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State v. Green

2025-03-04

Summary

Holding. The Court reversed the Court of Appeals' decision in part and affirmed Green's attempted enticement conviction, concluding that evidence of Green's sexually suggestive comments and deceptive attempts to lure adult CVS employees into his vehicle was relevant and sufficient to establish his intent to entice the minor victim for indecent purposes.

Billy Ray Green was charged with attempting to entice a minor for indecent purposes after he approached a 15-year-old girl and attempted to get her into his vehicle. The Court of Appeals reversed his conviction because it concluded that evidence of Green's unwanted, sexually suggestive comments made to adult CVS employees earlier that day was irrelevant to whether his attempted enticement of the minor victim was motivated by intent to commit child molestation or indecent acts. The Georgia Supreme Court disagreed, holding that evidence of similar conduct committed in close temporal and circumstantial proximity is relevant to proving a defendant's intent, even when directed at different victims or at adults rather than children.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether evidence of a defendant's sexually suggestive conduct toward adults is relevant to prove intent in a child enticement charge
  • Standard for relevance of evidence showing similar acts committed in close temporal and circumstantial proximity
  • Sufficiency of circumstantial evidence to prove criminal intent in attempted enticement cases

Procedural posture

The Court of Appeals reversed Green's conviction for insufficient evidence; the Georgia Supreme Court granted certiorari to determine whether evidence of the defendant's prior conduct toward adults was relevant to his intent regarding the minor victim.

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

Decided: March 4, 2025

S24G0816. THE STATE v. GREEN.

LAGRUA, Justice.

Appellee Billy Ray Green was convicted of attempt to entice a

child for indecent purposes and other crimes arising from his March

12, 2021 interaction with a 15-year-old female, A.H. 1 The Court of

Appeals reversed this conviction as unsupported by sufficient

evidence pursuant to Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 309 (III) (B)

(99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979), and its progeny. See Green v.

1 Green was also convicted of criminal attempt to commit kidnapping,

criminal attempt to commit false imprisonment, and simple assault, but only

the conviction for attempt to entice a child for indecent purposes (“attempted

enticement”) is at issue here. This crime is committed “when, with intent to

commit [enticement],” a defendant “performs any act which constitutes a

substantial step toward the commission of [enticement].” OCGA § 16-4-1. See

OCGA § 16-6-5 (a) (“A person commits the offense of enticing a child for

indecent purposes when he or she solicits, entices, or takes any child under the

age of 16 years to any place whatsoever for the purpose of child molestation or

indecent acts.”). The indictment alleged that Green “attempt[ed] to commit the

crime of [enticement], in violation of [OCGA § 16-6-5], in that said accused did

attempt to entice [A.H.], a child less than 16 years of age, to enter his vehicle

for the purpose of committing indecent acts . . .”

State, 371 Ga. App. 259, 262-264 (2) (899 SE2d 493) (2024). The

State sought certiorari, arguing that the Court of Appeals

misapplied sufficiency standards with respect to this conviction by

treating certain evidence (referred to herein as the “CVS evidence”)

as not relevant to the issue of Green’s intent. We granted review to

consider whether evidence that a defendant made unwanted,

sexually suggestive comments to an adult is evidence relevant to

whether the defendant’s later solicitation, enticement, or taking of

a minor was done “for the purpose of child molestation or indecent

acts.” OCGA § 16-6-5 (a). In this case, we answer our certiorari

question affirmatively and agree with the State that the CVS

evidence is relevant to Green’s intent to entice A.H. Thus, we

conclude that it was error for the Court of Appeals to hold otherwise,

and that, when properly considered in the context of a sufficiency

challenge, the CVS evidence is sufficient on the issue of Green’s

intent to uphold the attempted enticement conviction. Therefore, we

reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals in part and affirm

Green’s conviction.

2

1. Background

(a) The evidence presented at trial showed the following. Around

5:30 p.m. on March 12, 2021, A.H. was walking her dog in her

neighborhood when a car driven by Green pulled up beside her.

