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Riley v. State

2025-03-04

Summary

Holding. The judgment of conviction was affirmed.

Yathomas Riley was convicted of murdering his wife, Dr. Lisa Marie Riley, in July 2015. Physical evidence, surveillance video, ballistics testimony, and autopsy findings all indicated that Riley shot his wife while she was in the bedroom with their infant son. The state presented extensive evidence including security system data showing Riley accessed surveillance footage repeatedly after the killing and made calls to his attorney, as well as blood spatter and bullet trajectory analysis inconsistent with self-inflicted injury. Riley appealed on multiple grounds, including that the trial court erred in allowing the lead investigator to remain in the courtroom, that false evidence was presented regarding the home security system, that his trial counsel was ineffective, and that counsel improperly conceded guilt by arguing an insanity defense based on chronic traumatic encephalopathy from boxing.

The Supreme Court of Georgia rejected all of Riley's arguments. The court found that the trial court properly exercised discretion in exempting the lead investigator from the sequestration rule applicable to witnesses, that Riley failed to preserve his challenges to the security system evidence for appeal or meet his burden of proving falsity, and that Riley did not adequately support his ineffective assistance claims. Most significantly, the court held that Riley's counsel did not violate the Sixth Amendment by presenting an alternative insanity theory because the objective remained acquittal and counsel repeatedly emphasized the state's burden of proof while presenting other possible explanations for the death.

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

Key issues

  • Whether trial court properly exempted lead investigator from witness sequestration rule
  • Whether grand jury and trial evidence regarding home security system was false or improperly presented
  • Whether trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to investigate, prepare adequately, and pursue severance motions
  • Whether trial counsel violated the Sixth Amendment by arguing an insanity defense over the defendant's objection

Procedural posture

Riley appealed his convictions for malice murder and other crimes following a jury trial and denial of his motion for new trial.

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

S24A1002. RILEY v. THE STATE.

ELLINGTON, Justice.

Yathomas Riley, representing himself, appeals his convictions

for malice murder and other crimes in connection with the shooting

death of his wife, Dr. Lisa Marie Riley, in the presence of their infant

son, G.W.R.1 Riley contends that the trial court erred by allowing

1 The crimes occurred on June 14 and July 9, 2015. On August 26, 2015,

a Lee County grand jury indicted Riley for malice murder, felony murder, three

counts of aggravated assault of Lisa on June 14, one count of aggravated

assault of Lisa on July 9, and one count each of aggravated assault of G.W.R.

by family violence and cruelty to children in the first degree. After a jury trial that ended on June 24, 2016, Riley was found guilty on all counts. On July 1,

2016, Riley was sentenced to serve life in prison without the possibility of

parole for malice murder, consecutive 20-year prison terms for one count of

aggravated assault of Lisa on June 14, 2015 and for cruelty to children, and

concurrent 20-year prison terms for two counts of aggravated assault of Lisa

on June 14 and for aggravated assault by family violence. The felony murder

count was vacated by operation of law, and the count of aggravated assault of

Lisa on July 9 was merged into the malice murder conviction. The indictment

also charged Riley with one count of aggravated assault of five persons that

allegedly occurred on May 25, 2015, but that count was not presented to the

jury and was nolle prossed after trial.

the lead investigator to remain in the courtroom during the trial,

that allegedly false or inaccurate evidence was presented to the

grand jury and at trial, and that Riley’s trial counsel provided

constitutionally ineffective assistance and also caused a structural

error by conceding Riley’s guilt. 2 For the reasons explained below,

we affirm.

The State presented evidence at trial showing that on the night

Riley filed a timely motion for new trial, which he amended through new

counsel on February 12, 2020. After Riley requested a ruling on the first

ground of his amended motion without a hearing, the trial court denied the

motion as to that ground. After a hearing on the remaining grounds on

February 7, 2023, the trial court entered a final order denying Riley’s amended

motion for new trial on August 23, 2023.

Riley filed a timely pro se notice of appeal to the Court of Appeals on

September 21, 2023, and the Court of Appeals transferred the case to this

Court on November 30, 2023. In Case Number S24A0419, we remanded Riley’s

case to the trial court on January 26, 2024, and, on April 3, 2024, the trial

court determined that Riley made a knowing and voluntary decision to

represent himself on appeal after receiving extensive and specific warnings.

