Wilkes v. State

471 S.E.2d 332, 221 Ga. App. 390, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 2146, 1996 Ga. App. LEXIS 507
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 14, 1996
DocketA96A0093
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 471 S.E.2d 332 (Wilkes v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkes v. State, 471 S.E.2d 332, 221 Ga. App. 390, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 2146, 1996 Ga. App. LEXIS 507 (Ga. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

McMurray, Presiding Judge.

Defendant was charged in a special presentment with armed robbery (two counts), kidnapping, burglary, and violation of the Georgia Controlled Substances Act (two counts). Prior to trial, the State’s attorney “ask[ed] the Court to dismiss the last two counts,” and the remaining charges were tried before a jury. The evidence adduced at his trial, including the testimony of defendant’s accomplice and defendant’s custodial confession, revealed the following: Using a .25 caliber automatic handgun, defendant took cash and prescription narcotics from the immediate presence of Lauren Smith, the manager of Apothecary Shoppe Pharmacy on Prestley Mill Road, in Douglas County, Georgia. Lauren Smith affirmed that another *391 employee, “Tammy Daniell[,] was working behind the cash register[, . . . a]nd David Gammon was behind the counter where the pharmacy materials are.” Defendant asked for an item and followed Lauren Smith to the counter, when she “felt a little shove.” “Tammy took a deep sigh and turned around and that’s when [Lauren Smith] saw the pistol.” Defendant “told [them] to move over to the side, and he told Dave that he wanted the drugs.” David Gammon “handed [defendant] the keys to the narcotics box.” Lauren Smith “took the money out of the register . . . [and] put it in his bag.” Using handcuffs and duct tape that he brought into the store with him, defendant “handcuffed all three [employees] and then taped [their] legs together.” Defendant ordered them “to get in the back of the room, the storage room.”

Detective Don Walker of the Douglasville Police Department responded to a “hold-up alarm activated at that location.” As Detective Walker entered the pharmacy, defendant “came flying to the back of the storage room, like he was trying to find a way out.” He eventually fled “out the back door.” Detective Walker, returned to his patrol car to summon help and saw defendant run “towards the parking lot.” A “brown Chrysler-type vehicle slowly move[d] out of a parking space.” This vehicle refused Detective Walker’s command to halt, evaded a backup officer, and drove all the way around the Apothecary Shoppe, “back towards the rear of the building out into a grassy area.” The passengers fled into the tall grass. As Detective Walker was establishing a “perimeter with the car that was then left, a radio dispatch [announced] a hostage situation nearby, [at the] Lane residence on Prestley Mill Road. . . .” By the time Detective Walker arrived at the Lane residence, the hostage situation had ended. There, Detective Walker “observed the same individual that [he] had seen in the Apothecary Shoppe ... as well as the white female [driving] the brown Chrysler. . . .” Marian McCartney, the daughter of Harold Lane and Sue Lane, was at her parents’ residence, speaking to her mother (who was not at home) on the telephone when she noticed defendant, “that man right there[,] standing at the door.” She turned away, but when she looked back, she said, “my God, he’s got a gun, and slammed the phone down.” Defendant “grabbed [Marian McCartney] by the arm.” He “demanded that [she] drive him to the expressway without getting on Prestley Mill Road.” Marian McCartney affirmed that defendant had “a gun in his hand the whole time[, . . . and so defendant, his female accomplice, and Marian McCartney] got into [her] car,” where defendant grabbed her again. Before Marian McCartney could exit her parents’ driveway, they “were surrounded by the sheriff’s department and police.” At that point, “the girl in the back seat was yelling for her purse, and [defendant] got the purse and took out a cigarette cellophane of like eight or so white *392 pills and took them all.” In so doing, defendant “laid it [(the gun)] down.” Marian McCartney “took the gun and opened the door and ran.”

Iris Elaine Johnson, defendant’s accomplice, confirmed that she and defendant went to the Apothecary Shoppe “[t]o rob it.” She was looking as defendant “kicked it [the door] open,” at the Lane residence. She also confirmed that Marian McCartney “was at gunpoint, didn’t have much choice,” when she left her parents’ house with defendant. In a custodial statement, defendant “blurted out you got me redhanded, . . . and he . . . continue[d] to volunteer information,” without requesting an attorney.

The jury found defendant guilty on all four counts. His motion for new trial was denied, and this appeal followed. Held'.

1. Defendant first enumerates the denial of his motion for new trial on the ground that his custodial statements were involuntary and should have been suppressed, due to his ingestion of several tablets of methadone immediately before his arrest.

At the hearing on the voluntariness of defendant’s custodial statements, Douglas County Sheriff’s Detective Eddie Morris testified that defendant “seemed coherent, alert to the questions and was able to answer the questions . . . asked him.” A tape of this interview was played for the trial court, on which defendant expressly stated: “I’m not intoxicated.” Rather, he took ten 10-milligram pills of methadone “so [he] wouldn’t be sick for a day or so.”

“ ‘The trial court’s findings as to factual determinations and credibility relating to the admissibility of statements will be upheld on appeal unless they are clearly erroneous. (Cit.)’ Henson v. State, 258 Ga. 600, 601 (1) (372 SE2d 806) (1988). Based on the testimony of the detective who interviewed the [defendant in the case sub judice], the trial court was authorized to conclude that [defendant’s] waiver of his constitutional rights was voluntarily and knowingly made, and was not the product of a will overborne by the influence of narcotics.” Weddington v. State, 191 Ga. App. 738, 740 (7) (382 SE2d 661).

2. Next, defendant contends he was erroneously “made to appear before the jury in a prison uniform.” The record reflects that defendant made numerous pretrial motions, including a motion for continuance, on various grounds. But he did not object to wearing a bright orange jump suit until the second day of trial, i.e., after the jury had been impaneled and sworn, and the presentation of evidence was well under way. The record further reflects that the Sheriff’s office had no civilian clothes that would fit defendant, who had gained “thirty or forty pounds . . .” since his arrest. Defendant further spurned an offer of clothes “from the Salvation Army, [explaining] ‘I’m not a bum on the street, and I don’t wear clothes like that.’ ”

*393 “Although the defendant had the right to wear civilian clothes rather than prison clothing at his trial ([cit.]), this is a procedural right that may be lost where there is a failure to assert it properly. [Cits.] See also Timmons v. State, 223 Ga. 450 (1) (156 SE2d 68), and cit.” Sharpe v. State, 119 Ga. App. 222 (1) (166 SE2d 645). In the case sub judice, we hold that defendant waived any valid objection to his attire by failing to urge this matter before trial. Kerr v. State, 194 Ga. App. 604, 605 (3) (391 SE2d 449).

3. Defendant contends the trial court erred in permitting the State’s attorney to place his character in issue.

Defendant’s Exhibit 1 “consists of a five-page letter handwritten, signed by Elaine [Johnson].” This was tendered by defendant during his cross-examination of Elaine Johnson.

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Bluebook (online)
471 S.E.2d 332, 221 Ga. App. 390, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 2146, 1996 Ga. App. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkes-v-state-gactapp-1996.