Jones v. State ( 2022 )


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  •  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: June 22, 2022
    S22A0069. JONES v. THE STATE.
    S22A0380. MCFARLAND v. THE STATE.
    PETERSON, Justice.
    Appellants Xzavaien Jones and Terrell McFarland were tried
    jointly and convicted of murder and related offenses in connection
    with the shooting death of Anthony Meredith. 1 Both men appeal and
    1The crimes took place on March 26, 2016. On September 27, 2016, a
    Muscogee County grand jury jointly indicted Jones, McFarland, and Tekoa
    Young for malice murder (Count 1), felony murder predicated on aggravated
    assault (Count 2), aggravated assault (Count 3), and violating the Georgia
    gang act (Count 5). Jones was also indicted for one count of possession of a
    firearm during the commission of a felony (Count 4).
    At a joint jury trial held from April 17 through May 3, 2017, Jones,
    McFarland, and Young were found guilty of all counts. Jones was sentenced to
    life imprisonment for malice murder, five consecutive years in prison for the
    firearm charge, and fifteen concurrent years in prison for the gang-act
    violation; the trial court merged the remaining counts into Jones’s malice
    murder conviction. McFarland was sentenced to life imprisonment for malice
    murder and five consecutive years in prison for the gang-act violation; the trial
    court merged the remaining counts into McFarland’s malice murder charge.
    Although the court purported to merge Jones’s and McFarland’s felony murder
    charges into their malice murder convictions, those counts were actually
    vacated by operation of law. See Malcolm v. State, 
    263 Ga. 369
    , 372 (434 SE2d
    479) (1993).
    raise numerous trial court errors, including the removal of a
    dissenting juror during deliberations. Although the record may well
    have supported findings authorizing the trial court to remove the
    juror, the findings that the trial court actually made and to which
    our review is limited were not sufficient to justify removal. Because
    the trial court abused its discretion in removing the juror, we
    reverse.2
    Jones and McFarland each timely filed a motion for new trial, which was
    amended, and, following a joint hearing on September 18, 2020, the trial court
    denied both motions. Both men timely filed a notice of appeal; the appeals were
    docketed to the term of this Court beginning in December 2021 and were
    submitted for a decision on the briefs.
    Young was sentenced to life imprisonment for malice murder and a
    concurrent sentence of five years for the gang-act violation, and she attempted
    to appeal. But in January we vacated the trial court’s order on her amended
    motion for new trial and remanded the case with direction that the trial court
    dismiss the motion, because her original motion was filed pro se before her trial
    counsel had been authorized to withdraw.
    2 Jones obtained new counsel after his motion for new trial was denied
    but before a notice of appeal was filed. On appeal, Jones requested that this
    Court remand his case to the trial court so that he could have the opportunity
    to “have conflict-free counsel review potential claims of ineffective assistance
    of counsel.” While Jones did not have an opportunity to raise claims of
    ineffective assistance of his trial counsel prior to this appeal, and raising such
    claims now would normally entitle him to a remand, Jones failed to enumerate
    any specific claims of ineffective assistance. Accordingly, this Court denied the
    motion for remand. In his brief, Jones requests that the Court reconsider its
    ruling. But given our reversal of his convictions on other grounds, Jones’s
    request is moot.
    2
    1.   Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the
    evidence at trial showed that, at all relevant times, Jones and
    McFarland were members of the Crips gang along with Christopher
    Twitty, who was in a relationship with Tekoa Young, Jones’s sister.
    In November 2015, Twitty was shot and killed at his house. Young
    believed that Meredith was the culprit because he had been in a
    drug-related dispute with Twitty. After Twitty’s death, Young called
    Shanna Douglas, who was Young’s best friend and Meredith’s
    girlfriend. During that phone call, Young told Douglas that “[Young]
    wasn’t going to be the only one crying.”
    On the evening of March 26, 2016, Devon Wynn was at
    Peachtree Mall in Columbus. Wynn, who knew both Meredith and
    Jones, saw Meredith near the food court entrance to the mall.
    Meredith was talking to Jones, another man, and a woman. Wynn
    was walking toward the group to greet Meredith when he saw Jones
    shoot Meredith. A nearby witness heard a man, whom he later
    identified as Jones, yell “f**k n***er, f**k n***er” at Meredith,
    followed by multiple gunshots. The witness then heard Jones say,
    3
    “Come on, let’s go,” and saw Jones and another man sprint to a
    parked car and drive off.
    Officers obtained a surveillance video recording from the mall’s
    parking lot from the evening of March 26. Douglas identified Young
    and Jones in the surveillance video at trial. The video showed that
    Young drove into the parking lot, got out of her car and paced while
    talking on a cellphone. Shortly thereafter, Jones and another man
    arrived at the mall together and parked a few spots away. The group
    talked briefly and then approached Meredith. Jones shot Meredith
    multiple times. The group then ran back to their respective vehicles
    and drove away.
    After the shooting, Young spoke to police officers. She arrived
    at the police station driving a car that matched the car that she was
    seen driving in the surveillance video of the murder. Young denied
    any involvement in the shooting, telling officers that, on the
    afternoon of March 26, she left work and drove straight to a strip
    mall to do some shopping. Surveillance video from the strip mall
    recorded after the shooting showed Young wearing the same clothes
    4
    that she had on in the surveillance video from Peachtree Mall.
    Police officers also interviewed McFarland. He denied being at the
    mall on the day of the shooting. He did admit knowing Meredith,
    being a member of the Crips gang, and knowing about the escalating
    dispute between Meredith and Twitty.
    Cellphone data introduced at trial showed that the cellphones
    associated with Jones, McFarland, and Young were all in the area
    of Peachtree Mall at the time of the shooting. Young’s phone placed
    three calls right after the shooting, two to McFarland and one to
    Jones. Young also sent McFarland a text message (which Young
    subsequently deleted) asking “y’all good?” Investigators found that
    Young had deleted other post-shooting texts from her phone. In one
    deleted text, Young admitted being at the mall, and in another,
    Jones sent Young the address of 6351 Birling Drive. After the
    shooting, McFarland’s and Jones’s phones traveled east and stopped
    in the area of 6351 Birling Drive. Meanwhile, Young’s phone
    traveled approximately three miles away to a strip mall.
    Meredith’s autopsy revealed that he suffered ten gunshot
    5
    wounds. The majority of the wounds were back to front, indicating
    that he was shot in the back several times. The medical examiner
    concluded that the manner of death was homicide caused by
    multiple gunshot wounds. The State also called an expert in
    criminal gang activity who testified that, based on statements the
    defendants made to law enforcement officers, their tattoos, their
    association before and after the crime, and their social media posts,
    Jones and McFarland were associated with the Crips gang. He
    further opined that the shooting was consistent with a retaliatory
    act required by the rules of the gang that would also increase Jones’s
    and McFarland’s status within the gang’s structure.
    2. Jones and McFarland assert that the trial court abused its
    discretion when it removed the jury foreperson after deliberations
    had started. We agree.
    (a) The record shows that the jury was sent out for
    deliberations at 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 26, 2017. The jury
    voted for a foreperson (L.M.) and then requested to return in the
    morning to begin deliberating. The trial court agreed and dismissed
    6
    the jury for the night. Deliberations began on April 27 at 9:05 a.m.
    The jury sent the court three notes at 10:46, 11:07, and 11:26 a.m.,
    requesting to view certain video evidence. The court then informed
    the jurors that it would break for lunch and return at 1:00 p.m. to
    review the evidence. After court resumed, but before the jury
    reviewed the video, the court received two more notes. Relevant to
    the claim at issue here was the second note, which the court labeled
    Jury Question 7. This note, which the record reflects was written by
    L.M., stated:
    What if someone feels like they’re guilty but not enough
    hardcore evidence to prosecute[?]
    no gun – but gun charge
    no clothing
    no gunpowder
    no calls before
    no sufficient evidence about gang related
    flimsy witness – the eyewitness seem[s] to know more
    about the case than [he’s] revealing
    it’s a[]lot of loopholes.
