De'Andre Dampier a/k/a Deandre Dampier v. State of Mississippi
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Opinion
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2021-KA-00280-COA
DE’ANDRE DAMPIER A/K/A DEANDRE APPELLANT DAMPIER
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/01/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DEWEY KEY ARTHUR COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: RANKIN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES TAMARRA A. BOWIE ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: ALEXANDRA RODU ROSENBLATT DISTRICT ATTORNEY: JOHN K. BRAMLETT JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 10/04/2022 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:
EN BANC.
CARLTON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. On July 8, 2004, Harry McGuffee Jr. was shot and killed at his business, Five Star
Auto Sales. Two cars were stolen from his car lot. De’Andre Dampier and Jermaine Rogers
were indicted for capital murder and conspiracy to commit murder. Dampier was sixteen
years old on the date of the crime, and Rogers was twenty-one. Rogers subsequently pleaded
guilty. Dampier was tried before a Rankin County Circuit Court jury and was convicted of
capital murder. The Rankin County Circuit Court sentenced Dampier to life imprisonment
without eligibility for parole in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC). Dampier’s conviction and sentence were affirmed by the Mississippi Supreme
Court. Dampier v. State, 973 So. 2d 221, 237 (¶44) (Miss. 2008).
¶2. Following the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S.
4607 (2012), the supreme court granted Dampier leave to file a motion for post-conviction
relief (PCR)1 in the Rankin County Circuit Court based on Miller. The circuit court
subsequently entered an agreed order vacating Dampier’s sentence and setting the case for
a Miller sentencing hearing. Dampier moved for jury sentencing with respect to that hearing,
which the circuit court denied. Dampier also filed motions for funds for a mitigation
investigator and a psychologist to assist in his preparation for the Miller sentencing hearing.
The circuit court granted the motions in part.
¶3. After an evidentiary hearing, the circuit court assessed the Miller factors and found
they weighed in favor of a sentence of life without parole. The circuit court therefore denied
Dampier’s request to be re-sentenced to a term of life imprisonment with eligibility for
parole.
¶4. On appeal, Dampier asserts that the circuit court’s decision must be reversed because
(1) he has a statutory right to be re-sentenced by a jury; (2) his life-without-parole sentence
is disproportionate as a matter of law; (3) his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights were
violated when the circuit court denied adequate funding for an investigator; (4) the circuit
1 See Uniform Post-Conviction Collateral Relief Act, Miss. Code Ann. §§ 99-39-1 to 99-39-29 (Rev. 2020).
2 court applied the “wrong legal standard” in sentencing him to life without parole; and (5)
sentencing a minor to life without parole is “categorically” unconstitutional in all cases. For
the reasons explained below, we conclude that Dampier’s assignments of error are without
merit and that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
I. The Crime, Trial, and Direct Appeal
¶5. McGuffee was shot and killed at his car dealership, Five Star Auto, and two cars were
stolen from the lot. The crime occurred on July 8, 2004. On February 9, 2005, Dampier,
who was sixteen years old at the time of shooting, was indicted along with twenty-one-year
old Rogers for capital murder and conspiracy to commit murder for McGuffee’s death.
Rogers pleaded guilty; Dampier’s case was tried before a Rankin County jury beginning
August 29, 2006.
¶6. At trial, the State presented two statements that Dampier gave to police shortly after
the shooting (dated July 9 and July 23, 2004), in which Dampier described his involvement
in the crime at Five Star Auto. In his July 23, 2004 statement, Dampier said:
[Rogers] called me [on July 6, 2004] and he told me that he wanted me to come help him pick up these cars . . . . [H]e said Five Star [Auto Sales] . . . . Then I said how you gonna get ‘em and he said I’m gonna buy ‘em . . . . Then he said, [h]ow we gonna do is, I’m gonna get you to drive me up there, then I’m gonna get you to go to the store and park the car. Naw, that my [Dampier’s] girlfriend [Tamesha McClendon] stays close over. I said take the cars to her house which is Indian Creek Apartments.
¶7. Dampier stated that on the morning of July 8 (the day of the shooting), Rogers came
3 to Dampier’s house and said, “Ready? Alright good . . . so I put my shirt on. He went outside
to the car, ready.” As Dampier was walking outside toward the car, he said he saw that
“[Rogers], he’d got his gun and he’d put it inside his pants. And he putting his shirt over it
so I went on and got in the car. So we drove off . . . and so I asked him, . . . Maine, why’d
you got your pistol with you?2 He said: No reason.” “So,” Dampier said, “I didn’t say
nuttin’ else about it.”
¶8. Dampier said he drove the car (a blue Toyota Corolla) to Five Star Auto because “it
had been a while since I had drove a stick.” When they got to Five Star Auto, Dampier said
he “was about to turn in and [Rogers] said: “N’aw, don’t pull in, pull right here which is
right there in front of the place,” blocking the gate.3 Dampier said that he then “let [Rogers]
out. So [Rogers] walked inside the building [on the car lot]. Then him and the man
[McGuffee] came out and checked out the Mustang.” Dampier said that no one other than
McGuffee was at the car lot at the time.
¶9. Dampier sat in the car (in front of the entrance gate) and could see that McGuffee and
Rogers had “[o]pened the door [of the green Mustang] and popped the hood,” and then
“[Rogers] pulled his hand up for me to leave and go to Indian Creek apartments.” Rebecca
2 Mark Dwayne Hankins testified that he had loaned his .22-caliber pistol to Rogers on July 7, 2004. According to Hankins, Rogers said he needed the gun because “he was going fishing and there were snakes and alligators where he was going.” 3 Captain Andrew Barrett of the Florence Police Department testified that in his July 9, 2004, interview, Dampier said that “at Five Star . . . he went to turn into the parking lot, and [Rogers] told him, ‘you need to stop right here at this gate,’ blocking the gate.”
4 Wood testified that she drove past Five Star Auto “around 11:00 [a.m.]” She said that she
“was going to make a payment,” but when she “got to Five Star, there was a medium blue[-
]colored car parked in the driveway that was kind of cross-ways[, so] . . . I didn’t stop, I just
kept going.” She also testified that “Mr. McGuffee was standing out front of a Mustang with
the hood up with a black gentleman’s back to [Highway] 49.” Wood said that the black
gentleman was “about 5’10” or 5’11”.” Investigator Eklund of the Rankin County Sheriff’s
Office testified that according to the booking sheets for Rogers and Dampier, “[t]he height
of Mr. Rogers is 5’6”, recorded weight of 210 pounds. The recorded height of Mr. Dampier
is 6’0”[,] . . . 200 pounds.”
¶10. As noted, Dampier said he left Five Star Auto after Rogers waved him on and went
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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2021-KA-00280-COA
DE’ANDRE DAMPIER A/K/A DEANDRE APPELLANT DAMPIER
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/01/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DEWEY KEY ARTHUR COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: RANKIN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES TAMARRA A. BOWIE ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: ALEXANDRA RODU ROSENBLATT DISTRICT ATTORNEY: JOHN K. BRAMLETT JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 10/04/2022 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:
EN BANC.
CARLTON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. On July 8, 2004, Harry McGuffee Jr. was shot and killed at his business, Five Star
Auto Sales. Two cars were stolen from his car lot. De’Andre Dampier and Jermaine Rogers
were indicted for capital murder and conspiracy to commit murder. Dampier was sixteen
years old on the date of the crime, and Rogers was twenty-one. Rogers subsequently pleaded
guilty. Dampier was tried before a Rankin County Circuit Court jury and was convicted of
capital murder. The Rankin County Circuit Court sentenced Dampier to life imprisonment
without eligibility for parole in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC). Dampier’s conviction and sentence were affirmed by the Mississippi Supreme
Court. Dampier v. State, 973 So. 2d 221, 237 (¶44) (Miss. 2008).
¶2. Following the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S.
4607 (2012), the supreme court granted Dampier leave to file a motion for post-conviction
relief (PCR)1 in the Rankin County Circuit Court based on Miller. The circuit court
subsequently entered an agreed order vacating Dampier’s sentence and setting the case for
a Miller sentencing hearing. Dampier moved for jury sentencing with respect to that hearing,
which the circuit court denied. Dampier also filed motions for funds for a mitigation
investigator and a psychologist to assist in his preparation for the Miller sentencing hearing.
The circuit court granted the motions in part.
¶3. After an evidentiary hearing, the circuit court assessed the Miller factors and found
they weighed in favor of a sentence of life without parole. The circuit court therefore denied
Dampier’s request to be re-sentenced to a term of life imprisonment with eligibility for
parole.
¶4. On appeal, Dampier asserts that the circuit court’s decision must be reversed because
(1) he has a statutory right to be re-sentenced by a jury; (2) his life-without-parole sentence
is disproportionate as a matter of law; (3) his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights were
violated when the circuit court denied adequate funding for an investigator; (4) the circuit
1 See Uniform Post-Conviction Collateral Relief Act, Miss. Code Ann. §§ 99-39-1 to 99-39-29 (Rev. 2020).
2 court applied the “wrong legal standard” in sentencing him to life without parole; and (5)
sentencing a minor to life without parole is “categorically” unconstitutional in all cases. For
the reasons explained below, we conclude that Dampier’s assignments of error are without
merit and that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
I. The Crime, Trial, and Direct Appeal
¶5. McGuffee was shot and killed at his car dealership, Five Star Auto, and two cars were
stolen from the lot. The crime occurred on July 8, 2004. On February 9, 2005, Dampier,
who was sixteen years old at the time of shooting, was indicted along with twenty-one-year
old Rogers for capital murder and conspiracy to commit murder for McGuffee’s death.
Rogers pleaded guilty; Dampier’s case was tried before a Rankin County jury beginning
August 29, 2006.
¶6. At trial, the State presented two statements that Dampier gave to police shortly after
the shooting (dated July 9 and July 23, 2004), in which Dampier described his involvement
in the crime at Five Star Auto. In his July 23, 2004 statement, Dampier said:
[Rogers] called me [on July 6, 2004] and he told me that he wanted me to come help him pick up these cars . . . . [H]e said Five Star [Auto Sales] . . . . Then I said how you gonna get ‘em and he said I’m gonna buy ‘em . . . . Then he said, [h]ow we gonna do is, I’m gonna get you to drive me up there, then I’m gonna get you to go to the store and park the car. Naw, that my [Dampier’s] girlfriend [Tamesha McClendon] stays close over. I said take the cars to her house which is Indian Creek Apartments.