The case was then transmitted back to this Court, redocketed to the August

2024 term, and submitted for a decision on the briefs.

2 Although Riley’s appellate brief sufficiently raised these contentions,

he also has filed many supplemental briefs that we do not consider because

they were filed without leave of this Court as required by Supreme Court Rule

24 (2). Moreover, to the extent that Riley attempts to use those briefs to

respond to the State’s arguments, they cannot be considered for that purpose

because none of them was filed within the time allowed for reply briefs under

Supreme Court Rule 10 (2), and no extension of time was requested. To the

extent that Riley raises new issues in his supplemental briefs, they cannot be

considered because “[s]upplemental briefs may not be used to expand the

enumeration of errors.” Supreme Court Rule 24 (3).

2

of July 9, 2015, Riley shot and killed Lisa in their bedroom in close

proximity to G.W.R. At the time of her death, Lisa was an emergency

room physician at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany. For

some time, Lisa’s mother, colleagues, and friends had been worried

about her relationship with Riley because his behavior was “selfcentered,” “controlling,” “jealous,” and possibly “abusive.” Lisa’s

colleagues also testified that nothing made them suspect Lisa was

suicidal.

Less than a month before the shooting, Riley was arrested for

threatening to kill Lisa with a gun. On June 14, 2015, Lisa called

911 to report a domestic incident. Riley was stopped after he left

their house in a red convertible with several weapons, including a

.380-caliber semi-automatic pistol in his pants. A sheriff’s deputy

then went to the Riley house, where Lisa was “upset and crying,”

with red marks on her neck and upper chest. Lisa’s mother received

a phone call from Lisa, who “barely could speak” and “couldn’t

breathe” but managed to say that Riley “tried to kill” her.

On the morning of July 10, 2015, Riley called 911. When

3

paramedics arrived at the house, Riley came out with G.W.R. and

yelled for them to go inside the house. The paramedics found Lisa in

the master bedroom, “obviously deceased” in rigor mortis. There was

a firearm on the floor above Lisa’s head, and a large amount of blood

all over the floor, furniture, and body, including some that “seemed

to be smeared,” but no blood on G.W.R., who was wearing only a

diaper at the time. Riley repeatedly asked to go back into the house

to retrieve a cell phone, but, during a pat-down of Riley, an

investigator at the scene found both Riley’s and Lisa’s phones in

Riley’s pants pockets. The investigator testified at trial that, based

on the crime scene, it was his opinion that Lisa did not shoot herself.

Riley was taken into custody at a later time when a previous bond

was revoked, and he was subsequently arrested for murder.

Video from surveillance cameras at the Riley house was

collected and reviewed. As the video was played for the jury, a GBI

special agent testified that, at 8:12 p.m. on July 9, 2015, Riley can

be seen entering the front door of the house, and shortly after that,

Lisa walked down the hallway toward the bedrooms with G.W.R.

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crawling behind her. The last time Lisa appeared in any footage was

8:16 p.m. About 15 minutes later, Riley left the house alone in a

white V-neck T-shirt that was later recovered and found to have

blood spatter on the front. There was no further movement on the

footage until about 8:25 a.m. the next morning, when a vehicle

pulled into the driveway. Riley can be seen in the white V-neck Tshirt talking on the telephone at about 8:32 a.m., and paramedics

arrived at 8:35 a.m.

A GBI firearms examiner testified that a bullet removed from

the bedroom wall was fired from a .380-caliber semi-automatic

pistol; that bullet fragments removed from Lisa’s skull and found

under the bed came from a 9mm bullet that had been fired from the

semi-automatic firearm found by Lisa’s body; and that lead

fragments found in G.W.R.’s “bouncy seat” and in a bullet defect on

the floor were consistent with a round fired from a revolver that was

never recovered or identified.

The GBI medical examiner who performed Lisa’s autopsy

explained that Lisa had a gunshot entry wound to the right

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forehead. The bullet passed through her head in a downward, rightto-left trajectory, exiting behind the left ear and below the base of

the skull. The bullet’s trajectory was not typical of a self-inflicted

wound. In nearly all suicides by a gunshot wound to the head, the

gun is in contact with the skin, and the typical trajectory for the

gunshot wound is from side to side. However, Lisa’s gunshot wound

was at close range with a steep downward trajectory, and the

stippling and soot on her body indicated that the firearm was one to

two inches from the skin. The medical examiner determined, based

on her autopsy findings and the investigative information she

received, that the manner of death was homicide.

