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Gary
Chad THOMASON
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
August 21,
1992
Date of arrest:
Same day
Date of birth: 1971
Victim profile: Jerry Self,
34
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Floyd County, Georgia, USA
Status: Sentenced to death on October 7, 1996
Gary Chad Thomason, 21, was
sentenced to death in Floyd County in October 1996. Mr. Thomason was
convicted of killing 34-year-old Jerry Self, who was shot in his truck
in his own driveway when he interrupted a burglary.
Mr. Thomason's
defense attorney had him plead guilty and waive a jury trial, leaving a
judge to determine his punishment. The Supreme Court affirmed his
conviction and sentence in July 1997.
THOMASON v. THE STATE.
S97P0285.
(268 Ga. 298)
(486 SE2d 861)
(1997)
SEARS, Justice.
Murder. Floyd Superior Court. Before Judge Salmon.
Following a three-day bench trial, appellant Gary
Chad Thomason was convicted of malice murder, burglary, and
possession of a firearm by a felon during the commission of a
burglary. 1 The trial court
sentenced Thomason to death for the murder conviction, finding as
statutory aggravating circumstances that the murder was committed
during the commission of a burglary, and for the purpose of
obtaining money and things of monetary value.
On appeal, we find that the trial court properly
denied Thomason's motion to suppress certain evidence, because the
searches and seizures that precipitated the collection of such
evidence were permissible. We also find that the trial court
properly admitted into evidence two eyewitness identifications of
Thomason, made as he fled the murder scene, because no substantial
likelihood of misidentification existed. Furthermore, to the extent
that the trial court failed to follow the procedures delineated in
the Unified Appeal Procedure, no reversible error occurred. Finding
no error associated with the remaining enumerations raised on
appeal, we affirm.
Evidence was introduced at trial showing that
shortly before noon on August 21, 1992, Floyd County police officers
received an emergency telephone call from Jerry Self. Self, who
called the police on his cellular phone, reported that upon driving
into the driveway of his home, he had discovered an unfamiliar
Oldsmobile Cutlass parked in the carport.
Officers Corbin and Logan responded to Self's
emergency call, and as they approached the Self residence, they
drove slowly in order to see the house numbers. Because it was
raining heavily, the officers rolled down the patrol car's windows
in order to better observe the house numbers.
As they came within 100 yards of the Self
residence, Officers Corbin and Logan saw and heard an automobile
approaching them from the direction of the Self residence. As the
two cars approached one another, the officers observed that the
other car was a light brown 1978 or 1979 model Oldsmobile Cutlass,
with a lighter brown top, that was traveling approximately thirty
miles an hour, and was accelerating. The officers testified that, as
the two cars passed one another, the driver of the Oldsmobile looked
directly at them, and they observed that the driver was a white male
with brown curly hair, and that he was wearing a black baseball cap.
The officers continued to the Self residence, and,
upon pulling into the driveway, they saw a body lying on the ground,
later identified as Self. He had been shot several times, and was
dead when the officers arrived. Self's truck was found in front of
the house, with the engine still running. The side window of the
truck had been broken, and there was blood on the front seat. A
window on the front of the Self residence had been broken, and the
house had been burglarized. It was later discovered that earlier
that same day, another house on the same street, the Blaylock
residence, had been burglarized in a similar manner.
Local police were alerted to be on the lookout
for a brown 1978 or 1979 Oldsmobile Cutlass, described as being "not
as dark [brown] as the sheriff department's cars," with a lighter
brown top, being driven by a white male. Shortly thereafter, a
vehicle and driver matching that description were seen leaving a
convenience store in nearby Calhoun.
After following the Cutlass for approximately
five minutes, City of Calhoun police officer Gilbert stopped the car,
which was being driven by appellant Thomason. Thomason was asked to
step out of the vehicle, and was "patted down" by the officer. The
officer discovered a cigarette lighter in Thomason's pocket, which
he returned to Thomason. Officer Gilbert observed that Thomason's
clothing was soaking wet, even though it had only just begun to rain
very lightly in the Calhoun area, and that Thomason's shirt appeared
to have blood stains on it. After Thomason consented to a search of
the Cutlass, Officer Gilbert also observed crumpled currency on the
car's console that appeared to have fresh blood on it. Officer
Gilbert then handcuffed Thomason and placed him in the back of
Gilbert's patrol car.
A sergeant with the Floyd County Police
Department arrived on the scene, and was shown the blood stains on
the currency and on Thomason's shirt. The sergeant cut a piece of
the blood-stained material off Thomason's shirt tail and placed it
in a plastic bag. At that point, Thomason was placed in the back of
the Floyd County sergeant's patrol car.
