Snow v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 19, 2026
DocketS26A0176
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Snow v. State, (Ga. 2026).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia No. S26A0176 Christopher Dean Snow v. The State

On Appeal from the Superior Court of Chatham County No. 2023CR650LHB

Decided: May 19, 2026

MCMILLIAN, Justice. Appellant Christopher Snow was convicted of malice mur- der for stabbing his wife Casey Allen to death. 1 On appeal, Snow argues that the trial court erred in admitting testimony under the residual hearsay exception; denying Snow’s pretrial motion for a continuance; admitting a prior felony conviction into evidence un-

1 Allen died on the night of April 14, 2023. On June 14, 2023, a Hall County grand jury indicted Snow for malice murder (Count 1), felony murder predicated on aggravated assault, family violence (Count 2), and aggravated assault, family violence (Count 3). At a trial held in May 2024, the jury found Snow guilty of all counts. The trial court sentenced Snow to serve life in prison without the possibility of parole for Count 1, merged Count 3 into Count 1, and purported to also merge Count 2 into Count 1, although Count 2 was actually vacated by operation of law. See Washington v. State, 313 Ga. 771, 772–73 (2022). Snow filed a timely motion for new trial, which was amended by new counsel. Following a hearing, the trial court denied Snow’s motion for new trial, as amended, on June 30, 2025. Snow filed a timely notice of appeal on July 22, 2025, and the case was docketed to the term of this Court beginning in December 2025 and thereafter submitted for a decision on the briefs. der OCGA § 24-6-609 (“Rule 609”); refusing to vacate Snow’s con- viction because the indictment failed to allege Allen’s killing was unlawful; and overruling Snow’s objection to a statement made during the prosecutor’s closing argument. For the reasons that follow, we affirm. 1. The evidence presented at trial showed that Snow stabbed Allen to death in their apartment during the night of their first wedding anniversary. They began dating in 2021 and got married on April 14, 2022. About nine months later, Allen gave birth to the couple’s son. On the night of their first wedding anniversary, Snow’s aunt took care of their son at her home, so they could go out and celebrate their anniversary. At approximately 7:30 a.m. the next morning, Snow called his father and told him, “Dad, I can’t fix this. I really F’d up and did – you know, I’m really sorry. I’m really sorry …. We were there and she had a knife and I don’t know if she meant to but she might have nicked me. I’m not sure. I lost it …. She’s dead.” Snow’s father urged him to call the police, but instead, Snow went to his aunt’s house to pick up his son. Snow told his aunt that he and Allen got in an argument the night before about her driving home after drinking and that she did not come home, even though Snow and Allen had plans to go with Snow’s aunt to a family birthday party that day. Snow’s aunt went to the party without them, where Snow’s father told the aunt that Allen was dead. Af- ter Snow’s aunt left the party, she found Snow back at her house when she arrived. Snow told his aunt, “I accidentally killed her.” Snow said that after he and Allen had argued the night before, she got a knife, and he tried to take it away from her to prevent her from harming herself. But after Allen accidentally cut Snow on the arm, he “lost it” and killed her. Snow showed his aunt a cut on his arm, which she described as “not bad.” She did not see

2 any other wounds on Snow. After Snow told her that he did not want to live and left, Snow’s aunt called 911 to report the killing. Police responded to Snow and Allen’s apartment, where they found Allen’s body under a pile of blankets with multiple stab wounds. A chair with their baby’s pictures on it was facing her body. The medical examiner who performed Allen’s autopsy testified that Allen was stabbed and slashed about the head, face, neck, chest, and arm 19 times, causing her death, the manner of which was homicide. A large laceration on Allen’s left arm was consistent with a defensive wound. Later the same day that police discovered Allen’s body, they responded to a vehicular collision on Interstate 85. Snow had driven at a high rate of speed into an energy absorption de- vice at an exit on the interstate. Snow was transported to the hospital, where he was treated for injuries, which included “a knife wound that was not crash related.” At trial, Allen’s sister Tiffany Agee testified that she and Allen used to talk “very often,” but “[i]t slowly started to decrease” after Allen started dating Snow, and Allen had told Agee, “I’m sorry. [Snow] doesn’t like how much we talk.” Agee also testified about a specific instance of domestic violence by Snow that Allen told Agee about before the couple was married. Allen told Agee that “Chris and I got into an argument in the kitchen and he had slammed my head into the cabinet and he choked me and said, ‘I could kill you right now and no one would do anything or find out.’” Agee testified that Allen “told me that she had gone to the hospital to get stitches.” Agee testified that Allen told her, “[p]lease do not hate him. He said he’s sorry. I’ve forgiven him. Please don’t hold any anger towards him …. He’s said he’s sorry and it will never happen again.” On cross-examination, Snow

3 elicited testimony that if Allen had received stitches at an emer- gency room, Agee believed that Allen would have gone to the local hospital in Gainesville, and that Agee had never seen Snow “put his hands” on Allen. Later in the trial, Snow tendered the emer- gency room records for the hospital in Gainesville, which con- tained no record of Allen receiving stitches during the time period of her relationship with Snow, and also elicited the testimony of a friend of Snow and Allen, who said he never observed Allen with stitches. Snow’s defense at trial was that he committed voluntary manslaughter rather than murder. Snow testified that after he and Allen had been out for their anniversary, they got in an argu- ment about her driving home drunk. He said that Allen got a knife from the kitchen, but he blocked her from going into the bathroom because she had cut herself in the past and he was con- cerned she would self-harm. He “tried real fast to grab [the knife]. And she realized [he] was going for it and kind of – she didn’t mean to. She snatched it up and it caught me in the arm.” Snow said that he was angry and said, “[n]ow that I have an injury, I can call the cops and get [our son] myself,” and that when he turned to walk away, he felt a “like a pinch … In my shoulder, neck area,” that felt like being stabbed. Snow testified that he “snap[ped] and los[t] it,” “tackled” Allen, took the knife from her, and was on top of her in “not even a second.” When asked by his trial counsel if he inflicted all of the wounds identified by the med- ical examiner, Snow responded, “I had to.” Snow said he did not remember all of it, but thought he heard Allen say his name, re- alized what he had done and that she was dead, covered her body, put photos of their son in a chair beside her body, and got rid of the knife. Snow acknowledged that Allen “didn’t deserve to die.” He further testified that the next day he drove down Interstate 85 “looking for the perfect exit to end my life on …. At the same

4 time, I put a knife to my neck.

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