Christopher O'Neil McCune v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 2007
Docket2007-KA-00923-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Christopher O'Neil McCune v. State of Mississippi (Christopher O'Neil McCune 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
Christopher O'Neil McCune v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2007-KA-00923-SCT

CHRISTOPHER O’NEIL McCUNE

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/12/2007 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. MARCUS D. GORDON COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: NEWTON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: JAMES EDWIN SMITH, III ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: DESHUN TERRELL MARTIN DISTRICT ATTORNEY: MARK SHELDON DUNCAN NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 07/17/2008 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WALLER, P.J., GRAVES AND RANDOLPH, JJ.

RANDOLPH, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Christopher O’Neil McCune was indicted for murder and aggravated assault. A jury

trial was held in the Circuit Court of Newton County following the denial of McCune’s

motion for change of venue. The circuit judge denied McCune’s proposed lesser-offense

instructions regarding manslaughter. A jury of McCune’s peers found him guilty as charged

on both counts. McCune was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder conviction and

to an additional twenty years, to run consecutively to the sentence of life imprisonment, for

the aggravated assault conviction. Following denial of his “Motion for a New Trial or Other

Relief,” McCune filed notice of appeal. FACTS

¶2. On August 13, 2006, at approximately 2:15 a.m., Cathy Hardy arrived at James “J.J.”

Bolton’s house, accompanied by a friend. Around 2:45 a.m., Hardy and Bolton left for

Hardy’s house in Bolton’s vehicle, as she was concerned she had left the stove on. While

they were returning to Bolton’s house, a white Chevy Suburban passed them slowly.

According to McCune, the driver of the white Suburban,1 “I went past [Bolton] because he

was driving sort of slow.” Hardy testified that McCune began “pushing on the brakes[,]” and

made a left turn. Bolton then pulled up behind McCune’s vehicle. Hardy “noticed [McCune]

and [Kidd] standing outside the car.” Hardy testified that Bolton then rolled his window

down “and [McCune] asked him, why the [f] did he stop the [mf] truck. And [Bolton] told

him, ‘Man, I was just trying to see what was up.’” In contrast, McCune testified that he did

not recall using profanity and merely got out of his vehicle “and asked [Bolton] what was up

and asked him, what’s going on, you know, ‘Why don’t you go ahead on,’ . . . because

[there] had been some threats made and things of that sort.” 2 According to Hardy, McCune

“asked [Bolton] again why did he stop the [f]’ing truck. And [Bolton] told him, ‘Man, I was

just trying to see what was up.’ And [McCune] replied, ‘You done caused enough [s...] on

1 He was accompanied in the vehicle by Kafien Kidd, Jonathan Perrilliat, and Anthony Arrington. 2 McCune testified that he had known Bolton “practically all my life. Me and him went to school together[,] . . . knew him from . . . [the] neighborhood that we lived in. All of us come in contact pretty frequent.” According to McCune, threats had been made “[t]o me and also members of my family . . ., threats made that [Bolton] was going to do something about shooting in my sister house[,] . . . at the time I was staying there.” McCune conceded that Bolton “didn’t make [threats] directly to me. But some people that associated with him and I had said that he had.” Of greater import, McCune testified that Bolton made no threats to him that evening.

2 these streets.’” Hardy testified that Bolton replied, “‘Man, I wouldn’t do you like that,’ and

he replied to [Kidd], ‘And, man, you know I wouldn’t do you like that.’” 3 According to

McCune, he then asked Bolton “to go on twice[,]” without success.4 Hardy testified that as

she “leaned up to look at [McCune], [Bolton] was barely brushing the side of my thigh, as

if he was trying to get my attention. So I just leaned up, and that’s when I noticed that

[McCune] had a gun at his side.” Hardy then “told [Bolton] that he didn’t have a gun, let’s

leave. He was just – but he wasn’t reaching down. He wasn’t doing none of that.” 5 McCune

testified that he “noticed [Bolton] was reaching for something. I know [Bolton] carry a gun.

I mean, I have saw him with a gun before.[6 ] I didn’t know what to do at the time. So, as he

was reaching for his gun,[7 ] that’s when I pulled my gun.” Immediately thereafter, according

to Hardy, “the gun just started going off.” According to McCune, he began shooting “out

of self-defense . . . because I felt like he was going to do something to me.” (Emphasis

added). McCune testified that he shot until he ran out of bullets because “I didn’t know if

I had shot him or not. It happened real fast.”

3 Hardy testified that Bolton was “talking nice” to McCune and made no verbal threats or threatening gestures. 4 McCune admitted that he likewise could have gotten back into his vehicle and left, but did not. 5 On September 6, 2006, Hardy gave a voluntary statement that, “I felt [Bolton] touching the side of my lap. So I looked up at [McCune] and noticed that he had a gun in his right hand. I leaned back and told [Bolton], ‘Let’s just go, you don’t have a gun in here.’” 6 McCune admitted that he did not see Bolton with a gun “that particular night . . . .” 7 McCune later testified that he had assumed Bolton was reaching for a gun.

3 ¶3. According to Hardy, “[a]fter the shots had stopped firing, I noticed [Bolton] had took

his left hand and took his shirt and brushed his shirt. That’s when I noticed he had a bullet

hole in his shirt. I leaned back up . . . and I seen [McCune] with the gun in the window.”

Hardy testified that McCune was pointing the gun toward her head and “the gun fired and

something just told me to get out and run and I just ran.” As Hardy ran away, she heard

McCune yell, “‘Bitch, you better run or I’ll kill you, too.’” McCune denies shooting at, or

even speaking to, Hardy. According to McCune, “I never noticed [Hardy] at all. . . . [A]s we

was headed back to the truck, I saw somebody running . . . . I didn’t know who she was.”

¶4. Robert and Margaret Moore, who lived in a nearby home, were awakened by the

gunshots. Margaret testified that she “heard a lot of commotion. And then as the guy was

walking back to the white Suburban, I heard him say, ‘And I’ll kill you, too.’” According

to Robert, the white Suburban then “sped off as I was going out the back door, as I took two

or three steps toward the roadway.” After hiding briefly at a nearby church, Hardy returned

to Bolton’s vehicle and testified that:

I was going to just sit on top of [Bolton] and try to drive him home. That’s what was in my mind I was thinking to do. And when I turned back and looked again, I seen the [white Suburban] coming back and it was coming back real fast, so I took off running again.

According to Robert:

I heard [the white Suburban] as it was making the block. It came around – it was just gassing it all the way around to each stop. When I heard it turn to come back toward me, that’s when I got in the defensive posture trying to see what they was going to do.

4 Hardy testified that she heard McCune again threaten her, stating “[y]ou better run or I’ll kill

you.” She then ran to Robert, who was standing outside with a gun in his pocket, and told

him she “thought [McCune] was going to kill me.” According to Robert:

[b]y the time the truck made it back around, [Hardy] had braced herself right behind me. She came from the left side of the vehicle and she just grabbed me like this here. “Mr. Robert, Mr.

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