IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2019-KA-00028-COA
ANDRE K. KENNEDY A/K/A ANDRE KENNEDY APPELLANT
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/18/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JEFF WEILL SR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: ERIN ELIZABETH BRIGGS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: LISA L. BLOUNT DISTRICT ATTORNEY: ROBERT SHULER SMITH NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/23/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:
EN BANC.
BARNES, C.J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. A Hinds County Circuit Court jury convicted Andre Kennedy of armed robbery,
attempted kidnapping, and burglary. The trial court sentenced Kennedy to forty-five years
for armed robbery, five years suspended and forty years to serve, and placed on five years of
post-release supervision; to serve twenty-five years for attempted kidnapping; and to serve
twenty years for burglary, with the sentences ordered to run concurrently in the custody of
the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC). The court denied Kennedy’s motion
for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) or, in the alternative, a new trial. He appeals, arguing that the circuit court erred in refusing the defense’s requested jury
instructions on circumstantial evidence. Finding no error, we affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. At approximately 6:00 a.m. on May 16, 2015, two armed men wearing bandannas over
their faces approached Dr. Lawrence Goldstein in his driveway while he was loading
equipment for a shooting competition into his truck. Goldstein’s wife was asleep in the
house. Although Goldstein could not see the men’s faces, he later described them as being
in their twenties. The men demanded money, and the first assailant put a gun to Goldstein’s
head. When Goldstein could not find his billfold, the assailants led him into the garage at
gunpoint to Goldstein’s gun safe. The assailants took handguns and a rifle from the safe and
put them in a bag.
¶3. The gunmen then forced Goldstein into his house to find his billfold and cash. The
first assailant took $500 cash from the wife’s purse. Goldstein could not find his billfold, but
he remembered his debit card was in the truck; so the men forced Goldstein to drive his truck
to the nearest ATM, with the armed assailants sitting in the back seat. Goldstein withdrew
a total of $1,500 in $500 increments. A surveillance video from the bank showed the doctor
withdrawing cash from the ATM. According to Goldstein, the assailant sitting directly
behind the doctor had a handgun, and the one sitting in the rear passenger seat had a long
gun.
¶4. Goldstein was then directed to a wooded area near his home behind Northminster
Baptist Church on Ridgewood Road in Jackson, Mississippi. Knowing Goldstein’s wife had
2 jewelry, the assailants told him that they were going back to his house to get his wife, and
they directed Goldstein to get out of the truck. As he opened the door, Goldstein grabbed a
9mm handgun hidden in the side pocket of the driver’s door and began shooting at the men,
fatally wounding the first assailant seated behind him. The second assailant escaped, running
toward Goldstein’s home. Worried for his wife’s safety, Goldstein removed the first
assailant from the truck and began driving home. Turning onto Ridgewood Road, Goldstein
saw the second assailant get into a SUV parked at the church’s rear parking lot. As the SUV
began to exit the lot, Goldstein shot at it three times. However, the SUV continued out of
the parking lot onto Eastover Drive, and Goldstein lost sight of it. The doctor returned to
where he had shot the first assailant, who was later identified as Edwin Robinson. He then
went to the nearest house to call his wife and 911.
¶5. An investigation by the Jackson Police Department (JPD) led to the arrest of Kennedy,
Robinson’s best friend and roommate. Kennedy was indicted on February 26, 2016, for
armed robbery, attempted kidnapping, and burglary of a dwelling. A jury trial was held in
the Hinds County Circuit Court on December 10-12, 2018.
