In the Supreme Court of Georgia
Decided: February 15, 2021
S20A1093. SUGGS v. THE STATE.
BOGGS, Justice.
Appellant Kalvin Tyrone Suggs challenges his 2017 convictions
for malice murder and other crimes in connection with the shooting
death of Tony Harrison. Appellant contends that the evidence
presented at his trial was legally insufficient to support his
convictions. He also contends that the trial court erred in denying
his pretrial motion regarding voir dire, thereby forcing him to
question all the prospective jurors together; rejecting his challenge
to an allegedly racially discriminatory peremptory strike; denying
his motion in limine to exclude evidence derived from a surreptitious
audio recording of a conversation; and admitting 21 crime scene and
autopsy photographs. He further contends that the court did not
follow the proper procedure when receiving a communication from
the jury and that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel.
For the reasons that follow, we affirm. 1
1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the
evidence at trial showed the following. On the night of February 28-
March 1, 2015, Appellant rode with his friend Patrick Pridgen to the
Jackpot Club in the Sunset Plaza shopping center in Moultrie.
Appellant was wearing black pants and a black and white shirt. At
around 1:30 a.m., Appellant got into a fight with Harrison and
1 The shooting occurred on March 1, 2015. In September 2015, a Colquitt
County grand jury indicted Appellant for malice murder, felony murder,
aggravated assault, three counts of possession of a firearm during the
commission of a felony, and two counts of possession of a firearm by a convicted
felon (one for a firearm on the date of the shooting, and the other for a different
firearm on the date of his arrest). In August 2016, Appellant entered a non-
negotiated guilty plea under North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (91 SCt 160,
27 LE2d 162) (1970), to involuntary manslaughter in exchange for the State’s
agreement to dismiss all other pending charges, which he withdrew in March
2017. At a December 2017 trial, the jury found Appellant guilty of all charges.
In February 2018, the trial court sentenced Appellant to serve life in prison for
malice murder, five years consecutive for possession of a firearm during the
commission of a felony, and consecutive terms of five years each for the two
felon-in-possession convictions. The felony murder verdict was vacated by
operation of law, see Malcolm v. State, 263 Ga. 369, 371-372 (434 SE2d 479)
(1993), and the court merged the other guilty verdicts. Appellant filed a timely
motion for new trial, which he amended with new counsel in July 2019. After
an evidentiary hearing, the court denied the motion in November 2019.
Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal, and the case was docketed to this
Court’s August 2020 term and submitted for decision on the briefs.
2
Harrison’s brother, Dontavious Jackson, and Harrison and Jackson
severely beat Appellant. The club’s owner, Israel Shaw, helped
break up the fight and told his bouncers to clear the club.
As the large crowd spilled into the parking lot, Timothy Davis
offered Harrison and Jackson a ride home, and the three men
walked to Davis’ car. Tamera Edwards drove up with her boyfriend
and parked next to Davis. Harrison was standing between the two
cars when gunfire erupted from a 9mm pistol one row over in the
parking lot, striking the side of Edwards’ car and shattering her
back window. Harrison pulled his own 9mm pistol and returned fire,
getting off seven rounds before he was hit in the right upper chest
and fell to the ground. The bullet that struck Harrison went through
his right lung, windpipe, aorta, and left lung before exiting through
his upper left arm. Appellant jumped into a Chevrolet Camaro
convertible that his cousin was driving and was dropped off at the
Northgate Apartments.
Harrison was pronounced dead at the scene. Law enforcement
officers recovered two sets of 9mm shell casings from the parking lot
3
– seven shell casings from around and under Harrison’s body that
matched the pistol lying by his left foot, and 12 shell casings nearby
that were fired from a different 9mm pistol, which was never found.
At around 3:00 a.m. on March 1, 2015, Appellant called
Pridgen, and Pridgen picked him up at the Northgate Apartments.
At Appellant’s request, Pridgen drove Appellant to Appellant’s
sister’s house in the Atlanta area, dropping him off at around 6:30
a.m. before driving back to Moultrie. The next day, Appellant called
Pridgen, who drove to Atlanta, picked up Appellant, and brought
him back to Moultrie. Both on the way up to Atlanta and on the way
back to Moultrie, Appellant told Pridgen that he was in the parking
lot “ducking and shooting” after the club shut down on the night that
Harrison was shot.