¶7. Dampier stated that on the morning of July 8 (the day of the shooting), Rogers came
3 to Dampier’s house and said, “Ready? Alright good . . . so I put my shirt on. He went outside
to the car, ready.” As Dampier was walking outside toward the car, he said he saw that
“[Rogers], he’d got his gun and he’d put it inside his pants. And he putting his shirt over it
so I went on and got in the car. So we drove off . . . and so I asked him, . . . Maine, why’d
you got your pistol with you?2 He said: No reason.” “So,” Dampier said, “I didn’t say
nuttin’ else about it.”
¶8. Dampier said he drove the car (a blue Toyota Corolla) to Five Star Auto because “it
had been a while since I had drove a stick.” When they got to Five Star Auto, Dampier said
he “was about to turn in and [Rogers] said: “N’aw, don’t pull in, pull right here which is
right there in front of the place,” blocking the gate.3 Dampier said that he then “let [Rogers]
out. So [Rogers] walked inside the building [on the car lot]. Then him and the man
[McGuffee] came out and checked out the Mustang.” Dampier said that no one other than
McGuffee was at the car lot at the time.
¶9. Dampier sat in the car (in front of the entrance gate) and could see that McGuffee and
Rogers had “[o]pened the door [of the green Mustang] and popped the hood,” and then
“[Rogers] pulled his hand up for me to leave and go to Indian Creek apartments.” Rebecca
2 Mark Dwayne Hankins testified that he had loaned his .22-caliber pistol to Rogers on July 7, 2004. According to Hankins, Rogers said he needed the gun because “he was going fishing and there were snakes and alligators where he was going.” 3 Captain Andrew Barrett of the Florence Police Department testified that in his July 9, 2004, interview, Dampier said that “at Five Star . . . he went to turn into the parking lot, and [Rogers] told him, ‘you need to stop right here at this gate,’ blocking the gate.”
4 Wood testified that she drove past Five Star Auto “around 11:00 [a.m.]” She said that she
“was going to make a payment,” but when she “got to Five Star, there was a medium blue[-
]colored car parked in the driveway that was kind of cross-ways[, so] . . . I didn’t stop, I just
kept going.” She also testified that “Mr. McGuffee was standing out front of a Mustang with
the hood up with a black gentleman’s back to [Highway] 49.” Wood said that the black
gentleman was “about 5’10” or 5’11”.” Investigator Eklund of the Rankin County Sheriff’s
Office testified that according to the booking sheets for Rogers and Dampier, “[t]he height
of Mr. Rogers is 5’6”, recorded weight of 210 pounds. The recorded height of Mr. Dampier
is 6’0”[,] . . . 200 pounds.”
¶10. As noted, Dampier said he left Five Star Auto after Rogers waved him on and went
to Indian Creek apartments. Indian Creek apartments are located on Highway 49 south of
Five Star Auto. Dampier’s girlfriend, McClendon, lived there.
¶11. In his July 9, 2004 statement, Dampier said that when he got to his girlfriend’s
apartment, he “told [McClendon] about what was goin’ on down there[, Rogers] wanted me
to come get these cars for him and stuff, I told her that he had a pistol. I didn’t know he say
what he was gonna do with it, he said he wouldn’t gonna do nothing with it[.]”
¶12. Then, according to Dampier, “within no time, [Rogers] came back, he picked me up
[in the Mustang].” Dampier accompanied Rogers back to Five Star Auto in the green
Mustang, Rogers gave him a key to a black Jeep Cherokee on the lot, and Dampier got in it.
Dampier said that after they drove through the entrance as they were leaving (Rogers driving
5 the Green Mustang and Dampier following him driving the black Jeep Cherokee), Rogers
stopped, got out of his car, and closed the entrance gate. Dampier asked Rogers, “[W]hat’d
you close the gate for? He said, “Dude, this dude’s in a hurry and [Rogers] had the keys and
[McGuffee] wanted me to lock up after I get the Jeep.’” Joe Ishee testified that he drove past
Five Star Auto at around 11:25 a.m. and noticed “a big colored man closing the gate. When
I come by there he was closing that white gate, and he went through there. And there was
an SUV, a dark-colored vehicle there.”
¶13. Upon leaving Five Star Auto, Dampier said he followed Rogers southbound on
Highway 49 to Rogers’s apartment. At trial, Richard Vorder Bruegge, Ph.D., was accepted
as an expert in forensic image analysis and video analysis. He reviewed surveillance video
retrieved by law enforcement from a business south of Five Star Auto on the southbound side
of Highway 49. Bruegge limited his focus to southbound traffic, explaining that the video
quality was too poor for him to reach any conclusions about northbound vehicles.
¶14. Bruegge concluded that both the green Mustang and the black Jeep Cherokee traveled
southbound on Highway 49 only one time between 11:00 a.m. and 12:00 p.m. on July 8,
2004. As to the green Mustang, Bruegge testified that, if it “came down [Highway 49] in that
period from 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., then it was at . . .11:25:32.” Regarding the black Jeep
Cherokee, Bruegge “found two instances in which there was a vehicle that was consistent
with the black Jeep . . . . One of them is at 11:25:42, and the other one was at 11:23.”
Bruegge concluded that if the black Jeep Cherokee followed the green Mustang, as Dampier
6 described in his statements, it did so at 11:25:42.
¶15. Dampier stated that when they got to Rogers’s apartment, Rogers asked him to fill out
the title applications for the Mustang and the Cherokee “cause his wife knew his
handwriting.” After Dampier completed the title applications, Dampier said that Rogers
signed McGuffee’s name on both of them. While they were at the apartment, Rogers received
a phone call. Dampier said that after Rogers got off the phone, Rogers told him that
McGuffee “had been shot. And so like . . . I [said], what’d they kill him for. He told me that
they found some drugs on him and they had stole a Crown Vic from his lot.” Later that day,
Dampier confronted Rogers and said, “[N]ow Maine, you know we boys and all that, and I
asked him, Jermaine, did you kill that dude? And I was like, be for real with me. He was
like, Naw, I didn’t kill that dude and stuff like that.” At the end of his July 23, 2004
statement, Dampier was asked if he had anything more to add. Dampier stated, “I didn’t
have nothing to do with it.”
¶16. Captain Andrew Barrett of the Florence Police Department testified that the Mustang
and the Jeep Cherokee were recovered at Eastside Apartments where Rogers lived. The
police collected clothes and shoes from Dampier’s and Rogers’s homes. Investigator Eklund
testified that a pair of Rogers’s shoes had McGuffee’s blood on them. Dampier’s clothes and
shoes were also tested; although they had human blood on them, McGuffee’s blood was not
found on Dampier’s belongings. Eklund testified that Dampier’s fingerprints were found
inside the vehicles and on some items in the vehicles, but his fingerprints were not found on
7 any other items collected from Five Star Auto. The bullets extracted from McGuffee’s head
during the autopsy performed by Dr. Steven Hayne were found to be consistent with the gun
Hankins loaned to Rogers.
¶17. The State offered the testimony of Kenneth Harth, an inmate in the Rankin County jail
who was housed in the same cell block as Dampier. Harth testified:
[Dampier] got to telling me what had happened in his situation and why he was there. And he told me that he and [Rogers] had planned a robbery, and that [Rogers] had knew the man that owned the car lot, and that they were in need for some money, and that [Rogers] promised him that he would get a truck out of the deal . . . . And he told me that in the process of the robbery, that he had taken cash and that he had taken a cell phone, and that he had drove a vehicle, which was a truck, a Jeep Cherokee, off the lot of the car dealership.
¶18. Harth also testified that Dampier told him “that if [Rogers] had listened to him, that
they wouldn’t have ever got caught.” Elaborating, Harth further testified:
Basically what [Dampier] was saying was if [Rogers] had listened to him, because he was the one actually who was supposed to carry out the robbery and stuff and the murder, and [Rogers], I guess, assumed that he could do it and they were going to have to kill the man because the man knew [Rogers]. This is what [Dampier] told me.
¶19. Additionally, Harth testified about a story that Dampier and Rogers planned to use to
confuse law enforcement, as follows:
[STATE:] And was there a story that they were supposed to stick to to keep law enforcement from figuring out who actually committed the murder and robbery?
[HARTH:] Yes. [Dampier] had said that [Rogers] was saying he did it and he was saying [Rogers] did it. That’s what he told me, that he was telling the people [Rogers] did it and [Rogers] was telling the people he did it, so nobody would know actually who was
8 the trigger man. Then [Dampier] also went on to say later on that he was going to change his story and tell the people that [Rogers] made him do it, that he didn’t know [Rogers]. Then he turned around and told me again he was going to change it and say he didn’t know that [Rogers] was going to do that.
¶20. Harth confirmed that he did not strike a deal, or ask for a deal, in giving information
to the authorities, and that he had served his time in Mississippi for the crime he committed
here. When Harth completed his sentence in Mississippi, he returned to jail in Tennessee (his
home state) because his suspended time was revoked on his prior Tennessee felony
convictions for habitually driving without a valid license.
¶21. After the State rested, the defense tendered Robert Breithaupt, owner of Breithaupt
Southern Images Photography and Video, who was accepted as an expert in video analysis.
Unlike Bruegge (the State’s expert in forensic image and video analysis), Breithaupt did not
limit his conclusions to southbound vehicles. In his opinion, a vehicle consistent with the
green Mustang was traveling southbound at 11:18 a.m. and northbound at 11:22 a.m. The
defense presented no other witnesses.
¶22. The jury convicted Dampier of capital murder on September 1, 2006. The trial court
sentenced Dampier to life imprisonment without eligibility for parole, with the judge
observing that “I’ve seen a lot of defendants, and I’ve handed down a lot of sentences, and
this sentence is as justified as any of them that I’ve ever handed down.” The Mississippi
Supreme Court affirmed Dampier’s conviction and sentence on direct appeal. Dampier, 973
So. 2d at 237 (¶44).
9 II. Post-Trial Motions
¶23. In 2014, the Mississippi Supreme Court granted Dampier leave to file a PCR motion
in the circuit court based on the United States Supreme Court’s 2012 decision in Miller. See
Order, Dampier v. State, No. 2013-M-00808 (November 13, 2014). The circuit court entered
an agreed order vacating Dampier’s sentence and setting the case for a hearing pursuant to
Miller. Motions relevant to this appeal were subsequently filed, as described below and
discussed in detail as necessary in our analysis.