    The trial court called the jurors into the courtroom and allowed
    them to review the requested video evidence. They were then sent
    back to the jury room to deliberate, and the judge conferred with the
    7
    parties regarding the proper response to Jury Question 7.
    Thereafter, the court called the jury back into the courtroom and
    gave the following instruction:
    If you’ll recall, yesterday I charged you with the law that
    applies to the case, and also supplied you with two copies
    of that law.[3] I will instruct you to continue to deliberate.
    If you have questions, refer to the law that I’ve charged
    you with, determine the law, apply the law to the facts
    and the facts to the law to reach your verdict.
    The jury returned to the jury room to continue deliberations.
    At 5:04 p.m., the court received Jury Question 8, which stated:
    “The jury cannot come to a unanimous decision at this time on any
    of the 13 charges listed in the indictment. What do we do next?”
    Then, at 5:07 p.m., the judge received Jury Question 9 that stated:
    “Question #7 was not from the entire jury. One person wrote it and
    it is the same person unwilling to deliberate on the charges.”4 The
    3  The charges read to and sent back with the jury addressed, in relevant
    part, the State’s burden of proof, guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, mere
    presence and mere association, direct and circumstantial evidence, credibility
    of witnesses, identity, party to a crime, deliberating with an open mind,
    consulting with other jurors, and deciding the case based on the evidence and
    not sympathy.
    4 The record shows that Jury Question 9 was not written by L.M.
    8
    court instructed the jury to continue to deliberate. About 20 minutes
    later, the jury asked to be excused for the evening and return to
    deliberate in the morning. The court agreed and dismissed everyone
    for the night.
    The jury resumed deliberating at 9:00 a.m. on April 28. At
    10:31 a.m., L.M. sent the judge a note that stated, “we have taken a
    vote, more than once . . . and we cannot reach [a] unanimous vote on
    any of the 13 charges.” Attached to the note was an incomplete tally
    of the guilty votes for the various charges for each defendant, which
    indicated that the jury was split on many of the charges. In response
    to this note, the trial court again instructed the jury to continue its
    deliberations. The trial court received another note at 11:20 a.m.
    from L.M. that was marked “Personal to Judge.” It read:
    I’m not sure if I have a different understanding of the law
    or what. I honestly feel that they do have some evidence
    but not enough for me to say guilty. I’m not sure if I have
    a different concept of how things work or what[] my duty
    here is, I have been through the evidence[;] we have went
    over it. I’m not sure what y[’]all want from me, only thing
    happening now is, I’m getting force[d] to follow what
    everyone else is saying. Can I be switch[ed] with an
    alternate so y[’]all can get the answer you’re looking for.
    9
    I’m firm! This is from [L.M.] alone, writing this.
    The trial court had extensive discussions with the parties regarding
    how it should proceed. During those discussions, McFarland, as well
    as Young, moved for a mistrial. Without ruling on the motions, the
    trial court eventually decided to conduct an inquiry.
    The trial court brought in the jury and asked L.M. for
    clarification on the tally. L.M. stated that “someone else took the
    tallies and did all that, I just signed [the note].” Still, L.M. stated
    that the votes for Jones were “11 to 1” on all charges; for Young, the
    vote was “11 to 1” on the murder and aggravated assault charges,
    and “8 to 4” on the gang act charge; and, for McFarland, the vote
    was “6 to 6” on the murder charges, “7 to 5” on the aggravated
    assault, and “5 to 7” on the gang act charge. 5
    5 The dissent argues that L.M. was not a holdout juror because only eight
    of the thirteen charges were eleven to one. But L.M. was undisputedly the lone
    holdout as to those eight, including all of the charges against Jones. And more
    importantly, we are aware of no authority — and the dissent identifies none —
    for the proposition that a trial court has broader discretion to remove a juror
    simply because one or more other jurors may share that juror’s position.
    Indeed, that another juror may share that juror’s position may undermine the
    notion that the juror in question had refused to deliberate. See Semega v. State,
    
    302 Ga. App. 879
    , 882 (691 SE2d 923) (2010) (“that a second juror originally
    10
    The court then asked each juror two questions: (1) have all
    jurors deliberated, and (2) have there been any instances of insult,
    undue intimidation, or pressure?6 All of the jurors affirmed that
    everyone had deliberated. Eight of the jurors, including L.M.,
    responded that there had been no instances of insult, undue
    intimidation, or pressure; four jurors (J.S., C.G., C.R., and L.W.)
    answered that there had been such instances, although one added
    the caveat, “[n]ot to me.” The trial court instructed these four jurors
    to make a written narrative of what they had seen and provide those
    writings to the court. The four written explanations stated as
    follows:
    Statement from J.S.: [L.M.] has not fairly deliberated
    during this trial. She has insulted others because of
    differing views. However, I know this is a part of the
    process — to discuss our different views. To expand on
    [the] insult, she has attacked (verbally) others on their
    views of the law. I do not think she was fit to be on a court
    case.
    agreed with the replaced juror” indicated “that the juror had not refused to
    deliberate but had simply reached a different decision than that of the other
    jurors”).
    6 The trial court instructed each juror to answer these questions with a
    “yes” or “no.”
    11
    Statement from C.G.: I felt threatened by [the]
    fore[person] by her singling me out and said she was
    about to snap on someone.
    Statement from C.R.: Witnessed the fore[person] refer to
    a juror as “Dr. Phil.” The fore[person] has stated she
    would not want any of us to ever be on a jury deciding her
    fate if ever a defendant. The fore[person] has stated she
    has made up her mind and she feels like we are trying to
    “change her mind.” The fore[person] stated she has looked
    around the room and sees the others giving her bad looks.
    Statement from L.W.: [L.M.] made a statement about how
    she was about to “go off” and she didn’t want to have
    anyone come make arrests in here. She has also said
    we’ve been giving her disgusted looks and by her language
    is nonchalantly insulting several others based on their
    own interpretation of the evidence presented to all of us.
    She also has stated about her time in prison and I believe
    she was suspected of aggravated assault according to
    what I have heard from her.[7]
    Once again, the parties had a lengthy discussion regarding the trial
    court’s next steps. Ultimately, the court brought the four jurors and
    7 During a break, the prosecutor confirmed that L.M. was arrested for
    aggravated assault in 2008 and that the District Attorney’s office indicted her
    on that charge, which was subsequently reduced to battery. The prosecutor
    argued that L.M.’s failure to disclose this arrest during voir dire showed that
    “she got on that jury with an agenda.” A review of the voir dire transcript shows
    that the trial court asked the statutory question concerning whether anyone in
    the pool was a convicted felon who did not have his or her civil rights restored,
    but there do not appear to have been any questions concerning arrests or
    misdemeanor convictions.
    12
    the foreperson back into the courtroom one at a time and questioned
    them regarding their experience deliberating.
    The testimony of the four jurors included that L.M. was
    defensive and combative in the jury room; had been insulting other
    members of the panel to the point that those persons would “refrain
    from being forthcoming in their opinions”; “was very obstinate,” “not
    involved at all,” and “wanted to call it quits” as soon as
    “midafternoon” on the first day of deliberations; “made up her mind”
    early in the deliberation process, but refused to explain her opinions
    or the reasoning behind them; had physically removed herself from
    the table and refused to participate in discussions; sat in the corner
    of the room and would not make eye contact with other jurors; and
    refused to consider or listen to the views of other jurors, deliberate
    with an open mind, or review all of the evidence presented at trial.
    Jurors testified that L.M.’s behavior was “disruptive to moving
    forward in [the] deliberation process” because, although it did not
    prevent them from considering the evidence and the law, it forced
    them to “operat[e as] an eleven member jury.” L.W. clarified that
    13
    L.M. was “[o]nly disruptive in the sense that in order to deliberate
    it must be every person on the jury to reach a unanimous decision,
    so only disruptive in that sense, not in a loud, demonstrative sense.”
