exception. We disagree.

At a pre-trial motions hearing, the State argued for admission

of the statements Williams made to Smith, Bales, Officer Mitchell,

6 and Johnson describing the circumstances of his stabbing and giving

the name and description of his attacker under the dying declaration

and excited utterance hearsay exceptions.

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Bluebook (online)
857 S.E.2d 467, 311 Ga. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopez-v-state-ga-2021.