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Brandon Astor JONES
Brandon Astor Jones
was sentenced to death for the June 17, 1979 murder of 29-year-old gas
station manager Roger Tackett. Jones and Van Roosevelt Solomon were
arrested at the scene after an officer just happened to drive up and
heard gunshots. In the storeroom, the officer found Tackett’s body. He
had been shot in the arms and legs and beaten before the fatal shot was
fired into his skull.
Solomon also was
sentenced to death, and was executed on Feb. 20, 1985. According to a
Web site devoted to Jones, he is a writer who has had articles published
around the world. In “Without War,” which he describes as a “roman á
clef,” he writes about the brutality involved in tracking runaway slaves
in the pre-Civil War South.
Jones was sentenced to
death in a 1997 retrial during which international supporters testified
that he had been rehabilitated. Currently, there is a decision pending
in the Georgia Supreme Court on an application for certificate of
probable cause to appeal.
JONES v. THE STATE.
S00P1316.
(273 Ga. 231)
(539 SE2d 154)
(2000)
SEARS, Justice.
Murder. Cobb Superior Court. Before Judge Nix.
Brandon Astor Jones, also known as Wilbur May, was convicted of
murder and sentenced to die in 1979. In 1989, his death sentence was
vacated by a federal district court. A re-sentencing trial was held
in 1997 and the jury recommended a death sentence after finding
beyond a reasonable doubt that Jones committed the offense of murder
while engaged in the commission of armed robbery and burglary and
that the murder was outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible or
inhuman in that it involved torture to the victim before death. This
is Jones's appeal from the re-sentencing verdict. 1 At the outset,
we note that in this appeal Jones does not raise an Eighth Amendment
challenge to the method of execution, electrocution, that has been
imposed against him. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
1. Viewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to the prosecution, the evidence showed that the
victim, Roger Tackett, was the manager of a Tenneco convenience
store. On June 16, 1979, he arrived at the store at 11:20 p.m.
to close it for the night. After the other employees left,
Tackett remained at the store to complete some paperwork.
At approximately 1:45 a.m., Officer Kendall
of the Cobb County police department drove a stranded motorist
to the Tenneco parking lot so she could use a pay phone. Officer
Kendall observed a car (Tackett's) parked in front of the store
with the driver's-side door open; the lights were also still on
inside the store. Since the Tenneco store was in his regular
patrol area, Officer Kendall knew that it usually closed at
midnight. Suspicious, he walked to the store and saw through the
front window Brandon Jones stick his head out of the storeroom
door at the back of the store, look around (apparently without
seeing the officer), and then close the storeroom door.
Officer Kendall entered through the unlocked
front door and heard three shots, a pause, and then a fourth
shot. He drew his weapon and after shouting "police, come on
out" without a response, approached the storeroom door and
opened it. Jones and his co-defendant, Van Roosevelt Solomon,
were standing just inside the door. Officer Kendall ordered them
into the main store area, where he searched them and handcuffed
Jones. He placed Solomon in his patrol car since he only had one
set of handcuffs, and called for assistance on the radio. He
also informed both defendants of their rights under Miranda v.
Arizona.
A private security officer, Alex Woolyard, heard
Officer Kendall's request for assistance on a police scanner and
arrived first. He loaned Officer Kendall a set of handcuffs to
restrain Solomon and watched the defendants while Officer Kendall
investigated a van parked nearby.
During this time, Woolyard spoke with Jones and
determined that the car parked in front of the store did not belong
to them; they had arrived in the van. Upon continued questioning by
Woolyard, Jones stated that they had come to burglarize the store
and found a man who was "bad hurt" in the back of the store. After
handcuffing Jones to a metal pole, Woolyard and Officer Kendall
entered the store and discovered that the storeroom door had locked
when it shut as the defendants exited.
They used a crowbar to break open the door and
they found Tackett's body lying face-down at one end of the narrow
storeroom (Officer Kendall had not seen the victim when he first
encountered the defendants in the storeroom since he did not enter
the storeroom at that time). Tackett had been shot five times from
behind, once in the jaw, once behind the left ear, once in the thumb,
and twice in the right hip.
The medical examiner determined that the fatal
shot was the "loose contact" shot behind the left ear since that
bullet penetrated the brain; this shot was probably the final shot
and was fired while the victim was lying on the ground. Two .38
caliber revolvers were found in an open box next to where Officer
Kendall had first encountered the defendants. A large Smith and
Wesson contained two spent shells; a smaller Colt contained four
spent shells. Four .38 caliber bullets were recovered at the scene
or in the victim's body; the ballistics expert determined that all
were probably fired by the Colt. Crime scene photographs also show a
possible bullet hole in a shelf on the wall, indicating a fifth shot
may have been fired in the storeroom. An atomic absorption test
conducted on swabs of the defendants' hands indicated that both men
had recently fired a gun or handled a recently-fired gun.
