Velasco v. State

306 Ga. 888
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 7, 2019
DocketS19A0590
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 306 Ga. 888 (Velasco 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
Velasco v. State, 306 Ga. 888 (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

306 Ga. 888 FINAL COPY

S19A0590. VELASCO v. THE STATE.

NAHMIAS, Presiding Justice.

Appellant Urihaan Velasco was convicted of malice murder in

connection with the beating death of Quang Popham. Appellant

contends that the evidence presented at his trial was legally

insufficient to support his conviction; that the State failed to prove

venue; and that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by

failing to file a pretrial motion for immunity and by failing to request

a jury instruction on voluntary manslaughter. Finding no merit in

these contentions, we affirm.1

1. (a) Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the

1 Popham was killed on March 5, 2015. On July 15, 2015, a Clayton

County grand jury indicted Appellant for malice murder and felony murder based on aggravated assault. At a trial from October 16 to 19, 2017, the jury found Appellant guilty of both charges. The trial court sentenced him to serve life in prison for malice murder, and the felony murder count was vacated by operation of law. Appellant filed a timely motion for new trial, which he later amended with new counsel. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied the motion on October 22, 2018. Appellant then filed a timely notice of appeal, and the case was docketed in this Court for the April 2019 term and submitted for decision on the briefs. evidence presented at Appellant’s trial showed the following. In the

fall of 2014, Appellant, who was 20 years old and homeless, began

staying with Maria Ramirez and her granddaughter Guadalupe

Pantoja in their mobile home in Clayton County. Ramirez’s friend

Quang Popham, who was 66 years old, often visited the home and

gave Pantoja rides to work in his car. On one occasion, Popham gave

a ride to both Pantoja and Appellant. On the evening of March 4,

2015, Pantoja phoned Popham and asked if he would give her a ride

to work the next day at 10:00 a.m.; Popham agreed. Appellant was

within earshot of Pantoja during the call.

Around 7:30 on the following rainy morning, Ramirez saw

Appellant, who was wearing slippers, go into the kitchen and then

leave the mobile home. Around 9:30 a.m., Ramirez heard Popham’s

car arrive. She then heard footsteps on the front porch and a sound

like a groan. Pantoja, who was getting ready for work, also heard

the sound and looked outside. She saw Popham’s car parked in the

space in front of the home, but she did not see Popham.

Minutes passed, and Ramirez and Pantoja wondered why

2 Popham had not come inside. Ramirez went to the front porch and

saw Appellant changing his clothes, which were soaking wet.

Appellant then went outside. He was carrying Popham’s keys, and

he walked to Popham’s car. Ramirez and Pantoja followed, and

Pantoja saw blood on the steps to the porch. Appellant said that he

would take Pantoja to work and that Popham was waiting for them

at the entrance of the mobile home park. Ramirez and Pantoja

thought that was odd, because Popham did not lend his car to other

people. Ramirez and Pantoja asked Appellant where Popham was;

Appellant smiled and laughed as he told them that he “beat”

Popham and put him behind the mobile home.

Ramirez then ran to find Raul Cruz-Rios, another family

member who lived nearby, and Appellant followed her. When they

arrived at Cruz-Rios’s mobile home, Ramirez told him to ask

Appellant where Popham was. Cruz-Rios did so, and Appellant said

“he had got into a fight with [Popham] and hit him with a hammer,

but [Popham] was okay.” Appellant then led Cruz-Rios to a small,

fenced dog pen behind Ramirez’s mobile home. Popham’s dead body

3 was face down on the ground inside the dog pen; he was bleeding

from his head and his pants were around his ankles. Cruz-Rios

asked Appellant why he had killed Popham, and Appellant said that

he needed money and wanted to take Popham’s car. Pantoja called

911, and the responding officers took Appellant into custody.

Investigators found blood on the ground in front of Popham’s

car, drag marks in the mud and a blood trail that led toward the

area behind the mobile home, and blood spatter inside the dog pen.

Near the dog pen, investigators found a small, blue-handled

hammer that Ramirez kept in the kitchen. Appellant’s slippers were

located underneath a nearby shed. On the front porch of the mobile

home, investigators found Appellant’s wet clothing. Testing later

showed that Popham’s blood was on the hammer, one of the slippers,

and the clothing.

Later that day, a detective interviewed Appellant; the recorded

interview was played for the jury. Appellant told the following story.

He had been outside walking when Popham, a man he had never

seen before, parked in front of the mobile home and got out of his

4 car. Popham said something to Appellant in a language he did not

understand, so he walked over to Popham. Popham then waved his

fingers in front of Appellant’s mouth and touched Appellant’s face.

Appellant used his fist to hit Popham twice in the face, and Popham

hit Appellant. Popham ran toward the area behind the mobile home,

but he tripped and fell. Appellant then grabbed a hammer that was

on the ground near Popham and used it to hit Popham five times in

his jaw. During the interview, Appellant repeatedly denied that he

stayed in Ramirez’s mobile home, that he had changed his clothes

after he killed Popham, and that he told Cruz-Rios that he killed

Popham because he wanted his car. The detective asked Appellant

if Popham had threatened him and if Popham had a weapon;

Appellant answered no to both questions.

Appellant testified at trial and added new details to his story.

He claimed that after Popham ran behind the mobile home, he and

Popham continued fighting, and he saw the hammer in Popham’s

hand. He was afraid that Popham would kill him, so he grabbed the

hammer, hit Popham a few times with it, and then threw it on the

5 ground. Popham stood up, retrieved the hammer, and tried to hit

Appellant, but Appellant used a nearby sledgehammer to block the

blows. Popham began to collapse, and Appellant took the hammer

from him, picked him up, and carried him into the dog pen.

Appellant claimed that he did not hit Popham with the hammer

until they were behind the mobile home; that he did not drag

Popham’s body; and that he did not hit Popham with the hammer

while he was inside the dog pen. Appellant also claimed that he

changed out of his wet clothes because Ramirez told him to do that.

A crime scene investigator testified that the blood trail and

drag marks on the ground indicated that Popham was attacked near

his car in front of the mobile home and then dragged to the dog pen,

and that the blood spatter inside the dog pen showed that Popham

was attacked again there. In addition, the detective who interviewed

Appellant shortly after the murder testified that Appellant was not

injured, despite his claim that Popham had hit him. The medical

examiner who performed Popham’s autopsy testified that Popham

had “astonishing” multiple blunt-force injuries and fractures on his

6 face; nose and ear lacerations consistent with being struck by the

claw end of a hammer; forehead injuries consistent with falling onto

concrete; several fractures on the sides and back of his head;

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