¶6. JPD Detective James Roberts testified to his investigation of the case. He identified
Robinson, the deceased assailant, from an ID card in his pocket and notified Robinson’s
mother, Regina Jefferson, of his death. Jefferson told the investigator that if her son was
with anyone it would have been Kennedy, Robinson’s roommate; so the police went to
Kennedy and Robinson’s apartment and spoke with Jacqueline Funchess, Kennedy’s
girlfriend. According to Roberts, Kennedy came to the police station on May 19 and gave
3 a statement. Kennedy, an MDOC employee, had an arm injury that he claimed he received
at work the previous night. Roberts noted that there were “graze marks” on the driver’s side
door of Kennedy’s SUV. Kennedy told the detective that his SUV had been damaged in an
accident a couple of weeks earlier and that his left rear taillight was out. Kennedy denied
being with Robinson on the morning of the incident, instead claiming that he awoke at 5:00
a.m. and went driving. Worried something was wrong, Kennedy told Roberts that he rode
around south Jackson looking for Robinson without success. He returned to his apartment,
gathered his things, and left for a National Guard drill. Funchess told Roberts a different
story—that Kennedy had left with Robinson the night before and that when he returned that
morning, Kennedy had been injured.
¶7. Goldstein, the victim, could not identify Kennedy as the second assailant due to the
bandanna covering his face. Goldstein said that the second assailant got into a tan SUV with
a rear light out and no license plate and that upon viewing the church’s surveillance video
and still photograph, Goldstein identified the SUV as being the one he saw drive out of the
parking lot. He also identified the person seen running in the video as the second assailant.
Goldstein testified that the assailants stole $1,500 that he withdrew from the ATM and $500
from his wife’s purse, none of which was recovered.
¶8. The pastor from Northminster Baptist Church identified a surveillance video from the
morning of the incident showing the church’s back parking lot adjacent to the Goldstein
house and a drive-through area. The video and still shots show an individual running toward
the parking lot and then an SUV, with the rear taillight out, exiting the parking lot.
4 ¶9. JPD mobile crime scene Investigator Maimee Barrett processed the crime scene,
collecting evidence and taking photographs. Barrett testified that she observed a white
Toyota pick-up truck with blood stains on the back seat, a deceased subject (Robinson) on
the ground, spent shell casings near the body, and Goldstein’s gun on the truck-bed cover.
Goldstein’s pack containing some weapons was also found on the rear floor and seat.
Robinson was wearing blue disposable gloves and a white kerchief. Upon searching
Kennedy’s SUV, Barrett noted that the left taillight was burned out and that the SUV had an
easily removable license plate. There was a bullet hole or graze on the driver’s side of the
SUV. Barrett recovered blue disposable gloves, similar to the gloves found on Robinson,
from the front passenger-side door of Kennedy’s SUV. She also recovered a glass-shop
receipt from the interior of the SUV that showed a rear panel window was replaced on the
day of the incident.
¶10. Robinson’s mother, Jefferson, testified that she had known Kennedy for several years
because her son Robinson and Kennedy were best friends. She said that Robinson lived with
Kennedy and Funchess and that Kennedy had been at her house numerous times. According
to Jefferson, Kennedy came to see her on May 16, wearing his army clothing, and said that
his dad had told him about Robinson’s death. That night, Jefferson talked with Kennedy by
phone, and he told her that he and Funchess were in the room when Robinson told them he
was going out. Kennedy said that he did not know with whom Robinson left, he just knew
that he left. The following day, Kennedy and Funchess brought some of Robinson’s things
to Jefferson, and Kennedy again said that Robinson left with someone else but he did not
5 know whom. Jefferson said that Funchess commented, “[T]hat’s not what you told me,
Andre,” and Kennedy “snatched her up by her arm” and took her outside. Jefferson also
noted a bandage on Kennedy’s arm. Jefferson identified the SUV in the church’s
surveillance video as Kennedy’s and stated with certainty that the man seen in the video and
photograph was Kennedy.
¶11. Funchess testified that she and Kennedy had been dating about six months prior to the
May 16, 2015 incident. Funchess, Kennedy, and Robinson (a.k.a. “D”) began sharing an
apartment about three months before Robinson’s death. On Friday, May 15, Kennedy and
Robinson left the apartment and returned home around midnight, claiming to have been
taking care of business. The men were searching for Kennedy’s bandanna and asked
Funchess if she had seen it. She had not; so the men went to the back of the apartment and
left thirty minutes later, not informing Funchess where they were going. Kennedy returned
home around 6:30 a.m. on May 16, telling Funchess that after he dropped Robinson off, he
went to the Natchez Trail. When Kennedy returned to pick him up, he found Robinson dead.
