Christopher Edward Thomas v. State of Mississippi

180 So. 3d 756, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 609, 2015 WL 7435956
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedNovember 24, 2015
Docket2014-KA-00243-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 180 So. 3d 756 (Christopher Edward Thomas v. State of Mississippi) 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
Christopher Edward Thomas v. State of Mississippi, 180 So. 3d 756, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 609, 2015 WL 7435956 (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

MAXWELL, J.

for the Court:

¶ 1. Christopher Thomas appeals his conspiracy-to-commit-armed-robbery conviction. He also challenges his capital-murder conviction. He raises weight and sufficiency-of-the-evidence issues on both. After review, we find his co-conspirators’ testimony, along with expert testimony and. physical evidence from the murder scene, was sufficient, to support the conspiracy-to-commit-armed-robbery conviction. And we find both his conspiracy conviction and capital-murder conviction were supported by the weight qf the evidence, Because we find no merit to these, or the other issues raised on appeal, we affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

¶2. On the afternoon of May 3, 2013, Taneille “Nay” Burgess had some friends over to her home in Panola County. Among those present were DeShaun “Shaun” Alexander, John .“Little John” Market, LaDaron “Little Bit” Taylor, Quendravious “Bug Eye” Taylor, and Christopher “Lucky” Thomas (Chris). 1 After drinking and smoking marijuana, the five men left Taneille’s house in Taneille’s red jeep. They next stopped by a liquor store, then made their way to a dice game at Markes “Cat Daddy” Jones’s house. Shaun and John dropped the other three men off at Markes’s house and went to buy cigarettes. -After picking up smokes, they *760 returned to Markes’s house but remained in the car.

¶ 3. Meanwhile, Chris, LaDaron, and Quendravious hung out at Markes’s house. Tovell “Taco” Henderson was one of several men shooting dice. Tovell won about $1,250, and Chris lost all the money he wagered.

¶4. According to LaDaron, Chris was “mad because he lost all his money[,]” and “he wanted to rob the whole dice game.” LaDaron also mentioned Chris said he was “going to get something back from Tovell.” LaDaron claimed Chris decided to rob To-vell.

¶ 5. After Chris gambled away his money, the five men left in the jeep. Shaun testified Chris wanted to get some marijuana, but Quendravious remembered the group going to Chris’s mom’s house to pick up more gambling money. LaDaron recalled there was already one gun in the jeep before they stopped by Chris’s mother’s home. When they arrived at Chris’s mom’s house, Chris went inside. Shaun saw Chris come back out to the jeep holding a big, black pistol. This gun was different from the one LaDaron said was already in the jeep. And LaDaron remembered Chris got “more money, ... some weed[,] and another gun” before getting back in the car at his mom’s house.

¶ 6. The men then returned to Markes’s house so Chris could continue shooting dice. Shaun and John remained in the jeep, while Chris, LaDaron, and Quendra-vious went back inside. About twenty minutes later, the three men came back outside with Tovell.

¶ 7. Chris and Tovell left Markes’s house together in Tovell’s white truck. Shaun, John, LaDaron, and Quendravious hopped back in the jeep and followed Chris and Tovell until the white truck pulled into a driveway. The four men circled the block. LaDaron, who admitted he and Chris were both armed, testified he got out to see what Chris was doing because he and Quendravious planned on getting “money and dope.” Quendravious got out of the jeep too.

¶ 8. After dropping LaDaron and Quen-dravious off, Shaun and John drove around for two or three minutes. Meanwhile, La-Daron and Quendravious approached the truck. Tovell was sitting in the driver’s seat, and Chris was in the passenger’s seat. LaDaron got in behind Tovell, and Quendravious sat behind Chris. Quendra-vious and LaDaron both testified they saw Chris with a gun in the truck.

¶9. According to Quendravious, Chris wanted to sell Tovell $300 worth of marijuana. But LaDaron recalled Tovell did not want to buy any weed. Quendravious testified that Tovell pulled out a wad of cash, and LaDaron jumped out of the truck and yelled, “Give me that,” referring to the money. At trial, LaDaron testified he “demanded [Tovell] give [him] everything he [had],” According to Quendravious, at this point, Tovell rushed LaDaron to the ground, and LaDaron “let out one gunshot.” 2 LaDaron also testified Tovell “jumped out on [him] and rushed [him] to the ground and the gun went off.” LaDar-on said after he shot Tovell once, he pushed Tovell off of him and grabbed $1,500 in cash 3 from him. He then ran away and heard four or five more gun *761 shots. When Quendravious heard the initial gunshot, he too took off running. Right before he got back in the jeep, he heard more gunshots. LaDaron testified Chris was the only person still back at the truck with a gun when he heard the last four or five shots. So he believed Chris fired those last shots.

¶ 10. Tina Flowers lived across the street from the shooting and recalled hearing two gunshots. When she asked her daughter, Paige Flowers, to look outside, Paige started screaming, “they are shooting that man!” Then, Tina and Paige heard several more gunshots and called 911. Paige saw a single shooter standing over a man on the ground. The man on the ground was not moving. Another neighbor, Ruby Henderson, was getting out of the shower when she heard five or six gunshots. When she looked out the window, she saw two men running up the road.

¶ 11. As Shaun and John were driving around the neighborhood, Shaun heard a total of seven gunshots with some pauses between shots. Shaun then heard someone yelling, “stop!” He saw Quendravious, followed by LaDaron, running towards them. Shaun picked up the two men in the jeep. 4 After hearing police sirens, the four men went back to Taneille’s house. Chris was nowhere in sight. While en route, Shaun recalled Quendravious being very quiet, but LaDaron “was talking loud like something had happened” and hollering that “Chris had killed a man.” According to Shaun, LaDaron admitted shooting Tovell twice before running off.

¶ 12. All the men except Chris returned to Taneille’s house around 10 p.m. that night. Once there, they smoked more marijuana and drank liquor. 5 Very early the next morning, Chris' called Taneille’s cell phone, and Quendravious answered. Chris asked Quendravious • to come pick him up. And Quendravious and his cousin, Jerrick Todd, went to get Chris, who had been hiding on a school-bus with one of the pistols used in the shooting. Chris told the two men he hid the gun on the school bus. This particular gun was found around two weeks later by a student -on the school bus.

¶ 13. According to Quendravious; he, John, LaDaron, and Ghris divvied up the stolen money at Taneille’s house that night. Quendravious also claimed LaDar-on wrapped the pistol he had used in a shirt, and Quendravious hid the gun “outside[,] behind the fence line.” The police never recovered this pistol. The next morning, police arrested LaDaron, Quen-dravious, and Chris at Taneille’s house. Shaun was arrested four days later.

¶ 14. Chris, LaDaron, and Quendravious were jointly indicted for conspiracy to commit armed robbery. They were also charged with capital murder. Shaun was charged as an accessory after the fact. The defendants’ trials were severed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 So. 3d 756, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 609, 2015 WL 7435956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christopher-edward-thomas-v-state-of-mississippi-missctapp-2015.