A GBI criminal intelligence analyst testified that on the

evening of July 9, 2015, at 9:20 to 9:21 p.m., Lisa’s cell phone had

one outgoing call to, and then two incoming calls from, the home

phone number of Riley’s then-attorney. And there were other

outgoing calls to the Riley house during the night. Cell tower pings

showed that after 9:40 p.m., Lisa’s phone was moved from north Lee

County where the house was located to the Albany area to Atlanta,

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then was moved back down the highway, and was returned to north

Lee County at 8:09 a.m. Riley’s cell phone made the same journey

around the same time. Lisa’s cell phone had four phone calls to

Riley’s attorney between 8:25 and 8:28 a.m. on July 10, a six-minute

call to 911 beginning at 8:31, and two subsequent calls to Riley’s

attorney.

A GBI special agent who was qualified as an expert in crime

scene investigation, bloodstain pattern analysis, and shooting

incident reconstruction testified that the numerous bullet

fragments and marks observed in the bedroom indicated that there

was “a bunch of shooting” with “a lot of” different kinds of firearms

being fired into many different items. The special agent concluded

that the blood spatter, bullet trajectory angle through Lisa’s skull,

and body position were consistent with someone shooting at Lisa,

and not Lisa shooting herself. Examination of the clothes Riley was

wearing at the scene revealed a reddish-orange discoloration on the

front of his white V-neck T-shirt and a blood spatter pattern that

appeared to be from “being in close proximity to a high-energy, high7

force velocity bloodshed event.” It also appeared that someone

attempted to clean the bathroom sink before law enforcement

arrived. Baby clothing recovered from behind a doorway to the

master bedroom tested positive for significant quantity of blood,

including a “huge saturation stain” on the back from where the baby

lay or sat in a large quantity of blood. A small bone fragment was

embedded in the front of the baby clothing, indicating that G.W.R.

was very close to his mother when the shooting occurred.

Testimony given by ADT service technician Bryant Brown

suggested that the gunshots likely occurred while Riley was present

in the master bedroom and that he then checked the system

throughout the night to view footage from the security cameras. A

product called “ADT Pulse” gives customers the ability to monitor

the security system themselves and keeps records every time a

device is tripped in any way, whether or not the system is armed.

Customers can view “pulse logs” on their pulse account on either a

computer or cell phone. Each person associated with the account has

his own username and password, making it possible to tell who

8

logged into the account. After the murder, Brown made a list of each

of the system’s sensors by tripping each device in the security system

while an assistant looked at the keypad to verify which sensor was

tripped. Brown testified that the master bedroom’s glass-break

sensor was tripped on July 9, 2015, at 8:23 p.m. and again at 8:26

p.m., which was before Riley was seen on video walking out of the

room. The motion sensors in the house then tripped in a way

indicating that someone walked out of the master bedroom, to the

front hall, back to the master bedroom, back to the front hall, and

then out the front door at 8:32 p.m. Between 9:51 p.m. and 2:08

a.m., Riley accessed the pulse system 21 times and viewed the

footage from each of four security cameras. At 2:09 a.m., Riley used

the pulse system to arm the security panel remotely. At 2:10 a.m.,

the security panel was disarmed, rearmed, and then disarmed

again, all remotely. Between 3:14 and 7:30 a.m., Riley again

accessed the pulse system 21 times. No windows were broken in the

Riley house. Pursuant to a search warrant, the GBI special agent

went with GBI Investigator Stephen Douglas to the Riley house to

9

test-fire the 9mm pistol in the master bedroom, which demonstrated

that the glass break sensor in that room would be tripped by a

sequence of multiple gunshots.

1. Riley contends that the trial court erred by allowing

Investigator Douglas to remain in the courtroom during the trial.

The trial court did not abuse its broad discretion in that regard.

Investigator Douglas was the lead case agent with the GBI,

prepared “the master report,” and “oversaw the investigative

process” before being hired by the District Attorney. Riley filed a

pre-trial motion to sequester all law enforcement witnesses. But, at

the pre-trial motions hearing, the prosecutor requested that

Investigator Douglas stay in the courtroom during the presentation

of the case to the jury because the investigator had helped prepare

the case for trial and was familiar with the voluminous evidence.

