State v. Mizell

705 S.E.2d 154, 288 Ga. 474
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 24, 2011
DocketS10A2064
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 705 S.E.2d 154 (State v. Mizell) 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. Mizell, 705 S.E.2d 154, 288 Ga. 474 (Ga. 2011).

Opinion

NAHMIAS, Justice.

Willie Mizell was convicted of malice murder and other crimes in May 2005. Almost five years later, the trial court granted Mizell a new trial. Several months after that, the trial court granted Mizell’s motion to dismiss his indictment, ruling that the State had violated his due process rights by acting in bad faith in failing to preserve apparently exculpatory evidence. The State appeals from that order, and we reverse.

1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence at trial showed that Mizell beat a friend, Cassandra Bryant, to death on October 7, 2003, and put her body under some kudzu near a dumpster in the apartment complex where Mizell lived. In another dumpster at the apartment complex, the police found a rolled up orange towel. Inside were part of the victim’s broken dentures, six cigarette butts, a pair of men’s underwear, bloody shoes, two wash cloths, and a blue slipper. In a subsequent search of Mizell’s apartment, the police found the other half of the victim’s broken dentures, seven more cigarette butts, an orange towel like the one found in the second dumpster, and the other blue slipper.

On the day after the crimes, Mizell gave a statement to the police, in which he claimed that Stanley Brealand had borrowed his apartment and committed the murder. Later that month, the lead investigator sent numerous items of evidence to the GBI crime lab, including the cigarette butts from the apartment and the dumpster, DNA samples from Mizell and Brealand, and a piece of carpet taken from Mizell’s apartment. On March 1, 2004, Mizell filed a general motion to preserve and permit testing of physical evidence. Later in March, the GBI returned the evidence to the Atlanta Police Department, with the note that “[t]his case may contain evidence that must be preserved in accordance with OCGA § 17-5-56." 1 In June 2004, Mizell filed a particularized motion to preserve and test physical evidence, specifically listing the two sets of cigarette butts.

In December 2004, apparently unaware that the cigarette butts were no longer in the possession of the GBI crime lab, the State *475 obtained an order from the trial court directing the crime lab to conduct DNA testing of the dumpster cigarette butts. The order noted that the “[t]he State contends that this evidence is material in its prosecution of this case.” The crime lab, however, indicated that it no longer had the cigarette butts and that it would conduct the test upon receiving the butts from the State.

Testing of the dumpster cigarette butts was not conducted before Mizell’s March 2005 trial. Mizell did not testify at trial, but his defense, as asserted in his custodial statement, was that Brealand had committed the murder. Brealand, however, testified at trial and denied being in the area on the night of the crime, and his alibi was supported by testimony from his roommates and friends. A crime lab expert testified that the carpet from Mizell’s apartment contained the victim’s blood. She explained that the cigarette butts were not tested because the crime lab has a policy, due to budget and staffing constraints, that it will not test multiple items of evidence once it has tested evidence connecting the defendant with the crime. On cross-examination, the expert testified that DNA can be obtained from a cigarette butt and that if DNA had been obtained from one of the butts submitted for testing, she could have compared it to Brealand’s DNA sample.

After he was convicted, Mizell obtained new counsel and filed a motion for new trial, contending that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance in failing to present evidence regarding comparison testing of any DNA found on the cigarette butts obtained from the apartment with the DNA of Brealand. During the new trial proceedings, the trial court also asked why DNA testing had never been performed on the cigarette butts found in the dumpster, as directed by its pre-trial order. The State subsequently found the seven cigarette butts from the apartment, apparently in the District Attorney’s evidence room, and had them tested, but the butts from the dumpster could not be located. At a motion for new trial hearing, the State introduced evidence, over objection, that one of the butts from the apartment contained the DNA of both the victim and Mizell and excluded Brealand.

At the end of a motion for new trial hearing on March 17, 2010, the trial court indicated that it would continue the hearing on March 24. However, on March 19, 2010, the trial court granted the motion for new trial on the sole ground that the court “is persuaded that the issue of the State’s failure to comply with the Court’s order and test evidence which could have been exculpatory or inculpatory is dis-positive of the motion.” Mizell then filed a motion to dismiss the indictment based on the State’s failure to preserve both sets of cigarette butts. On July 14, 2010, the trial court granted the motion based on the failure to preserve the butts found in the dumpster. The *476 dismissal order stated that Mizell’s defense was that Brealand had committed the murder, that Mizell’s “ability to impeach Brealand’s testimony and alibi by placing Brealand at the scene would have been pivotal in the defense of the case,” and that Brealand’s DNA was available for testing. The court concluded that the “exculpatory value of the missing cigarette butts should have been apparent prior to the[ir] loss.” The court also concluded that the State acted in bad faith in failing to preserve the evidence, because the State violated OCGA § 17-5-56 (a) and because the State disregarded Mizell’s notice to preserve the evidence and the court’s order to test the evidence.

2. The State contends that the trial court erred in granting Mizell’s motion to dismiss the indictment based on the State’s failure to preserve the cigarette butts from the dumpster. We agree.

“In dealing with the failure of the state to preserve evidence which might have exonerated the defendant, a court must determine both whether the evidence was material and whether the police acted in bad faith in failing to preserve the evidence. Arizona v. Youngblood, 488 U. S. 51 (109 SC 333, 102 LE2d 281) (1988). To meet the standard of constitutional materiality, the evidence must possess an exculpatory value that was apparent before it was destroyed, and be of such a nature that the defendant would be unable to obtain comparable evidence by other reasonably available means. California v. Trombetta, 467 U. S. 479 (104 SC 2528, 81 LE2d 413) (1984).”

Krause v. State, 286 Ga. 745, 752 (691 SE2d 211) (2010) (citation omitted).

With regard to materiality,

the fact that evidence may be “potentially useful” in a defendant’s attempt at exoneration is insufficient to sustain a claim that the defendant has suffered an abridgment of due process of law due to the destruction or loss of the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
705 S.E.2d 154, 288 Ga. 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mizell-ga-2011.