A. Motion for Jury Sentencing
¶24. On August 10, 2018, the defense filed a “Motion for Sentence of Life with the
Possibility of Parole or, in the Alternative, for Jury Sentencing Hearing Pursuant to
Miss[issippi] Code [Annotated section] 99-19-101.” Dampier asserted, among other issues,
that he had a statutory right to jury sentencing at his Miller hearing. On August 12, 2020, the
circuit court set the motion for hearing and ordered the parties to file briefs “in opposition
or to support the motion including any intervening decisions by the appellate court.” The
court heard arguments concerning jury sentencing on August 31, 2020, and denied Dampier’s
motion. On March 4, 2021 (after the Miller hearing), the circuit court issued another written
order denying Dampier’s motion.
B. Defense Motions for Expert Funding
¶25. On August 24, 2016, Dampier filed a “Motion for Funds for Expert Assistance in the
Field of Mitigation Investigation” to develop mitigation evidence to be presented at his
10 Miller hearing. The circuit court continued the Miller sentencing hearing several times
because the defense had not yet retained a mitigation expert. On January 17, 2019, Dampier
(represented by new counsel) filed an “Amended Motion for Funds for Expert Assistance in
the Field of Mitigation Investigation” requesting the appointment of Jennifer L. Hoff from
Inquisitor for 150 to 200 hours at a reduced rate of $65 an hour. In March 2019, the circuit
court signed an “Agreed Order Granting Funds in the Field of Mitigation Investigation”
approving three thousand dollars to retain Hoff.
¶26. On March 16, 2020, at a hearing on other matters, defense counsel informed the
circuit court that the mitigation investigator needed additional funds to locate and interview
four witnesses and complete her investigation. Defense counsel told the circuit court she was
waiting for Hoff to provide her more information, so the circuit court instructed the parties
to file any additional motions by the next status conference. The record reflects that defense
counsel did not file a motion for additional funds for a mitigation expert, or any information
that would support a request for additional funds for Hoff.
¶27. On August 25, 2020, Dampier filed a “Motion for Funds for Expert Assistance in the
Field of Psychology” asking for $3,000 to retain Dr. Lott to evaluate Dampier with respect
to the Miller factors. At a hearing held on August 31, 2020, the circuit court granted the
motion for funds for Dr. Lott, awarding $1,000.
¶28. At another hearing about three months later, defense counsel told the circuit court that
Dr. Lott refused to do Dampier’s mental evaluation for $1,000. The circuit judge asked,
11 “Didn’t I give several thousand dollars on something else, too?” Defense counsel responded,
“Yes. [Dampier] was given $3000 [for] the mitigation expert. But he needs a mental
eval[uation] as well.” The circuit judge sought clarification, asking, “When you say he needs
a mental evaluation, do you mean he is not competent to proceed?” The defense responded,
“No . . . under the Miller test he is allowed to have a mental expert as well.” In the end, the
circuit judge treated the defense’s request as an ore tenus motion for additional expert funds,
and denied that request:
All right. This is where we are. I understand that the State Public Defender is training all public defenders to handle these cases as though they are death penalty cases. This is not—this is PCR. It’s not a death penalty type case. This Court has already granted $4000 in experts to this Defendant, which is more than courts in this district have routinely granted in death penalty cases. So I’m going to treat it as a motion for additional funds, and the Court would deny that motion.
The circuit court issued its written order denying the defense’s request for additional expert
funds that same day. Defense counsel secured funds to retain Dr. Lott through grant funding
available through the Southern Poverty Law Center, and Dr. Lott testified at Dampier’s
Miller sentencing hearing.
C. The Miller Sentencing Hearing
¶29. On February 23, 2021, the circuit court held an evidentiary Miller sentencing hearing.
The State entered five exhibits into the record, namely the trial transcript of the 2006 capital
murder trial; Dampier’s July 9, 2004, statement; Dampier’s July 23, 2004, statement;
Dampier’s MDOC records; and Dampier’s records from the Rankin County Jail. The State
12 did not call any witnesses.
¶30. The defense called two witnesses, Sergeant Demetre Apostolidis, who testified about
his interactions with Dampier at the Rankin County Jail, and Dr. Lott, who was accepted as
an expert in the field of forensic psychology and testified about his evaluation of how the
Miller factors applied to Dampier. At the end of the hearing, the circuit court reviewed the
Miller factors and determined that the factors weighed in favor of a life-without-parole
sentence. The circuit court imposed that sentence and denied Dampier’s request that he be
sentenced to life imprisonment with eligibility for parole.
¶31. Dampier appealed, raising the issues listed above.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶32. “[T]here are two applicable standards of review in a Miller case. First, whether the
trial court applied the correct legal standard is a question of law subject to de novo review.”
Dotson v. State, 328 So. 3d 659, 665 (¶23) (Miss. Ct. App. 2021) (quoting Chandler v. State,
242 So. 3d 65, 68 (¶7) (Miss. 2018)), cert. denied, 329 So. 3d 1200 (Miss. 2021). Second,
“[i]f the trial court applied the proper legal standard, its sentencing decision is reviewed for
an abuse of discretion.” Id. The standard of review with respect to other issues will be
addressed in the relevant discussion section.
DISCUSSION
¶33. In his fifth assignment of error, Dampier asserts that sentencing a juvenile to life
without parole is “categorically” unconstitutional in all cases. This Court and the Mississippi
13 Supreme Court have previously considered and rejected this assertion. See McGilberry v.
State, 292 So. 3d 199, 205-06 (¶¶25-27) (Miss. 2020), cert. denied, 328 So. 3d 1251 (Miss.
2021); Wharton v. State, 298 So. 3d 921, 926 (¶22) (Miss. 2019) (recognizing that “neither
Miller nor Montgomery [v. Louisiana, 577 U.S. 190 (2016),] mandate a categorical bar on
life without parole for juveniles”); Miller v. State, 327 So. 3d 121, 128 (¶23) (Miss. Ct. App.
2020); Booker v. State, No. 2018-CA-00664-COA, 2019 WL 13161100, at *3 (Miss. Ct.
App. Sept. 3, 2019), as modified on rehearing (April 4, 2022); see also Jones v. Mississippi,
141 S. Ct. 1307, 1316 (2021) (recognizing that Miller does not impose a categorical bar
against life without parole for juveniles “because Miller said so: ‘Our decision does not
categorically bar a penalty for a class of offenders or type of crime—as, for example, we did
in Roper [v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551 (2005),] or Graham [v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48 (2010)]’”
(quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at 483)). This assertion requires no new discussion, and therefore
we focus on Dampier’s remaining four arguments.
I. Whether Dampier has a statutory right to jury re-sentencing.
¶34. Relying on Moore v. State, 287 So. 3d 905 (Miss. 2019), Dampier asserts that he
should have been re-sentenced by a jury pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated Section
99-19-101(1) (Rev. 2020) because he was convicted of capital murder. This argument has
been rejected by both the Mississippi Supreme Court and this Court. We likewise do so here
for the reasons addressed below.
¶35. Section 99-19-101(1) provides in relevant part:
14 Upon conviction or adjudication of guilt of a defendant of capital murder, . . . the court shall conduct a separate sentencing proceeding to determine whether the defendant should be sentenced to death, life imprisonment without eligibility for parole, or life imprisonment. The proceeding shall be conducted by the trial judge before the trial jury as soon as practicable.
¶36. In Moore, the supreme court held that section 99-19-101(1) governs the initial
sentencing of “a minor convicted of capital murder post-Miller.” Id. at 919 (¶57) (emphasis
added). The supreme court explained that this is so, notwithstanding its “decision in Pham
v. State [that] authorizes a common practice among trial courts of sentencing a defendant in
a capital case after a jury trial in which the death penalty is not sought despite the contrary
language found in Section 99-19-101.” Id. at (¶55) (citing Pham v. State, 716 So. 2d 1100,
1103-04 (¶¶21-24) (Miss. 1998)). With respect to adult offenders, “[t]his authority . . . is
vested in the trial court because the parole statutes leave only one sentencing option,” id., but
“[i]n the sentencing of a juvenile, capital-murder offender, . . . more than one sentence is
possible due to Miller.” Id. (citation omitted). As such, a minor “convicted of capital murder
post-Miller” has a statutory right to have a jury determine “whether [he] should be sentenced
to life imprisonment without parole or life imprisonment with eligibility for parole.” Id. at
(¶59).
¶37. In reaching this conclusion, the supreme court distinguished Moore’s situation (denial
of initial sentencing by a jury under Section 99-19-101) from cases “in which defendants
sought resentencing by a jury post-Miller,” id. at (¶57) (emphasis added), as Dampier does
in the case before us. The supreme court explicitly stated that “our holding today is limited
15 to the facts of this case: a minor convicted of capital murder post-Miller who was denied
sentencing by a jury.” Id. In short, the supreme court did not address “scenarios in which
defendants [seek] resentencing by a jury post-Miller,” id., like Dampier.
¶38. After Moore was decided, the supreme court addressed the question whether
resentencing by a jury is required when a prisoner seeks post-conviction relief based upon
Miller, and his conviction and sentence were already final when Miller was decided.
Wharton, 298 So. 3d at 923 (¶¶1-4). Wharton was tried for capital murder in 1995 when the
death penalty was still an option. Id. at (¶5). Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551 (2005),
prohibiting the imposition of the death penalty for defendants under the age of eighteen when
they committed their crimes, had not yet been decided. Thus Wharton’s initial sentencing
was before a jury pursuant to section 99-19-101. Id. at (¶6).
¶39. The supreme court held that “while we find that Wharton is entitled to a Miller
hearing, we do not find that he is entitled to a Miller hearing in front of a new jury.” Id. at
925 (¶20). The supreme court determined that under the United States Supreme Court’s
decisions in Miller and Montgomery, “prisoners like [Wharton] must be given the
opportunity to show their crime did not reflect irreparable corruption,” id. at 927 (¶25)
(emphasis omitted) (quoting Montgomery, 577 U.S. at 213), and “Mississippi’s PCR statute
provides this opportunity to prisoners, such as Wharton, whose convictions and sentences
were final when Miller was decided.” Id. at (¶26). In this regard, such prisoners are not
entitled to resentencing before a jury but, instead, are “entitled . . . to an evidentiary hearing
16 in the trial court, at which that court [will] consider and apply the Miller factors.” Id. at 928
(¶32).4
¶40. Faced with the same circumstances in McGilberry, 292 So. 3d at 208 (¶37), the
supreme court again concluded: “While Miller requires an individualized sentencing
hearing, there is no constitutional or statutory right to a jury for that hearing. Therefore, the
trial court did not err by denying McGilberry’s motion to be re-sentenced by a jury.” In
McGilberry, “[a] jury found McGilberry guilty of four counts of capital murder and
sentenced him to death.” Id. at 200 (¶1). Post-Miller, McGilberry was granted permission
to seek PCR relief from his death sentence. Id. at (¶2).
