IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2022-KA-00447-COA
ALLEN M. RUSSELL A/K/A ALLEN RUSSELL APPELLANT
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/07/2022 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JON MARK WEATHERS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: FORREST COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: W. DANIEL HINCHCLIFF ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: ALLISON ELIZABETH HORNE DISTRICT ATTORNEY: PATRICIA A. THOMAS BURCHELL NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 10/17/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., McCARTY AND SMITH, JJ.
SMITH, J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. A Forrest County Circuit Court jury convicted Allen Russell of first-degree murder.
The circuit court sentenced Russell to life imprisonment in the custody of the Mississippi
Department of Corrections (MDOC) and ordered the sentence to run consecutively to any
prior sentence imposed by the same or another court. On appeal, Russell argues the circuit
court erred by allowing a State’s witness to narrate the events depicted in a surveillance video
as excerpts of the footage were played for the jury during the witness’s testimony. Finding
no reversible error, we affirm Russell’s conviction and sentence.
FACTS ¶2. On the morning of November 29, 2017, Hattiesburg police officers investigated a
reported shooting at room 114 of the Deluxe Inn motel. Officers discovered a partially
clothed man—later identified as Bobby Gwin—slumped in a corner of the room. Gwin had
sustained three gunshots to his head and one to his arm. Officers found a condom wrapper
on the carpet near some vomit. On the bed inside room 114, officers found shell casings,
credit cards, and a folded piece of paper. The folded piece of paper turned out to be a
hospital bill for Russell. The bill provided not only Russell’s name but also his home
address. Officers also found a cell phone in the room. The cell phone was missing its SIM
(Subscriber Identity Module) card, which Sergeant Neal Rockhold testified was “what stores
your identity on that phone.”
¶3. In addition to Sergeant Rockhold, Lieutenant Dale Bounds and Detective Jeremy
Dunaway both responded to the crime scene. Upon interviewing witnesses, the officers
learned that a woman and her husband occupied the motel room beside Gwin’s room. The
woman reported hearing “pops” at 1:10 a.m. Lieutenant Bounds and Detective Dunaway
also watched the Deluxe Inn’s surveillance footage, which is the subject of Russell’s appeal.
The State introduced the surveillance footage into evidence during Lieutenant Bounds’s
testimony. But prior to Lieutenant Bounds’s testimony, the State called Detective Dunaway
as a witness. Although the State did not question Detective Dunaway on direct examination
about the Deluxe Inn’s surveillance footage, the subject arose during Detective Dunaway’s
cross-examination. Detective Dunaway stated multiple times on cross-examination that
2 Russell “was seen fleeing from the victim’s room with a firearm in his hand, which [Russell]
dropped [and then] picked up” before continuing to flee. The defense repeatedly questioned
Detective Dunaway about what proof supported his statements that Russell entered Gwin’s
motel room and why other potential suspects were eliminated from the investigation. During
this line of questioning, the following exchange occurred:
[Detective Dunaway]: [Russell’s] belongings were left behind in that room. There was evidence of him in that room. There was no evidence of [two other potential suspects] being inside the victim’s room.
[Defense Attorney]: Mr. Russell was actually in that room for about two hours on and off, wasn’t he, if you take it and add it all up together?
[Detective Dunaway]: He was there for quite some time.
[Defense Attorney]: And he left a medical bill with his name and his address on it, didn’t he?
[Detective Dunaway]: That’s correct.
¶4. The defense also repeatedly questioned Detective Dunaway about whether the
surveillance video clearly showed Russell leaving Gwin’s room and holding a gun. In
response to the defense’s questions, Detective Dunaway maintained his recollection was that
the surveillance footage showed Russell fleeing from Gwin’s motel room with a gun in his
hand that Russell dropped and retrieved. On redirect examination, the State asked Detective
Dunaway for the first time about his recollection of the surveillance footage as it related to
Russell. Detective Dunaway answered that from his recollection of the surveillance footage,
3 Russell could be seen entering Gwin’s motel room and then quickly exiting around 1:15 a.m.
Detective Dunaway believed Russell had returned to his apartment after Russell left the
Deluxe Inn.