The prosecutor expected Investigator Douglas to testify briefly on a

few matters. Trial counsel objected based on the rule of

sequestration. The trial court allowed Investigator Douglas to

remain in the courtroom. Investigator Douglas ultimately was the

10

last witness to testify in the weeklong trial. He testified with respect

to video recordings of the ballistics testing and the home alarm

system, as well as a picture downloaded from a social media account

of Riley’s.

Georgia’s rule of sequestration does “not authorize exclusion of

. . . [a]n officer or employee of a party which is not a natural person

designated as its representative by its attorney[.]” OCGA § 24-6-615

(2). Based on this provision, it is well settled, under both the state

rule and Federal Rule of Evidence 615 (2), 3 that “[i]t is within a trial

court’s discretion to exempt the government’s chief investigative

agent from sequestration[.]” Anderson v. State, 307 Ga. 79, 88 (5)

(834 SE2d 830) (2019). Because Investigator Douglas was the State’s

chief investigative agent, it was well within the trial court’s

discretion to exempt him from the rule of sequestration and to deny

3 Notwithstanding the State’s improper reliance on precedent under our

old Evidence Code, “[t]he text of OCGA § 24-6-615 differs significantly from the

text of the sequestration provision of the old Evidence Code, and instead tracks

in pertinent part the language of Federal Rule of Evidence 615 as that rule

read in 2011,” and we therefore “look for guidance to the decisions of the federal appellate courts on Rule 615, not our precedent under the old Evidence Code.”

Anderson v. State, 307 Ga. 79, 88 (5) n.15 (834 SE2d 830) (2019) (citation and

punctuation omitted).

11

Riley’s objection on this ground. See id. Cf. Lopez v. State, 310 Ga.

529, 533-534 (3) (b) (852 SE2d 547) (2020) (holding that it was not

ineffective assistance when the defendant’s trial counsel failed to

object to the State’s request for its chief investigative agent to be

allowed to remain in the courtroom, because an objection on this

ground would have been meritless and the trial court would have

acted within its discretion in denying it), overruled on other grounds

by Johnson v. State, 315 Ga. 876, 877, 884 (2) (b) (885 SE2d 725)

(2023).

2. Riley contends that his federal due process rights were

violated when certain allegedly false or inaccurate evidence related

to his home security system was presented to the grand jury and at

trial.4 Riley’s claims concerning evidence presented to the grand jury

4 Riley also claims under this enumeration that the trial judge,

apparently by misrepresenting what Riley had preserved for review and by

supposedly committing “perjury,” violated Riley’s right under the First

Amendment of the United States Constitution to petition for redress of

grievances. But “these arguments have been waived for purposes of this

appeal, as a proper objection was not raised below with respect to these

matters.” Atkinson v. State, 301 Ga. 518, 522 (3) (801 SE2d 833) (2017). Plainerror review is not available because none of Riley’s arguments involve any of

the possible bases for such review in Georgia. See Miller v. State, 309 Ga. 549,

12

are not reviewable, and, as to his claims concerning evidence

presented at trial, Riley either failed to preserve them for appeal or

failed to meet his burden of showing error.

“[G]rand juries, unlike petit juries, are authorized to consider

evidence without regard to its eventual admissibility at trial.” State

v. Lampl, 296 Ga. 892, 898 (2) (770 SE2d 629) (2015). Indeed, “[t]he

evidence which the grand jury receives in finding a true bill is not

subject to inquiry as to admissibility, confidentiality, relevance or

552 (2) (847 SE2d 344) (2020) (“In Georgia, plain error review is limited to the

sentencing phase of a trial resulting in the death penalty, a trial judge’s

expression of opinion in violation of OCGA § 17-8-57, and a jury charge

affecting substantial rights of the parties as provided under OCGA § 17-8-58

(b), and, for cases tried after January 1, 2013, with regard to rulings on

evidence, a court is allowed to consider plain errors affecting substantial rights although such errors were not brought to the attention of the court. OCGA §

24-1-103 (d).” (citation and punctuation omitted)); State v. HerreraBustamante, 304 Ga. 259, 264 (2) (b) (818 SE2d 552) (2018) (holding that plainerror review under OCGA § 24-1-103 (d) “is limited to the trial court’s

evidentiary rulings” and therefore did not apply to challenges to the

constitutionality of certain statutes). Riley further claims that the trial judge

should be impeached under the United States Constitution, but we have no

jurisdiction to consider any such claim. See U.S. Const. Art. II, Sec. IV

(providing for impeachment of “all civil Officers of the United States” (emphasis

supplied)). See also U.S. Const. Art. I, Sec. II (“The House of Representatives

. . . shall have the sole Power of Impeachment.”); Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. III,

Sec. VII, Par. I (The Georgia “House of Representatives shall have the sole

power to vote impeachment charges against any . . . judicial officer of this

state[.]”).