    One juror testified that L.M. may not have voted:
    I didn’t know that she had chosen not guilty on some of
    the ones that she read out today, when we were all here
    together? Because she keeps saying I don’t know. I don’t
    know. I don’t know. So we couldn’t really put it down as a
    not guilty or a guilty when we were taking the votes. And
    I’m not even sure I saw her hand go up on either of those
    votes as we re-tallied them again this morning.
    But another juror explained that not-guilty votes were not asked for:
    “[W]e never did the opposite vote, and therefore the numbers that
    are not on that sheet of paper we gave to you were not necessarily
    votes for the opposing view, they were just not stated votes at this
    time.”8
    8 The dissent argues that this indicates that L.M. refused to vote, and
    that her refusal to vote guilty or not guilty is another reason to have removed
    her. But again, the trial court made no such finding (finding instead that she
    made up her mind quickly, which is the opposite of refusing to decide).
    Moreover, this testimony was not undisputed; L.M. testified that she voted on
    every count. In context, the testimony on which the dissent relies is far from
    clear. And there does not appear to be any evidence to support the idea that
    L.M. had never voted; at most, the evidence supports the finding that the trial
    court actually made: that L.M. stopped engaging (which would include voting)
    at some point because she made up her mind.
    14
    L.M. testified that she was participating in deliberations and
    that she was applying the law to the facts “to the best of [her]
    knowledge.” When the trial court asked if there were disagreements
    between her and the other jurors about the law and the facts, she
    replied, “For me it’s more emotional, it’s a more emotional thing[,]”
    adding that “[w]e have people back there crying and all of that.” She
    explained further:
    [B]efore we even just got into the box or whatever, it was
    already guilty, you know and I’m — like I said in the note
    I wrote you, I said maybe I got a ‘mis-concept’ of how the
    law is and how things work and all that. That’s why I
    asked to be switched out, because how I — in my mind,
    how I got it, and how I look at things as the real evidence
    as far as the gun and all this — maybe I watch too much
    TV, I don’t know, but in my mind, this is how it’s set up.
    And that’s what I explained to the other jurors. They had
    all these different people here with different minds, and
    it’s, like I said, maybe I got a misunderstanding on how
    things work or — I’m not sure.
    L.M. also was questioned by the trial court about her criminal
    history, responding that she had pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor
    simple battery charge and received a sentence of probation. She said
    that she did not recall any voir dire questions that called for a
    15
    disclosure of this, saying she had never been convicted of a felony.
    After the jurors returned to the jury room, the State moved the
    trial court to remove L.M. from the jury. The defendants objected.
    The trial court took a recess to consider all of the arguments and
    testimony; during the break, L.M. sent another note to the trial
    court (at approximately 5:10 p.m.) that stated: “Judge, with all
    respect I am a residen[t] of Columbus, GA an[d] the way things just
    took place, I don’t agree. I thought the jurors[’s] info [would] be
    private, I did not sign[] up for this, and to get [thrown] under the
    bus in front [of] the whole courtroom is a slap in the face.”
    After another recess, the trial court granted the State’s motion
    to remove L.M. In a subsequent written order, the trial court found
    as follows:
    [L.M.] did not threaten the other jurors nor did she
    unduly pressure or intimidate them into changing their
    opinions. However, through those same testimonies, it
    was discovered that the foreperson was impeding the
    jury’s progress as a whole in deliberating. It was stated
    that as early as two hours into deliberations, L.M.
    announced that she had made up her mind and then
    removed herself from further discussions. According to
    fellow jurors, L.M. removed herself from the table and
    16
    positioned herself in the corner of the room away from the
    other jurors, and she refused to communicate her reasons
    for her state of mind. She further stated that she would
    not deliberate any longer and asked to be removed from
    the jury. Multiple jurors stated that in order to proceed
    with deliberations, they had to act as if it was an 11[-]
    person jury, including when it came to voting on guilt or
    innocence.
    Before the trial court could inform the jury of its ruling,
    however, the court received another note from L.M., which stated:
    “We as the jury has [sic] come to a verdict. We are ready to
    deliberate.” The defendants, once again, moved for a mistrial, which
    the court denied. The court brought the jury back into the courtroom
    and informed the jurors that the court would “not accept the
    verdict.” Thereafter, the trial court removed L.M. from the panel and
    replaced her with an alternate juror. McFarland and Young moved
    again for a mistrial; Jones moved for a mistrial as well, and the trial
    court denied the motions.
    Deliberations with the alternate juror proceeded over the
    course of three weekdays, although their commencement was
    delayed due to tornado warnings, then the jury lost at least half a
    17
    day of deliberations due to the alternate juror experiencing a fall
    that sent her to the hospital. On the third day, the jury announced
    that it had reached unanimous verdicts, but during polling of the
    jury and subsequent individual questioning, the alternate juror
    stated that her verdicts as to Young and McFarland were not freely
    and voluntarily made. The trial court charged the jury pursuant to
    Allen v. United States, 
    164 U.S. 492
     (17 SCt 154, 41 LE 528) (1896),
    and later that day the jury returned verdicts of guilty on all counts
    as to all defendants, with the alternate juror affirming in polling
    that her verdicts were freely and voluntarily made.
    (b) A trial court generally has broad discretion to remove a
    juror for cause. But this discretion is narrowed once deliberations
    have begun, and even more so when removing a dissenting juror
    from a jury that appears to be divided.
    The general rule on removing jurors for cause is statutory.
    OCGA § 15-12-172 provides:
    If at any time, whether before or after final submission of
    the case to the jury, a juror dies, becomes ill, upon other
    good cause shown to the court is found to be unable to
    18
    perform his duty, or is discharged for other legal cause,
    the first alternate juror shall take the place of the first
    juror becoming incapacitated.
    As this Court has explained:
    The question of whether to remove a juror is a matter
    committed to the trial court’s discretion, even after jury
    deliberations have begun. However, there must be some
    sound basis upon which the trial court exercises his
    discretion to remove the juror. A sound basis may be one
    which serves the legally relevant purpose of preserving
    public respect for the integrity of the judicial process.
    Moon v. State, 
    312 Ga. 31
    , 36-37 (2) (860 SE2d 519) (2021) (citation
    and punctuation omitted). “Both the need for investigation and the
    possibility of harmful error are heightened when a jury has begun
    deliberations or when a jury is deadlocked.” Id. at 37 (2) (citation
    and punctuation omitted). And “because removing a dissenting juror
    when the jury is deadlocked risks violating a defendant’s right to a
    unanimous verdict, a trial judge must exercise the utmost care in
    determining that good cause exists before removing the juror.” Id. at
    37 (2) (citing Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __ (140 SCt 1390, 1397,
    206 LEd2d 583) (2020); and United States v. Brown, 996 F3d 1171,
    19
    1184 (11th Cir. 2021) (en banc)).9
    Georgia appellate decisions reviewing the removal of jurors
    during deliberations reveal a general rule for the removal of holdout
    jurors during deliberations: such a juror may be removed after
    sufficient investigation supports findings establishing proper
    reasons unrelated to the juror’s view of the trial evidence, but a juror
    may not be removed for reasons related to the juror’s view of the
    trial evidence, even if the juror’s insistence on that view has negative
    effects on other jurors and the jury’s deliberations. Many cases have
    affirmed removal during deliberations for reasons unrelated to the
    juror’s view of the trial evidence. See, e.g., Jones v. State, 
    307 Ga. 463
    , 465-466 & n.5 (2) (835 SE2d 620) (2019) (no abuse of discretion
    in removal of juror during deliberations where juror said she was
    unable to deliberate; “the trial court explicitly acknowledged that it
    9 The dissent cites our case law for the general proposition that a
    criminal defendant has no vested interest in the service of any particular juror.