Green told A.H. that her father, Jamie – whom Green referred to by

name – had called and asked for Green to bring A.H. to him. A.H.

testified that she did not know or recognize Green, and Jamie

testified to the same. Green then opened the passenger side door of

his car, reached his arm out toward A.H., and gestured for her to get

in. A.H. testified that Green became mad when she declined his

request, but that Green did not threaten her, touch her, or say

anything to her that was sexual in nature. About this same time,

one of A.H.’s neighbors pulled into the neighborhood, and Green

“sped off.” A.H. called her father, and then 911. During the 911 call,

which was played at Green’s trial, A.H. told the operator that “a guy

just tried to kidnap [her],” and she described the perpetrator as a

white male in his 50’s or 60’s with long hair driving a small red car.

Officers with the Barrow County Sheriff’s Office (“BCSO”),

3

including Sgt. William Meeler, responded to A.H.’s location within

minutes. 2 BCSO Sgt. Garrett Guest also responded to the 911 call

and was a few minutes from A.H.’s location when he spotted a car in

a nearby CVS parking lot that matched the description given by

A.H. Sgt. Guest pulled into the CVS parking lot and made contact

with the driver, who identified himself as Green.3 In their

conversation, Green repeatedly said he had been at the CVS “all

day,” but also gave Sgt. Guest conflicting versions of his activities

that day. A few minutes later, Sgt. Guest entered the CVS to obtain

security camera footage and learned from an employee that Green

had tried to “lure” female CVS employees into his car earlier that

day. When Sgt. Guest walked back outside, he asked Green whether

he had talked to any CVS employees that day, and Green affirmed

he had asked two “young girls” if they wanted to “hang out.” BCSO

officers decided to conduct a showup, and Sgt. Meeler drove A.H. to

2 Sgt. Meeler’s bodycam footage was admitted into evidence, which

depicts A.H. describing the perpetrator, his car, and their encounter.

3 Sgt. Guest’s bodycam footage was admitted into evidence, which depicts

his interactions with Green in the CVS parking lot.

4

the CVS, where she positively identified Green. 4 Green was

subsequently arrested.5

Evidence specific to Green’s interactions with two CVS

employees (the “CVS evidence”) was presented at trial through the

testimony of those employees, both of whom were female, aged 39

and 27, respectively. 6 Their testimony collectively showed that

around lunchtime on March 12, Green entered the CVS, feigned

injury, and asked the two employees if they could help him get to his

car. Both declined, offering instead to get their manager or call 911.

Green insisted that he did not want them to call their manager or

4 A “showup” is “[a] police procedure in which a suspect is shown singly

to a witness for identification, rather than as part of a lineup.” Showup, Black’s Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024).

5 In a later search of Green’s car, two softball bats and a stuffed unicorn

were found inside.

6 The trial court held in a pre-trial order that the CVS evidence was

“admissible as intrinsic evidence because it was necessary to complete the

story of the crimes charged in the indictment[,]” and that “the probative value

of the [CVS] evidence was not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair

prejudice,” such that the balance was struck in favor of admissibility under

OCGA § 24-4-403 (“Rule 403”). This pre-trial order also held the CVS evidence

was admissible as extrinsic other acts evidence under OCGA § 24-4-404 (b)

(“Rule 404 (b)”), but “at trial, the State stated that it was simply offering the

[CVS] evidence as intrinsic evidence and withdrew its request for a jury

instruction on other acts evidence.” Green, 371 Ga. App. at 264 (4), n.7.

5

911, and when they went to do so, Green “bolted” out the door to his

car. One of the employees recalled the other suggesting: “I don’t

think that man was hurt . . . I think he was just trying to get us out

there.”

The 27-year-old employee testified that she left for lunch

shortly after this incident and asked her manager to watch her leave

because she was “90 percent sure [Green] was still out there.” When

she returned around 45 minutes later, Green’s car was still in the

CVS parking lot but had been moved into the spot where the

employee’s car had previously been. While this employee “thought

that was very strange,” she did not interact with Green again, but

still asked her manager to watch her leave at the end of her shift

that day.