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prejudice, which evidentiary questions can be raised and resolved at

trial.” Anderson v. State, 258 Ga. 70, 73 (11) (365 SE2d 421) (1988).

See also Mitchell v. State, 239 Ga. 456, 459 (3) (238 SE2d 100)

(1977). “[W]here it appears that a competent witness or witnesses

were sworn and examined before the grand jury by whom the

indictment was preferred, . . . no inquiry into the sufficiency or

legality of the evidence is indulged.” Ward v. State, 288 Ga. 641, 643-644 (2) (706 SE2d 430) (2011) (holding that, where the appellant

asserted “that the trial court erred in denying his motion to quash

the indictment alleging that the grand jury heard testimony only

from an investigator in the district attorney’s office who did not have

first hand knowledge of the case,” the enumeration of error

presented “nothing for review” (citation and punctuation omitted)).

See also Felker v. State, 252 Ga. 351, 366 (2) (a) (314 SE2d 621)

(1984) (quoted in Ward; rejecting dicta “implying any broader basis

for quashing an indictment for lack of evidence”). Riley’s claims

related to the grand jury furnish no grounds for reversal, as he “has

not shown that any grand jury witness was incompetent or not

14

sworn properly.” Young v. State, 305 Ga. 92, 99 (7) (823 SE2d 774)

(2019) (citation and punctuation omitted).

With respect to the trial itself, Riley briefly argues that the

State violated his rights under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U. S. 83 (83

SCt 1194, 10 LE2d 215) (1963), by failing to disclose evidence.5 But

he fails to point to any specific undisclosed evidence that was

favorable to him, and he therefore has failed to meet his burden of

showing such evidence. See Muse v. State, 316 Ga. 639, 663 (8) (889

SE2d 885) (2023) (The appellant made a Brady claim of failure to

disclose text messages and other data extracted from his cell phone

but did not point to any data that he contended was exculpatory, and

this Court held that he had “failed to carry his burden to show that

5 To establish a violation under Brady, the defendant must show that:

(1) the State, including any part of the prosecution team, possessed

evidence favorable to the defendant; (2) the defendant did not

possess the favorable evidence and could not obtain it himself with

any reasonable diligence; (3) the State suppressed the favorable

evidence; and (4) a reasonable probability exists that the outcome

of the trial would have been different had the evidence been

disclosed to the defense.

Harris v. State, 309 Ga. 599, 605-606 (2) (b) (847 SE2d 563) (2020) (citation

and punctuation omitted). “The burden of proof on these elements lies with the

defendant.” Muse v. State, 316 Ga. 639, 662 (8) (889 SE2d 885) (2023) (citation

and punctuation omitted).

15

the evidence was exculpatory.”).

As for Riley’s claim that false evidence and perjured testimony

about the security system was presented at trial, he argues

variously that Brown committed perjury when he testified about his

evaluation of the system, that the ADT installation records and

pulse logs admitted at trial had been falsified, and that this evidence

was knowingly presented by the State. Riley purports to base this

claim on his personal knowledge related to the installation and

operation of his home security system, but he has not supported this

assertion with his testimony or any other evidence Because Riley’s

claim of false evidence and perjured testimony could have been

raised at trial but was not, it has not been preserved for appeal. See

Davis v. State, 316 Ga. 418, 424 (4) (b) (888 SE2d 546) (2023)

(“Although we have serious doubts that [the appellant] has made the

threshold showing that the prosecutor knowingly used perjured

testimony or failed to correct what the prosecutor subsequently

learned was false testimony, we need not reach these questions

because we conclude that [the defendant’s] claim was not preserved

16

since it was not raised at trial.”).

