Crook v. State

105 So. 3d 353, 2012 WL 1185998, 2012 Miss. App. LEXIS 211
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedApril 10, 2012
DocketNo. 2010-KA-01528-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 105 So. 3d 353 (Crook v. State) 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
Crook v. State, 105 So. 3d 353, 2012 WL 1185998, 2012 Miss. App. LEXIS 211 (Mich. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinions

MAXWELL, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. A Forrest County jury found Wilbert Crook guilty of aggravated assault for stabbing Gemile Carter with a box cutter. The trial court sentenced Crook to twenty years in the custody of the Mississippi [356]*356Department of Corrections (MDOC) as a habitual offender, without eligibility for parole or probation. Crook now appeals, raising three issues. He claims the trial court erred in refusing jury instruction D-10 on self-defense and allowing certain comments by the prosecution during its closing argument rebuttal. Crook also argues that the verdict was against the weight and sufficiency of the evidence. Finding no error, we affirm Crook’s conviction and sentence.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. On the afternoon of July 18, 2009, Loletta Dunn, her cousin Carter, and her three sons were in her vehicle on their way to a barbecue at Loletta’s father’s house. Crook and Loletta had been romantically involved for approximately one year but had recently broken up. Crook had borrowed Victor Ramirez’s truck to search for Loletta. Crook’s friend Willie Smith was with him. Crook passed Loletta on the road, and both vehicles pulled over. Crook and Loletta exited their respective vehicles and began arguing.

¶ 3. Testifying for the State, Loletta said Carter left her vehicle and began arguing with Crook, telling Crook to “quit cussing her out and calling out her name.” Crook then “got up in [Carter’s] face” and cursed him. Crook and Carter began fist fighting, but Loletta broke it up. Loletta stated:

And the next thing I know I see Wilbert Crook come out with a box cutter, and I’m like, “Don’t cut my cousin. Don’t cut him.” Like that. But they was steady arguing, but [Crook] looked like he was putting the box cutter back in his pocket, but then they started fighting again and the next thing I know I just see my cousin got blood all over his shirt.

Once the fight stopped, Loletta picked up the box cutter and tossed it into a field. She also began throwing full beer bottles out of her vehicle at Crook’s truck, breaking the windshield. Crook and Loletta drove away in their vehicles. Loletta dropped Carter off at her house and asked someone to call the police. She then went to Ramirez’s apartment, where Crook was located, and began throwing full beer bottles and bricks at the apartment door to keep Crook there until the police arrived. Loletta claimed she did not see who started the fight. Nor did she see Carter -with any weapon. She also did not actually witness Crook stab Carter, but saw that Carter was injured.

¶4. Smith also testified for the State. On July 18, he and Crook decided to borrow Ramirez’s truck and purchase beer and half a pint of whiskey. After drinking the alcohol, they went in search of Loletta and found her. Loletta told Crook to quit following her. The two got out of their vehicles and began arguing. Smith testified that Carter got out of Loletta’s vehicle with a ceiling-fan blade, but tossed it back in his vehicle when Crook told Carter to “fight me like a man.” When the two men began fighting, Carter had no weapon. Smith tried to break them up, but Crook cut Smith across the nose “with the razor.” Smith separated the two men and urged Crook to leave. Crook then put Carter in a “headlock.” Smith saw blood coming from Carter, but did not see Carter get stabbed.

¶ 5. Carter testified that on the day of the incident he went with Loletta and her children to see Loletta’s father. They passed Crook in Ramirez’s truck, and Crook flagged them down. Crook and Lo-letta began arguing, but when Crook became disrespectful and started calling Lo-letta names, Carter got out of Loletta’s vehicle without a weapon and approached [357]*357Crook. Crook started “getting violent” towards Carter, cursing at him. Carter noticed Crook had a box-cutter knife, so Carter retrieved a wooden ceiling-fan blade from Loletta’s vehicle. Crook told Carter to “fight like a man.” Carter then threw the fan blade back in the vehicle, and Crook put away his box cutter. Carter claims he never hit Crook with the fan blade. They began fighting, and Crook put Carter in a headlock and bit off a chunk of Carter’s finger. Smith saw Crook’s arm moving, then saw blood everywhere. After they stopped fighting, Loletta told Carter he was bleeding. Carter could not breathe and realized he had been stabbed deeply twice in the chest and once in the upper shoulder blade. His injuries required hospitalization.

¶ 6. Ramirez testified that when Crook returned to his apartment, Crook had a ripped shirt with blood on it. Crook told Ramirez he had “just cut some guy.” Ramirez testified Crook always carried a box cutter because Crook was a painter and installed carpet.

¶ 7. Officer Eric Hatten with the Hat-tiesburg Police Department, responding to a dispatch call, arrived at Ramirez’s apartment. Officer Hatten testified that Crook was handcuffed and looked like “he had been involved in something.” He was “real sweaty,” his shirt was torn, and he had a bruise over his left eye that looked like it had been made by a fist. Crook told Officer Hatten that he had been in an altercation and the “person had fallen on a knife or had been cut but the knife did not belong to him.”

¶ 8. Dr. Eric Jordan, who treated Carter in the emergency room, testified Carter had potentially life-threatening injuries. Carter’s three stab wounds penetrated the muscle, and his lung collapsed as a result of the stabbing.

¶ 9. Crook testified on his own behalf. He claimed the State witnesses’ versions of the stabbing conflicted with his version. Crook testified that during the argument Loletta began walking back to her vehicle, and Crook cursed her. Carter then jumped out of Loletta’s vehicle with “his fists balled up,” heading towards Crook. Carter cursed Crook and “started swinging.” Crook hit Carter once, and Carter stated, “that’s all right. I got something for you.” Carter ran back to Loletta’s vehicle, retrieving the fan blade. As Crook was retreating to his truck, Carter walked towards Crook with the fan blade and said, “I’m going to bust me some crack head.” Carter and Loletta were both cursing Crook, so Crook brandished his box cutter from his pants pocket in self-defense. Crook claimed Carter then hit him in the face with the fan blade. Carter pushed Crook to the ground and fell on top of him; Crook still had the box cutter in his hand. The men rolled around until Loletta broke them up. She noticed blood on Carter’s shirt and said to Crook, “you done cut my cousin.” Crook claimed he did not cut anyone. Loletta began throwing full beer bottles at Crook’s vehicle, breaking the truck’s windshield. Crook then departed the scene.

¶ 10. On cross-examination, Crook admitted he had been searching for Loletta to give her a beer prior to the altercation. He claimed he still considered Loletta his girlfriend. Crook also admitted that he and Smith had consumed several beers and a half pint of whiskey before finding Loletta.

¶ 11. In February 2010, Smith was arrested for a probation violation. Smith testified that during his incarceration, he shared a cell block with Crook in the Forrest County Jail. Crook wrote out a statement about the altercation and had Smith sign it. Three fellow prisoners witnessed [358]*358it. Smith is illiterate, but he can sign his name.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 So. 3d 353, 2012 WL 1185998, 2012 Miss. App. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crook-v-state-missctapp-2012.