Beasley v. State

136 So. 3d 393, 2014 WL 172114, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 28
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 2014
DocketNo. 2012-KA-01595-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 136 So. 3d 393 (Beasley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beasley v. State, 136 So. 3d 393, 2014 WL 172114, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 28 (Mich. 2014).

Opinion

WALLER, Chief Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Daniel Luther Beasley appeals from the verdict of an Amite County jury finding him guilty of murder. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 2. Janie Wilkinson owned a beauty salon behind her house in Liberty, Mississippi. She converted the salon into an apartment and allowed her nephew Daniel Beasley to live there. At a family gathering at Wilkinson’s house on Easter weekend of 2011, Wilkinson discussed converting the apartment back into a beauty salon for her granddaughter to operate. Wilkinson told Beasley that he would have to move out of the apartment at some point so she could begin renovations on the salon. Wilkinson later told her son Bill Bag-gett that Beasley had become very upset about having to move out of the apartment.

¶ 3. On May 14, 2011, Wilkinson went to Martha Kello’s house to play cards. When she arrived, she was visibly upset about, an incident with Beasley earlier in the day. Wilkinson had locked herself out of her house earlier in the day, so she asked Beasley to crawl through a window to retrieve the keys. Beasley had felt Wilkinson’s pockets to see if she had actually left the keys in the house, and this apparently had upset Wilkinson. Wilkinson played cards at Kello’s house until approximately 7:00 p.m. and then returned home. This was the last time she was seen alive.

¶ 4. Kello called Wilkinson several times over the next two days, but Wilkinson [396]*396never answered the phone. Kello became concerned, because she and Wilkinson usually talked on a regular basis, so she called Wilkinson’s sister Mary Artman. Artman had not heard from Wilkinson either.

¶ 5. Kello went to Wilkinson’s house on May 16, 2011, to check on her. She knocked on the front door and did not get an answer. The doors to the house were locked, but she noticed that the lights were on in the back of the house. Kello then went to pick up Artman, who had a spare key to the house, and then returned. Kel-lo and Artman entered the house and found Wilkinson’s dead body wrapped in a comforter in the back bedroom. She was wearing the same clothes she had been wearing at Kello’s house two days earlier. Wilkinson’s head was covered in blood, and blood was splattered on the walls and furniture in the room. Artman testified that she was so upset by the scene that she forgot to call 9-1-1. Instead, Artman called a store where she previously had worked and told them what had happened. An employee at the store then called 9-1-1.

¶ 6. Officer Sean Umbrello of the Liberty Police Department was the first to arrive on the scene. Umbrello described the scene as follows:

Large amount of blood in that room and also the hallway leading back to that room from the kitchen, there was drops of blood in the hall, and they stopped in the kitchen next to a counter where there was a purse on top of the counter.

The police found Wilkinson’s dog dead in a trash can just outside the house. The police did not find evidence of forced entry, and no items had been stolen from the house.

¶ 7. Anna Savrock, a crime-scene investigator with the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, performed an investigation of Wilkinson’s home and Beasley’s apartment shortly after the first responders arrived. Savrock noticed that Wilkinson’s arm was hanging in the air in an unnatural position due to rigor mortis and determined that Wilkinson’s body probably had been moved between ten and twelve hours after her death. During her investigation of Beasley’s apartment, Savrock found a bloody napkin in a trash can and noticed that the counters in Beasley’s bathroom were still wet. Using a chemical called Blue Star, Savrock found traces of what appeared to be blood in Beasley’s shower. Savrock explained that Blue Star reacts with bleach, as well as blood, but opined that the pattern of particles in Beasley’s shower was not consistent with a cleaning action.

¶ 8. Later that day, police officers found bloody clothes in a dumpster behind the local Exxon station. LaDonna Chapman, a cashier at the Exxon station, testified that she had seen Beasley behind the Exxon station when she was taking trash to the dumpster. In the dumpster, Chapman saw a jacket that Beasley had been wearing earlier. Chapman testified that she recognized Beasley because he came to the Exxon station almost every day. The police collected a blue hooded sweatshirt and gray sweat pants from the dumpster and sent cuttings from each to the Mississippi Crime Laboratory for testing. Joseph Cothern, an officer with the Liberty Police Department, testified that he had seen Beasley wearing these same clothes while he was walking down Main Street in Liberty on May 14, 2011. The blood found on the sweatshirt and sweat pants was determined to be consistent with a reference DNA sample taken from Wilkinson. DNA taken from skin cells found on the inside of the sweat pants was found to be consistent with a reference DNA sample taken from Beasley.

[397]*397¶ 9. Dr. Mark Levon, chief medical examiner for the State of Mississippi, performed the autopsy of Wilkinson’s body. Dr. Levon indicated that Wilkinson’s body had undergone “post mortem changes,” meaning that she had been dead for some time before she was discovered. Dr. Le-von determined that the cause of Wilkinson’s death was multiple sharp-force trauma, and that the manner of death was homicide. Wilkinson had suffered multiple blunt-force injuries, as well as sixteen “sharp force or cut or chop type injuries made to the head and neck area,” the most severe of which resulted in actual cutting of the skull. While no murder weapon was ever recovered,1 Dr. Levon indicated that Wilkinson’s injuries could have been caused by a hatchet, ax, or machete. During the autopsy, Dr. Levon discovered that Wilkinson also had sustained some defensive wounds to her hands, indicating that some sort of struggle had taken place before her death.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

¶ 10. Beasley was arrested and indicted for deliberate-design murder. Beasley’s indictment indicates that the State sought an enhanced penalty for the commission of a felony against a victim over the age of sixty-five. Prior to trial, Beasley filed a motion for mental evaluation to determine his competency to stand trial. The trial court granted this motion and ordered Beasley to undergo a competency examination. After the examination had been conducted, the trial court held a competency hearing and determined that Beasley was competent to stand trial.

¶ 11. A jury trial was conducted in the Circuit Court of Amite County, Mississippi, on September 18-19, 2012. Beasley chose to testify in his own defense. He claimed that, on the day of the murder, he was in his apartment when he heard loud noises coming from Wilkinson’s house. He stated that he became scared and ran into the woods behind the apartment. After fifteen or twenty minutes, Beasley claimed that he returned to Wilkinson’s house and went inside, where he found her dead body lying face-down. Beasley rolled her over to identify her and then moved her away from the back door of the house. Beasley admitted that he put Wilkinson’s dog in a trash can, but he denied killing the dog. He also admitted that he threw his bloody clothes into the dumpster behind the Exxon station. He claimed that he threw his clothes away because he was afraid the clothes would implicate him in the murder. Beasley never contacted the police or medical personnel.

¶ 12.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 So. 3d 393, 2014 WL 172114, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beasley-v-state-miss-2014.