Carter v. State

743 So. 2d 985, 1999 WL 573360
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1999
Docket1998-KA-00982-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 743 So. 2d 985 (Carter 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
Carter v. State, 743 So. 2d 985, 1999 WL 573360 (Mich. 1999).

Opinion

743 So.2d 985 (1999)

Aaron CARTER a/k/a `Little Head'
v.
STATE of Mississippi.

No. 1998-KA-00982-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

August 5, 1999.

*986 Allan D. Shackelford, Clarksdale, Attorney for Appellant.

Office of The Attorney General by W. Glenn Watts, Attorney for Appellee.

BEFORE PITTMAN, P.J., McRAE AND SMITH, JJ.

McRAE, Justice, for the Court:

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

¶ 1. In this case, Aaron Carter was found guilty of capital murder and sentenced to life without parole. He raises a single issue on direct appeal: that the verdict is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Given the conflicting evidence and our limited standard of review, we affirm.

¶ 2. Via an indictment filed December 11, 1996, Aaron Carter and George Pierce were charged with capital murder while engaged in the commission of a robbery. The indictment charged them with either committing the crime individually or with having aided and abetted the other.

¶ 3. The cases were severed for trial. Pierce went to trial in September, 1997, and December, 1997, and on both occasions the jury was unable to agree on a verdict. The prosecution then announced that it would not be seeking the death penalty and moved to consolidate the cases. The motion to consolidate was granted January 20, 1998.

¶ 4. Trial commenced February 17, 1998. The jury found both men guilty of capital murder and the trial court sentenced Aaron Carter to life without parole.

¶ 5. The prosecution in this case presented no physical evidence tying either Aaron Carter or George Pierce to the crime. They did have, however, two self-proclaimed eyewitnesses: one was drunk at the time of the crime and had been doing crack cocaine the whole day; the other was a heavy marijuana user who was fifteen when she allegedly witnessed the shooting. George Pierce was implicated by one additional witness, his sometimes girlfriend, who testified that he told her, some hours after the shooting, that he had killed a man.

¶ 6. Clarksdale Police Investigator Fernando Harris testified that the victim, James Ryalls, was able to relate prior to his death that he had been coming out of Toney's Package Store where he worked, when he was attacked by a male who took Mr. Ryall's .38 pistol from him. Some men then pulled him over to the west side of the building where he was shot. As Ryalls fell to the ground, they shot him again.

*987 ¶ 7. Harris testified that he received a call that night around 9:30 from a Tyrone Collins who stated that he had seen the incident. As a result of that call, Officer Harris sought out and arrested George Pierce and Aaron Carter.

¶ 8. Victor Tyrone Collins testified that in October, 1996, he lived across the street and down a block from Toney's Liquor store. On October 28, Collins was drinking, smoking crack (approximately $150 to $200 worth), and hanging out behind an old house with eight or nine friends.

¶ 9. Collins stated that after he purchased liquor from Toney's Liquor store that day, he saw "Little Head" [Aaron Carter] and George Pierce standing by the Delta Packing building, talking. Collins testified that he looked up when he heard some shots and saw George Pierce standing over a man and shooting him. Like everyone else, when Collins heard the shots, he ran.

¶ 10. Savannah Watson was seventeen at the time of the trial, fifteen when the crime occurred. She testified that on October 28, 1996, she was visiting her sister downtown. She saw a fight over by the liquor store. It was a "white dude and Little Head". The fight started in the front of the store and then the white man was dragged to the side. Savannah testified that she does not know Little Head's real name. When she heard the shots, she ran. Afterwards, she got a bus ticket and headed for Memphis because she did not want to have anything to do with it.

¶ 11. Savannah testified that there were two people standing outside the building but she did not really see the other guy's face. She did see that Little Head had a pistol. However, she did not see the trigger man or the shooting. Nor did she see the white man hit Little Head. Savannah admitted that at the time of crime, she was smoking a lot of marijuana.

¶ 12. In October, 1996, Willie Tillman was working as a painter in Batesville. On October 28 of that year, he went to the Hong Kong Market to get a beer. He saw George Pierce as he was walking away from the Hong Kong. Then he went and sat with some friends, Tyrone and Willie Collins, at a house nearby. While he was standing there he heard a commotion. Tillman testified that he looked back towards the liquor store and saw two black males, whom he did not recognize, beating someone on the ground. Then, after a while, he heard four shots from a gun. This occurred about fifteen to twenty minutes after he saw Pierce standing under the tree.

¶ 13. Tillman testified that his friend Tyrone Collins was pretty unstable that day—staggering and drunk.[1] When Tyrone got into an argument with his brother Willie, Tillman and Willie took Tyrone into his house across the street. Willie and Tillman were standing outside the house talking when Tillman heard the shots. Tillman testified that he did not see Tyrone Collins outside, however. If Tyrone came back out of the house. Tillman stated that while he knows Little Head, he did not see him that night.

¶ 14. Latasha Veal was 18 at the time of the trial. She testified that George Pierce was the father of her second child. She had been seeing George off and on when she ran into him on October 28, 1996. Latasha joined George between 8 and 9 p.m. and rode around for an hour. They planned to check into a motel but ended up going to Memphis instead. On the way to Memphis George was acting normal. She asked him why he had been pacing earlier, and he told her he did not know what to do about something, that he had killed a man at the liquor store.

¶ 15. In Memphis, Latasha and George stayed at George's brother's house. They *988 came back to Clarksdale the next day and George turned himself in.

¶ 16. Carter and Pierce presented separate alibi defenses. Carter's witnesses, including himself, testified that he spent the night driving around with two friends. Both of the friends were impeached by the fact that they had been questioned in the early morning hours after the shooting and denied having been with Carter. Wesley Fuqua explained that at the time he was questioned his father was listening in on the conversation and he did not want his father to know who he was hanging around with.

¶ 17. The other friend, Deon Strong, testified at trial that he spent two to three hours in Carter's company that night. He did not recall telling an officer who questioned him via telephone at 4 in the morning after the shooting that he had spent merely fifteen or twenty minutes with Carter the night before.

¶ 18. Carter also presented two of his relatives, his cousin Evelyn Davis and his grandmother, Willie Merle Williams, who stated that they had seen Carter at his grandmother's house around 9:30 or 10:00 p.m. and that he was accompanied by Wesley and Deon.

¶ 19. Mary Alice McClean testified that she was working at the Exxon on U.S. Highway 49 South when Carter came in with two of his friends at about 8:20 p.m.

¶ 20. Carter's mother, Shirley Carter, testified that she saw Aaron that night between 8 and 9 when he came by the house to pick up some cigarettes. Carter was with Deon and Wesley. Carter returned to the house between 10:30 and 11:00 p.m. The police came to the house about 3 a.m.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
743 So. 2d 985, 1999 WL 573360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-state-miss-1999.