Before doing that, however, the sergeant
conducted a second "pat down" of Thomason, and in so doing,
discovered that the lighter in Thomason's pocket was engraved with
the murder victim's name. He also discovered a ring and two gold
chains in Thomason's pocket, both of which were later determined to
have been taken in the Blaylock burglary. The Oldsmobile Cutlass was
taken to a nearby holding facility.
Approximately 45 minutes after Thomason was
stopped, Officers Logan and Corbin arrived on the scene, and
identified Thomason as the individual they had seen driving away
from the Self residence. They later identified the Oldsmobile
Cutlass as the car they had observed accelerating away from the
crime scene. Several items discovered in the Cutlass were identified
as having been taken from the Self and Blaylock residences.
It was determined that Self had died from three
gunshot wounds, each made with a .38 caliber-type bullet. Among the
items missing from the Self residence following the burglary was a
.357 magnum pistol, which sometimes was loaded with .38 caliber
ammunition. Laboratory analyses later determined that the blood
stains on Thomason's shirt matched Self's blood.
1. Viewed most favorably to the verdict, we
determine that the evidence introduced at trial was sufficient to
enable a rational trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt
that Thomason was guilty of the crimes for which he was convicted.
2. Thomason argues that the trial court erred in
denying his motion to suppress evidence gathered as a result of the
State's warrantless seizures and searches of him and his car. In
making this argument, Thomason claims that Officer Gilbert's
investigatory stop of him was not based upon reasonable and
articulable suspicion, and thus was illegal. Thomason also argues
that even if the investigatory stop was legal, the subsequent search
of the Cutlass exceeded the bounds of such a stop, and was not
otherwise permissible. Thomason further alleges that his seizure was
not based upon probable cause, and that the police search of his
person was unreasonable. We will address each of these contentions
in turn.
(a) Thomason argues that the investigative stop
of him by Calhoun Police Officer Gilbert was impermissible, because
it was not based upon specific and articulable facts that, when
taken together with the rational inferences arising therefrom,
provided the requisite reasonable suspicion to warrant the resulting
intrusion. It is established that, in making this determination, we
examine whether the detaining officer had a particularized and
objective basis for reasonably suspecting that the particular
individual stopped was or had been engaged in criminal activity.
Applying these principles to this case, we find
that the initial stop of Thomason was based upon reasonable
suspicion. Contrary to Thomason's argument, Officer Gilbert had more
than a generalized description of the suspect he was seeking and the
car he was driving. Officer Gilbert knew the color of both the car
and its top, the manufacturer, model, and model year of the car, and
the driver's gender and race. That detailed information was
sufficient to provide Officer Gilbert with the requisite
particularized basis to warrant the investigative stop of Thomason.
The precedent relied upon by Thomason in arguing
that the stop was not based on reasonable suspicion, Vansant, supra,
is factually distinguishable. In Vansant, the investigating officer
knew only that the suspect vehicle was a white van being driven in
an intoxicated manner by a white male, and the officer admitted that
he detained the suspect only because he was driving a white vehicle.
The officer in Vansant had no information to
distinguish the van he stopped from all other white vans, such as
its manufacturer, model, or model year. In contrast, Thomason's
detention was initiated upon a much more particularized description
of the suspect vehicle. That specific and articulable information
was sufficient to warrant Officer Gilbert's reasonable suspicion
that the car and its driver were the subjects of the lookout request
generated by Floyd County police, and thus warranted the
investigative stop.
(b) Thomason argues that, even if the
investigative stop was supported by reasonable suspicion, the
subsequent warrantless search of his car exceeded the limits of an
investigative stop, and was not based upon either probable cause or
exigent circumstances, thus rendering it illegal. However, it is
undisputed that, after Officer Gilbert initiated the investigative
stop of Thomason and appropriately conducted a "pat-down" in order
to search for weapons, he sought and received Thomason's consent to
search the Cutlass' interior. While the State carries the burden of
proving that Thomason freely and voluntarily consented to the search,
inherent in the trial court's findings supporting the denial of the
motion to suppress is the finding that consent to the search was
made voluntarily.
Our own review of the record leads us to the same
conclusion. Voluntariness of consent is considered from all of the
circumstances, and none of the facts attendant to this claim
indicate that Thomason's consent to the search of his car was the
result of coercion, duress or any other impermissible factor.
Insofar as the investigatory stop of Thomason was lawful, it did
nothing to taint the subsequent search of the car's interior.
Because valid consent to search the interior of Thomason's car
existed, the need for either probable cause or a search warrant was
eliminated.
(c) In addition to observing the bloody currency
on the Cutlass' console and the blood stains on Thomason's shirt,
Officer Gilbert queried Thomason on why his clothes were soaking wet,
when only a light rain was falling in the area. Thomason gave an
implausible response to this question. Officer Gilbert testified at
the hearing on the motion to suppress that at the time he asked this
question, he knew that it was raining heavily in Floyd County, where
the murder occurred, and suspected that Thomason may have come from
that direction before being stopped. It was after all of this
information was gathered that Thomason was handcuffed and placed in
the back of Gilbert's patrol car. Thomason argues that his seizure
constituted an illegal arrest, because Officer Gilbert did not
recover any incriminating evidence during his "pat down" of Thomason.
