Walker v. State

829 S.E.2d 121, 306 Ga. 44
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 3, 2019
DocketS19A0177.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 829 S.E.2d 121 (Walker 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
Walker v. State, 829 S.E.2d 121, 306 Ga. 44 (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

MELTON, Chief Justice.

*123**44Following a jury trial, Harvey Walker was found guilty of murder and related crimes in connection with the shooting and stabbing **45death of his ex-girlfriend, Kateria Benton.1 On appeal, Walker contends, among other things, that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict and that the trial court erred by allowing improper testimony and evidence of prior bad acts to be admitted at trial. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

1. In the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence presented at trial revealed that, around December 2014, Walker and Benton broke up over allegations of Walker cheating. However, in January 2015, Benton invited Walker to move into her apartment and stay in a separate bedroom. At that time, Benton lived with her niece, Shanise McGill. Around early March 2015, McGill overheard Benton and Walker arguing over Benton's password-protected cellular telephone.

On Friday, March 27, 2015, Benton told her neighbor, Blanche Holloway, that Walker was jealous and "too controlling," so she had told him to move out. Sometime that night, Walker attacked Benton in her master bedroom with a blunt object, leaving a pool of blood in the corner of the bedroom. Walker then fired a shot from a handgun that went into the bedroom ceiling. When Benton tried to escape to the kitchen, Walker fired a second shot, but this shot missed Benton. Walker fired a third time, and this time hit Benton in her back. When Benton fell to the kitchen floor, she was still alive, and Walker stabbed her repeatedly until she died. After stabbing Benton to death, Walker destroyed her phone, covered her with a sheet, and attempted to clean himself up in the bathroom. He then shot himself in the hand and cut his own wrist. The blood pattern on the floor of Benton's bedroom was consistent with someone standing over her and hitting her repeatedly with an object or a fist. A spent shell casing was found on Benton's bed, and there was a bullet hole in the ceiling consistent with a gun being pointed upward. In addition, blood marks on the walls of the kitchen, **46the dishwasher, and the stove were consistent with those left by someone struggling or attempting to escape. Lastly, DNA from an ammunition box found in the home matched Walker's, and Benton's blood was found on the magazine of the firearm.

On the morning after the murder, Walker called a friend and told her, "I might be going to jail," before calling 911. Around 7:30 a.m., emergency personnel responded to Walker's 911 call summoning them to Benton's apartment, where they found Benton dead, lying on her back in a pool of blood and partially covered with a sheet. When police arrived, Walker came out of the front door with his arms raised. Walker said to the responding officer, "I f* *ked up, I f* *ked up, I stabbed her" and "[s]he's in the kitchen." The officer observed two bloody knives on the floor, a handgun on the dining room table, and a spent shell casing under the table. Walker had a gunshot wound on his *124left hand and a deep laceration to his left wrist.

On the way to the hospital, Walker told a paramedic that he and Benton had gotten into an altercation where she shot him, and he then had to wrestle a butcher knife out of her hand. Walker testified at trial that he stabbed Benton "a couple" of times in self-defense. However, a medical examiner confirmed that Benton suffered one gunshot wound to her back right shoulder and a total of 27 sharp-force injuries, which included both stab wounds and incised wounds. In all, Benton suffered six stab wounds to her torso, one stab wound and nine incised wounds to her extremities, and three stab wounds and eight incised wounds to her head. One of the stab wounds to Benton's torso, which fractured her rib and hit an artery near her heart, killed her. The medical examiner also explained that many of Benton's wounds were consistent with defensive injuries suffered by someone trying to ward off an attack.2

The evidence presented at trial was sufficient to enable a rational trier of fact to reject Walker's claim that he had been acting in self-defense at the time that he shot and stabbed Benton and find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of malice murder and the other crimes of which he was convicted. Jackson v. Virginia , 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979). See also, e.g., Roper v. State , 281 Ga. 878 (1), 644 S.E.2d 120 (2007) (witness credibility is for the jury **47to decide, as is the question of justification; therefore, the jury is free to reject claim that defendant acted in self-defense).

2. Walker contends that the trial court erred by excluding his sister Helen Walker's potential testimony in which she would have stated that Walker told her after the shooting that "[Benton] tried to kill me." However, pretermitting the question of whether the trial court erred in excluding this testimony, any error was rendered harmless.3 To begin with, the testimony was somewhat cumulative of Walker's own testimony in which he claimed that he acted in self-defense and his statement to the paramedic and the responding officer in which he claimed that Benton had shot him and that he had to wrestle a knife out of her hand. See Nix v. State , 280 Ga. 141 (5), 625 S.E.2d 746 (2006) (the trial court's error, if any, in excluding hearsay testimony of defendant's mother, was harmless where the excluded testimony was largely cumulative of other evidence introduced at trial). Moreover, the evidence of Walker's guilt was overwhelming, including (1) evidence showing that Walker shot Benton in the back while she was trying to get away from him, which directly undermined his claim of self-defense; and (2) Walker's own admission to police that he had "f* *ked up" and stabbed Benton, where the evidence showed that Benton was stabbed or cut nearly 30 times. The overwhelming evidence showed that Walker shot Benton when she could no longer have been a threat to him and that he continued to brutally stab her to death after she had fallen as a result of being shot, not that he acted in self-defense. 4

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