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Ebony
Passion SMITH
By Becky Purser - Macon.com
August 8, 2013
PERRY -- A Warner Robins woman was sentenced to life in prison
with the possibility of parole Thursday for killing her husband a
few hours after she was served with divorce papers.
A Houston County jury convicted 32-year-old Ebony Passion Smith
on Wednesday of malice murder, felony murder, aggravated assault,
aggravated battery and possession of a firearm during a crime.
Superior Court Judge Edward D. Lukemire, who presided over the
2 1/2-day trial, sentenced Smith before a courtroom filled with
the husband’s close-knit family. Ebony Smith’s sister and father
sat behind her during the hearing.
She is expected to serve 30 years before she would be eligible
for parole consideration, according to state sentencing
guidelines.
Smith gunned down her 30-year-old husband, a C-130 aircraft
mechanic at Robins Air Force Base, in the hallway bathroom of
their Warner Robins home July 15, 2011, with his .40-caliber
handgun.
Alfreda Smothers, Brian Smith’s aunt, read a statement to the
court on the behalf of his mother, Sandra Smith.
“Brian was my refuge,” Sandra Smith wrote about her son, the
oldest of three sons, in the statement. She said he helped her
through the sudden loss of her 49-year-old husband following a
massive heart attack. They had been married nearly 28 years.
She also wrote about the impact on Ebony and Brian Smith’s
daughter, who was 4 when her mother murdered her father.
“Her childhood has been altered forever,” Sandra Smith wrote.
“She tosses and turns restlessly in her sleep. I lay awake so many
nights listening to this baby crying for her daddy in her sleep.
“She has mood swings and becomes overly anxious at any change
of schedule. I have to be in the school pickup line early because
she fears being left alone again. She remembers her dad telling
her that he would be right back to get her. But he never came,”
Smith said.
Marcus Smith, who discovered his brother’s bullet-riddled body
after he went to check on him at his Jay Drive home, shared in his
statement what that experience has done to him.
“I’m paranoid to the point where I can’t go out to social
places without thinking something is going to happen,” he wrote.
“I have to constantly watch my back because of my sense of
security. Panic or anxiety attacks are frequent. I can’t get the
visions of seeing my brother dead out of my head, and I often have
nightmares about it.”
Kelvin Smith, Brian Smith’s other brother, wrote in his
statement to the court, “The thing that troubles me most about
this loss is his daughter.
“To know that she will never get the opportunity to get to see
the kind of person her dad was or to know that she will never get
to have her dad at her graduations, will not get to see her off to
prom or get to walk her down the wedding aisle depresses me,” he
said.
Public Defender Nick White, who represented Ebony Smith, told
the judge that she asked him -- and asked her family -- not to
make any statements on her behalf, feeling unworthy and remorseful
about the slaying. He noted that she took responsibility for the
shooting from the start and has not wavered from that.
Smith, clad in a dark green Houston County jail jumpsuit,
handcuffed and shackled, wiped away tears and kept her head down
during most of the sentencing hearing. She did not make a
statement.
Her sister sobbed and cried loudly after the judge pronounced
the sentence. She was helped out of the courtroom. Smith’s father,
who remained seated alone in the courtroom except for a bailiff,
declined comment.
Assistant District Attorney Clif Woody, the lead prosecutor on
the case, sought life in prison for Smith and made no
recommendation either way on the possibility of parole. He left
that to the judge’s discretion.
Afterward, Woody said he was pleased with the disposition of
the case. He said domestic cases such as this one involving two
people who were once committed to each other are the hardest to
try.
“You have families that are torn apart,” he said.
Brian and Ebony Smith had been married for four years. Besides
the child they had together, Ebony Smith also has a boy from a
previous relationship. He was 10 at the time of the slaying. The
children were not at home when Brian Smith was killed.
He died of multiple gunshot wounds to the chest and abdomen.
Bullets also struck his left hand, right arm and right leg.
When reaching a verdict Wednesday, jurors rejected an
alternative charge of voluntary manslaughter. The defense
contended that Ebony Smith was guilty of killing her husband but
not of murder, having acted in a moment of passion when her
husband would not tell her where he’d taken their daughter. He was
seeking custody of the girl, and the couple had argued about that
earlier in the day when Ebony Smith was served with divorce
papers.
By Becky Purser - Macon.com
August 7, 2013
Ebony Passion Smith was found guilty of both malice murder and
felony murder. Malice murder is an intentional killing, and felony
murder is when someone dies during the commission of another
felony. She also was convicted of aggravated assault, aggravated
battery and three counts of possession of firearm during the
commission of a crime.