    See Reynolds v. State, 
    271 Ga. 174
    , 175 (2) (517 SE2d 51) (1999) (affirming
    dismissal of juror after trial began but before deliberations when juror realized
    he was disqualified). But the dissent cites no case law that supports the
    application of this rule to remove a holdout juror during deliberations, and
    such an application would squarely conflict with Moon and other decisions of
    this Court.
    20
    would be inappropriate to release the juror at issue merely because
    she was a lone holdout”); Allen v. State, 
    297 Ga. 702
    , 704 (3) (777
    SE2d 680) (2015) (no abuse of discretion in removal during
    deliberations where “removed juror (1) stated several times that she
    did not want to form an opinion about the case, and (2) further stated
    that she was actually incapable of making the decision in the case
    because she could not ‘play God’ and because her moral beliefs
    precluded her from making a decision in the case”); Moon v. State,
    
    288 Ga. 508
    , 513 (5) (705 SE2d 649) (2011) (no abuse of discretion in
    removal during deliberations where holdout juror “was not removed
    for refusing to deliberate but because of concerns over her
    truthfulness and impartiality as well as her extra-judicial
    comments”; evidence showed she knew defendants and many
    witnesses, but had not “let on during voir dire,” and referred to one
    witness as a drug dealer even though no evidence of such was
    presented); Carr v. State, 
    282 Ga. 698
    , 702 (4) (653 SE2d 472) (2007)
    (no abuse of discretion in removal during deliberations when “juror
    did not promptly inform the court when it became clear that his voir
    21
    dire representation that he did not know any of [defendant’s]
    relatives was incorrect”); State v. Arnold, 
    280 Ga. 487
    , 487, 489-490
    (629 SE2d 807) (2006) (no abuse of discretion in removal of juror
    where the juror “questioned the impartiality of the trial court and
    humiliated,     insulted,     and    cursed     at   other    jurors     during
    deliberations,” including “actively humiliating other jurors through
    the use of vindictive personal attacks wholly unrelated to the
    important issues being considered by the jury”);10 Williams v. State,
    
    272 Ga. 828
    , 830 (5) (537 SE2d 39) (2000) (no abuse of discretion in
    removal during deliberations of juror who “stated she could not
    deliberate because her religious beliefs prevented her from judging
    another person”); Thompson v. State, 
    260 Ga. App. 253
    , 257-260 (5)
    (581 SE2d 596) (2003) (no abuse of discretion in removal during
    deliberations of lone holdout juror and first alternate juror when
    trial court found the two engaged in effort to subvert jury, including
    by attempted bribery of third juror); Alford v. State, 244 Ga. App.
    10The dissent relies heavily on Arnold. But the trial court’s findings here
    prevent any real similarity between L.M. and the juror in Arnold.
    22
    234, 238 (534 SE2d 103) (2000) (removal during deliberations not
    abuse of discretion when trial court removed juror “only after [juror]
    made it clear that he would not participate in any discussions with
    his fellow jurors and kept repeating that he wanted ‘off’ the jury,”
    and juror “never stated that he believed the defendants were
    innocent but rather described problems dealing with his fellow
    jurors and participating in deliberations”); Cloud v. State, 
    235 Ga. App. 721
    , 721-722 (1) (510 SE2d 370) (1998) (no abuse of discretion
    in removal during deliberations when juror requested removal,
    cried, and said he could not judge the defendant, and the record
    provided “no support for [defendant’s] contention that the juror was
    actually expressing his view of [defendant’s] innocence”); Norris v.
    State, 
    230 Ga. App. 492
    , 495-496 (5) (496 SE2d 781) (1998) (no abuse
    of discretion in removal during deliberations where juror falsely
    denied during voir dire having been in abusive relationships, and
    during deliberations displayed bias arising from that history);
    McGuire v. State, 
    200 Ga. App. 509
    , 510 (3) (408 SE2d 506) (1991)
    (no abuse of discretion in removal during deliberations where juror
    23
    visited crime scene in violation of judge’s instructions and urged
    other jurors to vote based on juror’s extrajudicial observations).
    On the other hand, a number of Georgia appellate decisions
    have concluded that the trial court abused its discretion in removing
    a juror during deliberations when the removal was for a reason
    related to a juror’s view of the evidence, or when the trial court’s
    investigation was insufficient to conclude with confidence that the
    reason for removal was unrelated to the juror’s view of the evidence.
    In other words, a juror’s view of the evidence is not the sort of
    “legally relevant purpose” our case law requires before removing
    that juror, even when the juror’s view of the evidence has a negative
    effect on deliberations. See, e.g., Moon, 312 Ga. at 36-50 (2) (trial
    court abused discretion in removal of a holdout juror when all jurors
    made up their minds quickly and trial court’s contemporaneous
    statements about the juror’s misconduct were not supported by
    findings); Mills v. State, 
    308 Ga. 558
    , 559-563 (2) (842 SE2d 284)
    (2020) (trial court abused discretion in removal of holdout juror who
    said she would change her mind only if the State had a clear-
    24
    resolution video of the crime; trial court found this constituted
    failure to follow instructions on burden of proof, but it was not);
    Delgado v. State, 
    356 Ga. App. 625
    , 629-630 (848 SE2d 665) (2020)
    (trial court abused discretion in removal of holdout juror who
    participated in deliberations for five hours before making up his
    mind and disengaging from further deliberations); Semega v. State,
    
    302 Ga. App. 879
    , 880-882 (1) (691 SE2d 923) (2010) (trial court
    abused discretion in removal of holdout juror about five hours into
    deliberations; foreperson testified juror would not consider all the
    evidence, but the juror testified he did consider all the evidence, and
    trial court should have investigated further before simply crediting
    foreperson); Mason v. State, 
    244 Ga. App. 247
    , 248 (1) (535 SE2d
    497) (2000) (trial court abused discretion in removal of holdout juror
    who arrived at conclusion and, after two days of deliberations,
    refused to participate further and asked to be removed, going so far
    as to leave the jury room and wait in the courtroom); Stokes v. State,
    
    204 Ga. App. 141
    , 142 (1) (418 SE2d 419) (1992) (trial court abused
    its discretion in removal of two jurors who refused to vote after 30
    25
    minutes of deliberations when only the evidence of why they refused
    was the foreperson’s statement that they felt there was “not enough
    evidence either way,” which indicated that “those two jurors either
    had reasonable doubt about [defendant’s] guilt or were confused
    about the meaning of reasonable doubt,” and court should have
    either recharged the jury as to burden of proof and continued
    deliberations or declared a mistrial; removal of jurors “who may
    have harbored reasonable doubt” was “extraordinary”).
    In one sense, this case could perhaps have fit in either of these
    two lines of cases: while the evidence the trial court developed
    during its investigation could have supported findings that would
    place this case in the line allowing removal, the findings the trial
    court actually made instead placed it squarely in the line prohibiting
    removal. There was sufficient testimony from which the trial court
    could have found that L.M. insulted, threatened, unduly pressured,
    and intimidated other members of the jury, the sort of behavior
    unrelated a juror’s view of the evidence that we have held can justify
    removal; indeed, the State and the dissent rely in part on this point
    26
    in defending L.M.’s removal. But the State and dissent fail to
    grapple with the fact that the trial court made no such finding. To
    the contrary, the trial court expressly found that L.M. “did not
    threaten the other jurors, nor did she unduly pressure or intimidate
    them into changing their opinions,” and made no finding at all about
    insults. 11 Although some jurors reported that L.M. had threatened,
    insulted, or pressured them in some way, “credibility of witnesses
    and the weight to be given their testimony is a decision-making
    power that lies solely with the trier of fact.” Tate v. State, 
    264 Ga. 53
    , 56 (3) (440 SE2d 646) (1994). “The trier of fact is not obligated to
    believe a witness even if the testimony is uncontradicted and may
    accept or reject any portion of the testimony.” 
