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: April 8, 2025
S25A0161. KINGDOM v. THE STATE.
COLVIN, Justice.
Appellant Devin Kingdom appeals his convictions for malice
murder and other crimes related to the shooting death of Cierra
Ford and the aggravated assault of Tyrique Lobban. 1 On appeal,
1 The crimes occurred on November 25, 2016. On April 21, 2017, a Fulton
County grand jury returned a 14-count indictment against Appellant, Joseph
Alexander Clarke, Malik Kendall Ortiz, and Gregory Battle. Appellant was
charged with participation in street gang activity (Count 1), malice murder
(Count 2), felony murder (Counts 3, 4, 5, 6), home invasion in the first degree
(Count 7), aggravated assault against Ford (Count 8), aggravated assault
against Lobban with a shotgun (Count 9), aggravated assault against Lobban
with a handgun (Count 10), aggravated battery against Lobban (Count 11),
burglary in the first degree (Count 12), and possession of a firearm during the
commission of a felony (Counts 13 and 14).
Appellant and Ortiz were jointly tried before a jury from May 7 through
17, 2018, and the jury found Appellant guilty on all counts except Counts 1 and
6. The trial court sentenced Appellant to life in prison for malice murder (Count
2) and home invasion in the first degree (Count 7). The court also imposed 20-year concurrent sentences for the aggravated assault with a deadly weapon
charge (Count 10) and the aggravated battery charge (Count 11). And it
imposed five-year consecutive sentences for the charges of possession of a
firearm during the commission of a felony (Counts 13 and 14). The remaining
Appellant argues that the trial court erred by admitting testimony
regarding an out-of-court identification by a deceased declarant in
violation of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution
and Georgia law. Appellant further argues that, to the extent his
trial counsel opened the door to this out-of-court identification,
Appellant’s counsel was constitutionally ineffective. As explained
below, however, these arguments fail, and we affirm Appellant’s
convictions.
1. The trial evidence showed the following. Lobban, Malik
Ortiz, Joseph Clarke, Gregory Battle, and Jabar Brady were friends
in New York before moving to Georgia and eventually settling into
a townhome around August 2016. Ortiz, Clarke, and Battle,
however, moved out of the townhome on October 29 because they
would not contribute to rent. Appellant — whom Lobban had also
charges were either merged or vacated by operation of law.
Appellant filed a motion for new trial on May 23, 2018. Appellant
amended his motion for new trial several times, acting either pro se or through
new counsel, the last of which was filed by counsel on August 24, 2022. The
trial court denied the Appellant’s motion for new trial on February 5, 2024, and
Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal with this Court on March 6, 2024,
which was amended on April 24, 2024. The appeal was docketed to this Court’s
term beginning in December 2024 and submitted for a decision on the briefs.
2
known from New York and who frequently socialized with Clarke at
the townhome — helped Ortiz and Battle move out. According to
Lobban, Appellant came back later that day, asked Lobban how he
made money, and told Lobban that he needed to “clear [his] name”
after “snitching” about an incident in New York. 2
Tension remained high among the group post move-out.
Lobban testified that, in mid-November, Clarke told Brady that
Clarke was going to shoot Lobban after Lobban initially refused to
return a gun he had borrowed. On Thanksgiving Day, Lobban made
a social media post showing him in the townhome with about
$17,000 in cash. Lobban testified that he noticed Brady’s phone
being called that day. Lobban further testified that he picked up
Brady’s phone, that Appellant was on the other end of the line, and
that Appellant said, “Who is that, Jubby? All right,” before hanging
up. 3
Tension neared a peak hours later. Lobban returned to his
2 At trial, Lobban said that Appellant did not indicate who Lobban had
“snitch[ed]” on.
3 Trial evidence established that “Jubby” is Lobban’s nickname.
3
townhome around 1:30 a.m. on November 25, 2016 after celebrating
Thanksgiving. When he returned, he briefly saw Brady and his new
roommate, Tyrique Jackson, who were playing video games together
in Brady’s bedroom. Lobban then went to his own bedroom, where
he was later joined by his girlfriend, Ford, after she returned from
her own Thanksgiving celebrations. Jackson testified that Lobban
came to Brady’s bedroom about ten or fifteen minutes after Ford
arrived and asked Jackson to go purchase some “roll-up paper” for
smoking marijuana. Jackson agreed. When Jackson left, Lobban
and Ford were inside Lobban’s bedroom with the door closed.