Smith admittedly gunned down her husband, 30-year-old Brian
Smith, a C-130 aircraft mechanic at Robins Air Force Base, in the
hallway bathroom of their Warner Robins home with his
semi-automatic .40-caliber handgun.
He died of multiple gunshot wounds to the chest and abdomen,
but bullets also struck his left hand, right arm and right leg.
Jurors rejected an alternative charge of voluntary manslaughter
in the place of murder. The defense contended that Ebony Smith was
guilty of killing her husband but not of murder, having acted in a
moment of passion when her husband would not tell her where he’d
taken their daughter, who was 4 at the time. He was seeking
physical custody of the girl, and the couple had argued about that
earlier in the day when Ebony Smith was served with divorce
papers.
The prosecution contended that Ebony Smith was lying in wait
for her husband on that summer day two years ago and that she knew
exactly what she planned to do. She then cornered her husband in
the bathroom and fatally shot him. When police arrived, they found
her lethargic, under the covers in the bed in the master bedroom
after she took an overdose of medicine in an attempt to take her
own life.
Ebony Smith, with her head down, was quiet Wednesday when the
verdict was read.
Judge Edward D. Lukemire set a sentencing hearing for Ebony
Smith for 2 p.m. Thursday. She faces a possible sentence of life
in prison without the possibility of parole.
During closing arguments earlier Wednesday, prosecution and
defense attorneys agreed that Ebony Smith was guilty of aggravated
battery, aggravated assault and two counts of possession of a
handgun during the commission of a crime.
But attorneys split on the issue of murder and voluntary
manslaughter and one count of possession of a firearm tied to the
alleged crime of murder.
Public Defender Nick White argued that Smith was guilty of the
lesser crime of voluntary manslaughter. He told jurors that
voluntary manslaughter is when someone kills another person out of
a “sudden, violent and irresistible passion” as the result of
serious provocation.
“He was hiding her child away from her,” White told jurors.
According to the defense, Ebony Smith, who was “loose” on pills
she took to get up the nerve to kill herself with her husband’s
handgun, confronted Brian Smith after he returned home without
their daughter.
But Assistant District Attorney Clif Woody argued that the
legal definition of voluntary manslaughter does not apply if there
is an interval between the killing and provocation that’s
“sufficient for the voice of reason to be heard.”
According to the prosecution, Ebony Smith had plenty of time to
cool down between the time Brian Smith left with their daughter
and then returned without her. Woody noted that Ebony Smith
testified she knew that Brian Smith probably took their daughter
to the house of a friend whom Ebony Smith also said she suspected
of having a relationship with her husband.
“In this nightmare, Brian had no chance,” Woody told jurors.
“He didn’t see it coming.”
By Becky Purser - Macon.com
PERRY -- On trial for killing her husband two summers ago,
Ebony Passion Smith testified Tuesday that she took his handgun
from the top dresser drawer not with the intention to kill him but
to end her own life.
Smith is on trial in Houston County Superior Court for the July
15, 2011, slaying of Brian Smith in the couple’s Jay Drive home in
Warner Robins. Her attorney says that although she killed her
husband, she is not guilty of murder.
“I wasn’t even thinking,” said Ebony Smith, who testified that
she was “floating” on pills she took to get up the nerve up to
kill herself.
As she stood in the door of the hallway bathroom with the gun
at her side, Smith kept asking her husband where he’d taken their
daughter, who was 4 at the time. He didn’t answer immediately and
finally told her he’d dropped their daughter off, she recounted to
jurors Tuesday. Ebony Smith said she figured their girl was at the
home of a woman she suspected him of dating.
“It made me feel like he was trying to take my baby and hide
her from me,” Smith testified.
Smith said she shot her husband with his semi-automatic
.40-caliber handgun, inflicting multiple gunshot wounds. She said
she took more pills to end her life but couldn’t shoot herself
because there were no bullets left in the gun. The gun magazine
had held 13 bullets.
Smith, dressed in a gray business suit, testified Tuesday she
had asked her husband for a divorce and wanted him to pay for it.
She said she wasn’t bothered by the divorce but was surprised that
Brian Smith sought sole custody of their daughter. The divorce
papers were served a few hours before Ebony Smith shot him to
death.
