Adams v. State

Decision Date21 August 2000
Docket NumberNo. A00A0917.,A00A0917.
Citation245 Ga. App. 607,538 S.E.2d 508
CourtGeorgia Court of Appeals
PartiesADAMS v. The STATE.

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

William J. Mason, Columbus, for appellant.

J. Gray Conger, District Attorney, Roger H. Anderson, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.

RUFFIN, Judge.

Sherman Adams was convicted of aggravated assault, possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime, possession of a sawed-off rifle, and obstruction of an officer. He appeals, contending that the evidence was insufficient to support the convictions and that the court erred in conducting a portion of the trial in his absence.

1. Viewed in the light most favorable to support the verdict, the evidence was as follows. About midnight on April 19, 1997, Saleh Grogan was walking across a bridge in Columbus when he heard two shots. Grogan ran and hid behind a car near some apartments on Martin Luther King Boulevard. Directly across the street from the apartments was the Marshall Middle School football field. Grogan saw a medium-built male dressed in black on a hill in the field, reloading a lever-action rifle. Grogan called out to the man, asking why he was shooting at him. The man walked toward Grogan, who started running toward the apartment building. The man shot Grogan in the back.

Grogan then knocked on the window of Rosie Butler's apartment, asking to be let in. When she said no, Grogan broke in through the window. Butler called the police and tried to control Grogan's bleeding while waiting for them to arrive.

Sandra Rigons, who lived in the same complex as Butler, corroborated many details of Grogan's testimony. She testified that, after hearing what sounded like a car backfiring, she looked out her window and saw Grogan standing by the cars in the parking lot. According to Rigons, Grogan was talking to someone across Martin Luther King Boulevard, saying, "[W]hat's up, man[?] Why you doing this[?] Why you trippin' like this[?]" Rigons looked across the road and saw a male standing on a hill in the field, dressed in black pants, a white t-shirt, and black and white tennis shoes. This man pulled up what looked to Rigons like a shotgun and started shooting at Grogan. Rigons saw Grogan fall after being shot.

Officer Jackie Lee arrived at the scene and spoke with Grogan. Lee then advised Officer Kimberly Trumble that shots had been fired from the Marshall Middle School area. Trumble and other officers drove toward the school to search for the shooter. At the corner of Sheppard Drive and Seventeenth Avenue, they encountered a man, later identified as Adams, who told them he had heard shots and had seen someone running down Sheppard Drive. Officer Michael Green, who arrived on the scene as Trumble was talking to Adams, saw Adams pointing toward the middle school. Adams was wearing a black jacket and dark pants, and had grass in his hair and on his clothing. Officer Green performed a pat-down search and found two 30/30 caliber bullets in Adams' jacket pocket. Green then told Trumble to place handcuffs on Adams. Adams began struggling with the officers. He eventually broke free and ran down Sheppard Drive toward the Farley Homes apartments. Officer Torrence Goodwin saw Adams running across Nina Street near the apartments. After Adams unsuccessfully tried to jump over a fence, Goodwin drew his weapon and ordered Adams to put his hands in the air. Adams did so, and was taken into custody.

After Adams was arrested, Officer Trumble returned to the intersection of Sheppard Drive and Seventeenth Avenue where she had first seen him. She found a bag next to a telephone pole where Adams had been standing. Inside the bag was a sawed-off 30/30 lever-action rifle, along with 27 rounds of 30/30 caliber ammunition. In addition, there were a Blockbuster Video card and a food stamp card with Adams' name on them, as well as a receipt in the name of "S. Adams."

Officer Lee searched the hill from which the shots were supposedly fired, and found a 30/30 caliber shell casing on the ground. He explained that the shell casing would have been ejected from the rifle when it was recocked after firing.

Rigons saw Adams after he was arrested, and told police that he was wearing the same clothes as the man she had seen firing the shots. However, she said that she had not seen the man's face. At trial, she was shown the sawed-off rifle found in Adams' bag, and said that it could have been the weapon the man was firing, although she could not be sure because it was dark. Grogan testified that the rifle looked like the one with which he was shot.

Although Adams points out that no eyewitness positively identified him as the shooter, the circumstantial evidence was sufficient for the jury to conclude that he was in fact the shooter. Adams was discovered shortly after the shooting, near the scene of the crime, at a time of night...

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3 cases
  • Craven v. State
    • United States
    • Georgia Court of Appeals
    • 9 Julio 2008
    ...court was authorized to weigh the credibility of witnesses, and its factual findings were not clearly erroneous. Adams v. State, 245 Ga.App. 607, 610(3), 538 S.E.2d 508 (2000). Further, Craven did not bring the matter to the trial court's attention when he learned of it, which was before th......
  • Rankin v. the State.
    • United States
    • Georgia Court of Appeals
    • 7 Junio 2011
    ...or she takes property of another from the person or immediate presence of another by use of an offensive weapon); Adams v. State, 245 Ga.App. 607, 609(1), 538 S.E.2d 508 (2000) (although no eyewitness positively identified defendant as person who shot at victim, circumstantial evidence was ......
  • Frezghi v. State
    • United States
    • Georgia Supreme Court
    • 4 Junio 2001
    ...court was authorized to weigh the credibility of witnesses, and its factual findings were not clearly erroneous. Adams v. State, 245 Ga. App. 607, 610(3), 538 S.E.2d 508 (2000). Judgment All the Justices concur. 1. The crime occurred on December 15, 1995. The grand jury returned its indictm......

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