Doyle, Presiding Judge. In this declaratory judgment action filed by Country Mutual Insurance Company against Elisabeth Cannon (its insured) and Vernon and Bridget Marcus (tort claimants), the Marcuses appeal from an order granting summary judgment to Country Mutual on the ground that the acts that caused the injuries at issue were criminal in nature and therefore not covered by Cannon’s insurance policy. Because the policy does not cover criminal acts of its insured, and the record before us demonstrates that Cannon’s acts were criminal, we affirm the grant of summary judgment to Country Mutual. On appeal from the grant of summary judgment, we construe the evidence most favorably towards the nonmoving party, who is given the benefit of all reasonable doubts and possible inferences. The party opposing summary judgment is not required to produce evidence demanding judgment for it, but is only required to present evidence that raises a genuine issue of material fact. Our review of the grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment is de novo.[1] So viewed, the record shows that for a period of time leading up to January 2017, Cannon observed what she believed was “suspicious activity,” loitering, and vandalism by young people on the sidewalk in front of her house. Cannon had made numerous complaints to local authorities, and on the afternoon of January 16, 2017, she again called the police to complain of disorderly juveniles. A sheriff’s deputy responded, and Cannon, after using racial epithets, identified three fourteen-year-old African-American boys who she said previously had thrown rocks at her house and car; she admitted that they had not done so on that day. The deputy was able to locate the three boys, who explained that Cannon had called them racial epithets, and they had responded by calling her “bitch.” Based on his interaction with Cannon, the deputy warned the boys to stay on the other side of the street when passing by her house, knowing that Cannon was upset and hostile. The deputy returned to Cannon’s residence and told her that there was nothing more he could do. Shortly thereafter, the deputy received another call by Cannon’s father, who was upset. The deputy returned to the Cannon property and re-explained the situation to the father. During this conversation, Cannon produced a .38 revolver, and the father expressed concern about Cannon possessing the firearm, but Cannon assured him that she only wanted the weapon for self defense. She explained further that she might scare them by pointing at them and saying “I’ll kill you mother f—er.” The officer warned her that doing so would constitute a terroristic threat, and he also explained that she could not fire the weapon into the air. The deputy then concluded the visit. Approximately five hours later, police returned to the scene when Cannon called 911 to report that she had shot someone. Cannon told police that she was in her driveway when the three boys came onto her property and began throwing rocks at her and her adult daughter who had driven to Cannon’s home earlier. Cannon gave a statement to police stating, “I only wanted them to leave us alone. . . I only intended to scare them. I felt so threatened. I was so nervous that I shot several times.” Cannon stated that she did not intend to hit anyone, but nevertheless shot V. M., a juvenile returning home from the store with a friend. V. M. was struck in the head by a bullet and suffers permanent disabilities as a result. He and his friend apparently were uninvolved in any prior interactions with Cannon. Based on these events, Cannon was charged with two counts of aggravated assault and one count of aggravated battery. She entered a not guilty plea, but on the morning of trial, she changed her plea to guilty under North Carolina v. Alford[2] as to one count of aggravated assault on V. M., and the State nolle prossed the remaining two counts. The court accepted the following factual basis for the plea: On January 16, 2017, . . . in the evening . . . officers were dispatched to [the road near Cannon's] residence. There they found [V. M.], a 15-year-old African American male on the sidewalk. He suffered a gunshot wound to the head. He was transported to the Medical Center. The wound was in the back of the head exiting out the front, and the investigation showed that Cannon was the one [who] fired the weapon. Cannon did not make an assertion of self-defense or justification; the trial court sentenced Cannon to serve fifteen years in prison followed by five years of probation. In May 2017, V. M.’s parents made a claim under the home insurance policy issued to Cannon by Country Mutual. Country Mutual reserved its rights and filed the present action against Cannon and V. M.’s parents seeking a declaratory judgment as to its obligations under the policy with respect to the shooting. Country Mutual then moved for summary judgment, and after a hearing, the trial court granted the motion. The Marcuses now appeal. 