Stafford v. State

865 S.E.2d 116, 312 Ga. 811
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 2, 2021
DocketS21A0767
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 865 S.E.2d 116 (Stafford 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
Stafford v. State, 865 S.E.2d 116, 312 Ga. 811 (Ga. 2021).

Opinion

312 Ga. 811 FINAL COPY

S21A0767. STAFFORD v. THE STATE.

LAGRUA, Justice.

Appellant Lil’Che Stafford was found guilty by a Fulton County

jury of felony murder and first-degree burglary in connection with

the death of Jose Greer.1 On appeal, Appellant raises four

enumerations of error: (1) evidence of an earlier burglary and armed

robbery was improperly admitted; (2) a testifying detective

inappropriately opined that Appellant was involved in an additional

prior robbery; (3) trial counsel was ineffective for failing to request

1 The crimes occurred on December 8, 2015. On March 20, 2018, a Fulton

County grand jury indicted Appellant, Fredrick Clark, Vas Coleman, Maxx Pritchett, and Mark Spencer for felony murder and burglary in the first degree. Prior to trial, Appellant’s and Spencer’s trial was severed from their co- defendants’ trial. At a joint trial with Spencer from September 24 to October 2, 2018, a jury found Appellant guilty of all counts. The trial court then sentenced Appellant to serve life in prison for felony murder. The trial court merged the burglary count with the felony murder count. Appellant timely filed a motion for new trial on October 24, 2018, which he amended four times. Following hearings, the trial court denied Appellant’s amended motion for new trial on December 3, 2020. Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal on December 8, 2020, and his case was docketed to this Court’s April 2021 term. Appellant’s case was orally argued on June 9, 2021. a jury instruction on intervening or unforeseen cause of death; and

(4) the detective’s testimony regarding the custodial statements of a

co-conspirator was improperly admitted because it was inadmissible

hearsay and trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to its

admission based on the Confrontation Clause. We conclude that

there was no reversible error, so we affirm.

1. The evidence concerning the crimes came largely from co-

defendant Fredrick Clark, who was offered use immunity for his

testimony. Clark testified as follows: On December 8, 2015,

Appellant met with Clark and co-defendants Mark Spencer, Maxx

Pritchett, and Vas Coleman at a house on Mitchell Street in Atlanta.

After discussing that they needed money, the group decided to rob

the home of a drug dealer they knew as “Cash.” Clark drove the men

to Sky Lofts Condominiums, where they thought Cash lived. Upon

their arrival, Spencer checked the front entryway of the

condominium complex for cameras and returned to Clark’s car.

Appellant, Clark, and Spencer then entered the condominium

complex while Coleman and Pritchett remained in the car.

2 Clark rang the doorbell of a third-floor unit where they

believed Cash was residing, while Appellant and Spencer hid out of

view. When nobody answered, Clark began using a screwdriver to

open the door, and Appellant and Spencer joined him in attempting

to break down the door. After seeing someone down the hall, Clark

and Appellant began to flee, but Spencer stopped Clark and

convinced him to continue trying to get into the unit. Appellant

returned to the door to see why Clark and Spencer stopped following

him, then stayed. The three men took turns trying to open the door

with the screwdriver, and eventually Appellant and Spencer broke

the door open together with their forearms. Once inside the unit,

the three men stole an iPhone, iPad, laptop computer, and some

hats — all of which were placed in a backpack that Spencer was

carrying. Appellant also took a jar full of coins. While in the unit,

Spencer remarked to Clark that he noticed an ambulance and police

in the vicinity, which prompted the three men to leave through a

back stairway of the condominium complex. When they got outside,

they passed “a guy on the ground.” Clark testified that Spencer

3 asked the man if he needed help, but when he received no response,

they continued to flee by jumping over a gate. Clark also testified

“the coins dropped” as the three jumped over the complex gate to

escape.

Unbeknownst to the men, Cash did not live in this unit, but the

victim, Greer, did. When Greer heard the commotion at his door, he

called 911 to report that his unit was being broken into; he also told

911 that he had fled to his balcony to escape the perpetrators and

that he might try to jump off the balcony to get to safety. Ultimately,

Greer fell 30 feet to the ground.

A surveillance video recording from the condominium complex

showed three men entering the complex through a doorway.

Another camera recorded the same three men running down a

stairwell and exiting through a different doorway.

William Gadsden, a resident at the condominium complex, saw

three men running down the back stairwell of the complex. Gadsden

noticed that the men were in their late teens or early twenties,

wearing dark clothes, and one was carrying a backpack. After

4 exiting the door of the building, the men climbed over the fence

surrounding the complex and fled toward a nearby CVS Pharmacy.

The police arrived at the scene about two minutes after Greer

called 911 and moments after Gadsden saw the three men running

down the stairwell. The responding officer found Greer lying on the

sidewalk, and Greer was able to tell her that he was trying to escape

the burglars by climbing to the balcony below, but he slipped and

fell. The police found an abandoned jar of coins containing Greer’s

business card on the sidewalk nearby and found Greer’s unit

ransacked. Greer was transported to the hospital, where he later

died. The medical examiner testified that Greer died from blunt

force trauma and classified the manner of death as a homicide.

Clark testified that after jumping over the fence, he and

Spencer went in one direction and Appellant went in an opposite

direction. Spencer and Clark shed their outer clothing, placed the

clothes in the backpack, and disposed of the backpack in an

alleyway. They then walked to a nearby Krispy Kreme, where they

called an Uber to take them back to the Mitchell Street house. Video

5 surveillance recordings from the Krispy Kreme, recorded about six

minutes after Greer’s 911 call was placed, showed two men in the

store wearing pants that matched those worn by two of the men in

the condominium complex surveillance video. According to Clark,

after returning to the Mitchell Street house in the Uber, Spencer

called Korey Bryant to get a ride back to the alleyway to retrieve the

backpack.

Bryant, who was friends with Appellant and his co-defendants,

testified that Spencer called him to give Spencer a ride. He picked

up Clark and Spencer from the Mitchell Street house on the day of

Greer’s homicide. As they were leaving the house, they saw

Appellant walking toward them. Appellant got into Bryant’s car,

and Bryant took all three men back toward the area of the crime

scene. Spencer directed Bryant to park by a building about a block

away from the Sky Lofts Condominiums. Appellant, Clark, and

Spencer left the car for a few minutes and returned with a backpack.

Bryant then took them back to the Mitchell Street house.

Cell site tower location information for Clark, Coleman,

6 Pritchett, and Spencer placed their cell phones in the area of the

Mitchell Street house before the burglary, in the area of the Sky

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