Kennedy told Funchess someone started shooting at him when was trying to see the body.
Funchess testified that Kennedy’s arm was hurt, and she bandaged it. Then she went with
Kennedy to a glass-repair shop to get the window replaced in his SUV because the window
had been shot out when he was trying to get Robinson.
¶12. The following day, the couple went to see Jefferson. According to Funchess,
Kennedy told Jefferson that he had been with Funchess all night and that Robinson had gone
out and taken his SUV. Kennedy also told Jefferson that he found out about Robinson’s
6 death when they did. Funchess testified that Kennedy told Jefferson a different story than
what he told her, including when he learned of Robinson’s death. Kennedy had a large
amount of cash when he returned home that Saturday morning, and she said that it was
unusual for him to have that much cash. Kennedy previously told her about a money scheme
that he, Robinson and a second friend named “D” had planned; so she assumed that was
where he got the money. On May 16, Kennedy paid their past-due rent ($600) and his past-
due car note that was over $400. In the following days, they took Funchess’s brother to the
movies and Kennedy’s sisters to Chuck E. Cheese. Kennedy and Funchess also went
shopping for clothes and jewelry with the extra cash. Receipts from their shopping trip were
found in his SUV and admitted into evidence. When the police came to their apartment on
May 16, Kennedy was not home. He had left, claiming that he was going to his weekend
drill with the National Guard. On May 19, Funchess gave a statement to the police, telling
them that during the time Kennedy was gone to drill, the second friend of Kennedy’s named
“D” stopped by the apartment looking for Kennedy. When he learned Kennedy was not
home, this “D” got in his vehicle, “screaming and talking to himself.” Funchess identified
Kennedy and his SUV in the church surveillance video and still photographs, noting that he
was wearing the same black shirt and khaki pants in the video that he had on when he left
their apartment with Robinson. Funchess said that the second friend named “D” was not the
man in the surveillance video and photograph; the second “D” was taller and darker than
Kennedy.
¶13. An employee with Auto Glass Now in Richland testified that Kennedy came to the
7 shop on May 16, 2015, between 12:00 and 5:00 p.m. to have a window replaced. He
replaced the back quarter glass on the driver’s side of Kennedy’s SUV. He noticed that
Kennedy had his arm bandaged and that there was blood on the steering wheel; so he asked
Kennedy if he broke out the window with his arm. Kennedy responded that he shot the glass
out. The employee later identified Kennedy in a photo lineup.
¶14. The State rested, and Dexter Russell, Kennedy’s father, testified for the defense.
According to Russell, the SUV in the surveillance video “look[ed] similar to the one [his]
son had,” but he did not recognize the person seen running in the church video as his son,
¶15. During the State’s rebuttal, one of Goldstein’s neighbors testified that he was walking
his dog before 6:00 a.m. on May 16 and noticed an “older Chevy Blazer with heavy tinted
windows and no tag” backed into a parking space at the church. About an hour later, he
heard gunshots. Funchess again testified that she recognized the man in the church’s video
and the photograph as Kennedy. Funchess reiterated that Kennedy was wearing the same
clothes in the video that he had been wearing when he left their apartment and returned home
later that day. Even though she could not see his face very clearly in the video, Funchess said
she knew his stature and his build, and she had no doubt that it was Kennedy. She was also
sure that the SUV in the video was Kennedy’s.
¶16. The jury found Kennedy guilty of all counts. On December 18, 2018, the court
sentenced Kennedy to serve the following sentences in the custody of the MDOC: Count I,
armed robbery: forty-five years, with five years suspended and forty years to serve, and
8 placed on five years of post-release supervision; Count II, attempted kidnapping: twenty-five
years to serve; and Count III, burglary of a dwelling: twenty years to serve. The sentences
were ordered to run concurrently with credit for time served.
¶17. Kennedy filed a motion for a JNOV, alleging, among other assignments of error, that
“[t]he court erred in refusing appropriate jury instructions offered by Mr. Kennedy, including
but not limited to [d]efense instructions concerning the circumstantial evidence presented in
this case, D-12 and D-13, resulting in the improper and incomplete instruction of the jury[.]”