According to Lobban, intruders kicked their bedroom door open
after he and Ford had been lying in bed for about ten minutes. At
trial, Lobban testified that he saw four people in the doorway:
Clarke, Ortiz, Battle, and a man Lobban identified as “Chubbs.”
According to Lobban, Ortiz and Battle ran away, but “Chubbs” and
Clarke “bum-rushed” through the door with a shotgun and handgun
respectively. Lobban testified that “Chubbs” fired the shotgun; that
during the shooting, he heard a “chi-chi, boom” sound eight times;
4
and that “Chubbs” then “ran out the room.” Lobban further testified
that he “tried to get up” after the room “was . . . quiet for . . . a
minute.” According to Lobban, Clarke then began shooting with a
handgun about “four or five times.”
A medical examiner testified that Ford took a fatal shot to the
head from a shotgun, and a surgeon testified that Lobban sustained
gunshot wounds to his chest, abdomen, thigh, and arm from what
“appeared to be . . . various weapons, mostly bullets” from a “shotgun
possibly.” After the shooters retreated, Lobban dialed 911 at 2:49
a.m. and 2:54 a.m. A neighbor witnessed four individuals loading
unidentified items into a white car around that time. 4
Lobban testified that Brady came to his bedroom while he was
“[i]n the process of . . . calling 911.” Lobban further testified that he
asked Brady for help, but Brady “panicked and ran out [of] the
room.” Jackson testified that when he returned to the townhome, he
found Brady in his bedroom crying and packing his clothes and that
4 The neighbor testified that she left her daughter’s house at 2:31 a.m.
that day before stopping at a gas station and then going to her townhome early
that morning.
5
the two left the house together early that morning.
Lobban told dispatchers that he was shot by “Chubbs” and
Clarke. Officers arrived and pronounced Ford dead on the scene but
Lobban underwent surgeries and survived. Brady died by suicide
almost a month after the incident.
During their investigation, detectives determined that
Appellant was the person Lobban referred to as “Chubbs.” After an
extensive surgery, Lobban mistakenly told detectives that Clarke
was “Chubbs,” but he promptly clarified that the two were separate
people. When detectives asked Lobban for “Chubbs’s” real name,
Lobban stated that he did not know “Chubbs” or associate with him.
But after further questioning, detectives realized that when Lobban
said that he did not “know Chubbs,” he meant that he did not
consider him a close friend. Indeed, Lobban told detectives that he
had seen “Chubbs” more than ten times, that “Chubbs” had been to
Lobban’s townhouse with Clarke, and that the three would drink
and smoke together. Lobban also had a number for Chubbs in his
phone, which detectives traced back to Appellant. Lobban was later
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shown a single photograph of Appellant and expressed “a thousand
percent” certainty that the photograph was of the individual he
knew as “Chubbs.”
Other evidence linked Appellant to the name “Chubbs” and to
the crime, namely, evidence placing his cell phone and his
girlfriend’s car, a white Hyundai Sonata, near the scene. Appellant’s
girlfriend testified that “Chubbs” was one of Appellant’s nicknames.
And she further testified that around 1:00 a.m. on the day of the
crime, she went to Appellant’s apartment, parked her car in front of
his complex, and left her car keys in her jacket by the door before
she met Appellant in bed. Though she claimed that Appellant spent
the night with her, she also testified that she had taken medication
that “allow[ed] [her] to sleep.” Later that morning, she could tell that
someone else had driven her car. A tag reader photographed her car
“half a mile south” from Lobban’s townhome about 30 minutes
before the shooting. And cell phone and location data for a phone
number that both Lobban and Appellant’s girlfriend had provided to
detectives for Appellant showed that Appellant’s cell phone was
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within the vicinity of the crime scene within minutes of Lobban
dialing 911.5
2. Appellant argues that the trial court erred by admitting a
deceased declarant’s out-of-court statement in violation of
Appellant’s Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses
against him. This claim fails.
The Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause provides that
“[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . .
to be confronted with the witnesses against him.” U.S. Const.
amend. VI. The United States Supreme Court held in Crawford v.
Washington, 541 U.S. 36 (124 SCt 1354, 158 LE2d 177) (2004) that
the “admission of out-of-court statements that are testimonial in
nature violates the Confrontation Clause unless the declarant is
unavailable and the defendant had a prior opportunity for crossexamination.” Pitts v. State, 280 Ga. 288, 288 (627 SE2d 17) (2006).