¶5. The State then introduced into evidence both the surveillance footage and still
photographs taken from the footage during Lieutenant Bounds’s direct examination.
Lieutenant Bounds testified that the footage showed a black male hurriedly exiting Gwin’s
motel room at 1:10 a.m. Lieutenant Bounds stated that the suspect wore “a camo jacket
[with] black sleeves, black pants with slits on them, [and] metallic blue-gray looking tennis
shoes” and carried “a Pittsburgh Steelers ball cap in his right hand and what I believed to be
a cell phone also.” Lieutenant Bounds further stated that the suspect in the video “had a
goatee, kind of had like a little pot belly, [and] had a white T-shirt on . . . under the camo
jacket with the black sleeves.”
¶6. After obtaining a search warrant for Russell’s apartment, officers discovered Russell
hiding in the attic and took him into custody. Sergeant Rockhold testified that he recovered
a SIM card from inside Russell’s apartment that he later learned was linked to a cell phone
number for Gwin’s mother. After obtaining samples of Gwin’s and Russell’s DNA, officers
sent the samples and the vomit-stained carpet from room 114 for laboratory analysis. The
test results showed that the DNA sample collected from the vomit-stained carpet at the
Deluxe Inn matched the DNA sample obtained from Russell.
¶7. Lieutenant Bounds and Detective Dunaway testified about certain items they collected
4 from Russell’s apartment. Relevant to their investigation, the two officers found clothing
items consistent with those worn by the suspect seen on the Deluxe Inn’s surveillance
footage. These clothing items included a Pittsburgh Steelers ball cap, a camo jacket with
black sleeves, a pair of black pants with slits in the front, and a pair of metallic blue-gray
tennis shoes. Lieutenant Bounds also stated that at the time of Russell’s arrest, Russell wore
a white sleeveless shirt and had both a goatee and a pot belly. Upon further questioning by
the State, Lieutenant Bounds, without any objection from the defense, affirmatively
identified Russell as the man seen on the Deluxe Inn’s surveillance video who wore the same
clothing items later recovered from Russell’s apartment.
¶8. On cross-examination, the defense asked Lieutenant Bounds, “Was Allen Russell the
only person at the Deluxe Inn that day [of Gwin’s murder] wearing a camo shirt or a camo
jacket?” Lieutenant Bounds responded, “To my knowledge, yes.” At a later point during
cross-examination, Russell’s attorney questioned Lieutenant Bounds about the absence of a
gun or any ammunition in Russell’s possession at the time of Russell’s arrest. The defense
attorney then asked whether the entire case against Russell was based on the surveillance
footage, and Lieutenant Bounds answered that officers collected other evidence, such as
Russell’s hospital bill found inside Gwin’s motel room, that connected Russell to the crime.
Following Lieutenant Bounds’s response, the following exchange ensued:
[Defense Attorney]: Sure. I haven’t heard anybody deny that Mr. Russell was present there at the Deluxe Inn . . . , have you?
5 [Lieutenant Bounds]: I haven’t.
[Defense Attorney]: So do you know who else went into that room?
¶9. On redirect, the State questioned Lieutenant Bounds for the first time about the
absence of a gun found in Russell’s possession, which the defense had raised during cross-
examination. Lieutenant Bounds testified that the only gun-related evidence in the case
included “[t]he spent shell casings and the rounds that were recovered out of the wall and out
of Mr. Gwin” and what “appeared to be a firearm” in the possession of “[t]he person running
out of room 114” at the Deluxe Inn. Lieutenant Bounds further testified that based on his
observation of the surveillance footage, no one else entered Gwin’s room after Russell exited
at 1:10 a.m. In addition, Lieutenant Bounds stated he had uncovered no evidence during the
investigation to show that someone other than Russell was involved in Gwin’s murder.