¶41. McGilberry subsequently filed a motion to have a jury resentence him. Id. at (¶3).
The supreme court affirmed the trial court’s ruling that “McGilberry had no right to a jury
for his Miller hearing.” Id. at 200-01 (¶¶3-4). In reaching this conclusion, the supreme court
recognized that section 99-19-101 allowed McGilberry, convicted of four counts of capital
murder, the right to be sentenced by a jury at his original sentencing hearing. Id. at 201 (¶4).
“But this statute is silent about and thus extends no rights to the scenario we face
here—post-conviction review of [a] life-without-parole sentence following [Miller’s] new
substantive rule of constitutional law.” Id. (emphasis added).
4 The dissent disagrees with the Wharton Court’s analysis on this point, and likewise the dissent disagrees with our analysis that is based on this clear precedent, as well as the precedent set by the supreme court’s decision in McGilberry, and our own decision in Martin. See post at ¶102. For the reasons detailed above, we find that this precedent amply supports our analysis and decision in this case.
17 ¶42. In Martin v. State, 329 So. 3d 451 (Miss. Ct. App. 2020), cert. denied, 329 So. 3d
1201 (Miss. 2021), this Court discussed and followed the supreme court’s decisions in
Moore, Wharton, and McGilberry under circumstances like those in Dampier’s case. In
2002, a Jackson County jury found Martin guilty of “capital felony murder with the
underlying felony of robbery.” Id. at 454 (¶3). Just as in Dampier’s case, “[a]fter the State
announced that it would not seek the death penalty, the circuit court sentenced Martin to a
term of life imprisonment without eligibility for parole, which was then the only possible
sentence.” Id.; see Pham, 716 So. 2d at 1103 (¶21).
¶43. After Miller was decided, the supreme court granted Martin leaven to file a PCR
motion in the trial court, and the trial court subsequently entered an agreed order vacating
Martin’s sentence for a new sentencing hearing pursuant to Miller. Id. at 454 (¶4). The trial
court denied Martin’s request for jury sentencing, see id. at 458 (¶15), and “[f]ollowing an
evidentiary hearing, the court held that Martin was not entitled to relief under Miller and re-
sentenced him to a term of life imprisonment without eligibility for parole.” Id. On appeal,
Martin asserted that the trial court erred in denying his request for a jury sentencing hearing.
Id. at 455 (¶7); see id. at 458 (¶15).
¶44. This Court unanimously held that the trial court properly denied Martin’s request for
a jury after thoroughly discussing Moore, Wharton, and McGilberry. Id. at 455-58 (¶¶8-15).
Like Dampier in this case, “Martin [sought] to distinguish his case from Wharton on the
ground that he ha[d] never had a jury sentencing hearing, whereas Wharton was originally
18 sentenced by a jury.” Id. at 457 (¶14). This Court held, however, that this distinction has no
“legal significance.” Id. We explained that the only reason Wharton (or McGilberry) were
sentenced by a jury was because the State originally sought the death penalty in their cases.
Id. In contrast, “there was no [jury] sentencing hearing at Martin’s trial in 2002 because the
State . . . [did] not seek the death penalty[,]” leaving life without parole as the only possible
sentence. Id. at 457-58 (¶14) (citing Pham, 716 So. 2d at 1103 (¶21)).
¶45. We then concluded:
It is true that Martin would be sentenced by a jury if his trial were held today. Moore, 287 So. 3d at 919-20 (¶¶58-59). However, our Supreme Court has now held that prisoners whose convictions and sentences were already final when Miller was decided are not entitled to be re[-]sentenced by a jury. McGilberry, 292 So. 3d at 201, 208 (¶¶4, 37); Wharton, 298 So. 3d at 927-28 (¶¶26-29). Those offenders are instead entitled to an evidentiary hearing before a judge. Wharton, 298 So. 3d at 927-28 (¶¶26-29) . . . . Therefore, the circuit judge did not err by denying Martin’s request for a jury sentencing hearing.
Id. at 458 (¶15).
¶46. Dampier makes the same argument as Martin (i.e., that his case is different from
Wharton and McGilberry because “[he] never received a jury sentencing hearing”). As in
Martin, we likewise hold here that this distinction has no “legal significance.” Martin, 329
So. 3d at 457 (¶14).5 Under Wharton, McGilberry, and Martin, Dampier was not entitled to
a jury at his post-conviction Miller hearing. McGilberry, 292 So. 3d at 207 (¶33); Wharton,
5 The dissent asserts that this analysis in Martin is erroneous. See post at ¶101. We disagree and find the analysis in Martin wholly applicable here as detailed above.
19 298 So. 3d at 927 (¶26); Martin, 329 So. 3d at 458 (¶15); see Booker, 2019 WL 13161100,
at *6 (¶¶24-25).
¶47. Dampier also asserts that he was entitled to jury sentencing because the circuit court
entered an agreed order vacating his original sentence for a new sentencing hearing. When
this order became final after the State did not appeal it, Dampier asserts that he was then no
longer seeking post-conviction relief, but rather was a defendant entitled to a criminal
sentencing hearing pursuant to section 99-19-101. But orders vacating the prisoners’
sentences were also entered in Wharton, 298 So. 3d at 926 (¶22), McGilberry, 292 So. 3d at
206 (¶29), and Martin, 329 So. 3d at 454 (¶4). In both Wharton and McGilberry, the
supreme court held that the circuit court erred by vacating the prisoner’s sentences prior to
holding a PCR hearing. Nevertheless, the supreme court essentially disregarded the error and
analyzed the hearing in the circuit court as a PCR hearing—not a new, de novo sentencing
hearing. Wharton, 298 So. 3d at 926-28 (¶¶22-29); McGilberry, 292 So. 3d at 206 (¶29); see
Booker, 2019 WL 13161100, at *6, n.8. Most recently, in Alexander v. State, 333 So. 3d 19
(Miss. 2022), the supreme court did the same thing where, as in Wharton, McGilberry, and
Martin, the circuit court granted Alexander’s Miller-based PCR motion by vacating his life-
without-parole sentence and then holding a Miller hearing. Id. at 30 (¶47). We are, of
course, obliged to follow these precedents in this case.6
6 The dissent acknowledges the existence of these precedents, but “do[es] not believe this Court should continue to ignore this incongruity.” Post at ¶104. However, “this Court does not have the authority to overrule or ignore supreme court precedent.” Cahn v. Copac
20 ¶48. Lastly, Dampier asserts that the United States Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Jones v. Mississippi, 141 S. Ct. 1307 (2021), “makes clear” that Wharton and McGilberry
were wrongly decided, because, under Jones, “the remedy for a Miller violation is a new
sentencing hearing where ‘the sentencer has discretion to “consider the mitigating qualities
of youth” and impose a lesser punishment.’” Jones, 141 S. Ct. at 1314 (quoting Miller, 567
U.S. at 476)). Quoting the statement from Jones that “Miller ‘require[s] a sentencing
procedure similar to the procedure that this Court has required for the individualized
consideration of mitigating circumstances in capital cases,’” Jones, 141 S. Ct. at 1315,
Dampier asserts that this individualized sentencing requirement “cannot be satisfied in a
post-conviction evidentiary hearing[.]” We find this assertion is without merit.
¶49. We find nothing in Jones that suggests that the hearing must occur under a state’s
statutory sentencing scheme and not under a state’s statutory post-conviction-relief scheme
as described in Wharton and McGilberry. To the contrary, the United States Supreme Court
in Jones specifically recognized that “when ‘a new substantive rule of constitutional law is
established, this Court is careful to limit the scope of any attendant procedural requirement
to avoid intruding more than necessary upon the States’ sovereign administration of their
criminal justice systems.’” Jones, 141 S. Ct. at 1321 (quoting Montgomery, 577 U.S. at 211).
Continuing, the Jones Court held, “So it is here. Because Montgomery directs us to ‘avoid
intruding more than necessary’ upon the States, [Montgomery, 577 U.S. at 211], and because
Inc., 198 So. 3d 347, 358 (¶35) (Miss. Ct. App. 2015).
21 a discretionary sentencing procedure suffices to ensure individualized consideration of a
defendant’s youth, we should not now add still more procedural requirements.” Id.
¶50. Indeed, post-Jones, in Alexander, 333 So. 3d at 30-31 (¶¶49-50), the supreme court
again found no error in the circuit court denying the defendant’s motion seeking jury
resentencing under Miller. Alexander was convicted for capital murder for stabbing his
mother-in-law to death in 1993 when he was seventeen years old. Id. at 21 (¶3). Alexander
had prior convictions and was sentenced by the trial court to life without eligibility of parole
as a habitual offender. Id. at (¶4). In 2014, the supreme court granted Alexander permission
to proceed in the trial court with a PCR motion based on Miller. Id. at 21 (¶5). The trial court
granted Alexander’s PCR motion, vacated his sentence, and set a Miller hearing. Id. at (¶6).
“The State and defense counsel had stipulated that the trial court should re-sentence
Alexander to life with eligibility for parole on his capital-murder conviction because the
sentencing statute for capital murder in 1993 allowed only for either the death penalty or a
life sentence,”7 but the State informed the circuit court “that it intended to prove that
Alexander was a habitual offender for purposes [of Mississippi Code Annotated] section
99-19-81 [(Rev. 2020)] and would seek life without parole.” Id. at (¶7).
¶51. Alexander moved for jury re-sentencing, “assert[ing] that he was entitled to an
individualized hearing before a jury on the habitual-offender sentence, with consideration of
7 Alexander was convicted of capital murder in 1993. Id. at 21 (¶7) & n.2. Section 99-19-101 was not amended until July 1994 to allow life-without-parole sentences, and the State did not seek the death penalty at Alexander’s capital murder trial. Id.
