In the Supreme Court of Georgia



                                                        Decided: March 16, 2015


                       S14A1497. ROBERTS v. THE STATE.


       HINES, Presiding Justice.

       Keith Jerome Roberts appeals the denial of his motion for new trial, as

amended, and his convictions for malice murder, kidnaping, and false

imprisonment in connection with the death of Carlnell Walker caused by

hyperthermia from entrapment inside the trunk of an automobile. Roberts

challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions and the

effectiveness of his trial counsel. Finding the challenges to be without merit, we

affirm.1


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          The murder and related crimes occurred between June 21, 2006 and July 8, 2006. On March
21, 2007, a Clayton County grand jury returned a 13-count indictment against Roberts and Miles
Jonathan Allen, Theodore Paul Holliman, and Breylon Wendell Garland, charging: Count (1) -
malice murder; Count (2) - felony murder while in the commission of burglary; Count (3) - felony
murder while in the commission of armed robbery; Count (4) - felony murder while in the
commission of kidnaping; Count (5) - aggravated assault with intent to murder; Count (6) -
aggravated assault with intent to rob; Count (7) - aggravated assault with a knife; Count (8) -
aggravated battery; Count (9) - kidnaping; Count (10) - false imprisonment; Count (11) - burglary
with the intent to commit aggravated assault; Count (12) - burglary with the intent to commit theft;
and Count (13) - armed robbery. Roberts was tried alone before a jury April 23-27, 2012; he was
granted a directed verdict on Counts 2, 3, 11, 12, and 13. The jury found him guilty on Counts 1,
4, 5, 9, and 10, and not guilty on Counts 6 and 7. An order of nolle prosequi was entered as to Count
       The evidence construed in favor of the verdicts showed the following.

On July 8, 2006, Clayton County police discovered Carlnell Walker’s body

while performing a “welfare check” at the residence Walker was renting in

Clayton County. The police found Walker’s decomposing body tied up in the

trunk of his car in the closed garage. Walker had been beaten and stabbed with

a sharp object, his front tooth was knocked out, and his mouth had sustained

blunt force trauma. His mouth was “gagged” with electrical tape, and his hands

were tied behind his back with a coaxial cable, a USB cable, and electrical tape.

He was barefoot. Walker had been dead for several days. His position when

discovered indicated that he was alive when he was placed in the trunk, and it

was determined that despite his injuries, had he been able to free himself he

could have avoided death by entrapment in the hot car trunk.

       Walker, Roberts, and Allen had attended the same college and Roberts and



8. On June 7, 2012, Roberts was sentenced to life in prison on Count (1), a consecutive term of life
in prison on Count (9), and 10 years in prison on Count (10), to be served consecutively to the
sentence on Count (9). The verdict on Count (4) stood vacated by operation of law and the verdict
on Count (5) was found to merge with that on Count (1) for the purpose of sentencing. Trial counsel
filed a motion for new trial on Roberts’s behalf on May 4, 2012, and new counsel filed on Roberts’s
behalf amended motions for new trial on November 20, 2013 and November 21, 2013. The motion
for new trial, as amended, was denied on March 28, 2014. A notice of appeal was filed on April 2,
2014, and the case was docketed in this Court’s September 2014 Term. The appeal was argued
orally on October 7, 2014.

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Allen had been roommates in college. The three men knew each other and

socialized together. Walker was involved in a car wreck in 2006, and shortly

before his murder, he was advised that he might recover $50,000 in damages as

a result of the wreck. He told his landlord, who also had ties to the same

college, that he was expecting a settlement check. Walker was viewed as an

“entrepreneur,” and was seen on his created website holding up “a wad of

money.” Roberts, Allen, and others referred to Walker by the nickname “C-

Money.”

      When the police arrived at Walker’s residence, they found the back door

open, and no signs of forced entry. However, the house showed signs of a

struggle with debris on the floor and blood throughout. Items, including a pair

of scissors and remnants of Walker’s hair, were on the living room floor, and

they were placed in a pile in a manner indicating that someone intended to burn

them. The globe from a hurricane oil lamp was on the floor near the debris and

close to dried smeared blood, which blood was determined to be Walker’s and

part of a pattern of someone actively bleeding. An empty bottle which had

contained lamp oil was found near the debris. Roberts’s fingerprints were

recovered from the lamp globe; no other fingerprints, including Walker’s, were

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on it. The base of the lamp was found undisturbed on top of a television

approximately eight feet away from the globe, and there were no usable

fingerprints found on the base. Roberts’s fingerprints on the lamp globe were

consistent with someone reaching and taking the globe off of the lamp base.

Palm prints of Walker’s blood were found on the walls and these prints were

determined to have been made by Allen. There were patterns of blood in the

bathtub consistent with someone with shoes standing behind someone without

shoes who was actively moving. A substance that felt like the lamp oil found in

the living room was around the edge of the bathtub. Jeans found in the laundry

room contained DNA matching the profiles of Walker and Allen. A claw

hammer which appeared to have blood on the metal part was also found in the

laundry room. Drawers were pulled out, and the attic access panel was out of

place. The blood pattern and locks of Walker’s hair on the floor were consistent

with one person restraining a body while another was cutting the hair. The

blood patterns in the halls suggested two people dragging Walker through the

house. The small amount of physical evidence on the bumper of the vehicle in

which Walker’s body was found was consistent with more than one person

lifting Walker’s body into the trunk.

