Rogers v. State

859 S.E.2d 92, 311 Ga. 634
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 1, 2021
DocketS21A0152
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 859 S.E.2d 92 (Rogers 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
Rogers v. State, 859 S.E.2d 92, 311 Ga. 634 (Ga. 2021).

Opinion

311 Ga. 634 FINAL COPY

S21A0152. ROGERS v. THE STATE.

WARREN, Justice.

Robert Rogers was convicted of felony murder in connection

with the shooting death of Richard Trantham, Jr. On appeal, Rogers

contends that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction

and that the trial court committed plain error when it admitted

certain testimony from a State witness. Seeing no reversible error,

we affirm.1

1 Trantham was killed on March 26, 2016. After Rogers’s first trial ended

in a mistrial, a Wayne County grand jury re-indicted him on June 5, 2017, charging him with malice murder, felony murder predicated on aggravated assault, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and conspiracy to commit aggravated assault. Rogers was tried from August 28 to September 1, 2017. The jury found him not guilty of malice murder, but guilty of the other three counts. The trial court sentenced Rogers to life in prison without parole for felony murder, and the remaining counts were merged for purposes of sentencing. Rogers filed a timely motion for new trial on September 28, 2017, and he amended it through new counsel on January 17, 2019. After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion, as amended, on August 9, 2019. Rogers initially failed to appeal in a timely manner, but the trial court granted his motion for an out-of-time appeal, after which Rogers filed a timely notice of appeal. This case was docketed in this Court to the term beginning in December 2020 and submitted for a decision on the briefs. 1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the

evidence presented at trial shows the following. On March 26, 2016,

Trantham and two of his friends were inside his mobile home on Saw

Mill Road in Wayne County when Andy O’Quinn — an acquaintance

— showed up. After spending a few minutes in the living room,

O’Quinn asked Trantham to “walk out with him to get a beer.”

While the two were outside, the friends who were still inside the

trailer heard a gunshot, went to the back door, and saw Trantham

lying on the back porch. When emergency personnel arrived at the

residence, they found Trantham deceased, with a “large hole” in the

center of his chest. Some drug paraphernalia was found in the

pockets of Trantham’s shorts. An autopsy revealed that Trantham

died from a single, high-velocity gunshot wound to the back, though

the range from which the bullet was fired could not be determined.

The victim’s brother, David Trantham, testified that Trantham

had a drug problem and had “slipped back” into his drug habit before

his death. According to David, Trantham had “gone downhill quite

a bit” and had robbed Dana Fossett, a woman who had provided

2 Trantham with drugs. Trantham had told David that, as a result of

the robbery, “they had took a hit out on him, and he was pretty sure

something was going to happen.”

At trial, O’Quinn — who was indicted separately for

Trantham’s murder but obtained a plea offer — testified that, on the

day of the shooting, he was contacted by Rogers, whom he had not

seen in 15 or 20 years. Rogers told O’Quinn that he wanted to “get

together and catch up,” so Rogers picked up O’Quinn at his home,

and they drove in the general direction of Trantham’s residence.

Rogers asked O’Quinn where Trantham lived, explaining that

Trantham “owed some money” and that Rogers “just wanted to

watch him and scare him.” The two men then stopped by Fossett’s

house and performed some landscaping work for her. While there,

Rogers and Fossett had a brief conversation, during which O’Quinn

overheard Fossett talking about Trantham with Rogers. After the

visit to Fossett’s house, Rogers took O’Quinn home and said he

would call O’Quinn later.

Later that day, O’Quinn testified, he picked up Rogers at a local

3 store, and they drove in O’Quinn’s car toward Trantham’s home.

Rogers got out of the car on Saw Mill Road “between some houses

and a field” — ostensibly to “watch” and “scare” Trantham — while

O’Quinn continued to Trantham’s residence, where he spent some

time talking with Trantham and the others who were inside. At

some point, O’Quinn walked outside to get a beer and Trantham

followed him out. The two men then sat in O’Quinn’s car and had a

brief conversation. Trantham then exited the car and walked back

toward the mobile home, at which point O’Quinn backed out of the

driveway and drove home. O’Quinn testified that he did not hear a

gunshot. He also testified that he did not pick up Rogers because

Rogers had told him earlier that Rogers was going to walk back to

Rogers’s car, which was parked at the local store.

Rogers was arrested several days after the shooting and was

interviewed by a GBI Special Agent, Richard Dyal. During that

interview, an audio recording of which was played for the jury at

trial, Rogers initially denied being present at the crime scene, but

he eventually admitted to being involved in the killing. Specifically,

4 Agent Dyal expressed his belief that Rogers shot Trantham, and he

asked Rogers about his motivation. Rogers responded that he

wanted to “scare” Trantham because Trantham had stolen cash and

other items from Rogers’s house about three months earlier. To that

end, Rogers said, he went to Trantham’s residence, positioned

himself outside the mobile home with a scoped rifle, and waited for

Trantham to come out. When Trantham came out on the back porch,

Rogers aimed for the light on the porch, but shot “a little to the left”

and hit Trantham instead. Rogers then ran off and threw the rifle

in the woods. In addition to the interview, other evidence showed

that Rogers told the same story — that he shot at the porch light to

scare Trantham — to his mother and daughter.

Rogers testified in his own defense. He admitted that he went

to Trantham’s house with O’Quinn on the night of March 26 to

“confront” Trantham about the theft of items from his house months

earlier. But Rogers denied that he fired a gun or that he even had a

gun in his possession, and he claimed that he did not know who fired

the shot that killed Trantham. Rogers also claimed that he lied to

5 the police about the shooting to protect himself and his family from

the unknown shooter.

2. Rogers first contends that the evidence presented at trial

was insufficient to support his conviction because, he says, it did not

exclude every reasonable hypothesis of innocence — particularly the

hypothesis that someone else shot Trantham. See OCGA § 24-14-6

(“To warrant a conviction on circumstantial evidence, the proved

facts shall not only be consistent with the hypothesis of guilt, but

shall exclude every other reasonable hypothesis save that of the

guilt of the accused.”). However, the principle set forth in OCGA

§ 24-14-6 on which Rogers relies “applies only where the State’s case

against the defendant was wholly circumstantial.” Jackson v. State,

310 Ga. 224, 228 (850 SE2d 131) (2020) (citation and punctuation

omitted). Here, the case against Rogers was not wholly

circumstantial; the State presented at least some direct evidence of

Rogers’s guilt, namely, the recording of Rogers’s interview with

Agent Dyal, where Rogers admitted that he intentionally fired the

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Bluebook (online)
859 S.E.2d 92, 311 Ga. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-state-ga-2021.