Rigsby v. State

829 S.E.2d 93, 306 Ga. 38
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 3, 2019
DocketS19A0172
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 829 S.E.2d 93 (Rigsby 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
Rigsby v. State, 829 S.E.2d 93, 306 Ga. 38 (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

Nahmias, Presiding Justice.

*95**38Appellant Johnny Rigsby was convicted of malice murder and other crimes in connection with the shooting death of his girlfriend Betty Smith. Appellant contends that the trial court erred by failing to suppress his post-arrest statement to an investigator, that the jury instructions and verdict form regarding the lesser offense of voluntary manslaughter were improper, and that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to timely object to the verdict form. We affirm.1

1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the evidence presented at Appellant's trial showed the following. Around 2:30 p.m. on September 4, 2010, a City of Griffin police officer responded to a report that a man in a Toyota Camry was driving recklessly. The officer located the Camry, which belonged to Smith, at a gas station. Appellant was in the driver's seat rolling a marijuana cigarette, and his pet ferret was also in the car. The officer searched Appellant and found a .38-caliber revolver with two spent rounds in it. Appellant was then arrested, and his grandmother Mary Sampler picked up the Camry and the ferret and drove to Smith's house in Spalding County, where Smith and Appellant lived together. At the house, Sampler knocked on the front door, and when there was no answer, she dropped off the car keys just inside the unlocked door. Sampler then paid Appellant's bail, and he was released from custody. Around **396:00 p.m., she dropped him and the ferret off at his and Smith's house. Appellant told Sampler that Smith was ill, and Sampler left without entering the house.

Later that night, a deputy sheriff responded to another report about Appellant's reckless driving in Smith's car, this time in Lamar County, and he was arrested again and held in jail there. The next day, Sampler tried to call Smith about Appellant's arrest, but there was no response. On the following morning, September 6, Sampler went to Appellant and Smith's house and knocked on the front door. When Smith did not answer, Sampler tried to open the door, but it was locked. Sampler went to the house again on September 7 and again received no response to her knocking. Later that evening, she and her daughter asked the sheriff's department to check on Smith.

Around 10:00 p.m., Spalding County sheriff's investigators who responded to the house found Smith's dead body, along with her dead pet ferret, in a large chest in her bedroom.2 Smith had been shot twice - once on the right side of her head and once between her eyes. Investigators found a large pool of blood to the right of the bedroom door, a wad of bloody hair, and markings on the carpet "as if someone were clawing" the *96floor. In a toilet in the bathroom, investigators found blood and hair.

In the kitchen, the investigators found a bloody knife, a bloody pair of scissors, and blood on the walls, cabinets, counters, and floor. Testing later showed that Appellant's fingerprint was on the knife and that the blood on the knife, the scissors, a kitchen wall, and a counter belonged to an animal. Investigators determined that the blood spatter in the kitchen was consistent with cutting an animal and then swinging it around and slamming it against the cabinets. In the living room, investigators found a cage that contained Appellant's pet ferret, the empty box for the revolver Appellant had been carrying when he was arrested on September 4, and another pair of bloody scissors. DNA testing later showed that the blood on those scissors came from Smith. Investigators also found two cell phones in the living room. The last call made from one of the phones was to a friend of Smith's at 12:19 p.m. on September 4, about two hours before Appellant was arrested carrying the revolver.

At trial, the State presented evidence that the gunshot wound to the right side of Smith's head was caused by a shot fired from more than two or three feet away and may not have been fatal. The .38-caliber bullet that caused that wound was found in a window frame in Smith's bedroom. The bullet's trajectory indicated that the **40shooter was standing to the left of the bedroom door. The wound between Smith's eyes was fatal. It was caused by a .38-caliber bullet, which was recovered from Smith's head, fired from less than one half of an inch to three feet away. A firearms examiner testified that both the bullet in the window frame and the bullet in Smith's head had been fired from the revolver that Appellant was carrying when he was first arrested. A medical examiner testified that the manner of Smith's death was homicide. In addition, a crime scene investigator testified that based on lividity in Smith's body, Smith had been put inside the chest after she died.

The State also presented evidence that during a meeting with an investigator two days after Smith's body was found, Appellant was told that he would be charged with both malice murder and felony murder and that he said, "I only killed - they said I only killed one person." In addition, Appellant's jail cellmate testified that Appellant said that he shot Smith because she was planning to leave him, that he cut her hair, and that he killed her ferret because it would "make him seem insane ... and he was sure he was gonna get off."

The trial's opening statements and closing arguments were not transcribed, and Appellant did not testify. Some of his counsel's questioning of witnesses suggested a defense theory that Appellant was not present at the time of the shooting. Appellant also elicited testimony from two witnesses that Smith was depressed and had talked about killing herself, and the crime scene investigator testified on cross-examination that Smith had blood on her right hand, which can occur in a suicide by shooting. During re-direct examination, however, the investigator explained that the evidence as a whole was inconsistent with a suicide.

Appellant does not challenge the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting his convictions. Nevertheless, in accordance with this Court's practice in murder cases, we have reviewed the record and conclude that, when viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the evidence presented at trial and summarized above was sufficient to authorize a rational jury to find Appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes of which he was convicted. See Jackson v. Virginia , 443 U.S. 307, 319, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979). See also Vega v. State , 285 Ga. 32, 33, 673 S.E.2d 223

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Bluebook (online)
829 S.E.2d 93, 306 Ga. 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rigsby-v-state-ga-2019.