¶10. The State next called Deboriouse Badon as a witness. Badon testified that he and
Russell were friends and that Russell was a fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers. According to
Badon, on the night leading up to Gwin’s death, Russell asked Badon to come to room 114
at the Deluxe Inn. Badon believed that a woman named Maya would be in room 114 along
with him and Russell. Badon testified, however, that there was no woman present and that
Gwin was instead there. Badon stated there was no evidence of vomit inside the motel room
while he was there and that Russell and Gwin were the only people who remained in the
room when he left around 11 p.m.
¶11. Fellow inmate Steve Walker Jr. testified that he and Russell were in the same area of
6 jail in February or March 2019. According to Walker, on multiple occasions Russell
admitted that he had “offed” Gwin. Walker stated, “[Russell] told me he met somebody on
the Internet that he thought was a woman and went to go meet him[;] . . . it wound up being
a man[,] and I guess things went wrong then.”
¶12. As its final witness, the State called Detective Chadra Daniels, who led the
investigation of Gwin’s death. Like Detective Dunaway and Lieutenant Bounds, Detective
Daniels testified that she had reviewed the surveillance footage at the Deluxe Inn. After
watching three days of surveillance video, Detective Daniels created a timeline of
surveillance-video events that she found relevant to her investigation into Gwin’s death.
Without any objection from the defense, the State introduced this timeline document into
evidence during Detective Daniels’s testimony. The State also entered into evidence an
exhibit that contained an abbreviated version of the Deluxe Inn’s surveillance video. The
abbreviated surveillance video showed only the relevant events included in Detective
Daniels’s timeline.
¶13. During Detective Daniels’s testimony, the State asked her to play the video excerpts
in the chronological order provided on her timeline. Following each excerpt, the State
questioned Detective Daniels about the events depicted in the footage. Detective Daniels
testified that the video showed Gwin arrive at the Deluxe Inn on November 27, 2017, dressed
as a male. After checking into room 114, Gwin later exited the room dressed as a female.
Detective Daniels testified that Russell arrived at the Deluxe Inn the following day, on
7 November 28, 2017. Russell walked around the motel property for a while before eventually
entering Gwin’s room. About fifteen minutes later, the video footage showed Badon park
his vehicle in front of room 114 and enter the motel room.
¶14. At this point during Detective Daniels’s testimony, the defense raised an objection.
The objection and related discussion occurred as follows:
[Defense Attorney]: Your Honor, I’m going to object to him [(the prosecutor)] continuing to read off of a document that’s in evidence. It’s in evidence. Part of my motion was that he not narrate, that nobody narrate. The evidence speaks for itself. I don’t have a problem with Detective Daniels telling what she thinks she sees. . . .
The Court: Not to interrupt you, but let’s kind of do it this way: Just move to whichever--in other words, you . . . tell her where to go and then let her narrate it.
[Prosecutor]: She’ll be allowed to do that?
The Court: Yes. She [(the defense attorney)] doesn’t object to that. Yes. I think her objection was she doesn’t want you testifying.
[Defense Attorney]: That was my objection.
The Court: Is that correct?
[Defense Attorney]: That’s it.
¶15. Upon resuming her testimony, Detective Daniels stated that the surveillance footage
showed Badon exit room 114 and get into his vehicle. Badon started to back out of his
parking spot before pulling back in the spot. Detective Daniels testified that Russell then
exited the motel room, walked to the driver’s side door of Badon’s vehicle, spoke to Badon,
8 and walked back inside room 114. Badon next pulled out of the parking spot and left the
motel. Detective Daniels stated that Russell later opened the door to room 114 once more
for a few seconds before closing the door and thereafter remaining inside the motel room.
¶16. The following morning, on November 29, 2017, Demetrius Willis arrived at the motel.
Detective Daniels testified that Russell opened the door to room 114, retrieved an item from
inside the motel room, and handed the item to Willis. Detective Daniels stated that Willis
never entered room 114, and Russell closed the motel room door again after handing Willis
the unknown object. At 1:10 a.m., Russell opened the door to room 114 and unsuccessfully
tried to close the door behind him as he exited the room. Detective Daniels testified that
Russell began to run away from the motel room. As Russell rounded a corner of the motel,
he “drop[ped] an item on the sidewalk area.” Earlier in her testimony, Detective Daniels had
stated that the footage showed the suspect, whom she later identified as Russell, “drop[] an
object onto the sidewalk area. It appears to be a gun. [He b]ends down, picks up the gun,
and places it back into his either left back pocket or left hip area and continues walking . . . .”
