Taylor v. State ( 2023 )


Menu:
  •  NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court
    Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the
    opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any
    prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and
    official text of the opinion.
    In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: February 21, 2023
    S22A1003. TAYLOR v. THE STATE.
    WARREN, Justice.
    After a jury trial in December 2013, Jeremy Gene Taylor was
    convicted of the malice murder of Eric Bolar and the aggravated
    battery of Seaborn Roberts.1 Taylor raises five claims of error on
    appeal: that (1) the trial court abused its discretion by excluding
    evidence about Taylor’s mental health; (2) the trial court erred by
    sentencing Taylor based on an inference that Taylor did not accept
    1 The crimes occurred on August 3, 2011. On August 23, 2011, a
    Richmond County grand jury indicted Taylor on three counts: malice murder,
    felony murder, and aggravated battery. After a jury trial from December 16 to
    18, 2013, Taylor was found guilty on all counts. On December 18, 2013, Taylor
    was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for malice
    murder and 20 years to be served consecutively for aggravated battery. The
    felony-murder count was vacated by operation of law. Taylor filed a timely
    motion for new trial on December 27, 2013, which he amended on November
    24, 2020. On January 26, 2022, the trial court denied Taylor’s motion for new
    trial, as amended. Taylor timely filed a notice of appeal on February 7, 2022.
    The case was docketed in this Court to the August 2022 term and submitted
    for a decision on the briefs.
    responsibility or feel remorse for his crimes because he did not plead
    guilty; (3) the trial court abused its discretion by denying Taylor’s
    motion for a mistrial after a defense witness opined on the legal
    definition of aggravated battery; (4) Taylor received ineffective
    assistance of counsel because his lawyer did not investigate and
    present an insanity defense; and (5) Taylor received ineffective
    assistance of counsel because his lawyer failed to introduce
    mitigation evidence based on Taylor’s mental health.
    We conclude that the trial court did not plainly err by excluding
    evidence about Taylor’s mental health because Taylor affirmatively
    waived the argument he now raises on appeal about mental health
    evidence being excluded at trial, and that the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion by denying Taylor’s motion for a mistrial
    because the witness’s testimony was based on personal knowledge
    and because lay witnesses are allowed to testify about an “ultimate
    issue” in a case.   With respect to Taylor’s claims of ineffective
    assistance of counsel, we conclude that trial counsel’s investigation
    into Taylor’s mental health and his decision not to raise an insanity
    2
    defense were not constitutionally deficient; that aspects of counsel’s
    mitigation strategy were not constitutionally deficient; and that
    certain other aspects of trial counsel’s mitigation strategy did not
    prejudice Taylor. Finally, we conclude that Taylor has not met his
    burden to show that the trial court penalized him for exercising his
    right to trial.   We therefore affirm Taylor’s convictions and
    sentences.
    1. (a) The evidence presented at trial showed the following. On
    August 3, 2011, Taylor was living at the Hale Foundation, a “sober
    living community for men,” and was in his first 30 days at the
    Foundation—a period of time when residents have most of their
    days scheduled for them.
    That morning, Roberts and Eric Fairfax—who had been living
    at the Foundation longer than 30 days—were sitting behind a house
    in the Foundation parking lot. Roberts and Fairfax noticed that
    Taylor was walking around the lot instead of attending a required
    meeting.     Roberts, who knew Taylor before their time at the
    Foundation, asked Taylor why he was not in a meeting. According
    3
    to Fairfax, Taylor’s response was something to the effect of he “didn’t
    feel like being there, didn’t want to be there[,] and didn’t need it.”
    Taylor then approached Roberts and Fairfax. Although Roberts and
    Fairfax provided conflicting testimony about whether Roberts asked
    another question or said nothing else, they both stated that once
    Taylor reached Roberts and Fairfax, Taylor punched Roberts in the
    face once, knocking him unconscious. Fairfax testified that Taylor
    then “backed away for a second.” Fairfax had “never seen anybody
    get hit that hard [his] entire life;” “the first hit . . . was so hard and
    so fast that [Fairfax] questioned whether it had actually happened.”
    Taylor “hit [Roberts] four more times.”
    Fairfax intervened after Taylor hit Roberts for a fifth time.
    Fairfax asked Taylor to stop hitting Roberts and to not hit him.
    Taylor responded, “[Fairfax], I’m not going to hit you,” and then,
    according to Fairfax, “seemed calm.” Roberts and Fairfax testified
    that neither had any issues with Taylor leading up to the attack.
    Fairfax called the police and Deputy Chris Hill responded to
    the scene. Roberts and Fairfax later testified that they did not speak
    4
    to the police that day, but Deputy Hill testified that he spoke with
    Roberts and that once he arrived, someone—he “believe[d] it was
    [Roberts]”—told him that Taylor “punched [Roberts] in the face for
    no reason.” Deputy Hill, who saw that Roberts had a scratch on his
    forehead that had been bleeding, did not “speak to any medical
    personnel at the scene,” so he was “not aware of the full extent of
    [Roberts’s] injuries.”
    Deputy Hill then “turn[ed his] attention” to Taylor. While still
    at the Foundation, Taylor admitted to Deputy Hill that he hit
    Roberts. When Deputy Hill asked Taylor why, Taylor responded
    that he did it “because he felt like it.” Taylor also told Deputy Hill
    that he drank alcohol the night before but that he had not consumed
    alcohol or drugs that day. Deputy Hill later testified that Taylor
    seemed “in control of his faculties” and that he did not smell alcohol
    on Taylor. When Deputy Hill transported Taylor to jail, Taylor did
    not “give [Deputy Hill] any trouble” or “appear to be agitated . . . ,
    angry or upset[.]”
    5
    Ponyetta Odums, an employee in the Richmond County
    Sheriff’s department, filled out a medical intake form for Taylor
    while booking him at the jail. Odums later testified that Taylor did
    not appear to be angry or intoxicated, but that Taylor told her that
    he had been drinking at some point recently.
    Odums booked Taylor on a disorderly-conduct charge. 2 Taylor
    was placed in a holding cell with five other people, including Earl
    Bolar, a homeless man who had been charged with criminal
    trespassing.    Odums also booked Bolar, whom she described as
    appearing “very jolly.” She further testified that Bolar was “just
    going to go asleep” once he got in the holding cell and that “[h]e went
    inside and laid down.”
    After Taylor and Bolar were in the cell together for some time,
    jail employee Maria Hurlburt let one of the prisoners out of the
    holding cell to make a phone call and then escorted him back to the
    2  The State’s charging decision was made after Deputy Hill saw only a
    “small mark” on Roberts’s head. After the State learned of “the extent of
    [Roberts’s] facial fractures and surgery he would need,” it upgraded Taylor’s
    charge to aggravated battery.
    6
    cell. Around 15 to 20 minutes later, Hurlburt and Odums were
    walking past that holding cell when they looked inside and saw
    Bolar on the floor. He was “fighting to catch his breath,” with blood
    covering his nose and mouth. He could not speak and was “jerking
    his head” with “blood just running out” and had “defecated on
    himself.”