The trial court denied the motion, and Kennedy now appeals, reasserting his argument that
the court erred in denying his circumstantial-evidence instructions.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶18. This Court reviews a trial court’s giving or refusal of jury instructions for abuse of
discretion. Taylor v. State, 109 So. 3d 589, 595 (¶18) (Miss. Ct. App. 2013) (citing Victory
v. State, 83 So. 3d 370, 373 (¶12) (Miss. 2012)). “When reviewing the giving or refusal of
jury instructions, we do not view the jury instructions in isolation, but instead we consider
them as a whole.” Id. (citing Rushing v. State, 911 So. 2d 526, 537 (¶24) (Miss. 2005)).
DISCUSSION
¶19. The sole issue raised by Kennedy concerns whether the trial court erred in failing to
give the defense’s circumstantial-evidence instructions, Jury Instructions D-12 and D-13,
which stated:
Jury Instruction D-12: The [c]ourt instructs the jury that if there are two plausible theories arising out of the evidence in this case, and one tends to prove that Andre Kennedy committed the crimes charged herein, and another tends to prove that some other theory of who committed the crimes charged
9 herein, and if the jury is unable to determine from the evidence which of the two theories is true, the jury must accept that theory most favorable for Andre Kennedy and find him not guilty.
Jury Instruction D-13: The [c]ourt instructs the jury that if there is a fact or circumstance in this case susceptible to two interpretations, one favorable and the other unfavorable to Andre Kennedy, and when the jury has considered said fact or circumstance with all other evidence, and there is a reasonable doubt as to the correct interpretation, then you, the jury, must resolve such doubt in favor of Andre Kennedy, and place upon such fact or circumstance the interpretation most favorable to Andre Kennedy.
The [c]ourt instructs the jury that if you can reconcile the evidence upon any reasonable hypothesis consistent with Andre Kennedy’s innocence, you should do so and find him not guilty.
Kennedy contends that because there was no confession or any eyewitnesses that could
identify Kennedy as the assailant, the evidence was “wholly circumstantial,” and the court’s
failure to give the circumstantial-evidence instructions was error.
¶20. The Mississippi Supreme Court has held that “[d]irect evidence . . . must directly and
not by inference implicate the accused and not just show that there has been a crime.”
Burleson v. State, 166 So. 3d 499, 509 (¶29) (Miss. 2015) (internal quotation mark omitted).
“[E]xamples of direct evidence include an admission or confession by the defendant to ‘a
significant element of the offense,’ or eyewitness testimony ‘to the gravamen of the offense
charged.’” Id. (quoting Kirkwood v. State, 52 So. 3d 1184, 1187 (¶10) (Miss. 2011)).
¶21. Circumstantial evidence, on the other hand, is “evidence which, without going directly
to prove the existence of a fact, gives rise to a logical inference that such fact does exist.”
Id. (quoting Keys v. State, 478 So. 2d 266, 268 (Miss. 1985)). If there is no confession or
eyewitness testimony “to the gravamen of the offense charged, the defendant is entitled to
10 an instruction requiring the jury to exclude every other reasonable hypothesis other than that
of guilt before a conviction can be had.” Id. (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
“A circumstantial-evidence instruction provides that the State must prove the defendant
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of all reasonable hypotheses consistent
with innocence.” McInnis v. State, 61 So. 3d 872, 875-76 (¶11) (Miss. 2011) (emphasis
omitted). “A two-theory instruction provides that when a jury has considered facts and
circumstances along with all other evidence, and every reasonable theory of innocence has
been excluded, the jury must resolve the case in favor of the defendant.” Evans v. State, 119
So. 3d 1084, 1086 (¶10) (Miss. Ct. App. 2013).
¶22. At trial, the State proffered two circumstantial-evidence instructions, S-8 and S-9.
The trial judge expressed hesitation in giving the State’s circumstantial-evidence instructions,
citing two cases: Harris v. State, 908 So. 2d 868 (Miss. Ct. App. 2005), and Johnson v.