On the afternoon of March 3, Kaysha Trim agreed to meet with
GBI agents at a cemetery in Moultrie to discuss the shooting. In an
audio-recorded interview, which was later played for the jury, Trim
told the agents that she knew Appellant and that she saw Harrison
and Jackson beat him up inside the club. Trim said that after the
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club closed, she was in the parking lot walking to her car when she
saw Appellant, who was standing near her car, fire multiple shots
in Harrison’s direction and saw Harrison fall to the ground.
Later that afternoon, Appellant contacted the GBI to make a
statement. Appellant told agents that Harrison and Jackson beat
him up inside the club and that he passed two police officers on his
way out but did not report the fight to them.2 Appellant claimed that
he was walking toward Pridgen’s car when the shooting started, that
he ran to the other end of the parking lot, and that someone he did
not know picked him up in a black truck and drove him to his ex-
girlfriend’s house, where he stayed in seclusion in a shed in her
backyard for the next two days without her knowledge. Appellant
said that when he left the shed, he went to his parents’ house, where
he was notified that law enforcement was requesting to speak with
him. Appellant could not describe the individual who picked him up
or the truck (beyond the fact that it was black), he did not know how
2 Two off-duty Moultrie Police Department officers were working a
security detail for the club in the parking lot that night.
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the driver knew to take him to his ex-girlfriend’s house, and his
description of the inside of the shed did not match what GBI agents
found when they searched it after the interview ended. Appellant
turned over khaki pants and a red shirt that he claimed he was
wearing at the time of the shooting.
On March 5, the GBI received cell phone tower location records
for Appellant’s and Pridgen’s phones. During an interview with
Pridgen, GBI agents confronted him with the records, and Pridgen
admitted that he drove Appellant to Atlanta after the shooting and
brought him back to Moultrie the next day. Pridgen agreed to go
speak with Appellant and record him with a device provided by the
GBI. Shortly after 5:00 p.m., Pridgen went to the home of one of
Appellant’s relatives and spoke to Appellant, who asked Pridgen
what he told the GBI and whether the GBI asked him about a gun.
Appellant told Pridgen to contact the GBI and say that he lied about
taking Appellant to Atlanta after the shooting and that he instead
took someone else who had Appellant’s phone. An audio recording of
the conversation was later played for the jury.
6
At 7:06 p.m. on March 5, Appellant was riding with his father
in his father’s truck when a GBI agent conducted a traffic stop and
arrested Appellant. During a search of the truck, the agent found a
loaded firearm in the passenger-side door compartment next to
where Appellant was sitting, which Appellant, as a convicted felon,
was not allowed to possess.
Appellant contends that the evidence was legally insufficient
to support his convictions. When viewed in the light most favorable
to the verdicts, however, the evidence presented at trial and
summarized above was sufficient as a matter of constitutional due
process to authorize a rational jury to find Appellant guilty beyond
a reasonable doubt of the crimes for which he was convicted. See
Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560)
(1979). See also Vega v. State, 285 Ga. 32, 33 (673 SE2d 223) (2009)
(“‘It was for the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses and
to resolve any conflicts or inconsistencies in the evidence.’” (citation
omitted)).
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2. Appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying
his pretrial motion to conduct individual voir dire of the prospective
jurors one-by-one or, alternatively, in panels of 12 at a time, thereby
forcing him to conduct individual voir dire of all the prospective
jurors together. Appellant relies on Lahr v. State, 239 Ga. 813 (238
SE2d 878) (1977), where this Court stated that “voir dire questions
are propounded to panels of 12 and defendant can question them in
panels of 12 or individually but not en masse to the entire group of
48 jurors at one time.” Id. at 814.
The trial transcript shows that the court divided the
prospective jurors into groups of 12 and sat them in separate
locations in the courtroom for voir dire. After the jury had been
selected and the remaining prospective jurors were excused,
Appellant complained that the court denied him the right to conduct
individual voir dire with panels of 12 prospective jurors at a time.
