The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Race center stage at trial's opening

2 prosecutio­n witnesses, serving time in jail, cite defendant’s statements.

- By Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com

Racial animus led Franklin Gebhardt to murder Timothy Coggins in 1983, prosecutor­s said Wednesday.

Indifferen­ce over a black man’s death left the Spalding County case unsolved for 34 years, Griffin Judicial Circuit Assistant District Attorney Marie Broder said in her opening statement.

It was an admission seized upon by Gebhardt’s attorneys, whose strategy is informed by the shoddy initial investigat­ion and subsequent mishandlin­g of evidence they hope will create enough reasonable doubt to free their client. For prosecutor­s, the “shameful”

and “incomplete” probe by the Spalding sheriff ’s office and the GBI into Coggins’ death presents a challenge they had to confront. “They didn’t care about Timothy

Coggins,” Broder said on Day One of Frank Gebhardt’s murder trial. She then asked jurors to “atone for the sins of the past.”

Finding Coggins’ killer or kill- ers was never a “top priority” for the sheriff at the time, said retired

Spalding deputy Clint Phillips, the lead investigat­or at the time.

Phillips said he was one of only three investigat­ors in the office.

“If I had the help then that Sheriff (Darrell) Dix has now, we would’ve solved the case,” Phillips said. “We just didn’t have the help back then.”

The case was closed after only a few months. When it was reopened in March 2017 by the GBI’s cold case unit, much of the physical evidence that had been collected from the crime scene was missing.

Tire impression­s of the truck that allegedly dragged Coggins’ body back and forth under the power lines off rural Minter Road, where his body was found, were gone. Same for the victim’s bloody sweater, which contained hair samples. Also missing: a wooden club and an empty Jack Daniels bottle.

“Where did it go?” asked defense co-counsel Scott Johnston, who told jurors the state shouldn’t get a pass just because the case is old.

Coggins’ mutilated body was found near Gebhardt’s residence in the city of Sunny Side, which had about 330 residents then and only 134 now.

The state is dependent on witnesses who say they heard Gebhardt brag that he killed Coggins, though Broder said Gebhardt never called Coggins by his name.

“(Gebhardt) tells people he killed a N-word,” Broder said.

The prosecutio­n’s witnesses come with some baggage. Two men who testified Wednesday are serving time in prison. The state said the men were not offered any deals, such as a possible reduction in their sentences, in exchange for their testimony.

Christophe­r Vaughn, who was 10 years old when he discovered Coggins’ body while hunting with his father, said Gebhardt told him, just a few months later, “they had killed the man we had found over there . ... Him and Bill Moore. He was in a good mood.”

Moore, also charged with felony murder, is scheduled to go on trial in October.

Vaughn, a convicted child molester, said Coggins was targeted because he was involved

with Gebhardt’s girlfriend. A black man sleeping with a white woman was “something that would not be tolerated” by Gebhardt and Moore, Vaughn testified.

Johnston, in his opening statement, urged jurors to consider the source.

“Listen to who is saying these things,” he said.

Robert Smith, in prison for meth possession, said he heard Gebhardt reference Coggins’ murder as recently as 2016. “‘He didn’t live to tell about that white girl he was with,’ ” Smith said, quoting the defendant.

Defense co-counsel Larkin Lee noted that Smith’s testimony contained details not shared with investigat­ors in 2017, including an anecdote about a wild party at the Sunny Side trailer park where Gebhardt and Moore lived.

Smith said he witnessed the two suspects butcher a cow in one of the trailers.

“Were you holding back stories or did you just think of some new ones?” Lee said.

From all of the witnesses who testified Wednesday, a common theme emerged about the racial climate in the Griffin area 35 years ago.

Telisa Coggins, one of Coggins’ sisters, said she saw her brother dance with a white woman at the People’s Choice, a black nightclub in Griffin. After he was killed, the family received ominous threats, she said. Coggins testified that a decapitate­d black dog was left outside their door along with a note that read, “You’re next.”

Testimony resumes today. Broder said the prosecutio­n expects to wrap up its case by the end of the week.

 ??  ?? Defendant Franklin Gebhardt is on trial in Timothy Coggins’ 1983 murder.
Defendant Franklin Gebhardt is on trial in Timothy Coggins’ 1983 murder.
 ?? MAX PELTZ/POOL ?? Assistant District Attorney Marie Broder, with District Attorney Benjamin Coker on Monday, said the defendant has told people that “he killed a N-word.”
MAX PELTZ/POOL Assistant District Attorney Marie Broder, with District Attorney Benjamin Coker on Monday, said the defendant has told people that “he killed a N-word.”

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