“[F]or evidence to fall within the ambit of the Confrontation Clause,
5 Appellant’s girlfriend testified that his cell phone was a communal
phone used for “business.”
8
it must be both a ‘statement’ and ‘testimonial.’” State v. Gilmore, 312
Ga. 289, 293 (2) (b) (862 SE2d 499) (2021) (citations omitted). “A
statement is testimonial if its primary purpose was to establish
evidence for use in a future prosecution.” Campbell v. State, 320 Ga.
333, 350 (5) (907 SE2d 871) (2024) (citation and punctuation
omitted).
At the preliminary hearing, Detective J.T. Williams testified
that Brady identified Appellant, Clarke, and Ortiz each in single
photographs. Defense counsel later filed a motion in limine to
exclude out-of-court statements made to law enforcement “during
questioning” and “other form[s]” of “testimonial statement[s]” made
out-of-court. Defense counsel specifically named Brady as a
declarant who would be unavailable to testify at trial. The trial court
“reserve[d] ruling as to the admissibility of any statements” after
holding pretrial hearings on the defense’s motion in limine and a
related notice of intention from the prosecution to introduce
statements that Brady made to individuals who were not law
enforcement officers.
9
During a bench conference at trial, the prosecution sought the
court’s permission to ask Detective Williams whether Brady made
an identification during an interview. The prosecutor proffered that
the answer would be “yes,” but stated that he would not ask the
detective who Brady identified. Appellant’s counsel objected on
hearsay grounds and under the Confrontation Clause. Ortiz’s
counsel also objected because, in counsel’s view, Detective
Williams’s testimony would implicate Ortiz.
The trial court permitted the questioning, which went as
follows:
PROSECUTOR: Now, Detective Williams, without telling
me what anybody said at all, it’s been talked [about] both
during direct and cross-examination that Mr. Jabar
Brady was interviewed late in the day on November 25th
of 2016. Do you remember that?
WILLIAMS: Yes, sir.
PROSECUTOR: And during that interview, was Jabar
Brady able to make identification?
WILLIAMS: Yes, sir.
Appellant argues that this testimony violated his rights under the
Confrontation Clause because Brady’s identification was a
testimonial statement, and Appellant did not have an opportunity
10
to confront him.
Pretermitting whether Detective Williams’s testimony
implicated the Confrontation Clause, we hold that the trial court’s
admission of the testimony was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt
because the evidence of Appellant’s guilt was overwhelming. As we
have explained,
A constitutional error is harmless when the State proves
beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not
contribute to the verdict, such as when the evidence at
issue is cumulative of other properly-admitted evidence
or when the evidence against the defendant is
overwhelming.
Jones v. State, 314 Ga. 605, 616 (4) (878 SE2d 505) (2022) (citation
and punctuation omitted). Here, overwhelming evidence of
Appellant’s guilt included Lobban’s eyewitness testimony in which
he identified Appellant as the shooter; Lobban’s immediate
identification of Appellant by the nickname “Chubbs” in his 911
phone call; Lobban’s “thousand percent” certainty that the photo
officers showed him of Appellant was “Chubbs”; Appellant’s
accessibility and connection to his girlfriend’s car that was spotted
11
near the scene by a tag reader; and cell phone data showing
Appellant’s phone near the crime scene around the time that Lobban
dialed 911. Moreover, the detective’s testimony that Brady made an
identification never clearly implicated Appellant, who was charged
with three other co-indictees, one of whom he was jointly tried with.
The evidence was overwhelming, and the admission of Detective
Williams’s testimony was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See
id. at 615-616 (4) (pretermitting whether the trial court admitted
evidence in violation of the Sixth Amendment and holding that any
error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt in light of the
“substantial evidence support[ing] [the appellant’s] convictions,”
which “included the eyewitness testimony of [a bystander] and her
positive identification of [the appellant]” as the shooter); Sutton v.
State, 295 Ga. 350, 352-353 (3) (759 SE2d 846) (2014) (holding that
any Confrontation Clause violation was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt, in part, because the erroneously admitted
testimony was “cumulative of other admissible evidence placing
[the] appellant in the house” where the murder occurred); Ardis v.
