State v. Britton

888 S.E.2d 157, 316 Ga. 283
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 16, 2023
DocketS23A0102
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 888 S.E.2d 157 (State v. Britton) 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
State v. Britton, 888 S.E.2d 157, 316 Ga. 283 (Ga. 2023).

Opinion

316 Ga. 283 FINAL COPY

S23A0102. THE STATE v. BRITTON.

MCMILLIAN, Justice.

Manvel Britton was charged with murder and other offenses in

connection with the fatal shooting of Eddy Leonardo.1 The State

appeals the trial court’s grant of Britton’s motion to suppress

evidence from his cell phone records obtained pursuant to a search

warrant (the “Warrant”) during the police investigation into that

death.2 The trial court found that the affidavit for the Warrant (the

“Affidavit”) contained a material misrepresentation which tainted

the entire document, and, with that misrepresentation excluded, the

Affidavit failed to establish the requisite probable cause to issue the

Warrant. The trial court further found a “discrepancy” in the

1 Britton is charged with murder, felony murder (four counts), criminal

attempt to commit armed robbery, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, possession of a firearm during commission of a felony, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon (two counts). The case was orally argued on March 29, 2023. 2 See OCGA § 5-7-1 (a) (4). Affidavit that it determined affected the validity of the Warrant. The

State argues on appeal that in reaching these conclusions, the trial

court did not properly apply the law and failed to give proper

deference to the magistrate judge who issued the Warrant. We agree

and reverse for the reasons set forth below.

The Affidavit recites the following. On February 1, 2020,

officers from the Roswell Police Department responded to a report

of a shooting at a supermarket. When the officers arrived on the

scene, they discovered Leonardo lying on the pavement in the

parking lot with a gunshot wound to his torso. The officers also

located a plastic bag containing a large sum of U.S. currency.

Leonardo was transported to the hospital where he was pronounced

dead.

Witnesses at the scene told the police officers that they had

earlier seen an “unknown black male” exit the passenger side of a

black Dodge Charger and approach Leonardo. The man got into a

physical altercation with Leonardo, then pulled a gun out of his

waistband and fired one shot. Leonardo fell to the ground. The

2 unknown man got back into the Charger on the passenger side, and

the car sped northbound on Alpharetta Highway. Based on this

information, the officers consulted a nearby stationary license plate

reader (“LPR”) to search for any vehicles matching the witnesses’

description and determined that a matching car had passed the

LPR’s location a few minutes prior to the incident. A search of other

LPRs in the area revealed that the same black Dodge Charger had

been in the vicinity of a bank where Leonardo made a stop earlier in

the day, and video footage from a fast food restaurant showed that,

approximately 15 minutes before the shooting, a black Dodge

Charger was there at the same time Leonardo purchased food from

the restaurant.3 The Charger followed Leonardo’s truck out of the

restaurant’s parking lot and onto the roadway.

Video footage from a location across the street from the

supermarket showed Leonardo arriving there in his truck, followed

by a black Dodge Charger, which pulled in behind the truck. An

3 Police discovered a receipt for this purchase in Leonardo’s truck, leading them to obtain the video footage. 3 unknown person then exited the Charger and appeared to head

toward the truck. That same camera recorded the Charger exiting

the supermarket’s parking lot “at a high rate of speed” and heading

northbound on Alpharetta Highway.

The Roswell officers obtained the license plate number for the

black Dodge Charger from the LPRs and used that information to

identify the vehicle’s owner as James Travious English, Britton’s co-

defendant. The police later obtained a search warrant to obtain “call

detail records with historical cell tower and geographical location

data” for English’s cell phone number. The search warrant also

authorized the phone company to release “real time geo[graphic]

location pinging of the phone number.” From this information,

officers discovered that the movements of the phone mirrored the

movements of the Dodge Charger on the day of the shooting. Police

arrested English, and, after impounding the Charger, obtained a

warrant to search the vehicle. Britton’s fingerprints were discovered

inside the Charger, and English’s phone records showed that his

phone and Britton’s phone “had been communicating around the

4 time of Leonardo’s murder.”

On February 3, 2020, Roswell police applied for a search

warrant to T-Mobile for Britton’s phone records. The Affidavit stated

that one of the fingerprints in the Dodge Charger belonged to

Britton, who was found to have a criminal history including armed

robbery, thefts, and carrying a weapon in the commission of a felony.

The Affidavit also stated that from a review of English’s “historical

phone records[,] it was discovered that he was in extensive

communication with Britton around the time of the reported

crimes.” A Fulton County magistrate judge issued the Warrant to T-

Mobile for “[s]ubscriber information[,] call detail records,” “historical

GPS/cell tower location” records, and “real time GPS location

(pinging)” information for Britton’s cell phone.

Britton was arrested for Leonardo’s murder on February 11,

2020, and, on November 9, 2021, he filed a motion to suppress his

cell phone location records seized pursuant to the Warrant (the “cell

phone location records”).

Following a hearing, the trial court issued an order granting

5 the motion to suppress based on its findings that the Affidavit

contained both a material misrepresentation and a discrepancy that

undercut the Warrant’s validity. Specifically, the trial court found

that the Affidavit materially misrepresented that English was in

“extensive communication with Britton around the time of the

reported crimes” because cell phone records showed that on the day

of Leonardo’s shooting English’s phone and Britton’s phone

exchanged only thirteen calls, six of those calls were missed calls,

and the remaining seven only lasted a total of two minutes and forty-

two seconds. (Emphasis in original.) The trial court further found

that this “material falsehood” tainted the entire Affidavit, and that

without this “material falsehood,” the Affidavit lacked sufficient

evidence to support probable cause because the existence of Britton’s

fingerprint in English’s car that was seized two days after the

shooting did not place him in the car at the time of the shooting and

the only description of the alleged assailant was that he was an

“unknown black male,” and “Britton was not identified as being on

the scene or being the assailant or even being a black male.”

6 The trial court also questioned the veracity of the affiant due

to a discrepancy on the face of the Affidavit. The body of the Affidavit

began with the sentence: “The undersigned[,] Charles Jackson,

being duly sworn, deposes and says: I am a Georgia certified peace

officer charged with the duty of enforcing the criminal laws . . .” but

then further in the Affidavit, it states: “I, Detective Irving, am a

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888 S.E.2d 157, 316 Ga. 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-britton-ga-2023.