    When Odums asked the inmates who attacked Bolar, Taylor
    responded, “I did it.” When asked why, he responded, “because I felt
    like it.” Bolar was taken to the hospital and placed on life support.
    He died two weeks later.
    Taylor was ultimately charged with malice murder and felony
    murder for attacking and killing Bolar and aggravated battery for
    attacking Roberts.
    (b) Before trial, Taylor’s pre-trial counsel considered raising
    an insanity defense on behalf of Taylor.       To that end, pre-trial
    counsel sought and obtained two court-ordered evaluations in which
    a psychologist offered her opinion on Taylor’s competency to stand
    trial and his criminal responsibility at the time of the alleged crimes.
    7
    The psychologist’s first evaluation (and resulting report) focused on
    Taylor’s competency to stand trial because, as the report reflects,
    Taylor initially “declined to have his mental state at the time of the
    alleged offenses assessed.” But, at Taylor’s request, the psychologist
    later completed a second evaluation and report addressing Taylor’s
    criminal responsibility. As explained more below in Division 5, the
    resulting reports recounted Taylor’s past struggles with substance
    abuse and mental health, but ultimately concluded that Taylor was
    competent to stand trial and was not insane when he allegedly
    attacked Roberts and Bolar.      The second report also contained
    Taylor’s account of how he attacked Bolar after his cellmates made
    “racist comments” and left Taylor with the impression that “they
    were all going to jump” him. Taylor’s trial counsel decided against
    asserting an insanity defense, and trial counsel did not seek to admit
    the reports into evidence.
    Even so, Taylor’s trial counsel mentioned Taylor’s mental
    health several times outside the presence of the jury. For example,
    the transcript shows that trial counsel remarked how “the
    8
    evaluations” stated that Taylor might have “delusional thinking . . .
    induced by probably substance abuse” but it did not rise “to the level
    of an insanity defense.” Later, when Taylor asked during trial why
    his mental health was not being discussed before the jury, trial
    counsel remarked that he had “not seen anything” indicating that
    Taylor had “a defense based on mental health.” Likewise, the trial
    court commented that a diagnosis such as bipolar disorder or
    depression was “not equivalent or equal to” the defense of “not guilty
    by reason of insanity and/or guilty but mentally ill.” The trial court
    also expressed its understanding that Taylor had undergone
    “forensic . . . or mental health evaluations . . . which did not support”
    raising a mental health defense. To that end, the trial court noted
    that it wanted to be “clear for the record” that Taylor’s mental health
    had “been investigated by [his] attorney.” Taylor’s trial counsel
    responded that “[t]he most the evaluation tells us is that Mr. Taylor
    was probably operating from a paranoid perspective and that would
    have been induced by his substance abuse” when he allegedly
    9
    committed the crimes, to which the court responded that “voluntary
    intoxication of whatever sort is not a defense.”
    (c)   Before trial, the State offered Taylor a plea bargain in
    which Taylor would be sentenced to life with the possibility of parole
    for Bolar’s murder and a concurrent sentence of an unknown time
    for committing aggravated battery against Roberts. Taylor did not
    accept that offer and elected to go to trial instead. At trial, the four
    inmates who had been in the holding cell with Taylor and Bolar
    testified about the attack on Bolar. They each testified that when
    Taylor was placed in the cell, Bolar was there and already sleeping.
    In one inmate’s words, Taylor walked up to Bolar sometime later
    and “just started beating” him and then “kicking . . . [him] in the
    face.” Each of the four inmates testified that Bolar was sleeping
    when Taylor attacked him. Three inmates testified that no one in
    the cell talked to Taylor and that Taylor did not talk to any of them
    before the attack. The fourth testified that he never spoke to Taylor
    and that Taylor and Bolar never spoke to each other.           All four
    testified that Taylor attacked Bolar for no apparent reason. The
    10
    attack was captured by a surveillance camera, and a video recording
    of it was played for the jury.
    The medical examiner who performed Bolar’s autopsy, Dr.
    Daniel Brown, determined that Bolar’s cause of death was homicide
    from blunt-force trauma. Taylor did not present any witnesses. His
    trial counsel asked for and obtained jury instructions on the lesser-
    included offenses of voluntary and involuntary manslaughter on the
    malice and felony-murder charges and battery on the aggravated
    battery charge.    Taylor was found guilty of all counts: malice
    murder, felony murder, and aggravated battery.
    (d) Taylor’s mother, father, and pastor spoke briefly at
    sentencing. So did Bolar’s mother, sister, and daughter. Taylor also
    spoke at sentencing, saying: “I just want to say I’m sorry. But I also
    want to say I’m sorry for taking an innocent man’s life.” The trial
    court said that it was “clear from the evidence” that the crimes
    Taylor was convicted of resulted from Taylor’s history of substance
    abuse, and that the court was “convinced that had there not been
    substance abuse involved in this case,” the crimes Taylor was
    11
    convicted of never would have occurred. It continued: “Mr. Taylor,
    you did not accept responsibility for your actions. The State prior to
    trial in this case offered you an opportunity to accept responsibility,
    and offered you a sentence of life with the possibility of parole.”
    After Taylor briefly responded, the trial court said, “[y]ou declined
    to accept that and you declined to accept or admit any responsibility
    for this action.”
    Trial counsel reminded the court that Taylor had undergone
    two mental health evaluations and that Taylor experienced
    “paranoid thinking.” Trial counsel asserted that Taylor “honestly
    believed” that there was a “threat” in the cell with him and that
    Taylor “had to defend himself” when he killed Bolar. Trial counsel
    then asked that the court not “punish” Taylor “for exercising his
    right to trial,” to which the court responded: “the sentence is not
    intended to punish you for exercising your right to trial. It does
    reflect the fact that you did not accept any responsibility or show
    any remorse for your actions in causing the death of an individual.”
    12
    Taylor responded that he had “accepted responsibility.” He
    said that he told his “attorney several times that [he] would accept
    [a sentence for] manslaughter because that is what [he] felt like” he
    committed; he “did not know that [his] hands would cause that kind
    of damage.” He said he was “sorry for what [he had] done,” and that
    he “accepted[ed] responsibility.”     The trial court said that it
    “underst[oo]d,” but that the facts necessary to support manslaughter
    “were not present in this case at all.”    Taylor did not proffer a
    mental-health expert at sentencing.       The court then sentenced
    Taylor to life in prison without parole for Bolar’s murder and 20
    years consecutive for aggravated battery. The reason the court gave
    for its sentence was that Taylor failed to “accept any responsibility
    or show any remorse” for his actions.
    2.   Taylor contends that the trial court abused its discretion
    by granting the State’s motion to exclude from evidence portions of
    the medical intake form Taylor filled out at booking that pertained
    to his mental health. On appeal, Taylor argues that portions of the
    medical intake form were admissible as lay evidence of a “mental
    13
    health defense.”    But Taylor affirmatively waived any “mental
    health defense” at trial, so this enumeration fails.