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State, 290 Ga. 58, 60-63 (2) (a) (718 SE2d 526) (2011) (holding that
a Confrontation Clause violation was harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt where other properly-admitted evidence against the accused
was overwhelming, including, among other things, that the
appellant had access to his girlfriend’s car which matched the
description of a car that witnesses saw at the crime scene); Veasley
v. State, 275 Ga. 516, 518 (2) (570 SE2d 298) (2002) (pretermitting
whether the trial court admitted evidence in error and holding that
its admission was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt “inasmuch
as there was an eyewitness to the crimes and other evidence linking
[the appellant] with the murder and assaults”). Cf. Rodriguez v.
State, 309 Ga. 542, 545-546 (1) (847 SE2d 303) (2020) (holding that
“the State presented strong circumstantial evidence of [the
appellant’s] guilt,” which included, evidence that, “about 12 hours
before [the victim’s] death,” the appellant and the victim were in an
altercation, after which, the appellant told “multiple people that he
was going to kill [the victim]” and evidence of “[c]ell phone records
show[ing] that [the appellant] was at or near the crime scene . . .
13
during the time that [the victim] was killed”); Wainwright v. State,
305 Ga. 63, 70 (4) (823 SE2d 749) (2019) (holding that “evidence of
[the appellant’s] guilt was strong” when “among other things, the
surviving victim identified [the appellant] — in a photographic
lineup and again at trial — as the [shooter],” a witness who was
familiar with both the appellant and his co-defendant saw the two
running from the crime scene and heard the appellant admit to
shooting a victim, and “cell-phone records confirmed that [the
appellant] was in the area at the time of the murder”).
2. Appellant also argues that the trial court erred in admitting
inadmissible hearsay in violation of OCGA § 24-8-802. This claim
also fails.
Appellant contends that Detective Williams’s testimony that
Brady made an identification contained inadmissible hearsay.
Assuming without deciding that Detective Williams’s testimony did
contain inadmissible hearsay, any error in admitting that testimony
was harmless under the nonconstitutional harmless error standard.
See Kitchens v. State, 310 Ga. 698, 702 (2) (854 SE2d 518) (2021)
14
(applying the nonconstitutional harmless error standard to the
appellant’s hearsay claim). “The test for determining
nonconstitutional harmless error is whether it is highly probable
that the error did not contribute to the verdict.” See id. (citation and
punctuation omitted). Here, the admission of Detective Williams’s
testimony was harmless for the reasons explained in Division 1.
Thus, Appellant’s hearsay claim fails.
3. Finally, Appellant argues that trial counsel rendered
ineffective assistance by opening the door to Detective Williams’s
testimony that, according to Appellant, introduced Brady’s out-ofcourt identification. This claim also fails.
To prevail on an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim,
Appellant “must show both that his counsel’s performance was
constitutionally deficient and that he was prejudiced by this
deficient performance.” See Lynn v. State, 310 Ga. 608, 612 (4) (852
SE2d 843) (2020) (citing Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687
(104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984)). “When evaluating whether an
appellant has established prejudice . . . we review the record de novo
15
and weigh the evidence as we would expect reasonable jurors to have
done.” Harmon v. State, 319 Ga. 259, 265 (3) (903 SE2d 28) (2024)
(citation and punctuation omitted).
Here, even assuming without deciding that trial counsel
opened the door to Brady’s statements and was deficient for doing
so, Appellant cannot show prejudice because he cannot show that
but for trial counsel’s deficiency, there was a reasonable probability
that the jury would not have convicted him. See Bell v. State, 294
Ga. 443, 446 (3) (754 SE2d 327) (2014). The evidence against
Appellant was overwhelming for the reasons explained in our
harmless error analysis. See Ardis, 290 Ga. at 60-63 (2) (a) (holding
that trial counsel was not ineffective for failing to object to an outof-court statement that violated the appellant’s Confrontation rights
when other properly admitted evidence against the appellant was
overwhelming, including testimony that identified the appellant as
the get-away driver of a car that matched the description of his
girlfriend’s vehicle). Accordingly, Appellant’s claim fails.
4. Finally, we must consider whether Appellant suffered
16
cumulative prejudice from the errors he alleges. See Zayas v. State,
319 Ga. 402, 414 (4) (902 SE2d 583) (2024). We hold that he did not
“because the harm from the assumed errors and assumed deficiency
is the same [in this case] . . . and we have concluded that the[y] . .
. did not likely affect the outcome of the trial.” Id. (citation and
punctuation omitted).
Judgment affirmed. Peterson, CJ, Warren, PJ, and Bethel,
Ellington, McMillian, LaGrua, and Pinson, JJ, concur.
17