Locklear v. State ( 2023 )


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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
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    official text of the opinion.
    In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: August 21, 2023
    S23A0601. LOCKLEAR v. THE STATE.
    BETHEL, Justice.
    A jury found Tony James Locklear guilty of the malice murder
    of William Long, concealing a death, and related charges. 1 On
    appeal, Locklear challenges the sufficiency of the evidence
    supporting his convictions. He also argues that the trial court erred
    by (1) failing to suppress statements made during his custodial
    1 On January 9, 2019, a Chatham County grand jury indicted Locklear
    for malice murder, felony murder, aggravated assault, and concealing the
    death of another. Locklear was tried before a jury from November 18 to 21,
    2019, and he was found guilty of all counts. The trial court sentenced Locklear
    as a recidivist under OCGA § 17-10-7 (a) and (c) to serve life in prison for malice
    murder and a consecutive term of ten years for concealing the death of another.
    The felony murder count was vacated by operation of law, and the aggravated
    assault count merged into the malice murder conviction. Locklear filed a timely
    motion for new trial on November 26, 2019, which he amended through new
    counsel on January 7, 2022, and August 15, 2022. Following a hearing, the trial
    court denied Locklear’s motion for new trial as amended. Locklear filed a
    timely notice of appeal, and his appeal was docketed in this Court to the April
    2023 term and submitted for a decision on the briefs.
    interview; (2) denying his motion to suppress certain physical
    evidence; (3) providing a confusing verdict form to the jury; and
    (4) refusing to grant a mistrial after the prosecutor made improper
    comments during closing arguments. Because the evidence was
    clearly sufficient to support Locklear’s convictions and because the
    trial court committed no reversible error with respect to Locklear’s
    other enumerations of error, we affirm.
    1. Locklear first asserts that the evidence was insufficient to
    support his convictions. When considering the sufficiency of
    evidence, we ask “whether, after viewing the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could
    have found the essential elements of the crime[s] beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” (Emphasis omitted.) Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U. S. 307
    , 319 (III) (B) (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).
    Viewed in this light, the evidence at trial showed as follows. On
    the morning of October 13, 2018, 82-year-old William Long left his
    home for work but did not return that evening and did not answer
    his phone when family and friends tried to contact him. The next
    2
    day, with Long still missing, his son, Robert Long, accessed his
    father’s phone records, which showed that Long’s last call was made
    at 8:51 a.m. on October 13. Robert began calling the most recent
    phone numbers that his father had called, and he reached Locklear,
    who stated that he had worked for and been fired by Long on four
    occasions but had contacted Long recently to inquire about more
    work. Locklear indicated that Long had agreed to hire him and was
    supposed to pick him up the previous morning but never arrived.
    In the meantime, Floyd Williams, Long’s friend, decided to look
    for Long at job sites where Long had recently worked. Williams,
    accompanied by his grandson, soon located Long’s truck with
    Locklear asleep inside. While Williams’ grandson was peeking in the
    truck’s window, Locklear awoke and drove off, nearly hitting
    Williams’ grandson in the process. Williams and his grandson gave
    chase, followed the truck for about ten minutes, lost it briefly, and
    then found it abandoned in a residential area with its door open and
    the key still in the ignition. Williams contacted police during the
    pursuit, and responding officers found Locklear about ten feet from
    3
    the truck hiding behind a tree and holding a small knife to his own
    neck. After being detained, Locklear told officers that he intended to
    “end it all” and expected to spend the rest of his life in prison. The
    officers then transported Locklear to the police station.
    During a custodial interview, Locklear, who was homeless and
    had been camping in a wooded area, described the events leading to
    Long’s death and told police where to find Long’s body. According to
    Locklear, he “ha[s] blackouts sometimes,” and, although he could not
    remember anything about the incident when he first awoke on the
    morning of October 14, his memories had started to return. Locklear
    claimed that Long “put his hands on [Locklear] and pulled
    [Locklear’s] pants down,” which, he said, caused him to blackout.