Obviously, at the point where he was handcuffed
and placed in the back of the patrol car, Thomason was in custody
and not free to leave the scene. However, we believe that Thomason's
seizure was permissible. In addition to the information he gathered
after initiating the investigative stop, Officer Gilbert knew at the
time he placed Thomason in custody that both Thomason and the car he
was driving matched the description of the car and driver seen
leaving the scene of the murder. That degree of knowledge,
considered in its entirety, would justify a person of reasonable
caution to believe it probable that an offense had been committed,
and thus provided the probable cause required to take custody of
Thomason.
(d) Finally, we reject Thomason's claim that the
evidence gathered from his person should have been suppressed. The
lighter and jewelry discovered in his pocket were seized as part of
a search incident to a lawful arrest, conducted at the time Floyd
County officers took custody of Thomason.
The blood-stained piece of Thomason's shirt was
in plain view at the time of the search incident to arrest, and was
removed and placed in a protective bag in order to preserve evidence,
as it had begun to rain rather heavily at the scene. Likewise, swabs
of blood were permissibly taken from Thomason's skin surface after
he was taken into custody, as they also preserved evidence. Thomason
concedes that before samples of his own blood were withdrawn, a
valid warrant was obtained.
For all of these reasons, we reject Thomason's
argument that the trial court erred by denying his motion to
suppress evidence.
3. Thomason claims that the trial court erred in
denying his motion to suppress Officers Corbin's and Logan's
testimony identifying him as the individual they observed driving
the Oldsmobile Cutlass away from the murder scene. Thomason claims
that (1) the conditions attending the officers' first sighting of
Thomason created a substantial likelihood of misidentification, and
(2) unnecessarily suggestive procedures corrupted the officers'
identification of Thomason after he had been taken into police
custody.
Factors to be considered in determining the
admissibility of eyewitness identifications include (1) the
witness's opportunity to view the accused at the time of the crime;
(2) the witness's degree of attention; (3) the accuracy of the
witness's prior description of the accused; (4) the witness's level
of certainty at the confrontation; and (5) the length of time
between the crime and the confrontation.
The officers admitted that, as their patrol car
approached Thomason's Cutlass, heavy rain on the patrol car's
windshield obscured their vision. However, the officers also
testified that they had rolled down both their driver- and passenger-side
windows in order to see more clearly. As the Cutlass passed the
patrol car, its driver-side window also was rolled down. The
officers testified that the two cars passed within several feet of
one another, and that as the cars passed, Thomason and the officers
looked at each other "eye to eye" through the open windows for three
to five seconds. Knowing that they were near the Self residence,
where the emergency call they were responding to had originated, and
that the Cutlass was accelerating from that direction, the officers
had stated to one another that they should pay extremely close
attention to the driver of the Cutlass as he passed. Under these
circumstances, we reject Thomason's contention that there was a
substantial likelihood of misidentification associated with the
officer's first sighting of him.
Officers Logan's and Corbin's identification of
Thomason after he was taken into custody also was reliable. The
officers' initial description of Thomason to the radio dispatcher,
made before their identification of him, was accurate. Moreover,
after speaking with the dispatcher, the officers radioed a more
detailed description of Thomason to the Calhoun police officers who
were holding Thomason, and that description also was accurate. At
the "show up," which took place no more than one hour after the
officers first saw Thomason, the officers were entirely confident
that it was Thomason they had seen leaving the murder scene. Thus,
all of the Biggers criteria for establishing the reliability of an
eyewitness identification are satisfied in this case.
Nor does the record support Thomason's claim that
the officers' identification of him after he was taken into custody
was tainted by impermissibly suggestive procedures. Thomason claims
that radioed communications between Calhoun police officers and
Floyd County officers Corbin and Logan corrupted the "show up"
identification procedure. After Calhoun police stopped Thomason,
they radioed Corbin and Logan and asked them to describe the man
they were seeking. Corbin and Logan did so, in slightly more detail
than they had done initially to the police dispatcher. Calhoun
police then responded "we've got him," and confirmed that Corbin and
Logan should proceed to the "show up" identification. We reject
Thomason's argument that the single statement "we've got him" was so
impermissibly suggestive to have swayed Thomason's identification by
two trained law enforcement officers who had plainly viewed him
leaving the scene of a crime less than one hour earlier. Rather, our
reading of the transcript of the radioed communications indicates
that the Calhoun police officers' statement merely confirmed that a
suspect was being held who matched the lookout description, and that
Officers Logan and Crawford should proceed to either confirm or deny
that the proper individual had been apprehended.
