McKelvey v. State

855 S.E.2d 598, 311 Ga. 34
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 1, 2021
DocketS20A1548
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 855 S.E.2d 598 (McKelvey 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
McKelvey v. State, 855 S.E.2d 598, 311 Ga. 34 (Ga. 2021).

Opinion

311 Ga. 34 FINAL COPY

S20A1548. McKELVEY v. THE STATE.

LAGRUA, Justice.

Appellant Sacorey McKelvey was convicted of murder and

other crimes in connection with the shooting death of Corey Owens.1

On appeal, McKelvey contends that the evidence presented at trial

was insufficient to support his convictions; that the trial court erred

by admitting into evidence his 2009 convictions for terroristic

threats; that the trial court erred in striking two potential jurors for

cause; and that his trial counsel rendered constitutionally

1 The crimes occurred on April 24, 2014. In March 2015, a Muscogee County grand jury indicted McKelvey for malice murder, felony murder, aggravated assault, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. After a trial in July 2017, the jury found McKelvey guilty of all counts. The trial court sentenced McKelvey to serve life in prison without the possibility of parole for malice murder and a five-year consecutive term for the firearm possession count. The other counts merged or were vacated by operation of law. McKelvey filed a timely motion for new trial in September 2017, which he twice amended through new counsel. After a hearing, the trial court denied McKelvey’s motion on March 4, 2020. McKelvey filed a timely notice of appeal, and his case was docketed to the August 2020 term of this Court and submitted for a decision on the briefs. ineffective assistance by failing to call two alibi witnesses. For the

reasons set forth below, we affirm.

1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the

evidence presented at trial showed the following: Owens had a

biological brother, Gregory Owens, and a stepbrother, Matthew

Mungin. Elexis Cooper is the mother of Gregory’s children. In

March 2009, McKelvey confronted Elexis and her cousin after an

altercation between their families, pointing a gun in Elexis’s face

and threatening to kill her. Following this incident, McKelvey was

arrested and incarcerated. On November 17, 2009, McKelvey

pleaded guilty to three counts of terroristic threats and was

sentenced to three concurrent probated terms of five years.

On April 22, 2014, McKelvey ran into Owens and told him he

wanted to meet with Owens, Gregory, and Mungin. That evening,

Owens, Gregory, and Mungin met McKelvey in a field adjacent to a

group of apartment homes on Adair Avenue in Columbus. People

who frequent this area often refer to it as “Adair.” Soon after

meeting the brothers, McKelvey got angry and started talking about

2 his past “trouble for a pistol charge” — referencing the 2009 incident

with Elexis. McKelvey told the brothers that they “owed” him

money or drugs for what happened in 2009, blaming Gregory, in

particular, for McKelvey’s arrest, incarceration, and inability to get

a job. Gregory said they owed him nothing, and McKelvey pulled a

gun and aimed it at Gregory’s face. Gregory charged McKelvey, and

the two fell to the ground fighting. Mungin and Owens joined in,

trying to wrestle the gun away from McKelvey. Ultimately, Mungin

was able to get the gun away from McKelvey. McKelvey told Mungin

he was going to get another gun and come back. McKelvey then ran

away, saying he was going to kill all of them. The brothers

immediately left the area.

Elexis’s mother, Debra, witnessed the incident in the field from

her apartment. Debra, who has known McKelvey since he was a

child, testified that she saw him tussling with Owens, Gregory, and

Mungin and heard someone say “he got a gun,” referring to

McKelvey. Debra said the brothers “wrestled [McKelvey] down and

3 took the gun.” Everyone then scattered and left, and Debra heard

McKelvey tell the brothers that he “was going to kill them all.”

Later the same night, Debra was standing on her back porch

when she saw McKelvey approach with a gun. McKelvey was angry,

and Debra tried to calm him down, encouraging him to “just leave it

alone, . . . just let it go.” McKelvey told her he “had to kill them”;

she understood “them” to mean Owens, Gregory, and Mungin.2

McKelvey then mentioned Debra’s daughter, Elexis, and the fact

that Gregory lived with her. Debra got upset, explaining that Elexis

had nothing to do with what happened earlier that day. Debra

called Elexis and made McKelvey speak with her. McKelvey told

Elexis he would not go to her house “with the mess,” but he was

going to kill Owens, Gregory, and Mungin.3 When Debra saw

McKelvey again the next day, he confirmed he would not go to

2 Debra testified that earlier the same night, McKelvey kicked in the door

of an apartment in Adair where the brothers hung out and sold drugs, but no one was in the apartment at the time. 3 After Elexis spoke to McKelvey, she contacted the police to report his

threats against the brothers. A day or two later, Elexis also contacted McKelvey’s probation officer to report the threats.

4 Elexis’s house. For the next couple of days, Owens, Mungin, and

Gregory stayed away from Adair and their apartment because,

according to Mungin and Gregory, they continued receiving threats

that McKelvey was going kill them.

On April 24, Mungin spoke to Owens on the phone between

1:00 and 2:00 p.m. Owens indicated that he was going to Adair to

pick up his children and would call Mungin when he returned to his

house. At 1:28 p.m., McKelvey picked up his paycheck from the

construction company where he worked. Debra McNeil, the owner

of the company, gave McKelvey his paycheck and observed that he

was dressed in all black. McKelvey was accompanied by Kazarita

Piatt, his sister’s boyfriend. From McNeil’s position in the front

office, she had a view of the parking area, and she noted McKelvey

was traveling in a black car with tinted windows. McNeil’s husband,

David, was in his truck in the parking lot at the same time and also

noticed that McKelvey was traveling in a compact, black car with

tinted windows. After getting his paycheck, McKelvey and Piatt left

in the black car.

5 The same afternoon, Martin DeJesus and Nigel Staples were

walking in Adair near the intersection of Wynnton Road and Adair

Avenue when they saw a black car pull up. A man with dark skin

and shoulder-length dreadlocks jumped out of the car and hid

behind some nearby poles. About ten minutes later, DeJesus saw a

white SUV traveling toward the intersection where the man was

hiding, and at that point, the man came out from behind the poles

and “went to shooting.” The man fired toward the SUV a couple

times and then approached the car, continuing to shoot. Staples

yelled out, and the man looked at them, ran to a church around the

corner, and disappeared. DeJesus went up to the SUV and saw a

man — later identified as Owens — seated in the driver’s seat,

bleeding from gunshot wounds and struggling to breathe. DeJesus

was interviewed at the scene and then taken to police headquarters,

where he identified McKelvey from a photographic line-up as the

shooter. Prior to that day, DeJesus had never seen McKelvey or

Owens.

6 Adair resident Gwendolyn Woodson also witnessed the

shooting. She was walking down Adair Avenue toward Wynnton

Road that afternoon when she saw Owens driving a white SUV. She

then saw a man, whom she recognized as McKelvey, run alongside

Owens’s SUV, shooting at Owens. McKelvey ran across the street

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Bluebook (online)
855 S.E.2d 598, 311 Ga. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckelvey-v-state-ga-2021.