    (a) At trial, Taylor sought to introduce portions of the medical
    intake form that he filled out while being booked in jail. The form
    included 27 yes-or-no questions, and Taylor wanted to introduce his
    answers to questions pertaining to his mental health history. In
    particular, he had provided affirmative responses to question 11,
    which asked whether he had “any Mental Health problems,” and
    question 16, which asked whether he had “ever tried to hurt or kill”
    himself.
    The prosecutor made an oral motion in limine to prevent the
    answers from being admitted, contending that all of Taylor’s
    answers from the form should be excluded as inadmissible hearsay
    and that, hearsay aside, Taylor’s answers suggesting that he “may
    have had mental health problems” should be excluded as irrelevant
    and prejudicial because Taylor did not file a notice of asserting a
    mental health defense. The trial court explained that it “d[id]n’t
    think” that the mental health questions “should come in to
    14
    evidence.” Taylor’s trial counsel responded that “[t]his is not a given
    case where we’re raising a mental health defense of any kind,” but
    contended the medical intake form should be admitted to help the
    jury understand Taylor’s “state of mind at the time he was arrested
    and placed” in the holding cell. The trial court then granted the
    motion to exclude and ruled that it would not admit into evidence
    Taylor’s answers to any of the questions on the intake form that
    related to Taylor’s mental health.
    (b) Taylor has not preserved this enumeration of error for
    ordinary appellate review.     That is because Taylor contends on
    appeal that the trial court should have admitted the answers to the
    mental health questions on his medical intake form on the theory
    that they were lay evidence that he “heard” voices that were in
    reality “coming from his head,” thus supporting a “mental health
    defense” that would have enabled the jury to “choose a lesser
    included charge on the verdict form.” But at trial, Taylor did not
    advance that theory in seeking to admit those responses; to the
    15
    contrary, he sought their admission only to show his state of mind
    when “he was arrested and placed into th[e] holding cell.”
    Nonetheless, plain-error review applies when, on appeal, a
    defendant argues that evidence was admissible for a purpose other
    than the one for which he sought to admit the evidence at trial, as
    Taylor does here. See Williams v. State, 
    302 Ga. 147
    , 150-151 (
    805 SE2d 873
    ) (2017) (applying plain-error review when on appeal the
    defendant argued that the court should have admitted a
    toxicologist’s testimony about “drugs found in [the victim’s] blood” in
    support of the defense theory that the drugs made the victim more
    likely to die by “asphyxiation by choking,” when at trial the
    defendant argued only that the drugs “would have made [the victim]
    both ‘clumsy’ and ‘drowsy’ and ‘explosive, hyperactive’”).
    The plain-error standard has four prongs.
    First, there must be an error or defect—some sort of
    “[d]eviation from a legal rule”—that has not been
    intentionally    relinquished    or    abandoned,     i.e.,
    affirmatively waived, by the appellant. Second, the legal
    error must be clear or obvious, rather than subject to
    reasonable dispute. Third, the error must have affected
    the appellant’s substantial rights, which in the ordinary
    16
    case means he must demonstrate that it “affected the
    outcome of the trial court proceedings.” Fourth and
    finally, if the above three prongs are satisfied, the
    appellate court has the discretion to remedy the error—
    discretion which ought to be exercised only if the error
    “‘seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity or public
    reputation of judicial proceedings.’”
    Gates v. State, 
    298 Ga. 324
    , 327 (
    781 SE2d 772
    ) (2016) (quoting State
    v. Kelly, 
    290 Ga. 29
    , 33 (
    718 SE2d 232
    ) (2011)).
    Here, Taylor does not satisfy even the first prong of plain-error
    review because he affirmatively waived using the medical intake
    form for the purpose of supporting of a “mental health defense.” To
    that end, the record shows that while attempting to admit the
    medical intake form into evidence, Taylor’s trial counsel asserted
    that Taylor was not “raising a mental health defense of any kind,”
    affirmatively waiving use of the medical intake form for that
    purpose. See Dukes v. State, 
    311 Ga. 561
    , 569 (2021) (
    858 SE2d 510
    )
    (holding that the defendant affirmatively waived the argument that
    a witness should have been permitted to further testify when, in
    response to the State’s objection that the defendant had not laid a
    proper foundation, the defendant said, “That’s all I’m going to ask
    17
    him” and that the witness was “not qualified” to continue testifying);
    Davis v. State, 
    311 Ga. 225
    , 230-231 (
    857 SE2d 207
    ) (2021) (holding
    that the defendant affirmatively waived the argument that a
    witness was not “unavailable” under the hearsay rules when the
    defendant told the judge that the State’s argument for why the
    witness was “unavailable” was “right” and asked that all of the
    witness’s testimony come in, not only the parts that helped the
    State). Because Taylor has not shown that the trial court plainly
    erred, his claim fails.
    3.    Taylor contends that the trial court erred by using his
    decision to forgo a plea deal as a consideration during sentencing.
    Taylor does not rely on a “presumption of vindictiveness” in
    advancing his claim, and instead points to what he deems the trial
    court’s “improper consideration of the rejection of a plea deal.”
    Because Taylor has failed to meet his burden in showing that the
    trial court sentenced him with an impermissible motive such that it
    penalized Taylor for exercising his constitutional right to a trial, we
    affirm.
    18
    (a)   As noted above, the State offered Taylor a plea deal before
    trial. It offered Taylor a sentence of life with the possibility of parole
    for Bolar’s murder (as opposed to the only other sentence available
    here for a conviction of malice murder, life without parole) and a
    concurrent sentence of an unknown time (as opposed to up to 20
    years) for committing aggravated battery against Roberts, if Taylor
    agreed to plead guilty to Bolar’s murder and to the aggravated
    battery of Roberts. Taylor did not accept that offer and instead
    elected to go to trial. He was convicted on both counts. The trial
    court then imposed the maximum available sentence: life without
    parole with 20 years in prison consecutive.
    At sentencing, Taylor’s pastor, his mother, and his father
    testified on his behalf. Taylor then offered remarks and had the
    following exchange with the trial court:
    THE DEFENDANT: I just want to say I’m sorry. But I
    also want to say I’m sorry for taking an innocent man’s
    life.
    THE COURT: It is clear from the evidence in this case
    that this was a result of substance abuse of a long nature.
    Mr. Taylor, you did not accept responsibility for your
    19
    actions. The State prior to trial in this case offered you
    an opportunity to accept responsibility, and offered you a
    sentence of life with the possibility of parole.
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, ma’am.
    THE COURT: You declined to accept that and you
    declined to accept or admit any responsibility for this
    action. And you come from a good and loving family.