4. Thomason argues that his conviction must be
reversed because the trial court erred by failing to follow several
procedures delineated in the Unified Appeal Procedure ("UAP"). The
record on appeal shows that while the trial court complied with
virtually all of the UAP's directives, it erred procedurally by not
complying with several key portions of the UAP. However, we
determine that Thomason suffered absolutely no harm as a result of
the trial court's actions, and thus no reversible error exists.
(a) The UAP requires the trial court to review
section one of the UAP checklist with counsel for both sides at the
"first proceeding," to determine what pre-trial issues the defense
intends to raise, to schedule hearings on any such issues, and to
remind counsel that any such issues not timely raised may be waived.
Examples of the types of pre-trial issues
included in section one of the UAP checklist are challenges to the
grand and traverse jury pools, and search and seizure challenges.
Thomason claims that the trial court committed reversible error by
not reviewing the UAP checklist with counsel at the first proceeding,
and by not scheduling a later conference in order to review the
issues set forth in the checklist.
Our review of the transcript of the first
proceeding shows that Thomason was represented by new counsel at
that proceeding, and that at the first proceeding, counsel requested
that the trial court "start from scratch," and "follow the normal
procedure in a death penalty case." The transcript also indicates
that at the first proceeding, copies of the UAP checklist were
provided to counsel for both sides, and defense counsel informed the
trial court that he could not state at that time whether he intended
to challenge the jury pools, as he had only recently been retained
and was not entirely familiar with the case. From this, we find that
it was reasonable for the trial court to conclude that defense
counsel could not state with any certainty what pre-trial issues
included in the checklist he intended to raise. We also note that at
the first proceeding, the trial court instructed that, because of
defense counsel's late entry into the case, any motions that should
have been filed before the first proceeding would be accepted within
ten days thereafter, and that all timely-filed motions would be
heard and promptly ruled upon.
Finally, we note that subsequent to the first
proceeding, Thomason filed motions pertaining to a great many of the
issues set forth in section one of the UAP checklist, and that all
of those motions were heard and ruled upon by the trial court. These
factors convince us that, while the trial court erred procedurally
by not reviewing section one of the UAP checklist with counsel at
the first proceeding in order to determine what pre-trial issues
would be raised, that action did not prevent Thomason from having a
full opportunity to raise those issues and have them decided by the
court. Thus, as no harm resulted from the trial court's actions, no
reversible error exists.
The record shows that a great number of
conferences on pre-trial issues were scheduled and held by the trial
court, and that several such conferences were conducted ex parte at
the request of defense counsel. Thus, we reject Thomason's claim
that the trial court did not afford him sufficient opportunity to
raise the pre-trial issues at court-scheduled conferences.
(b) Thomason incorrectly asserts that the trial
court erred by not inquiring of him at the first proceeding whether
he had any objection to his counsel's handling of his defense. The
transcript of the first proceeding, however, shows that the trial
court did make this inquiry, and that Thomason replied he was
satisfied with his counsel.
(c) Regarding the trial court's hearing on
Thomason's pre-trial motions, Thomason complains that the trial
court failed to (1) review section one of the UAP checklist with
counsel for both sides, and determine whether there were potential
pre-trial issues not raised that should have been raised, and (2)
inquire whether defense counsel had explained to Thomason his rights
regarding any issue not raised.
The transcript shows that at the motions hearing,
the trial court did not review the UAP checklist with counsel, and
did not inquire of Thomason whether he had discussed issues not
raised with his counsel. However, at the hearing, the trial court
heard, considered and ruled upon over 40 pre-trial motions. Thomason
did not aver at the motions hearing, nor does he argue on appeal,
that the trial court's failure to comply with these two directives
of the UAP prevented him from raising any meritorious pre-trial
issue that could have been asserted. Moreover, on several occasions
both during and following the motions hearing, the trial court
inquired of Thomason whether he was satisfied with his counsel's
performance, and each time he responded affirmatively. These factors
convince us that, while the trial court did err procedurally by not
complying with the precise directives of section II (B) (2) of the
UAP, no harm resulted therefrom, rendering the error harmless.
(d) We reject Thomason's assertion that the trial
court improperly ruled that his pre-trial motions were untimely
because they were not filed before his arraignment. The transcript
shows that, during the motions hearing, the trial court commented
that because Thomason's pre-trial motions should have been filed
before his arraignment, they appeared to be untimely. Nonetheless,
the trial court went on to hear arguments on each pre-trial motion
filed, to consider the merits of each such motion, and to rule upon
each motion based upon its merits. Thus, contrary to Thomason's
assertion, the trial court did not dispose of his pre-trial motions
simply by ruling that the motions were untimely, and this
enumeration is rejected.
