The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Justices dump murder conviction, life sentence; find counsel lacking

Jury not told felon’s gun possession in self-defense is legal.

- By Rosie Manins rosie.manins@ajc.com

The Georgia Supreme Court has wiped the felony murder conviction and life sentence imposed against a man involved in a fatal shooting, finding his law- yer was ineffectiv­e at trial.

In a unanimous opinion issued Tuesday, the court also reversed Darnell Floyd’s conviction­s and sentences on two associated gun pos- session charges in the 2017 shooting death of Telmo Ortiz in Covington. Floyd’s related conviction­s and sen- tences for single counts of fleeing police and cruelty to children in the third degree remain untouched.

The court said Floyd’s attorney failed to tell the jury in a 2019 trial that he should be acquitted of the felony murder charge if they believed he was acting in self-defense when he shot Ortiz. Floyd’s trial lawyer, W. Scott Smith, also didn’t object to the trial judge’s questionab­le response to a jury inquiry, records show.

“Trial counsel did not explain that (Floyd) was jus- tified in possessing the gun at the time he shot Ortiz if (Floyd) was acting in self-de- fense,” the court said.

Floyd can be retried, the court held.

Smith said the court’s rul- ing is a “great result” for Floyd, who has been in cus- tody since his indictment in December 2017. He said there was confusion at the time of trial about a Georgia self-defense law and whether it absolved Floyd — a convicted felon — of possess- ing a gun when acting in self-defense.

The court’s opinion clar- ifies that a convicted felon can lawfully possess a gun in self-defense, Smith said

Wednesday. He said he’ll seek bond for Floyd, who is now in his 30s and has completed the sentences not overturned.

“I’m hoping that the pros- ecution will do the right thing and dismiss this case or offer him a time-served plea,” Smith told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

The shooting occurred on Washington Street in Newton County in September 2017. Floyd testified at trial that he shot Ortiz in self defense after Ortiz reached for a handgun he had placed in the waistband of his shorts.

The two men, who had been involved in a prior altercatio­n, were discuss- ing a stolen cellphone, case records show. After shooting Ortiz, Floyd fled the scene in his vehicle with a friend and her child. He was appre- hended in possession of three guns, including an AR-15-style rifle.

A Washington Street resident who heard the shooting testified that he approached the scene before law enforcemen­t officers arrived and noticed that Ortiz was lying next to a handgun. A responding offi- cer later cleared a bullet from the chamber of the gun, the court noted.

Floyd was found guilty of felony murder predicated on his possession of a gun as a convicted felon. The jury also found him guilty of two associated gun-pos- session charges and single counts of fleeing police and child cruelty. He was acquit- ted on several other charges, including malice murder, attempted armed robbery, aggravated assault and kid- napping.

In its opinion Tuesday, the state Supreme Court said there was sufficient evidence to support the jury’s ver- dict, but that Floyd’s coun- sel during trial was ineffec- tive in several ways, war- ranting the reversal.

The crux of the problem was Smith’s confusion about the Georgia self-defense law and whether it absolved Floyd’s gun possession if the jury found he acted in self-defense, the court noted. It said Smith didn’t object to the trial judge’s problemati­c response to a jury question about a convicted felon’s right to use a firearm in self-defense.

Writing for the court, Chief Justice Michael P. Boggs said the judge’s response to the jury “at best was a nonanswer, and at worst, authorized the jury to convict on felony murder based on felon-in-possession even if it believed (Floyd’s) claim of self-defense.” The Newton County trial judge, Eugene M. Benton, told the jurors it was up to them to decide if self-defense at all costs took precedence over a felon possessing a weapon to defend himself, records show.

“Especially given that self-defense was (Floyd’s) sole defense to felony murder based on felon-in-possession, we conclude that no reasonable attorney would have agreed with the trial court’s response,” Boggs wrote. “The jury was confused by the concession that (Floyd) was a convicted felon and not permitted to possess a gun and the claim that he was justified in using a gun in self-defense.”

In a concurring opinion, Justice Shawn Ellen LaGrua said the jury’s confusion is understand­able and that state legislator­s may want to clarify the self-defense law.

“I question whether (the law) was intended to protect felons who intentiona­lly arm themselves and then use those weapons in situations like this,” she wrote.

Alcovy Judicial Circuit District Attorney Randy McGinley, who helped prosecute the case, did not immediatel­y respond to questions about the ruling.

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