    Taylor’s counsel, after referencing Taylor’s mental health and
    substance abuse, asked that the trial court not “punish Mr. Taylor
    for exercising his right to trial” and stated that Taylor “felt in his
    heart that he was not a murderer.” The court responded that “the
    sentence is not intended to punish you for exercising your right to
    trial.      It does reflect the fact that you did not accept any
    responsibility or show any remorse for your actions in causing the
    death of an individual.” Taylor then asked to speak and stated:
    Judge . . . I have accepted responsibility for it. I told my
    attorney several times that I would accept manslaughter
    because that is what I felt like I have done. I did take
    manslaughter. Okay. But I had no intent to -- I did not
    understand the severity, I did not understand Mr.
    Roberts, and I didn’t know that he was as bad as he was.
    I did not know that my hands would cause that kind of
    damage. I had no idea. And I’m sorry for what I’ve done.
    I do accept responsibility. That’s all.
    20
    The court responded that the necessary “facts [for manslaughter]
    were not present in this case at all.” It then sentenced Taylor.
    (b) In reviewing Taylor’s claim, we “presume the trial court
    knew and applied” the law when sentencing Taylor “‘absent some
    indication in the record suggesting otherwise.’” Holmes v. State, 
    311 Ga. 698
    , 706 (
    859 SE2d 475
    ) (2021) (quoting State v. Abbott, 
    309 Ga. 715
    , 719 (
    849 SE2d 105
    ) (2020)).      We also keep in mind that,
    although not without limits, sentencing judges generally are
    afforded wide discretion. See State v. Riggs, 
    301 Ga. 63
    , 68 (
    799 SE2d 770
    ) (2017) (“[T]rial courts generally have the discretion to
    fashion sentences that fit the crimes for which the defendant is
    convicted, so long as the sentences fall within the statutory
    ranges.”). One limitation on that discretion is the constitutional
    prohibition of sentences that punish defendants for exercising their
    constitutional rights, such as the right to trial. See Bordenkircher
    v. Hayes, 
    434 U.S. 357
    , 363 (98 SCt 663, 54 LE2d 604) (1978) (“To
    punish a person because he has done what the law plainly allows
    21
    him to do is a due process violation of the most basic sort, and for an
    agent of the State to pursue a course of action whose objective is to
    penalize a person’s reliance on his legal rights is ‘patently
    unconstitutional.’”) (citations and punctuation omitted); Corbitt v.
    New Jersey, 
    439 U.S. 212
    , 221-225 (99 SCt 492, 58 LE2d 466) (1978)
    (applying Bordenkircher to a statutory sentencing framework). See
    also North Carolina v. Pearce, 
    395 U.S. 711
    , 725 (89 SCt 2072, 23
    LE2d 656) (1969) (“Due process of law, then, requires that
    vindictiveness against a defendant for having successfully attacked
    his first conviction must play no part in the sentence he receives
    after a new trial.”), overruled in part by Alabama v. Smith, 
    490 U.S. 794
     (109 SCt 2201, 104 LE2d 865) (1989). But see Bordenkircher,
    
    434 U.S. at 363
     (“[I]n the ‘give-and-take’ of plea bargaining, there is
    no such element of punishment or retaliation so long as the accused
    is free to accept or reject the prosecution’s offer.”).
    In contending that the trial court had an impermissible motive
    in sentencing, Taylor does not rely on the presumption of
    vindictiveness established in Pearce, 
    395 U.S. at 726
    . He does not
    22
    cite any cases showing what burden he bears to prevail on his claim,
    so we presume that he must “show actual vindictiveness,” see Texas
    v. McCullough, 
    475 U.S. 134
    , 138 (106 SCt 976, 89 LEd 2d 104)
    (1986), especially given that Taylor does not contend that any other
    standard applies.   See also, e.g., Alabama, 
    490 U.S. at 799-800
    (defendant bears the burden when alleging actual vindictiveness in
    resentencing). Cf. United States v. Dvorin, 
    817 F.3d 438
    , 454 (5th
    Cir. 2016) (defendant bears the burden by a preponderance of the
    evidence when alleging actual prosecutorial vindictiveness).
    In Taylor’s view, he has shown that the trial court punished
    him for choosing to exercise his right to trial because the proximity
    of the court’s statement that Taylor “declined to accept” the plea
    with its finding that Taylor “declined to accept or admit any
    responsibility” necessarily implies that the court considered Taylor
    rejecting the plea deal in assessing whether he accepted
    responsibility. He contends that inference is particularly strong
    because the record—which shows Taylor stating three times during
    sentencing that he was sorry and also stating that he “accepted
    23
    responsibility”—contradicts the trial court’s finding that Taylor “did
    not accept responsibility” and “did not show any remorse.”
    We are not so sure. Although the trial court’s reference to
    Taylor declining the State’s plea offer—particularly in such close
    proximity to its finding that Taylor “declined to accept or admit any
    responsibility”—could be viewed as implying that the trial court
    equated Taylor rejecting a plea (and then exercising his right to
    trial) with a lack of acceptance of responsibility and remorse, we
    cannot say that is definitively so. Indeed, at most Taylor has shown
    that the record is ambiguous with respect to the court’s motive in
    sentencing Taylor. We reach that conclusion in large part because
    after making the potentially problematic statements referenced
    above, the trial court expressly stated that “the sentence [wa]s not
    intended to punish [Taylor] for exercising [his] right to trial,” and
    that the sentence was based on the court’s finding that Taylor “did
    not accept any responsibility or show any remorse.” And the record
    could be viewed as supporting that conclusion: the trial court was
    authorized to evaluate Taylor’s credibility and the genuineness of
    24
    his remorse, see Isaacs v. State, 
    259 Ga. 717
    , 723 (
    386 SE2d 316
    )
    (1989) (“‘[S]incere contrition’” “is a permissible area of inquiry
    during sentencing.”), and it was authorized to discredit Taylor’s
    statement that he accepted responsibility for the crimes—especially
    given that he immediately followed one of his apologies by saying “I
    would accept manslaughter” (not the murder charge for which he
    was convicted) “because that is what I felt like I have done”—a
    comment that the trial court could have viewed as undermining the
    genuineness of any or all of Taylor’s apologetic statements.
    To be sure, if the trial court exercised its discretion to give
    Taylor the maximum available sentence because it did not, in fact,
    believe his multiple apologies were genuine, or because his professed
    acceptance of responsibility was not credible, the better course
    under these particular circumstances would have been for the trial
    court to make those findings on the record and make no suggestion—
    implicit or explicit, cf. Winfrey v. State, 
    304 Ga. 94
    , 98 (
    816 SE2d 613
    ) (2018)—that the exercise of Taylor’s constitutional right to trial
    motivated the trial court’s sentence. But viewing the record as a
    25
    whole, and in light of the presumption that the trial court knew and
    applied the law, see 
    Holmes, 311
     Ga. at 706, we cannot say that
    Taylor has carried his burden of showing that the trial court
    penalized him for exercising his right to trial. We therefore affirm
    his sentence.
