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The trial for a woman accused of killing and dismembering her
husband in 2005 ended abruptly Tuesday when the woman pleaded
guilty to murder and concealing a death.
Crystal Mae Wagner, 29, was sentenced to life in prison in
accordance with a recommendation from the prosecution and her
attorneys.
Wagner’s attorneys struck a plea deal with
prosecutors Tuesday morning just as the second day of her trial
was scheduled to begin. In exchange for her plea, the prosecution
dismissed a theft by taking charge pending against Wagner.
Wagner cried quietly during the plea hearing,
but did not speak in her own defense prior to the judge imposing a
sentence.
Prosecutor Elizabeth Bobbitt said she received
a letter Monday afternoon that Wagner wrote to her boyfriend and
co-defendant, 29-year-old Shay Alan Morey. In the letter, Wagner
wrote in 2005 about the couple planning and carrying out the
murder of her husband, Bobby Gene Wagner.
Franklin J. Hogue, one of Crystal Wagner’s
lawyers, said Wagner was ready to discuss a plea deal with the
prosecution Tuesday morning even before the prosecution told the
defense about the letter.
“Hearing (the testimony) in the courtroom can
have a powerful effect on one’s view,” Hogue said.
By pleading guilty with a joint recommendation
for sentencing, Wagner avoided a sentence of life without parole,
Hogue said.
She faced the death penalty before a February
hearing, but prosecutors dropped it in exchange for Wagner waiving
her right to a jury trial. At trial, Chief Bibb County Superior
Court Judge Martha Christian would have decided Wagner’s fate.
Wagner’s family and friends sat on both sides
of the courtroom Tuesday.
Marsha Mathews, Wagner’s aunt, said she was
scheduled to testify in her niece’s defense — not because she
thinks Wagner is innocent, but to explain why she might have
participated in a plan to kill her husband.
“I feel she felt trapped over the years,” said
Mathews after the trial.
During the plea hearing, Frank Hogue told the
judge that Wagner was abused as a child. The abuse ranged from
emotional abuse that left her feeling unwanted and afraid of
abandonment to her being locked in her room for days. Hogue also
stated that Wagner’s parents were brother and sister.
In opening statements held Monday, prosecutor
Elizabeth Bobbitt said Wagner asked Morey to kill her husband so
she and Morey could be together. At the time of the killing, Bobby
and Crystal Wagner were living with their son and Morey in a motel
near Thomaston Road and Interstate 475.
Hogue said Crystal Wagner and Morey met about a
year before the killing during a time when Wagner and her husband
were separated. She later reunited with her husband, but later was
again in a relationship with Morey and they lived together.
At the time of the killing, Bobby Wagner was
under the impression that Morey was living in the motel room with
the couple and their young son to help his wife, Hogue said.
Wagner suffers from a physical deformity caused
by juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, her other attorney, Laura D.
Hogue, said Monday.
Bobby Wagner and Morey were friends. In the
days prior to the killing, Bobby Wagner tried to get Morey a job
at the towing company where he worked, Hogue said.
On Feb. 10, 2005, Bobby Wagner was in the
shower when Morey struck him repeatedly on the head. The blows
weren’t fatal and Bobby Wagner returned to the bathroom followed
by his wife. Crystal Wagner came out and told Morey that her
husband was calling the police. Morey went back into the bathroom,
where he stabbed Bobby Wagner in the heart, Bobbitt said.
Morey dismembered Wagner’s body after
discovering he couldn’t move him, Bobbitt said.
A sheriff’s office crime scene investigator
testified Monday that authorities found rope in the motel room and
two concrete blocks in the Wagners’ car. Bobbitt said Crystal
Wagner and Morey had planned to tie Bobby Wagner to the blocks and
dispose of him in a body of water.
Authorities found Bobby Wagner’s remains four
days after the killing behind an abandoned house in Twiggs County,
testified Lee Weatherby, a GBI crime scene specialist. Wagner’s
body was covered by a pile of aluminum hubcaps and cast-iron
sinks.
Morey pleaded guilty in 2006 to killing and
dismembering Wagner. He was sentenced to life in prison without
parole.
Mathews said Bobby and Crystal Wagner’s young
son is being raised by Crystal Wagner’s mother.
By Amy Leigh Womack - Macon.com
Crystal Mae Wagner, 29, is charged with murder
in the death of her husband, Bobby Gene Wagner. She faced the
death penalty before a February hearing, but prosecutors dropped
it in exchange for Wagner’s waiving her right to a jury trial.