The court replied, “You did have that right, sir, you could have done
it if you wanted to. They were sitting in panels of 12, if I’m not
mistaken. Is that not true? I intentionally sat them in groups of 12,”
8
and Appellant acknowledged that the jurors were sitting in panels
of 12. In its order denying Appellant’s new trial motion, the trial
court stated that Appellant “was told that he could question each
panel completely before moving to the next panel if he so wished
rather than en masse,” and found that if Appellant questioned all
the prospective jurors at one time, “that was a choice he made, not
a directive of the court.” Thus, Appellant has failed to show error.
See Perez v. State, 258 Ga. 343, 344 (369 SE2d 256) (1988) (finding
no reversible error where, in response to defendant’s request to voir
dire prospective jurors in panels of 12 at a time, trial court said,
“Well, you will have this twelve here, that twelve there and that
twelve there”).
3. Appellant claims that the trial court erred in rejecting his
challenge under Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (106 SCt 1712, 90
LE2d 69) (1986), to the State’s peremptory strike of an African-
American prospective juror, Juror 33. Batson established a three-
step process for evaluating claims of racial discrimination in the use
of peremptory strikes:
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(1) the opponent of a peremptory challenge must make a
prima facie showing of racial discrimination; (2) the
proponent of the strike must then provide a race-neutral
explanation for the strike; and (3) the court must decide
whether the opponent of the strike has proven [the
proponent’s] discriminatory intent.
Heard v. State, 295 Ga. 559, 566 (761 SE2d 314) (2014) (citation
omitted). Appellant’s Batson claim focuses on step two.
After Appellant raised his Batson challenge, the State
explained that it struck Juror 33 because of photographs on her
Facebook page that showed her “throwing up gang signs” and with
marijuana, which a GBI special agent discovered while looking up
all the prospective jurors on Facebook. Appellant argues that the
trial court erred in concluding that the State gave a race-neutral
explanation for striking Juror 33, because the State’s explanation
was not reasonable or plausible and was not based on Juror 33’s
conduct, mannerisms, or responses during voir dire. However,
contrary to Appellant’s argument, the second step of the Batson
process
does not demand an explanation that is persuasive, or
even plausible. “At this [second] step of the inquiry, the
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issue is the facial validity of the prosecutor’s explanation.
Unless a discriminatory intent is inherent in the
prosecutor’s explanation, the reason offered will be
deemed race neutral.”
Purkett v. Elem, 514 U.S. 765, 768 (115 SCt 1769, 131 LE2d 834)
(1995) (citation omitted). Moreover, the reasons for striking
prospective jurors need not come only from voir dire. See Johnson v.
State, 302 Ga. 774, 781 (809 SE2d 769) (2018).
The State’s proffered reason for striking Juror 33 – that she
had photographs on her Facebook page showing her making gang
signs and with marijuana – was race-neutral. See Smith v. State,
264 Ga. 449, 449-451 (448 SE2d 179) (1994) (holding that
prospective juror’s residence in public housing project where gang
activity was prevalent was race-neutral explanation for peremptory
strike); Franklin v. State, 305 Ga. App. 574, 577 (699 SE2d 868)
(2010) (holding that prospective juror’s involvement with drugs was
race-neutral explanation for peremptory strike). Accordingly,
Appellant’s Batson claim fails.
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4. Appellant also claims that the trial court erred in denying
his motion in limine to exclude the audio recording that Pridgen
secretly made of a conversation that he had with Appellant.
Appellant relies on OCGA § 16-11-67, which says: “No evidence
obtained in a manner which violates any of the provisions of this
part [i.e., OCGA §§ 16-11-60 to 16-11-70] shall be admissible in any
court of this state except to prove violations of this part.” However,
the provision that governs audio recordings is OCGA § 16-11-62 (1),
which says: “It shall be unlawful for . . . [a]ny person in a clandestine
manner intentionally to overhear, transmit, or record . . . the private
conversation of another which shall originate in any private place.”
(Emphasis added.) It is well established that OCGA § 16-11-62 (1)
“does not prohibit one party to a conversation from secretly
recording or transmitting it without the knowledge or consent of the
other party.” State v. Birge, 240 Ga. 501, 501 (241 SE2d 213) (1978)
(interpreting predecessor to OCGA § 16-11-62 (1)). Accord Fetty v.