The 39-year-old employee testified to additional interactions

with Green on March 12. She testified that, when she walked

outside for a smoke break in the afternoon, Green asked her “are you

ready for a good time?” Not wanting to “egg him on,” she ignored

Green, continued to her car, took her smoke break, and went back

6

inside the CVS without incident. Then, at the end of her shift,

around 5:00 or 5:30 p.m., the employee walked outside to discover

Green’s car parked next to hers. She told the jury that, “[b]ased on

the little comment [Green] made already, it scared the hell out of

me,” so she got her manager and asked him to watch her leave. As

she reached her car, Green told her that he could “show her a few

tricks” or “show her a few things.” The employee interpreted Green’s

comments as an attempt “to coax [her] to get in [Green’s car] and go

do things with him.”

At the close of the State’s case, Green moved for a directed

verdict on the attempted enticement charge. The transcript reflects

the following:

COUNSEL: . . . I’ll make a motion for directed verdict on

Count Three. Specifically, the victim in the case said that

there was -- in any contact between her and Mr. Green,

that there was no mention of any kind of sexual advance.

And based on her statement, I believe that -- that as a

matter of law, that Count Three has to be -- a directed

verdict would be appropriate as to Count Three.

THE COURT: All right. State’s response, please?

7

THE STATE: Yes, Your Honor. Looking at Count Three,

it charges Mr. Green with criminal attempt to entice a

child for indecent purposes. It talks about the substantial

steps that he took to do that. And whether those

constituted substantial steps, that would be a question for

the jury, but certainly there’s some evidence that he took

steps to do that.

In terms of what his intent was, obviously that’s

something the State has to prove beyond a reasonable

doubt. It’s alleged that he did this with the purpose of

committing indecent acts. And [defense counsel] is

correct, there was no testimony about any kind of explicit

sexual advance towards the victim from Mr. Green, no

sexual comment, but the State would argue that there is

sufficient circumstantial evidence on his intent based on

how he was acting that day towards others. And that gets

into the -- the intrinsic evidence with other witnesses

from CVS. And what constitutes an indecent act, that’s

also a question for the jury, but the State would argue

there is sufficient evidence to get past the directed

verdict.

THE COURT: You get the final word on that motion with

respect to that count. Anything else you want to say?

COUNSEL: Yeah, and the child themself said that there

was no indication of any sexual advance, and I think

that’s clear, that based on that as to that count, there’s no

substantial step toward doing something that she said

didn’t occur. So we feel like, as a matter of law, that we

should have a directed verdict as to Count Three.

8

THE COURT: . . . The Court is inclined to deny the motion

and finds that there may be some -- some evidence, albeit

circumstantial, that could put a jury in a position to

conclude that -- that the Defendant committed this act. So

I’m just going to -- I’m going to deny your motion with

respect to that count.

Green then testified in his own defense and gave the jury his

version of events from March 12. He did not deny interacting with

A.H., but characterized their encounter in much different terms.

Green testified that he was on his way to the CVS from his home7

when he saw who he thought was a 40-year-old female friend of his

named Dana Hayne walking in front of the house where a different

friend, George Baker, used to live, so he turned down the road to

talk to her. Though it was not his friend Dana, Green testified that

he pulled over anyway to “ask[] her did she know George Baker,”

and when A.H. said she did not, Green “said thank you and drove

off.” Green denied opening the door to his car or gesturing for A.H.

to get in, testified that he did not know A.H.’s father and denied

7 The evidence showed that Green lived in the same neighborhood as

A.H.

9

using his name, said the softball bats were for his “little great

grandson,” and opined that the stuffed unicorn was not his, but

might belong to his niece who would occasionally use his car. At

various points, Green told the jury that harming A.H. “never crossed

[his] mind” and that “[he] had no intentions of nothing” in speaking

with her, adding that he “would never hurt a child” and had “never

harmed a kid.”