Laura Hogue, one of Wagner’s defense attorneys,
said in opening statements Monday that Wagner’s boyfriend,
29-year-old Shay Alan Morey, acted alone in killing Bobby Wagner.
She said Morey acted in a fit of jealousy and rage. Crystal Wagner
didn’t ask Morey to kill her husband, Hogue said.
“That would ruin the thrill,” she said.
Crystal
Wagner has a physical deformity from juvenile rheumatoid
arthritis, and she is mentally crippled by the feeling that men
won’t find her desirable except as “a piece of meat.” She needed
the attention of men arguing and fighting over her, Hogue said.
But prosecutor Elizabeth Bobbitt contends that Crystal Wagner
asked Morey to kill her husband so that she and Morey could be
together. At the time of the killing, Bobby and Crystal Wagner
were living with their son and Morey in a hotel located near
Thomaston Road and Interstate 475.
Bobbitt said
Crystal Wagner and Morey discussed the idea of killing Bobby
Wagner for a few days before Morey agreed and the two formulated a
plan.
Bibb County sheriff’s Capt. Dennis
Hagerman testified that deputies recovered rope and cords from the
hotel room after the killing. Deputies also found two cinder
blocks in the Wagners’ car.
Bobbitt said Crystal
Wagner and Morey planned to use the rope and cinder blocks to help
them dispose of Bobby Wagner in a body of water after the killing.
Their plan, Bobbitt said, was that Crystal Wagner would lure her
husband into the bathroom, telling him that they were attending a
birthday party and he needed to get ready. Morey then would kill
Bobby Wagner, she said.
On Feb. 10, 2005, Bobby
Wagner was in the shower when Morey struck him repeatedly on the
head. Although the blows caused cuts and bleeding, Wagner survived
and went back into the hotel room. He asked Crystal Wagner to call
an ambulance and told Morey to leave, Bobbitt said.
Bobby Wagner returned to the bathroom followed by his wife.
Crystal Wagner came out and told Morey that Bobby Wagner was
calling the police. Morey went back into the bathroom, where he
stabbed Bobby Wagner in the heart, Bobbitt said.
Morey dismembered the body after discovering that he couldn’t move
Bobby Wagner, she told the judge.
Grisly
discovery
Four days later, authorities found
Bobby Wagner’s remains behind an abandoned house in Twiggs County,
said Lee Weatherby, a GBI crime scene specialist. Wagner’s body
was covered by a pile of aluminum hubcaps and cast-iron sinks.
Wagner’s face was badly burned, but authorities found his wallet,
a letter addressed to him and pay stubs. Blood-stained towels and
the weapons used to dismember Wagner also were there, Weatherby
said.
Wagner’s cell phone also was recovered.
His last outgoing call was placed just before 9 p.m. Feb. 10 to
the Bibb County sheriff’s office, Weatherby said.
His co-workers testified Monday that he had expressed fear that
his wife might try to kill him in the weeks preceding his death.
Robert Allen “Bobby” Wagner, manager of Heart of Georgia Towing
Co., said Bobby Wagner seldom talked about his personal life, but
he confided in his boss about his fears. He also asked to work on
his days off so he wouldn’t be at home.
“He was
very nervous,” Robert Wagner testified. “You could tell it was
really bothering him.”
Lori Jones, a former
office manager at the towing company, said Bobby Wagner told her
he’d considered leaving his wife, but he was concerned about their
son.
When Bobby Wagner didn’t show up at work
Feb. 11, Robert Wagner, who is not related to the deceased, tried
to call him on the phone and the company radio multiple times
before he drove to Wagner’s hotel room and knocked on the door.
Although the Wagners’ car was outside, no one answered the door.
Robert Wagner returned Saturday, and Morey answered when he
knocked on the door. Crystal Wagner and the Wagners’ son also were
there, he said.
“It looked like they just got
up,” he said.
Morey and Crystal Wagner said
Bobby Wagner had gone to Florida, Robert Wagner testified. “That
room was in a total mess,” he said. “The odor was so bad I could
hardly go in.”
Crystal Wagner initially told
authorities that she slept through the period when her husband was
killed after she took a sleeping potion. Later, however, she said
she didn’t take the potion, Bobbitt said.
Wagner
told authorities that Morey killed her husband and she didn’t turn
him in for fear he’d kill her young son, Bobbitt said.
Morey pleaded guilty in 2006 to killing and dismembering Bobby
Wagner. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole. He has
alleged that Crystal Wagner was involved in “virtually every stage
of the crime.”