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      When Allen was taken for palm and fingerprinting on July 20, 2006,

police observed that he had a healing three-inch-long cut on his right hand

which appeared to have been made by a knife. During the warranted search of

Roberts’s apartment, police found a sock stained with Allen’s blood on the

master bedroom floor.

      1. Roberts contends that the evidence was insufficient to support his

conviction on any count because the State did not meet its burden to prove that

his fingerprints were impressed on the lamp globe at the time the crimes were

committed, and that such fingerprints were the sole evidence that he participated

in the crimes. He further urges insufficiency because of what he offers as a

reasonable explanation of why his fingerprints were on the globe, that is, that he

was frequently in Walker’s home and that power to the home was often off

necessitating use of the oil lamp.

      As Roberts maintains, when fingerprint evidence is the only evidence

linking a defendant to the crimes on trial, the State must prove to the exclusion

of other reasonable hypotheses that the fingerprints could have been impressed

only at the time of the commission of the crimes. Rivers v. State, 271 Ga. 115,

116 (1) (516 SE2d 525) (1999); Leonard v. State, 269 Ga. 867, 868 (1) (506

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SE2d 853) (1998). It is equally true that under former OCGA § 24–4–6, and

present OCGA § 24–14–6, in order to warrant a conviction based solely upon

circumstantial evidence, the proven facts must be consistent with the hypothesis

of guilt and must exclude every reasonable theory other than the guilt of the

accused. Clark v. State, __ Ga. __ (Case No. S14A1685, decided February 16,

2015.) And, when the circumstantial evidence supports both a theory consistent

with guilt and one consistent with innocence, the evidence does not exclude

every other reasonable hypothesis except guilt, and therefore, is insufficient to

prove the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. O’Neill v. State, 285 Ga.

125 (674 SE2d 302) (2009).

      First, Roberts’s fingerprints were not the only evidence linking Roberts

to the crimes. The evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom showed that

Roberts and Allen were close friends and were part of Walker’s social inner

circle; that Walker was perceived by some to have money, and indeed, cash on

hand, and that Walker had not kept silent about the fact that he was to receive

a substantial money settlement; the crime scene evidence suggested Walker

knew his attackers, and that they were searching for something of value, tortured

Walker to find out where it was, and when they were unsuccessful in doing so

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placed Walker in the hot car trunk; that the physical evidence of Allen’s hand

injury was consistent with having been sustained in the attack upon Walker; and

that Allen’s blood-stained item from an obvious injury was found in Roberts’s

bedroom.

      Moreover, the circumstances surrounding the fingerprints lead to the only

reasonable explanation that they were impressed during commission of the

crimes. See Crawford v. State, 292 Ga. App. 463 (1) (664 SE2d 820) (2008).

Although Roberts cites testimony from his younger brother to the alleged effect

that Roberts visited Walker’s home on multiple occasions, and that Walker

possessed the hurricane lamp because his power frequently went out; and

therefore, that Roberts had an innocent reason to touch the hurricane lamp, such

evidence does not aid Roberts’s hypothesis of innocence. Indeed, it belies it.

Roberts’s brother’s exact testimony was that Walker had resided not only in the

ransacked home in Clayton County where the crimes occurred but in a different

home as well, and that Roberts had been inside one of these unspecified homes

only on “several different occasions.” There was no testimony from the brother

that Roberts was ever at Walker’s residence when the power was out. In fact,

the testimony was that when Roberts and his brother visited Walker, they would,

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inter alia, watch television, an activity which plainly required electric power.

Further, the lack of Walker’s or another’s discernible fingerprints on the lamp

or its base belie his or other’s frequent recent use of the lamp, or indeed its use

for the intended purpose at all. The empty bottle of lamp oil found near the

globe and the pile of debris support the inference that the globe was removed

from the lamp base in order to obtain the oil to incinerate evidence of the crimes

and/or to torture Walker. Moreover, there was no testimony from the brother

or other evidence that Roberts actually touched the lamp or its globe at any time

other than that of the attack upon Walker. See In the Interest of J.D., 275 Ga.

App. 147, 149 (1) (619 SE2d 818) (2005) (The testimony that the witness was

“pretty sure” the defendant had been to the house before the burglary was not

an innocent explanation of why the defendant’s fingerprints were found on the

window used to gain entry.) Furthermore, the absence of other fingerprints on

the globe, the positioning of Roberts’s fingerprints on the globe as impressed by

lifting it off of its base, the globe being found on the floor amidst the rubble of

the crime scene, and the emptied bottle of lamp oil lead to the only reasonable

conclusion that Roberts’s fingerprints were left on the globe at the time of the

crimes.

