Benham, Justice.This case presents the issue of whether a trial court has authority to dismiss a prosecutor’s notice of intent to seek the death penalty prior to trial. This issue previously has been decided adversely to appellant’s position, and for the reasons set forth below, we are not persuaded to change this Court’s longstanding ruling on the issue.Appellant Tracen Lamar Franklin was eighteen years old at the time of the events involved in this case. He was one of four young men indicted for malice murder and felony murder (predicated on aggravated assault) for beating and kicking to death Bobby Tillman after a teen party. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence showed a general brawl broke out after the party. One of the co-indictees was angry about being struck by a female and declared he was going to hit the first man he saw. The co-indictee ran up to Tillman, who was standing passively by a car, and started punching him. Several trial witnesses identified Franklin as one of three others who joined in, and the four men severely beat, kicked, and stomped Tillman, who was later pronounced dead at the hospital as a result of a ruptured right ventricle of the heart caused by blunt impact.The Douglas County District Attorney sent a letter to counsel for each co-indictee offering a 90-day window to negotiate the case before he intended to file a notice of intent to seek the death penalty. The death penalty was sought against Franklin, and the trial court denied Franklin’s pre-trial motion to strike the death penalty notice, in which Franklin sought an evidentiary hearing to prove the alleged aggravating circumstances were not supported by the evidence. The case proceeded to trial, and the jury returned a guilty verdict on both counts after deliberating for 90 minutes. The trial court again addressed the motion to quash the death penalty and denied it in part, ruling that evidence was presented from which the jury could find one of the aggravating circumstances set forth in the State’s notice, thereby permitting the case to proceed to the sentencing phase. After a period of jury deliberation, the trial court declared the jury to be deadlocked on the issue of punishment. The trial court then sentenced Franklin to life without parole. The trial court denied Franklin’s motion for new trial.[1]1. Although Franklin does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to convict him, it is this Court’s practice to conduct an examination of the record to determine the legal sufficiency of the evidence in murder cases. Having done so, we conclude the evidence presented at trial and summarized above was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find Franklin guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes of which he was convicted. See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (III) (B) (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).2. After filing a notice of intent to seek the death penalty, the State filed a notice of three statutory aggravating circumstances which, according to the State, would support the imposition of the death penalty. Citing OCGA § 17-10-30 (b) (7), the State alleged first that the murder was outrageously and wantonly vile, horrible and inhuman in that the murder involved an aggravated battery to the victim, and secondly that it involved depravity of mind. Citing OCGA § 17-10-30 (b) (2), the State alleged the murder was committed while the defendant was engaged in the commission of an aggravated battery to the victim.[2] Prior to trial, Franklin moved to dismiss and exclude the notice of statutory aggravating circumstances on the ground that the facts alleged in the indictment and the evidence reflected in the autopsy report were insufficient to establish the statutory aggravating circumstances necessary to support the imposition of the death penalty in the event he were convicted of murder. After a hearing at which the trial court refused to admit expert testimony about the autopsy report, the court denied the motion, stating that a trial court lacks authority to rule prior to trial that the State cannot prove its case for imposing the death penalty. The trial court considered the motion again after the close of the evidence in the guilt-innocence phase of the trial for purposes of determining whether the imposition of the death penalty should be submitted to the jury, and again the court denied it in part.On appeal, Franklin asserts the prosecutor sought the death penalty in this case in bad faith, in an attempt to improve the odds of a conviction by seating a death-qualified jury. Even though the death penalty was not imposed, Franklin argues that this Court should grant a new trial where a bad-faith purpose for seeking the death penalty is shown. He argues that bad faith is demonstrated in this case because, pursuant to the notice of statutory aggravating circumstances and the evidence the State could (and ultimately did) present in support of these circumstances, he was not eligible for the death penalty as a matter of law. Franklin recognizes it would be moot to assert as error that the evidence actually presented at trial was insufficient to support the death penalty because the death penalty was not imposed. Nevertheless, he asserts that the alleged insufficiency of the evidence presented at trial is relevant to demonstrate that sufficient evidence was lacking prior to trial, and thus the trial court erred in denying his pre-trial motion and permitting the case to proceed as a death penalty trial and permitting the jury to be death qualified. Accordingly, Franklin argues, the trial court abused its discretion to spare him from having to endure a death penalty trial, and thereby violated his constitutional rights to a fair proceeding before a representative and unbiased jury.Franklin complains that the trial court wrongly assumed it had no authority to determine prior to trial whether the aggravating circumstances alleged by the State would be sufficiently proved by the evidence to support the imposition of the death penalty. In support of his assertion that the trial court possesses such authority, Franklin points to cases in which this Court has examined factual and legal issues raised by a defendant’s pre-trial motion to quash the State’s notice of intent to seek the death penalty. But those cases addressed, for example, the legal sufficiency of the allegations in the notice of intent to state a basis for the imposition of the death penalty; they did not approve a pre-trial determination of whether the facts a defendant expected to be established at trial would prove, or not, the State’s allegations. See Leach v. State, 259 Ga. 33, 34 (2) (376 SE2d 667) (1989) (rejecting the appellant’s assertion that the trial court erred in failing to grant a pre-trial motion to prevent the State