22 the Miller factors.” Id. at 22 (¶8). The circuit court denied Alexander’s motion, id.,
subsequently held the Miller hearing, and “sentenced Alexander to life as a habitual offender
under Section 99-19-81, without parole eligibility.” Id. at 23 (¶16).
¶52. Alexander appealed, asserting, among other issues, that he was denied his
“constitutional right to have a jury impose his sentence.” Id. at 24 (¶20). The supreme court
found no error in the trial court denying Alexander’s motion for a jury determination of the
Miller factors,8 observing that it had “rejected the same argument in [McGilberry, 292 So.
3d at 206-07 (¶¶30-32)].” Id. at 30 (¶50).
¶53. Directly relevant to Dampier’s assertion here, the Alexander Court reiterated “that
Miller does not ‘impose additional fact-finding before a juvenile offender may receive the
greater punishment of life without parole.’” Id. (emphasis added) (quoting McGilberry, 292
So. 3d at 206 (¶30)). “‘Stated differently, the Miller factors are not elements of the crime
that the sentencer must find beyond a reasonable doubt to impose a life-without-parole
sentence.’” Id. (quoting McGilberry, 292 So. 3d at 207 (¶31)). We find no basis for
distinguishing the supreme court’s analysis in Alexander on this point from the circumstances
before us. As the supreme court explained, Miller “does not ‘impose additional
fact-finding,’” and “the Miller factors are not elements of the crime that the sentencer must
find beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. at 30 (¶50) (emphasis added). Based upon these same
8 The supreme court underwent this analysis separately from its specific discussion about Alexander’s sentencing under the habitual-offender statute (section 99-19-81), which is not applicable here.
23 principles, we find no merit to Dampier’s assertion that the “individualized sentencing
requirement” referenced in Jones “cannot be satisfied in a post-conviction evidentiary
hearing.”
¶54. For all the reasons addressed above, we find that Dampier’s jury-sentencing
assignment of error is without merit.
II. Whether Dampier’s sentence is disproportionate as a matter of law.
¶55. Relying on Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48 (2010), and Miller, Dampier asserts that
his sentence must be vacated because, “given his role in this case, a life-without-the-
possibility-of-parole sentence is disproportionate and violates the Eight Amendment to the
United States Constitution.” We find this assignment of error without merit for the reasons
addressed below.
¶56. Dampier was convicted of felony murder—a homicide offense. In Graham, the
United States Supreme Court recognized that in prior cases it had found that “defendants who
do not kill, intend to kill, or foresee that life will be taken are categorically less deserving of
the most serious forms of punishment than are murderers.” Graham, 560 U.S. at 69. The
Supreme Court then applied this principle to juvenile offenders, who are, by reason of their
“lack of maturity” and “susceptibl[ity] to negative influences,” id. at 68, less culpable than
when compared to adults. The Graham Court held “that for a juvenile offender who did not
commit homicide the Eighth Amendment forbids the sentence of life without parole.” Id. at
74 (emphasis added).
24 ¶57. Importantly, Graham did not prohibit life-without-parole sentences for juvenile
homicide offenders, but rather drew a distinct “line between homicide and other serious
violent offenses against the individual.” Id. at 69 (internal quotation mark omitted). The
United States Supreme Court in Jones likewise noted this distinction. Jones, 141 S. Ct. at
1314.
¶58. Two years after Graham, the United States Supreme Court in Miller “allowed
life-without-parole sentences for defendants who committed homicide when they were under
18, but only so long as the sentence is not mandatory—that is, only so long as the sentencer
has discretion to ‘consider the mitigating qualities of youth’ and impose a lesser
punishment.” Jones, 141 S. Ct. at 1314 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Miller,
567 U.S. at 476). As we discuss in further detail in Part IV below, “[t]he Miller Court
identified several factors that must be considered by the sentencing authority,” Parker v.
State, 119 So. 3d 987, 995 (¶19) (Miss. 2013) (quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at 480)—and one
of the five Miller factors requires the sentencer to consider “the circumstances of the
homicide offense, including the extent of [the juvenile offender’s] . . . participation in the
conduct and the way familial and peer pressures may have affected him.” Id. at 995-96 (¶19)
(quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at 477).
¶59. But nowhere in Miller or Jones do we find any authority for the proposition that we
must consider the “circumstances-of-the-homicide-offense” factor to the exclusion of the
other four factors, or even that additional weight must be given to this factor. Yet by asking
25 this Court to vacate his sentence due to his purportedly lesser role in the crime, Dampier
essentially asks us to do just that. We decline to do so, as we are bound by the federal and
Mississippi precedents on this issue that neither authorize, nor require, this Court to give
exclusive or priority consideration of this factor.
¶60. In any event, even if we were to undergo such an analysis, we observe that Dampier
faces a heavy burden to prove that his life-without-parole sentence is disproportionate under
the circumstances of his case. As the Graham Court explained, “the Eighth Amendment
contains a ‘narrow proportionality principle,’ that ‘does not require strict proportionality
between crime and sentence’ but rather ‘forbids only extreme sentences that are grossly
disproportionate to the crime.’” Graham, 560 U.S. at 59-60 (quoting Harmelin v. Michigan,
501 U.S. 957, 997, 1000-01 (1991) (Kennedy, J., concurring in part and concurring in
judgment)). We find no “gross[] disproportiona[lity]” here.
¶61. The record reflects, and the circuit court found, that Dampier participated in planning
a robbery of Five Star Auto, knew that Rogers had a gun from the time Rogers arrived at
Dampier’s house on the morning of the shooting, drove Rogers to Five Star Auto, blocked
the gate to Five Star Auto during the robbery, and drove a stolen vehicle from the lot after
McGuffee had been murdered. Further, there is conflicting evidence whether Dampier ever
left Five Star Auto during the crime. Dampier claimed in his statements to the police that he
left Five Star Auto after Rogers waved him on and went to McClendon’s apartment, where
he waited until Rogers picked him up “within no time.” The State’s expert forensic image
26 and video analyst, however, testified that based upon his review of Highway 49 video
surveillance, both the green Mustang (driven by Rogers) and the black Jeep Cherokee (driven
by Dampier) traveled southbound on Highway 49 only one time between 11:00 to 12:00 on
July 8, 2004.
¶62. And Harth’s testimony about what Dampier told him in prison described an entirely
different story than what Dampier told police. Harth said that Dampier told him “he and
[Rogers] had planned a robbery . . . and in the process of the robbery, that he [(Dampier)] had
taken cash and that he had taken a cell phone” as well as the black Jeep Cherokee.
Additionally, according to Harth, Dampier knew that in carrying out the robbery, “they
[(Dampier and Rogers)] were going to have to kill the man [(McGuffee)] because the man
knew [Rogers].” Lastly, Harth said that Dampier told him the different versions of his
“story” that he planned to use to confuse law enforcement and cast the blame for the shooting
on Rogers. Although Dampier attacks Harth’s credibility as a “jailhouse snitch,” the record
reflects, and the jury heard, Harth confirm that he did not strike a deal, or ask for a deal, in
giving information to the authorities.
¶63. Further, the transcript from Dampier’s capital murder sentencing hearing reflects that
the circuit judge, when sentencing Dampier to life imprisonment without parole remarked,
“I’ve seen a lot of defendants, and I’ve handed down a lot of sentences, and this sentence is
as justified as any of them that I’ve ever handed down.” Based upon our own review of the
record, we do not find that Dampier’s life-without-parole sentence is “grossly
27 disproportionate” to his capital murder conviction in this case under Graham, Miller, and
Jones.
¶64. For all these reasons, we find that Dampier’s disproportionality assignment of error
is without merit.
III. Whether Dampier was wrongly denied “adequate” funds for the mitigation investigator.
¶65. Dampier asserts that he was denied his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights when
the circuit court denied “adequate funding” for a mitigation investigator. We find this
assignment of error without merit for the reasons addressed below.
A. Waiver
¶66. First, Dampier never properly sought additional funding for his mitigation expert. The
record reflects that in March 2019, the circuit court awarded Dampier $3000 for a mitigation
expert, Jennifer Hoff, to develop mitigation evidence to be presented at Dampier’s Miller
hearing. About a year later, at a hearing on other motions, Dampier’s counsel alluded to
needing additional funds to pay Hoff, as follows:
[COUNSEL FOR DAMPIER:] The mitigation expert ha[s] asked for additional funding.
THE COURT: How much additional funding?
[COUNSEL FOR DAMPIER:] She hasn’t said. She just said she needed to interview four more people in his family, and she was having issues with interviewing his mother. Now, I can follow up again. I told her to e-mail me an itemized bill of what she’s already taken so that I could present it to the Court,
28 and I haven’t received it yet.
(Emphasis added). Later on in the hearing, the circuit court noted that “[a]s far as the Court
ordering more than $3,000, I’m going to have to hear a really, really strong reason why,—this
Court has never granted a Defendant more than $3,000. Even in death penalty cases, I
haven’t seen courts grant more than $3,000 for expert assistance.” The circuit court then
specifically told counsel to “[s]et this back on settlement day next term for a status
conference . . . . If you have motions, they need to [be] filed by that time.”
¶67. The record reflects that defense counsel never filed a motion for additional funds for
a mitigation expert or even informally furnished the circuit court with any information
regarding additional funds for Hoff, whether in writing or ore tenus, at any subsequent
hearing.
¶68. And even if the scant information defense counsel offered at the March 2020 hearing
could suffice as a “motion” on the request, Dampier’s counsel never obtained a specific
ruling on that request. Instead, Dampier shifted his focus to obtaining funds for expert
assistance in the field of psychology, filing a motion for same in August 2020, and asking
for $3,000 to retain Dr. Lott to evaluate Dampier with respect to the Miller factors. No
mention was made of needing additional funds for Hoff. The circuit court awarded $1,000
“earmarked” for Dr. Lott.
¶69. At a hearing three months later, defense counsel sought additional funds for Dr. Lott
and made clear that these funds were not for Dampier’s mitigation investigator, Hoff. The
29 circuit court specifically asked Dampier’s counsel, “Didn’t I give several thousand dollars
on something else, too?” Defense counsel responded, “Yes. [Dampier] was given $3000
[for] the mitigation expert. But he needs a mental eval[uation] as well.” (Emphasis added).
