Bolden v. State

23 So. 3d 491, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 193, 2009 WL 921136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedApril 7, 2009
Docket2008-KA-00108-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 So. 3d 491 (Bolden v. State) 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
Bolden v. State, 23 So. 3d 491, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 193, 2009 WL 921136 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

MYERS, P.J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. Jamie C. Bolden was convicted of sexual battery and sentenced to thirty years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections with ten years suspended and twenty years to serve, five years of post-release supervision, and registration as a sexual offender. He now appeals his conviction alleging the following errors: (1) he was irreparably prejudiced by improper opinion testimony; (2) violation of the witness-sequestration rule requires reversal; (3) the trial court erred in refusing the jury instruction regarding impeachment; and (4) the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence. We find each of these issues to be without merit; therefore, we affirm the trial court’s conviction and sentence.

FACTS

¶ 2. On September 25, 2004, Demetria Moore took her eight-year-old son, E.M., to a birthday party at Patricia Bolden’s home. A.B., a nine-year-old male, and D.B., an eleven-year-old male, were also attending. 1 Patricia is Bolden’s grandmother. That night E.M. spent the night with A.B. at Patricia’s house after the party. Eighteen-year-old Bolden lived with his mother, Penny Bolden, at the house next door to where the birthday party was held. Bolden is a cousin of both A.B. and D.B., and although he is not related to E.M., all lived on Little Egypt Road in Benton County when the incident is alleged to have taken place.

¶ 3. The next day, Sunday, Demetria returned home from church and saw E.M. walking in front of their driveway with Bolden and Bolden’s two sisters. Demet-ria picked up E.M. and drove down their driveway to their home. After she and E.M. got out of the car, but before they could get inside their house, E.M. disclosed to his mother that Bolden had taken him, A.B., and D.B. into a wooded area off Little Egypt Road near a pipeline that runs through the area. E.M. told his mother that Bolden had sex with E.M. and D.B. He then forced A.B. and E.M. to have sex with each other.

¶ 4. Upon hearing this, Demetria got back into her car and went to Frank Bol-den’s house. A.B. and D.B. were sitting on the front porch of the home. She asked the boys what had happened that day, and they related the same account to Demet-ria. Demetria then traveled to Penny’s home. There, she told Penny that Bolden had “messed with” E.M. Demetria testified that Bolden’s mother had stated that “[t]his boy going to make me have a heart attack” upon hearing the news. Next, Demetria and E.M.’s father, Russell Hunt, took E.M. to the Tippah County Hospital where a rape kit was performed. Seminal fluids were found on E.M.’s buttocks.

¶ 5. At trial, the jury was shown a videotaped interview of E.M. conducted by the Family Crisis Center in Oxford approximately one week after the sexual assault. In the video, E.M. relates the same story he told his mother on the night of the incident, detailing how Bolden forced the boys to have sex with him as well as each other. The nurse who aided in the administration of the rape kit, Kelty Childs, also testified. She assisted Dr. Roger Marlin in following the protocol of the rape kit *495 which involved a Woods lamp, a blue fluorescent light that makes sperm or seminal fluid glow when the overhead lights are turned off. She testified that she swabbed the area near E.M.’s rectum that had glowed under the fluorescent light and placed the swab in the rape kit package for evidence. A serologist from the Mississippi Crime Laboratory testified that the swabbed substance from the rape kit was seminal fluid. She also testified that the Woods lamp does not give false positives and only glows in relation to sperm or seminal fluid.

¶6. David Murphy with the Benton County Sheriffs Department testified that the sheriffs office had requested a DNA analysis after the serology report confirmed the presence of seminal fluid on the rape kit swabs taken from E.M. There was an insufficient sample for the Mississippi Crime Laboratory to determine the presence of DNA, but Scale Biolab, a private laboratory, was able to determine that the substance contained the DNA of E.M. and a second person. The sample was insufficient to determine the identity of the second person.

¶ 7. D.B. was called as a witness for the defense. On the stand, he testified that Bolden did not do anything to him, A.B., or E.M., but that Bolden had previously caught A.B. and E.M. in the woods and threatened to tell on them. 2 D.B. testified that he and his mother, Lisa Bolden, had met with District Attorney Ben Creek-more on the day of trial, and Lisa was upset because D.B. was going to testify against Bolden knowing he might go to jail. Lisa and Bolden’s mother are sisters and are very close. D.B. did not remember telling Creekmore that the story he had related to the Family Crisis Center in Oxford was true, or that he was angry at Bolden when he made up the accusations against him. The day of the trial was the first time that D.B. claimed the accusations he made against Bolden were false.

¶8. Pammie Davidson was called as a rebuttal witness for the State. She is the victims’ advocate coordinator for the Benton County District Attorney’s Office. Her duties include preparing victims for trial. When it became apparent that D.B. was going to recant his statement, the State asked her to leave the courtroom so it could call her as a rebuttal witness. Prior to this time, it was not anticipated that she would be called as a witness, and she was not subjected to the sequestration rule. Because of her presence in the courtroom, Bolden objected to her testimony. The prosecutor advised the trial court that she left the courtroom almost immediately after D.B. took the stand. The trial court held that she could testify, but it would entertain any contemporaneous objections if testimony contradicted the State’s position that she was an unexpected witness. Bolden did not make any such contemporaneous objections while Davidson was on the stand.

¶ 9. Davidson testified that she had been present during the conversation before trial between D.B. and his mother, Lisa. Davidson said that Lisa had become very upset when D.B. affirmed his prior statements. Lisa screamed and pointed her finger in the face of D.B., causing him to become tearful and withdrawn. Lisa told D.B. that he was making her chest hurt, she was sick to her stomach, Bolden was going to jail, and D.B. was going to help put him there. Lisa also told D.B. that Bolden’s trial was tearing the family apart. *496 After the exchange, Creekmore attempted to question D.B. again, but D.B. remained very upset and shook his head “no” to all the questions he was asked, including whether his testimony would be the same. The State did not call D.B. as a witness during its case-in-chief.

¶ 10. Bolden testified in his own defense. On the stand, he claimed that he woke up Sunday around 12:40 p.m. and went to Holly Springs with his girlfriend, Hailey Crosby. He did not return home again until 11:00 or 11:20 p.m. Sunday night. Bolden was cross-examined by the State regarding his notice of alibi which stated that Bolden, Edmond Morgan, and Travis Hodges had driven from Ashland to New Albany to Holly Springs and back to Ashland on that Sunday and had not returned until after dark on the same day. Prior to trial, both Morgan and Hodges had denied being with Bolden.

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Related

Bates v. State
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146 So. 3d 985 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 3d 491, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 193, 2009 WL 921136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolden-v-state-missctapp-2009.