Charles David Burleson, II v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 2015
Docket2013-KA-00772-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Charles David Burleson, II v. State of Mississippi (Charles David Burleson, II 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
Charles David Burleson, II v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2013-KA-00772-SCT

CHARLES DAVID BURLESON, II a/k/a CHARLES BURLESON

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/12/2012 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JAMES LAMAR ROBERTS, JR. TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: JOHN C. HELMERT, JR. VICKI R. SLATER RICHARD D. BOWEN JOSH WISE COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: PRENTISS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: ERIN ELIZABETH PRIDGEN GEORGE T. HOLMES JOHN CARL HELMERT, JR. ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: MELANIE DOTSON THOMAS DISTRICT ATTORNEY: J. TRENT KELLY NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 05/21/2015 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

WALLER, CHIEF JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Charles David Burleson II appeals his conviction and sentence for capital murder with

the underlying felony of robbery. Finding that the trial court erred in amending Burleson’s

indictment to charge him as a violent habitual offender and in denying Burleson’s proffered circumstantial-evidence instruction, we reverse Burleson’s conviction and sentence and

remand this case for a new trial.

FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On Saturday, May 15, 2010, Donnie Holley returned to his home in Thrasher,

Mississippi, after a fishing trip with his son Scott. As he was checking his mail, he noticed

a white car driving off his property and away from his house. When he entered his house,

he found his son Steven lying on the floor in the living room. Steven was completely

unresponsive, and a pool of blood had collected under his head. Donnie immediately called

9-1-1. Steven was taken to the hospital, but doctors were unable to revive him, and he died

from his injuries five days later.

¶3. Officer Derrick Hester of the Prentiss County Sheriff’s Department and his partner

Officer Tammy Johnson were the first to respond to Donnie’s 9-1-1 call. They arrived at the

house around 1:00 p.m. After medical personnel arrived to tend to Steven, Officer Hester

and Officer Johnson investigated the rest of the house. The bedrooms in the house appeared

to have been ransacked. In Steven’s room, clothes were strewn across the floor, dresser

drawers had been left open, and the mattress had been thrown off the bed.

¶4. Officer Hester called Investigator Roy Ragin of the Prentiss County Sheriff’s

Department to assist with the crime scene investigation. Upon entering the Holley residence,

Investigator Ragin observed blood stains on the couch in the living room, next to where

Steven was found. Investigator Ragin collected a knife discovered under Steven’s body, but

he did not observe any blood on the knife. Investigator Ragin observed that a medicine

2 cabinet in the house was in disarray, as if someone had rummaged through it. Outside the

house, Investigator Ragin found broken glass from the storm door in the Holleys’ carport,

and one of the metal bars on the storm door was missing. Investigator Ragin interviewed

Donnie to find out if anything was missing from the house, and he also spoke to some of the

Holleys’ neighbors. Donnie stated that a flat-screen TV, a DVD player, and some

prescription medication were missing from the house.

¶5. After leaving the Holleys’ house, Investigator Ragin received a call from Joey Clark,

a narcotics investigator with the Prentiss County Sheriff’s Department. Investigator Clark

previously had worked on a case involving Steven, and he offered to help Investigator Ragin

locate people who might have been associated with Steven. Investigator Clark met with

Investigator Ragin and Officer Hester on the evening of May 15 to discuss the investigation.

¶6. At around midnight on May 15, Investigator Clark and Investigator Ragin received

a text message from Tammy Cook, who lived approximately twenty miles from the Holleys,

asking for details about Steven. Investigator Ragin went to Cook’s house to interview her.

Cook told Investigator Ragin that a man named Jeremy Huguley had been to her house at

least twice that day, once early in the morning and again around 1:00 p.m. On his second

visit, Huguley had arrived with his girlfriend Kayla Cartwright and another man, later

identified as Burleson, whom Cook did not recognize at the time. Huguley, Burleson, and

Cartwright had arrived at Cook’s house in a white Oldsmobile. Cook watched Huguley take

a metal bar out of the car and throw it into the woods next to her house. Huguley also

retrieved a garbage bag from the car and placed it under Cook’s porch. Huguley and

3 Cartwright then left in the white car, but Burleson stayed outside, talking to Cook’s son Max.

Shortly thereafter, someone driving a green Ford Mustang picked up Burleson. Max then

retrieved the metal bar that Huguley had thrown into the woods, and Cook retrieved the

garbage bag that Huguley had left under her porch. Cook inspected the contents of the

garbage bag and found prescription medication information forms with Donnie Holley’s

name on them. At that point, Cook contacted Investigator Clark and Investigator Ragin. Cook

also told Investigator Clark that Huguley previously had left a gun at her house, hidden in

Max’s room. Huguley had come back to her house while she was gone and retrieved the gun

and took $200 in cash from her son’s room.

¶7. Based on Cook’s statements, Investigator Ragin notified the police to be on the

lookout for a white Oldsmobile or a green Ford Mustang. Cartwright and Huguley were both

taken into custody in the early hours of May 16, 2010. Huguley was intoxicated when he was

brought to the police station, so he was not interviewed at that time, but Investigator Ragin

was able to interview Cartwright. Investigator Ragin received Cartwright’s consent to search

her home for the items missing from the Holley residence. Cartwright and Huguley were

living together at the time. At Cartwright’s home, Investigator Ragin found a flat-screen TV,

a comforter, some CDs, an electric drill, two wallets, and a cell phone, all of which belonged

to the Holleys. Investigator Ragin also found prescription medication bottles belonging to

Donnie Holley in a garbage can outside Cartwright’s house.

¶8. Cartwright stated that, before noon on the day of Steven’s attack, she and Huguley had

picked up Burleson at a truck stop in Baldwin, Mississippi. After stopping briefly at

4 Cartwright’s house, the trio went to the Holleys’ house in Thrasher. They all rode together

in Cartwright’s white Oldsmobile. When they arrived at the Holley residence, Cartwright

stayed in the car, while Huguley and Burleson entered the house. Cartwright asked Huguley

and Burleson to look for her hair straightener, which she previously had left at the Holley

residence. Huguley could not find the straightener, so Cartwright went inside to tell Steven

what it looked like. When she entered the house, Steven was sitting on the couch in the living

room, and Burleson was sitting across from him on a love seat; Huguley was not in the living

room. Cartwright then went back outside and sat in her car while she waited for Huguley and

Burleson. Huguley later brought Cartwright her straightener and then went back inside the

house.

¶9. Shortly thereafter, Cartwright recalled that “[Burleson] came outside with a pole, but

I’m not positive that it was David. It might have been [Huguley] that brought it out. And

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