Death penalty sought in dismemberment
killing
Accessnorthga.com
May 3, 2005
Authorities will seek the death
penalty against a couple accused of killing and dismembering a
Bibb County man.
Bibb County District Attorney
Howard Simms made the death penalty announcement Tuesday when
24-year-olds Crystal Mae Wagner and Shay Allen Morey were indicted
by a grand jury on charges of malice murder, felony murder,
concealment of a death, and theft by taking for allegedly killing
the woman's ex-husband.
Morey and Wagner were
arrested Feb. 15 after Bobby Gene Wagner was stabbed in the chest,
then hacked up in a bathtub, hauled to Twiggs County and dumped in
the woods, investigators said.
The three of them
had been living at the Travel Inn near Interstate 475 for some
time before his death.
Crystal Wagner told
investigators she waited roughly 30 minutes in a car while Morey
purchased the mallet, hacksaw and hatchet used to cut Wagner's
body to pieces in the motel room bathtub, Lt. Aubrey Evins said at
a February court hearing.
The couple then
allegedly drove Carver's car to rural Twiggs County and dumped the
body, the knife and the tools. These were found Feb. 15 in the
woods off Ga. 18.
Body found dismembered in Twiggs Co
By Jason Hobb - Courier-Herald.com
February 15,
2005
JEFFERSONVILLE — A Twiggs county man made a
gruesome discovery when he found the dismembered and partially
burned body of a Bibb County man Sunday as he was walking on a
piece of property that he frequently visited on Ga. Hwy. 18 just
north of Jeffersonville.
The dismembered and
partially burned body of 32 year-old Bobby Gene Wagner was found
behind an abandoned home on Ga. Hwy. 18 just north of
Jeffersonville when an unidentified man was walking around a piece
of property near the abandoned home where he frequently went to
scavenge spare parts from some junk cars which were left there.
Sheriff Darren Mitchum said the scene continued to bother the
Twiggs man because “it just didn’t look right” so he called
Jeffersonville Police Chief Lawson Burnett Monday morning.
According to Mitchum, when Burnett went to investigate what the
man had found, he immediately called him and he in turn called
Twiggs County Coroner Harold Reece Jr. and the Georgia Bureau of
Investigations.
Mitchum said there was enough
evidence at the scene that they were able to identify Wagner on
the spot and through further investigation they found that Wagner
lived in a south Macon motel. The trail also lead to Wagner’s 24-
year-old ex-wife Crystal May Carver and 24 year-old Shay Allen
Morey, who worked with Wagner at Heart of Georgia Towing on Emory
Highway in Macon. Carver and Morey also lived in a separate room
at the same motel as Wagner.
Wagner was killed
at the motel where the three were living and dismembered in a
bathtub there, said Mitchum adding that Wagner’s dismembered body
had then been transported to Twiggs County where an attempt to
burn the body was made. However, Mitchum said they were not very
successful, so an attempt was then made to conceal the body using
some sinks that were also on the property.
“This
shows again how networking with other agencies can help you
quickly solve cases,” said Mitchum. “Our coroner, Harold Reece,
did an excellent job at the crime scene as did the GBI’s Crime
Scene Investigation Team and I would like to thank both the people
from our Coroner’s office and from the GBI for their assistance on
this case.”
Morey, who has given a statement to
officials, and Carver have both been charged with murder and are
being held in Bibb County. Mitchum said that the pair will also be
charged with concealing a body in Twiggs County
WAGNER v. The STATE
No. S07A0002.
June 11, 2007
Crystal Mae Wagner has been indicted for
murder, felony murder, and concealment of a death.1
The crimes allegedly occurred on February 10, 2005. The State
has given notice of its intent to seek the death penalty. This
Court granted Wagner's application for interim review and directed
the parties to address five issues. Wagner has raised two
additional issues. As set forth below, we reverse the trial
court's overruling a demurrer to Count 2 of the indictment, affirm
with direction as to Counts 1 and 3, and affirm as to all other
issues raised.
1. Count 2 of Wagner's indictment attempts to
charge felony murder, but it includes the phrase, “intentionally
and with malice aforethought,” which obviously should appear in a
malice murder charge, not a felony murder charge. See OCGA
§ 16-5-1. The State could have charged malice and felony murder
in the alternative in the same count. See Leutner v. State, 235
Ga. 77, 79(2), 218 S.E.2d 820 (1975). However, the charge at
issue here mixed those elements rather than charging them in the
alternative.