Green also told the jury that, on March 12, like most days, he

spent a large portion of his time in the CVS parking lot “just sit[ting]

there and play[ing] [his] radio” because it was “something to do.”

Asked about the day in question, Green repeatedly testified that he

did not recall speaking with any CVS employees and denied entering

the CVS. But after being impeached with Sgt. Guest’s bodycam

footage, Green admitted he “might have talked to the two [CVS

employees] at the store.” When confronted about his changing story,

Green admitted that he lied to Sgt. Guest but said he did so because

he consumed “half a pint” of vodka on the morning of March 12, had

recently received a DUI, and “didn’t want to go to jail.”

10

After Green’s testimony concluded, he renewed his motion for

directed verdict on the attempted enticement charge. The trial court

denied the renewed motion without elaboration, stating only that it

“decline[d] to alter its [previous] ruling,” but noted renewal of the

motion for the record. At the end of trial, the jury returned guilty

verdicts on each of the four counts charged. Green was sentenced

immediately thereafter.

(b) Green appealed his convictions to the Court of Appeals,

where he argued in relevant part that the trial court erred in

denying his motion for directed verdict on the attempted enticement

charge, asserting that insufficient evidence was presented at trial to

sustain it. See Green, 371 Ga. App. at 262-264 (2). The Court of

Appeals agreed and reversed this conviction in Division 2 of its

opinion. Id.

The Court of Appeals’ discussion on this enumeration of error

began with a recitation of OCGA § 16-6-5 (a)’s statutory language

and citation to its precedent for the proposition that a conviction for

enticement “must be based upon some evidence that an act of

11

indecency or child molestation was the intended motivation for the

enticement.” Green, 371 Ga. App. at 263 (2) (citing Lasseter v. State,

197 Ga. App. 498, 499-500 (1) (339 SE2d 85) (1990)). The Court of

Appeals then reasoned that, while the evidence presented at trial

was sufficient to prove “that Green attempted to entice the minor

victim into his vehicle,” that same evidence was not sufficient to

establish “that an act of indecency or child molestation was the

intended motivation for Green’s attempted enticement of the minor

victim.” Green, 371 Ga. App. at 263-264 (2) (cleaned up). With

respect to Green’s “intended motivation,” the Court of Appeals held

that the evidence was not just insufficient, but “lacking” altogether,

as was the case in Phillips v. State. Id. (citing 354 Ga. App. 88, 92

(1) (840 SE2d 165) (2020)).8 To support that conclusion, the Court of

8 In Phillips, a defendant was convicted of three counts of attempted

enticement and challenged the sufficiency of the evidence on appeal. 354 Ga.

App. at 90-92 (1). There, the evidence at trial showed that the defendant

attempted to entice three different children at three different times and

locations: first, by gesturing at a minor victim for her to come get in his car;

second, by telling a minor victim that he “like[d] her hair” before asking “if she wanted to put her bike in the back of his car and go[;]” and third, by making a

“money gesture” from his car toward a minor victim. Id. The Court of Appeals

reversed each conviction due to an “absence of evidence showing that an act of

12

Appeals observed that A.H. “denied that Green said anything about

wanting to take her somewhere else to ‘try and have relations with

[her]’ or anything similar[,]” and rejected the State’s position – the

same position maintained on appeal to this Court – “that Green’s

arguably suggestive prior comments to one of the CVS employees

constituted evidence of Green’s motivation for enticing the minor

victim.” Id. (citation omitted). Instead, it reasoned the CVS evidence

was “not evidence of the motivation required” and suggested, as

Green argues before this Court on appeal, that because the

unwanted, sexually suggestive comments comprising the CVS

evidence were directed at adults, those comments had no relevant

evidentiary value with respect to Green’s intent to entice A.H., a

minor, for indecent purposes. See id. at 263 (2) (“Green’s comments

to the CVS employee, while upsetting, were directed to another

adult and were not evidence of the motivation required here.”).