    Locklear reported discovering Long’s body near his campsite. Police
    later learned that Locklear left a voicemail for his son and daughter-
    in-law the morning of October 14, explaining that he “need[ed]
    [them] bad” and had “f**ked up.”
    Officers located Long’s body in a wooded area about 50 yards
    from Locklear’s tent. The body had been rolled in a plastic tarp,
    4
    placed in a sleeping bag, and wrapped in trash bags with twine tied
    around the head and feet; debris had been heaped on the body. Police
    obtained a warrant to search Locklear’s tent and, inside, found the
    same twine used to bind Long’s body, as well as a knife that
    appeared blood-stained and on which Long’s DNA was later
    identified. The autopsy revealed that Long had suffered 21 sharp
    and blunt force injuries — mostly to his head and neck — the totality
    of which resulted in his death. It appeared from the autopsy that
    one wound was inflicted by a screwdriver, and police located a
    screwdriver during a subsequent search of Locklear’s tent.
    Locklear’s theory of defense at trial was that he acted in self-
    defense after Long attempted to commit a forcible felony —
    aggravated oral sodomy — against him. Locklear did not testify or
    offer any evidence in support of his defense and instead relied solely
    on his statements made during the custodial interview. The
    evidence recounted above was plainly sufficient to sustain Locklear’s
    convictions as a matter of constitutional due process. See Jackson,
    
    443 U. S. at 319
     (III) (B). Locklear’s arguments to the contrary are
    5
    unavailing.
    Locklear first argues that the evidence was insufficient to
    support his conviction for malice murder because, he says, the State
    did not produce any evidence to contradict his claim of self-defense.
    He also contends that, even if his actions did not rise to the level of
    self-defense, the evidence showed that he acted in a heat of passion
    and that he should have been found guilty of voluntary
    manslaughter, rather than malice murder. “But questions about the
    existence of justification are for a jury to decide,” Corley v. State, 
    308 Ga. 321
    , 322 (1) (a) (
    840 SE2d 391
    ) (2020), as are questions about
    the sufficiency of provocation to support a verdict of voluntary
    manslaughter, see McNair v. State, 
    296 Ga. 181
    , 182 (1) (
    766 SE2d 45
    ) (2014). And contrary to Locklear’s contention, the State
    presented significant evidence contradicting his self-serving version
    of events, including evidence showing that Locklear used both a
    knife and a screwdriver to stab the 82-year-old Long 21 times and
    subsequently took extensive measures to conceal Long’s body. See
    Martin v. State, 
    306 Ga. 538
    , 541 (1) (
    832 SE2d 402
    ) (2019) (evidence
    6
    that appellant “took extreme measures to destroy and conceal
    evidence” undermined his claim of self-defense); Ferguson v. State,
    
    297 Ga. 342
    , 344 (1) (
    773 SE2d 749
    ) (2015) (jury was authorized to
    reject appellant’s unrebutted testimony that he acted in self-
    defense, especially in light of “evidence that appear[ed] at odds with
    [appellant’s] account, as, for example, the sheer number of stab
    wounds sustained by [the victim], which is indicative of an
    aggressive attack rather than defensive maneuverings”).
    Turning to the conviction for concealing a death, Locklear
    argues that, because he told police where to find Long’s body, he did
    not hinder discovery of Long’s murder. 2 But the evidence showed
    that Locklear went to great lengths to conceal Long’s death: Long’s
    body was found in a wooded area, about 50 feet from the wood line,
    wrapped in a sleeping bag and plastic tarp, tied with twine, and
    covered with trash, and investigating officers found blood spatter on
    trees about 15 yards from where Long’s body was located, indicating
    2 “A person who, by concealing the death of any other person, hinders a
    discovery of whether or not such person was unlawfully killed is guilty of a
    felony[.]” OCGA § 16-10-31.