    4.   Taylor contends that the trial court abused its discretion
    in denying Taylor’s motion for a mistrial after one of the State’s lay
    witnesses provided improper testimony by testifying that “the law
    dictate[d]” that aggravated battery was the appropriate charge for
    Taylor attacking Roberts. For the reasons that follow, this claim
    fails.
    (a) Taylor was originally charged with disorderly conduct for
    attacking Roberts.      However, once the State was informed that
    Roberts’s injuries were more severe than initially known, the State
    filed additional charges against Taylor.         While examining an
    investigator at trial, the prosecutor asked why Taylor’s charge was
    upgraded from disorderly conduct to aggravated battery.             The
    investigator responded: “[A]fter meeting with the victim and
    26
    viewing his injuries and speaking with his doctors on the extent of
    his facial fractures and surgery he would need, the law dictates that
    that was the appropriate charge.” Taylor moved for a mistrial,
    arguing that the answer “invade[d] the province of the jury” because
    it is the jury’s role to determine the “appropriate charge.” The trial
    court denied Taylor’s motion. Later, in denying Taylor’s motion for
    new trial on the same issue, the trial court ruled that the
    investigator’s testimony was “most fairly seen as an attempt to
    explain his own conduct in upgrading the charge . . . rather than an
    opinion on the ultimate issue of whether [Taylor] committed the
    offense.”   In the alternative, the trial court ruled that the
    investigator’s “remark was not barred even if it touched on the
    ultimate issue in the case” under OCGA § 24-7-704 (a).
    (b) “Under Georgia’s Evidence Code, a lay witness ‘may not
    testify to a matter unless evidence is introduced sufficient to support
    a finding that the witness has personal knowledge of such matter.
    Evidence to prove personal knowledge may, but need not, consist of
    the witness’s own testimony.’” Draughn v. State, 
    311 Ga. 378
    , 385
    27
    (
    858 SE2d 8
    ) (2021) (quoting OCGA § 24-6-602 (“Rule 602”)) (holding
    that eyewitness testimony identifying the defendants in a
    surveillance video was based on personal knowledge because the
    witness identified the defendants based on his “recollection of the
    stabbing”).   In addition, except for certain expert testimony,
    “testimony in the form of an opinion or inference otherwise
    admissible shall not be objectionable because it embraces an
    ultimate issue to be decided by the trier of fact.” See OCGA § 24-7-
    704 (“Rule 704”). “This Court has repeatedly held . . . that the
    current Evidence Code . . . abolished the prohibition on lay opinion
    testimony concerning the ultimate issue in a case.” Fisher v. State,
    
    309 Ga. 814
    , 821 (
    848 SE2d 434
    ) (2020) (cleaned up).
    To the extent the trial court concluded that the investigator’s
    testimony was proper lay testimony because it was based on
    personal knowledge about why Taylor’s charges were upgraded, see
    Draughn, 311 Ga. at 384-385, we see no abuse of discretion in the
    trial court denying Taylor’s motion for mistrial on that basis. And
    even assuming, without deciding, that the investigator’s testimony
    28
    touched upon the ultimate issue in this case, see Pyatt v. State, 
    298 Ga. 742
    , 754 (
    784 SE2d 759
    ) (2016) (assuming without deciding that
    a law enforcement officer’s testimony touched on the ultimate issue
    when he testified among other things that “In my opinion and in
    what I consider the law[,] that is aggravated assault”), we likewise
    see no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s denial of the motion on
    that basis. Thornton v. State, 
    307 Ga. 121
    , 127-128 (
    834 SE2d 814
    )
    (2019) (concluding that a lead detective’s testimony that only one
    suspect could have committed part of the crime was lay testimony
    and thus not barred by Rule 704). See also Fisher, 309 Ga. at 820-
    821 (noting that Rule 704 would not have barred a lead detective’s
    testimony about whether someone was an accomplice to the
    defendant’s crime even if it touched upon the case’s ultimate issue
    because that rule does not bar lay opinion testimony).
    5. Taylor contends that his trial counsel provided ineffective
    assistance under the Sixth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution because trial counsel failed to investigate and make
    arguments related to Taylor’s mental health at both the guilt and
    29
    sentencing phases of his trial.        Some additional background is
    necessary to review Taylor’s claim. To begin, because Taylor was
    indigent and unable to pay for expenses related to his defense,
    Taylor’s pre-trial counsel (who did not participate at trial) filed with
    the trial court a petition for a court-ordered psychiatric evaluation
    to be performed on Taylor. Before trial, the trial court ordered a
    psychiatric evaluation to determine whether Taylor was (1)
    “mentally competent at the time” of the alleged crimes and (2)
    “competent to counsel with his attorney and [] competent to stand
    trial.” The trial court also ordered that the psychiatrist’s findings
    be memorialized in a report.        Pursuant to the court order, Dr.
    Elizabeth Donegan, a licensed psychologist 3 employed by the
    Georgia Department of Behavioral Health & Developmental
    Disabilities, performed two evaluations and produced two reports.
    A March 2012 report addressed whether Taylor was competent to
    stand trial, and a February 2013 report addressed Taylor’s mental
    3 On appeal, Taylor does not enumerate any error related to Dr. Donegan
    being a psychologist and not a psychiatrist.
    30
    state at the time of the alleged crimes against Roberts and Bolar.
    Dr. Donegan explained in the second report that a second evaluation
    was needed to evaluate Taylor’s mental state when he attacked
    Roberts and Bolar because, during the first evaluation, “Taylor
    declined to have his mental state at the time of the alleged offenses
    assessed.”   Ultimately, neither the March 2012 report nor the
    February 2013 report were introduced into evidence at trial, but
    those reports are at the center of Taylor’s claims of ineffective
    assistance of counsel and were part of the record at the motion-for-
    new-trial stage.
    March 2012 Report.        In the first report, Dr. Donegan
    determined that Taylor knew the charges he faced, knew he could
    go to prison if convicted, and “demonstrated awareness of the
    judicial process.” According to Dr. Donegan, Taylor showed the
    ability to exercise behavior that would be “appropriate for the
    courtroom,” and he “was able to provide relevant information in
    response to questions.”     Dr. Donegan concluded that “Taylor
    appeared to understand the nature and object of the proceedings, to
    31
    comprehend his situation in reference to the proceedings, and to
    have the capacity to render his attorney assistance in providing a
    proper defense.”
    February 2013 Report. As explained more below, Dr. Donegan
    concluded in her second report that when he attacked Roberts and
    Bolar, Taylor did not appear to be under a “delusional compulsion
    that overmastered his will to resist committing the offenses” or
    “unable (as a result of mental illness or impairment) to distinguish
    basic concepts of right and wrong.” Before reaching this conclusion,
    Dr. Donegan conducted two “[c]linical forensic interview[s]” with
    Taylor, one in January 2012 and the other in January 2013, and
    examined court documents from Taylor’s arrest, medical records
    from while Taylor was in jail, and medical records from three of
    Taylor’s earlier hospitalizations.