3. Riley contends that his trial counsel provided

constitutionally ineffective assistance by failing to investigate and

prepare for trial properly. Riley asserts that his trial counsel’s

alleged failure to prepare for trial is demonstrated by his failure “to

review the State’s files and pretrial discovery,” “to interview

witnesses,” “to request funds for” and “secure an expert witness in

support of his theory of defense,” “to request or review . . . Riley’s

medical records and fight history” as a boxer, “to secure a blood

spatter expert to support his theory of victim suicide,” and “to secure

an expert witness on the alarm system at the marital residence.”

Riley also asserts that trial counsel failed to conduct a “reasonable

investigation of witnesses who he himself opined would probably be

helpful” and “to examine any of the many boxes of discovery that

were provided by the State.” Riley further asserts that counsel

completely failed “to provide any expert testimony as to . . . Riley’s

medical history, medication, treating physicians or his

boxing/fighting history that would suggest that he suffered from

17

CTE,” chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Riley has wholly failed to

meet his heavy burden of proving that trial counsel’s alleged failures

amounted to ineffective assistance.

To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance, a defendant

must prove both that the performance of his lawyer was deficient

and that he was prejudiced by counsel’s deficient performance.

Strickland v. Washington, 466 U. S. 668, 687 (III) (104 SCt 2052, 80

LE2d 674) (1984). To satisfy the deficiency prong of the Strickland

test, the defendant “must show that his attorney performed at trial

in an objectively unreasonable way considering all the

circumstances and in light of prevailing professional norms.” Lofton

v. State, 309 Ga. 349, 360 (6) (846 SE2d 57) (2020). “This requires a

defendant to overcome the strong presumption that counsel’s

performance fell within a wide range of reasonable professional

conduct, and that counsel’s decisions were made in the exercise of

reasonable professional judgment.” Scott v. State, 306 Ga. 417, 419-420 (2) (831 SE2d 813) (2019) (citation and punctuation omitted).

“Decisions regarding trial tactics and strategy may form the basis

18

for an ineffectiveness claim only if they were so patently

unreasonable that no competent attorney would have followed such

a course.” Thomas v. State, 311 Ga. 706, 714 (2) (a) (859 SE2d 14)

(2021) (citation and punctuation omitted). The defendant must also

show that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense, which

requires showing that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for

counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would

have been different.” Strickland, 466 U. S. at 694 (III) (B). If an

appellant “fails to meet his burden of proving either prong of the

Strickland test, the reviewing court does not have to examine the

other prong.” Williams v. State, 315 Ga. 797, 806 (2) (884 SE2d 877)

(2023). “The burden of proving ineffective assistance is a heavy

one[.]” Smith v. State, 303 Ga. 643, 646 (II) (A) (814 SE2d 411)

(2018).

Riley has presented his ineffective assistance claims “in a

cursory manner.” Brown v. State, 301 Ga. 728, 735 (4) (804 SE2d 16)

(2017) (also involving a pro se appellant). And his list of “generalized

assertions of his trial counsel’s alleged failings” does not “show in

19

what respect his counsel’s performance was deficient.” Jones v.

State, 319 Ga. 758, 764 (3) (906 SE2d 699) (2024). See also Sauder

v. State, 318 Ga. 791, 816 (7) (f) n.21 (901 SE2d 124) (2024) (“To the

extent [the appellant] has not identified specific instances of these

alleged deficiencies, he has not carried his burden of showing that

his lawyer performed deficiently.”); Howard v. State, 318 Ga. 681,

686 (2) n.2 (899 SE2d 669) (2024) (holding that an enumeration of

counsel’s ineffectiveness for failing to “file a motion to suppress the

photo lineup” was insufficient to raise any claim of ineffective

assistance of counsel for our review); Ward v. State, 313 Ga. 265, 275

(4) (c) (869 SE2d 470) (2022) (holding that the appellant failed to

demonstrate ineffectiveness of trial counsel because he did “not

identify any specific instances to support [his] broad allegations”).

In any event, Riley “makes no specific argument and cites no

authority to support any of these claims, so we do not address them.”

Sauder, 318 Ga. at 816 (7) (f) n.21 (citing former Supreme Court

Rule 22). See also current Supreme Court Rule 22 (1); Howard, 318

Ga. at 686 (2) n.2 (“Moreover, because [the appellant] makes no

20

substantive argument or citation of authority regarding trial

counsel’s alleged deficiencies in this regard, we would not address

such claims of ineffectiveness even if they were contained in his

enumerations of error.” (citing former Supreme Court Rule 22)).