    7
    that the body was moved. In addition, when contacted by Long’s son,
    Locklear prevaricated, indicating that he had not seen Long, despite
    knowing both where Long was and that he was dead. That Locklear
    eventually told police where to find Long’s body does not negate the
    fact that Locklear concealed Long’s death when he “hindered
    discovery” of the facts that Long “was dead and was the victim of an
    unlawful homicide.” White v. State, 
    287 Ga. 713
    , 716-717 (1) (c) (
    699 SE2d 291
    ) (2010) (sufficient evidence supported conviction for
    concealing death of another where appellant removed victim’s body
    from site where she was killed and falsely told victim’s children and
    police that victim was missing when he knew she was dead). The
    evidence at trial was more than sufficient to support Locklear’s
    convictions for malice murder and concealing the death of another.
    2. Locklear next asserts that the trial court erred by failing to
    suppress incriminating statements made during his custodial
    interview at the police station, which he says were made after he
    invoked his right to remain silent under the Fifth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution. To establish that he invoked his right to
    8
    remain silent, Locklear points to body-camera footage taken at the
    location where he was detained that shows an officer asking
    Locklear, who was handcuffed in the backseat of a police car, how
    he obtained Long’s truck and Locklear responding, “Bill c[a]me by
    yesterday, okay, that’s as far as I’m going with it.” This claim fails.
    The record shows that Locklear filed a pre-trial motion to
    suppress statements he made after first being detained by police and
    later during the custodial interview at the police station on the
    grounds that police questioned him without giving him the warnings
    required by Miranda 3 and that he invoked his right to remain silent
    but was ignored. Following a Jackson-Denno 4 hearing, the trial
    court granted Locklear’s motion and suppressed his statements
    made at the scene after Locklear was asked how he came into
    possession of Long’s truck, finding that officers questioned Locklear
    without first advising him of the Miranda warnings. But the trial
    court denied the motion as to statements made during the custodial
    3 Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U. S. 436
     (86 SCt 1602, 16 LE2d 694) (1966).
    4 Jackson v. Denno, 
    378 U. S. 368
     (84 SCt 1774, 12 LE2d 908) (1964).
    9
    interview at the police station, finding that Locklear was advised of
    the Miranda warnings prior to the interview and that he understood
    his rights, voluntarily waived them, and gave his statements freely
    and voluntarily.
    Though Locklear’s motion expressly asserted a second basis for
    suppression — that the officers failed to honor his invocation of his
    right to remain silent, the same argument he raises on appeal — the
    trial court made no ruling on that issue. It does not appear from the
    record that Locklear moved for reconsideration or otherwise brought
    to the trial court’s attention its failure to rule on the issue of whether
    he invoked his right to remain silent, nor did Locklear renew his
    objection to the admission of this evidence at trial. Accordingly, we
    review this claim only for plain error. See Goins v. State, 
    310 Ga. 199
    , 204 (4) (
    850 SE2d 68
    ) (2020) (applying plain-error review where
    appellant moved to suppress evidence on certain grounds but trial
    court did not rule on the motion and appellant did not request a
    ruling or object when the evidence was admitted at trial); Lofton v.
    State, 
    309 Ga. 349
    , 358 (4) (
    846 SE2d 57
    ) (2020) (same); OCGA § 24-
    10
    1-103 (d).
    To prevail on this claim, [Locklear] must demonstrate
    that the trial court committed an error that was not
    affirmatively waived, was obvious beyond reasonable
    dispute, likely affected the outcome of his trial, and
    seriously affected the fairness, integrity, or public
    reputation of judicial proceedings.
    Goins, 310 Ga. at 204 (4). “And if an appellant fails to establish any
    one of these elements, his plain error claim fails.” Wright v. State,
    
    315 Ga. 459
    , 462 (3) (
    883 SE2d 294
    ) (2023).
    We have explained that “[p]olice must scrupulously honor a
    suspect’s right to remain silent if the person clearly and
    unambiguously     states   that   he   wants    to   end   a   custodial
    interrogation.” (Punctuation omitted.) Causey v. State, 
    307 Ga. 147
    ,
    148-149 (2) (
    834 SE2d 857
    ) (2019). “Whether an invocation is
    unambiguous and unequivocal depends on whether the accused
    articulated a desire to cut off questioning with sufficient clarity that
    a reasonable police officer in the circumstances would understand
    the statement to be an assertion of the right to remain silent.” Sillah
    v. State, 
    315 Ga. 741
    , 748 (2) (
    883 SE2d 756
    ) (2023). “[I]f a defendant
    11
    equivocates in asserting the right, a police officer is under no
    obligation to clarify or to stop questioning.” (Punctuation omitted.)
