Mims v. State

304 Ga. 851
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 22, 2019
DocketS18A1208
StatusPublished

This text of 304 Ga. 851 (Mims 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
Mims v. State, 304 Ga. 851 (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

304 Ga. 851 FINAL COPY

S18A1208. MIMS v. THE STATE.

PETERSON, Justice.

Skyy Raven Marie Mims was convicted of malice murder and other

crimes related to the stabbing death of Dahyabhai Chaudhari during an armed

robbery and of theft by bringing a stolen vehicle into the state.1 Following an

earlier remand by this Court, Mims appeals and argues that the evidence was

insufficient to sustain her theft conviction, her trial counsel rendered ineffective

assistance, and her due process rights were violated when the trial court denied

1 Chaudhari was killed on March 9, 2014. On May 29, 2014, a Whitfield County grand jury indicted Mims for malice murder, four counts of felony murder (two predicated on aggravated assault, one predicated on armed robbery, and one predicated on burglary), two counts of aggravated assault, armed robbery, burglary, possession of a knife during the commission of a felony, and theft by bringing stolen property into the state. Following a jury trial held from April 27 to May 1, 2015, the jury found Mims guilty of all charges. The trial court sentenced Mims to life without parole for malice murder, a concurrent life term for armed robbery, a concurrent five-year term for burglary, a consecutive five-year term for possession of a knife during the commission of a felony, and ten years concurrent for the theft offense. All other counts were merged or vacated as a matter of law. The trial court denied Mims’s motion for new trial in December 2016, she appealed, and we remanded the case for the trial court to consider Mims’s claims that her counsel at the hearing on her motion for new trial was ineffective. The trial court considered the additional ineffectiveness claims and denied them on remand, and Mims filed a new notice of appeal. Mims’s case was docketed to this Court’s August 2018 term and submitted for a decision on the briefs. her request to be present at the motion for new trial hearing on remand in order

to support her ineffectiveness claims. We reverse Mims’s theft conviction

because trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move to sever this count from

the murder-related offenses. All of the remaining ineffectiveness claims against

trial counsel fail, and because these claims fail for reasons independent of her

absence at the hearing, her due process rights were not violated. Therefore, we

affirm in part and reverse in part.

Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury verdicts, the trial evidence

showed the following. On January 30, 2014, Christopher Sears drove his

fiancée’s car, a green 2012 Kia Soul, to work in the Detroit, Michigan area.

Before he left work for the day, Sears had his boss start the car and left it

running to warm up while Sears remained inside to finish his work. Sears saw

someone about six feet tall climb into the car and drive away in the vehicle.

Sears did not get a good look at the thief, who was shielding his or her face with

a hooded sweatshirt, but told the police that he thought the thief was a white

male. Sears testified that the thief had “blondish-brown, crinkly, curly” hair.

Sears’s wallet was in the console of the car when it was stolen, and the vehicle

2 had a Michigan State University license plate frame. The car was reported

stolen, and insurance paid about $11,000.

Mims, a black woman about six feet tall, lived in Detroit around the time

of the theft. Shortly after the theft, Mims announced on Facebook that she had

moved to Atlanta. Upon arriving in Georgia, Mims initially lived in a green

2012 Kia Soul before eventually moving into a house with Kylle Harewood,

Harewood’s girlfriend, and the girlfriend’s family.

Sometime in early March 2014, Mims became very happy when she

thought she had a winning lottery ticket, but Harewood told her it was not a

winning ticket. Afterward, Mims talked about all the things she could do if she

won money. On March 8, Mims purchased a red bandana, gloves, a roll of red

duct tape, a fish fillet knife, and an Airsoft pistol that she painted to make it look

like a real gun. Later that day, Harewood, with others nearby, asked Mims about

the duct tape she had placed on the bottom of her shoes. Mims replied jokingly

that “the less [they] know, the better” and “I’m going to go in there, ask them

how much is in the register.”

The next day, Mims drove a 2012 green Kia Soul to three different gas

stations in Whitfield County. The clerks at the first two stores testified that

3 Mims acted strangely, and one clerk said that Mims had asked how much money

was in the register and whether the store had a safe.

Mims entered the third gas station, a Kanku’s Express. Mims had burnt-

orange colored blond hair, wore a black hooded sweatshirt and gloves, and

carried a bag over her shoulder. She went to the bathroom, stayed there for some

time, and briefly spoke to the store clerk, Chaudhari, upon exiting the bathroom.

She left the store and waited outside until all the customers and cars left, at

which point she reentered the store and immediately went back to the bathroom.

Mims exited the bathroom wearing a white hooded sweatshirt, a red bandana,

and a roll of duct tape on her right wrist. Holding what appeared to be a gun,

Mims ran toward Chaudhari; Chaudhari tried to flee into the kitchen at the back

of the store and unsuccessfully attempted to close a door on Mims. The two

struggled, causing Mims to drop the gun. Mims pulled out a knife and stabbed

Chaudhari twice. Mims closed the door to the kitchen and covered Chaudhari’s

mouth and eyes with red duct tape. Mims then began to apply pressure to

Chaudhari’s nose and mouth area and suffocated him until he stopped moving.

Mims collected some of her things, rummaged through Chaudhari’s pockets, and

grabbed a roll of lottery tickets and money from the cash register before she left.

4 Several customers entered the store soon after Mims left, discovered

Chaudhari’s body, and called the police. When police arrived, they found

Chaudhari lying in a large pool of blood and a cell phone next to Chaudhari that

was later connected to Mims. The events at Kanku’s Express were captured by

surveillance cameras, and the video recording was played for the jury.

Chaudhari died from the stab wounds.

Police later located Mims at her residence and saw the Kia Soul parked

outside. After police arrested Mims, they searched the residence and found

approximately 80 $500-a-week-for-life lottery tickets, keys to the Kia Soul, a

pair of large sunglasses, and a white hooded sweatshirt. Police also searched the

Kia Soul and found additional $500-a-week-for-life lottery tickets, a pair of

black boots with red duct tape on the soles, gloves with red duct tape on them,

and a black bag containing a roll of red duct tape, a knife with red duct tape on

the handle, and an Airsoft pistol. DNA analysis revealed that Chaudhari’s blood

was found on the knife, the gloves had blood from Chaudhari on the outside and

Mims’s DNA on the inside, and the red duct tape tested positive for Chaudhari’s

DNA.

5 Police also found several other items inside the vehicle: Mims’s wallet

containing a MasterCard belonging to Sears; a Michigan State University

license plate frame in the back hatch; and Sears’s wallet and driver’s license in

the hatch. Police also discovered that the license tag number had been altered.

The Kia Soul also contained personal items belonging to Mims, including

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