    Dr. Donegan noted that Taylor had a history of substance
    abuse and mental-health-related issues. Taylor’s substance abuse
    mainly involved the use of alcohol, marijuana, and cocaine. His
    mental   health    history   included,    among   other   things,   two
    32
    hospitalizations for harming himself and diagnoses of Polysubstance
    Dependence,     Intermittent     Explosive     Disorder,    Antisocial
    Personality    Disorder,    Substance-Induced       Mood     Disorder,
    Substance-Induced Psychosis, and Substance-Induced Psychotic
    Disorder.
    The report recounted Taylor’s accounts of the beatings of
    Roberts and Bolar.     Taylor said that he was doing cocaine and
    drinking with Roberts the morning of the crimes, and that he had
    experienced “some paranoia while in the Hale House,” including
    thinking that “everyone” there was “out to hurt” him, and that he
    was “kinda high, but . . . too stressed out and too spooked to be
    enjoying anything.” He also “thought [the other inmates] were all
    going to jump” him. Taylor said that Bolar called him a “cracker”
    after the other inmates in the cell had each already “said something
    racist” to Taylor. Taylor told Bolar not to call him a “cracker” again.
    When Bolar did, Taylor “hit him and kicked him and hit him and
    kicked him.” The report then noted that, “in clarification,” Taylor
    said he was not sure whether the inmates were actually talking to
    33
    him or “it was voices [he] was hearing,” but that he “denied
    experiencing hallucinations in his history.” Taylor said that “he did
    not think that” he would have attacked Roberts and Bolar “if he had
    not been using [drugs] that day.”
    Dr. Donegan concluded:
    While Mr. Taylor appears to have some mental
    health treatment history; largely, it appears, in
    connection with substance abuse; and a tendency for
    interpreting people’s actions and statements in a
    paranoid or derogatory manner was reported during that
    period surrounding the alleged offenses, Mr. Taylor did
    not express overtly delusional beliefs directly related to
    the alleged offenses and other available evidence for
    review surrounding the times of the alleged offenses did
    not note Mr. Taylor to have made seemingly delusional
    statements in regard to the alleged offenses and his
    behaviors or suggest he experienced delusional thinking
    during those times. Behaviors surrounding the alleged
    offenses do not appear to have resulted from a delusional
    compulsion that overmastered his will to resist
    committing the offenses. Available information from the
    period surrounding the alleged offenses also does not
    suggest Mr. Taylor experienced mental health symptoms
    during the time of the alleged offenses to a degree of
    severity that his mental capacity was so impaired that he
    was unable (as a result of mental illness or impairment)
    to distinguish basic concepts of right and wrong during
    those times. Mr. Taylor is though noted to have been
    abusing alcohol and cocaine in close proximity to the
    alleged offenses, the use of which, it appears reasonable
    34
    to presume, would likely have made him more prone to
    impulsive behavior and poor judgment and, based on his
    history, irritability and a paranoid perspective.
    Taylor’s Motion for New Trial. At the hearing on Taylor’s
    motion for new trial, trial counsel testified about his trial strategy.
    He explained that, although he did not personally request that
    mental health evaluations be conducted for Taylor, a lawyer who
    represented Taylor before trial did so and that Dr. Donegan
    eventually conducted them. Trial counsel was “fairly confident” that
    he reviewed those evaluations around the time of Taylor’s trial.
    After Taylor’s motion-for-new-trial counsel attempted to impeach
    Taylor’s trial counsel by asking whether trial counsel told another
    lawyer in 2016 that he did not read Dr. Donegan’s reports4, trial
    counsel testified “[t]hat would not be consistent with [his] memory”
    and clarified that he read Dr. Donegan’s evaluations and did not
    raise an insanity defense because he understood them to “say that
    4 Taylor presented testimony from a lawyer who worked on Taylor’s case
    after he was convicted. She testified that she ran into Taylor’s trial counsel in
    court one day in 2016 and had “a very brief conversation” with him in which
    she asked whether he had been “able to read [Dr. Donegan’s] evaluations”; he
    responded “he had not.”
    35
    [Taylor] was competent,” although he “recall[ed] some language to
    the effect that there was some delusional component to his thinking
    processes.” Trial counsel explained that his strategy was requesting
    “lesser included offenses” for Taylor instead of pursuing an insanity
    defense.
    On cross-examination, the prosecutor elicited testimony from
    Taylor’s trial counsel that counsel must have considered an insanity
    defense for Taylor because he mentioned on the record before trial
    that he was not raising a mental health defense and that Taylor’s
    diagnosis of substance-induced psychosis would have created
    problems because voluntary intoxication generally is not a defense.
    With respect to his representation at the sentencing phase, trial
    counsel testified that his decision not to call “doctors or experts
    during the mitigation” phase of sentencing was not a “strategic
    choice,” and that he “probably should have” done that “in hindsight.”
    Taylor also called a forensic psychologist, Dr. Paganelli, to
    testify. Dr. Paganelli evaluated Taylor in 2020, around seven years
    after Taylor was convicted for attacking Roberts and Bolar. She
    36
    concluded that Taylor was having “paranoid delusions” when he
    attacked Roberts and Bolar “that were not directly caused by any
    substance or any alcohol.”     According to Dr. Paganelli, Taylor’s
    mental health issues and events like a car accident, losing his job,
    being physically attacked in a previous job, and “split[ting] up” with
    his wife—and not exclusively drug use—contributed to his mental
    state when he attacked Roberts and Bolar. She concluded that
    Taylor was “very likely . . . experiencing psychotic and mood disorder
    symptoms alongside his alcohol and drug use in the community” but
    that those “were masked by his substance abuse and/or completely
    attributed to drugs of abuse, as many substances of abuse
    (specifically cocaine) can cause paranoia and other symptoms that
    mimic    psychosis.”     Dr.   Paganelli    diagnosed    Taylor   with
    “Schizophrenia, Schizoaffective Disorder, and/or Bipolar Disorder.”
    However, Dr. Paganelli concluded that “Taylor does not meet the
    criteria for a not guilty by reason of insanity plea.”
    The trial court denied Taylor’s claims of ineffective assistance
    of counsel, finding that despite trial counsel’s inability to remember
    37
    with certainty whether he reviewed Dr. Donegan’s reports, “the
    record shows counsel indeed undertook such an evaluation and
    affirmatively concluded the evidence did not support” raising an
    insanity defense. For example, the trial court pointed out that “trial
    counsel’s ability to recall the most favorable details from Dr.
