Corey Ramon Davis v. State of Alabama (Appeal from Marengo Circuit Court: CC-09-102)

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 17, 2025
DocketCR-2023-0826
StatusPublished

This text of Corey Ramon Davis v. State of Alabama (Appeal from Marengo Circuit Court: CC-09-102) (Corey Ramon Davis v. State of Alabama (Appeal from Marengo Circuit Court: CC-09-102)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corey Ramon Davis v. State of Alabama (Appeal from Marengo Circuit Court: CC-09-102), (Ala. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Rel: January 17, 2025

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals OCTOBER TERM, 2024-2025 _________________________

CR-2023-0826 _________________________

Corey Ramon Davis

v.

State of Alabama

Appeal from Marengo Circuit Court (CC-09-102)

MINOR, Judge.

AFFIRMED BY UNPUBLISHED MEMORANDUM.

McCool and Cole, JJ., concur in the result. Windom, P.J., dissents, with opinion. Kellum, J., dissents. CR-2023-0826

WINDOM, Presiding Judge, dissenting.

Corey Ramon Davis appeals from his convictions for one count of

capital murder, see § 13A-5-40(a)(10), Ala. Code 1975, and one count of

conspiracy to commit murder, see §§ 13A-4-3 and 13A-6-2, Ala. Code

1975, and his resulting concurrent sentences to life in prison without the

possibility of parole and to 10 years in prison, respectively. This Court,

in an unpublished memorandum, affirms Davis's convictions and

sentences. I respectfully dissent.

I.

Davis argues on appeal, as he did at the close of the State's case-in-

chief, that there was no evidence presented to corroborate the testimony

of his alleged accomplices – Jeremy Bell and Carl Perry. The

unpublished memorandum summarizes the evidence as follows:

"In November 2008, Georgetta Essex pulled up to her sister's house on East Decatur Street in Demopolis. Essex's boyfriend Ron Elmore and Essex's sister's boyfriend Ben Green were both standing in the yard. After Elmore walked up to the car, Essex heard a loud 'boom.' (R. 330.) Essex then saw Elmore and Green lying on the ground with fatal gunshot wounds.1

"Detective Tim Soronen, who ha[s] since retired from the Demopolis Police Department, responded, after receiving a call around 5:00 p.m. on November 13 about someone being shot on East Decatur Street, and saw two men lying in the

2 CR-2023-0826

driveway and Essex nearby in her car.2 Detective Soronen could tell that Elmore was dead with a gunshot wound to his head, but he called an ambulance for Green, who was still breathing. [Detective] Soronen found on the ground near the bodies bullet fragments the size of which he believed to be 'of a 12-gauge[,] double-aught buckshot.' (R. 428.) He also found a 'small amount' of marijuana near Elmore's body and a marijuana 'blunt' in the mailbox in front of the house. (R. 432.) Detective Soronen testified that based on where the two men were standing and that they were both struck on the right side of their bodies 'kind of from the back to the front,' he determined that both men were hit by one shotgun blast fired from a wooded area across the road. (R. 437.)

"After initial interviews on the evening of the shooting, Detective Soronen tried to locate Davis, who earlier had been at Ruthie Mae Williams's house next door to the crime scene, because he learned that there had been a 'possible rift' between Davis and the two men, but Detective Soronen could not find Davis. (R. 439.) But the next day Davis went to the police station and gave a Mirandized3 statement to police. Davis confirmed the 'beef,' stating that he believed that Green had stolen about $800 or $900 from him at the Oak Tree Lounge. (R. 443.) Detective Soronen testified that Davis admitted that on the day of the shootings, he and Green had had some 'exchanges.' (R. 444.)

"Agent Leslie Hines, a certified firearms instructor, testified that based on where the bodies of Elmore and Green had fallen and the pellet impacts on the home, she opined that the shooter would have been 'directly across the street in the wooded area between the railroad tracks and East Decatur Street.' (R. 481.) She opined that the distance of the shooter would have been at least 25 to 35 yards. Agent Hines examined the 12-gauge shotgun seized as the weapon used during the shooting and the projectiles recovered from the bodies and determined that both men were killed by buckshot. Agent Hines explained that there are eight to nine projectiles

3 CR-2023-0826

within a single buckshot shell. She also explained that the location of Green's injuries showed a 'torso up' aiming point. (R. 498.)

"Chylon Spencer, an acquaintance of Davis, testified that on the day of the shooting, he and Davis were at Ruthie Mae Williams's house next door to the crime scene when Green walked up and said that 'he heard some threats supposed to be going on about an altercation [Davis and Green] had.' (R. 549.) He also testified that around 6:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. on the night of the shooting, Spencer, who at the time was in Eutaw, Alabama, called Davis's cellphone and that [Jeremy] Bell answered Davis's phone and said, 'He's busy.' (R. 557-58.) Spencer testified that later that night when he returned home and was with Davis, he overheard Davis on the phone asking, 'about where a gun was.' (R. 561.)

"Jeremy Bell, Davis's cousin, testified that he was currently incarcerated for the murders of Elmore and Green. Bell testified that on the day of the shooting, Davis and his friend Carl Perry were looking for him because they wanted to talk about needing a gun or ammunition. Bell testified that Davis told him to shoot Elmore and Green and that Perry told him where to stand—about 45 yards away. Bell testified that he fired one shot with a .410 shotgun loaded with what he believed was bird shot.4 Bell explained that he had no reason to kill Elmore or Green and that he did not mean for them to die. Bell testified that 'Davis told [him] to shoot them waist down. [Davis] never said kill them.' (R. 506.) Bell testified that after the shooting, he ran down the train tracks and hid the shotgun.

"Carl Perry testified that he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit the murder of Elmore and Green and read his allocution made during the guilty plea. Perry admitted that he had loaned his shotgun to Davis, who had Bell with him, and that he knew that Davis planned to use it against Green. Perry testified that Davis stated that he had had an

4 CR-2023-0826

altercation with Green and that Davis wanted to get back at Green, '[Davis] wanted to sting [Green] on [Green's] behind.' (R. 586.) Perry denied that he loaded the shotgun before Bell got it from Davis. But Perry admitted that on the morning after the shooting, he helped Davis and Bell find the shotgun and that Perry threw the shotgun near a creek where it was recovered by police.

"Officer Tommie Reese with the Marengo County Sheriff's Department took Davis's statement, in which Davis admitted that he and Green had fought over money that Green supposedly had stolen from him at the Oak Tree Lounge but denied that he had had any 'words' with him since. (R. 664.) He also admitted that at the time of the shooting, he and Perry were at Ruthie Mae Williams's house and that afterward he and Perry left and rode around for a while.

"_____________________

"1Dr. Edward Reedy employed with the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences testified that Elmore died from a shotgun wound to the head and that Green died from shotgun wounds to his neck and abdomen. Dr. Reedy testified that the shotgun blasts were fired from a distant range and that the circumstances of death were consistent with homicide.

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Corey Ramon Davis v. State of Alabama (Appeal from Marengo Circuit Court: CC-09-102), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corey-ramon-davis-v-state-of-alabama-appeal-from-marengo-circuit-court-alacrimapp-2025.