Dennis Dee Gilbert v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 5, 2026
Docket0723253
StatusPublished

This text of Dennis Dee Gilbert v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Dennis Dee Gilbert v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Dennis Dee Gilbert v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Record No. 0723-25-3

DENNIS DEE GILBERT v. COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, Lorish and Senior Judge Humphreys Argued at Lexington, Virginia Opinion Issued May 5, 2026

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF RUSSELL COUNTY Michael L. Moore, Judge

B. Laken Shuler (Bruce H. Russell, II, P.C., on brief), for appellant.

Victoria Johnson, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,1 Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

PUBLISHED OPINION BY JUDGE MARY GRACE O’BRIEN

Dennis Dee Gilbert (“appellant”) appeals his convictions for second-degree murder, using a

firearm to commit a felony, and shooting in a public place. Appellant shot Zachary Boyd in a

Walmart parking lot. Their altercation, however, began on the road—where appellant chastised

Boyd for using a cellphone while driving.

Appellant asserts two assignments of error. First, he contends that the court erroneously

denied his pretrial motion to exclude evidence of his encounter with another driver using her

cellphone two days before the fatal shooting, claiming it was “irrelevant prior bad act evidence.”

Second, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions, arguing that he

proved self-defense as a matter of law. For the following reasons, we affirm.

1 Jay C. Jones succeeded Jason S. Miyares as Attorney General on January 17, 2026. BACKGROUND2

I. The Fatal Shooting

On March 5, 2024, appellant rode his three-wheeled motorcycle to the Walmart in Lebanon.

After shopping, appellant exited the parking lot and saw a green Ford Mustang pulling in; the driver

was holding a cellphone up to his ear and talking. Appellant did not know the driver, Boyd, but

yelled at him to get off the phone. They initially went their separate ways; appellant rode off, and

Boyd drove through the parking lot to aisle 9.

Appellant soon returned to the lot, rode directly to aisle 9, and paused near the Mustang.

Boyd got out of his car, and the men began arguing. Surveillance cameras from two stores captured

video, but no audio, of the encounter. Witnesses recalled hearing a loud altercation, but no one

heard specific words.

As depicted in the surveillance footage, Boyd turned away from appellant and walked

toward his car. But he abruptly turned back and pushed appellant off his motorcycle. Boyd briefly

leaned over the motorcycle and then walked around it—toward where appellant had fallen on the

pavement. Boyd did not lean over again. Appellant pulled his .44 caliber handgun from his

shoulder holster and fatally shot Boyd in the chest. The surveillance footage showed Boyd turning

and staggering back toward his Mustang. Appellant, who was 71 years old at the time, was a

military veteran and a trained shooter.

Appellant pulled himself back onto his motorcycle and steered to the side of aisle 9. As

bystanders gathered to help Boyd, appellant sat and watched, appearing “angry,” “agitated,” and

“[c]old.” He announced to one bystander, “[B]itch, call 911, I killed that motherfucker.” Appellant

2 “An appellate court must ‘review the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party in the trial court,’ and must ‘accord the Commonwealth the benefit of all reasonable inferences deducible from the evidence’ in making its determination.” Commonwealth v. Wilkerson, 304 Va. 92, 100 (2025) (quoting Commonwealth v. Garrick, 303 Va. 176, 182 (2024)). -2- told bystanders that he had either fallen or been pushed off the motorcycle, but he did not mention

that Boyd had attempted to take his gun.

When interviewed by police, appellant admitted that he had seen Boyd talking on his

cellphone while driving and had told him not to do so because it was illegal. Appellant explained

that, after riding away from his initial encounter with Boyd, he decided to come back to the

Walmart parking lot and ride around to see if any family or friends were there. He claimed that

Boyd flagged him down and asked if appellant was the person who had talked to him earlier;

appellant replied “yes” and reiterated that it was illegal to talk on a cellphone while driving. Their

conversation grew heated, and the two men exchanged insults. Appellant told police that Boyd

approached and grabbed him, ripped his shirt, broke the drink holder off his motorcycle, and either

knocked or punched appellant so that he fell to the ground. Appellant claimed that, while he was

lying on the ground, Boyd leaned over the motorcycle and attempted to grab the gun from

appellant’s holster, but appellant pushed his hand away. Appellant told police that he pulled his gun

and shot Boyd when Boyd walked around the motorcycle and came toward him.

Appellant acknowledged that Boyd did not have a weapon and did not verbally threaten him

but simply would not “back off.” Appellant also said that Boyd could see his gun, which he openly

carried in a shoulder holster, but still “got in [appellant’s] face.” When police asked if appellant

considered leaving when Boyd initially walked away, appellant agreed that he should have left, but

Boyd had called him an “asshole.” Appellant also told police about an incident that occurred the

day before near the same Walmart.3 He had seen a woman talking on her cellphone while driving,

and he confronted her. Appellant told police that he rode his motorcycle next to her, pointed toward

3 Other evidence in the record established that this other encounter—with trial witness Courtney Mosley—actually occurred two days before appellant fatally shot Boyd. -3- his holstered gun, and made shooting gestures at her with his hand. Appellant indicated that seeing

Boyd driving while using a cellphone angered him again.

Appellant told police that the lack of respect shown by those who drive while talking on a

cellphone made him angry. He admitted having “road rage” and that he was still bothered by his

encounter with the woman. Appellant stated that he was at his “breaking point” on the day he shot

Boyd.

II. Appellant’s Self-Defense Testimony

At trial, appellant testified in support of his self-defense claim. He first explained that his

lower left leg had been amputated and he used a prosthesis. Regarding the incident with Boyd,

appellant testified that it began with him politely reminding Boyd not to use a cellphone while

driving, but Boyd ignored him. Appellant did not “get a good look” at Boyd and paid no attention

to the car he was driving. After initially riding away, appellant claimed that he only returned to the

Walmart parking lot to “cruise around” and look for friends or family. He further claimed that

when he rode down aisle 9, he did not notice Boyd’s green Mustang. About halfway down the

aisle, “someone” flagged appellant down and asked if he was “the guy that was talking to me up at

the stop sign earlier.” Only then did appellant recognize Boyd, and he replied, “[Y]es sir, that was

me.”

Appellant testified that Boyd pulled his car up, got out, and started walking in appellant’s

direction. Appellant turned off his motorcycle and pulled the brake, figuring that he would “give

[Boyd] the courtesy of hearing what he wanted to say.” According to appellant, Boyd asked why

appellant had confronted him, and appellant replied that he had wanted to “remind[]” Boyd that “it’s

illegal to be driving with a handheld device.” Boyd grew defensive, called appellant an “asshole,”

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