State v. Kaiman Lamar Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 5, 2026
DocketA25A1975
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Kaiman Lamar Smith (State v. Kaiman Lamar Smith) 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
State v. Kaiman Lamar Smith, (Ga. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., MARKLE and PADGETT, JJ.

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. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

March 5, 2026

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A25A1975. THE STATE v. SMITH.

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

The State filed an accusation against Kaiman Lamar Smith, alleging one count

of driving a vehicle while under the influence of drugs and one count of driving

without headlights. The trial court granted Smith’s motion to suppress, and the State

appeals, arguing that the trial court erred because the officer had a reasonable

articulable suspicion for stopping Smith or, alternatively, had a good faith belief that

he observed a violation. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

When “reviewing a ruling on a motion to suppress, we review the trial court’s

factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo. In doing so, we

construe the evidence most favorably to the upholding of the trial court’s findings and judgment.” State v. Mikel, 321 Ga. 751, 757(2)(b) (917 SE2d 175) (2025) (citation and

quotation marks omitted).

So viewed, the record shows that on February 3, 2024, Deputy Kevin Ferguson

observed a car traveling on a Houston County parkway with “the passenger side

headlight burnt out.” After effectuating a traffic stop of the car, the deputy

approached the driver, later identified as Smith, and told Smith the reason for the stop

was “due to a missing headlight.” The deputy told Smith that he smelled the odor of

burnt marijuana and asked when he had last smoked. Upon searching the vehicle, the

deputy discovered a small amount of marijuana in a cigar pack on the passenger side

floorboard.

Officer Christopher Fussell joined the stop and conducted a field sobriety test

of Smith, and Smith was arrested for driving under the influence of marijuana

(“DUI”). Deputy Ferguson issued uniform traffic citations (“UTC”) to Smith for

DUI and for violating OCGA § 40-8-20, driving without headlights, noting “front

passenger side inop [sic].” The State later filed an accusation against Smith in which

it charged that Smith, inter alia, was driving “without displaying ... headlights.” The

State cited no statute in this charge.

2 Smith moved to suppress evidence from the incident, arguing that the deputy

lacked a reasonable articulable suspicion for stopping him because his headlights were

illuminated as shown by the deputy’s dashcam video.

At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Deputy Ferguson testified that while

patrolling after dark on the night in question, he noticed Smith’s vehicle because

“[t]he passenger headlight didn’t appear to be illuminated as ... it was supposed to

be.” Based on this, Deputy Ferguson, who was traveling toward Smith, turned around

and effectuated the stop. Deputy Ferguson testified that he had observed his dashcam

video from that night, and the video fairly and accurately represented the conditions

at the time. While the video was paused, the deputy identified Smith’s vehicle, and

he explained that the driver’s side headlight was much brighter than the passenger’s

side headlight. The Deputy stated that in addition to the statute that requires

headlights at night, another statute requires all vehicle equipment to be “working

properly.” After stopping the vehicle, Ferguson did not investigate the passenger

headlight any further. Figure 1 and Figure 2, infra, are screen captures from the video

and show Smith’s vehicle circled in yellow.

3 Figure 1

Figure 2

On cross-examination, Deputy Ferguson acknowledged that he did not cite

Smith for an improperly working headlight, and the UTC and incident report instead

referenced a “burnt out” or “missing” headlight. The Deputy also acknowledged that

all four headlights were illuminated in the video.

4 The State also called Officer Fussell, who had joined Ferguson to perform field

sobriety tests of Smith. He testified that he had seen Smith’s vehicle earlier in the

evening, noted to himself the “dim” passenger headlight, but declined to stop Smith

because he had pulled over another vehicle. On cross-examination, the officer

disputed that all four lights were illuminated as shown in the video, and he contended

that the video did not depict the actual brightness level:

[y]ou can see four points of light coming from the front of that vehicle, but I can’t determine if that’s a headlight on the passenger side. Which the night of the stop I know was not working. Compared to the driver’s side that is a larger, brighter area of the front of that vehicle. So, the body — or the in-car camera does not depict what we as officers see with our natural eye.

Officer Fussell testified that on his body-cam video, he made a statement about the

headlights at that time; however, the court’s order found that his body camera footage

“was not tendered into evidence.”

The trial court granted the motion to suppress, issuing an order, which it later

amended. In its order, the court first noted that the incident report stated that

Ferguson stopped Smith for a “burnt out headlight” and “missing headlight.” The

court then explained that although Ferguson testified that he initiated the stop because

5 of “a missing/improper headlight,” the court’s review of the video showed that

Smith’s headlights were “functioning and were on.” The court found that the deputy

admitted that the headlights were on, which contradicted his basis for the stop as

stated in the UTC and incident report. The court also found that Officer Fussell

testified that the headlights were not working “despite what the video may show.”

The court found that

[t]he evidence was clear and even admitted by the deputy that the headlights were on[; t]he charges do not match the incident report, or the narrative given by Deputy Ferguson[; a] charge or mention of failure to maintain equipment could have changed the outcome of this [m]otion[; and i]f the Defendant’s lights were on, which the evidence supports, then there was no [r]easonable [a]rticulable [s]uspicion for the stop.

The court went on to determine that, aside from the clear evidence that Smith did not

violate the headlight statute, under the totality of the circumstances Deputy Ferguson

was not acting in good faith when he stopped Smith. This appeal followed.

1. As an initial matter, despite the State appealing this case, it failed to ensure

that Deputy Ferguson’s dashcam video and his incident report were transmitted to

this Court for review. We remind the State that when it is the appellant, it is

6 responsible for ensuring that the record is complete and risks having this Court

decline to review any enumerations of error that require the missing portion of the

record. See Court of Appeals Rule 18(b) (“The appellant’s failure to complete the

record may also result in this Court declining to consider enumerations of error

related to the missing evidence.”). More troubling, however, is the fact that despite

tendering into evidence only Deputy Ferguson’s dashcam video, when this Court

requested from the trial court a copy of that recording, this Court instead received a

disc containing the dashcam video and also two other videos from Deputy Ferguson,

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State v. Kaiman Lamar Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kaiman-lamar-smith-gactapp-2026.