    Id.
     Because the trial
    court did not find that L.M. threatened or insulted others, we cannot
    11 The motion-for-new-trial judge concluded in his order denying the
    motion for new trial that the trial judge’s statements in this regard “are also
    properly interpreted as a finding that the pressure and intimidation described
    by the four jurors did not cause any of them to change their opinions of the
    evidence” and “is not the same as saying that pressure and intimidation were
    not exerted[.]” But the trial court plainly found that L.M. had not threatened
    anyone.
    27
    affirm her removal on this basis.12
    Instead, the trial court based its removal of L.M. on four
    related findings: (1) she ceased deliberating after making up her
    mind as early as two hours into deliberations, (2) she refused to
    communicate her reasons for her conclusion, (3) she sought to
    physically distance herself from the other members of the jury, and
    (4) she asked to be removed from the jury. Even assuming these
    findings are supported by the record, 13 they are insufficient to
    12  The dissent asserts that the trial court made implicit findings about
    L.M.’s behavior impeding deliberations, but does not explain how any findings
    were necessarily implicit in the court’s written order, much less how we can
    read unnecessary implicit findings into the order containing explicit findings.
    Our general presumption that trial courts make permissible implicit findings
    that support their orders is a presumption that applies “in the absence of
    explicit factual and credibility findings by the trial court[.]” Davis v. State, 
    306 Ga. 430
    , 432 (831 SE2d 804) (2019). No such absence exists in this case.
    Moreover, the testimony by four jurors that L.M. insulted other members of
    the jury was disputed by L.M. and the other seven jurors, who all testified that
    no incidents of insult occurred. “[A]n appellate court generally must limit its
    consideration of the disputed facts to those expressly found by the trial court.”
    Hughes v. State, 
    296 Ga. 744
    , 746 (1) (770 SE2d 636) (2015).
    The dissent also criticizes us for “seem[ing] to credit L.M.’s statements
    that she was participating in deliberations and considering the evidence[.]” Not
    so. Even the trial judge’s findings indicated that L.M. had participated in
    deliberations for at least two hours: “It was stated that as early as two hours
    into deliberations, L.M. announced that she had made up her mind and then
    removed herself from further discussions.”
    13 The basis for the trial court’s finding that L.M. stopped deliberating
    after two hours is unclear.
    28
    support removal. Each of these findings is part and parcel of the
    notion that L.M. reached a firm conclusion as to the counts before
    the jury and declined to deliberate further. Although the dissent
    makes much of the trial court’s finding that L.M. was “impeding the
    jury’s progress as a whole in deliberating,” the court made no finding
    that L.M. prevented other jurors from deliberating, and the context
    of that finding strongly suggests that the court meant that L.M. was
    impeding deliberations in the sense that the jury was unable to
    reach a unanimous verdict given her unwillingness to participate in
    further discussions. We are not aware of any decision of this Court
    holding that a juror’s having arrived at a firm conclusion based on
    the trial evidence — or arriving at that conclusion too quickly after
    deliberations begin — constitutes good cause for removal. Indeed,
    “once a juror has heard the evidence, the arguments of counsel, and
    the court’s instructions on the law, there is no requirement that the
    juror spend any particular length of time deliberating before
    forming an opinion as to the defendant’s guilt or innocence.” Moon,
    312 Ga. at 46 (2) (b) n.7.
    29
    With one possible exception, the limited case law on which the
    State relies does not support L.M.’s removal.14 And, as explained
    below, we expressly disapprove that one possible exception, Bethea
    v. State, 
    337 Ga. App. 217
     (786 SE2d 891) (2016), to the extent that
    it could be read as inconsistent with the general rule we have found
    in Georgia case law.
    In Jones, we concluded that the trial court acted within its
    discretion in removing a juror who asked to be removed, “repeatedly
    broke down” when questioned by the court, and told the court she
    was unable to continue to deliberating. 307 Ga. at 465-466 (2). But
    there was no indication in that opinion that the reason the juror felt
    that she was unable to continue was that she had reached a firm
    conclusion at odds with her fellow jurors. Indeed, we made clear in
    that case that “it would be inappropriate to release the juror at issue
    14 The District Attorney makes a substantive argument about only two
    cases, Bethea and Mayfield v. State, 
    276 Ga. 324
     (578 SE2d 438) (2003), citing
    a third case only for the applicable standard of review. The Attorney General
    cites no cases for anything other than generally applicable standards, but we
    interpret generously the parentheticals for two of those cases, Mills and Jones,
    as containing some kind of case-specific argument.
    30
    merely because she was a lone holdout” and noted the juror’s
    unhappiness with another juror. 
    Id. at 466
     (2) n.5.
    In Mills, we held that a trial court abused its discretion in
    removing a holdout juror who said that she would change her mind
    only if the State could present a clear-resolution video of the crime.
    See 308 Ga. at 559-563 (2). The trial court found that this
    constituted failure to follow the court’s instruction on the burden of
    proof, but we disagreed, in part due to an insufficient investigation.
    See id. Nothing in Mills supports the State’s argument; the trial
    court here made no finding about any failure by L.M. to follow
    instructions.
    In Mayfield v. State, 
    276 Ga. 324
     (578 SE2d 438) (2003), we
    affirmed a trial court’s decision to investigate and then give an Allen
    charge instead of remove a juror or grant a mistrial; in that case, a
    note from the jury accused a juror of refusing to apply the law, and
    then later a juror threatened violence. See 
    id. at 326-331
     (2).
    Nothing in Mayfield supports the State’s argument; the trial court
    in Mayfield did not remove a juror, and, in any event, the trial court
    31
    here found that L.M. did not threaten anyone and did not find that
    she refused to follow the law.
    Finally, the State cites Bethea, a Court of Appeals decision that
    affirmed the removal of a juror based in part on the trial court’s
    conclusion that the juror had “reached a fixed and definite opinion”
    early in determinations, apparently after “fewer than two hours.”
    337 Ga. App. at 219-220. But we have cited that case only once, in a
    “Compare” cite that characterized the juror removed therein as
    having “formed an unwavering opinion before fully vetting the
    evidence[.]” Moon, 312 Ga. at 47 (2) (b). Our uncritical citation of
    Bethea in that fashion did not adopt all of its reasoning. And to the
    extent that Bethea holds that a juror’s refusal to deliberate further
    once she has made up her mind after two hours of deliberations is
    good cause to remove her, we decline to adopt that holding now.
    Bethea states generally that “[l]egal cause for excusing a juror
    arises when the court determines, in its sound discretion, that the
    juror holds an opinion so fixed and definite that he or she cannot lay
    it aside and decide the case on the evidence presented and the court’s
    32
    charge.” 337 Ga. App. at 219 (citation and punctuation omitted). For
    that proposition and others, however, Bethea relies on Georgia
    appellate opinions involving questions about the removal of jurors
    prior to the start of deliberations. See id. at 219 nn.6-9 & 11.
    “Because a juror’s verdict must be based on the evidence in the case,
    a trial court may excuse for cause a prospective juror who has formed
    a fixed opinion as to the defendant’s guilt or innocence prior to
    hearing any evidence in a case.” Moon, 312 Ga. at 46 (2) (b) n.7
    (emphasis in original); see also Edmonds v. State, 
    275 Ga. 450
    , 453
    (2) (569 SE2d 530) (2002) (“In order for a potential juror to be
    excused for cause, see OCGA § 15-12-164 (a), the person must be
    shown to hold an opinion of the guilt or innocence of the defendant
    that is so fixed and definite that the person will be unable to set the
    opinion aside and decide the case upon the evidence or the court’s
    charge upon the evidence.”); Willis v. State, 
    12 Ga. 444
    , 446 (1)
    (1853) (“The question then is, whether the formation and
    entertaining of a fixed opinion, either for or against the prisoner,
    will disqualify the Juror. We now rule for the first time that it will.”);
    33
    OCGA § 15-12-164 (providing that prospective jurors for felony trials
    must be asked during voir dire whether they have “formed and
    expressed any opinion in regard to the guilt or innocence of the
    accused” and that a juror’s answer to that question may make the
    juror “incompetent” and subject to being set aside for cause).
