Sara Thomas v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 28, 2012
DocketA12A1577
StatusPublished

This text of Sara Thomas v. State (Sara Thomas 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
Sara Thomas v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION ELLINGTON, C. J., PHIPPS, P. J., and DILLARD, J.

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. (Court of Appeals Rule 4 (b) and Rule 37 (b), February 21, 2008) http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

September 28, 2012

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A12A1577. THOMAS v. THE STATE.

PHIPPS, Presiding Judge.

A jury found Sara Thomas and her daughter guilty of three counts of theft by

shoplifting and Thomas, alone, guilty of giving a false name to a police officer.

Thomas appeals her convictions, contending that the trial court erred in admitting at

trial her custodial statement. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Thomas contends that her custodial statement was not voluntarily made and

that she was induced to make it because she feared that she and her daughter would

be taken to jail and her grandchildren would be taken into the custody of the Georgia

Department of Human Resources Division of Family & Children Services (DFCS).

She argues that the “coercive environment” at the scene of the incident which led to the suppression of her daughter’s written statement should also have led to the

suppression of her custodial statement.

At the Jackson-Denno1 hearing, the arresting officer testified that on July 21,

2005, he responded to a call about a theft at a shopping mall. When he arrived at the

mall, the complainant (apparently a store merchant ) pointed out the suspects to the

officer. The officer approached Thomas and her daughter as they exited a store.

The officer explained to Thomas and her daughter that the police had been

called because of a shoplifting report. The women denied that they had shoplifted.

The officer asked them for identification. The daughter produced a Georgia

identification card. Thomas stated that she did not have identification, but she gave

the officer a name and date of birth. The officer transmitted that identification

information to “dispatch and they ran it through GCIC.” After the officer received a

response from dispatch, he determined that Thomas had given him a false name,

arrested her for that crime, and placed her in the back seat of his patrol vehicle. He

testified that at this point, he had not decided whether to charge Thomas or her

daughter with shoplifting.

1 378 U. S. 368 (84 SC 1774, 12 LE2d 908) (1964).

2 The officer turned his attention back to the daughter, who was accompanied by

minor children. He approached her vehicle, which was parked 15 yards away from his

patrol car. He testified that as the daughter opened the door to put the children inside,

he saw in plain view in the console area “a whole bunch of jewelry . . . just laying out

in the open.” Tags were on the jewelry, and the officer asked the daughter whether

she had a receipt for them. The daughter stated that she had a receipt from a particular

merchant, but produced none. The officer asked that jewelry store merchant about the

daughter’s purchases that day, and the merchant stated that the daughter had paid for

ear piercings for one of the children but had not purchased any jewelry.

The officer testified that he then walked to his patrol vehicle, told Thomas what

the jewelry store merchant had said, and read Thomas the Miranda2 warnings. After

he advised Thomas of her rights, he asked her whether she understood them, and

Thomas replied that she did. He then asked Thomas whether she wanted to make a

statement. Thomas told him that she had taken the items, that her daughter had a good

job, and that she did not want her daughter to lose her job. The officer closed the back

door of his patrol vehicle and re-approached Thomas’s daughter, who was standing

outside her vehicle, with the children inside. He told the daughter that Thomas had

2 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U. S. 436 (86 SC 1602, 16 LE2d 694) (1966).

3 stated that she was “going to take this, the shoplifting charge.” According to the

officer, the daughter, who was not then in custody or under arrest, replied that

Thomas “didn’t do it all,” and began naming stores from which she had shoplifted.

The daughter then executed a written statement of confession, listing several stores

from which she had stolen clothes and other items.

Thomas’s daughter testified that she wrote the statement under the following

circumstances. Thomas was in the patrol vehicle yelling, trying to talk to her. A

police officer was hitting the vehicle and telling Thomas to “shut up” and that

“somebody’s going to admit to taking these clothes.” The daughter stated that she was

frustrated and crying, and the children were crying. The daughter testified that the

arresting officer started “threatening me that he would call DFCS if I didn’t write a

statement and own up to the clothes.” She testified that the officer told her what to

write.

Thomas called one witness to testify, a person with whom her daughter had

gone to school. The witness testified that she never saw Thomas on the scene. She

testified that she heard kids crying and screaming and heard one child say, “I don’t

want my mommy to go to jail.” The witness testified that when Thomas’s daughter

asked a police officer whether she could call someone to come pick up the children,

4 the officer told her, “[N]o, not until you write this.” The witness testified that the

officer just kept telling Thomas’s daughter to “write” or he would call DFCS to pick

up the children.

The officer testified that he did not threaten Thomas’s daughter to write the

statement, he did not promise her that she would not be charged if she wrote the

statement, and he did not offer her any hope of benefit to write the statement.

Thomas did not testify. At the end of the hearing, the trial court ruled: “All

right. I’m going to find in the case and totality of the circumstances that the false

name statement of Ms. Sara Thomas and the Mirandized statement come in. As to

[Thomas’s daughter], we find that the – that the oral statement comes in, but the

written statement is out.”

A custodial statement is admissible only if it was made voluntarily, without being induced by another by the slightest hope of benefit or remotest fear of injury. To determine whether the state has proven that a confession was made voluntarily, the trial court must consider the totality of the circumstances. The trial court sits as the factfinder in a Jackson-Denno hearing, and its resolution of factual issues will be upheld by the appellate court unless it is clearly erroneous.3

3 Presley v. State, 251 Ga. App. 823, 824 (1) (555 SE2d 156) (2001) (citations and punctuation omitted); see OCGA § 24-3-50.

5 “The ‘remotest fear of injury’ that renders an incriminating statement

involuntary and inadmissible under OCGA § 24-3-50 is ‘physical or mental torture’

or coercion by threats. This determination must be based on the totality of the

circumstances.” 4 “If there is a conflict as to whether or not a statement, admission, or

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Related

Jackson v. Denno
378 U.S. 368 (Supreme Court, 1964)
Miranda v. Arizona
384 U.S. 436 (Supreme Court, 1966)
State v. Lynch
686 S.E.2d 244 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2009)
Newton v. State
209 S.E.2d 690 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1974)
Mungin v. State
358 S.E.2d 673 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1987)
Presley v. State
555 S.E.2d 156 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2001)
Johnson v. State
625 S.E.2d 411 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2005)
Hester v. State
651 S.E.2d 538 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2007)
Anderson v. State
481 S.E.2d 595 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1997)
Carter v. State
709 S.E.2d 223 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2011)
Lovell v. State
345 S.E.2d 645 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1986)

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Sara Thomas v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sara-thomas-v-state-gactapp-2012.