Perryman-Henderson v. State

889 S.E.2d 814, 316 Ga. 626
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 21, 2023
DocketS23A0228
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 889 S.E.2d 814 (Perryman-Henderson 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
Perryman-Henderson v. State, 889 S.E.2d 814, 316 Ga. 626 (Ga. 2023).

Opinion

316 Ga. 626 FINAL COPY

S23A0228. PERRYMAN-HENDERSON v. THE STATE.

PINSON, Justice.

Anthony Perryman-Henderson was convicted of malice murder

and other crimes in connection with the shooting death of Tanaya

Dunlap.1 On appeal, Perryman-Henderson contends that (1) his trial

counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to “correct” the

medical examiner’s testimony about the range the fatal shot was

1 The crimes occurred on June 13, 2017. On August 31, 2017, a DeKalb

County grand jury indicted Perryman-Henderson for malice murder (Count 1), two counts of felony murder (Counts 2 and 4), two counts of aggravated assault (Counts 3 and 7—one against Dunlap and the other against Racquel Eagle), possession of a firearm by a convicted felon (Count 5), and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (Count 6). Perryman-Henderson was tried by a jury from July 8 to 15, 2019. The jury found Perryman-Henderson guilty of all counts. Perryman-Henderson was sentenced to serve life in prison with the possibility of parole on Count 1, five years in prison on Count 5 concurrent with Count 1, five years in prison on Count 6 consecutive to Count 1, and 15 years of probation on Count 7 consecutive to Count 1, resulting in a sentence of life plus five years in prison, followed by 15 years of probation. The remaining counts were merged or vacated by operation of law. Perryman- Henderson filed a motion for new trial, which he amended through new counsel on January 9, 2022. Following a hearing, the court denied the motion for new trial on July 29, 2022. Perryman-Henderson filed a timely notice of appeal. The case was docketed to the term of this Court beginning in December 2022 and submitted for a decision on the briefs. fired from, and (2) the trial court committed plain error by

commenting on the State’s characterization of the medical

examiner’s range-of-fire testimony in a way that could be taken as

endorsement of it. But Perryman-Henderson failed to establish that

his defense counsel’s relatively thorough cross-examination of the

medical examiner, which elicited testimony favorable to Perryman-

Henderson, fell outside the range of reasonable professional

assistance. And even assuming the trial court’s comment was error

(an issue we do not decide), Perryman-Henderson has failed to

establish that it was plain error because he has not shown how it

affected his substantial rights—particularly given the evidence

against him, which included eyewitness testimony that was not

consistent with his version of events. So we affirm his convictions

and sentence.

1. Early in the morning of June 13, 2017, Dunlap was fatally

shot in the head after an argument with Perryman-Henderson, her

boyfriend, in a restaurant parking lot. The evidence presented at

trial showed the following.

2 On the day before the shooting, Perryman-Henderson and

Dunlap drove from Columbus, Georgia to the house where

Perryman-Henderson’s father, Robert Perryman, lived in DeKalb

County. The three spent the evening drinking and “chilling.” At

some point, Perryman-Henderson and Perryman left to get more

alcohol. While out of the house, Perryman-Henderson called his

father’s roommate, Stephen Lewis, and asked Lewis to “put [his

phone] on the charger,” in part because “the mother of my children

used to send random text messages . . . when she know I was with

Ms. Dunlap and I didn’t want her to do that around that time and

let [Dunlap] see it.” The two returned to the house to continue

drinking.

Early the next morning, Perryman-Henderson, Dunlap, and

Perryman took a white car to a nearby restaurant to get something

to eat. Perryman and Dunlap went inside the restaurant, leaving

Perryman-Henderson in the back seat because he “wasn’t coherent

at all.” Shortly after arriving, Perryman went outside to check on

his son and found him “passed out” in the back seat. While Perryman

3 was returning to the restaurant, Dunlap walked out to the car. After

about 13 minutes, Perryman left the restaurant again and then

returned shortly with Dunlap. About five minutes later, Dunlap

again left the restaurant and walked to the car.

Reshida Clark, who was in an SUV parked across from the

white car, testified that she saw a man and a woman arguing in the

car. The woman was saying, “let me go, let me go,” and was trying

to get out of the front seat. Clark testified that she “could barely see

inside because the car was foggy,” but “[o]nce [Dunlap] got out, she

reached back in and grabbed something and that’s when she was

shot in the head.” Immediately after the shot, Clark drove away

from the parking lot. After a few minutes, Clark returned to try to

administer medical aid. When she returned, Perryman-Henderson

was pulling out of the parking lot in the white car and screaming,

“[D]id anybody else want to be shot.”

The State also introduced surveillance videos of the parking lot

and the restaurant’s interior. The videos showed an SUV park

across from a white car. Dunlap walked to the car and stayed there

4 for several minutes. The videos then showed Dunlap falling to the

ground. The SUV immediately pulled out of the parking lot, and a

minute later, the white car looped through the parking lot and then

left.2

According to the chief medical examiner for DeKalb County,

Dunlap was shot once on the left side of her head between her

eyebrow and hairline. The shot was “at a straight line” with “no

2 Another eyewitness, Racquel Eagle, said she saw a couple arguing in

the parking lot. A man—later identified as Perryman-Henderson—was sitting in the back seat of a white car, and a woman was trying to get out from the front seat of the car, but the man appeared to be reaching forward and holding onto the woman’s hair. The woman then got back in the front seat. At that point, the man in the back seat pulled out a gun and shot the woman. Eagle then testified that she and her mother got out of their car because she thought “he’s going to shoot us next.” She said her mother ran down a hill away from the parking lot, while Eagle grabbed her baby to run, and that Perryman- Henderson exited the car, made eye contact with her, and said, “[Y]ou didn’t see anything.” Eagle said she begged for her life and turned her back to protect her baby, at which point Perryman-Henderson “pointed the gun at [her].” She said her mother returned to the parking lot, trying to distract Perryman- Henderson, who turned and pointed the gun at her mother, “going back and forth between the both of us.” Eagle testified that a teenager then exited the restaurant, and Perryman-Henderson pointed the gun at her as well. Perryman-Henderson then drove around the parking lot, looking out the window, before leaving. The surveillance videos, which were played for the jury, do not appear to show Perryman-Henderson getting out of the car and pointing his gun at anyone, or anyone running down a hill. The videos do show two women running into the restaurant carrying two small children less than a minute after the white car left. 5 angulation.” The medical examiner gave an “estimate” that, given

the degree of stippling (abrasions from gunpowder particles) and

absence of soot, Dunlap was “probably . . . 2 to 3 feet away from the

muzzle of the gun” when she was shot. He added that soot might be

deposited from a foot or “sometimes 15 inches” away, but “not very

often any further than that.” He also testified that soot can be

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Madera v. State
899 S.E.2d 132 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2024)
Jones v. State
317 Ga. 466 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
889 S.E.2d 814, 316 Ga. 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perryman-henderson-v-state-ga-2023.