Marshall v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 29, 2015
DocketS15A0624
StatusPublished

This text of Marshall v. State (Marshall 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
Marshall v. State, (Ga. 2015).

Opinion

297 Ga. 445 FINAL COPY

S15A0624. MARSHALL v. THE STATE.

HINES, Presiding Justice.

Levi Jerome Marshall, Jr., appeals from his convictions and sentences for

malice murder and making false statements to law enforcement officers, in

connection with the death of Alan O’Neal. For the reasons that follow, we

affirm.1

Construed to support the verdicts, the evidence showed that O’Neal and

Carlos Coleman were seated on Coleman’s front porch on Dixon Street when

two men emerged from along the side of the house bearing firearms; the two

men fired handguns, and O’Neal returned gunfire, but was struck by projectiles

and died of multiple gunshot wounds.

1 The crimes occurred on June 21, 2011. On September 14, 2011, a Chatham County grand jury indicted Marshall for malice murder, felony murder while in the commission of the crime of attempted robbery, and making false statements to law enforcement officers. He was tried before a jury April 8-11, 2013, and found guilty of malice murder and making a false statement to a law enforcement officer; the court granted a directed verdict as to the charge of felony murder while in the commission of the crime of attempted robbery. On April 15, 2013, Marshall was sentenced to life in prison for malice murder and a consecutive term of five years in prison for making false statements to law enforcement officers. Marshall filed a motion for new trial on May 6, 2013, which he amended on September 19, 2013, and again on March 14, 2014. On September 15, 2014, the motion, as amended, was denied. Marshall filed a notice of appeal on October 7, 2014, and the appeal was docketed in this Court for the January 2015 term, and submitted for decision on the briefs. Shortly after this incident, police officers responded to a 911 call several

miles away, where Marshall reported that he had been shot in the leg while

walking down the street. Marshall went to a cousin’s house, and asked for help,

and the cousin called 911; his cousin told a responding law enforcement officer

that he did not hear a gunshot, although another cousin in the house said he

heard one gunshot. Marshall was taken to a hospital and treated for a gunshot

wound in the leg. After Marshall left the hospital, detectives assigned to

O’Neal’s murder interviewed him. Initially, he said that he had not been present

at Dixon Street but was instead shot near his cousin’s home, several miles away.

However, he eventually admitted that he was in the neighborhood of the

shooting, and had been shot from a passing car while he was in the lane behind

Coleman’s house; he said that he was alone at the time.

Part of the State’s theory of the case was that Marshall acted in concert

with another man in coming around the side of Coleman’s house. The State

presented the testimony of John Bright, who testified that he walked past

Coleman’s house, spoke to Coleman and O’Neal, and walked past Marshall,

who was dribbling a basketball at the corner of Coleman’s street. Bright and

Marshall exchanged greetings, Marshall then turned around and went back

2 toward a basketball court, and Bright continued across a park; Bright initially

described this encounter as “they come up behind me [sic].” He later testified

that two other young men were separated from Marshall by approximately 50

yards in the direction in which Marshall turned after encountering Bright,

although he could not say that the three men were together; his statement to an

investigating detective was that the distance between Marshall and the others

was 20 yards. Bright testified that four to six minutes after his encounter with

Marshall, he heard gunshots, saw police cars arriving, and walked back to the

area of Coleman’s house; there, shortly after the shooting, Bright spoke with

Coleman while standing outside the police evidence tape, but he testified that

the exchange was nothing more than his inquiry as to what happened, and

Coleman’s response was that he did not know.

Coleman testified that he and O’Neal were seated outside his home when

“people” came around the side of the house; in response to several questions

about details such as their clothing, if they had firearms, or said anything, he

replied “I can’t remember.” The State received the trial court’s permission to

treat Coleman as a hostile witness, and Coleman later testified that one assailant

had a white T-shirt over his face, but he did not see a second assailant; he later

3 testified that he did see a second person. Although he testified that he gave a

statement to an investigating detective, he said he could not remember telling

him that one assailant had covered his face with his arm, or that the assailants

said: “You know what time it is.” Coleman also testified that before the

shooting, he had played basketball in the nearby park, but could not remember

whether he played against Marshall; he also denied that O’Neal had played a

dice game and won a significant amount of money. He testified that after the

shooting, he retrieved a pistol from the ground near O’Neal, went to a

neighbor’s house across the street, and then went to another street nearby; he

denied returning to his house after law enforcement officers and the ambulance

arrived. Although forensic evidence indicated that O’Neal had exchanged

gunfire with his assailants, Coleman testified that he heard multiple shots, but

had fallen to the ground exiting his chair and did not see O’Neal fire a weapon.

Marshall’s mother testified that shortly after the time of the shooting,

Marshall came to her house near Coleman’s house while another young man

from the neighborhood stayed outside; she did not identify this other young

man, but said it was not Leonard Anthony or Irvin Bryant. At Marshall’s

request, she drove him to a location on the other side of town, but she did not

4 notice any injury to Marshall at the time; she also testified that Marshall wanted

money to retrieve his car from an impoundment lot.

The detective who interviewed Coleman after the shooting testified that

Coleman said that he could not identify the assailants, but that the height,

weight, and complexion of the man who had a T-shirt over his face was

consistent with that of Marshall, and that this man was wearing dark shorts, a

white tank top, and black and teal “Bo Jackson” athletic shoes, which were the

clothes that Coleman had seen Marshall wearing earlier at the basketball court.

Coleman also said that the height, complexion, and haircut of the other man was

consistent with that of Leonard Anthony. The detective also testified that Bright

had told him that prior to Bright’s encounter with Marshall, Marshall had been

walking toward Coleman’s house, but turned around after the encounter, as did

the other two men, who were about 20 yards from Marshall. Bright also told the

detective that after the shooting, he spoke to Coleman and learned what had

happened, and that this was the extent of the conversation between Bright and

Coleman. The detective also testified that Coleman had given a different

recounting of his conversation with Bright, telling the detective that Bright said

that, shortly before the shooting, he saw Marshall and Anthony enter the lane

5 behind Coleman’s house.

Rakesh Patel, an inmate with Marshall during his pre-trial confinement,

testified that Marshall said that O’Neal was a “pre-prick,” meaning an easy or

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