The store's cash drawer was found moved from its
original place inside the store and wrapped in a plastic bag. Inside
the van, which belonged to Solomon, the police discovered burglary
tools, holsters that fit the revolvers and .38 Caliber bullets.
We find that the evidence adduced at Jones's re-sentencing
trial was sufficient to enable any rational trier of fact to find
the existence of the statutory aggravating circumstances beyond a
reasonable doubt.
2. Jones claims that sentencing him to death
after two decades on death row is an affront to human dignity. This
"waiting for execution is intolerably cruel" argument is without
merit. To the extent that Jones also makes a speedy trial claim with
regard to the eight-year delay in bringing him to trial after his
sentence was vacated, that claim fails for three reasons. First,
there is no evidence that Jones asserted his right to a speedy trial
before trial. Second, much of the delay is attributable to Jones's
actions in that he frequently refused to cooperate with his
appointed counsel and repeatedly sought to have them replaced, and
that he appealed the denial of a plea in bar and sought a separate
interim review, each requiring considerable time to litigate.
In addition, one of the superior court judges
assigned to the case was appointed to this Court, and two others
recused themselves on defense motions, one because she had years
earlier worked on Jones's case as an assistant district attorney and
one because she had a sister in the district attorney's office. This
resulted in a delay that cannot be fairly attributed to the
prosecution. Third, Jones fails to show how he was prejudiced by the
delay since his murder conviction was unaffected by the federal
Courts and he was, in any event, required to serve at least a life
sentence.
There is no evidence that his defense was
impaired; in fact, several of his mitigation witnesses testified
that they did not become acquainted with Jones until they read
articles he had written in the mid-1990s. We therefore find no
speedy trial violation. There is also no evidence to support Jones's
assertion that his jury was aware that he had previously been
sentenced to death.
3. During deliberations, the jury sent a note to
the trial Court asking, "Is a life sentence considered life without
parole or will parole be considered?" The trial court responded that
this "is not a question for your deliberations." This response was
not error.
4. Jones claims that the prosecutor erred by
commenting on Jones's right to remain silent when he argued Jones's
lack of remorse during closing argument. However, it is not improper
to argue the defendant's lack of remorse in the penalty phase, nor
do such comments amount to an improper reference to a defendant's
failure to testify. Several of Jones's mitigation witnesses
testified about his numerous articles published in magazines and on
the Internet and their frequent correspondence with him, but the
prosecutor pointed out that none had mentioned any expression of
remorse by Jones. Further, it is not improper for the prosecutor to
urge that mercy is not appropriate in the case at hand, or to argue
Jones's future dangerousness. The argument that Jones's autopsy
expert's conclusions may have been affected by her failure to
utilize the original Polaroid photographs of the autopsy was a
reasonable inference. We therefore find no error in the State's
closing argument or any prosecutorial misconduct. We also find no
error in the victim-impact evidence presented by the State or in the
cross-examination questions posed to Jones's mitigation witnesses.
There was no reversible error due to the victim's daughter
identifying a photograph of the victim in life since Jones did not
object and there was no emotional display.
5. After the jury had been deliberating about ten
hours, they, sent a note to the trial judge stating that they were
at an "impasse," that the vote was 11-1 for a death sentence, and
that "one juror is opposed to the death penalty under any
circumstances." Although the trial court learned of the nature of
the split, there is no error since the jury volunteered this
information without prompting by the judge. The trial court gave a
modified Allen charge and the jury returned with a death sentence
three hours later and was polled as to its verdict. Jones asserts
that the trial court should have declared a mistrial when the jury
announced its impasse, and that the charge was coercive. However, a
trial court does not err by requiring a jury to continue
deliberating under these circumstances; it is not required to accept
a jury's declaration of deadlock. The modified Allen charge was not
improper and the three hours from the charge to the verdict further
indicates a lack of coercion. The trial court was also not required
to single out the holdout juror for additional questions during the
polling of the jury or inform the jury during its charge of the
consequences of a deadlock. We find that the jury's verdict was not
coerced.
6. During its deliberations, the jury sent a note
to the trial court stating, "Please define: Intended that deadly
force be used by another to accomplish the criminal enterprise."
After discussion with both parties, the trial court responded to the
note by telling the jury they had the complete written charge before
them and that no additional explanation would be given. Jones
specifically stated that he had no objection to this response,
thereby waiving his claim on appeal that the trial court committed
error in this instance.