    Causey, 307 Ga. at 149 (2).
    To support his claim that he invoked his right to remain silent,
    Locklear relies on his statement made at the scene in response to
    the officer’s question about how he obtained Long’s truck, “Bill
    c[a]me by yesterday, okay, that’s as far as I’m going with it”; he also
    points to his refusal to answer some of the officer’s subsequent
    questions as evidence of invocation. But neither that statement nor
    Locklear’s subsequent silence was “an invocation of his right to
    remain silent, let alone an ‘unequivocal and unambiguous’ one.”
    Dozier v. State, 
    306 Ga. 29
    , 34 (4) (a) (
    829 SE2d 131
    ) (2019). A
    reasonable law enforcement officer instead would have understood
    Locklear’s statement to mean only that he did not want to discuss in
    greater detail what happened in relation to Long’s truck, not that he
    did not want to speak to police at all. 5 See Cheley v. State, 
    299 Ga. 5
     To that end, about a minute after Locklear made the statement, the
    officer asked, “You don’t want to tell us about what happened after [Long] came
    12
    88, 91 (2) (
    786 SE2d 642
    ) (2016) (considered in context, a reasonable
    officer would have understood appellant’s statement that he was
    “completely finished” to mean “only that [appellant] had lost
    patience with the repeated and continued questions about what he
    had done before buying gasoline and that he wanted to know what
    the investigators were investigating” (emphasis in original)); Barnes
    v. State, 
    287 Ga. 423
    , 425 (2) (
    696 SE2d 629
    ) (2010) (appellant’s
    statement “‘if you’re not going to talk real talk, then we shouldn’t
    talk’ was not an unequivocal and unambiguous invocation of his
    right to remain silent” because “it was conditional and ambiguous,
    and lacked sufficient clarity to lead a reasonable police officer to
    understand that [appellant] was exercising his right to remain
    silent”). Locklear’s contention that he invoked his right to remain
    silent by not answering the officer’s subsequent questions is likewise
    unavailing because his refusal to respond does not amount to an
    “unambiguous and unequivocal invocation.” See Berghuis v.
    by and picked you up?” and Locklear responded by shaking his head in the
    negative.
    13
    Thompkins, 
    560 U. S. 370
    , 381 (III) (B) (130 SCt 2250, 176 LE2d
    1098) (2010) (rejecting argument that defendant invoked the right
    to remain silent “by not saying anything for a sufficient period of
    time”).
    Because Locklear did not unambiguously and unequivocally
    invoke his right to remain silent, the officers at the scene and, later,
    at the police station, had no obligation to stop questioning him.
    Accordingly, the trial court did not commit clear error by admitting
    Locklear’s subsequent statements made during the custodial
    interview, and Locklear has failed to establish plain error.
    3. Locklear also challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion
    to suppress evidence obtained during the search of his tent, arguing
    that the search warrant was premised on his custodial statement
    which, he asserts, was obtained in violation of his right to remain
    silent. In light of our holding in Division 2, this claim fails.
    4. In his fourth enumeration of error, Locklear contends that
    the trial court erred by providing what he says was a confusing and
    incomplete pre-printed verdict form to the jury. As Locklear
    14
    concedes, he failed to object to the verdict form at trial, so we review
    this claim only for plain error. See OCGA § 17-8-58 (b).
    “In deciding whether a verdict form accurately presented the
    law and properly guided the jury, this Court reviews the language
    of the form along with the trial court’s instructions to the jury.”
    Atkins v. State, 
    310 Ga. 246
    , 252 (3) (
    850 SE2d 103
    ) (2020).