    This Court also has held that good cause to remove a selected
    juror who has reached a “fixed and definite” opinion of guilt or
    innocence can be established after jury selection, before the start of
    deliberations. See Butler v. State, 
    290 Ga. 412
    , 417-418 (5) (721
    SE2d 876) (2012). Indeed, a juror or prospective juror who holds a
    fixed opinion about guilt or innocence before the evidence is
    complete and the judge has charged the jury has necessarily arrived
    at that opinion improperly, because that opinion is necessarily based
    on something other than all the evidence and the judge’s charge. But
    it makes no sense to extend that same proposition to a juror who has
    reached a fixed opinion after listening to all of the evidence and the
    judge’s charge, and engaging in deliberations. Such a juror may have
    done precisely what we expect jurors to do — consider the law and
    34
    evidence, and thereby reach a conclusion with a high level of
    personal confidence.
    Bethea can be read in two different ways. First, it can be read
    consistent with Georgia law as affirming the removal of a juror who
    refused to decide the case based on the trial evidence. See 337 Ga.
    App. at 219-220 (noting trial court’s concern that juror reached a
    decision “without fully vetting the evidence with the other jurors,”
    and stating that good cause for removing exists when “juror holds
    an opinion so fixed and definite that he or she cannot lay it aside
    and decide the case on the evidence presented and the court’s
    charge” (citation and punctuation omitted)). But Bethea can also be
    read to conclude that a juror may be removed for deliberating for
    what the court deems an insufficient amount of time before arriving
    at a conclusion. See id. (citing as reasons for removal that “she had
    reached an unwavering opinion fewer than two hours into the
    deliberation,” “very early on, the juror had ceased deliberating with
    the other members of the jury,” and “the juror held a fixed and
    definite opinion so early in the process”). We expressly disapprove
    35
    as inconsistent with Georgia law this second interpretation of
    Bethea. 15
    Georgia law does not require a juror who has properly reached
    a fixed opinion as to guilt or innocence to continue to deliberate
    indefinitely in order to fulfill the juror’s duty. See Moon, 312 Ga. at
    46 n.7; Delgado, 356 Ga. App. at 629-630; Semega, 302 Ga. App. at
    880-883 (1). At some point a juror who has reached and
    communicated a firm conclusion as to guilt or innocence may stop
    engaging with other jurors in deliberations.16 Most people lack the
    fortitude to debate an issue with strangers indefinitely. That does
    not mean that they are “unable to perform [their] duty” within the
    meaning of OCGA § 15-12-172.17
    15  The dissent agrees with this disapproval while still relying on Bethea
    as support for its conclusion. But only the now-disapproved reading of Bethea
    supports the dissent.
    16 If a juror has a fixed view immediately upon beginning deliberations,
    that might support a finding that the juror developed that view previously
    based on something other than the complete trial evidence and the law. But
    this is not such a case, and the trial court made no such finding.
    17 We also note that this Court has affirmed guilty verdicts reached in
    less than two hours in murder and other serious felony cases. See Franklin v.
    State, 
    303 Ga. 165
     (810 SE2d 118) (2018) (affirming murder conviction on
    verdict reached after 90 minutes of deliberations); Jones v. State, 
    243 Ga. 820
    36
    And although the trial court also found that L.M. “asked to be
    removed from the jury,” a point that has supported removal in
    several other Georgia cases, that request does not support removal
    here. That request was made in a note sent to the court, and the
    relevant text of the note made clear that the request was a result of
    L.M.’s firm conclusion that the evidence was insufficient to convict:
    I’m not sure if I have a different understanding of the law
    or what. I honestly feel that they do have some evidence
    but not enough for me to say guilty. I’m not sure if I have
    a different concept of how things work or what[] my duty
    here is, I have been through the evidence[;] we have went
    over it. I’m not sure what y[’]all want from me, only thing
    happening now is, I’m getting force[d] to follow what
    everyone else is saying. Can I be switch[ed] with an
    alternate so y[’]all can get the answer you’re looking for.
    I’m firm!
    A juror cannot be removed from a jury based on his or her request
    to be removed when that request is based on a “firm” conclusion that
    the evidence is insufficient to convict. Compare Smith v. State, 266
    (256 SE2d 907) (1979) (upholding murder conviction and death sentence where
    jury reached guilty verdict after 50 minutes and death penalty
    recommendation after 58 minutes); Jones v. State, 
    233 Ga. 662
     (212 SE2d 832)
    (1975) (affirming rape convictions based on verdicts reached after 13 minutes
    of deliberations).
    
    37 Ga. 827
    , 829 (2) (470 SE2d 674) (1996) (affirming removal when
    juror informed court she could not fulfill her duties as a juror
    because she had to undergo emergency dental surgery); Alford, 244
    Ga. App. at 238 (affirming removal when juror kept repeating that
    he wanted to be removed and “never stated that he believed the
    defendants were innocent but rather described problems dealing
    with his fellow jurors and participating in deliberations”); and
    Cloud, 235 Ga. App. at 722 (1) (affirming removal when juror
    requested removal, cried, and said he could not judge the defendant,
    and the record provided “no support for [defendant’s] contention that
    the juror was actually expressing his view of [defendant’s]
    innocence”); with Mason, 244 Ga. App. at 247-250 (reversing
    removal when juror concluded defendant was not guilty, but
    requested to be removed because she needed to get back to her
    business and if she were required to continue deliberating, she
    “might change her vote to go along with the majority” even though
    “her opinion about the case would not change”).
    Because the trial court abused its discretion in removing L.M.
    38
    from the jury, we conclude that Jones’s and McFarland’s convictions
    must be reversed. See Moon, 312 Ga. at 50 (2) (reversing convictions
    where trial court abused its discretion in removing juror during
    deliberations); Mills, 308 Ga. at 562-563 (2) (“Dismissal of a juror
    without any factual support or for a legally irrelevant reason is
    prejudicial.” (citation and punctuation omitted)).
    3.   Although we conclude that Jones and McFarland are
    entitled to new trials based on the trial court’s handling of the juror
    issue, we must consider McFarland’s argument that the evidence
    was constitutionally insufficient to sustain his convictions, as retrial
    would be precluded were he correct on this point. We conclude that
    the evidence is constitutionally sufficient.
    McFarland     specifically   argues   that   the   evidence   was
    constitutionally insufficient as to him under Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U. S. 307
     (III) (B) (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979), because the
    State failed to show that he was a party to the crimes. When
    evaluating the sufficiency of evidence as a matter of constitutional
    due process, “the relevant question is whether, after viewing the
    39
    evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational
    trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id. at 319
     (III) (B) (emphasis omitted).
    Moreover, “criminal intent is a question for the jury, and it may be
    inferred from [the defendant’s] conduct before, during, and after the
    commission of the crime.” Jones v. State, 
    292 Ga. 656
    , 658 (1) (a)
    (740 SE2d 590) (2013). Also, “[w]hile mere presence at the scene of
    a crime is not sufficient evidence to convict one of being a party to a
    crime,   criminal   intent   may       be   inferred   from   presence,
    companionship, and conduct before, during, and after the offense.”
    Parks v. State, 
    304 Ga. 313
    , 315 (1) (a) (818 SE2d 502) (2018)
    (citation and punctuation omitted).