7. When the jury returned its verdict, the trial
court discovered a scrivener's error with one of the statutory
aggravating circumstances and, without commenting on the verdict
itself, sent the jury back out to complete the form. Jones did not
object to the form of the verdict or to the trial court's handling
of the scrivener's error so any argument regarding an alleged
invalid verdict form is waived. Moreover, it is not improper for the
trial court to send a jury back out to correct errors on the verdict
form. The statutory aggravating circumstances submitted by the State
were not improper, and the statutory aggravating circumstances found
by the jury were not mutually supporting.
8. Jones claims that his 1978 robbery conviction
in Chicago admitted as non-statutory aggravating evidence was
invalid because he had received ineffective assistance of counsel
and he had not properly waived his right to a jury before the 1978
bench trial. There is no evidence that Jones's counsel in 1978 was
ineffective. The record of conviction also contains Jones's written
waiver of a jury as well as the transcript of the colloquy with the
judge in which Jones waived a jury in the presence of his counsel.
Jones's 1978 conviction was valid and properly admitted.
9. Jones sought to introduce a certified copy of
his co-defendant Solomon's conviction for the malice murder of
Tackett, but the State objected and the trial court sustained the
objection. We find no error with this ruling, since Solomon's
conviction would not tend to lessen Jones's culpability for the
murder, nor would it constitute mitigating evidence pertaining to
Jones's "character, prior record, or the circumstances of the
offense." The jury was informed of Solomon's role in the murder (to
the extent possible since only Jones, Solomon, and the victim were
in the storeroom) through the testimony of the witnesses. A
certified copy of Solomon's 1960 armed robbery conviction was
properly excluded by the trial court for the same reasons. An
unsworn letter written by a person who did not appear at trial
asking for mercy for Jones was inadmissible hearsay.
10. Jones complains that five prospective jurors
were erroneously excused for cause due to their opposition to the
death penalty. The record shows that all of these prospective jurors
stated unequivocally that they could not vote to impose a death
sentence regardless of the evidence. The trial court therefore did
not err by excusing them for cause.
11. The trial court did not err by refusing to
excuse for cause a prospective juror who said that he believed in an
eye for an eye and that he was leaning to a death sentence. This
juror also stated that he could fairly consider both life and death
as possible sentences, that his mind was not made up with regard to
punishment, and that he would have to hear the evidence before
deciding the sentence.
12. Jones claims that the atomic absorption test
performed on Jones's hands was scientifically unreliable. At a
pretrial hearing and again at trial, the chemist who performed the
test, after being properly qualified as an expert by the trial court,
testified about the procedures and the result of the test, which is
used to detect trace elements of metals found in gunshot residue.
The witness was fully subject to cross-examination by Jones
regarding this test and its reliability, and Jones did not present
evidence that this test was considered to be unreliable by other
experts. The atomic absorption test has been widely used by the
Crime Lab since 1975 and we conclude that its admission in this case
was not error.
13. Jones's claim of racism in the seeking of the
death penalty in his case has already been found to be without merit
on interim review.
14. Jones claims that the selection of a white
jury foreperson was the result of a discriminatory procedure, in
that the jury was instructed to select a foreperson from among
themselves, races tend to block-vote, and whites were a majority of
the jury. Because Jones did not object to the trial court's
instruction on selecting a jury foreperson, this argument is waived
on appeal. Further, there is no state action in the selection of the
jury foreperson since the jurors select the foreperson by themselves.
We find no error.
15. We conclude that the wooden trim in the
courtroom, which was patterned on a cross motif, was not prejudicial
to the defendant.
16. The trial court did not err by failing to
give a charge on the voluntariness of Jones's statements to Alex
Woolyard since Jones did not request such a charge. The
admissibility of Jones's statements was determined before trial.
17. Georgia does not recognize the cumulative
error rule.
18. Jones's death sentence was not imposed as the
result of impermissible passion, prejudice or other arbitrary
factor. The death sentence is also not excessive or disproportionate
to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime
and the defendant. We note that two juries have recommended that
Jones receive the death penalty for Tackett's murder, and that his
co-defendant was also sentenced to death for the same murder. The
similar cases listed in the Appendix support the imposition of the
death penalty in this case, in that all involve a murder during the
commission of an armed robbery or burglary.
FLETCHER, Presiding Justice, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent to division 4 of the
majority opinion and to the imposition of the death penalty.