State, 268 Ga. 365, 366 (489 SE2d 813) (1997). Thus, Pridgen did not
violate OCGA § 16-11-62 (1) when he made the audio recording of
12
his conversation with Appellant, and OCGA § 16-11-67 did not
require the trial court to exclude the recording.
5. Appellant asserts that the trial court erred in admitting
21 crime scene and autopsy photographs, because “[t]he
photographs of the bodies at the crime scene were repetitious of
others,” and “[t]here were autopsy photographs that . . . showed
parts of the body which had no relevance to the crime alleged . . .
and were introduced only to inflame the minds of the jury.” However,
more than 60 crime scene and autopsy photographs were admitted
without objection at Appellant’s trial, and Appellant has failed to
identify, by citation to the relevant pages in the record, which
specific subset of 21 photographs he is challenging, as required by
this Court’s rules. See Supreme Court Rule 19 n.1 (“[F]or
briefs, . . . page references to the record (R-) and transcript (T-) are
essential.”). Moreover, his descriptions of what the 21 challenged
crime scene and autopsy photographs depict, considered in light of
his stated bases for challenging them, are simply too vague to enable
this Court to isolate and evaluate the 21 allegedly objectionable
13
photographs. See Henderson v. State, 304 Ga. 733, 739 (822 SE2d
228) (2018) (“It is not this Court’s job to cull the record on behalf of
Appellant to find alleged errors . . . .” (citation and punctuation
omitted)); Roberson v. State, 300 Ga. 632, 636 (797 SE2d 104) (2017)
(“It is well established that the burden is on the party alleging error
to show it by the record . . . .” (citation and punctuation omitted)).
Accordingly, this claim provides no basis for reversal. See
Westmoreland v. State, 287 Ga. 688, 696 (699 SE2d 13) (2010)
(finding no basis for reversal where defendant challenged admission
of “unspecified photographs ‘of individuals that were not in issue’”).
6. Appellant also asserts that the trial court did not follow
the proper procedure when receiving a communication from the jury
during deliberations, citing Lowery v. State, 282 Ga. 68 (646 SE2d
67) (2007). Lowery requires trial courts to ensure that jury
communications are submitted to the court in writing, to mark any
written communication as a court exhibit in the presence of counsel,
to afford counsel a full opportunity to suggest an appropriate
response, and to make counsel aware of the substance of the court’s
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intended response so that counsel may seek modifications to the
response before the jury is exposed to it. See id. at 76. See also
Burney v. State, 299 Ga. 813, 819 n.6 (792 SE2d 354) (2016)
(discussing required procedure for jury communications to court
from outside courtroom).
Here, less than two hours into deliberations, the jury sent the
court a note that said: “Due to his personal view of evidence
presented, one juror feels uncomfortable making a decision based on
the evidence present.” The trial transcript shows that the court
marked this written jury communication as a court exhibit in the
presence of counsel and discussed the note and the court’s intended
response with counsel before bringing in the jury, thereby affording
counsel a full opportunity to seek any desired modifications before
the jury was recharged.
Appellant does not challenge the substance of the recharge
given to the jury in response to the jury note. Instead, he claims that
the trial court failed to follow the procedure prescribed by Lowery for
handling jury notes. But the record reflects that the trial court
15
complied with Lowery. Moreover, Appellant did not object at trial to
the procedure that the court followed in handling the jury note here.
Cf. Lowery, 282 Ga. at 73 (noting that trial counsel “voiced objection
to the trial court’s action”). Appellant therefore waived this claim
and is not entitled even to plain error review. See Miller v. State,
302 Ga. 118, 120 n.2 (805 SE2d 22) (2017) (holding that plain error
review is limited “to only certain types of errors, namely, (1) alleged
errors in the sentencing phase of a death penalty trial; (2) certain
improper comments by the trial judge in violation of OCGA § 17-8-
57; (3) errors in jury instructions; and (4) evidentiary errors in trials
occurring after January 1, 2013”). See also OCGA § 17-8-58 (b)
(authorizing plain error review of any “portion of the jury charge”).
