Christopher Morris a/k/a Christopher Jermaine Morris v. State of Mississippi;

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 14, 2020
DocketNO. 2016-KA-01710-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Christopher Morris a/k/a Christopher Jermaine Morris v. State of Mississippi; (Christopher Morris a/k/a Christopher Jermaine Morris 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 Morris a/k/a Christopher Jermaine Morris v. State of Mississippi;, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2016-KA-01710-COA

CHRISTOPHER MORRIS A/K/A APPELLANT CHRISTOPHER JERMAINE MORRIS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/22/2016 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JUSTIN MILLER COBB COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LAUDERDALE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: SHARON D. HENDERSON ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: KAYLYN HAVRILLA McCLINTON DISTRICT ATTORNEY: BILBO MITCHELL NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 01/14/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE J. WILSON, P.J., McDONALD AND McCARTY, JJ.

J. WILSON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Following a jury trial, Christopher Jermaine Morris was convicted of first-degree

murder, aggravated assault, and shooting into a dwelling. On appeal, Morris argues that the

State presented insufficient evidence to support his convictions; that the jury’s verdict is

contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence; that the trial judge erred by denying

a circumstantial evidence jury instruction; that he was denied a fair trial for various other

reasons; and that his constitutional right to a speedy trial was violated. However, we find no

error and affirm Morris’s convictions and sentences.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY ¶2. On September 4, 2013, sometime between 10 and 11 p.m., Crystal King and Manuel

Torres were sitting on King’s front porch in Meridian. King testified that Morris pulled up

in front of her house in a dark-colored truck or SUV and said that he needed to talk to Torres.

Morris and Torres argued for five to ten minutes. Morris then left, but King saw him drive

around the block a few times.

¶3. King testified that Morris eventually returned and parked across the street. He got out

of his vehicle and called for Torres to come to him. Torres walked over to Morris, and the

two men began arguing again. Morris then yelled out for King to come to the street, but she

told the two men that she was not getting involved. Morris told her that was the “wrong

answer” and that she had “ten seconds.” Morris then pulled out a gun and started shooting.

He shot Torres, and Torres ran back toward King’s house. King yelled at Torres not to come

her way, so he turned and ran toward a funeral home directly across the street from King’s

house. Morris followed Torres. King heard Morris fire a few more shots, and Torres fell in

some tall grass near the funeral home. Morris fired still more shots.

¶4. Morris then walked back in the direction of King’s house and began shooting at it.

King lay on the front porch, hoping not to get shot. King’s boyfriend, Wilson Gates, was

sleeping in a front room of the house when the gunfire woke him. King yelled to Gates for

help, so he crawled outside. Morris shot seven or eight times into the house. Morris finally

stopped shooting, walked back to his vehicle, and drove away. After Morris left, King

noticed that Gates’s back was bleeding. He had a small graze wound on his back, but he did

not realize that he had been shot. When paramedics arrived, they looked at the wound, but

2 Gates refused further treatment.

¶5. When law enforcement officers arrived, they followed a trail of blood from the street

to where Torres lay in front of the funeral home. Torres was bleeding heavily from his leg

and having difficulty breathing. Meridian Police Officer Eric Shirley asked Torres who shot

him, and, according to Shirley, Torres said, “It’s Bo. Bo’s the one that shot me.” Shirley

tried to get more information from Torres, but Torres could only tell him “Bo” and that “Bo”

drove a Caprice. Shirley was with Torres for five to ten minutes before the ambulance

arrived. Shirley turned the information about “Bo” over to detectives and had no further

involvement in the investigation.

¶6. Meridian Police Officer Kevin Boyd photographed and documented the blood trail,

and Officer Rusty Powell recovered some shell casings found in the area after Boyd

photographed them. They found shell casings in front of the funeral home, in the grass

where Torres was found, and in the street in front of King’s house. Most of the casings were

within forty or fifty yards of where Torres was found. All casings recovered were from a

7.62-caliber Winchester gun, which Boyd testified was likely a rifle. No fingerprints were

recovered from the casings. Boyd and Powell also photographed the exterior and interior of

King’s home, which had several bullet holes through the front wall and into the kitchen. Jars

of food in the kitchen had been struck by the bullets and exploded on impact. A few

projectiles were retrieved from the home as well.

¶7. Boyd and Powell asked King, Gates, and others associated with the case if they could

identify “Bo.” King and Gates would not speak with them the night of the shooting, but King

3 later gave a statement to police. She did not know who “Bo” was, but she identified Morris

as the shooter. Powell also ran an alias search for the area and persons known as “Bo,” but

it turned up nothing.

¶8. Torres was taken to a nearby hospital. Dr. Dru Denison testified that Torres had been

shot in his right leg, nearly severing an artery in two, and had suffered significant blood loss.

After Denison stopped the bleeding, he placed a shunt in Torres’s leg to bypass the injured

area. A blood clot later developed and blocked the shunt, which required additional surgery.

Denison then created a bypass graft using a vein from Torres’s left leg. That procedure was

also unsuccessful, and Torres’s leg had to be amputated. Denison testified that Torres was

in the hospital for several days, possibly a week, before he died from his injuries. Testifying

as an expert in general surgery, Denison opined that Torres died as a result of complications

from his gunshot wound.

¶9. Dr. J. Brent Davis, a forensic pathologist, also testified that the cause of death was

complications from the gunshot wound. Davis did not conduct a toxicology screen on Torres

because Torres had been in the hospital for over a week prior to his death, and he did not

believe a toxicology screen was necessary to determine the cause of death. Davis examined

Torres’s body but was unable to examine Torres’s amputated leg.

¶10. A Lauderdale County grand jury indicted Morris for first-degree murder, aggravated

assault, and shooting into a dwelling. Morris did not testify or call any witnesses at trial.

The jury found him guilty on all three counts. Morris was sentenced to serve life without the

possibility of parole for first-degree murder, ten years for aggravated assault, and ten years

4 for shooting into a dwelling. The court ordered the ten-year sentences to run concurrently

with each other and consecutively to the life sentence. Morris filed a motion for a new trial,

which was denied, and then appealed.

¶11. After the appeal was docketed and assigned to this Court, Morris filed a motion to

remand the case to the circuit court to supplement the record and subpoena the trial

recording. Morris alleged that the transcript omitted parts of King’s testimony, comments

by the trial judge identifying the alternate jurors, and an objection by defense counsel during

the State’s closing argument. A panel of this Court granted Morris’s motion and ordered

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