State v. Geter
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In the early morning of March 7, 2015, Robert Xavier Geter and James Lewis engaged in a fight at Culler's Bar in Columbia, South Carolina. The altercation moved outside, where Geter stabbed Lewis, who later died from his injuries. During the incident, Geter also stabbed Clarence Stone, causing permanent blindness in one eye. Geter claimed self-defense, stating he was attacked by multiple people and only used his knife to defend himself.
The State indicted Geter for murder and attempted murder, arguing that Geter intended to kill Lewis and that this intent transferred to Stone when he was stabbed. The trial court instructed the jury on the doctrine of transferred intent, and Geter was convicted of both charges. Geter appealed, arguing that transferred intent should not apply to attempted murder and that certain testimony constituted improper bolstering.
The South Carolina Court of Appeals reversed Geter's attempted murder conviction, holding that the State needed to prove Geter specifically intended to kill Stone, which was not the State's theory. The court also found that some testimony constituted improper bolstering but deemed it harmless, affirming the murder conviction. Judge Geathers dissented on the transferred intent issue.
The South Carolina Supreme Court reviewed the case and held that the doctrine of transferred intent does not apply to attempted murder. The court affirmed the Court of Appeals' decision to reverse Geter's attempted murder conviction and upheld the murder conviction, agreeing that the error in admitting the bolstering testimony was harmless.
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