    Here, the State presented sufficient evidence that McFarland
    was a party to the crimes charged. The State provided evidence that
    McFarland belonged to a criminal street gang and that he had a
    motive to avenge the killing of a senior gang member. Cellphone
    evidence showed that McFarland was in contact with Jones and
    Young before and immediately after the crimes. It also placed him
    40
    in the area of Peachtree Mall at the time of the crimes, which
    directly contradicted McFarland’s statement to the police wherein
    he denied being present at the mall at the time of the shooting. The
    cellphone evidence showed him moving in the same direction as
    Jones and ending in the vicinity of an address Jones had texted to
    Young after the shooting. Finally, surveillance video showed Jones,
    Young, and a third man meet in the mall parking lot. The video then
    showed the group approach Meredith together, Jones shoot
    Meredith, and the three flee the scene together after the shooting.
    When viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the
    evidence presented at trial was sufficient as a matter of
    constitutional due process to authorize a rational jury to find
    McFarland guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes charged
    based upon his being a party to the crimes. See OCGA §§ 16-2-20
    (defining party to a crime); 16-5-1 (a) (defining malice murder); 16-
    15-3 (defining “criminal street gang” and “criminal gang activity”).
    Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur, except McMillian,
    LaGrua, and Colvin, JJ., who concur in part and dissent in part.
    41
    COLVIN, Justice, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    Because I agree with the majority opinion’s conclusions that
    the evidence was sufficient to sustain McFarland’s convictions, I
    concur in Division 3. However, because the record shows that the
    trial court had a sound legal basis for dismissing a juror who, single-
    handedly, ground the deliberative process to a halt, our standard of
    review mandates a finding that the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in this case. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent from
    Division 2 and from the judgment reached in the majority opinion.
    In my mind, the majority opinion’s analysis contains a
    fundamental flaw in that it characterizes L.M. as a “holdout” juror.
    As the majority opinion notes, when L.M. announced the vote tally,
    the jury was undecided on all of the charges related to McFarland
    and on one of the charges against Young. In other words, the jurors
    were undecided on 5 of the 13 charges and they were attempting to
    continue deliberating, but L.M. removed herself from all discussions
    and became disruptive to the process, bringing deliberations to a
    halt. While a juror can maintain her “not guilty” stance based upon
    42
    her view of the evidence and the law, she cannot impede the
    deliberation process from proceeding so that no decision can be
    reached. Further, during deliberations, jurors routinely return to
    charges in the indictment and continue to debate and change their
    minds. Consequently, a tentative vote of 11 guilty 1 not guilty can
    change as the jurors continue to review and discuss the evidence
    relating to the charges not yet decided. I do not suggest, as the
    majority opinion represents, that the trial court had broader
    discretion to remove L.M. “simply because one or more other jurors
    may share that juror’s position.” Maj. Op. p. 10 n.5. In fact, the
    record would not support such a finding because all of the jurors,
    including L.M., testified that they did not take a complete vote tally
    because they only counted the “guilty” votes on each charge. 18
    Instead, it shows that the jury had no decision whatsoever on five of
    the charges when L.M. decided to stop participating.
    Turning to the removal issue, a “defendant in a criminal
    18 The majority opinion notes that L.M. herself either refused to vote or
    stated, “I don’t know” when the jury attempted to take votes on all of the
    charges.
    43
    proceeding has no vested interest in the service of any particular
    juror, but is entitled only to a legal and impartial jury.” Reynolds
    v. State, 
    271 Ga. 174
    , 175 (517 SE2d 51) (1999).19 Under Georgia
    law, “[a] trial court is statutorily vested with the discretion to
    discharge a juror and seat an alternate juror at any time during the
    proceedings, as long as the trial court has a sound legal basis to do
    so.” Smith v. State, 
    284 Ga. 17
    , 22 (663 SE2d 142) (2008) (citing
    OCGA § 15-12-172). See also Green v. Zant, 715 F2d 551, 555 (11th
    Cir. 1983) (“There must be some sound basis upon which the trial
    judge exercises his discretion to remove the juror.” (citation and
    punctuation omitted)). “A sound [legal] basis may be one which
    serves the legally relevant purpose of preserving public respect for
    19 Contrary to the majority opinion’s assertion, our decision in Moon v.
    State, 
    312 Ga. 31
     (860 SE2d 519) (2021), does not stand for the proposition that
    a criminal defendant has a vested interest in the service of a particular juror.
    If this were true, then judges would never be able to exercise the discretion
    granted to them by the General Assembly to remove a juror during
    deliberations, because a criminal defendant would always have a vested
    interest in every juror on the panel. Instead, Moon held that the trial court
    abused its discretion because its removal “inquiry fell short and resulted in
    dismissing [a juror] on a basis that was not legally sound.” Moon, 312 Ga. at
    45.
    44
    the integrity of the judicial process.” Gibson v. State, 
    290 Ga. 6
    , 10
    (717 SE2d 447) (2011) (citation and punctuation omitted). A trial
    court’s decision to remove a juror under OCGA § 15-12-172 is
    reviewed for an abuse of discretion, see Cummings v. State, 
    280 Ga. 831
    , 835 (6) (632 SE2d 152) (2006), and the court “has broad
    discretion to determine whether it is appropriate” to do so, Smith v.
    State, 
    298 Ga. 357
    , 360 (3) (782 SE2d 26) (2016). “[T]he trial court’s
    determination in matters such as this is based on the demeanor and
    credibility of the juror in question, which are peculiarly in the trial
    court’s province.” State v. Arnold, 
    280 Ga. 487
    , 490 n.2 (629 SE2d
    807) (2006) (citations and punctuation omitted).
    Our case law is clear that a trial court abuses its discretion
    when a juror is dismissed “without any factual support or for a
    legally irrelevant reason.” Mills v. State, 
    308 Ga. 558
    , 560 (2) (842
    SE2d 284) (2020) (citation and punctuation omitted). Indeed, the
    cases relied upon by the majority for a finding of an abuse of
    discretion fall into one of these two categories. See Moon v. State,
    
    312 Ga. 31
    , 45 (b) (860 SE2d 519) (2021) (holding that the trial
    45
    court’s limited inquiry into a holdout juror’s possible incapacity did
    not provide sufficient factual support to show that the juror’s
    removal fell within a sound legal basis); Mills, 308 Ga. at 559-562
    (2) (trial court abused its discretion for immediately removing a
    holdout juror without conducting any inquiry into the juror’s alleged
    incapacity so as to provide a sufficient factual basis for her removal);
    Semega v. State, 
    302 Ga. App. 879
    , 879-882 (1) (691 SE2d 923) (2010)
    (“Given that the jury was deadlocked, the trial court should not have
    relied solely on the foreperson’s assertion that a juror was refusing
    to participate, but should have conducted further inquiry before
    replacing the juror with an alternate.”). See also Delgado v. State,
    
    356 Ga. App. 625
    , 629-630 (848 SE2d 665) (2020) (trial court abused
    its discretion by removing lone holdout juror without a sound legal
    basis as the juror “did not fail to fulfill his obligations as a juror, but
    rather had reached a decision, . . . after meaningfully deliberating
    and trying to reach a verdict”); Mason v. State, 
    244 Ga. App. 247
     (1)
    (555 SE3d 497) (2000) (no sound legal basis for juror removal where
    there “was no showing that the juror was unable to fulfill her
    46
    duties,” “the juror’s statements that she did not want to deliberate
    further and would not change her vote did not amount to a refusal
    to deliberate,” and the juror’s concern “about getting back to her
    business . . . [did] not amount to a legal cause for dismissal”); Stokes
    v. State, 
    204 Ga. App. 141
    , 141 (418 SE2d 419) (1992) (trial court
    abused its discretion in removing two jurors where “[t]here was no
    showing that the jurors were in any way incapacitated or unable to
    fulfill their duties and no other legal cause was shown,” and where
    the trial court failed to develop any factual basis to support the
    jurors’ removal).