The circuit judge sought clarification, asking, “When you say he needs a mental evaluation,
do you mean he is not competent to proceed?” The defense responded, “No . . . under the
Miller test he is allowed to have a mental expert as well.” The circuit judge ultimately ruled
that he was treating Dampier’s request “as a motion for additional funds, and the Court
would deny that motion.”
¶70. Under these circumstances, we find that Dampier waived any issue that he was
purportedly denied “adequate funds” for his mitigation expert in the circuit court.
Consequently we find that he has waived this issue on appeal. As the supreme court
recognized in Alexander, “[i]t is the moving party’s responsibility to obtain a ruling from the
trial court on any motions filed with the trial court[,]” Alexander, 333 So. 3d at 26 (¶26), and
the party’s “failure to do so constitutes a waiver of same.” Billiot v. State, 454 So. 2d 445,
456 (Miss. 1984); see Bufford v. State, 191 So. 3d 755, 760 (¶17) (Miss. Ct. App. 2015).
B. Denial of Additional Mitigation Expert Funding
¶71. Second, even if Dampier had preserved his contention that he was denied adequate
funds for his mitigation expert, we find that Dampier wholly failed to show that the trial court
abused its discretion in denying any such request. As the supreme court recognized in
Moore, 287 So. 3d at 920 (¶60), “[t]he question of whether a defendant has a right to [expert]
30 funds is a question left to the sound discretion of the trial court.” Further, “[t]he
determination of whether a defendant must be provided expert funding is made on a
case-by-case basis.” Alexander, 333 So. 3d at 25 (¶23). “‘A defendant must demonstrate a
substantial need in order to justify the trial court expending public funds for an expert to
assist the defense.’” Id. (quoting Richardson v. State, 767 So. 2d 195, 198 (¶10) (Miss.
2000)). As such, the defendant is required to “‘come forth with concrete reasons, not
unsubstantiated assertions that assistance would be beneficial.’” Id. (quoting Harrison v.
State, 635 So. 2d 894, 901 (Miss. 1994)). In the Miller hearing context, the supreme court
specifically recognized that “[t]his Court has ‘never held that expert testimony is required in
a Miller hearing.’” Id. at (¶24) (quoting Moore, 287 So. 3d at 920 (¶61)). Rather, “‘[t]he
determination of an offender’s potential for rehabilitation under the Miller factors is left to
the sentencing authority.’” Id.
¶72. In Alexander, the supreme court found on certiorari review that the trial court acted
within its discretion in denying the defendant’s motion for expert funds to hire a mitigation
investigator for his Miller hearing after his life-without-parole sentence as a habitual offender
was set aside by the trial court. Alexander, 333 So. 3d at 21 (¶¶1-2). The Court of Appeals
had determined that the trial court abused its discretion in denying “adequate” expert funds
to support Alexander’s defense. Id. at (¶1). In reversing that decision, the supreme court
agreed with the dissent that “Alexander failed to meet his burden of providing the circuit
court with concrete reasons for requiring expert assistance; instead, Alexander offered only
31 unsubstantiated assertions that expert assistance would be beneficial.” Id. at 25 (¶22)
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted). We find the same principles applied by the
supreme court in Alexander, apply here.
¶73. The Alexander court began its analysis by observing the defense’s delay in seeking
expert funding. Id. at (¶26). The supreme court pointed out that “this matter sat on the trial
court’s docket for almost four years from the time Alexander’s attorney was retained until
the time the Miller hearing was finally conducted.” Id. Similarly, although Dampier’s
counsel sought funding for “expert assistance in the field of mitigation investigation” in
August 2016, following that, the record reflects that Dampier’s Miller sentencing hearing
was continued several times because defense counsel had not yet retained a mitigation expert.
Finally, three years later, in 2019, Dampier’s new lawyer filed an amended motion for funds
to retain Hoff as a mitigation investigator, and the circuit court awarded $3,000 for the
defense to retain Hoff. Then, as detailed above, after mentioning to the circuit court that
Hoff required more funds, defense counsel never followed through on this vague request at
all. Further, despite the fact that Dampier had been awarded $3,000 for Hoff’s services, there
is no indication in the record that Hoff produced any report encompassing the $3,000 worth
of work she had already performed, nor did Hoff testify at trial. Under these circumstances,
we find that Dampier wholly failed to demonstrate a “substantial need” for additional funding
for a mitigation expert that would “justify the trial court expending public funds for an expert
to assist the defense.” Id. at (¶23).
32 ¶74. Dampier cites Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 77 (1985), for the general proposition
that “a criminal trial is fundamentally unfair if the State proceeds against an indigent
defendant without making certain that he has access to the raw materials integral to the
building of an effective defense.” But in Alexander, the supreme court specifically
recognized that it “has never interpreted Ake to mandate the appointment of a mitigation
expert or investigator for sentencing in capital trials.” Alexander, 333 So. 3d at 28 (¶38).
¶75. Instead, the supreme court reiterated that “[w]here a defendant offers no more than
undeveloped assertions that the requested assistance should be beneficial, no trial court is
under an obligation to provide him with fishing equipment[.]” Id. (internal quotation marks
omitted) (quoting Fisher v. City of Eupora, 587 So. 2d 878, 883 (Miss. 1991)). The supreme
court also recognized that although “there can conceivably be instances when the state in
fairness should be required to pay the cost of an expert needed by the defense to insure a fair
trial for an indigent accused[,] . . . “[t]hose cases can only be left to the discretion of the trial
court, and they will be rare.” Id. at (¶39) (emphasis added) (quoting Ruffin v. State, 447 So.
2d 113, 118 (Miss. 1984)). The supreme court also found relevant that Mississippi “case law
routinely has placed the burden of mitigation investigation largely on defense counsel.” Id.
at (¶40).
¶76. In light of these principles, the Alexander court observed, “Here, the record does not
indicate whether defense counsel ever attempted to conduct any sort of mitigation
investigation on his own[,]” id. at 29 (¶41), and “Alexander’s reasons for needing expert
33 funds never developed beyond the level of general speculation.” Id. at 26 (¶29). The same
is true for Dampier. In seeking additional funds for the mitigation investigator, defense
counsel told the circuit court that Hoff “just said she needed to interview four more people
in [Dampier’s] family, and she was having issues with interviewing his mother.” There is
no indication that defense counsel attempted to interview these witnesses, or “conduct any
sort of mitigation investigation on her own.” Id. at 29 (¶41). Nor did Dampier’s counsel
offer any reason why she could not do so.
¶77. Further, the general reasons Dampier submitted in his 2019 amended motion for
expert mitigation investigation funds were nearly identical to the inadequate reasons
submitted by the defendant in Alexander, namely: (1) “Every aspect of Dampier’s life from
conception to the present day must be investigated and this investigation must precede
determination of a mitigation case theory”; (2) “[a] social history investigation is not within
the expertise of a lawyer”; (3) the same American Bar Association guidelines for
death-penalty cases should apply, which “specifically call for ‘a mitigation specialist’”; and
(4) Dampier is indigent. Cf. Alexander, 333 So. 3d at 26 (¶27) (reasons number 3, 4, 6, and
7). Just as the supreme court found in Alexander, we likewise find that Dampier’s “reasons
for needing expert funds never developed beyond the level of general speculation.” Id. at
(¶29). Accordingly, we find no abuse in the circuit court’s decision denying any additional
mitigation investigation funds.
C. Additional Funds for Dr. Criss Lott
34 ¶78. In the interest of clarity, we recognize that Dampier also requested funds to obtain
funds for a psychologist, and the circuit court awarded him $1,000 to retain Dr. Lott to
evaluate him with respect to the Miller factors, as we detailed above. When Dampier
subsequently requested additional funds to pay Dr. Lott’s $3,000 fee, the circuit court denied
that request. Dr. Lott was then retained by the defense through grant funding from the
Southern Poverty Law Center, and he testified at Dampier’s Miller sentencing hearing.
¶79. In his appellant’s brief, Dampier makes no specific contentions regarding the
adequacy of the funds the circuit court allocated for Dr. Lott. In his reply brief, although
Dampier generally asserts that “[t]he [circuit] court abused its discretion in denying [him]
funding” to “prepare his mitigation case,” he addresses only the specifics of his original
motion requesting funding for Hoff as a mitigation investigator. Dampier offers no specific
argument regarding his request for funds for a psychologist or for Dr. Lott in particular. We
therefore find that Dampier waived any purported assignment of error with respect to expert
funding for a psychology expert. See M.R.A.P. 28(a)(7).
¶80. Even if Dampier had raised this issue with respect to Dr. Lott, and demonstrated a
“concrete need” for expert funds for a psychology expert, he must also show he “[was]
prejudiced by the denial of expert assistance to the extent that he . . . [was] denied a fair
trial.” Townsend v. State, 847 So. 2d 825, 829 (¶13) (Miss. 2003); see Barnett v. State, 192
So. 3d 1033, 1039 (¶19) (Miss. Ct. App. 2015). In this case, Dampier suffered no prejudice
at all. Dr. Lott testified at Dampier’s Miller sentencing hearing and was paid through
35 funding from the Southern Poverty Law Center. Thus, we find that any contention that
Dampier was denied his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights with respect to funding for
Dr. Lott is without merit.
¶81. For all the reasons discussed above, we find no abuse of discretion in the circuit
court’s decision denying Dampier’s motions for expert funds.
IV. Whether the circuit court applied the correct legal standard and considered the Miller factors in sentencing Dampier to life without parole.
¶82. Dampier asserts that the circuit court applied the “wrong legal standard” in sentencing
him to life without eligibility for parole. We find this assignment of error without merit.
¶83. The supreme court explained in Parker, that “Miller does not prohibit sentences of life
without parole for juvenile offenders. Rather, it ‘requires the sentencing authority to take
into account how children are different, and how those differences counsel against
irrevocably sentencing them to a lifetime in prison.’” Parker, 119 So. 3d at 995 (¶19)
(quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at 480). “The Miller Court identified several factors that must be
considered by the sentencing authority” id., including:
• the defendant’s “chronological age and its hallmark features—among them, immaturity, impetuosity, and failure to appreciate risks and consequences”;
• the defendant’s “family and home environment”;
• “the circumstances of the homicide offense, including the extent of his participation in the conduct and the way familial and peer pressures may have affected him”;
36 • whether the defendant “might have been charged and convicted of a lesser offense if not for incompetencies associated with youth—for example, his inability to deal with police officers or prosecutors (including on a plea agreement) or his incapacity to assist his own attorneys”; and
• whether the circumstances suggest that there is a “possibility of rehabilitation.”