4. Riley also claims that his trial counsel was ineffective by

failing to pursue severance of both the count of cruelty to children,

which was alleged to have occurred on the same day as the murder,

and the three counts of aggravated assault of Lisa that were alleged

to have occurred on June 14, 2015, from the murder counts. Counsel

did file a pre-trial motion to sever the aggravated assault counts that

allegedly occurred on June 14, 2015 from the counts of murder and

other crimes alleged to have occurred on July 9, 2015. But he

withdrew the motion to sever based on the parties’ agreement, which

the trial court accepted, to sever the count of aggravated assault

allegedly occurring on May 25, 2015. As explained above in footnote

1, the indictment included one count of aggravated assault of five

persons that allegedly occurred on May 25, 2015, but, pursuant to

the parties’ agreement, that count was not presented to the jury and

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in fact was nolle prossed after trial. 6

The record shows that trial counsel’s agreement not to pursue

severance of the cruelty to children count and the June 14, 2015

aggravated assault counts from the murder counts benefitted Riley

by securing the State’s agreement to sever the count of aggravated

assault of five persons on May 25. Riley’s strategic choice to

withdraw his motion to sever in return for the State’s agreement to

sever the May 25 aggravated assault was not objectively

unreasonable, especially when it appears that the aggravated

assaults against the victim less than a month before the murder and

the crimes against the child at the same time as the murder would

have been admissible even if they had not been charged in this

6 Riley enumerates trial court error with respect to severance, and the

enumeration itself does not mention the ineffectiveness claim, although he

discusses this ineffectiveness claim in his argument under the enumeration.

When counsel withdrew the motion to sever before the trial court ruled on it,

he waived the issue of whether the trial court erred in not granting severance.

See Leonard v. State, 316 Ga. 827, 836 (4) (889 SE2d 837) (2023) (“Because

Leonard failed to obtain a ruling on the issue [of severance], he cannot raise it

for the first time in this Court.” (citation and punctuation omitted)); Moss v.

State, 298 Ga. 613, 615 (3) (783 SE2d 652) (2016) (“Appellant withdrew his

motion to quash at a motions hearing, before the trial court had ruled on it, so

he cannot now complain that the court did not grant it.”). And the issue may

not be reviewed for plain error. See Leonard, 316 Ga. at 836 (4) n.9.

22

indictment. See McNabb v. State, 313 Ga. 701, 713 (2) (a) (872 SE2d

251) (2020) (holding that trial counsel did not perform deficiently by

failing to object to certain evidence because his “strategic choice to

pursue an agreement with the prosecutor after initially filing a

motion in limine to exclude the evidence at issue . . . was not

objectively unreasonable,” where counsel “would have pressed his

objections had he not obtained a favorable outcome with the

prosecutor, and it was not unreasonable for trial counsel to believe

he received a more favorable outcome in his negotiations with the

prosecutor than he might have received by pressing his motion with

the trial court, as much of the evidence [at issue] could have been

admitted as intrinsic evidence of the crimes”); Lowe v. State, 314 Ga.

788, 791-794 (2) (a) (879 SE2d 492) (2022) (holding that the trial

court did not abuse its discretion in denying a motion to sever

murder charges from charges involving similar acts of domestic

violence against the victim occurring two years before the murder,

because such other-acts evidence would have been admissible to

demonstrate the parties’ prior difficulties, shed light on the

23

appellant’s motive, and to counter his defense of accident); Carson

v. State, 308 Ga. 761, 764 (2) (a) (843 SE2d 421) (2020) (“Severance

is generally not warranted where the crimes charged [involved

different victims but] occurred over the same period of time and stem

from a course of continuing conduct.” (citation and punctuation

omitted)).

5. Finally, Riley contends that his trial counsel conceded guilt

at trial and thereby created a structural error that must be

presumed prejudicial under McCoy v. Louisiana, 584 U. S. 414 (138

SCt 1500, 200 LE2d 821) (2018). Specifically, Riley argues that

counsel used a defense of insanity or mental defect that Riley had

explicitly and vehemently rejected: that Riley, as a result of his

participation in the sport of boxing, suffered from CTE, a progressive

brain injury caused by multiple concussions, and that this injury

caused him to commit the crimes. However, as explained below, to

the extent that counsel argued such a defense, he did not concede

guilt and therefore did not violate McCoy.