In conclusion, our review of the entirety of the
pre-trial proceedings confirms that while the trial court erred
procedurally by not complying with all of the precise directives of
the UAP, it nonetheless accomplished the purpose of the UAP by
taking steps designed to ensure that all legal issues that should
have been raised were raised, considered upon their merits, and
ruled upon.
On appeal, Thomason does not claim that the trial
court's procedural errors prejudiced him in any manner. Rather, he
simply claims that the procedural errors, standing alone, mandate
reversal. Because it is irrefutable that error without resulting
prejudice is harmless, we conclude that the pre-trial procedural
irregularities complained of in this case do not warrant a new trial.
5. Thomason claims that the trial court erred by
requiring him to enter a plea prior to determining his competency to
stand trial. At the first appearance of counsel, the trial court was
informed that Thomason intended to challenge his competency to stand
trial, and would be requesting that a special jury determine that
issue. Thomason's arraignment subsequently was scheduled, and at the
arraignment, Thomason objected that being required to enter a plea
before the issue of his competency was resolved violated the rule
set forth in Martin v. State that an accused cannot be forced to
enter a plea while the issue of his competency to stand trial
remains unresolved. However, at the arraignment, Thomason did not
enter a plea. Rather, at the trial court's invitation, he opted to
stand mute, and, at the trial court's direction, a not guilty plea
was entered by the clerk of the court on Thomason's behalf. It being
undisputed that Thomason was not forced to enter a plea before the
issue of his competency was determined, there was no violation of
the principle set forth in Martin, supra, and this enumeration is
rejected.
6. Thomason filed an ex parte motion seeking
funds of between $17,000 and $20,000 with which to employ an expert
in the field of DNA analysis, and between $18,000 and $24,000 with
which to employ an expert forensic pathologist. In his ex parte
motion, Thomason explained (1) that the services of a DNA expert
were necessary for him effectively to rebut the State's case against
him, which would rely primarily upon the State's DNA analyses of
blood samples taken from the crime scene, the victim, and Thomason,
and (2) that he required the services of an expert forensic
pathologist because "the absence of certain physical evidence at the
scene, along with the nature of other evidence identified [by the
State] tends to establish . . . [his] innocence."
An ex parte hearing was initiated on this motion,
at which the trial court stated that it was greatly concerned about
the approximately $40,000 in fees that Thomason had requested to
employ these two experts. The trial court candidly admitted that,
due to its lack of investigative resources, it could not make an
intelligent decision on whether the fees sought were reasonable. In
order to develop additional facts concerning the reasonable costs of
the expert services sought, the trial court unsealed Thomason's ex
parte motion for funds, and served it on the State for its response.
At a subsequent hearing, the court inquired of the State what amount
of fees it believed would, when objectively viewed, be reasonable
for the expert services. After the State responded to that inquiry,
it was excused from the courtroom, and the hearing on Thomason's
motion was continued ex parte.
Thomason claims that the trial court erred by
unsealing his ex parte motion seeking funds, because that action
revealed his trial strategy to the State, without the State
concomitantly revealing its strategy. It has long been recognized
that an indigent defendant has a right to seek funds necessary to
his meaningful participation in the judicial proceeding where his
liberty and life are at stake. While exercising that right, a
defendant also has the right to maintain the secretive preparation
of his defense. For that reason, this court has held that when
attempting to make the showing required in order to obtain public
funds for the services of a scientific expert, a defendant cannot be
placed in the position of "revealing his theory of the case," and
thus has a legitimate interest in making that showing ex parte.
However, the trial court, in its discretion and without forcing a
defendant to reveal his theory of the case, may reserve issues
raised by an ex parte motion to be heard at a separate hearing at
which the State is present.
With these precepts in mind, we determine that
the trial court's unsealing of Thomason's ex parte motion for funds
did not improperly reveal his theory of the case. That Thomason
sought to challenge the State's DNA testing, which had already been
performed, cannot be considered a secretive trial strategy.
Furthermore, the very general statement that Thomason sought to
establish his innocence through "the absence of certain physical
evidence at the scene, along with the nature of other evidence,"
standing alone, is so vague and inconclusive as to offer no insight
into its specific meaning whatsoever. In this regard, we note that
at the ex parte hearing, it was necessary for defense counsel to
elaborate for the trial court rather extensively on what exactly was
meant by this statement.
Regarding the hearing, considering that Thomason
sought approximately $40,000 in funds with which to employ two
scientific experts, we cannot say that the trial court erred by
seeking additional information from the State as to the
reasonableness of that request. At the hearing, the trial court
clearly stated that Thomason would not be required to reveal his
trial strategy in the State's presence, and the transcript shows
that so long as the State was present, the only issues discussed
were the reasonable amount of fees that should be required for the
expert services sought, the proper scope of such services, and what
other experts had charged for the same or similar services. All
matters touching on trial strategy were reserved until they could be
heard ex parte. Under these facts, the trial court did not
improperly place Thomason in a position where, in order to make the
showing required for public funds with which to employ an expert, he
had to reveal his theory of the case to the State. Therefore, we
reject this enumeration.