    [A] verdict form is erroneous when the form would
    mislead jurors of reasonable understanding, or the trial
    court erroneously instructed the jury on the presumption
    of innocence, the State’s burden of proof, the possible
    verdicts that could be returned, or how the verdict should
    be entered on the printed form. A preprinted verdict form
    is treated as part of the jury instructions which are read
    and considered as a whole in determining whether there
    is [instructional] error.
    (Punctuation omitted.) 
    Id.
    The challenged language of the pre-printed verdict form read
    as follows:
    As to the homicide, we the jury, find sufficient mitigating
    evidence of passion or provocation beyond a reasonable
    doubt which causes the offense to be reduced to the
    offense of Voluntary Manslaughter;
    OR
    15
    As to the homicide, we do not find sufficient mitigating
    evidence of passion or provocation beyond a reasonable
    doubt which causes the offense to be reduce[d] to the
    offense of Voluntary Manslaughter.
    Locklear argues that the verdict form was deficient because, as he
    reads it, the form improperly required the jury, in order to find him
    not guilty of the lesser offense of voluntary manslaughter, to find
    him not guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.6 We agree that, standing
    alone, this part of the verdict form — specifically, the unnecessary
    insertion of the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard with respect
    to the presence of mitigating circumstances — is inartful and
    potentially confusing. 7 But it is axiomatic that we do not assess jury
    6 Locklear also complains that the verdict form was erroneous because it
    required the jury to consider the lesser offense of voluntary manslaughter
    before considering the remaining offenses. But our precedent makes clear that
    this instruction, in fact, was proper, and, thus, this argument is without merit.
    See, e.g., White v. State, 
    291 Ga. 7
    , 9 (3) (
    727 SE2d 109
    ) (2012) (“[T]he trial
    court . . . properly instructed the jury that it had to consider whether
    mitigating circumstances reduced the killing to voluntary manslaughter before
    it was authorized to return a guilty verdict on the malice murder or felony
    murder charge.”); Terry v. State, 
    291 Ga. 508
    , 510 (2) (
    731 SE2d 669
    ) (2012)
    (same); Miner v. State, 
    268 Ga. 67
    , 68 (4) (
    485 SE2d 456
    ) (1997) (same).
    7 The State bears the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that
    an offense was not mitigated by passion or provocation. See Morris v. State,
    
    303 Ga. 192
    , 200 (V) (C) (
    811 SE2d 321
    ) (2018). But the determination of
    whether an offense was mitigated by passion or provocation turns not on
    16
    charges in isolation; rather, we “consider them as a whole to
    determine whether there is a reasonable likelihood the jury
    improperly applied a challenged instruction.” Johnson v. State, 
    312 Ga. 481
    , 490 (3) (
    863 SE2d 137
    ) (2021). And in light of the charges
    as a whole, Locklear has not shown that the inartful nature of the
    verdict form likely affected the outcome of the proceedings.
    As an initial matter, the remainder of the preprinted verdict
    form correctly stated the burden of proof with respect to each
    charged offense. 8 The record also shows that the trial court properly
    instructed the jury on the charged offenses, the lesser offense of
    voluntary manslaughter, the State’s burden of proof, the possible
    verdicts that could be returned, and how to enter the verdicts on the
    whether the evidence shows beyond a reasonable doubt that the offense was so
    mitigated but rather whether the evidence shows that the offense resulted
    from provocation “sufficient to excite [a sudden, violent, and irresistible]
    passion in a reasonable person.” OCGA § 16-5-2 (a). Thus, the jury is tasked
    with determining whether the evidence of passion or provocation was sufficient
    to create a reasonable doubt with respect to guilt.
    8 For each of the four charged offenses, the verdict form required the jury
    to select between two options: “We, the jury, find beyond a reasonable doubt
    the Defendant, Tony Locklear is GUILTY of [the charged offense]” or “We, the
    jury, find the Defendant, Tony Locklear, NOT GUILTY of [the charged
    offense].”
