Diggs v. State

168 So. 3d 156, 2014 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 91, 2014 WL 6608352
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedNovember 21, 2014
DocketCR-13-0746
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 168 So. 3d 156 (Diggs v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diggs v. State, 168 So. 3d 156, 2014 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 91, 2014 WL 6608352 (Ala. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinions

WELCH, Judge.

Ellis Andrei Diggs was convicted of the intentional murder of Garry Blackwell, see § 13A-6-2(a)(l), Ala.Code 1975. Diggs was sentenced as a habitual felon to life in prison without the possibility of parole. On appeal, Diggs contends that the trial court committed reversible error when it refused to instruct the jury on self-defense and provocation manslaughter.

Diggs contends that the evidence .presented during his trial supported the giving of a jury instruction on self-defense.

[158]*158 Facts

On the night of February 3, 2012, Blackwell was using an abandoned house on Haardt Street in Montgomery for the purpose of hosting,1 for paying customers, an entertainment venue providing female dancers, strippers, and prostitutes. This venue was called “The Cave.” (R. 279.) Chasity Bowen was Diggs’s longtime girlfriend. She worked for Blackwell as a dancer and stripper.. According to Bowen, Blackwell had not been acting like himself. She claimed that he had recently gotten into an altercation with another dancer who worked for him, and on the morning of February 4 he had consumed more alcohol than was normal for him and he was intoxicated or at least, according to Bowen, over his limit. At approximately 4:00 a.m. on the morning of February 4, 2014, Bowen and Blackwell got into a dispute that escalated into foul language, spitting on one another, Blackwell’s delivering a glancing blow across Bowen’s cheek, and ultimately Blackwell’s lifting Bowen by her waist and carrying her from inside The Cave into the yard. Bowen testified that, after being removed from The Cave, she told Blackwell that “you done fucked up.... I got a boyfriend that’s going to fuck you up.” (R. 285.) According to Bowen, Blackwell responded, “I don’t give a fuck about your boyfriend. I done played football.... You think I’m worried about a simple basic nigger?” (R. 285.) Bowen testified that Blackwell further stated, “I don’t give a fuck who you call and what they bring, because when they made one gun, they made more.... [I]f they come up here and think they are going to control and do this and do that, I will bury them.” (R. 298.) Bowen testified that she got a ride home where she woke Diggs from his sleep and told him what Blackwell had done. Bowen testified that she wanted Diggs to confront Blackwell about the way he was “acting out,” but she did not want Blackwell to be killed. Bowen testified that Diggs stated, “Blackwell fucked up” and he and his brother, Eric Johnson, left. (R. 287.) When Diggs returned, he told Bowen what had happened at The Cave concerning his shooting Blackwell.

Diggs testified on his own behalf as follows. Chasity Bowen had been Diggs’s girlfriend for five or six years and Diggs considered her to be his wife. He also knew and accepted that Bowen worked for Blackwell as a dancer and stripper. Diggs knew Blackwell because Bowen worked for Blackwell and because about eight months earlier, Blackwell and Blackwell’s two young daughters had lived with Bowen during a period when Diggs was in jail. Diggs stated that he was not happy about that situation, but, according to Diggs, any differences he and Blackwell may have had about Blackwell’s living with Bowen had been resolved through discussion and based on their mutual respect for one another. Ultimately, following Diggs’s release from jail, Blackwell voluntarily moved out of Bowen’s residence. Diggs testified that he had not had any problem with Blackwell from the time Blackwell moved out of Bowen’s house until the night Blackwell died.

Diggs testified that Bowen was known to tell a lie and to exaggerate. When she woke him up in the early morning of February 4, 2012, she was hysterical and saying that Blackwell had' “put his hand on [her].” (R. 380.) She did have some swelling on her face. Diggs asserted that he did not go to The Cave intending to shoot Blackwell. He claimed that he intended to go to The Cave and speak to [159]*159Blackwell and find out if what Bowen said was true. According to Diggs, if it was true he intended to tell Blackwell “to stay away from [Bowen], don’t call her no more, it is over with, y’all ain’t going to have no more dealings” and that if Blackwell ever put his hands on Bowen again it was going to create a serious problem between them. (R. 403.)

“I mean, Chasity, I have been with her six years. She is like my wife. No, I don’t think I am wrong for going up there. I wanted to see why [Blackwell] put your hands on her, what happened. What made [Blackwell] do this? I am going to see.
“Would you go up there and see if it was your wife?”

(R. 396.)

Bowen told Diggs that Blackwell had a .380 caliber pistol and that he had commented that “he was going to bury [her boyfriend].” (R. 381.) Diggs said that he took his 9 mm. pistol with him to The Cave for his personal protection because he lived in a dangerous area, because of what goes on at The Cave, and because Bowen told him that Blackwell had a gun. Diggs said that his brother, Eric Devon Johnson,2 went with him. The Cave was approximately five to seven blocks from Diggs’s house. Diggs testified that he weighed 165 to 170 pounds and Blackwell was “way bigger.” (R. 383.) The autopsy report disclosed that the 46-year-old Blackwell was 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighed 288 pounds. (R. 176.) When Diggs walked up to the front of The Cave, Blackwell and another big man were standing outside near the front door. Diggs stated that when he said that he was looking for Blackwell, Blackwell stepped inside the house for about a minute. (R. 384.) Blackwell returned and stood a few steps outside the front door. Diggs was never asked to leave. For “a couple of minutes” Diggs and Blackwell were having a calm conversation during which Diggs asked Blackwell if Blackwell had put his hands on Bowen. (R. 385.) At first Blackwell said he had not but that he had escorted her out of The Cave. According to Diggs, about the time Blackwell recounted that Bowen had spit on him, that “he just flipped,” and that everything escalated. (R. 385.) According to Diggs,

“[Diggs] said, did you[, Blackwell,] put your hands on [Bowen]? Then [Blackwell] kept, he was explaining himself. But then [Blackwell] flipped. [Blackwell] was like, ‘[Bowen] spit at me, and I spit back on that bitch.’ When [Blackwell] said that, I said, ‘damn.’ So when I said ‘damn,’ he was like, ‘yeah, I did it.’ And he said, T ain’t got to explain it. I am sick of this shit.’ When he said that, he upped.

(R. 386.) Diggs testified that he and Blackwell were at “close range” from one another when Blackwell fired his pistol at Diggs. (R. 399.) Diggs thought that he was about to die. He did not “see how [Blackwell] didn’t shoot [him].” (R. 399.) Diggs did not remember pulling his gun, but he must have pulled his pistol from his waist and just “started shooting rapid” as he ran away. (R. 387.) He did not aim, he “just shot and [he] ran.” (R. 398.) Diggs had no idea how many times he fired his pistol, but he fired all his bullets in “[pjrobably two seconds.” (R. 387.) He ran all the way home. Diggs did not know [160]*160if Johnson had a gun or if anyone other than he and Blackwell had fired a gun. Johnson must have run when the gunfire began because he beat Diggs back to his house. Diggs knew that he shot Blackwell, but initially, he did not know Blackwell had died. Diggs further testified that he had convictions for nonviolent felonies4

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Related

Diggs v. State
203 So. 3d 120 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2015)
Fuller v. State
231 So. 3d 1207 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2015)
Johnson v. State
168 So. 3d 163 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 So. 3d 156, 2014 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 91, 2014 WL 6608352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diggs-v-state-alacrimapp-2014.