7. The trial court did not abuse its discretion
in denying Thomason's motions for funds with which to hire a crime
scene reconstructionist and an expert forensic psychologist. An
indigent's motion for the appointment of a defense expert should
inform the trial court with reasonable precision why certain
evidence is critical, what type of scientific testimony is needed,
what that expert proposes to do regarding the evidence, and the
anticipated costs for the services sought. Absent discretionary
abuse, a trial court's ruling on a criminal defendant's motion for
the appointment of an expert witness will be upheld.
In his motion, Thomason did not establish that
the services of a crime scene reconstructionist were critical to his
defense, and it is apparent that the absence of a reconstructionist
did not render his trial fundamentally unfair. Thomason had sought
the appointment of an expert reconstructionist in order to "recreate
the [crime] scene" and demonstrate inconsistencies in the State's
theory of how the murder was committed. In presenting its theory as
to how Thomason might have committed the murder, the State relied
upon the testimony of a police captain. Thomason was granted funds
by the trial court with which to hire a professional investigator,
and we believe that the investigator's ability to evaluate the crime
scene and draw conclusions regarding the murder's commission was the
substantial equivalent of the State's witness.
Considering these circumstances, we conclude that
Thomason has failed to establish that it was critical that he be
granted additional funds to hire an expert crime scene
reconstructionist in order to effectively rebut the State's theory.
Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying
the motion.
Nor did the trial court abuse its discretion in
denying Thomason's request for funds with which to hire a forensic
psychologist, Dr. Cheatum. Thomason asserts that he made a
sufficient showing to entitle him to an independent psychiatric
evaluation performed by Dr. Cheatum to assist his defense on the
issues of Thomason's competency and mitigating evidence for
sentencing purposes. Thomason's argument in support of this
enumeration is incomplete and misleading. The record shows that
after a competency evaluation was performed by a court-appointed
expert, Thomason sought funds for an independent competency
evaluation by Dr. Cheatum. The trial court granted Thomason $3,500
for that purpose, and Dr. Cheatum conducted an independent
evaluation of Thomason. Thomason then sought an additional $25,000
for another psychological evaluation focused on his formative social
and familial background. In response to that request, the trial
court ordered Thomason to present further evidence of his need for
the specific evaluation. To assist Thomason in gathering such
evidence, the trial court issued an order providing him access to
all of his official records. In an ex parte hearing, Thomason
presented evidence from those official records, and the evidence
presented failed to establish that the second psychological
evaluation was critical to Thomason's defense. Furthermore, we
conclude that the absence of the second independent psychological
evaluation did not render Thomason's trial fundamentally unfair.
Thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying this
motion.
8. We reject Thomason's claim that the trial
court erred by admitting into evidence samples of his blood and the
blood of the victim. A review of the testimony and evidence shows
that an adequate chain of custody was established with respect to
the blood samples, that the samples were handled routinely, and that
they were maintained properly in a sealed condition from the time of
their collection through their delivery to the State Crime
Laboratory. Nothing in the record raises a legitimate suspicion that
the blood samples admitted into evidence were not the samples that
were evaluated, and the record provides the requisite reasonable
assurances of the samples' identities.
9. The trial court did not abuse it discretion in
refusing to sever four counts of the indictment relating to the
burglary of the Blaylock residence and the possession of a firearm
by a convicted felon. Evidence showed that all of the crimes with
which Thomason was charged were committed within approximately one
hour of each other, and constituted a series of acts performed as
part of a single scheme or plan.
10. As each count of the indictment stated the
essential elements of the crime charged, and the indictment was
sufficient to put Thomason on notice of the charges that he needed
to defend against, the trial court properly denied Thomason's motion
to quash.
11. Georgia's death penalty statute is not
unconstitutional for any of the reasons asserted by Thomason.
12. The trial court did not abuse its discretion
in denying Thomason's motions asking that each member of the defense
counsel team be provided with a daily transcript of the trial
court's proceedings. Not only has Thomason made no showing that the
denial of these motions prejudiced his defense in any way, Georgia
law requires only that counsel be provided with a copy of the
transcript once proceedings are concluded and their transcription
has been completed.
13. The trial court did not abuse its discretion
in denying Thomason's motion for notice by the State of its
intention to use any evidence "arguably subject to a motion to
suppress," as the law does require the State to make such a
disclosure.
14. The evidence supports the finding of the
statutory aggravating circumstances that the murder was committed
during the course of a burglary and was committed for the purpose of
obtaining money and things of monetary value. The imposition of the
death penalty in this case was not extreme or excessive in light of
the facts of this case, and, as evidenced by the cases listed in the
Appendix, is not disproportionate to the penalty imposed in other
cases.
