Thomas v. State

723 S.E.2d 885, 290 Ga. 653, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 742, 2012 WL 685758, 2012 Ga. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 5, 2012
DocketS11A1686
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 723 S.E.2d 885 (Thomas 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
Thomas v. State, 723 S.E.2d 885, 290 Ga. 653, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 742, 2012 WL 685758, 2012 Ga. LEXIS 253 (Ga. 2012).

Opinion

NAHMIAS, Justice.

Appellant Clifton Thomas challenges his convictions of numerous crimes, including malice murder, armed robbery, and aggravated assault, committed at two different convenience stores in Athens, Georgia, on the same night. 1 Finding no merit to his contentions, we affirm.

1. The evidence presented at trial, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, showed the following. Shortly after 3:30 a.m. on December 5, 2007, the police responded to a shooting at a convenience store in Athens. They discovered the store clerk, Djamal Atroune, lying on the floor, bleeding heavily from a gunshot wound to his back. Paramedics took the victim to the hospital, where he was *654 pronounced dead. Daphne Brown, who worked at another convenience store in Athens, was robbed at gunpoint around 4:00 a.m. on the same night. Eyewitness descriptions, as well as video surveillance tapes from the two stores, indicated that the perpetrator at both stores was a man of similar size wearing similar clothing, including a dark-colored hoodie and jeans and a thin black mask covering his nose and mouth. Brown provided information for a sketch of the robber and at trial identified Appellant as the robber, explaining that even though he wore a wave cap and a thin mask, she got a good look at his eyes and could see the shape of his nose and lips.

On the night of the crimes, Appellant was with two cousins and a friend until about 2:30 a.m. He was wearing a dark hoodie and jeans. Shortly before 2:30 a.m., the four had stopped at a convenience store just outside Athens. One of Appellant’s cousins and his friend identified Appellant in still photographs taken from that store’s video surveillance system, which showed that the clothes Appellant was wearing at that store matched the clothes worn by the robber at the two Athens stores.

In a statement to the police two days after the crimes, Appellant said that his girlfriend had been arrested for shoplifting before the crimes. Appellant and his girlfriend have one child, and his girlfriend has two other children. Appellant claimed that he had been at home with the children on the evening of December 4 and early morning hours of December 5. However, testimony from Sammie Hancock, the girlfriend’s mother, contradicted Appellant’s account of the events. On the evening of December 4, Hancock was with her daughter’s two children fathered by another man. Her daughter was not there because she had not yet posted bond after her shoplifting arrest. Hancock testified that Appellant dropped off his child at her house that evening and said that he was going to get his “baby out” and was going to “do something he hadn’t did in a long time.” She said Appellant was wearing a black hoodie and jeans. She also testified that the next morning, December 5, as she waited at the bus stop with the children, Appellant stopped by and asked if she had heard about the robberies and murder that had occurred, naming the incidents discussed above. She said she had not, and Appellant left.

Similar transaction evidence was also presented at trial. Appellant’s friend and co-worker, Dañero Alexander, testified that sometime in 2005 or 2006, he and Appellant were driving near Athens one night when Appellant told Alexander to pull over to a convenience store and park behind it, because he intended to rob it. Appellant put a black wave cap over his mouth. Alexander told Appellant that he did not want to participate, and Appellant said that he used to rob convenience stores in “country counties.” Appellant emphasized *655 that he never got caught because he parked the car behind the convenience store and had a driver waiting for him to return. Alexander refused to stop the car and drove home.

The State also introduced evidence of two armed robberies that Appellant committed in 1995, to which he pled guilty in 1996. The evidence showed that Appellant and two other boys used a gun to rob a man in front of an Athens nightclub about 3:00 a.m., then later that same day Appellant and another boy used a gun to rob a woman in the parking lot of a nearby church.

When viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence presented at trial and summarized above was sufficient to authorize a rational jury to find Appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes for which he was convicted. See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307, 319 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979). See also Vega v. State, 285 Ga. 32, 33 (673 SE2d 223) (2009) (“ Tt was for the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses and to resolve any conflicts or inconsistencies in the evidence.’ ” (citation omitted)).

2. Appellant contends that the trial court erred by permitting the State to introduce evidence of the two armed robberies he committed in 1995 as similar transactions. We disagree.

Evidence that a defendant has committed an independent offense or bad act is admissible if the State shows and the trial court rules that there is a sufficient connection or similarity between the independent offenses or acts and the crime charged so proof of the former tends to prove the latter. . . . [T]he proper focus is on the similarities, not the differences, between the separate crime and the crime in question.

Whitehead v. State, 287 Ga. 242, 249 (695 SE2d 255) (2010) (citation and punctuation omitted).

Contrary to Appellant’s contention, the 12-year period between the prior offenses and the new crimes did not compel exclusion of the similar transaction evidence, particularly because Appellant spent ten years of that time incarcerated for the 1995 robberies. See Ledford v. State, 289 Ga. 70, 83 (709 SE2d 239) (2011) (holding that the relevance of a similar 15-year-old crime was not eroded because the defendant was incarcerated for ten of the intervening years). Appellant also calls our attention to several differences between the 1995 armed robberies and the crimes in this case, but “the . . . crimes need not be carbon copies of one another to be admissible.” Moore v. State, 273 Ga. 11, 13 (537 SE2d 334) (2000). Here, the evidence showed that Appellant committed the two previous 1995 robberies *656 with a handgun on the same day at locations near each other in Athens. Based on these similarities to the crimes for which the Appellant was on trial, the trial court’s decision to admit the evidence to show motive, common plan, or scheme was not an abuse of discretion. See Moore v. State, 288 Ga. 187, 190 (702 SE2d 176) (2010) (“A trial court’s decision to admit similar transaction evidence will not be disturbed absent an abuse of discretion.”). We also note that the court properly gave the jury a detailed limiting instruction regarding their consideration of the similar transaction evidence.

3. Appellant claims that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a change of venue due to pretrial publicity. To succeed on this claim, Appellant must show either that the setting of the trial was inherently prejudicial or that the jury selection process showed actual prejudice to a degree that rendered a fair trial impossible. See Edmond v. State,

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723 S.E.2d 885, 290 Ga. 653, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 742, 2012 WL 685758, 2012 Ga. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-state-ga-2012.