David Wayne Lomas a/k/a David Lomas v. State of Mississippi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMarch 16, 2021
Docket2019-KA-01827-COA
StatusPublished

This text of David Wayne Lomas a/k/a David Lomas v. State of Mississippi (David Wayne Lomas a/k/a David Lomas 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
David Wayne Lomas a/k/a David Lomas v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2019-KA-01827-COA

DAVID WAYNE LOMAS A/K/A DAVID LOMAS APPELLANT

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/31/2019 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. CELESTE EMBREY WILSON COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: DESOTO COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: JOHN M. COLETTE ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: SCOTT STUART DISTRICT ATTORNEY: ANGELA HUCK NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 03/13/2021 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., McDONALD AND GREENLEE, J.J.

McDONALD, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. On July 24, 2019, a Desoto County Circuit Court jury convicted David Lomas of

sexual battery in violation of Mississippi Code Annotated section 97-3-95 (Rev. 2014) and

of fondling his eleven-year-old grand-niece in violation of Mississippi Code Section 97-5-23

(Rev. 2014). The circuit court sentenced him thirty years’ imprisonment for the battery

conviction and fifteen years’ imprisonment for the fondling conviction, to be served

concurrently in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. After the circuit

court denied Lomas’s post-trial motions, Lomas appealed. He raises issues of alleged error,

including prosecutorial misconduct, the circuit court’s admission and exclusion of testimony, the circuit court’s denial of his post-trial motion, ineffective assistance of counsel, and

cumulative error. Having considered the arguments of counsel and the record, we affirm

Lomas’s convictions and sentences.

Facts

¶2. In July 2016, Lomas, who lived outside of Hattiesburg, started to work with his

nephew at a construction job in Hernando near where his nephew lived.1 For the first few

days, Lomas stayed with his nephew and his family, sleeping on the couch. Lomas then

decided to go home, purchase an RV camper, and took it back to an RV park in Southaven.

Lomas bought the camper, but because his spot at the RV park was not ready, Lomas moved

it to his nephew’s yard. At that time, Lomas’s nephew was married and living with his wife

and his two children. His father2 and his father’s girlfriend lived in a mother-in-law suite on

the second floor of the house.

¶3. Lomas arrived at his nephew’s home with his camper late on a Saturday night. On

Sunday morning, July 10, 2016, the youngest child was not feeling well, and Lomas’s

nephew decided they would not go to church. The older child, eleven-year-old “Mary,”3

asked and was given permission to go to see her uncle and tell him good morning.

¶4. Lomas gave his grand-niece some cantaloupe to eat and then took her into the

bedroom. There, according to Mary, he lay her on the bed, licked her private parts, and

1 The nephew contacted Lomas, a welder, because the nephew needed a welder for a job he had successfully bid for at the University of Memphis that involved welding. 2 Lomas’s brother, “Pops,” was in business with his son, Lomas’s nephew. 3 “Mary” is an alias used for the name of the minor victim to protect her privacy.

2 “French-kissed” her. He stopped when Mary’s younger sister knocked on the camper door.

Lomas told Mary not to tell anyone what happened, and he went into the bathroom to change

his shorts.

¶5. Mary went into the house, crying and upset, and told her parents that Lomas had

raped her. She told her mother that Lomas had licked her vagina. The medical record of

Mary’s physical examination later that day recounts:

11 yr. old female stated that her Uncle David french-kissed her and put his tongue in her privates. He told her she was beautiful and that he loved her. Mother reported that [Mary] had gone to his camper behind the family’s home, and he told her to go to the back where it was cool. Her 7 yr. old sister walked in, and he stopped, and [Mary] said she had to go to the bathroom and left. Also touched her breasts. She immediately went into the house and told her mother she had been raped. Uncle is David Lomas, age 53, and he had come to Desoto Cty to work with [Mary]’s father.[4]

¶6. Mary’s parents called law enforcement. Among those who responded was Detective

Suzanne Wallace of the DeSoto County Sheriff’s Department. Mary’s mother told her what

Mary had said. Wallace collected the underwear, shorts, and shirt that Mary was wearing at

the time of the incident. Other deputies placed Lomas in a police car. Wallace determined

she needed a bucchal swab from Lomas, but he did not agree. Wallace explained that she

would need to detain him only so she could obtain a search warrant for the bucchal swab.5

Lomas was taken to the station, and after obtaining the search warrant and bucchal swab,

Wallace told Lomas he was free to go.

4 The medical record also notes that Mary’s medications included Ambilify, Clonidine, Prozac, and Buspar. 5 Lomas’s nephew ordered him off his property, and Lomas planned to return to Hattiesburg. Wallace wanted to get the bucchal swab before Lomas left.

3 ¶7. Lomas’s nephew also told Detective Wallace about a prior incident that occurred

approximately two years earlier. At that time, Mary’s grandfather, “Pops,” was staying with

them. One day Lomas’s nephew observed “Pops” come in from work, and nine-year-old

Mary hugged him. “Pops” kissed her on the forehead, and they talked about their day.

Mary’s father saw and heard all of this. After “Pops” went upstairs, Mary told her dad that

“Pops” had “French-kissed” her. Her father immediately asked if anything further had

happened, and when Mary explained that she was referring to the kiss on her forehead, he

corrected her and said, “That was not a French-kiss.”6 This prior incident is meaningful

because after the more current incident in July 2016, Lomas called “Pops.” Lomas told

“Pops” that he had “French-kissed” Mary because Lomas had heard that “Pops” had done

so in the past.7

¶8. Wallace accompanied Mary and her parents to the Rape Crisis Center in Memphis,

where Mary underwent a physical examination. No injuries were found, yet pursuant to

protocol, staff completed a rape kit for subsequent testing.8 In addition to collecting evidence

at the scene and accompanying Mary and her parents to Mary’s physical examination,

6 Mary’s dad testified that Mary was not crying or upset when she and he discussed the incident —two years later, when Mary reported this incident, she was visibly shaken and upset. 7 Both the State and Lomas felt this prior incident was relevant. The State felt this testimony showed show that Lomas admitted to “French-kissing” the child. Lomas felt it showed that the child had previously accused a relative of wrongdoing that turned out to be false. 8 On cross-examination, Wallace admitted that in transporting the rape kit materials back to the station, the box it was in fell out of her vehicle, and the seal was partially torn.

4 Wallace arranged for Mary to undergo a forensic interview at the Healing Hearts Child

Advocacy Center in Southaven. The next day, Mary appeared, and forensic examiner Tina

Roberson interviewed her. The interview was videotaped. Roberson said Mary gave age-

appropriate responses and clear answers as to what her uncle had done. Roberson determined

that the child’s descriptions were consistent with those of a child who had been sexually

abused.

¶9. DNA testing was performed on Mary’s underwear, which was visibly stained. Tests

showed that although there was some difference in the coloration of the stain, there was no

seminal fluid.

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David Wayne Lomas a/k/a David Lomas v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-wayne-lomas-aka-david-lomas-v-state-of-mississippi-missctapp-2021.