APPENDIX.
BENHAM, Chief Justice, concurring in part and
dissenting in part.
Although I concur in the affirmance of Thomason's
conviction for murder, I cannot concur in the affirmance of the
death penalty imposed by the trial court following a trial without a
jury. Contrary to the majority, I do not believe that a
proportionality analysis supports affirmance of the sentence.
We are required by OCGA
17-10-35 to conduct a review of the sentence in all death
penalty cases, and specifically to consider "[w]hether the sentence
of death is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in
similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant." OCGA
17-10-35 (c) (3). Because we are the
only Georgia appellate court to review death penalty cases (Art. VI,
Sec. VI, Par. III, Ga. Const. 1983) and because the issue is one of
enormous gravity, this weighty responsibility must be approached
with special care in every case. Exacerbating the risk of a faulty
proportionality analysis is the doctrine of stare decisis: if we
lower the standard in a single case, that case becomes precedent for
easier and easier imposition of the most extreme punishment
available in criminal jurisprudence.
Bearing those considerations in mind, I have
reviewed this case in the context of other murder convictions in
which the conduct of the defendant was similar to that of Thomason
in this case. It is evident from the facts set out in the majority
opinion that Thomason was surprised in a burglary of the victim's
home. Thus, there is evidence that the murder was committed in the
course of a burglary and for the purpose of obtaining money and
things of value.
However, when considering this case in terms of
proportionality, it is apparent that other defendants who have
killed in the course of burglaries and other felonies, and whose
crimes have thus met the same test for aggravating circumstances
that Thomason's crime met, have not been subjected to our society's
ultimate punishment: White v. State, 267 Ga.
523 (481 SE2d 804) (1997), defendant convicted of felony
murder, armed robbery, and aggravated assault (defendant and two
others used assault rifles to rob and then shoot four men, two of
whom died), sentenced to consecutive terms of life imprisonment for
each count of felony murder, and twenty years for each remaining
count to be served concurrently; Sterling v. State,
267 Ga. 209 (477 SE2d 807) (1996),
defendant convicted of malice murder, felony murder, aggravated
assault, kidnapping and burglary (defendant and accomplice forced
their way into house of drug users and demanded money from victims
who were then taken into the woods and shot, one fatally in the
mouth and the other in the face), sentenced to life for the murder,
a consecutive life term for aggravated assault, and two twenty-year
concurrent terms for the kidnapping and burglary convictions; LeMay
v. State, 265 Ga. 73 (453 SE2d 737) (1995),
defendant found guilty of burglary, armed robbery, and murder (victim's
home ransacked, several handguns taken as well as money and jewelry,
and victim stabbed), received two life sentences for malice murder
and armed robbery, and a consecutive twenty-year sentence for armed
robbery (State sought the death penalty); Henry v. State,
265 Ga. 732 (462 SE2d 737) (1995),
defendant convicted of malice murder, armed robbery, and kidnapping
with bodily injury (defendant robbed jewelry store, shot owner in
the head), sentenced to life imprisonment without parole for the
murder, and to consecutive life sentences for the armed robbery and
kidnapping; Edwards v. State, 264 Ga. 615
(449 SE2d 516) (1994), defendant found guilty of malice
murder, armed robbery, and burglary (operator of a motel fatally
stabbed one week after argument with defendant in which defendant
threatened victim), sentenced to a life sentence for the murder, a
consecutive life sentence for the armed robbery, and ten years for
burglary; Brown v. State, 264 Ga. 803 (450
SE2d 821) (1994), defendant convicted of malice murder,
felony murder, attempted robbery, possession of a firearm during
commission of crime, armed robbery, aggravated assault (defendant
shot and killed taxicab driver during robbery), sentenced to life in
prison for malice murder, life for each count of armed robbery,
twenty years for each count of aggravated assault, ten years for
armed robbery convictions, five years for each conviction for
possession of a firearm during commission of crime; Howard v. State,
262 Ga. 784 (426 SE2d 365) (1993),
defendant convicted of felony murder, burglary, and armed robbery (victim
shot when he returned unexpectedly while defendant and two other men
were burglarizing victim's house), sentenced to two consecutive life
sentences for felony murder and armed robbery convictions; Mitchell
v. State, 261 Ga. 347 (405 SE2d 38) (1991)
(reversed on other grounds), defendant convicted of malice murder
and sentenced to life in prison (victim shot in chest with shotgun
because defendant upset over victim's relationship with defendant's
former girl friend), received a fifteen-year sentence for burglary,
as well as fifteen years for aggravated assault. The conduct of the
defendants in these cases was at least as culpable as Thomason's,
yet they were punished by imprisonment. Thomason's conduct should be
punished with similar severity.