During closing argument, the state argued that
Jones's failure to apologize to Roger Tackett's family was "the kind
of conduct that deserves the death penalty." The impermissible
inference from this argument was that Jones had a moral and legal
obligation to confess to the murder by apologizing to the victim's
family in order to avoid the death penalty. This type of argument is
fundamentally unfair because "[e]ven after he has been found guilty,
a defendant is under no obligation to confess, and he has a right to
urge his possible innocence to the jury as a factor in mitigation of
penalty." "Acceptance of the [s]tate's argument would place an
accused in the paradoxical position of saying I am sorry for a crime
of which I am not guilty." The state's argument in this case forced
Jones into an "intolerable dilemma" of having to choose between his
Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and a sentence of
death.
I acknowledge that this Court has held that it is
permissible for the state to argue the defendant's lack of remorse
in certain circumstances when there is lawful evidence to support
the argument. Here, there is no specific evidence of lack of remorse.
We have never held that the defendant's failure to apologize and
confess is lawful evidence of a lack of remorse or that such failure
permits the state to argue that a lack of remorse supports the
imposition of the death penalty. Furthermore, the majority's
reliance on Hammond v. State, is misplaced. Hammond addressed only
the specific comment made by the prosecutor in that case and does
not stand for the general proposition that arguments regarding a
lack of remorse can never constitute a comment on the failure to
testify.
The impropriety of the state's argument was
compounded by its contention that the power of forgiveness belonged
exclusively to Roger Tackett's family members, and that Jones had
not sought this forgiveness by apologizing for the murder. A logical
but impermissible inference for the jury to draw was that it had no
power to dispense mercy to Jones, contrary to OCGA
17-10-2 (c), which provides, in
pertinent part, that at the conclusion of the penalty phase, "the
jury shall retire to determine . . . whether to recommend mercy for
the defendant." Furthermore, "mercy for the individual defendant is,
by itself, a valid reason for a jury to decline to impose a death
sentence -- a jury can withhold the death penalty for any reason or
no reason at all."
Because the state's argument violated Jones's
Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, and was so
fundamentally unfair as to deny Jones due process, I would reverse
and remand for a new sentencing hearing.
I am authorized to state that Justice Hunstein
and Judge Perry Brannen, Jr., join in this dissent.
APPENDIX.
Cromartie v. State, 270 Ga.
780 (514 SE2d 205) (1999); Whatley v. State,
270 Ga. 296 (509 SE2d 45) (1998);
Bishop v. State, 268 Ga. 286 (486 SE2d 887)
(1997); Jones v. State, 267 Ga. 592
(481 SE2d 821) (1997); McClain v. State,
267 Ga. 378 (477 SE2d 814) (1996);
Greene v. State, 266 Ga. 439 (469 SE2d 129)
(1996); Mobley v. State, 265 Ga. 292
(455 SE2d 61) (1995); Meders v. State,
261 Ga. 806 (411 SE2d 491) (1992); Gibson v. State,
261 Ga. 313 (404 SE2d 781) (1991);
Ferrell v. State, 261 Ga. 115 (401 SE2d 741)
(1991); Stripling v. State, 261 Ga. 1
(401 SE2d 500) (1991); Lee v. State,
258 Ga. 82 (365 SE2d 99) (1988); Ford v. State,
257 Ga. 461 (360 SE2d 258) (1987);
Cargill v. State, 255 Ga. 616 (340 SE2d 891)
(1986); Ingram v. State, 253 Ga. 622
(323 SE2d 801) (1984); Spivey v. State,
253 Ga. 187 (319 SE2d 420) (1984);
Mincey v. State, 251 Ga. 255 (304 SE2d 882)
(1983); Wilson v. State, 250 Ga. 630
(300 SE2d 640) (1983); Solomon v. State,
247 Ga. 27 (277 SE2d 1) (1981).
Albertelli & Israel, Kenneth T. Israel, Ray B.
Gary, Jr., Mitchell D. Durham, Clive A. Stafford-Smith, for
appellant.
Notes
1 The murder occurred on June 17, 1979. Jones was indicted for
malice murder on July 16, 1979. After the vacation of his death sentence
in 1989, Jones appealed the denial of a plea in bar, Jones v. State,
260 Ga. 794 (401 SE2d 1) (1991), and
sought an interim review, Jones v. State, 263 Ga.
904 (440 SE2d 161) (1994). The re-sentencing trial took place
from September 8 to 23, 1997. Jones filed a motion for new trial on
October 10, 1997, and amended it on June 9, 1999. The trial court denied
the motion for new trial on January 11, 2000, and the case was docketed
to this Court on April 21, 2000. Oral argument was on July 18, 2000.
DECIDED NOVEMBER 20, 2000 -- RECONSIDERATION DENIED DECEMBER 14,
2000.