from seeking the death penalty “on the ground that the state’s case, as he then understood it, did not adequately present any statutory aggravating circumstances, and that the state was seeking the death penalty merely to inflame the minds of the jury against [him] through voir dire so as to enhance its chances of a favorable guilt-innocence verdict.”); State v. Terry, 257 Ga. 473 (1) (360 SE2d 588) (1987) (addressing whether the aggravating circumstances of OCGA § 17-10-30 (b) (1), relating to the defendant’s status as a previously convicted capital felon, could legally be established only by the defendant’s status at the time he committed the crime charged or by his status at the time of sentencing).In fact, the allegations asserted in the notice of aggravating circumstances filed in this case would support the imposition of the death penalty if they were proved at trial. In his motion to quash the notice of aggravating circumstances, Franklin asked the trial court to make a predetermination of factual issues. Factual disputes, however, are to be resolved by a jury where, as here, the defendant sought a trial by jury. That rule applies to factual disputes regarding proof of aggravating circumstances for the imposition of the death penalty, just as it applies to factual disputes regarding proof of the elements of the crimes charged. Franklin points to no authority under Georgia law for his argument that factual disputes relating to statutory aggravating circumstances for the imposition of the death penalty may be determined by the judge prior to trial. Franklin asserts, however, that the pre-trial determination of whether the death penalty may be sought in a murder case has been approved by the courts of certain other states, and he urges this Court to follow suit. But as this Court has stated, in Georgia a prosecutor’s discretion to seek the death penalty is limited by the statute defining the aggravating factors that must be shown to impose the death penalty, as well as the jury’s decision, based on the evidence, of whether to impose it. Wagner v. State, 282 Ga. 149, 152 (5) (646 SE2d 676) (2007). Andthis Court has repeatedly rejected challenges to the legislature’s determination that district attorneys should have the discretion to decide whether a murder defendant meets the statutory criteria for the death penalty and whether to pursue the death penalty when a defendant is eligible.(Punctuation and citation omitted.) Id. Except in cases in which the death penalty notice is challenged on legal grounds (which was not the basis for the challenge in this case), and not factual ones, we decline to adopt the views of what appears to be a minority of states that a prosecutor’s decision to pursue the death penalty is subject to pre-trial review.[3]Moreover, the assertion that “the death-qualification of jurors leads to the selection of juries that are slanted in favor of conviction at the guilt- innocence phase of a death penalty trial” has been resolved adversely to Franklin. Leach v. State, supra, 259 Ga. at 35 (2), citing Lockhart v. McCree, 476 U.S. 162, 177-184 (106 SCt 1758, 90 LE2d 137) (1986). See also Brockman v. State, 292 Ga. 707, 719 (7) (d) (739 SE2d 332) (2013); Riley v. State, 278 Ga. 677, 685 (6) (B) (604 SE2d 488) (2004); Brannan v. State, 275 Ga. 70, 79 (10) (561 SE2d 414) (2002); DeYoung v. State, 268 Ga. 780, 790 (11) (493 SE2d 157) (1997). Despite Franklin’s reliance on social science research for the proposition that removing otherwise qualified jurors from the panel based on their opposition to the death penalty skews the jury in favor of the prosecution on the threshold issue of guilt, we are not persuaded to reverse our long-standing conclusion on this issue.3. Franklin also asserts the trial court improperly denied his motion to dismiss the indictment on the ground that the grand jury that indicted him was drawn from a grand jury pool that systematically underrepresented blacks and overrepresented whites, in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. He claims this was a result of a selection process known as “forced balancing” the pool to the most recent decennial census for the county. Citing Ricks v. State, 301 Ga. 171 (800 SE2d 307) (2017), Franklin argues that due to Douglas County’s quickly changing racial demographics, this practice left the racial proportions of the jury pool significantly out of line with the demographics of the county at the time the grand jury pool was selected, which was more than ten years from the date of the latest available census taken in 2000. At the time of Franklin’s indictment in November 2010, however, the Jury Composition Reform Act of 2011, Ga. L. 2011, pp. 69-70, § 1-16, that replaced the forced balancing approach to creating grand and traverse jury pools, had not yet taken effect, as the effective date of that Act was July 1, 2012. See also Ga. L. 2012, Act 599, § 3-2. Instead, the forced balancing method to form lists from which the grand jury was summoned at the time Franklin was indicted was effectively required under the then-applicable version of the Unified Appeal procedure promulgated by this Court to guide trial courts in the administration of death penalty cases. See Ellington v. State, 292 Ga. 109, 118 (4) (735 SE2d 736) (2012). Furthermore, it is undisputed that the results of the 2010 decennial census had not yet been published at the time the grand jury pool that indicted Franklin was selected. Nevertheless, Franklin argues that 2008 and 2009 official census estimates were available at the time his grand jury pool was selected, and they could have been employed to arrive at a pool that was more accurately balanced by racial composition.In Williams v. State,[4] a case that also pre-dated the effective date of the Jury Composition Reform Act and which was decided just before this grand jury pool was certified, this Court examined a similar argument to a jury pool that had been forced-balanced to the most recently available decennial census rather than to more current demographics of the county in which the defendant was to be tried. In the opinion affirming the trial court’s denial of the defendant’s constitutional challenge, we acknowledged that even though the previously approved procedure of force-balancing to the most recently available decennial census could create temporary anomalies as census reports age, we concluded “the ill done by those temporary anomalies is outweighed by the other benefits of the procedure.” Id. at 738 (2). Franklin urges that this Court should not affirm the denial of his motion to dismiss the indictment in this case because the demographic discrepancies between the grand jury pool and the county’s population in this case were greater than those involved in Williams, but we reject that argument.Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.