    [Donegan’s] findings indicate[s] prior consideration of these
    findings.” The trial court also noted that “[d]espite mental health
    evaluations conducted both before and after trial, there has been no
    evidence produced to support a finding that [Taylor] lacked the
    mental capacity to distinguish right from wrong or that he suffered
    from a delusional compulsion.” It also highlighted various problems
    Taylor would face if he had tried to introduce Dr. Donegan’s report
    to support an insanity defense.       First, the report would have
    highlighted the role of substance abuse in Taylor’s conduct, whereas
    the jury otherwise heard minimal evidence about his substance
    abuse, thus “inject[ing] the negating dynamic of [Taylor’s] chronic
    history of controlled substance addiction.” And the report could
    have harmed Taylor’s defense because it might have led the jury to
    38
    believe that Taylor’s attack on Bolar was racially motivated. The
    trial court held that trial counsel’s decision not to raise an insanity
    defense at trial was not constitutionally deficient performance under
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674)
    (1984). It also concluded that Taylor was not prejudiced by any
    alleged deficiency related to trial counsel’s performance at
    sentencing, reasoning that “[g]iven the Court’s repeated appeal to
    the impact of voluntary intoxication, it is unlikely any additional
    evidence of Defendant’s mental health history would have had an
    impact on the Court’s decision to sentence” and that trial counsel’s
    further reference to either the pre-trial or post-trial expert reports
    would have been of no benefit to Taylor because both “make clear
    the causative dynamics of substance abuse with respect to
    Defendant’s aberrant behaviors.”
    (b) To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a
    defendant generally must show that counsel’s performance was
    deficient and that the deficient performance resulted in prejudice to
    the defendant. Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687
    ; Wesley v. State, 
    286 Ga. 39
    355, 356 (
    689 SE2d 280
    ) (2010). To satisfy the deficiency prong, a
    defendant must demonstrate that his attorney “performed at trial in
    an objectively unreasonable way considering all the circumstances
    and in the light of prevailing professional norms.” Romer v. State,
    
    293 Ga. 339
    , 344 (
    745 SE2d 637
    ) (2013). See also Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687-688
    . To satisfy the prejudice prong, a defendant must
    establish a reasonable probability that, in the absence of counsel’s
    deficient performance, the result of the trial would have been
    different. See 
    id. at 694
    . “If an appellant fails to meet his or her
    burden of proving either prong of the Strickland test, the reviewing
    court does not have to examine the other prong.” Lawrence v. State,
    
    286 Ga. 533
    , 533-534 (
    690 SE2d 801
    ) (2010).
    Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel involve mixed
    questions of law and fact, and “a trial court’s factual findings made
    in the course of deciding an ineffective assistance of counsel claim
    will be affirmed by the reviewing court unless clearly erroneous.”
    Green v. State, 
    302 Ga. 816
    , 818 (
    809 SE2d 738
    ) (2018) (citation and
    punctuation omitted). Conclusions of law based on those facts are
    40
    reviewed de novo. See Bright v. State, 
    292 Ga. 273
    , 274 (
    736 SE2d 380
    ) (2013).
    (c) Taylor contends that his trial counsel was ineffective for
    failing to investigate and raise a defense of insanity on his behalf.
    As part of that claim, Taylor contends that trial counsel should have
    read Dr. Donegan’s reports, obtained Taylor’s hospital and jail
    records, and obtained and introduced an expert report on Taylor’s
    mental health from an “independent psychologist.” Taylor further
    contends that his trial counsel should have raised and supported a
    defense of insanity by, for example, having Taylor’s mother testify
    about Taylor’s mental health and by introducing the medical intake
    form Taylor filled out when he was booked into jail.
    “We have explained before that, generally speaking in non-
    capital cases, a trial counsel’s ‘decision to forego or curtail’ further
    investigation of an accused’s mental health, ‘even when there has
    been a previous mental hospitalization, is reasonable when an
    expert has determined that the defendant is fit to stand trial or that
    he was sane at the time of the offense.’” Sullivan v. State, 
    308 Ga. 41
    508, 513 (
    842 SE2d 5
    ) (2020) (quoting Whitus v. State, 
    287 Ga. 801
    ,
    803-804 (
    700 SE2d 377
    ) (2010)). In Sullivan, for example, this Court
    held that trial counsel’s “failure to procure and present to the jury
    expert testimony about [the defendant’s] mental health and its effect
    on his criminal responsibility” was not constitutionally deficient
    when trial counsel “obtained mental evaluations” finding the
    defendant competent to stand trial and competent at the time of the
    offenses and trial counsel “consulted medical records.” 
    Id.
     at 512-
    514. See also Whitus, 
    287 Ga. at 803-804
     (defendant failed to show
    that her trial counsel “unreasonably relied on [an expert’s
    psychiatric] evaluation” and thus failed to show that trial counsel
    was constitutionally deficient for failing to obtain an additional
    evaluation when her trial counsel “testified that he believed the
    evaluation was fair and balanced and that he had no reason to
    disagree and request additional testing”).
    Here, Taylor has failed to show that trial counsel was deficient
    for failing to further investigate the possibility of an insanity
    defense. To begin, the trial court concluded at the motion-for-new-
    42
    trial stage that Taylor’s trial counsel did read and consider Dr.
    Donegan’s reports. Even to the extent there was conflicting evidence
    in the record about that point, the trial court was authorized to
    credit trial counsel’s testimony (as well as evidence such as counsel’s
    references to Dr. Donegan’s reports during trial) over the testimony
    of post-conviction counsel. See Stepp-McCommons v. State, 
    309 Ga. 400
    , 410 (
    845 SE2d 643
    ) (2020) (the trial court “‘resolve[s] any
    conflicts in the testimony’” at motion-for-new-trial hearing) (citation
    omitted). Thus, “this is not a case where trial counsel made no effort
    to investigate the potential for a defense based on mental health
    issues or relied exclusively upon his own lay evaluation of the
    mental health of his client.” See Sullivan, 308 Ga. at 514 (cleaned
    up).   Moreover, Taylor has not shown that it was objectively
    unreasonable for his trial counsel to rely on Dr. Donegan’s two
    reports—which she drafted after examining court documents from
    Taylor’s arrest, medical records from while Taylor was in jail, and
    43
    medical records from three of Taylor’s earlier hospitalizations 5—and
    in light of those reports, cease additional investigation into Taylor’s
    mental health and decide against raising additional evidence that
    could have supported an insanity defense. See Whitus, 
    287 Ga. at 803-805
    ; Sullivan, 308 Ga. at 513-514.6                   Thus, under the
    circumstances presented here, Taylor’s trial counsel was not
    constitutionally deficient in declining to obtain or introduce evidence
    (such as the medical intake form) in support of an insanity defense.
    This enumeration therefore fails.
    5Notably, Taylor has not shown how having trial counsel obtain records
    like the ones Dr. Donegan relied on would have equipped trial counsel to
    present different, let alone more favorable, arguments about Taylor’s mental
    health than Dr. Donegan.
    6  To the extent Taylor also contends that his trial counsel was
    constitutionally deficient because he “did not request from the trial court that
    an independent psychologist examine Mr. Taylor prior to trial” (emphasis
    added), his unsupported contention also fails. Indeed, Taylor has not alleged,
    let alone shown, that Dr. Donegan suffered from any conflict of interest or other
    deficiency such that she was not “independent,” and we cannot say that trial
    counsel was constitutionally deficient on this basis. See Whitus, 
    287 Ga. at 804
    .