In Bailey v. State, 280 Ga. 884, 635 S.E.2d 137
(2006), we found no error in the trial court's denial of a motion
to quash an indictment because “the misspelling of the grand
juror's name was not a material defect and because it is obvious
that Bailey will not suffer prejudice from the error.” Id. at
885, 635 S.E.2d 137. In so holding, we relied on prior case law
in which this Court affirmed on pre-trial appeal a trial court's
refusal to quash an indictment containing the misspelling of an
illegal drug because the indictment, even with the misspelling,
“remained ‘sufficient to put appellant on notice of the alleged
offense.’ [Cit.]” Id. at 884-885, 635 S.E.2d 137. We also
reiterated that a trial judge, in response to a special demurrer,
should “strike out the erroneous portion of an indictment where
the matter stricken is ‘immaterial.’ [Cit.]” Id. at 884, 635
S.E.2d 137. Thus, we distinguished our prior case law describing
the right to a “perfect” indictment upon the filing of a special
demurrer. Id. at 884, 635 S.E.2d 137.
Consistent with Bailey, supra, we hold that
where a special demurrer points out an immaterial defect, the
trial court should strike out or otherwise correct the immaterial
defect. Where a special demurrer points out a material defect,
the trial court must quash the defective count of the indictment.
However, in Bailey, in affirming the denial of the motion to
quash the indictment, we held that a trial court does not err by
denying a special demurrer “where the defect in an indictment is
not material and does not prejudice the defendant's rights.”
(Footnote omitted.) Id. at 885, 635 S.E.2d 137. While often
the questions of materiality and prejudice may be coextensive,
harmless error review is appropriate only in the post-conviction
setting, not in pre-trial proceedings or on pre-trial appeal.
Thus, to the extent that Bailey can be construed to hold that a
material defect that is not prejudicial to the defendant does not
require the quashing of a defective count of an indictment, it is
disapproved.
Because we find that the mixing of the elements
of malice murder and felony murder constitutes a material defect,
we order Count 2 of Wagner's indictment quashed.
2. The malice murder charge in Count 1 of
Wagner's indictment names the murder victim but fails to state
that the victim was a “human being.” This Court has previously
held in several post-conviction appeals that an indictment that
names a murder victim but fails to allege that the victim was a
human being is sufficient. Alexander v. Luzier, 229 Ga. 434(1),
192 S.E.2d 160 (1972) (habeas corpus); Green v. State, 172 Ga.
635(2), 158 S.E. 285 (1931) (direct appeal); Sutherland v. State,
121 Ga. 591(1), 49 S.E. 781 (1905) (appeal of denied motion in
arrest of judgment). We now hold, in this pre-trial appeal, that
the failure of a count of an indictment to state that a
specifically-named victim was a human being is not a material
defect. Thus, for the reasons set forth in Division 1, we hold
that the trial court did not err by refusing to quash the malice
murder count in Wagner's indictment; however, we direct the trial
court to correct the indictment in light of our discussion above.
3. Wagner complains that Count 3 of her
indictment names the crime of “Concealment of a Death” and
properly charges the elements of that offense, but that it lists
the incorrect Code section. Because the naming of the Code
section is mere surplusage, the misnaming of the Code section is
not a material defect. See State v. Eubanks, 239 Ga. 483,
490-491, 238 S.E.2d 38 (1977). Thus, in light of our discussion
in Division 1, we hold that the trial court did not err by
refusing to quash Count 3 of Wagner's indictment, but should
strike the incorrect Code section from the indictment.
4. Wagner argues that the trial court erred by
denying her motion to have challenges for cause heard outside the
jurors' presence. Some matters raised by counsel during voir
dire are better addressed outside the presence of the jurors.
See Holmes v. State, 273 Ga. 644(2), 543 S.E.2d 688 (2001)
(approving practice of remedying Batson violations by reseating
jurors who remain unaware of party who struck them); Armour v.
State, 188 Ga.App. 855, 856, 374 S.E.2d 794 (1988) (when defense
believes State's voir dire is improper, “proper procedure” is to
raise matter “outside the presence of prospective jurors”).
However, “[t]he trial court has a discretion to control voir
dire,” Jones v. State, 263 Ga. 904, 907(9)(b), 440 S.E.2d 161
(1994), and we find no reversible error in the trial court's
denial of Wagner's request to have all challenges for cause heard
outside the jurors' presence.