Assistant District Attorney Clif Woody questioned Ebony Smith
about the divorce papers -- which he noted did not state that
Brian Smith was seeking sole custody. He asked her if a reasonable
course of action would have been to seek the advice of an attorney
about custody.
Attorneys also asked Smith more than once why she shot her
husband, but she wasn’t always able to give an answer. She kept
her head down for most of her testimony and barely spoke barely
above a whisper. She sobbed when recounting the shooting.
She was the last witness to testify Tuesday, with both
prosecution and defense attorneys resting their case. Closing
arguments are expected Wednesday morning, followed by instructions
on the law from Judge Edward D. Lukemire on malice murder, felony
murder and other charges against her.
Earlier Tuesday, jurors heard testimony about the discovery of
the body, viewed autopsy photos and watched video of the crime
scene.
Former Warner Robins police Sgt. Matt Moulton, among the first
officers on the scene, testified that he found a lethargic Ebony
Smith hidden under covers on a bed. She had emptied several pill
bottles, he said.
“She told me she was very mad and she was tired of being lied
to and cheated on,” Moulton told jurors.
But when an audio recording of his conversation with Smith was
played by the defense, Ebony Smith was not heard making that
statement. Moulton said not all of their conversation was recorded
because the officer who had the microphone was in and out of the
bedroom while Moulton talked with Smith.
Dr. James Whitaker, Houston County medical examiner, testified
that Brian Smith was “hit nine different times” based on entry
wounds. Smith was shot in the abdomen, chest, right arm and right
leg, Whitaker said.
Whitaker’s testimony included the introduction of graphic
autopsy photographs of the victim’s body. When the photos were
first shown, Ebony Smith started sobbing, prompting Judge Lukemire
to call a recess.
Police officer Juan Herrera, a crime scene investigator,
testified about the semi-automatic Glock handgun used in the
slaying that was recovered in the three-bedroom home. Five of the
bullets were not recovered.
Jurors watched a video that showed the victim’s body on the
bathroom floor. Herrera said there were numerous shell casings and
a few bullets recovered nearby. One of the shell casings was found
in the bathroom sink, and some of the bullets traveled through the
bathroom wall into the wall of the master bedroom, Herrera said.
Houston County sheriff’s Deputy Robert Davis testified about
serving Ebony Smith with divorce papers the day Brian Smith was
killed. He said he asked her if she was expecting divorce papers
and she said, “No.”
Davis said Ebony Smith was “pretty calm” when she received the
papers. But after defense questioning, he added that she also did
not read the papers in his presence when they talked briefly at
her front door.
Family members of Ebony and Brian Smith were in the courtroom
Tuesday.
By Becky Purser - Macon.com
August 5, 2013
But the defense contends it wasn’t murder.
Opening statements began Monday in the Houston County trial of
Ebony Passion Smith. Smith was charged with malice murder, felony
murder, aggravated assault, aggravated battery and possession of a
firearm during a crime.
Her husband, Brian Smith, 30, was found dead inside the
couple’s home on Jay Drive off Green Street after he had been shot
multiple times in the upper torso July 15, 2011. Officers found
Ebony Smith in the back bedroom, where she had attempted suicide
by taking medication, police said.
Assistant District Attorney Greg Winters told jurors that Smith
shot her husband with a .40-caliber Glock handgun that held 13
rounds of ammunition, firing it “until it was empty.” The slaying
was the same afternoon Brian Smith had her served with divorce
papers, Winters said.
The victim’s brother is expected to testify that he found his
brother’s body in the hallway near a bathroom. He had gone to the
home because Brian Smith was not returning phone calls.
Winters said jurors could expect to hear testimony that Ebony
Smith took a bunch of pills after killing her husband.
Public Defender Nick White told jurors that Ebony Smith shot
and killed her husband but that he expected the evidence to show
she’s not guilty of malice or felony murder. Malice murder is when
someone intentionally kills someone, while felony murder is when
the death occurs as the result of the commission of another
felony.
White said Smith’s husband had gotten “rough” with her, had
slapped her in the past and had been guilty of adultery. But she
was not upset about that or about the divorce that the couple
previously had talked about, White said.
“What upset her was he was seeking custody of their
4-year-old,” White told jurors.
Ebony Smith had been OK with her husband taking their daughter
out of the home while they had been arguing. The other child, a
10-year-old boy of hers from a previous relationship, was not at
home.
While her husband was gone, Ebony Smith began to think about
losing her daughter who was the “apple of her eye,” White said.
She became irrational, decided that life was not worth living if
he took her daughter, and began to take pills.
