Carlos Keys v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1994
Docket94-CT-00844-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Carlos Keys v. State of Mississippi (Carlos Keys v. State of Mississippi) 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
Carlos Keys v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 1994).

Opinion

6/17/97 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

OF THE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 94-KA-00844 COA

CARLOS KEYS A/K/A CARLOS D. KEYS AND NICK WILLIAMS A/K/A NICK A. WILLIAMS

APPELLANTS

v.

APPELLEE

THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION AND

MAY NOT BE CITED, PURSUANT TO M.R.A.P. 35-B

TRIAL JUDGE: HON. R. I. PRITCHARD, III

COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: PEARL RIVER COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:

ALBERT NECAISE FOR CARLOS KEYS A/K/A CARLOS D. KEYS

WILLIAM L. DUCKER FOR NICK WILLIAMS

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:

OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL

BY: JOLENE M. LOWRYDISTRICT ATTORNEY: CLAIBORNE McDONALD, IV

MANYA S. CREEL

NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL -- FOUR COUNTS AGGRAVATED ASSAULT

TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: GUILTY OF ALL FOUR COUNTS AND EACH DEFENDANT- SENTENCED TO SERVE FIFTEEN YEARS PER COUNT IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, EACH SENTENCE TO RUN CONSECUTIVELY FOR TOTAL OF SIXTY YEARS MANDATE ISSUED: 7/8/97

BEFORE THOMAS, P.J., COLEMAN, AND SOUTHWICK, JJ.

COLEMAN, J., FOR THE COURT:

A jury in the Circuit Court of Pearl River County found Carlos Keys and Nick Williams guilty of four counts of aggravated assault. The trial court sentenced both Keys and Williams to serve fifteen years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections for each count of aggravated assault with each sentence to run consecutively to, or begin after the completion of, the previous sentence for a total of sixty years to serve in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Keys and Williams each have appealed from the trial court's orders of conviction of the four felonies of aggravated assault in which the trial court sentenced them as we have recited. This Court decides all issues which these Appellants have presented in their appeal adversely to them and affirms the trial court's respective orders of conviction of both Keys and Williams.

I. FACTS

On February 3, 1992, Bobby Norfleet purchased a white 1986 Buick Regal from a couple in Picayune, Mississippi, for $1,000. After Norfleet had completed the purchase of this 1986 Buick Regal, he and Ricky McCormick were out riding in the car when they stopped at a store in Picayune. While they were inside the store, the Appellant, Carlos Keys, told Norfleet that he had wanted the same 1986 Buick Regal, but that Norfleet bought it before he, Keys, could get to the car's owners to buy it from them.

The next day, February 4, at approximately 9:30 a.m., Bobby Norfleet, Ricky McCormick, Bobbie Van Buren, and Norris Jackson were riding together in Norfleet's newly acquired Buick Regal. The four were traveling east on Weems Street en route to take Bobbie VanBuren to school when they approached the intersection of Weems and Davis Streets. This intersection is a four-way stop. Carlos Keys, Nick Williams, and an unidentified driver were traveling west on Weems Street, when both they and Norfleet stopped at the respective stop signs posted at this intersection. Keys and Williams got out of the car and walked toward Norfleet's Buick Regal

We recite the subsequent events harmoniously with the State's evidence because the jury found both Keys and Williams guilty. Keys approached Norfleet, the driver, at the driver's window. When Norfleet rolled down the driver's window to speak to Keys, whom he saw brandishing a handgun, Keys said to Norfleet, "Bitch, get out of the car!" Norfleet and some of the passengers in the car thought at first that Keys was kidding with Norfleet because of the previous day's conversation in the store between Norfleet and Keys, and they began laughing. Then some of Norfleet's passengers saw Williams approaching them from the passenger's side of the Buick Regal. They further noticed that as Williams approached the car, he was carrying a handgun and was also pulling a mask over his head. This was no joke!

Keys began to back away from the driver's side window while he repeated his command that Norfleet, McCormick, VanBuren, and Jackson get out of the car. Norfleet immediately feared that Keys and Williams would shoot his passengers and him so he pressed hard on the accelerator to leave the scene of the encounter with Keys and Williams as quickly as possible. Keys and Williams opened fire on the fleeing car, which shattered its rear window and hit the body of the car with several bullets. In the barrage of gunfire, Norfleet ran the car into a ditch; and Norris Jackson, who had been riding in the front passenger seat, fell out of the vehicle when its passenger's door swung open. Jackson got up and began to run down the street while Keys and Williams continued shooting until Jackson finally jumped into a clump of trees for cover. Jackson was positive that Williams fired at him as he ran down the street and jumped into the clump of trees. Norfleet drove his car out of the ditch, and Keys and Williams got back into the vehicle in which they had approached the intersection of Weems and Davis and drove away. Keys' and Williams' fusillade injured neither Norfleet nor any of his passengers.

After the encounter with Keys and Williams, Norfleet drove to a nearby service station, where Bobbie Van Buren got out of the car. With his sole remaining passenger, Ricky McCormick, Norfleet then headed south down Highway 11 to the neighboring community of Nicholson. Norfleet and McCormick immediately left Nicholson and returned to the Picayune area, where they next encountered Curtis Broughton, an officer with the Picayune Police Department, whom that department's dispatcher had sent to investigate the shooting which begot the case sub judice. Broughton was about to detain Norfleet and McCormick when, instead, after they saw Broughton's patrol car, Norfleet and McCormick went to Broughton to report the shooting incident. L. M. Davis, an investigator with the Picayune Police Department was already at the scene of the shooting, and he came to take Norfleet and McCormick to the Picayune Criminal Justice Center to reduce their respective statements to writing.

All four of the occupants of Norfleet's vehicle had known Carlos Keys before the morning of February 4; thus, all four of them identified Keys by name as one of their assailants without resort to either a human or a photo lineup. Nick Williams, Keys' half-brother,Witnesses referred to Keys and Williams either as "half-brothers" or "step-brothers." was identified by name only by one of the victims, but the rest identified him through the use of a photo lineup at the Criminal Justice Center. Norris Jackson first identified a Chris Nixon by name as the other suspect, but some twelve weeks later at the photo lineup, he identified Williams as the other shooter. Jackson had been committed to the Oakley Training School after the shooting incident on a charge of possession of a firearm; hence the delay of twelve weeks before the Picayune police showed Jackson the photo lineup.

Warrants were issued for the arrest of Keys, Williams, and Nixon for the aggravated assault of Norfleet, Jackson, Van Buren, and McCormick. Keys was not arrested until Valentine's Day, 1994, when he ran from a 1983 Honda Civic in which he was riding when Picayune patrolman Isamel Quiroz stopped the vehicle because it had an expired license plate. Quiroz pursued Keys down the street by foot into a house. Quiroz entered the house, where he testified he found Keys standing in the bathtub with the shower curtain pulled forward in an attempt to escape officer Quiroz's determined pursuit. Williams had surrendered to the Picayune Police Department the afternoon of

February 4, the day the shooting occurred.

II.

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