Taylor v. Georgia
Annotate this CaseSylvester Taylor was convicted by jury for malice murder and criminal attempt to commit rape, amongst other crimes, stemming from the beating death of Linda Madison. This appeal stemmed from an exchange between Taylor and the judge presiding over his pre-trial proceedings, specifically, at a 2014 preliminary hearing, wherein Taylor proclaimed “I ain’t killed that b*tch; that b*tch killed herself.” The trial court then cautioned, “Wait a minute.” Taylor, however, immediately launched into an uninterrupted (albeit brief), profanity-laced tirade in which he denied killing Madison. The tirade culminated in him saying, “Y’all can kiss my black a**.” The trial court found Taylor guilty of 13 instances of criminal contempt, one for each of the obscene words that he used during the outburst, and sentenced him to a total of 230 days in jail, not to be served until Taylor became eligible for release pursuant to bond or “by final disposition of the charges upon which [Taylor] is currently being held.” Taylor appealed, contending (among other things) that the trial court erred by finding him guilty of multiple instances of contempt. The State agreed with Taylor, and so did the Georgia Supreme Court. Judgment was vacated and the matter remanded for further proceedings.
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