Detective Daniels testified that after Russell exited room 114, the video showed that no one
else entered the room until officers arrived to investigate.
¶17. Prior to Detective Daniels completing her testimony about the video excerpts, the
defense raised another objection. Russell’s attorney again stated that the defense did not
“mind them narrating what you can see in the [video footage] frame” but requested that
Detective Daniels not be allowed to narrate any events not specifically depicted in the video
9 frames. After the circuit court overruled the objection, Detective Daniels completed her
testimony about the video excerpts taken from the surveillance footage.
¶18. On cross-examination, the defense asked Detective Daniels about the number of
cameras at the Deluxe Inn and about Russell’s movements around the property. Unlike
during Detective Dunaway’s cross-examination, the defense did not challenge Detective
Daniels about her identification of Russell as the suspect seen on the surveillance footage.
Instead, while questioning Detective Daniels, Russell’s attorney asked, “So you saw Mr.
Russell talking to the manager of the place that night, didn’t you, on video?” Later, while
questioning Detective Daniels about the vomit found inside room 114, Russell’s attorney
stated, “We don’t deny [Russell] was there.” Finally, while questioning Detective Daniels
about the importance of the hospital bill found inside room 114, Russell’s attorney asked,
“To your knowledge, do we dispute [Russell] was in the room?” After the circuit court
overruled the State’s objection to the question, Russell’s attorney then asked, “Have you ever
heard me say [Russell] wasn’t there?”
¶19. The State rested after Detective Daniels’s testimony. After the defense presented its
case-in-chief, the jury deliberated and found Russell guilty of first-degree murder. The
circuit court sentenced Russell to life imprisonment in MDOC’s custody and ordered his
sentence to run consecutively to any prior sentence imposed against Russell by the same or
another court. Russell filed an unsuccessful motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict
or, alternatively, a new trial. Aggrieved, Russell appeals.
10 DISCUSSION
¶20. Russell’s sole argument on appeal is that the circuit court erred by allowing Detective
Daniels to narrate the parts of the surveillance video played during her testimony. Because
Russell’s attorney failed to contemporaneously object to the narration at trial, though, Russell
must rely on plain error. See Fisher v. State, 354 So. 3d 284, 288 (¶10) (Miss. 2022)
(“Generally, a party who fails to make a contemporaneous objection at trial must rely on
plain error to raise the issue on appeal, because otherwise it is procedurally barred.” (quoting
Swinney v. State, 241 So. 3d 599, 605 (¶13) (Miss. 2018))). Appellate courts employ plain-
error review “for correcting obvious instances of injustice or misapplied law” and “only in
situations when a defendant’s substantive or fundamental rights are affected.” Swinney, 241
So. 3d at 605 (¶14) (quoting Green v. State, 183 So. 3d 28, 31 (¶6) (Miss. 2016)). “To
determine if plain error has occurred, [the appellate court] must determine if the trial court
has deviated from a legal rule, whether that error is plain, clear, or obvious, and whether that
error has prejudiced the outcome of the trial.” Id. at 606 (¶15) (quoting Conner v. State, 138
So. 3d 143, 151 (¶19) (Miss. 2014)). Our caselaw holds that “[p]rejudice often is lacking
when the weight of the evidence against a defendant is overwhelming.” Id. (quoting Hall v.
State, 201 So. 3d 424, 428 (¶12) (Miss. 2016)).
¶21. A witness is permitted “to narrate video evidence when the narration simply describes
what is occurring in the video . . . .” Carruthers v. State, 348 So. 3d 1042, 1050 (¶20) (Miss.
Ct. App. 2022) (quoting Gales v. State, 153 So. 3d 632, 645 (¶41) (Miss. 2014)). Thus, “the
11 State’s asking Detective [Daniels] to describe what is happening in the video did not in itself
raise any red flags requiring the trial court to intervene despite no objection by counsel.”