    44
    (d) Taylor also raises a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel
    related to his trial counsel’s performance in the sentencing phase of
    trial. Citing only two Court of Appeals cases in which that court
    concluded that the trial counsel involved in those cases did not
    provide ineffective assistance 7, Taylor contends that his “trial
    counsel erred in failing to seek out mitigation evidence” at
    sentencing. He argues that his trial counsel should have done three
    things: sought out and introduced expert “mental health or
    mitigation” evidence; brought to the court’s attention evidence of
    Taylor’s “mental illness already in the record”; and brought to the
    trial court’s attention Taylor’s statement contained in Dr. Donegan’s
    report that he felt “like crap” for killing Bolar. Analyzing Taylor’s
    claim under the proper Strickland standard, we conclude that his
    claims fail.
    7 See Owens v. State, 
    324 Ga. App. 198
    , 206 (
    749 SE2d 783
    ) (2013)
    (analyzing a claim of ineffective assistance under Strickland’s prejudice
    prong); Tyner v. State, 
    313 Ga. App. 557
    , 565-567 (
    722 SE2d 177
    ) (2012) (trial
    counsel was not deficient under Strickland for failing to present mitigation
    testimony about the defendant’s mental health when “trial counsel was never
    made aware of [the defendant’s] condition”).
    45
    As an initial matter, we have already established that Taylor’s
    pre-trial counsel secured two mental health evaluations of Taylor
    and that the psychologist who examined him provided two expert
    reports.   And we have concluded that counsel did not perform
    deficiently at the trial stage when, in reliance on Dr. Donegan’s
    reports, he declined to further investigate Taylor’s mental health.
    See supra, Div. 5 (c). Even to the extent trial counsel testified at the
    motion-for-new-trial hearing that his decision not to call experts at
    the sentencing stage was not strategic, the standard for evaluating
    trial counsel’s conduct is an objective one under Strickland;
    “hindsight has no place in an assessment of the performance of trial
    counsel, and a lawyer second-guessing his own performance with the
    benefit of hindsight has no significance for an ineffective assistance
    of counsel claim,” and we cannot say that trial counsel was
    constitutionally deficient under the circumstances presented in this
    case by declining to have an additional expert evaluate and then
    testify about Taylor’s mental health at his sentencing. Keener v.
    State, 
    301 Ga. 848
    , 850 (
    804 SE2d 383
    ) (2017) (cleaned up)
    46
    (deemphasizing     testimony    from    defendant’s   attorneys    who
    disagreed about whether a witness was cross-examined deficiently).
    To the extent that Taylor’s statement that his trial counsel “did
    not seek out Dr. Donegan . . . to address [his] punishment” can be
    read as an argument that his trial counsel was deficient for failing
    to call Dr. Donegan to testify at his sentencing, that claim also fails.
    Any findings Taylor may have deemed helpful from Dr. Donegan’s
    report were undercut by Dr. Donegan’s ultimate conclusion that it
    was “reasonable to presume” that substance abuse contributed to
    Taylor attacking Bolar and Roberts and that Taylor was not “unable
    (as a result of mental illness of impairment) to distinguish basic
    concepts of right and wrong during those times.” Thus, trial counsel
    was not objectively unreasonable for declining to have Dr. Donegan
    testify during Taylor’s sentencing. See Sullivan, 308 Ga. at 512
    (whether to call an expert witness to testify about a defendant’s
    “mental health and its effect on his criminal responsibility” is a
    matter of trial strategy, and “to establish that a strategic decision
    constitutes deficient performance, a defendant must show that no
    47
    competent attorney, under similar circumstances, would have made
    it” (cleaned up)); Martin v. State, 
    306 Ga. 747
    , 751-752 (
    833 SE2d 122
    ) (2019) (holding that trial counsel did not perform deficiently by
    not procuring an expert to evaluate and testify about the defendant’s
    mental health because it might have led to discovery and admission
    of testimony trial counsel preferred to have excluded).
    Next, we cannot say that trial counsel was constitutionally
    deficient because he did not seek and present other mitigation
    evidence at sentencing. To that end, Taylor has not offered any
    additional mitigation evidence that trial counsel reasonably could
    have obtained, making only a passing reference to evidence “already
    in the record” and a “colloquy at trial” without offering any specific
    example or citing any specific portion of the record or transcript. “It
    is not the function of this Court to cull the record for a party to find
    alleged errors or to form arguments on the appellant’s behalf.”
    Neuman v. State, 
    311 Ga. 83
    , 96 (
    856 SE2d 289
    ) (2021) (citing
    Henderson v. State, 
    304 Ga. 733
    , 739 (
    822 SE2d 228
    ) (2018)). Taylor
    48
    has failed to carry his burden of showing that counsel performed
    deficiently in failing to provide additional mitigating evidence.
    Finally, with respect to Taylor’s last claim, we assume without
    deciding that trial counsel’s performance at sentencing was deficient
    when he failed to emphasize to the court the statement that Taylor
    felt “like crap” after attacking Bolar.   We accordingly must ask
    whether there is a “reasonable probability” that Taylor would have
    received a lesser sentence had his trial counsel invoked that
    statement at sentencing. Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    .
    We cannot say that there is a “reasonable probability” that
    Taylor would have received a lighter sentence had trial counsel
    invoked Taylor’s statement. 
    Id.
     As mentioned above, the evidence
    that Taylor killed Bolar was strong; the attack was recorded on a
    surveillance video that was played for the jury, and Taylor did not
    dispute that he attacked Bolar. Moreover, the trial court observed
    first-hand the aspects of Taylor’s apology in which he said he was
    “sorry for taking an innocent man’s life” and that he “accepted
    responsibility for” causing Bolar’s death. We cannot say that “there
    49
    is a reasonable probability that” Taylor’s sentence “would have been
    different” had his trial counsel also referenced an additional self-
    serving comment from Dr. Donegan’s expert report—and not made
    in person, where the trial court could have better assessed
    credibility—about how Taylor said he felt, especially given that the
    trial court was already weighing competing evidence of Taylor’s
    remorse or lack thereof, and that any additional apologetic comment
    the court credited could be viewed as cumulative. See Lewis v. State,
    
    312 Ga. 537
    , 544 (
    863 SE2d 65
    ) (2021) (holding that failure to
    present cumulative evidence was not prejudicial); Wesley v. State,
    
    286 Ga. 355
    , 358 (
    689 SE2d 280
    ) (2010) (same). See also Hulett v.
    State, 
    296 Ga. 49
    , 70 (
    766 SE2d 1
    ) (2014) (holding that the defendant
    was not prejudiced by defense counsel’s decision not to present
    mitigation evidence that was both “cumulative” of evidence
    presented and less “detailed and compelling”).
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    50