State, 999 So. 2d 360 (Miss. 2008). Upon review of the cases, the State withdrew S-9 and
objected to the defense’s proffered circumstantial-evidence instructions. With no objection
by the defense, the trial court gave instruction S-8, which stated:
Any fact in this case may be proved by either direct or circumstantial evidence or by both. “Direct evidence” is direct proof of a fact such as testimony by a witness about what that witness personally saw, heard, or did. “Direct evidence” is the testimony of someone who claims to have actual knowledge of a fact. “Direct evidence” is simply evidence which, if you believe it directly proves a fact. An example is if a witness testified that he saw it raining outside, and you believed him, that would be direct evidence that it was raining.
“Circumstantial evidence” is proof of a fact or facts from which you could conclude, by your reason and common sense that another fact exists even though it has not been proven directly. “Circumstantial evidence” is proof of
11 one or more facts from which you could find another fact. “Circumstantial evidence” is simply a chain of circumstances that indirectly proves a fact. An example is if someone walked into the courtroom wearing a raincoat covered with drops of water and carrying a wet umbrella that would be circumstantial evidence from which you could conclude that it was raining.
The law makes no distinction between the weight to be given to either direct or circumstantial evidence. You as the jury should decide how much weight to give to any evidence.
However, when the trial judge asked if the defense was withdrawing D-12 and D-13, defense
counsel replied, “Absolutely not, Your Honor,” standing by its proffer of the two instructions
on the basis that all of the evidence was circumstantial. The trial judge refused D-12 and D-
13, finding that there was eyewitness testimony by the victim and that other evidence
presented by the State “was consistent with the eyewitness testimony.” In light of the court’s
ruling, defense counsel subsequently objected to the court’s giving Jury Instruction S-8.
¶23. We find no error in the trial court’s refusal of D-12 and D-13. “To receive the
two-theory instruction, the evidence must be purely circumstantial and two reasonable
hypotheses or theories arising out of the evidence must be presented to the jury.” Johnson
v. State, 235 So. 3d 1404, 1412 (¶24) (Miss. 2017). In Johnson v. State, 999 So. 2d 360, 366
(¶27) (Miss. 2008), the defendant asserted a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for
failure to ask for a circumstantial-evidence instruction, arguing that the evidence in the case
was completely circumstantial because there were no eyewitnesses and no confession. Id.
at 366 (¶27). The case involved the armed robbery of a fast-food restaurant, and the
testimony was that the robber wore a ski mask; so none of the victims could positively
identify the defendant as the armed robber. Id. at 361, 366 (¶¶1-2, 27). The Mississippi
12 Supreme Court determined there was direct evidence of the armed robbery by four employees
who were eyewitnesses to the crime and who testified to items used or taken by the masked
gunman during the robbery and to his threats to kill them. Id. at 367 (¶30).
¶24. Likewise, in the present case, we find there was direct evidence to prove the charged
offenses. Although the victim (Goldstein) could not positively identify Kennedy, he was an
eyewitness to the “gravamen of the offense charged,” identifying the person in the church’s
surveillance video and photograph as the second assailant. He also identified the SUV in the
video as the one the assailant got into and drove from the parking lot. Both Funchess,
Kennedy’s girlfriend, and Jefferson, who had known Kennedy for years, identified Kennedy
and his SUV in the surveillance video and photograph.
¶25. Moreover, Kennedy told Funchess that he was present at the crime scene. According
to Funchess, Kennedy dropped off Robinson and when he came back to pick him up, he
found Robinson dead and “that’s when someone started shooting at him” and the window of
his SUV was “busted . . . . when they was shooting at him after he was coming back to get
[Robinson].” In Price v. State, 749 So. 2d 1188, 1197 (¶29) (Miss. Ct. App. 1999), this
Court determined that although the defendant’s statement that he had been at the scene of the
crime within hours of the crime was not an admission to the crime, it did constitute “‘an
admission by the defendant on a significant element of the offense’ that ‘render[ed]
unnecessary the circumstantial evidence instruction.’” (Quoting Mack v. State, 481 So. 2d
793, 795 (Miss. 1985)). Here, while Kennedy did not confess to being the second assailant,
we find that his statement to Funchess—that he was at the scene of the crime for another
13 purpose and was shot at—constituted additional direct evidence as “an admission to a
significant element of the offense.” “If any evidence qualifies as ‘direct’ evidence, a circuit
court may refuse a circumstantial-evidence instruction.” Allen v. State, 111 So. 3d 679, 684
(¶10) (Miss. Ct. App. 2013) (citing McInnis, 61 So. 3d at 876 (¶13)).
