Deandre Dampier v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 2006
Docket2006-KA-01792-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Deandre Dampier v. State of Mississippi (Deandre Dampier v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deandre Dampier v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2006-KA-01792-SCT

DEANDRE DAMPIER

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/01/2006 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. WILLIAM E. CHAPMAN, III COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: RANKIN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: KELSEY LEVOIL RUSHING RAMEL LEMAR COTTON ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: LADONNA C. HOLLAND DISTRICT ATTORNEY: DAVID BYRD CLARK NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 01/24/2008 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE SMITH, C.J., CARLSON AND RANDOLPH, JJ.

RANDOLPH, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Deandre Dampier was charged with the capital murder of Harry McGuffee, Jr.

(“McGuffee”) during the commission of a robbery. Dampier was found guilty by a jury.

The circuit court sentenced him to serve a term of life imprisonment without the possibility

of parole, as Dampier was a minor.

FACTS

¶2. According to Dampier’s July 23, 2004, statement, Jermaine Rogers (“Jermaine”):

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 (“Five Star”)]. . . . 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.

On July 7, 2004, Mark Dwayne Hankins loaned his .22 pistol to Jermaine, his neighbor at

Eastside Manor Apartments in Magee. Hankins testified that Jermaine claimed he needed

the gun because “he was going fishing and there were snakes and alligators where he was

going.”

¶3. Clarissa Rogers (“Clarissa”), Jermaine’s wife, testified that on July 8, 2004, at

approximately 9:30 a.m., Jermaine stated he was going to apply for a new job and left in their

Toyota Corolla. From there, Jermaine drove to Dampier’s residence.1 When Dampier

observed the gun on Jermaine, he asked “why’d you got your pistol with you? He said no

reason.” Dampier then drove the Corolla to Five Star with Jermaine in the passenger seat.

¶4. McGuffee owned and operated Five Star, a used car dealership located on Highway

49. At 11:04 a.m., McGuffee made a phone call to his wife, Charlotte McGuffee

(“Charlotte”), from Five Star. According to Charlotte:

[w]e were talking about what the plans were for the day, and I heard the alarm go off. Someone had pulled right into the driveway.[2 ] . . . I said, “I’d better let you go because it sounds like you have a customer.”

Captain Andrew Barrett of the Florence Police Department testified that in Dampier’s July

9, 2004, interview, he stated “at Five Star . . . he went to turn into the parking lot, and

1 Dampier was sixteen years old at the time. 2 Charlotte further testified that the fact that the alarm did not stop indicated “[t]hat somebody pulled up and blocked the gate.”

2 [Jermaine] told him, ‘. . . you need to stop right here at this gate,’ blocking the gate.”

Thereafter:

Dampier stated . . . that [Jermaine] got out of the vehicle, went inside the building, came back out with Mr. McGuffee, and they were standing there looking at the green [Ford] Mustang. They had lifted the hood on the green Mustang,[3] and [Dampier] stated that [Jermaine] waved at him, indicating, “[o]kay, you can leave,” and that he drove [the Corolla] from there back to [McClendon’s] . . . apartment at Indian Creek Apartments, which is south on 49 from Five Star Auto . . . .[4 ] [H]e waited there until [Jermaine] showed up in the green Mustang.

¶5. According to Dampier’s July 9, 2004, statement, at McClendon’s apartment, he:

told her about what was goin’ on down there[, Jermaine] wanted me to come get these cars for him and stuff, I told her that he had a pistol.[5] I didn’t know he say what he was gonna do with it, he said he wouldn’t gonna do nothing with it, so within no time, [Jermaine] came back, he picked me up [in the Mustang].

Upon arriving back at Five Star, Dampier stated that:

I’m th[i]nking everythang’s alright . . . I got . . . the Jeep and we drove off, got ready to drive off and [Jermaine] closed the gate and . . . he told me that the man, was . . . in a hurry so I’m th[i]nking the man was in a hurry, whatever so [Jermaine] closed the gate so we leave . . . .

3 Rebecca Wood testified that she drove past Five Star “around 11:00 [a.m.]” Originally, Wood intended to go in “to make a payment,” but because “there was a medium blue-colored car parked in the driveway that was kind of cross-ways . . . I didn’t stop, I just kept going.” Wood also observed that “McGuffee was standing out front of a Mustang with the hood up with a black gentleman’s back to 49.” 4 According to Investigator Greg Eklund of the Rankin County Sheriff’s Office, Five Star is 1.8 miles, or a “three minute” drive, from Indian Creek Apartments. 5 In his July 23, 2004, statement, Dampier claimed that he informed McClendon that Jermaine had a gun, and that he felt uncomfortable about the situation, only later that evening.

3 Joe Ishee testified that he drove past Five Star 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.” Jermaine then

drove off the car lot in the Mustang and Dampier followed him southbound on Highway 49

in the Jeep.

¶6. Surveillance video subsequently was retrieved by law enforcement from Hot Wheels

Auto, which is located south of Five Star, on the southbound side of Highway 49.6 That

video was sent to Richard Vorder Bruegge, Ph.D., who works in the Forensic Audio Video

and Image Analysis Unit of the FBI in Quantico, Virginia. At trial, Dr. Vorder Bruegge was

accepted as an expert in forensic image analysis and video analysis. After reviewing the

video, Dr. Vorder Bruegge limited his focus to southbound traffic, as the video quality

severely limited any conclusions regarding northbound vehicles.7 Regarding the green

Mustang, Dr. Vorder Bruegge concluded that if it “came down in that period from 11:00 to

12:00, then it was at . . . 11:25:32.” 8 As to the black Jeep, Dr. Vorder Bruegge “found two

instances in which there was a vehicle that was consistent. . . . One of them is at 11:25:42,

and the other one was at 11:23.” Ultimately, Dr. Vorder Bruegge concluded that if the black

Jeep followed the green Mustang, as Dampier claimed, it did so at 11:25:42.

6 According to Barrett, the surveillance video did not show “anything at Five Star. Just only north and southbound traffic that particular time of day.” 7 Robert Breithaupt, owner of Breithaupt Southern Images Photography and Video, was tendered by Dampier, and subsequently accepted, as an expert in video analysis. Breithaupt did not limit his conclusions to southbound vehicles. 8 By contrast, Breithaupt concluded that a vehicle consistent with the green Mustang was traveling southbound at 11:18 a.m. and northbound at 11:22 a.m.

4 ¶7. In Dampier’s July 23, 2004, statement, he noted that Jermaine pulled over to the side

of the road soon after leaving Five Star, followed by Dampier, and “took the tag off the Jeep

and the Mustang and put both of ‘em in the trunk of the Mustang.” Soon thereafter, Jermaine

pulled off the road again, claiming that the car was running hot, and proceeded to the home

of Claude Holloway. Dampier stated that Holloway was not home, therefore, they left the

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