In sum, despite the CVS evidence having been admitted at trial

indecency or child molestation behind [the defendant’s] apparent attempts to

entice the victims into his vehicle[.]” Id. at 92 (1).

13

as evidence intrinsic to the charged crimes, see Green, 371 Ga. App.

at 264-266 (4) (citation omitted), the Court of Appeals concluded that

the CVS evidence was categorically “not evidence” of the type needed

to sustain an attempted enticement conviction. Id. at 262-264 (2).9

Thus, absent any relevant evidence to establish the intent

component for an attempted enticement, the Court of Appeals

analogized the present case to Phillips, where “the State failed to

present any evidence” to establish the defendant’s intent, such that

the evidence presented at trial was necessarily insufficient. Id.

(citing 354 Ga. App. at 92 (1)). Applying that same logic here, the

Court of Appeals reversed Green’s conviction as unsupported by

sufficient evidence.

2. Analysis

(a) The enticement statute provides that: “[a] person commits

9 To the extent that the Court of Appeals’ discussion of the CVS evidence

in Division 4 was limited to the attempted kidnapping charge, we attribute the

siloed context of its analysis to the fact that this enumeration was

chronologically the last one to be addressed. The record reflects that the CVS

evidence was generally admitted by the trial court for any purpose, rather than

on a limited basis, see OCGA §§ 24-1-104 and 24-1-105, and that the only

request to limit the admissibility of the CVS evidence was from the State and

later withdrawn. See Green, 371 Ga. App. at 264 (4), n.7. See n.6, supra.

14

the offense of enticing a child for indecent purposes when he or she

solicits, entices, or takes any child under the age of 16 years to any

place whatsoever for the purpose of child molestation or indecent

acts.” OCGA § 16-6-5 (a). Enticement, like all other crimes, requires

a “joint operation of an act or omission to act and intention or

criminal negligence.” OCGA § 16-2-1 (a). See In the Interest of T.B.,

313 Ga. 846, 854 (3) (874 SE2d 101) (2022) (“[C]onduct cannot be

characterized as a ‘crime’ unless, at a minimum, the conduct

satisfies both the ‘act’ element and the ‘intention’ element of the

statutory offense.”) (citing OCGA § 16-2-1 (a)). In the present case,

Green concedes that he satisfied the act requirement for this crime

when he “reached out to A.H. and [tried] to grab at her[,]”and the

Court of Appeals concluded the same. See Green, 371 Ga. App. at

263 (2) (“Here, there was evidence that Green attempted to entice

the minor victim into his vehicle.”). See OCGA §§ 16-6-5 (a) and 16-2-1 (a). Thus, it is only the intent requirement for this crime’s joint

operation that is at issue here. OCGA § 16-2-1 (a).

To obtain a conviction under OCGA § 16-6-5 (a), the State must

15

establish that the defendant acted with the requisite intent – that

is, the State must offer evidence from which a rational trier of fact

could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant

enticed10 a minor victim “for the purpose of child molestation or

indecent acts.”11 That a defendant possessed such an intent must be

proven whether the crime is charged as a completed offense or as an

attempted offense. See OCGA § 16-4-1 (“A person commits the

offense of criminal attempt when, with intent to commit a specific

crime, he performs any act which constitutes a substantial step

toward the commission of the crime.”).

In the decision below, the Court of Appeals discounted the CVS

evidence on a categorical basis as not relevant to Green’s intent

because the comments comprising the CVS evidence were directed

at adults, rather than children. See Green, 371 Ga. App. at 263 (2).

10 While we refer to enticement throughout this opinion given the facts

of this case, a defendant’s soliciting or taking of a child can also satisfy the act requirement. See OCGA § 16-6-5 (a).

11 The code does not define the “indecent acts” referred to in OCGA § 16-6-5 (a), and we need not do so today. That said, the State’s theory at trial was

that Green sought to entice A.H. for the purpose of committing acts that were

sexual in nature, and Green’s briefing accepts that acts sexual in nature would

be included among those contemplated by the statute.