Although the majority opinion includes an
appendix of cases offered to demonstrate that the penalty in this
case was not disproportionate to that imposed in others, the cited
cases do not serve that purpose. While all murders are horrid, the
fact that proportionality analyses are undertaken shows that some
murders are to be considered more horrid than others, especially
those in which the murder is planned, or there is cruelty and
torture beyond the fact of killing, or there are multiple victims.
Those horrors are not present in this case. The evidence in this
case points unquestionably to the fact that Thomason was surprised
in a burglary of the victim's home, and suggests strongly that he
killed the victim with the victim's own gun, stolen in the burglary.
It is thus apparent that Thomason did not go to
the victim's home for the purpose of committing a murder and that he
did not engage in brutality and violence beyond that necessary to
carry out his criminal purpose. By contrast, the cases cited in the
majority opinion's appendix reflect either a fixed purpose to commit
murder or a greater degree of gratuitous violence: Mobley v. State,
265 Ga. 292 (455 SE2d 61) (1995),
victim forced to kneel and shot execution style; Meders v. State,
261 Ga. 806 (411 SE2d 491) (1992),
victim shot in the chest before a demand for money was made and
while he was opening the cash register, then shot again in the head
after falling on the floor; Ford v. State,
257 Ga. 461 (360 SE2d 258) (1987), victim whose relationship
with defendant had gone sour (defendant told a friend before the
shooting that he was going to "blow her brains out") shot three
times, and her eleven-year-old niece shot in the head; Cargill v.
State, 255 Ga. 616 (340 SE2d 891) (1986),
victims both lying on the floor and shot in the back of the head,
one victim at a distance of less than two feet; Horton v. State,
249 Ga. 871 (295 SE2d 281) (1982),
victim killed and another shot at by defendant leaving scene of
burglary; Amadeo v. State, 243 Ga. 627 (255
SE2d 718) (1976), victim shot in chest after demand for money
by defendant who had passed victim, then returned to single victim
out for robbery; Bowden v. State, 239 Ga. 821
(238 SE2d 905) (1977), one victim beaten so severely with a
pellet gun as to make her unrecognizable and her brain visible from
a large open wound behind her ear, then stabbed in chest with large
butcher knife after death (elderly victim, also severely beaten with
the same pellet gun, later died); Stephens v. State,
237 Ga. 259 (227 SE2d 261) (1976),
victim robbed, hit in the face and kicked, caught when he tried to
escape, and shot by a pistol placed in his ear; Pulliam v. State,
236 Ga. 460 (224 SE2d 8) (1976), cab
driver shot in the back of the head during planned robbery-murder;
Moore v. State, 233 Ga. 861 (213 SE2d 829)
(1975), victim murdered and robbed by defendant after arson-murder
plan with victim's nephew failed. In all of these cases, there is
some factor such as premeditation, gratuitous brutality, or multiple
victims which sets the conduct of those defendants apart from
Thomason's.
The cases set out above, considered in context
with Thomason's crime, persuade me that the imposition of the death
penalty in this case is not proportionate to the penalty imposed in
similar cases. The majority's affirmance of the sentence in this
case lowers the standard to be applied to subsequent death penalty
cases, and threatens to make routine the most serious penalty that
can be imposed in this state. I must, therefore, dissent.
Tamra P. Colston, District Attorney, Fred R.
Simpson, Assistant District Attorney, Thurbert E. Baker, Attorney
General, Susan V. Boleyn, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Paige
R. Whitaker, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
Notes
1 The crimes occurred on August
21, 1992, and Thomason was originally indicted later that same year.
That original indictment was nolle prossed, and on May 3, 1993, Thomason
was re-indicted for malice murder, felony murder, two counts of burglary,
possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime, and possession
of a firearm by a convicted felon. On May 2, 1995, a jury found Thomason
mentally competent to stand trial. On September 27, 1996, Thomason filed
a waiver of his right to a jury trial on the indicted charges. On
September 30, 1996, through October 3, 1996, Thomason was tried without
a jury before the Hon. F. Larry Salmon of the Floyd County Superior
Court. On October 3, 1996, Thomason was found guilty of malice murder
and felony murder, with the felony murder conviction merging into the
malice murder conviction by operation of law, two counts of burglary,
possession of a firearm during the commission of a burglary, and
possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. On October 3, 1996,
Thomason was sentenced to death for the malice murder conviction, twenty
years for each count of burglary, and five years for each of the two
firearm convictions, each term of years to run consecutively. The
transcript was certified by the court reporter on November 4, 1996. No
motion for new trial was filed. A notice of appeal was timely filed in
the superior court on November 1, 1996. The appeal was docketed in this
Court on November 13, 1996, and orally argued on March 10, 1997.
Bret J. Pangborn, Edwin Marger, for
appellant.
DECIDED JULY 16, 1997 -- RECONSIDERATION DENIED
JULY 30, 1997.