    This is not a case where the trial court removed a juror without
    factual support.    Compare Moon, supra; Mills, supra; Semega,
    supra; Stokes, supra. Instead, the trial court properly followed our
    case law by performing a comprehensive inquiry into the allegations
    of misconduct – he questioned the entire jury panel and then
    thoroughly questioned L.M. and the jurors who had alleged the
    misconduct, including asking jurors to make written accounts of the
    47
    behavior they witnessed.20     This investigation created extensive
    factual support for the trial court’s ultimate decision to remove L.M.,
    and the majority opinion concedes that there are ample facts in the
    record to support removal.
    Despite this, the majority opinion narrowly reads the trial
    court’s order before concluding that the trial court abused its
    discretion by removing L.M. from the jury. But “[o]n appeal, the
    question   is   whether    evidence    supports   the   trial   court’s
    determination [for removing the juror].” Butler v. State, 
    290 Ga. 412
    , 417-418 (5) (721 SE2d 876) (2012).       Indeed, the majority’s
    conclusion that “[t]his case seemingly has one foot in each line of
    cases” regarding juror removal requires that we affirm the decision
    to remove because of the deference we owe to the trial court.
    Giving the trial court’s credibility determinations and factual
    findings the proper deference, considering the totality of the
    circumstances as borne out by the court’s extensive investigation,
    20  The inquiry itself spanned approximately 45 pages of the trial
    transcript.
    48
    and reading the court’s order as a whole, I must conclude that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion when it removed L.M. from
    the jury for impeding the deliberative process. The record shows
    that L.M. refused to deliberate early on, 21 though the rest of the jury
    was split on 5 of the 13 charges; physically removed herself from
    conversing with the other jurors; refused to consider the views of
    others, explain her own opinions or views to the other members of
    the panel, or fully participate in the voting process; asked to be
    removed from the jury panel; insulted other jurors, causing a
    chilling effect in the jury room; was “disruptive to moving forward
    in [the] deliberation process” because, while her behavior did not
    prevent jurors from considering the evidence and the law, it forced
    them to “operat[e as] an eleven member jury”; and that her
    disagreements with other jurors were “emotional” rather than based
    21 While there is a discrepancy between the trial court’s order and the
    record as to whether L.M. stopped deliberating after “two hours” or after “a few
    hours,” that discrepancy is not material to the trial court’s ruling. What
    matters is L.M.’s refusal to continue deliberating while the rest of the jury was
    attempting to consider the evidence and the law and applying the same to all
    of the charges against all of the defendants.
    49
    on the law or the facts. Based on the foregoing, I conclude that the
    trial court conducted a thorough investigation into L.M.’s
    interference in the deliberative process and “developed a factual
    basis for its decision to remove [L.M.] for a legally relevant purpose.”
    Gibson, 290 Ga. at 10.
    Still, the majority opinion seems to credit L.M.’s statements
    that she was participating in deliberations and considering the
    evidence in order to conclude that the trial court abused its
    discretion by removing her. However, the trial court is not required
    to ignore the evidence from the other jurors that L.M. was not
    deliberating, nor does L.M.’s testimony “make the trial court’s
    [implicit] credibility decision to strike” her erroneous. Butler, 290
    Ga. at 418. See Cummings, 
    280 Ga. at 834-835
     (trial court did not
    abuse its discretion in replacing a juror for good cause based on the
    “totality of the circumstances”).22 Moreover, “we owe substantial
    deference to the way in which the trial court resolved disputed
    22Further, neither Jones nor McFarland “contend that the alternate
    juror who replaced [L.M.] was not qualified to serve.” Butler, 290 Ga. at 418.
    50
    questions of material fact.” Hughes v. State, 
    296 Ga. 744
    , 750 (770
    SE2d 636) (2015). While we may also “take notice of the undisputed
    facts – even if the trial court did not – without interfering with the
    prerogative of the trial court to resolve disputes of material fact,” 
    id.
    at 747 n.4, appellate courts cannot “make alternative findings of fact
    that are contrary to those explicitly or implicitly made by the trial
    court where other evidence exists that supports the trial court’s
    findings,” Mathenia v. Brumbelow, 
    308 Ga. 714
    , 716 n.3 (843 SE2d
    582) (2020).    By finding that the trial court abused its broad
    discretion in this case, the majority opinion ignores the substantial
    deference we owe to the trial court’s explicit and implicit findings
    concerning disputes of material fact.
    Further, I disagree with the majority opinion that the trial
    court did not have a sound legal basis to remove L.M. Though the
    majority opinion categorizes the trial court’s findings as “part and
    parcel to the notion that L.M. reached a firm conclusion . . . and
    declined to deliberate further,” Maj. Op. p. 29, the trial court’s order
    broadly concluded that L.M. “was impeding the jury’s progress as a
    51
    whole in deliberating.” In order to narrowly interpret this broad
    finding of the trial court, the majority opinion concludes that “the
    context of that finding makes clear that the court merely meant that
    L.M. was impeding deliberations in the sense that the jury was
    unable to reach a unanimous verdict given her unwillingness to
    participate in further discussions.” 
    Id.
     Yet the majority opinion’s
    interpretation is belied by the record. Although it appears that
    other jurors had reached an initial consensus as to Jones, the trial
    court and the jury were considering the case as it applied to all three
    defendants. To that end, the record shows that the jury was deeply
    divided on all of the counts against McFarland and on the Gang Act
    charge as it applied to Young. Despite having no consensus on these
    charges, L.M. refused to continue deliberating. She, among other
    things, physically removed herself from discussions, would not make
    eye contact with any jurors, refused to cast a vote, and asked to be
    removed from the jury while there was still much work to be done.
    In other words, whether L.M. was preventing other jurors from
    deliberating is of no consequence, because, as the trial court found,
    52
    she was subverting the deliberative process as a whole.
    Both this Court and the Court of Appeals have recognized that
    removal of a juror who was inhibiting the deliberative process is a
    sound legal basis for removal because it “serves the legally relevant
    purpose of preserving public respect for the integrity of the judicial
    process.” Arnold, 
    280 Ga. at 489-490
     (no abuse of discretion for
    removal of juror “who unduly disrupts and prevents the ongoing
    deliberative process”). See also Bethea v. State, 
    337 Ga. App. 217
    ,
    219-220 (786 SE2d 891) (2016) (to the extent that it holds that a trial
    court does not abuse its discretion for dismissing a juror who refuses
    to participate in deliberations);23 Thompson v. State, 
    260 Ga. App. 253
     (5) (581 SE2d 596) (2003) (no abuse of discretion for removal of
    juror where the trial court’s investigation revealed that the hold-out
    juror “was connected to an ongoing attempt to subvert the jury” and
    that “the deliberative process of the jury was under attack”); Alford
    v. State, 
    244 Ga. App. 234
    , 236-237 (534 SE2d 103) (2000) (no abuse
    23I agree with the majority opinion’s disapproval of Bethea to the extent
    that it improperly extended Georgia’s “fixed and definite” case law to the
    removal of jurors after deliberations have begun. Maj. Op. pp. 32-36.
    53
    of discretion for removing juror where that juror was antagonistic to
    other jurors, refused to participate in discussions or explain his
    opinions, and “wanted off” the jury); Jones v. State, 
    307 Ga. 463
    , 466
    (2) (835 SE2d 620) (2019) (no abuse of discretion for removal of juror
    who had “stopped participating in deliberations”).
    Because removal of a juror for impeding the deliberative
    process provides a sound legal basis for removal, and because the
    trial court developed sufficient facts in the record to support its
    reasoning for removal, I must conclude that the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion by removing L.M. from the jury. Because I
    would affirm the decision of the trial court, I dissent as to Division
    2 and in the judgment of the Court. 24
    I am authorized to state that Justice McMillian and Justice
    LaGrua join in this opinion concurring in part and dissenting in
    part.
    I also see no basis in the other enumerations of error raised by Jones
    24
    and McFarland for reversal of the judgment in this case.
    54