Potts v. State

376 S.E.2d 851, 259 Ga. 96, 1989 Ga. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 23, 1989
Docket45977
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 376 S.E.2d 851 (Potts 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
Potts v. State, 376 S.E.2d 851, 259 Ga. 96, 1989 Ga. LEXIS 84 (Ga. 1989).

Opinion

Smith, Justice.

This is a death penalty case. Jack Howard Potts originally was convicted and sentenced to death in Forsyth County for the murder of Michael Priest. Potts v. State, 241 Ga. 67 (243 SE2d 510) (1978). His death sentence for murder was set aside during federal habeas corpus proceedings, Potts v. Zant, 734 F2d 526 (11th Cir. 1984), and the case was remanded to Forsyth County for a retrial as to sentence. Potts’ motion for change of venue was granted, and the penalty phase was retried in Richmond County. Potts was resentenced to death. He now appeals. 1

*97 Facts

The evidence presented at the resentencing trial may be summarized as follows:

In the spring of 1975, Potts met 22-year-old Norma Blackwell. She left her husband and three children, and began living with Potts. In early May 1975, they were in Daytona Beach, Florida. While there, Potts killed a man. Blackwell helped Potts bury his bloody shirt and they returned to Georgia. (Potts later confessed to this murder.)

Potts and Blackwell spent the night of May 7, 1975, in Forsyth County. The next day, after Potts shot a window out of his mother’s car (because “he was upset”), Gene Snyder and Elaine Glaze stopped by in Snyder’s pickup truck. Blackwell and Potts sought a ride with them to Marietta where Potts had left his automobile. As the four of them rode to Marietta, Potts, who was driving, reached across the seat and shot Snyder.

Snyder testified:

[I heard] a sound like a firecracker going off in my ear, and I shook my head and wondered what happened, and I turned around and looked, and he had a gun in his hand, and I seen blood run down my shirt, and I figured then I’d been shot.
So, I took the key out of the switch and . . . the truck slowed down ... I told him to take me to the doctor , . . and he said he would if I’d put the key back in the switch.
So, I should have knowed better, but I did put the key back in the switch, and then he shot me again right through the sinus and down in the throat somewhere. . . .
[The first shot] went through my sideburn . . . and came out [my] right ear. . . .
[After the second shot], I tried to hold his hand, and ... he either hit me or his gun went off again. . . .

Snyder pretended to pass out. As Potts came around the truck (now stopped) to pull him out, Snyder took the ignition key out of the switch and threw it out of the window. Potts left Snyder by the side of the road and wiped down the inside of the truck to erase any fingerprints.

Potts walked to a nearby house, where Michael Priest, his pregnant wife, and her parents had just begun to eat supper. Potts, covered with blood, claimed he had been in an accident and needed a ride. Michael Priest volunteered to take him to a hospital.

*98 While Potts was gone, Elaine Glaze asked Norma Blackwell if she could just leave. Blackwell told her that Potts would kill her if she left; Blackwell had seen him kill before, in Florida.

Potts returned with Priest in the latter’s car. Priest saw Snyder “covered in blood” and stated, “My God, that man is hurt. Somebody needs to help him.” Potts pointed a gun at him and told Priest he had done it and would “do” Priest “like that.” The two women entered the car, and Potts ordered Priest to drive off.

Glaze testified:

Michael, he kept saying that he had a wife and baby and a baby on the way. That he didn’t want to die. Over and over. That he would do anything, and he would give him anything if he just didn’t hurt him. And it went on like that for awhile.
And Michael . . . started saying, “Oh, God, don’t hurt me because I haven’t done anything to you.” And that’s when [Potts] told him, “You’d better pray to me. I’m your God.” And Michael began to pray to him.

They stopped on a dirt road. Potts took Priest into some high weeds, forced him to his knees, and shot him in the back of the head. He returned to the truck, and, according to Glaze,

said, “Now it’s your turn. Come on.” And I was begging to Norma [Blackwell], and Norma said, “Don’t hurt her Jack. Don’t kill her. She’ll do anything you want to.” And ... I said, “I will.” And he laughed and got in the front seat and began to drive. . . .

After changing clothes and burning their old ones, the three drove to Cumming, where Potts stole a dealer “tag” to replace the license plate on Priest’s car. They disposed of Priest’s personal possessions and papers, and drove toward Florida.

They stopped to pick up a hitchhiker, but when Potts told him they were going “to hell and back,” the hitchhiker decided not to ride with them.

Glaze escaped when Potts stopped to get a motel room. When Potts returned to the car and discovered Glaze was gone, he and Blackwell drove on, spending the night in the car. The next morning, they picked up two hitchhikers. As they drove south, Potts bragged that he had killed a man the day before.

They were spotted near Morgan, Georgia, by police officer Rickey Weaver, who had received information over his radio that Potts had been driving recklessly. Weaver directed him to stop, but Potts re *99 fused. As Weaver chased Potts, he received another call on the radio informing him that the driver was wanted in connection with a murder in North Georgia.

Potts stopped his car and got out. According to Blackwell, Potts intended to shoot Weaver until he saw that the officer was armed with a shotgun. Officer Weaver testified that he stepped out of his car carrying his shotgun and told Potts to lie face down on the ground. Instead, Potts got back into his car and sped off.

Weaver chased Potts for several miles. As he topped a hill, Potts, who had stopped again, fired several shots at Weaver. Weaver stopped his car and fired at Potts, who took off again. Weaver resumed the chase, but soon had to quit because Potts had shot a hole in his radiator and his car overheated.

Potts and his companions broke into a farmhouse, stole some guns and ammunition, and were preparing to steal a car when two more policemen drove up. In the ensuing shootout, Potts and one of the policemen were wounded, and one of the hitchhikers was killed.

Potts was taken into custody, where he remained for 12 years. On September 19, 1987, while awaiting a retrial in this case, Potts broke out of the Forsyth County jail, using a gun furnished him by a 21-year-old female jailer who thought “he was a friend.” After a shootout, Potts was apprehended not far from the jail. The sentencing trial took place three and one-half months later.

Enumerations of Error

1. This court affirmed the denial of Potts’ double jeopardy claim based on prosecutorial misconduct at the original trial. Potts v. State, 257 Ga. 402 (359 SE2d 916) (1987).

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Bluebook (online)
376 S.E.2d 851, 259 Ga. 96, 1989 Ga. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-state-ga-1989.