1. The Marcuses contend that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment to Country Mutual despite factual issues in the record. Specifically, they point to an affidavit by Cannon and statements she made during her guilty plea to the effect that she was justified in shooting V. M. because she reasonably feared for her own safety. This, they argue, renders Cannon’s conduct not criminally culpable and not subject to the policy’s exclusion for criminal acts. Nevertheless, under Georgia case law, because this evidence amounts to self-serving testimony in contradiction of Cannon’s earlier admissions during her guilty plea, it does not suffice to create a genuine issue of fact for the purposes of summary judgment. We begin our analysis by looking at the exclusionary language at issue in the insurance policy: [Certain liability and coverage provisions] do not apply to the following: . . . “Bodily injury” or “property damage” arising from any criminal act. Criminal act means any act or omission which is criminal in nature or for which a penal statute or ordinance permits or requires any term of imprisonment or sentence of public service duties. This exclusion applies regardless of whether any “insured” is actually charged with or convicted of a crime and regardless of whether any “insured” subjectively intended the “bodily injury” or “property damage” for which a claim is made. . . . It is plain that this language encompasses the offense to which Cannon pleaded guilty, i.e., aggravated assault.[3] Based on the policy language and Cannon’s guilty plea to aggravated assault, the trial court ruled that the policy excluded coverage for any injuries caused by Cannon’s act of shooting V. M. The Marcuses challenge this ruling by relying on an affidavit filed by Cannon stating that she fired her weapon due to her reasonable fear for her safety, as well as her testimony at her sentencing hearing to the same effect. Based on these sworn statements from Cannon, they argue that there is evidence that Cannon had a justification defense to the criminal charges, so the evidence raises at least a fact question as to the criminality of Cannon’s conduct. In similar cases, in which an insured pleaded guilty to a criminal act, our courts have viewed the guilty plea as prima facie evidence of the facts supporting the guilty plea.[4] This is true even if the insured entered an Alford plea under a claim of innocence: [A]n Alford plea is one of guilt and may be accepted only if the court determines there is a factual basis for a determination of guilt. [Cannon's] guilty plea under Alford placed [her] in the same position as if [s]he had been convicted of [aggravated assault], and the collateral consequences flowing from an Alford plea are the same as those flowing from an ordinary plea of guilt. Accordingly, evidence that [Cannon] entered an Alford plea of guilt to [aggravated assault] was sufficient to establish a prima facie case that [Cannon committed a criminal act as defined by the policy].[5] This prima facie evidence showing that Cannon’s conduct falls within the criminal act exclusion creates a burden for the Marcuses to point to contrary evidence in the record creating a genuine issue of fact as to the criminality of Cannon’s conduct.[6] But Cannon’s self-serving affidavit and sentencing testimony are insufficient to do so. Our courts have held that when a person in Cannon’s position gives contradictory testimony as to her culpability, absent a reasonable explanation, such as incapacity at the guilty plea, “the law will construe this contradiction against [her].”[7] This is based on the principle in Prophecy Corp. v. Charles Rossignol, Inc.,[8] which held that the contradictory testimony of a partywitness, unless reasonably explained, will be construed against the party-witness on summary judgment.[9] Here, Cannon did not assert a justification defense in the criminal proceeding, and she faces the same collateral consequences as an ordinary plea of guilt. Further, the record does not reveal any infirmity on the part of Cannon or any flaw in the guilty-plea proceedings. “[T]he mere fact that . . . [additional and] conflicting [evidence] arose from [Cannon's self-serving affidavit and testimony] . . . does not prevent a Prophecy type rule from being invoked; testimony is testimony.”[10] Accordingly, based on the unrebutted prima facie evidence showing that Cannon’s conduct was subject to the policy’s criminal act exclusion, the trial court did not err by granting summary judgment to Country Mutual.[11] 2. Based on the foregoing, the Marcuses’ remaining enumerations are moot. Judgment affirmed. Hodges, J., concurs. McFadden, C. J., dissents.* *THIS OPINION IS PHYSICAL PRECEDENT ONLY. SEE COURT OF APPEALS RULE 33.2.