Id. at 995-96 (¶19) (quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at 477-78). “[T]he burden rests with the
juvenile offender to convince the sentencing authority that Miller considerations are
sufficient to prohibit a sentence of life without parole.” Dotson, 328 So. 3d at 667 (¶29)
(internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Wharton, 298 So. 3d at 927 (¶25)). Lastly, as
noted above, “whether the trial court applied the correct legal standard is a question of law
subject to de novo review . . . . If the trial court applied the proper legal standard, its
sentencing decision is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.” Chandler, 242 So. 3d at 68 (¶7)
(citations omitted).
¶84. Dampier asserts that the circuit court applied the wrong legal standard because the
judge expressed skepticism and, perhaps, frustration, about Mississippi’s parole practices
when addressing the rehabilitation Miller factor and Dr. Lott’s opinion that Dampier “has the
capacity, both intellectually and emotionally, to understand one mistake and you’re back
forever.”9 According to Dampier, the circuit judge’s comments were contrary to the
9 Specifically, the circuit judge was expressing disagreement with Dr. Lott’s testimony “where he basically said one mistake and you’re back forever, talking about parole. . . . I like Dr. Lott . . . but he’s wrong on that[.]” The circuit judge then said:
37 Montgomery Court’s observation that “[a] State may remedy a Miller violation by permitting
juvenile homicide offenders to be considered for parole . . . [thus] ensur[ing] that juveniles
whose crimes reflected only transient immaturity—and who have since matured—will not
be forced to serve a disproportionate sentence in violation of the Eighth Amendment.”
Montgomery, 577 U.S. at 212.
¶85. We recognize that the circuit judge’s observations about parole could be viewed as
criticism of a distinct function of the parole board, the entity vested with the “exclusive
authority over the grant or denial of parole,” Wilde v. State, 303 So. 3d 792, 795 (¶11) (Miss.
Ct. App. 2020), cert. denied, 303 So. 3d 421 (Miss. 2020), by the Mississippi Legislature.
See Miss. Code Ann. § 47-7-17 (Rev. 2015). Although perhaps unintentional, we find such
commentary inappropriate. We, as judges, must bear in mind that each branch of government
is coequal; no branch can properly function without the other branches, and comity and
mutual respect among these branches is an essential aspect of our tripartite system of
government. See Jones v. City of Ridgeland, 48 So. 3d 530, 535-36 (¶¶8-9) (Miss. 2010).
¶86. Nevertheless, we do not find that the circuit judge’s unnecessary commentary
This Court does not live in a vacuum, and I’ve spent 20 years dealing with the Department of Corrections. Being put on parole is a free pass to free walk on the streets of this community. Too many times this Court has had people that not only committed crimes but were convicted of the crimes while they were on parole only to be told by members of the parole board, We’re not revoking the parole. And people can say—both of them can say what they want. This Court knows, if this Court grants parole to Mr. Dampier, he will be paroled within the next six months.
38 amounted to “reversible error” or the application of the “wrong legal standard” in this case.
On the contrary, based upon our review of the record, we find that Dampier was provided a
full and fair evidentiary hearing. He was represented by counsel, and he presented the
testimony of Sergeant Apostolidis, who testified about his interactions with Dampier at the
Rankin County Jail, and the expert testimony and report of Dr. Lott, who was accepted as an
expert in forensic psychology. The record reflects that in accordance with Miller and Parker,
the circuit judge considered and analyzed each of the Miller factors based on the testimony
and evidence presented at the hearing. We find that the circuit court applied the correct legal
standard.
¶87. Dampier also asserts the circuit court applied the “wrong legal standard” in addressing
the Miller factors because it “disregarded the evidence presented and relied on a subjective
view of the case” and “refused to give mitigating weight to the mitigation presented.” We
find these assertions without merit. As we address below, we find that the circuit court
appropriately considered each of the Miller factors and did not abuse its discretion in
sentencing Dampier to life without parole. See Chandler, 242 So. 3d at 68 (¶7). We turn
now to a discussion of the five Miller factors.
Age and its Hallmark Features
¶88. Dampier asserts that the circuit court did not properly take into account his
age—sixteen at the time of the crime–in addressing this Miller factor. We find that this
assertion is unsupported by the record. The circuit court recognized that Dampier was
39 sixteen when the crime was committed and then addressed the “hallmark features” of
adolescence, including impetuosity, immaturity, and a failure to appreciate the risks of the
crime. The circuit court determined that Dampier’s crime was not “an impetuous crime,” but
rather was planned and executed with “thought and care.” Further, the circuit court
recognized the evidence that Dampier was mature for his age and had “above average
intellect;” and that Dampier knew the risks and consequences of his crime because he tried
to shield his girlfriend from them.
Family and Home Environment
¶89. Dampier asserts that the circuit court wrongly “refus[ed] to consider [Dampier’s]
loving family as mitigating.” The circuit court recognized that Dampier came from a loving
home environment, and then compared it to the “horrible circumstances” surrounding the
defendant’s home life in Jackson v. Hobbs, No. 10-9647, Miller’s companion case. See
Miller, 567 U.S. at 478 (recognizing that Jackson’s home life was “immers[ed] in violence”;
his mother and grandmother had both shot individuals in the past). The circuit court did not
weigh this factor in Dampier’s favor, reasoning that despite his loving family, Dampier still
turned to crime. We do not find the circuit court abused its discretion in making this
assessment. See Shoemake v. State, 323 So. 3d 1093, 1103 (¶35) (Miss. Ct. App. 2019)
(finding no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s assessment of the home environment Miller
factor where the court recognized that “by all accounts, [the defendant] comes from a stable
and caring family” in comparison to the defendants in Miller and Jackson who “did not have
40 the benefit of such stability” and ultimately concluded that Shoemake should be sentenced
to life without parole).
Circumstances of the Crime
¶90. Dampier asserts that the circuit court ignored the circumstances of the crime in finding
that this factor weighed against Dampier because the evidence showed that Dampier did not
shoot McGuffee. But the circuit court did not find that Dampier shot McGuffee. Rather, the
circuit court considered the circumstances of the crime, “including the extent of [Dampier’s]
participation in the conduct” and any peer pressure may have affected him. See Parker, 119
So. 3d at 995-96 (¶19) (quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at 477). The circuit court found that there
was no evidence of peer pressure in this case, and found that by “one account [(Harth’s
testimony)] [Dampier] was aware they were going to rob,” and by Dampier’s own account,
“he knew . . . Rogers had a pistol.” Indeed, as we have detailed in Part II above, Dampier
drove Rogers to Five Star Auto, blocked the gate to Five Star Auto during the robbery, and
drove the stolen Jeep Cherokee from the lot after McGuffee had been murdered. And Harth
testified not only that Dampier knew they would be robbing McGuffee but also that
McGuffee knew Rogers, so McGuffee would have to be killed in the process. The circuit
court concluded that Dampier’s involvement in the robbery and murder weighed against a
life-with-eligibility-for-parole sentence. We find no abuse of discretion in the circuit court’s
determination under these facts.
Incompetencies of Youth
41 ¶91. Dampier does not take issue with the next Miller factor, “whether Dampier might have
been charged or convicted of a lesser offense if not for the incompetencies associated with
youth,” and we find no abuse of discretion in the circuit court finding that this factor did not
weigh in favor of Dampier. In reaching this determination, the circuit court noted that
Dampier had the “presence of mind” to hire attorneys for his defense, and “to fire his
attorney because he did not like the plea negotiations.”
Possibility of Rehabilitation
¶92. Dampier asserts that the circuit court disregarded Sergeant Apostolidis’s testimony
in finding that the rehabilitation factor did not weigh in Dampier’s favor. The record does
not support Dampier’s assertion. Noting that Sergeant Apostolidis testified that “[Dampier]
is learning how to follow the rules,” the circuit court acknowledged that “the Court
appreciates Sergeant Apostolidis’s testimony.” But the circuit court further recognized that
“this Court doesn't have the luxury of finding out whether or not [he’s] learning. After almost
[seventeen] years of incarceration, this Court cannot take the chance with the community that
somebody can learn.” The circuit court also heard testimony about Dampier’s numerous
violations and infractions while at MDOC and the Rankin County Jail and observed that
these encounters “lead[] the Court to conclude that Mr. Dampier likes to impose his will
where possible.”
¶93. Dampier also asserts that the circuit court did not take into account Dr. Lott’s
testimony or report in assessing the rehabilitation factor. We find this assertion without
42 merit. The circuit court presided over the hearing in which Dr. Lott testified at length; made
certain Dr. Lott’s report was admitted into evidence; listened to closing arguments in which
Dr. Lott’s report and opinions were addressed at length; and reviewed the exhibits entered
into evidence, including Dr. Lott’s report, prior to announcing his ruling. We find no abuse
of discretion in the trial court’s determination that this factor did not weigh in Dampier’s
favor.
¶94. In sum, we find that the circuit court properly considered all of the Miller factors and
did not abuse its discretion in sentencing Dampier to life without parole.
CONCLUSION
¶95. For all the reasons addressed above, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment sentencing
Dampier to life imprisonment without eligibility for parole.
¶96. AFFIRMED.
BARNES, C.J., GREENLEE, LAWRENCE, McCARTY AND SMITH, JJ., CONCUR. WILSON, P.J., CONCURS IN PART AND IN THE RESULT WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. WESTBROOKS, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. McDONALD AND EMFINGER, JJ., NOT PARTICIPATING.
WESTBROOKS, J., DISSENTING:
¶97. I disagree with the majority opinion, which denies Dampier’s statutory right to
sentencing before a jury and affirms the circuit court’s judgment. Dampier’s right to be
sentenced by a jury is evident in the plain language of Mississippi Code Annotated section
99-19-101 (Rev. 2020) by Mississippi’s post-conviction relief (PCR) statutes. Furthermore,
43 Dampier’s vacated sentence requires that he be sentenced under the statutory scheme as the
Legislature has proscribed. Finally, even current Mississippi Supreme Court precedent
requires Dampier to be sentenced by a jury. Because of these reasons, I must respectfully
dissent.
¶98. On August 29, 2006, Dampier was convicted by a jury for capital murder for his role
in a robbery that ended a man’s life. He was sixteen years old at the time of the crime. On
the same day, Dampier was sentenced by the trial court judge (not a jury) to life without
parole. This was the only sentence available to him in 2006 since Dampier, as a juvenile, was
not eligible the death penalty. The Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed this sentence in 2008.
