Oubre v. Woldemichael

800 S.E.2d 518, 301 Ga. 299, 2017 WL 2332642, 2017 Ga. LEXIS 439
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 30, 2017
DocketS17A0656
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 800 S.E.2d 518 (Oubre v. Woldemichael) 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
Oubre v. Woldemichael, 800 S.E.2d 518, 301 Ga. 299, 2017 WL 2332642, 2017 Ga. LEXIS 439 (Ga. 2017).

Opinion

Peterson, Justice.

Yididya Woldemichael pleaded guilty to armed robbery and other charges for his role in the robbery and beating of a pizza delivery woman. He filed a petition for habeas corpus, which the habeas court granted on the basis that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to advise Woldemichael that inculpatory custodial statements by him could have been suppressed. Woldemichael was 14 years old at the time of the police interview. The Warden appeals the grant of habeas relief, arguing that the statements were voluntary and would have been admissible at trial and, thus, counsel’s performance was not deficient. We agree with the habeas court that Woldemichael’s statements to police were subject to suppression. But because the habeas court assumed without separate analysis that recorded statements that Woldemichael made to a co-defendant during a break in police questioning also were subject to suppression, we remand for the habeas court to analyze the admissibility of those statements in the first instance.

1. Factual background

In November 2010, Woldemichael was indicted with three others in connection with an August 2010 robbery. He was charged with three counts of armed robbery, two counts of aggravated assault, one count of false imprisonment, and one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony Woldemichael entered a non-negotiated guilty plea in September 2011 to all of the charges except for two of the armed robbery counts.1

At the plea hearing, the prosecutor told the court that she expected the evidence would show that the 60-year-old victim was badly beaten and robbed by three men, with a fourth man acting as a lookout, when she delivered pizza to an apartment. According to the prosecutor, Woldemichael answered the door before he and two others dragged the victim inside and proceeded to beat her. According to the prosecutor, the victim had reported that one of the men beat her with what she thought was a pipe — later determined to be a rifle or shotgun — and another waved a handgun. The prosecutor said one of the co-defendants, Gilbert Burton, told police that during the incident Woldemichael struck the victim repeatedly about the head and face with the shotgun as she lay on the floor.

[300]*300At the plea hearing, the prosecutor repeatedly referenced law enforcement’s interview of Woldemichael, as well as statements he made while he was left alone in the interview room with another co-defendant, Justin Tolbert, and laughter by Woldemichael about the victim while the two discussed the robbery. The trial court sentenced Woldemichael to 45 years, 20 years to be served in custody In 2014, Woldemichael filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The sole claim in the petition is that Woldemichael would not have pleaded guilty but for the ineffective assistance of trial counsel. In particular, Woldemichael contends that trial counsel did not inform him of the likelihood that his custodial statements would have been excluded had counsel sought their suppression.

At issue is the videotaped interview in which Woldemichael spent more than four hours in a police interrogation room.2 Wolde-michael complains that police repeatedly suggested to him that a confession would be to his benefit. Toward the end of the interview, after talking to his co-defendant, he acknowledged participating in the robbery

In the first 30 minutes of the session, before Woldemichael had been apprised of his rights, two detectives questioned him. One of the detectives made the following remarks:

I’m asking you to go ahead and just be completely honest with me. Because in the long run, it really helps us both if you’re just honest with me and just tell me from the beginning and I can say, listen, it was just a 15 [sic] year old kid who did some stupid stuff and he made some stupid mistakes, OK? That’s why you’re here right now.

The detective continued later:

We brought you in here for your own good, essentially ... We want you to tell us exactly what happened so we can go and we can say, “listen, these kids aren’t just vicious animals that did this for no reason.” . . . You think it’s gonna be all your other buddies that were with you yesterday are just gonna keep the same story that you are, or you think they are gonna start diming you out and they start saying,
[301]*301‘Yeah, he did this and he did that and he was this part of it?” And then we gotta go to court and we gotta say, “yeah, the other guys were honest, but this guy, he wasn’t.” We gotta say that to the judge. How do you think that’s going to make you look? Pretty bad.

Woldemichael then was left alone for about 30 minutes, before another set of detectives entered the room. Realizing that Wolde-michael had not yet been read his Miranda rights, one of the detectives apparently left to get the appropriate Miranda paperwork. While he was gone, Woldemichael said to the other detective, “I don’t feel like talking right now. I might just say I need a lawyer for real and let the lawyer talk for me. For real.”3 The officer answered, “That’s your choice,” and then continued asking questions after a brief pause.

The other detective returned and advised Woldemichael of his Miranda rights. One of the detectives again urged Woldemichael to cooperate so that the officers could speak on his behalf: “We’ve been talking to the other guys and we would like to hear your side, OK. Alright. Then we can go forward and say that, you know, you’re an honest person and this is kind of a dumb mistake that really got out of hand.” The detective continued later:

Yididya, you’re still a juvenile, OK. Now I can’t make you any promises about what happens, OK. I’m not saying you will be definitely prosecuted as an adult. I’m not saying that. I’m saying it can happen, OK, depending on how heinous the crime is. Alright. There’s been 10 year olds charged with murder before. OK. I’m just, I’m just saying that’s possible and I can’t make you any promises. OK. Put yourself in the position of the guy that’s gotta make the decision, do that.

Woldemichael inquired in response, “Which guy who’s gotta make a decision?” The detective replied:

Put yourself in the position of anybody who’s gotta make a decision. And this is what you got on your hands. OK. You got one guy who sits down, confesses to this crime that he did, says he was sorry, helps you, helps you figure out what’s going on, OK.... You got him, you got him dead to rights, he’s on security camera. But you sit down and you say, hey, man,
[302]*302I know you did this. He confesses and he helps you. OK. Then you got the other guy, you got him on security camera. He’s dead to rights, OK, but he sits there and says, “I didn’t do it.” You show him his picture. “It wasn’t me.” Which one of those guys do you want to work with? You know what I mean? I mean, clearly, you want to work with the guy who’s been cooperative, OK, who’s showed a little remorse. Who’s showed he was a human being after all, and not some crazy monster, OK, that would plan this kind of thing.

The detectives then brought the 21-year-old Tolbert into the room and left him alone with Woldemichael, one detective telling the two, “You guys have differing versions of what’s going on.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
800 S.E.2d 518, 301 Ga. 299, 2017 WL 2332642, 2017 Ga. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oubre-v-woldemichael-ga-2017.