Mowoe v. State

759 S.E.2d 663, 328 Ga. App. 536, 2014 WL 3361125, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 499
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 10, 2014
DocketA14A0595
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 759 S.E.2d 663 (Mowoe v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mowoe v. State, 759 S.E.2d 663, 328 Ga. App. 536, 2014 WL 3361125, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 499 (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

MCMILLIAN, Judge.

Mackie Omatshola Mowoe appeals following the trial court’s denial of his motion for new trial after a jury convicted him of one count of rape.1 We reverse for the reasons set forth below.

Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence shows that Mowoe and the victim lived on different floors in the same apartment building. The victim lived on the upper floor with her three-year-old daughter and some friends. Mowoe lived on the floor below with a man named Jersey, who had a daughter the same age as the victim’s daughter and whom the victim dated for a brief time after moving to the apartment complex. The victim met both men within a few weeks after she moved into the complex. And on least one occasion, she stayed outside talking with Mowoe, Jersey, and others in the complex parking lot.

On September 12, 2008, Mowoe knocked on the door of the victim’s apartment and asked her for help charging his phone. She told him to give her his phone and she would charge it for him, but “he was in the apartment before [she] knew it.” Mowoe started grabbing the victim and touching her, but he left when the victim’s daughter began to protest his actions.

Later that day, after the victim’s daughter left with her grandmother for a visit, the victim was alone in the apartment,2 and she decided to walk to a nearby restaurant. As she left her apartment, she passed Mowoe sitting on the stairs with another woman. After she passed them, the victim heard someone run up behind her. When she turned around, Mowoe grabbed her around the waist and tried to pick her up and pull her back inside the apartment building. The victim kicked Mowoe in the leg, and when he let her go, she ran to her apartment. She opened the apartment door, but before she could close it, Mowoe was standing in front of her, blocking the door. Mowoe forced his way inside, and the victim ran into her bedroom and locked the door. She heard Mowoe lock the door to her apartment and rummage around the kitchen for a knife, which he used to open the bedroom door. He maneuvered the victim down on the floor, held her hands where she could not move, removed her underwear, and had forcible intercourse with her. During these events, she told him she did not want to have sex and kicked him.

[537]*537Afterward, the victim found her phone and indicated that she was going to call the police. Mowoe then took away her phone, began to choke her, and slammed her head against the headboard twice. The victim’s roommates returned home shortly thereafter, and she fled to the bathroom crying. Mowoe took his phone and left the apartment.

A physical examination of the victim revealed bruises and fresh abrasions on her back and swelling in the area around her vagina, which was consistent with rape. The victim subsequently picked Mowoe out of a photographic lineup as her attacker, and DNA evidence matching Mowoe was found in the victim’s vagina.

At trial, Mowoe admitted that he had sex with the victim on September 12, 2008, but he said that she invited him into her apartment and the sex was consensual. Mowoe further testified that after intercourse, his girlfriend, LaToya Wise, called him on his phone; he answered it and lied to his girlfriend, telling her he was hanging out with his male friends. During the call, he told the victim to be quiet, and he turned away from her. These events appeared to upset the victim, and she ran to the bathroom crying when her roommates returned. Mowoe then left the apartment. However, the victim denied ever seeing Mowoe on his phone, and testified that the phone was still charging in her living room at the time he raped her. Mowoe also testified that the victim had been dancing on top of a car in the complex parking lot the night before when she fell off the car and “hit the ground, literally,” thereby explaining the bruises on the victim’s back.

1. Although Mowoe did not raise the issue, we find that the evidence at trial was sufficient to support his rape conviction beyond a reasonable doubt. See Walters v. State, 244 Ga. App. 657 (538 SE2d 451) (2000); Wells v. State, 208 Ga. App. 298, 299 (1) (430 SE2d 611) (1993); Clark v. State, 197 Ga. App. 318, 320 (1) (398 SE2d 377) (1990); Durden v. State, 187 Ga. App. 433, 433-434 (1) (370 SE2d 528) (1988).

2. Mowoe asserts that he received ineffective assistance of counsel asserting that his trial counsel was deficient because (1) she failed to object to the State’s illegal presentation of misleading evidence during its closing argument; (2) she “did not know how” to impeach the victim with her prior audio statement; and (3) she failed to secure the attendance of his girlfriend as a witness at trial.

In order to prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, [Mowoe] must show counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficient performance prejudiced him to the point that a reasonable probability exists that, but for counsel’s errors, the outcome of the trial would have been different.

[538]*538(Citation omitted.) Thompson v. State, 294 Ga. 693, 695 (2) (755 SE2d 713) (2014).

(a) Mowoe asserts that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object when, during closing argument, the prosecutor asked Mowoe’s girlfriend to stand up and make her presence known even though the girlfriend had not been called to testify at trial. The prosecutor argued:

And this is over a phone call, because he said, [“shhh”]. You don’t go through all this over, [“shhh”]. You go up and tell Ms. LaToya Wise, [“Hey,] Ms. Wise, I banged your boyfriend last night. [”] Ms. Wise is right here in this courtroom. “Ms. Wise, will you stand up, please?”

At that point, an unidentified person stood up in the gallery, and the prosecutor continued, ‘Why not bring her to the stand, if I’m not telling the truth? Go up and knock on her door.” Mowoe argues this procedure was improper and that his counsel’s failure to object “directly and misleadingly undermined [his] credibility, and at the same time wrongly shored up [the victim’s] credibility.”

At the hearing on the motion for new trial, Wise testified that she had met and spoken with the defense attorney some time before the trial to discuss her knowledge of the case. Wise said that the defense had her mother’s address and that was the only way they had to reach her. She said that the defense did not contact her again within the month before trial, but they did not have her phone number. However, if they had reached her, she would have been willing to testify. Wise was not in town on the first day of trial. She said that the State got in touch with her two days before trial, and she spoke with them the day before the last day of trial, which was when they subpoenaed her to be there on the last day.3

Wise further testified that on the evening before the alleged rape, she saw the victim in the parking lot of the complex with a large group of people while music was playing from the surrounding cars. She said she often saw the victim hanging outside with others in the complex. That night, however, Wise saw the victim and another woman dancing on top of a car. At one point, she saw the victim fall off the car and hit the ground on her back. A friend helped the victim back up.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
759 S.E.2d 663, 328 Ga. App. 536, 2014 WL 3361125, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mowoe-v-state-gactapp-2014.