McCoy held that a defendant has the right under the Sixth

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Amendment “to insist that counsel refrain from admitting guilt,

even when counsel’s experienced-based view is that confessing guilt

offers the defendant the best chance to avoid the death penalty” and

that “[w]ith individual liberty—and, in capital cases, life—at stake,

it is the defendant’s prerogative, not counsel’s, to decide on the

objective of his defense[.]” 584 U. S. at 417-418. The State relies on

the fact that the death penalty was not sought in this case and on a

suggestion in the dissenting opinion in McCoy that the Court’s

holding was “effectively confined to capital cases.” Id. at 433 (II)

(Alito, J., dissenting). But even assuming that McCoy is not limited

to capital cases, 7 counsel did not disregard the defendant’s

prerogative as prohibited in McCoy.

As we recently explained, the United States Supreme Court

specifically held in McCoy, 584 U. S. at 422-423 (II) (A), that

“autonomy to decide that the objective of the defense is to assert

7 We recently took the same tack in another case, where – like here – we

assumed without deciding that McCoy could apply in non-capital cases. See

Griffin v. State, Case No. S25A0086, 2025 WL 515896, at *3 (2) n.3 (decided

Feb. 18, 2025).

25

innocence is reserved for the client,” and “when a client expressly

asserts that the objective of his defense is to maintain innocence of

the charged criminal acts, his lawyer must abide by that objective

and may not override it by conceding guilt.” Griffin v. State, Case

No. S25A0086, 2025 WL 515896, at *3 (2) (a) (decided Feb. 18, 2025)

(punctuation omitted).Here, we conclude that Riley’s claim fails

because counsel did not “concede” guilt in the same manner as

counsel in McCoy. See id. at 423 (II) (A) (“When a client expressly

asserts that the objective of his defen[s]e is to maintain innocence of

the charged criminal acts, his lawyer must abide by that objective

and may not override it by conceding guilt.” (citation, punctuation,

and emphasis omitted)). Cf. Griffin, 2025 WL 515896, at *4 (2) (b)

(assuming that counsel “conceded” the defendant’s guilt but

concluding that the record did not support the existence of an

“intransigent and unambiguous objection”).

In McCoy, counsel left no doubt that he was conceding the

defendant’s guilt, telling the jury that the evidence was

“unambiguous,” that the defendant “was the killer,” and that on this

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issue counsel “took the burden off of the prosecutor.” Id. at 419-420

(I) (citation and punctuation omitted). See also Christian v. Thomas,

982 F3d 1215, 1222 (III) (B) (1) (9th Cir. 2020) (recognizing that

“McCoy’s counsel did not couch, equivocate, or preface these

statements with assurances that he was arguing only in the

alternative”). Unlike counsel in McCoy, Riley’s trial counsel – during

closing argument – repeatedly emphasized the prosecutor’s burden

to prove Riley’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and asserted the

prosecutor’s failure in this circumstantial evidence case to exclude

the following reasonable theories other than guilt: that Lisa

“committed suicide after he left”; that she “committed suicide while

he was there before he left and he was afraid to report it”; that “if he

did it, he did it without malice aforethought, which means that’s

voluntary manslaughter,” a theory he called a reasonable

“alternative” theory 8; and finally that “[i]f he did it, he did it because

of CTE, which is a disease, a brain damage disease, that boxers get”

8 Riley raises no claim that counsel conceded guilt against Riley’s wishes

by arguing the alternative theory of manslaughter.

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and that would result in a verdict of “not guilty by reason of

insanity.” Also during closing argument, counsel reviewed a variety

of evidence that he argued supported the theory of suicide or

manslaughter but that would not support the alternative theory

based on CTE. 9

Urging the jury to consider insanity based on CTE as an

alternative argument did not amount to a concession of guilt, did not

relieve the State of its burden to prove Riley’s guilt beyond a

reasonable doubt, and reflected an objective that was identical to

Riley’s: acquittal. Counsel’s “objective was not, as it was in McCoy,

to forsake acquittal in hopes of obtaining a lighter sentence.”

Christian, 982 F3d at 1225 (III) (B) (3). In short, counsel did not

violate Riley’s Sixth Amendment rights under McCoy simply by

arguing an alternative theory to support acquittal, and therefore did

not create a structural error that must be presumed prejudicial.

Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.

9 These closing arguments were drawn in part from counsel’s own crossexamination of the State’s witnesses and were consistent with counsel’s

opening statement.

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