Randy Ansley v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 18, 2013
DocketA13A1078
StatusPublished

This text of Randy Ansley v. State (Randy Ansley 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
Randy Ansley v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., MCFADDEN and BOGGS, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

November 18, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A1078. ANSLEY v. THE STATE. A13A1079. JOHNSON v. THE STATE. A13A1303. HANNAH v. THE STATE.

BOGGS, Judge.

Randy Ansley, Brian Lamar Johnson, and Quincy Hannah were tried together

and convicted of armed robbery. Their amended motions for new trial were denied,

and they appeal, asserting various enumerations of error. Finding no error, we affirm.

All three appellants contend the trial court erred in denying their motions to

suppress documentary and testimonial evidence. “When reviewing a trial court’s

ruling on a motion to suppress, we apply the ‘any evidence’ standard, which means

that we sustain all of the trial court’s findings of fact that are supported by any

evidence. We construe all evidence presented in favor of the trial court’s findings and

judgment.” (Citation, punctuation, and footnote omitted.) Davis v. State, 302 Ga. App. 144, 144-145 (690 SE2d 464) (2010). Because the defendants “intensely

cross-examined the officer[s] and challenged [their] credibility” in multiple hearings

on the motions to suppress, and at trial, we “do not apply a de novo standard of

review, which applies only where the facts are undisputed.” (Citation and footnote

omitted.) Id. at 145. In reviewing the trial court’s rulings, we may look at trial

testimony as well as testimony at the hearing on the motion to suppress. Jones v.

State, 318 Ga. App. 614, 616 (2) (734 SE2d 450) (2012).

So construed, the evidence showed that a finance company in Monroe, Georgia

was robbed on December 4, 2009, shortly before 1:00 p.m. The manager of the

company testified that the third day of the month was the company’s busiest day,

because social security, retirement and VA checks were received by their customers,

who then made payments owed to the company. She further testified that the

employees customarily collected all the receipts and secured them in her desk for

deposit with the bank. On December 4, the company had approximately $600 as

“normal operating cash” and just over $5,200 to deposit with the bank.

The robber arrived while the sole male employee of the business was on his

regular lunch break from 12 noon to 1 p.m. The robber entered the business through

an open back door, which was ordinarily kept locked and barricaded with a two-by-

2 four board, chain, and padlock during business hours. Employee Cassandra Cameron

was the last person to open the door before the robbery; she had asked to borrow the

manager’s keys that morning to take out the trash, although trash was not ordinarily

taken out until mid or late afternoon, which was the slowest time in the office.

After entering the business by the back door, the robber put a gun to the

manager’s head and demanded, “Get the money.” He took the manager’s cell phone

and instructed Cameron to get the money; the manager told Cameron to obey the

robber, and she unlocked the manager’s desk drawer and put the money in a bag. The

manager described the robber as a black male with dark eyes and a “very well

groomed” goatee and mustache, wearing a black Carhartt-style heavy jacket with a

grey hoodie underneath, khaki pants, white tennis shoes and a black ski mask. The

manager also testified that Cameron was unnaturally calm during the robbery and

ignored the robber’s instructions to remain in the bathroom for ten minutes after he

left. The male employee returned about five minutes before 1:00 p.m. and chased the

robber out the back door; he caught a glimpse of “dark clothes, white shoes.” After

the robbery, the deposit bag was discovered lying on the floor near the manager’s

desk “as if someone had dropped it.”

3 At about 1:00 p.m., a Monroe police officer on patrol noticed Johnson, whom

he knew from prior law enforcement contact, walking down the street behind the

finance company. Johnson, whose photograph depicts a black male with a neatly-

trimmed goatee beard and mustache, was wearing khaki pants and a dark-colored

jacket, and it appeared to the officer that Johnson was trying to avoid him. A few

minutes later, the officer learned that the finance company had been robbed and

received the description of the suspect. He immediately returned to the area but was

unable to relocate Johnson. After obtaining a photograph of Johnson, he provided it

to other officers and they all continued the search. Several hours later, Johnson was

located and taken into custody; $300 in cash, a cell phone, and a cell phone charger

were found on his person.

The City of Monroe police department is located less than a block from the

scene of the robbery. The police arrived “very, very quickly” and began their

investigation. A nearby resident reported seeing an older model “white BMW with

light tinted windows” driving back and forth “four or five times” on his street at about

12:30 p.m. on the day of the robbery. The last time the vehicle went by, around 1:00

p.m., it was traveling at a high rate of speed “from downtown going towards Spring

Street” and was occupied by two or three individuals. A sheriff’s deputy took

4 information from the resident and instructed officers to be on the lookout for a “white

BMW with small, gold rims.”

Another sheriff’s deputy in an unmarked vehicle received the BOLO and

recalled that he had recently seen a similar vehicle in a subdivision about two miles

from the robbery scene. He drove to the subdivision, and around 1:45 p.m., he saw

a white BMW pull up to a residence; two black males, whom he recognized from

“dealing with them” although he did not recall their names, went in the house. A few

minutes later, the deputy saw the same men get into a different vehicle and leave, and

he radioed that information to dispatch.1 Other officers made a traffic stop on the

second vehicle; Ansley was driving and Hannah was a passenger.

Both men were questioned and arrested, but the trial court later determined that

the arrests were based upon insufficient probable cause and suppressed their

statements given at the time of the arrest. The trial court held, however, that the

vehicle stop itself was permissible based upon the specific and articulable facts

known to the police.

1 The owner of the residence testified that Ansley came to her home that day and asked to borrow her car because his foot was injured and he could not drive his straight shift car.

5 After police informed the manager of the finance company that Ansley had

been arrested, she told police that she recognized his name. Ansley was the cousin of

Roman, Cameron’s live-in boyfriend and father of her child, and the manager had

seen Ansley on several occasions when she gave Cameron a ride home. A police

detective spoke with Cameron and her boyfriend that evening, and explained that he

believed the robbery was committed by someone with “inside knowledge” who knew

that there was a large amount of money on hand and that the only male employee

would be out of the office. Both agreed that there had to be inside knowledge, and

both agreed to come down to the police station for polygraph examinations. But when

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