David Jackson Williams v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 2007
Docket2008-CT-00695-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of David Jackson Williams v. State of Mississippi (David Jackson Williams 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
David Jackson Williams v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2008-CT-00695-SCT

DAVID JACKSON WILLIAMS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/27/2007 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ANDREW K. HOWORTH COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LAFAYETTE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: DAVID G. HILL ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: JOHN R. HENRY, JR. DISTRICT ATTORNEY: BENJAMIN F. CREEKMORE NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 11/10/2010 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

CARLSON, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. David Jackson Williams was convicted of murder in the Lafayette County Circuit

Court and sentenced to life imprisonment in the custody of the Mississippi Department of

Corrections. Williams appealed, and we assigned this case to the Court of Appeals. After the

Court of Appeals affirmed the trial-court judgment, we granted Williams’s petition for writ

of certiorari. Finding error in the trial court’s refusal to give an assisted-suicide instruction,

we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and the Lafayette County Circuit Court’s

judgment of conviction and sentence and remand this case to the trial court for a new trial. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

¶2. The following history is taken from the facts and trial-court proceedings as set out in

the opinion of the Court of Appeals. Williams v. State, 2009 WL 4808181 (Miss. Ct. App.

Dec. 15, 2009), reh’g denied Apr. 20, 2010. This appeal centers on the untimely death of

Demetria Bracey, who was a student at the University of Mississippi in Oxford. The events

that led to Bracey’s death were set into motion when Bracey met Williams on the internet

during January 2005.1 Shortly after they met, Bracey and Williams formed a romantic

relationship.

¶3. Bracey and Williams maintained their relationship throughout the early months of

2005. However, during the summer of 2005, Bracey left the United States for an opportunity

to study abroad in Paris, France. Bracey and Williams broke up before she left and remained

separated for the summer. Sometime after Bracey returned to Oxford, she and Williams

resumed their romantic relationship. The events central to this appeal occurred during the

second week of November 2005.

¶4. At the beginning of the week, Bracey uncharacteristically failed to report for band

practice and failed to report for her duties as a dormitory resident advisor. Later in the week,

one of Bracey’s close friends, Jessica Smith, became concerned for Bracey. Smith called

Williams on his cellular telephone and asked him whether he knew where she could find

Bracey. Williams reported that Bracey’s father was dying and that Bracey had gone home

1 Williams also was a student at the University of Mississippi.

2 to Jackson so that she could be with him. Smith was not able to reach Bracey on her cellular

telephone, so she asked Williams for the telephone number of Bracey’s father. However,

Williams would not give Jessica a telephone number. Williams told Smith that Bracey’s

father would not want Williams to give out his telephone number.

¶5. Undeterred, Smith asked Williams whether he would set up a three-way conference

call so she could at least speak to Bracey. Shortly afterward, Williams arranged a conference

call, and Smith was able to talk to Bracey for a short period of time. According to Smith,

Bracey had sounded as though she had been crying. Smith attributed Bracey’s emotional

state to her father’s illness. However, Bracey was not at her father’s house. She was not

even in Jackson. Instead, Bracey was with Williams at his apartment in Oxford. She had been

with Williams in his apartment since Sunday, November 6.

¶6. Sometime between late Thursday night, November 10, and early Friday morning,

November 11, Bracey died in Williams’s apartment after a kitchen knife penetrated her chest

and punctured the right ventricle of her heart. Bracey and Williams were alone in his

apartment at that time. During an interview with Oxford police officers, Williams claimed

that Bracey had killed herself pursuant to a mutual suicide pact.

¶7. According to Williams, sometime between Thursday night and Friday morning, he

and Bracey both went into one of his closets. During its case-in-chief, the prosecution

introduced into evidence a transcript of Williams’s interview with the police. In that

interview, Williams claimed that he and Bracey each had consumed substantial amounts of

3 alcohol and that they each had swallowed ten Klonopin tablets.2 Williams stated that Bracey

had then stabbed herself with one of his kitchen knives.3 Williams stated that he was

supposed to stab himself at the same time. According to Williams, he tried to stab himself,

but his knife did not go in far enough, and he lost consciousness because of the pain, as well

as the alcohol and prescription drug he had consumed.

¶8. Williams claimed that he regained consciousness a couple of hours later and

discovered that Bracey was dead. Williams told authorities that he removed the knife from

Bracey’s chest and threw it across the room. Williams reported that he then attempted to kill

himself again, but could not do so.

¶9. Williams spent the next few days isolated in his apartment drinking beer, watching

television, and playing video games. According to Williams, he drank “a lot” during that

time. Williams said he had hoped the alcohol would help him find the courage to kill himself.

On Saturday, Williams ordered pizza, and around the same time, he received a notice that

apartment inspectors would be visiting his apartment. Williams pushed Bracey’s legs into his

closet and covered her body with clothes. He slept in another closet so he would not easily

be discovered if an inspector entered his apartment.

2 Klonopin is the brand name for clonazepam, an anti-anxiety medication in the benzodiazepine family, the same family that includes diazepam (Valium), alorazikan (Xanax), lorazepam (A tivan ), flurazepam (Dalmane), an d others. http://www.medicinenet.com.

3 An autopsy revealed that the kitchen knife had penetrated between five and six inches into Bracey’s chest, which would have required “considerable” force.

4 ¶10. On the following Tuesday, November 15, 2005, Williams decided to go to his parents’

house in Olive Branch. Williams reportedly asked his parents what he should do. His

parents consulted an attorney and subsequently contacted authorities and informed them that

they should examine Williams’s apartment. Williams’s parents had him admitted to the

Baptist-DeSoto Hospital in Southaven, Mississippi.

¶11. On November 15, Lieutenant Wes Hatcher of the Oxford Police Department was

dispatched to Williams’s apartment. Lieutenant Hatcher went inside Williams’s apartment

and discovered Bracey’s body. Lieutenant Hatcher secured Williams’s apartment so it could

be examined by crime-scene investigators. Officers from the Oxford Police Department met

with Williams the next day.

¶12. On November 16, 2005, Williams was released from the hospital. Two members of

the Oxford Police Department drove Williams to Oxford. Williams and his attorney met with

Investigator Jimmy Williams of the Oxford Police Department and Master Sergeant John

Marsh of the Mississippi Highway Patrol’s criminal investigation bureau. Williams agreed

to be interviewed with his attorney present.

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David Jackson Williams v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-jackson-williams-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2007.