¶26. Accordingly, we find the trial court did not err in refusing the defense’s proposed
circumstantial-evidence instructions.
¶27. AFFIRMED.
CARLTON AND J. WILSON, P.JJ., GREENLEE, WESTBROOKS, LAWRENCE AND C. WILSON, JJ., CONCUR. McDONALD, J., CONCURS IN PART AND DISSENTS IN PART WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. McCARTY, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION, JOINED IN PART BY McDONALD, J.
McCARTY, J., DISSENTING:
¶28. Because the only evidence presented at trial was circumstantial, the defendant was
entitled to a circumstantial-evidence jury instruction. For this reason, I respectfully dissent.
¶29. “The Rule in Mississippi is that a circumstantial evidence instruction should be given
only when the prosecution can produce neither eyewitness or a confession to the offense
charged.” Stringfellow v. State, 595 So. 2d 1320, 1322 (Miss. 1992). In this case, the
defendant did not confess, and there was not an eyewitness that he committed any crime.
¶30. “[E]vidence that implicates the defendant by inference is circumstantial evidence,
without regard to how persuasive the inference appears to be.” Moore v. State, 247 So. 3d
1198, 1202 (¶17) (Miss. 2018). “Moreover, the sum of circumstantial evidence, however
great it may be—and although often it is sufficient to sustain a conviction—never becomes
14 direct evidence.” Id. (emphasis added). “Direct evidence, on the other hand, must directly
and not by inference implicate the accused and not just show that there has been a crime.”
Grace v. State, 290 So. 3d 1261, 1264 (¶13) (Miss. Ct. App. 2019).
¶31. I believe today this Court is making the same mistake the Supreme Court had actually
corrected in another case dealing with circumstantial evidence. McInnis v. State, 61 So. 3d
872, 876 (¶14) (Miss. 2011). There, the evidence presented was that the defendant was
spotted in the vicinity of the crime immediately after the burglary occurred, the victim’s
purse was found in the front seat of the car the defendant was driving, and the testimony of
the burglary victim—who could only identify the perpetrator as a “stocky black male wearing
a white T-shirt.” Id. at 874 (¶8). This Court of Appeals found that rough and generic
description to be direct evidence against the defendant and affirmed the trial court’s denial
of a circumstantial evidence instruction. Id.
¶32. Then the Mississippi Supreme Court unanimously reversed: “While the Court of
Appeals identified various testimony as direct evidence that a crime was committed, this was
not direct evidence that McInnis committed the crime[.]” Id. at 877 (¶14) (emphasis by the
Court).
¶33. In this case, just as in McInnis, Kennedy never confessed, and the State never
presented a single eyewitness that Kennedy committed any crimes. The victim did not testify
that he saw Kennedy do anything, because he could not identify him; rather the victim’s
testimony only proved that the crime had occurred. Likewise, the victim’s girlfriend’s
testimony only proved that Kennedy was in the vicinity. The jury was left to fill in the gap
15 that Kennedy was the perpetrator.
¶34. The State itself even acknowledged this was a circumstantial case, if not a two-theory
one, when it offered Jury Instruction S-9—a circumstantial evidence instruction.1 Further,
the State even stated that it “believe[d] a circumstantial evidence instruction is required[.]”
(Emphasis added).
¶35. Because we are making the same mistake as in McInnis, I respectfully dissent.
McDONALD, J., JOINS THIS OPINION IN PART.
1 Jury Instruction S-9 read:
The Court instructs the Jury that unless the State has proved the defendants guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of every reasonable hypothesis consistent with innocence then you must find the defendant not guilty.