16

Evidence is relevant if it has “any tendency to make the existence of

any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action

more probable or less probable that it would be without the

evidence.” OCGA § 24-4-401 (“Rule 401”). We have said that

“[r]elevance is a binary concept – evidence is relevant or it is not.”

Jones v. State, 301 Ga. 544, 546 (1) (802 SE2d 234) (2017) (citation

omitted). Moreover, relevance under Rule 401 is distinct from

probative value. See Olds v. State, 299 Ga. 65, 75 (2) (786 SE2d 633)

(2016) (“Evidence is relevant if it has ‘any tendency’ to prove or

disprove a fact, whereas the probative value of evidence derives in

large part from the extent to which the evidence tends to make the

existence of a fact more or less probable.”) (emphasis in original).

Here, Green’s intent was a fact of consequence to the

determination of the attempted enticement charge because he

pleaded not guilty to that charge. See Olds, 299 Ga. at 72 (2)

(“[I]ntent was put at issue by the defendant entering a plea of not

guilty. That such a plea puts the State to its burden of proving each

and every element of the crimes charges id beyond dispute.”)

17

(citations omitted)). Accordingly, if the CVS evidence has any

tendency to make it more or less probable that Green acted with the

requisite intent – that is, more or less probable that Green’s act of

enticing A.H. was for the purpose of committing child molestation or

an indecent act – then the evidence is relevant.

We conclude that the CVS evidence is relevant to Green’s

intent in this case, as it has some tendency to make it more probable

that Green’s enticement of A.H. was done for the purpose of

committing child molestation or an indecent act. In Olds, we

explained “that evidence that an accused committed an intentional

act generally is relevant to show – the evidence, in other words, has

some tendency to make more or less probable – that the same

defendant committed a similar act with the same sort of intent,

especially when the acts were committed close in time and in similar

circumstances.” Olds, 299 Ga. at 72 (2) (citations omitted; emphasis

in original). Such is the case here.

The record establishes that, in the span of approximately six

hours, Green interacted with three members of the opposite sex: 15-18

year old A.H. and the two CVS employees. Green attempted to get

each of these women into his car under false pretenses and through

the use of deception – first, by feigning injury at the CVS and later,

by telling A.H. that her father, who Green referred to by name, had

requested Green pick her up. Less than an hour before Green

encountered A.H., he made unwanted, sexually suggestive

comments to one of those CVS employees, telling her that he could

“show her a few tricks” or “show her a few things,” which that

employee interpreted as an attempt by Green “to coax [her] to get in

[Green’s car] and go do things with him” that were sexual in

nature.12 Because Green’s interactions with the CVS employees, and

in particular, his interaction with the employee that he offered to

“show a few tricks,” were “committed close in time and under similar

circumstances” to his interaction with A.H., that evidence has some

tendency to make it more probable that Green acted with a similar,

12 These facts distinguish the present case from Phillips, where the

defendant’s words and conduct toward minors were not supported by any facts

to suggest that a defendant’s intent was sexual in nature. See 354 Ga. App. at

91-92 (1).

19

sexually-related intent with respect to his attempted enticement of

A.H. Olds, 299 Ga. at 72 (2). As such, the CVS evidence is relevant

to Green’s intent for the attempted enticement conviction.

(b) Having concluded that the CVS evidence is relevant to

Green’s intent and that the Court of Appeals erred by categorically

disregarding it, we turn to whether the evidence presented at trial

on the issue of Green’s intent was sufficient. We conclude that it

was.