    17
    printed form. In addition, the trial court instructed the jurors three
    separate times that they were required to consider whether
    mitigating circumstances caused the offense of murder to be reduced
    to voluntary manslaughter and that the State bore the burden of
    proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the offense was not
    mitigated.9 The trial court twice asked whether the jurors
    understood that instruction, and the jurors responded affirmatively
    both times. The trial court also cautioned the jurors that, if they
    found that Long’s killing occurred as a result of passion or
    provocation, they could not return a guilty verdict on the malice
    murder or felony murder counts. And the trial court provided several
    copies of the written instructions for the jury to reference during
    deliberations. See Howard v. State, 
    288 Ga. 741
    , 745 (3) (
    707 SE2d 80
    ) (2011) (“[T]he presence of the written instructions in the jury
    room would have served to enlighten, rather than confuse, the
    9 The trial court gave no indication during its verbal instructions that
    the beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard applied to the jury’s consideration of
    the existence of mitigating circumstances and instead properly limited the
    application of that standard to the State’s burden of proving the absence of
    mitigation.
    18
    jury.”). Accordingly, Locklear has not shown that the verdict form
    affected the outcome at trial and, thus, has not demonstrated plain
    error.
    5. Finally, Locklear asserts that the trial court abused its
    discretion by denying his motion for mistrial following the
    prosecutor’s improper comments during closing arguments. The
    record shows that, as part of her final summation, the prosecutor
    commented, “I know [Locklear’s] in a wheelchair now. Not really
    sure why, other than to weigh on your sympathies.” Locklear
    objected to this argument as improper, which the trial court
    sustained. Near the end of her closing argument, the prosecutor
    characterized the jury’s role as “speak[ing] for the community” and
    insisted that, if the jury found Locklear guilty only of voluntary
    manslaughter, “[i]t’s open season for murder.” Locklear again
    objected, and the trial court again sustained his objection. After the
    prosecutor had finished her argument and the jury had been excused
    from the courtroom, Locklear moved for a mistrial or, alternatively,
    a curative instruction. The trial court denied the motion for mistrial
    19
    and determined that a curative instruction was not warranted,
    reasoning that the general jury instructions sufficed to remedy the
    prosecutor’s comments. Pretermitting whether Locklear timely
    moved for a mistrial, we see no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s
    denial of the mistrial.
    A trial court has broad discretion in ruling on a motion for
    mistrial, “and the denial of a mistrial is reversible error only if it
    appears that a mistrial was essential to preserve the defendant’s
    right to a fair trial.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) McKibbins
    v. State, 
    293 Ga. 843
    , 848 (3) (
    750 SE2d 314
    ) (2013). While the
    prosecutor’s comments here were indeed improper, Locklear cannot
    establish that a mistrial was essential to preserve his right to a fair
    trial.
    The record shows that the prosecutor’s comments were
    fleeting, and the trial court sustained Locklear’s objections in the
    presence of the jury. Moreover, as part of its general charge to the
    jury, the trial court defined evidence, instructed that closing
    arguments are not evidence, and explained that only testimony and
    20
    other evidence presented during the evidentiary portion of the trial
    could be considered in reaching a verdict. The trial court also
    instructed the jury that it was duty-bound “to consider the facts
    objectively without favor, affection, or sympathy to any party” and
    was “not permitted to be governed by sympathy or prejudice or
    because of public opinion.” “We presume that jurors follow the law.”
    (Punctuation omitted.) Kessler v. State, 311 Ga 607, 614 (3) (
    858 SE2d 1
    ) (2021). Under these circumstances, any harm that flowed
    from the prosecutor’s improper comments did not affect Locklear’s
    right to a fair trial, and we cannot say that the trial court abused its
    broad discretion when it denied a mistrial. See id.; Fulcher v. State,
    
    297 Ga. 733
    , 736 (3) (
    778 SE2d 159
    ) (2015). See also Reed v. State,
    
    291 Ga. 10
    , 17 (4) (b) (
    727 SE2d 112
    ) (2012) (“[E]ven when an
    objection to improper argument is sustained but a mistrial is denied,
    other action, including the giving of curative instructions, is not
    mandatory.”).
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    21