Under the influence of the medication, she picked up her
husband’s handgun and fired a shot into the bedroom wall upon his
return, White said. She became increasingly upset as he repeatedly
ignored her and would not answer her pleas about where he’d taken
their daughter.
Afraid she would lose the 4-year-old and not knowing where her
husband had taken the girl, Smith opened fire on her husband in
the hallway bathroom, White said.
“It was a horrible thing, and it was a crime,” White told
jurors. “But it was not a murder.”
Testimony is expected Tuesday in the trial presided over by
Judge Edward D. Lukemire. The trial is expected to continue at
least through Wednesday.
By Becky Purser - Macon.com
PERRY -- A Warner Robins woman accused of fatally shooting her
husband after he served her with divorce papers now faces felony
murder and other charges.
Ebony Passion Smith, 31, was reindicted by a Houston County
grand jury Tuesday on the additional charges. She was originally
indicted on a charge of malice murder, which accused her of
premeditating the killing.
The new charge of felony murder is when someone dies in the
commission of another felony.
Smith now also is charged with aggravated assault, aggravated
battery and possession of a firearm during a crime, according to
the new indictment.
At 5:59 p.m. July 15, 2011, police were dispatched to 119 Jay
Drive in Warner Robins in reference to a deceased person. Brian
Smith, 30, was found dead inside the home, shot several times in
the upper torso. Police officers found Ebony Smith in the back
bedroom, where she had attempted suicide by taking medication, a
Warner Robins police news release stated.
Judge Edward D. Lukemire signed an order Jan. 16 for a mental
evaluation of Ebony Smith to determine the degree of criminal
responsibility or mental competency at the time of the alleged
act, according to Superior Court records.
A defense notice to raise insanity, mental illness or mental
retardation as a defense was filed Jan. 16 by Houston County
Public Defender Nick White, according to court records.
According to police reports, the victim’s brother called 911
after he went into the home because his brother was not returning
phone calls. He found his brother dead in the bathroom.
Ebony Smith was found under the covers in the master bedroom,
according to the defense notice. She reportedly had taken large
doses of different medications before and after the shooting, the
notice states.
Smith was taken to The Medical Center of Central Georgia where
she was placed in intensive care on life support and later moved
to a regular room, the notice states. She was next moved to
Central State Hospital, where she remained until transferred to
the Houston County jail on Nov. 29, 2011.
The Central State Hospital diagnosis was for “major depressive
disorder recurrent with severe with psychotic features,” the
notice states.
The prognosis was of “delusions or hallucinations or serious
impairment or inability to function,” and Smith was “considered a
high risk for suicide,” the notice states.
According to police reports included in the court file, Ebony
Smith told police she shot her husband, who had served her with
divorce papers.
“Ms. Smith stated that she was mad and tired of being lied to
and cheated on,” a police report stated.
She also told police her husband had hit her a couple of times
in the face and pushed her down before the shooting, the report
stated. The officer did not observe any visible injuries, the
report stated.
A handgun was found at the foot of the bed, where Smith was
under the covers, near some papers, the report stated. Several
empty bottles of various prescription medications were found on
the dresser near the bed.
The couple’s children, ages 10 and 4 at the time of the
shooting, were not at home, the report stated.
At her May 19, 2012, arraignment prior to the new indictment,
Smith pleaded not guilty. A new arraignment is expected in light
of the new indictment.
Neither White or prosecutor Dan Bibler could be reached for
comment.
By Becky Purser - Macon.com
PERRY -- A Warner Robins woman was indicted by a Houston County
grand jury Tuesday on a charge of murder in the July shooting
death of her 30-year-old husband.
Ebony Passion Smith, 30, was released from Central State
Hospital where she had been for the past several months and booked
in the Houston County jail Nov. 29, public defender Nick White,
who is representing Smith, previously said. He could not
immediately be reached for comment late Tuesday afternoon.
The charge is malice murder, which means the slaying was
premeditated, said Julia C. Bowen, an assistant district attorney
who is prosecuting the case. Bowen declined to elaborate on the
facts of the case.
At 5:59 p.m. July 15, Warner Robins police were dispatched to
119 Jay Drive in reference to a deceased person, a Warner Robins
police news release stated.
Brian Smith was found dead inside the home, having been shot
several times in the upper torso. Ebony Smith was found by
responding police officers in the back bedroom, where she had
attempted suicide by consuming medication, the release stated.
Smith was being held Tuesday without bond in the Houston County
jail.