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      “Circumstantial evidence must exclude only reasonable inferences and

hypotheses and it is not necessary that such guilt be devoid of every inference

or hypothesis except that of the defendant’s guilt.” Reeves v. State, 294 Ga. 673

(755 SE2d 695) (2014) (Emphasis supplied.) And, the circumstantial evidence

in this case does not equally support a theory consistent with Roberts’s

innocence. O’Neill v. State, supra.

      The evidence, though circumstantial, was sufficient to enable a rational

trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Roberts was guilty of the

malice murder of Walker and the related crimes. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S.

307(99 SCt. 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).

      2. Roberts further contends that his trial counsel was ineffective for

failing to investigate and call as a witness at trial, his friend and college

freshman roommate, Hall, who he claims would have provided an innocent

explanation for his fingerprints on the lamp globe. He maintains that Hall

would have testified that he and Roberts helped Walker move into his Clayton

County home, thereby touching Walker’s furniture and other belongings, that

Roberts helped Walker unpack, and that Roberts visited Walker’s home multiple

times. He further urges that this testimony is not cumulative of that of Roberts’s

                                        9
brother because although the brother’s testimony puts Roberts in Walker’s home

on multiple occasions, Hall’s testimony puts Roberts’s hands on Walker’s

furniture, and thus, Roberts was prejudiced by the jury not hearing this

testimony.

      In order for Roberts to prevail on his claim that his trial counsel was

ineffective, he has to demonstrate under the standard of Strickland v.

Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (104 SCt. 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984), that his trial

counsel's performance was deficient, and that but for counsel’s deficiency, there

is a reasonable probability that the outcome of his trial would have been more

favorable. Allen v. State, 293 Ga. 626, 627(2) (748 SE2d 881) (2013). In order

to show a deficiency, Roberts must overcome the strong presumption that his

trial counsel's performance was within the broad range of reasonable

professional conduct, the reasonableness being judged from counsel's

perspective at the time of trial and under the particular circumstances of the

case. Id. To satisfy the second Strickland prong of prejudice requires that

Roberts demonstrate the reasonable probability that, absent the claimed

professional errors by counsel, the result of his trial would have been different.

Id. See Hites v. State, ___ Ga. ___ (Case No. S14A1419, decided February 16,

                                       10
2015.

        At the hearing on Roberts’s motion for new trial, as amended, trial

counsel, who was an experienced criminal defense attorney, testified he

thoroughly prepared for Roberts’s case with the assistance of two other

attorneys; he was aware of the importance of the issue of when Roberts’s

fingerprints were made on the lamp globe; the defense needed to rebut the

inference that Roberts’s fingerprints were impressed on the globe at the time of

the crimes and that he called Roberts’s brother to testify to rebut such inference,

to humanize Roberts, and to tell the jury about the relationship between Walker

and the others; counsel did not recall either interviewing Hall, or Hall’s name

being provided to him; if the potential witness’s name had been given to him,

counsel would probably have written it down, had the person interviewed, and

given the State notice of the witness; and counsel’s practice was not to call more

than one witness on the same point because of the likelihood they would

contradict one another.

        First, in reviewing a trial court's decision on the alleged ineffectiveness of

counsel, this Court is to accept the trial court's factual findings and credibility

determinations unless they are clearly erroneous, but to independently apply the

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legal principles to the facts. Scandrett v. State,

293 Ga. 602, 605 (4) (748 SE2d 861) (2013). In this case, the trial court found

that trial counsel’s performance was not deficient in the manner claimed because

there was no evidence that trial counsel was ever informed that Hall was a

witness to Roberts helping Walker move into his house, and based upon the

evidence at the hearing in the matter, this Court cannot conclude that such

finding is clearly erroneous. Id. What is more,

      [t]he decision of whether to call a witness to testify at trial is a
      matter of trial strategy and tactics, and such a strategic and tactical
      decision cannot be deemed deficient performance unless the
      decision is so unreasonable that no competent attorney would have
      made it under similar circumstances.

Hites, supra citing Miller v. State, 296 Ga. 9, 12 (4) (a) (764 SE2d 823) (2014).

And, it cannot be said that trial counsel’s strategy was unreasonable especially

in light of what Hall’s testimony would have been. At the motion-for-new-trial

hearing, Hall testified that while he, Roberts, and an unnamed college student

helped Walker move into the Clayton County house, Hall did not unpack any of

the items, did not witness any unpacking, never saw the lamp and/or its globe

during the move, and assumed that if it was with Walker’s belongings it was

boxed up; and that Walker’s mother had helped box up items. Hall further

                                        12
testified that Walker’s girlfriend was “in and out sporadically” during the move,

and that inasmuch as Roberts stayed at the residence to help unpack, Hall could

“only assume” that either Walker or Roberts “unpacked the lamp.” There is

nothing in Hall’s testimony about him witnessing Roberts unpacking any of

Walker’s belongings, much less touching any part of the lamp during the move

or on any other occasion; thus, even if it was assumed that trial counsel was

informed about Hall being a potentially positive witness, and that the failure to

call him at trial was deficient, there is no reasonable probability that the result

at trial would have been different had Hall testified for the defense. Simply, the

ineffectiveness of trial counsel has not been shown. Hites v. State, supra.

      Judgments affirmed. All the Justices concur.




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