In a sufficiency review, “we view the evidence presented at trial

in the light most favorable to the verdicts and consider whether it

was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find the

defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes of which

he was convicted.” Wilkerson v. State, 317 Ga. 242, 245 (1) (892 SE2d

737) (2023) (citations omitted). In so doing, we “leave[] to the jury

the resolution of conflicts in the evidence, the weight of the evidence,

the credibility of witnesses, and reasonable inferences to be made

from basic facts to ultimate facts.” Id. (citation omitted). Among

those matters left for a jury’s consideration is whether a defendant

20

acted with the requisite intent to commit the crimes charged. See

Poole v. State, 312 Ga. 515, 518-519 (863 SE2d 93) (2021)

(“[C]riminal intent is a question for the jury, and it may be inferred

from that person’s conduct before, during, and after the commission

of the crime.”) (citation omitted)); OCGA § 16-2-6 (“A person will not

be presumed to act with criminal intention but the trier of facts may

find such intention upon consideration of the words, conduct,

demeanor, motive, and all other circumstances connected with the

act for which the accused in prosecuted.”). See also Bryan v. State,

371 Ga. App. 769, 776 (1) (b) (903 SE2d 160) (2024) (“Intent, which

is a mental attitude, is commonly detectible only inferentially, and

the law accommodates this.”) (citation omitted)); OCGA § 24-14-9

(“In arriving at a verdict, the jury, from the facts proved, and

sometimes from the absence of counter evidence, may infer the

existence of facts reasonably and logically consequent to those

proved.”).

While Green testified that “[he] had no intentions of nothing,”

when interacting with A.H., a jury is permitted to draw reasonable

21

inferences, including on the issue of intent, from his denial and other

evidence presented at trial. Here, we think the jury could reasonably

infer Green’s intent with respect to his enticement of A.H. from the

relevant and intrinsic CVS evidence, as that evidence demonstrated

that Green’s prior actions, “which took place on the same day, and

in one instance, shortly before the incident with the victim[,]” Green,

371 Ga. App. at 265 (4), were motivated by a purpose that was sexual

in nature. The fact that Green’s sexually-related overtures toward

the employee that he offered to “show a few tricks” were frustrated

by the employee’s rejection of his efforts also increases the probative

value of that evidence with respect to Green’s intent when he

encountered A.H. less than an hour after being rejected.

Additionally, “jurors [are] authorized to consider their disbelief

in [a defendant’s] testimony – and the inconsistencies between it and

the eyewitness accounts of others – as substantive evidence of his

guilt” where “some corroborative evidence exists for the charged

offense[.]” Maynor v. State, 317 Ga. 492, 498 (2) (a) (893 SE2d 724)

(2023) (citation omitted); Daughtie v. State, 297 Ga. 261, 263-264 (2)

22

(773 SE2d 263) (2015) (citations omitted). Green himself offered

corroborative evidence for the attempted enticement conviction by

admitting that he approached A.H. on March 12. Moreover, Green’s

testimony was inconsistent with the testimony of both A.H. and the

CVS employees in several material respects. For example, Green

denied opening the door to his car, gesturing for A.H. to get in, or

using the name of A.H.’s father, despite A.H. testifying to those

facts, and he denied entering the CVS on March 12, but the CVS

employees testified that he did so twice. When confronted about

those inconsistencies on cross-examination, Green told the jury that

he “d[id]n’t have a clue” why his story was different from theirs. In

the face of these inconsistencies, the jury was authorized to reject

Green’s version of events and treat his inconsistent testimony as

substantive evidence of his guilt. See Maynor, 317 Ga. at 497-498 (2)

(a) (concluding that jury was authorized to reject defendant’s

testimony that he acted in self-defense where the only evidence

offered in support of that defense was the defendant’s self-serving

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statements).13

3. Conclusion

Based on the foregoing, we hold that the CVS evidence

presented at trial was relevant under Rule 401 and sufficient as a

matter of constitutional due process to establish Green’s intent for

the attempted enticement conviction. Accordingly, the decision of

the Court of Appeals is reversed in part.

Judgment reversed in part. All the Justices concur.

13 We also note that the jury could infer consciousness of guilt from

Green’s flight from the scene of his encounter with A.H. See Jenkins v. State,

313 Ga. 81, 88-89 (3) (868 SE2d 205) (2022).

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