5. Wagner argues that the trial court erred by
refusing to compel the District Attorney to testify about his
decisions to seek the death penalty in Wagner's case and other
cases. She argues that the District Attorney's testimony
potentially could show that his decisions were arbitrary and
capricious. Although a defendant bears the burden to prove any
allegedly-unconstitutional conduct by a prosecutor in electing to
seek a death sentence, see Jenkins v. State, 269 Ga. 282(2), 498
S.E.2d 502 (1998), the manner in which that burden is carried must
be consistent with the law and public policy considerations. A
prosecutor's discretion in seeking a death sentence is limited by
statute. See OCGA § 17-10-30. The prosecutor's discretion is
also “limited by the jury's ultimate decision” and the “strength
of the evidence” in any given case. Jenkins, supra, 269 Ga. at
285(2), 498 S.E.2d 502. However,
[t]his Court has repeatedly rejected challenges
to the legislature's determination that district attorneys should
have the discretion to decide whether a murder defendant meets the
statutory criteria for the death penalty and whether to pursue the
death penalty when a defendant is eligible.
(Footnote omitted.) Terrell v. State, 276 Ga.
34, 42(5), 572 S.E.2d 595 (2002). Policy considerations demand
that prosecutors generally should not be forced to testify in
rebuttal to accusations that they have abused their discretion
unless the criminal defendant presents a prima facie case of
unconstitutional conduct with respect to his or her case. See
McCleskey v. Kemp, 481 U.S. 279, 297 n. 18(II)(A), 107 S.Ct. 1756,
95 L.Ed.2d 262 (1987). In this case,
absent far stronger proof, it is unnecessary to
seek such a rebuttal, because a legitimate and unchallenged
explanation for the [prosecutor's] decision is apparent from the
record: [Wagner allegedly] committed an act for which the United
States Constitution and Georgia laws permit imposition of the
death penalty.
Id. at 296-297(II)(A), 107 S.Ct. 1756.
Therefore, we conclude that the trial court did not err by
refusing to compel the District Attorney's testimony in Wagner's
case.
6. Wagner complains that the State, in two of
the statutory aggravating circumstances listed in its notice of
intent to seek the death penalty, alleged that “[t]he offense of
murder in this case was committed for the purpose of receiving
money” rather than that “[t]he offender” committed the murder for
the purpose of receiving money, as appears in OCGA
§ 17-10-30(b)(4). Wagner makes a valid point, as it is
conceivable that her co-defendant committed “the murder” for the
purpose of receiving money but that Wagner's own participation in
the murder was not for that purpose. The State could simply
re-notify Wagner regarding this statutory aggravating circumstance
using the language of the Code. See Sears v. State, 270 Ga.
834(6)(a), 514 S.E.2d 426 (1999) (notice of additional aggravating
circumstance during guilt/ innocence phase jury deliberations held
permissible). See also Walker v. State, 281 Ga. 157, 160(2), n.
10, 635 S.E.2d 740 (2006) (strongly urging prosecutors to include
notice of specific statutory aggravating circumstances in notice
of intent to seek the death penalty, or as soon thereafter as is
possible). However, because there is no reason to believe the
trial court will fail to properly charge the jury and because
Wagner has sufficient notice of what she will have to defend
against, we conclude the trial court did not err by refusing
Wagner's request to “dismiss” this statutory aggravating
circumstance.
7. Wagner argues that there is a defect in the
State's notice that it will seek the death penalty based on the
OCGA § 17-10-30(b)(7) aggravating circumstance because that notice
fails to state what aspects of the murder involved “depravity of
mind.” This Court has specified the types of evidence that may
prove “depravity of mind,” and it has set out a specific charge on
“depravity of mind” to be given upon a defendant's request. See
West v. State, 252 Ga. 156(2), 161-162 (Appendix), 313 S.E.2d 67
(1984). As with the defective notice discussed above regarding
the purpose of the murder being money, the correct use of the
language of the Code regarding “depravity of mind” places Wagner
on sufficient notice regarding what she should be prepared to
defend against. Accordingly, the trial court did not err by
refusing to “dismiss” this statutory aggravating circumstance.
See Walker, supra, 281 Ga. at 160-161(2), 635 S.E.2d 740 (pretermitting
question of whether notice of specific statutory aggravating
circumstances is constitutionally required).
Judgment affirmed in part, affirmed in part
with direction and reversed in part.
FOOTNOTES
1. The
trial court quashed Count 4 of Wagner's indictment, which charged
her with theft by taking. This Court did not grant the
application for interim review to address this issue.