In 2012, the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S. 460
(2012), barred mandatory life-without-parole sentences for juveniles. Afterward, Dampier
petitioned the Mississippi Supreme Court for leave to file a motion for PCR. The Supreme
Court granted his petition on November 13, 2014. On September 25, 2015, the Rankin
County Circuit Court vacated Dampier’s sentence.
¶99. Dampier requested in pre-hearing motions that he receive a jury sentencing per
Mississippi Code Annotated section 99-19-101. This request was denied, and Dampier was
sentenced by the circuit court judge in February 23, 2021. Dampier appeals the denial of his
request to be re-sentenced by a jury and raises several other issues. I address only the issue
of re-sentencing by a jury in this dissent.
¶100. Let me acknowledge my position in Jones v. State, 285 So. 3d 626 (Miss. Ct. App.
44 2017), in which I stated that a Miller hearing did not require a jury. Id. at 634 (¶27). Further
analysis of this issue in isolation from the larger issues at play in Jones has caused me to
reconsider this position. In Jones, I analogized a Miller hearing to a sentencing-enhancement
statute, where factual findings were required to be conducted by the jury, and the judge was
allowed to implement the sentence. The United States Supreme Court has since clarified that
“a separate factual finding of permanent incorrigibility is not required” in Miller hearings.
Jones v. Mississippi, 141 S. Ct. 1307, 1319 (2021). Because this holding would remove the
jury entirely from the proceedings, and because further analysis by our Court of the statutory
right to a jury in McGilberry and Wharton has raised new issues, I must state that my prior
opinion has changed. After further consideration, it is evident that Dampier’s sentencing at
his Miller hearing should be imposed under the criminal statutory scheme and not through
the PCR statutes because (1) the plain language of the criminal statute supports this
construct; (2) his sentence was vacated, and therefore it was as if it never existed; and (3)
current caselaw supports his right to be sentenced by a jury.
¶101. The pertinent portion of section 99-19-101(1), which governs sentencing in capital
offenses, states:
(1) Upon conviction or adjudication of guilt of a defendant of capital murder or other capital offense, the court shall conduct a separate sentencing proceeding to determine whether the defendant should be sentenced to death, life imprisonment without eligibility for parole, or life imprisonment. The proceeding shall be conducted by the trial judge before the trial jury as soon as practicable. If, through impossibility or inability, the trial jury is unable to reconvene for a hearing on the issue of penalty, having determined the
45 guilt of the accused, the trial judge may summon a jury to determine the issue of the imposition of the penalty. If the trial jury has been waived, or if the defendant pleaded guilty, the sentencing proceeding shall be conducted before a jury impaneled for that purpose or may be conducted before the trial judge sitting without a jury if both the State of Mississippi and the defendant agree thereto in writing.
Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-101(1) (emphasis added). Our Supreme Court in Moore v. State,
287 So. 3d 905 (Miss. 2019), expressly stated that this section “is unambiguous” and “uses
mandatory language requiring that a separate sentencing hearing shall take place ‘[u]pon
conviction or adjudication of guilt of a defendant of capital murder . . . before the trial jury
as soon as practicable.’” Id. at 918 (¶51) (quoting Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-101(1)).
Wharton v. State, 298 So. 3d 921 (Miss. 2019), of course, holds that “Mississippi’s PCR Act
provides this opportunity to prisoners . . . whose convictions and sentences were final when
Miller was decided.” Id. at 927 (¶26) (citing Miss. Code Ann. § 99-39-5(1) (Rev. 2015)).
Dampier has a statutory right to jury re-sentencing under the clear language of section 99-19-
101 since he (and the State) did not waive this right in writing.
¶102. The majority and Wharton characterize Dampier’s sentencing as “final” and thus
capable of review under the PCR statutes, id.; see ante at ¶39; however, I disagree with this
depiction. When Roper and Miller issued from the United States Supreme Court, the
decisions gave the sentencing authority another sentencing option that was not previously
available for juveniles. Courts previously had operated under a misunderstanding about what
the Eighth Amendment required, but its true interpretation has since been revealed by these
46 cases. Now that the Supreme Court has clarified what the Eighth Amendment actually stands
for, the subsequent Miller hearing clearly is not a correction of a sentence, and it is not a
“redo” of a sentence. It is an initial application of what the Eighth Amendment held all along
but what was just recently illuminated. To say that the criminal case is final does not
comport with the fact that a new remedy is available to juvenile defendants through this
Eighth Amendment clarification from the United States Supreme Court.
¶103. Additionally, even our Supreme Court has recognized that “[a] Miller hearing is a
specialized proceeding . . . a judicial intervention.” Cook v. State, 242 So. 3d 865, 877 (¶44)
(Miss. 2017). The Court also acknowledged that the hearing required by section 99-19-101
“is a statutory procedure established by the Legislature in the exercise of its authority to set
sentences for criminal offenses.” Id. The Attorney General, in its manual on State Post-
Conviction Remedies and Relief, characterizes PCR remedies as “an independent civil
action, not a post-sentencing phase of the original criminal case.” Mississippi Attorney
General, Post-Conviction Manual § 27:1, at 725 (emphasis added). Moreover, the purpose
of the PCR statutes, as expressed in the Mississippi Code, states:
Direct appeal shall be the principal means of reviewing all criminal convictions and sentences, and the purpose of this article is to provide prisoners with a procedure, limited in nature, to review those objections, defenses, claims, questions, issues or errors which in practical reality could not be or should not have been raised at trial or on direct appeal.
Miss. Code Ann. § 99-39-3(2) (Rev. 2020) (emphasis added). Since a Miller hearing is a
specialized proceeding to address a sentencing option that previously existed under the
47 Eighth Amendment but was only recently clarified, it should be construed as a post-
sentencing phase of the case to be considered under the criminal statutory scheme, as our
statutes require.
¶104. Furthermore, Dampier’s sentence was vacated. When a sentence is vacated it is made
void. (See Vacate, Blacks Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (“1. To nullify or cancel; make
void; invalidate.”). When a sentence is vacated it should be adjudicated ab initio. To vacate
his sentence means the sentence never occurred, and Dampier’s Miller hearing sentencing
is his original sentencing, and is not a resentencing. The Supreme Court seems to
acknowledge this understanding in Wharton when it concluded “that it is error for our trial
courts to vacate a juvenile’s original life-without-parole sentence (or life sentence) before
conducting a Miller hearing.” Wharton, 298 So. 3d at 927-28 (¶29). The majority suggests
that I ignore the precedents in cases that have disregarded the circuit court’s error of vacating
the sentence. Ante at n.6. But instead I acknowledge these precedents and point out that they
are incongruous with both what our Supreme Court has concluded and the common
understanding of vacating sentences. Although I acknowledge the Wharton Court’s
conclusion may apply to a limited number of cases moving forward, I do not believe this
Court should continue to ignore this incongruity. Because Dampier’s sentence was
vacated—voided—I believe he should receive and is entitled to receive his sentence before
a jury, as section 99-19-101 mandates.
¶105. Finally, Dampier should receive a trial before a jury under section 99-19-101 because
48 he never received a jury trial at his initial phase of sentencing like the defendants did in
Wharton and McGilberry. Both of these cases affirm the statutory right to be sentenced (at
least once) by a jury. The Wharton court stated, “Wharton received a jury sentencing hearing
as required by Section 99-19-101(1). Thus, unlike in Moore, there was no statutory violation
in this instance.” Id. at 925 (¶20). The McGilberry court agreed, finding “[t]o be sure, as a
capital offender, McGilberry had a statutory right to be sentenced by a jury. . . . And this right
was indeed provided to him. In compliance with Section 99-19-101, upon his conviction of
four counts of capital murder, the trial court conducted a separate sentencing hearing before
a jury.” McGilberry v. State, 292 So. 3d 199, 207 (¶34) (Miss. 2020).
¶106. Here, there is no indication in the record that Dampier waived his statutory right to
a jury at first hearing either orally or in writing, as required by the statute. At the time of
Dampier’s sentencing, as the majority states, it was common practice to not have jury
sentence capital defendants with only one sentencing option, because “[c]alling a jury for
sentencing when there was only one option was considered a “meaningless, procedural step”
elevating “form over function.” See Pham v. State, 716 So. 2d 1100, 1104 (¶24) (Miss.
1998); ante at ¶44. But our Supreme Court explicitly held in Moore that Pham does not
control in cases involving juveniles since more than one sentence is possible for them in
capital cases. Moore v. State, 287 So. 3d 905, 919 (¶55) (Miss. 2019).
¶107. With this background in mind, this Court erroneously held in Martin and in Booker
that the distinction between those who were sentenced by jury originally and those who were
49 not has no “legal significance.” Martin v. State, 329 So. 3d 451, 457 (¶14) (Miss. Ct. App.
2020), reh’g denied (Sept. 14, 2021), cert. denied, 329 So. 3d 1201 (Miss. 2021); Booker v.
State, No. 2018-CA-00664-COA, 2019 WL 13161100 at *6 (Miss. Ct. App. Sept. 3, 2019).
This holding is not in harmony with of the Supreme Court’s declaration in Moore, which
states that section 99-19-101’s “plain language requires all capital offenders—without
exception—to be sentenced by a jury.” Moore, 287 So. 3d at 919 (¶58). McGilberry and
Wharton also clearly recognize the statutory right to be tried by jury at initial hearing - which
in those cases was met. Wharton, 298 So. 3d at 925 (¶20); McGilberry, 292 So. 3d at 207
(¶34). If there were no legal distinction between those sentenced with a jury and those
sentenced without, the Supreme Court would not have expressly recognized the right to be
sentenced by a jury in three strongly worded separate opinions.
¶108. Dampier’s case presents a set of unique and unusual circumstances. Dampier never
received sentencing by a jury, which again, should have been required under the plain
language of section 99-19-101. This point is especially true since his sentence was vacated.
His right to a jury sentencing is also supported by existing Mississippi Supreme Court
precedent. Accordingly, his sentence should be reversed and the case remanded for a jury
re-sentencing. Therefore, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to affirm the
circuit court’s judgment in this case.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
De'Andre Dampier a/k/a Deandre Dampier v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deandre-dampier-aka-deandre-dampier-v-state-of-mississippi-missctapp-2022.