Monroe v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 21, 2026
DocketS26A0060
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Monroe v. State, (Ga. 2026).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia No. S26A0060 Tonya Monroe v. The State

On Appeal from the Superior Court of Fulton County No. 18SC158564

Decided: April 21, 2026

LAND, Justice. Tonya Monroe appeals her 2022 convictions for malice murder and related charges stemming from the death of her in- fant grandson, Kobe Shaw. 1 Monroe argues that the evidence was

1 The crimes are alleged to have taken place on or about March 10, 2016. Monroe was first indicted on March 31, 2017, and was reindicted on April 6, 2018, by a Fulton County grand jury for malice murder (Count 1), fel- ony murder (Counts 2 and 3), cruelty to children in the first degree (Count 4), and distribution of methamphetamine (Count 5). In May 2018, Monroe’s first trial ended in a hung jury. At Monroe’s second trial, from November 3 to 10, 2022, the jury found Monroe guilty of all charges. The trial court sentenced Monroe to life in prison without the possibility of parole for Count 1, 20 years in prison for Count 4 (to be served concurrently with Count 1), and 30 years in prison for Count 5 (to be served concurrently with Count 1). Counts 2 and 3 were vacated by operation of law. Monroe filed a timely motion for new trial on December 5, 2022, and amended that motion through new counsel on October 20, 2023. After a hear- ing on February 14, 2024, the trial court denied the amended motion for new trial on December 30, 2024, and Monroe filed a timely notice of appeal. Mon- roe’s appeal was docketed to the term of this Court beginning in December 2025 and submitted for a decision on the briefs. constitutionally insufficient to support her convictions and that she was denied effective assistance of trial counsel in several re- spects. For the reasons that follow, we affirm. 1. The evidence presented at trial showed as follows. Kobe, who was nine months old at the time of his death on March 11, 2016, lived with his mother Taylor Shaw, his father Hayden Shaw, and his maternal grandmother, Monroe, in an apartment in Fulton County. At six months old, Kobe was diagnosed with a genetic disorder that caused severe underdevelopment of his brain and severely shortened his life expectancy. As a result of this disorder, Kobe was unable to roll, crawl, or reach and grab things, and he partially relied on a “g-tube” for feedings and med- icine. However, Taylor and Hayden testified that at Kobe’s last doctor’s appointment about a week prior to his death, his doctor stated that Kobe was “looking really good and really healthy” and that they discussed removing his feeding tube. On the evening of March 10, 2016, Kobe was “very fussy and … aggravated.” Hayden went to the store and purchased mashed potatoes, lemonade, and teething gel for Kobe. Taylor gave Kobe the teething gel while Monroe prepared the mashed potatoes, and Taylor then fed Kobe the mashed potatoes. Kobe later fell asleep on Taylor’s chest, and Taylor noticed that he was “sweating ... bad.” Between 1:00 and 2:00 am on March 11, Hay- den placed Kobe upright on a c-shaped “boppy” pillow inside his “pack and play” crib near his and Taylor’s bed to sleep the rest of the night. 2 Taylor and Hayden then fell asleep and woke up later that

2 Taylor and Hayden testified that they used the pillow at the direction of Kobe’s doctors to help minimize Kobe’s acid reflux but that the pillow was never placed on Kobe’s face. Hayden testified that Kobe also slept with his arms “wrap[ped]” in a blanket.

2 morning when Monroe came into their room saying that Kobe was “blue.” Hayden picked up Kobe and started “patting him on the back.” Taylor yelled at Monroe to call 911; Monroe did so. Emer- gency medical personnel and police officers arrived at the apart- ment, where they found Kobe in the pack and play and observed that he was “not breathing,” had an “arched body,” and was show- ing signs of rigor mortis, including discoloration. Monroe told po- lice that, when she went into Taylor’s and Hayden’s bedroom and saw Kobe, he was “covered with a blanket mostly over [his] entire body” and “the boppy pillow was on top of [his] body nearest the head.” Hayden told police that Monroe’s statement that the pillow was over Kobe’s face “was a lie” and he knew how Kobe “was sit- ting” because he “picked his son up.” Hayden testified at trial that he, his wife, and Monroe reg- ularly used meth together, but denied ever using meth in Kobe’s presence or giving him meth. Hayden testified that no one used meth on the day of Kobe’s death because Monroe told him “there wasn’t any” and that he last used drugs with Monroe and Taylor two days before Kobe died. The State presented testimony from several expert wit- nesses whose testimony supported the State’s theory that Kobe died from meth toxicity, including the testimony of two physicians who opined that meth caused Kobe’s death. Dr. Karen Sullivan, a forensic pathologist who served as the chief medical examiner for the Fulton County Medical Exam- iner’s Office, supervised Kobe’s autopsy and testified that she in- itially determined that Kobe’s cause of death might be asphyxia- tion based on the information she received from investigators that Kobe was found with a blanket and pillow over his body. Medical examiners performed an in-house urine test, which did not test

3 positive for meth. As part of the autopsy, however, medical exam- iners took samples of Kobe’s blood. Those samples tested positive for meth, revealing that Kobe’s blood contained 8.6 nanograms of meth per milliliter while his serum/plasma sample contained 14 nanograms of meth per milliliter. Tissue samples from Kobe’s lungs also revealed evidence of pneumonia, which Dr. Sullivan testified is “typical … in the lungs of a person who [has] died of an acute drug overdose.” Dr. Sullivan testified that the positive blood test results caused her to revise her determination as to the cause of death with her ultimate conclusion being that he died from meth toxicity. Dr. Sullivan determined the manner of Kobe’s death was a homicide because “the only way he could have gotten the [meth] was … if he was given it by someone else” as “he was unable to crawl, stand, [or] hold a bottle by himself.” Dr. Christy Cunningham, the forensic medical pathologist who conducted Kobe’s autopsy, testified that meth can cause “sud- den cardiac death” and that “anytime that you have the presence of an unexplained illicit drug in … [a] type of person that doesn’t have … the ability to put those things there themselves,” it is “considered contributory to death at that point.” Dr. Cunningham testified that “there is no safe or therapeutic level of certain drugs such as [meth]” and based her opinion that meth caused Kobe’s death, in part, on “volumes” of cases she had reviewed in scientific literature and “major pediatric forensic pathology textbooks.” Dr. Gaylord Lopez, a pharmacist with specialty training in clinical toxicology and the executive director of the Georgia Poison Center, testified that meth was “without a doubt … an accelerant” to Kobe’s death. Dr. Lopez further testified that, based on his re- view of Kobe’s bloodwork and scientific literature, the level of meth in Kobe’s body was consistent with “direct administration” of meth to Kobe, not secondary exposure. Dr. Lopez also testified

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