7. Appellant contends that he was denied the effective
assistance of counsel, pointing to numerous alleged errors by his
trial counsel. A defendant’s claim that his attorney’s assistance was
so inadequate as to require reversal of his conviction must prove
both that the attorney’s performance was professionally deficient
and that this deficiency resulted in prejudice to his case. See
16
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d
674) (1984). To establish deficient performance, the defendant must
show that his counsel’s acts or omissions were objectively
unreasonable, considering all the circumstances at the time and in
the light of prevailing professional norms. See id. at 687-690. To
establish prejudice, the defendant must show “a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result
of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable
probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome.” Id. at 694. We need not address both components of the
inquiry if the defendant makes an insufficient showing on one. See
id. at 697.
(a) Appellant points first to his trial counsel’s alleged failure
to adequately investigate the case. However, Appellant has not
suggested, much less shown, what further investigation would have
revealed or how it would have helped his defense. Thus, even if
counsel had conducted an inadequate investigation, Appellant has
failed to prove the required prejudice. See Long v. State, 309 Ga.
17
721, 728 (848 SE2d 91) (2020) (holding that in order to establish
prejudice from failure to adequately investigate case, defendant
must “‘at least make a proffer as to what additional investigation
would have uncovered’” (citation omitted)).
(b) Appellant also points to his trial counsel’s conduct in
connection with a plea agreement that Appellant entered into but
was later allowed to withdraw. The record shows that on the eve of
the scheduled trial, Appellant’s trial counsel met in chambers with
the prosecutor and the judge to discuss a potential plea agreement,
and the prosecutor verbally agreed to allow Appellant to enter a
guilty plea to involuntary manslaughter as a lesser included offense
of malice murder in exchange for the dismissal of the remaining
charges. Appellant claims that the prosecutor also agreed that
Appellant would be sentenced to time served, and that his trial
counsel was constitutionally deficient in failing to get this
agreement, with the promise of no additional jail time, reduced to
writing.
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The record does not bear out Appellant’s claim that the
prosecutor verbally agreed to a sentence of time served. At a plea
hearing a few days after the meeting in chambers, Appellant
confirmed, with his trial counsel present, that he understood that
“the maximum penalty the Court could impose” under the plea
agreement was “ten years in the state penal system.” The court also
explicitly advised Appellant that his sentencing would take place at
a later date, that the court was requesting a presentence
investigation, that Appellant should provide to his trial counsel
“[a]ny information you want me to review prior to that sentencing,”
and that Appellant would be placed on an ankle monitor and allowed
to live with his parents “until sentencing.” Moreover, although
Appellant’s trial counsel testified at the motion for new trial hearing
that “according to the agreement, there would be a PSI [i.e.,
presentence investigation], but [Appellant] would not be sentenced
to any more prison,” counsel admitted that after the meeting in
chambers, neither the prosecutor nor the judge remembered any
19
verbal agreement for Appellant to be sentenced to time served. Thus,
Appellant has failed to show deficient performance.
(c) Finally, in a single paragraph of his ten-page brief,
Appellant recites a litany of decisions by his trial counsel that he
asserts constituted deficient performance. Appellant contends that
his trial counsel was constitutionally deficient in failing to object to
the qualifications of two expert witnesses; failing to file “any type”
of motion or ask for “any pretrial hearing” regarding software used
by one of the expert witnesses; failing to seek funding to hire a
firearms expert; failing to object to the admission of the 21
unspecified crime scene and autopsy photographs discussed above;
and failing to request that the court reporter transcribe the entirety
of voir dire. However, “‘[s]uch after the fact disagreements about
trial counsel’s approach to the case . . . do not amount to a showing
of ineffective assistance of trial counsel.’” Armour v. State, 290 Ga.
553, 555-556 (722 SE2d 751) (2012) (citation omitted). Moreover,
Appellant has made “no effort to show that such conduct was the
product of anything other than reasonable trial strategy or to
20
establish that any of these [alleged] shortcomings, individually or in
the aggregate, had any effect on the outcome of the trial.” McDonald
v. State, 296 Ga. 643, 646 (770 SE2d 6) (2015). Accordingly,
Appellant has failed to carry his burden to show that he was denied
the effective assistance of counsel.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
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