Amy Denise Towles v. State of Mississippi

193 So. 3d 688, 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 382, 2016 WL 3248844
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 14, 2016
Docket2014-KA-01226-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 So. 3d 688 (Amy Denise Towles v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amy Denise Towles v. State of Mississippi, 193 So. 3d 688, 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 382, 2016 WL 3248844 (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

BARNES, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. On September 20, 2012, Amy Towles was indicted for aggravated assault on William Clay Wells. After a jury trial in Alcorn County Circuit Court, she was convicted and sentenced to twenty years, with five years to be served in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC), fifteen years suspended, and five years of post-release supervision. After the circuit court denied her posttrial motions, Towles appealed. Finding the circuit court erred in refusing to give the defendant’s proposed self-defense instruction, we reverse and remand for a new trial. The State’s acknowledgment of improper “send-a-message” arguments to the jury further supports reversible error.

SUMMARY OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. Towles and Wells had a tumultuous, off-and-on dating relationship for four years, until Towles shot and seriously injured Wells with a .22-caliber rifle in the early morning hours ■ of June 17, 2012. Wells had spent the night at Towles’s residence the previous evening (June 15). Towles lived alone.in an upstairs apartment at her mother’s hpme/farm. Wells drove Towles’s van to his job the following morning, June 16, but he brought it back to her midday and went back to work. 1 He was later dropped off at Towles’s apartment by a coworker sometime between 7:00 and 8:30 p,m. that evening.

¶ 3. There is some discrepancy regarding the events that transpired after Wells arrived at Towles’s apartment that evening. According to Wells, Towles “wanted to go out dancing” when he got home, but he was tired from work; • so he just drank a couple of beers, planning to retire early. 2 He said Towles kept trying to convince him to go out, and they began argüing over “petty” things. He claimed Towles struck him “several times” and hit him with a 'full beer bottle.' He eventually went to bed sometime between 10:30 p.m. and midnight; Wells said that he awoke around 3:00 a.m. and found Towles sitting ■on the- couch, drinking alcohol and watching television, which prompted another fight.

*692 ¶4. Towles, however, asserts she had planned to stay home that evening and was not aware Wells was coming over. She claims she was preparing Father’s Day gift baskets, and a client stopped by at 9:00 p.m. to pick one up. 3 She said Wells was “agitated” and wanted to discuss moving in with her, and he was “angry” because she did not want him to accompany her to Memphis to visit her family the next day for Father’s Day. Towles did not want Wells to move in due to his past issues with drug abuse. She admitted “he did push [her] button one time that night, and [she] threw a lamp in his direction,” but denied hitting him. Towles stated that after she threw the lamp, she “caught [herself],” not wanting to fight with him anymore. She wanted to take him home, and Wells went downstairs, presumably to get his laundry. However, when Wells came back upstairs to the apartment, he “passed out on the couch”; so Towles went to bed, not wanting to “arouse him from sleep to fight some more.” Towles awoke in the middle of the night to find Wells angry and awake; he began throwing and breaking her dishes. She testified that, “in all of [their] fights, [she] had never seen anything like it, like a tornado.... [H]e was just tearing up everything.” She picked up her son’s .22-caliber rifle that was by the door, “trying to get him to focus on right then and where [they] were and [trying to get] him to calm down.” But she claimed it had the “opposite effect”; he broke the windows of the french doors to the apartment.

¶5. Wells admitted that he broke a dish “to release some anger and busted out the wall, but ... [he stated he] never laid a hand on [Towles].” He also acknowledges that he walked outside to the porch area and broke the glass of the apartment’s french doors. But Wells claims he decided to leave the apartment at that point and walk to the nearby truck stop to call a friend to pick him up; so he proceeded down the outside stairs to the driveway. He heard Towles run up behind him, and when he turned, he saw her with the rifle. Wells stated that Towles shot him in the driveway, and he had to drag himself up the stairs to where she was sitting and watching television. He contends she refused to help him at first, but eventually relented and called 911.

¶ 6. Towles’s version of events leading to the shooting is substantially different. She maintains that after Wells broke the glass in the french doors, he remained on the deck outside the doors, angrily pacing and shouting “ugly things” at her. It was at this point Wells “came straight at [her],” and when she reflexively backed up, the gun went off accidentally. Initially, she was not certain he was hit. When she realized he was injured, Towles said she went to get dressed to drive him to the hospital. She said she came back into the room, and Wells was drinking a soda from the refrigerator. He collapsed, and she could not lift him; so she called 911.

¶7. The record shows that Towles called 911 at 3:58 a.m., requesting an ambulance; the 911 operator testified that Towles told her there had . been “an accidental shooting.” Alcorn County Sheriffs Deputy Shane Crowe soon arrived on the scene, noting the broken glass in the french doors and “several broken dishes in the floor.” He asked Towles where the gun was; she initially replied that she was *693 not sure. However, she quickly produced the rifle and handed it to the deputy.

¶ 8. At this point, Wells was awake, but unresponsive. EMS took him to the local hospital for medical treatment. Although Wells’s injuries were, according to his surgeon, “almost uniformly fatal,” he survived. Wells, who has an admitted history of substance abuse, had Lortab, cocaine, and Adderall in his system at the time of the shooting. 4 He claimed that the drugs were taken “a day or two prior” to the incident.

¶ 9. In the meantime, Investigator Tommy Hopkins arrived and talked to Towles, who stated that the gun accidentally discharged. The investigator said Towles did not appear to be intoxicated, and she freely gave her version of the events. She told law enforcement that she had firearm experience, and she later testified: “I had been shooting guns most of my life [ (hunting) ], and I was just a few points short of expert marksmanship.” Deputy Crowe noted that “her story changed.” Towles initially stated that the gun fell and went off. However, she later told the deputy that she ■ pointed it at Wells, admitting she had pulled a gun on Wells “several times in the past” to calm him down when they would fight.

¶ 10. After a jury trial, Towles was convicted of aggravated assault on July 24, 2014. The circuit court sentenced her to twenty years, with five years to be served in the custody of the MDOC, fifteen years suspended, and five years of post-release supervision. She filed a motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) or, in the alternative, for a new trial, arguing that the sufficiency and weight of the evidence did not support the verdict and that the inclusion of the term “recklessly” in Jury Instruction S-l, as an element of the offense, constituted reversible error.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 3d 688, 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 382, 2016 WL 3248844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amy-denise-towles-v-state-of-mississippi-missctapp-2016.