State v. Spratlin

305 Ga. 585
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 11, 2019
DocketS18A1158
StatusPublished

This text of 305 Ga. 585 (State v. Spratlin) 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. Spratlin, 305 Ga. 585 (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

305 Ga. 585 FINAL COPY

S18A1158. THE STATE v. SPRATLIN.

NAHMIAS, Presiding Justice.

Appellee DeJuan Spratlin was convicted of malice murder and a firearm

offense in connection with the shooting death of Edward Cobb. The trial court

granted Spratlin a new trial, however, on the ground that his trial counsel

provided ineffective assistance by failing to seek the exclusion of testimony and

comments about his post-arrest silence. The State appeals that ruling. As

explained below, we reverse the trial court’s order.

1. (a) In March 2012, a DeKalb County grand jury indicted Spratlin

and Isaiah Blackmon on charges of malice murder, felony murder, aggravated

assault on Cobb, aggravated assault on Stanton Gilliam, and possession of a

firearm during the commission of a felony. Spratlin and Blackmon were tried

together beginning on October 28, 2013.

The evidence presented at trial showed the following.1 According to

1 Because this appeal requires us to evaluate the strength of the evidence of Spratlin’s guilt, we do not describe the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdicts. Briana Abner, she called Blackmon on December 6, 2011, seeking to buy some

marijuana. Blackmon told her to pick up Spratlin, who had no car, because

Spratlin knew where to acquire the drugs. Spratlin called his former high school

classmate Gilliam and arranged to purchase a pound of marijuana at Gilliam’s

house. Abner picked up Spratlin and drove to the house; on the way, Spratlin

counted the $800 in cash that he was going to use to buy the drugs. When they

arrived, Spratlin and Abner entered Gilliam’s house and went with him to the

kitchen. Abner saw the candy and snacks that Gilliam and his housemates kept

there to sell to neighborhood children, and Spratlin bought Abner some candy.

Spratlin then called Blackmon to give him directions to the house because

Spratlin and Gilliam could not agree on a price for the marijuana. At this point,

Abner left the house to go wait in her car.

According to Gilliam, he called his friend and neighbor Cobb to come

over when Blackmon arrived because Gilliam felt uncomfortable about having

to deal with two people when he had been expecting to be dealing with Spratlin

alone. The men continued to negotiate, and after Cobb arrived, Blackmon

agreed to pay Gilliam $1,025 and handed over the money. Blackmon then put

the pound of marijuana in his coat, and the four men left the kitchen and headed

2 toward the front door. They passed through a front room with a pool table in the

middle; Gilliam was behind Cobb on one side of the pool table, and Spratlin was

behind Blackmon on the other side. Blackmon and Cobb reached the front door

at the same time, but as Cobb started to open the door, Blackmon turned, took

a gun out of his pocket, and said, “F**k this s**t, you know what it is, go ahead

and give me everything.” Gilliam threw the money onto the pool table near

Spratlin, and Cobb began to struggle with Blackmon over the gun. Gilliam

rushed over to help Cobb, but he heard a gunshot and backed away. Blackmon

then shot Gilliam in the upper leg; Gilliam fell against a wall, and Blackmon

shot him again in the back of the leg. Gilliam ran to a bedroom and hid in a

closet, where he heard several more gunshots followed by the alarm system’s

tone signaling that the front door had been opened. Gilliam did not see Spratlin

get involved in the fight between Blackmon and Cobb, did not see Spratlin with

a gun, and did not see Spratlin take any money off the table.

Abner, who had been waiting in her car, testified that after she heard the

gunshots, she started to drive away when she saw Spratlin run out of the house

in a panic saying, “They’re trying to rob me.” Spratlin got into Abner’s car and

they drove away. Abner did not see Blackmon leave the house, and she never

3 saw Spratlin with a gun.

Gilliam’s two housemates, Karalo Jackson and Rikeshia Andrews, had

been asleep but woke at the sound of gunfire. Jackson found Cobb lying on the

floor in the living room and called 911. Jackson and Andrews attempted to

resuscitate Cobb, but he died from his gunshot wounds. Gilliam was taken to

the hospital and recovered from his wounds. When the police searched the

crime scene, they found a number of small bags of marijuana in a pair of

Jackson’s pants in his room. Gilliam later testified that Jackson took 22 bags of

marijuana out of Cobb’s pockets before the police arrived. Gilliam told the

police that Spratlin and his associate had come over to purchase candy and then

attempted to rob him. When shown a photographic lineup that included both

Spratlin’s photo and Blackmon’s photo, Gilliam identified Spratlin (his former

classmate) but was unable to identify Blackmon. Gilliam, Jackson, and

Andrews did not tell the police that Spratlin and Blackmon had actually come

over to buy marijuana, although they admitted it at trial.

Experts testified that Cobb had a grazing gunshot wound to the back of the

head. He was shot through his arm and into his side by a .40-caliber bullet fired

from close range. The fatal wounds were caused by two .38-caliber bullets fired

4 into his back; there was no evidence about the range from which those shots

were fired. A bullet recovered from Gilliam’s leg was .40-caliber. Five more

bullets and eight cartridge cases — a mixture of .40-caliber and .38-caliber —

were found at the house. A firearms expert determined that at least two guns had

been fired during the incident, including a .40-caliber pistol and a .38 Special

or .357 Magnum revolver (but not a 380); because some of the bullets and

casings were fragments, it was possible that a 10mm pistol was also used.

Gilliam, Jackson, and Andrews each testified that they had no guns in the house,

and Gilliam testified that he and Cobb did not have any weapons and did not

attempt to rob Spratlin and Blackmon. A few days after the shooting, Blackmon

received text messages about two guns he was trying to sell — a .40-caliber and

a 380.

Spratlin was tracked to Alabama, where — 16 days after the shooting —

detectives found him with Blackmon and an unidentified woman. Both suspects

fled when the plainclothes detectives approached. Spratlin ran across the street

but was quickly apprehended; Blackmon was later found hiding a mile away.

A few days after the men were arrested, Gilliam saw Blackmon’s photo on a

mugshot website for DeKalb County, where Blackmon was listed as being

5 charged with housing a fugitive. Gilliam called one of the detectives

investigating the shooting and told him that “they had the shooter under the

wrong charge.” While in jail, Blackmon told his mother over the phone that he

“gave the gun to someone to get rid of.”

Neither defendant testified. Spratlin’s primary theory of defense was mere

presence. Spratlin’s counsel acknowledged that Spratlin set up the drug deal,

but argued that he was surprised by Blackmon’s spontaneous decision to rob and

shoot Gilliam and Cobb.

(b) During its case-in-chief, the State elicited testimony from three

witnesses regarding Spratlin’s pretrial silence. First, as mentioned above, Abner

testified that after she heard the gunshots, Spratlin ran toward her car and said,

“They’re trying to rob me.” The prosecutor then asked the following questions:

Q. Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
305 Ga. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-spratlin-ga-2019.