Riley v. State

604 S.E.2d 488, 278 Ga. 677, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 3437, 2004 Ga. LEXIS 943
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 25, 2004
DocketS04P1039
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 604 S.E.2d 488 (Riley 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
Riley v. State, 604 S.E.2d 488, 278 Ga. 677, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 3437, 2004 Ga. LEXIS 943 (Ga. 2004).

Opinion

HINES, Justice.

A jury convicted William David Riley, Sr., of three counts of malice murder and two counts of first-degree arson. The murder victims were Riley’s three young children. The jury recommended a death sentence for each murder after finding beyond a reasonable doubt seven statutory aggravating circumstances. OCGA § 17-10-30 (b) (2), (7). The trial court denied Riley’s motion for new trial, and he appeals. We affirm the convictions and sentences. 1

*678 1. The evidence presented at trial showed the following: at approximately 10:45 a.m. on August 16, 2000, a fire broke out in a trailer at the Pine Valley Mobile Home Park. The trailer was rented by Riley, who lived there with his girlfriend, Jacque, and his three children, six-year-old Ashley, five-year-old William, and three-year-old Samantha. Riley’s friend, Wayne Atnip, was also living there and sleeping on a couch. All three adults escaped the fire. All three children died.

Neighbors and firefighters reported odd behavior by Riley during the fire. They testified that he did not try to save his children and that his demeanor was cold, unemotional, and dry. While the trailer was burning, and before the firefighters arrived, he ran to the back of the trailer, yelled for his children to awake, banged on the outside wall a few times, and then moved his car away from the trailer. He was the only adult who escaped the fire fully dressed. He had some ash and soot on his face and in his nose, but no burns on his hands, arms or anywhere on his body.

Witnesses testified that Riley rarely interacted with the children and had used derogatory names when referring to them. He had made threats to kill them to a prior girlfriend if she called the Department of Family and Children Services (“DFACS”). Riley’s wife, the mother of the victims, moved out in May 2000 and Riley was in dire financial straits. He had been denied welfare benefits and was facing eviction; the eviction hearing had been scheduled for August 18. A neighbor heard Riley tell J acque that he would kill the children before he would let DFACS take them. He also said he would burn the trailer before he would be evicted. In an argument with Jacque three days before the fire, another neighbor heard Riley say he wished Jacque and the children were dead. Neighbors also testified that Riley and Jacque had a loud argument outside the trailer a few hours before the fire started.

One of the firefighters at the scene of the fire asked Riley if the children could have obtained a cigarette lighter and Riley insisted that was not possible because “we keep them put up.” Riley suggested a short circuit as the fire’s possible cause. The police tape-recorded an interview with Riley at the scene in which he said that he had been facing eviction because he had refused to pay his rent due to the trailer’s electrical problems, including exposed wires and cracked light fixtures. He said the adults had awakened that morning too late to go to work so everyone but he had gone back to sleep. Riley drank coffee and read; his children woke up and he fed them and then sent them back to their room to play. He went to the children’s room at 10:30 a.m. and told them to get dressed. There were no interior doors in the trailer, except one to the bathroom. Riley and Jacque had tacked a sheet over the doorway to the master bedroom. He went to *679 the master bedroom and dressed; Jacque was just waking up. As he was putting on his second boot, he heard three-year-old Samantha scream, “Daddy, help me!” He ran into the hallway and saw smoke. He went to the doorway of the children’s bedroom and saw flames on the far wall of the room behind his son’s bed. The children’s room had two twin-sized beds that filled almost the entire room; the room was 9' 1" by 7' 8" and the corner of the nearest bed was only 2.5 feet from the entrance to the room. Riley, who is 6' 5" tall, said he could not see his children through the smoke so he reached into the room and stepped on a bed to try to reach them. He was unable to do this because the heat was too intense, so he went outside, picked up a piece of wood, and threw it through the children’s window. He knew it was over when the screaming stopped and flames started coming out the window. He then moved his car because he was afraid it might explode.

A state arson investigator concluded that the fire had been intentionally set; it had started in the children’s bedroom near the center of the trailer, exited this room, and traveled down the hall to the living room. No cigarette lighter was found in the children’s room, where the three bodies were discovered. The investigator found no problems with the electrical system; electrical shorts will melt wire with a “beading” effect similar to the effect of welding on metal but no such beading of the wires in the trailer was found. He also found no problems with the electrical appliances. An electrician who inspected the trailer for the county in May 2000, just before Riley moved in, agreed that the wiring was not defective and that almost all the light fixtures had been recently replaced. The landlord and the mobile home park maintenance worker testified that Riley had never complained about any electrical problems or faulty wiring in his trailer. The police found a cigarette lighter on the ground eight feet from the trailer.

On the night of August 16, Riley drove to the sheriffs office for another audiotaped interview. When a GBI agent confronted him with his belief that Riley was not telling the truth about the fire, Riley stated, “My son plays with lighters. Okay?” Riley said he left a lighter out that he thought was empty and that his son must have found it, shook it, and started the fire in the children’s room. He also asserted that he was asleep when the fire started and he first heard Samantha screaming, but the agent reminded him that he had earlier said he was getting dressed. When the agent pointed out that Riley said he had gone into the children’s small bedroom to try to save them, but that his arm hair was not even singed, Riley then said he had not gone into their room. Eventually, Riley admitted that, while the children were sleeping and to scare Jacque, he used a cigarette lighter to set fire to the bedding on the corner of his son’s bed. When he returned to *680 the children’s room two or three minutes later, he saw that his son had jumped to the girls’ bed “and they started coughing and hacking and everything else and the heat from that fire just got ’em.”

The evidence was sufficient to enable a rational trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt Riley guilty of three counts of malice murder, three counts of felony murder, and two counts of arson in the first degree. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979). The trial court did not err by denying Riley’s motion for a directed verdict of acquittal. See Raulerson v. State, 268 Ga. 623 (1) (491 SE2d 791) (1997); OCGA § 17-9-1 (a).

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

Related

Smith v. State
882 S.E.2d 300 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2022)
Hipolito G. Diaz v. State
Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2018
DIAZ v. the STATE.
820 S.E.2d 249 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2018)
Willis v. State
304 Ga. 686 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2018)
Franklin v. State
303 Ga. 165 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2018)
Martin v. State
779 S.E.2d 342 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2015)
Hulett v. State
766 S.E.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2014)
Woodall v. State
754 S.E.2d 335 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2014)
State v. Miguel Munoz
Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2013
State v. Munoz
749 S.E.2d 48 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2013)
Edenfield v. State
744 S.E.2d 738 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2013)
Heidt v. State
736 S.E.2d 384 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2013)
Ellington v. State
735 S.E.2d 736 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2012)
Rice v. State
733 S.E.2d 755 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2012)
Humphrey v. Riley
731 S.E.2d 740 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2012)
Cawthon v. State
713 S.E.2d 388 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2011)
Ledford v. State
709 S.E.2d 239 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2011)
Loyd v. State
705 S.E.2d 616 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2011)
Fortune v. State
696 S.E.2d 120 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
604 S.E.2d 488, 278 Ga. 677, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 3437, 2004 Ga. LEXIS 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-state-ga-2004.