Turner v. State, 366 So. 3d 855, 862 (¶27) (Miss. 2023). A witness’s video narration is
impermissible, however, “if the witness attempts to place his [or her] own subjective
interpretation of events transpiring in the video based on nothing beyond the witness’s own
inspection of the contents of the videotape.” Carruthers, 348 So. 3d at 1050-51 (¶20)
(quoting Gales, 153 So. 3d at 645 (¶41)). Here, Russell contends that Detective Daniels’s
narration crossed into impermissible subjective interpretation when she (1) testified that the
suspect seen on the surveillance footage dropped and retrieved a gun and (2) identified the
suspect as Russell.
¶22. As discussed, the defense never objected to Detective Daniels’s testimony. In
addition, the record clearly reflects that prior to Detective Daniels’s testimony, both
Detective Dunaway and Lieutenant Bounds had already similarly testified—without
objection from the defense—that Russell was the suspect seen on the surveillance footage
and that the footage showed Russell drop and retrieve what appeared to be a gun. Both
Detective Dunaway and Lieutenant Bounds testified at length about the clothing and physical
appearance of the suspect seen in the surveillance footage. The two officers also stated that
they recovered matching items of clothing from inside Russell’s apartment following his
arrest and that Russell’s physical appearance matched that of the suspect on the video. The
jury also heard testimony that Russell’s medical bill was found inside Gwin’s motel room,
12 Russell’s DNA matched the DNA taken from the vomit found inside Gwin’s motel room, and
the SIM card found inside Russell’s apartment was linked to a cell phone number associated
with Gwin’s mother. Moreover, while cross-examining witnesses and during closing
arguments, the defense repeatedly conceded that Russell was not only at the motel but also
inside Gwin’s room.
¶23. “Counsel’s choice of whether or not to . . . call certain witnesses, ask certain
questions, or make certain objections falls within the ambit of trial strategy.” Sandlin v.
State, 312 So. 3d 1191, 1197 (¶14) (Miss. Ct. App. 2020) (quoting Hill v. State, 850 So. 2d
223, 226 (¶14) (Miss. Ct. App. 2003)). Here, the defense pressed both Detective Dunaway
and Lieutenant Bounds on their personal observations to support their identifications of
Russell as the suspect seen on the video and their statements that Russell appeared to drop
a gun as he left the motel. Rather than similarly challenge Detective Daniels’s testimony
regarding these matters, however, the defense made an apparently strategic decision to avoid
these topics during her cross-examination, [a]nd the trial court cannot [now] be held in error
for allowing trial counsel’s chosen strategy.” Turner, 366 So. 3d at 862 (¶28).
¶24. Further, during closing arguments, the defense attempted to use both the surveillance
footage and the testimony about the video to Russell’s strategic advantage. Russell’s
attorney pointed out that despite all the time spent discussing and watching the surveillance
footage, the video failed to show that Russell actually shot Gwin. The defense further
asserted that Gwin’s facial hair was visible and that Russell would not have mistaken Gwin
13 for a woman—especially after the two spent several hours hanging out together in the same
motel room. Finally, the defense attorney used the surveillance footage and related testimony
to cast doubt as to the item that Russell dropped as he left the motel. According to the
defense’s argument, the State could not definitively identify the item as a gun “when every
witness from the witness stand went to great lengths to say what appeared to be a gun.”
¶25. Based upon our review of the record and relevant caselaw, we find that the alleged
evidentiary error Russell now raises on appeal was neither obvious nor prejudicial. For the
foregoing reasons, we find that no error—let alone plain error—arose from the circuit court’s
failure to sua sponte prevent Detective Daniels’s now-disputed testimony as she narrated
portions of the surveillance footage for the jury.
CONCLUSION
¶26. Because we find no error, we affirm Russell’s conviction and sentence.
¶27. AFFIRMED.
BARNES, C.J., CARLTON AND WILSON, P.JJ., GREENLEE, WESTBROOKS, LAWRENCE, McCARTY AND EMFINGER, JJ., CONCUR. McDONALD, J., CONCURS IN PART AND IN THE RESULT WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.