Eric Lewis Williams v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 2008
Docket2008-KA-00438-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Eric Lewis Williams v. State of Mississippi (Eric Lewis Williams 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
Eric Lewis Williams v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2008-KA-00438-SCT

ERIC LEWIS WILLIAMS a/k/a E ERIC

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/23/2008 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. MICHAEL M. TAYLOR COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: PIKE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: BENJAMIN ALLEN SUBER LESLIE S. LEE GUS GRABLE SERMOS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: LISA LYNN BLOUNT DISTRICT ATTORNEY: DEE BATES NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/12/2009 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE GRAVES, P.J., RANDOLPH AND PIERCE, JJ.

RANDOLPH, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Seventeen-year-old Eric Lewis Williams was indicted for capital murder, conspiracy

to commit capital murder, aggravated assault, and conspiracy to commit aggravated assault.

Following a jury trial in the Circuit Court of Pike County, Mississippi, Williams was found

guilty on the counts of capital murder, aggravated assault, and conspiracy to commit

aggravated assault. He was then sentenced to life without the possibility of parole in the

custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (“MDOC”) for capital murder, to ten

years for aggravated assault, and to five years for conspiracy to commit aggravated assault, all to run consecutively. Following denial of his post-trial motions, Williams filed notice of

appeal.

FACTS

¶2. On January 27, 2007, Janice Bonds was at Williams’s trailer, along with her infant son

and Alexander Hymes. According to Bonds, Hymes asked to borrow her black 2006 Chevy

Malibu “to go to the store to get some cigarettes.” Bonds further testified that Hymes:

asked [Williams] to ride along with him. [Williams] refused to go at first. He was like, man, I don’t want to go to the store. So [Hymes] just kept on pressuring [Williams] . . . to go to the store with him. So eventually [Williams] did decide to get up and go. So I gave [Hymes] the keys to go, and they went to the store.

¶3. Trish Minton was the store clerk at the MS Food Mart on Highway 48. According to

Minton, Williams and Hymes entered the store and Hymes asked “to see a hat.” After

showing the hat to Hymes, Minton testified that “[h]e said he didn’t have any money, but he

wanted to look at them anyway. And [Williams] was in the back of the store.” While

conversing with Hymes, Minton “asked him did he go to Southwest [Community College

(“Southwest”)]. He said yes. And I asked him had he lost his ID, and he . . . said yes.”

Thereafter, Minton testified that she:

went around to get his ID for him. The guy that was at the back [of] the store [Williams] stuck a gun to my head and said, give me all the money. So I opened the register. When I opened the register, he shot the gun, and I went down to the floor. He got the money out of the register, and then he walked around, behind the counter where I was at . . . .

According to Minton, she “asked [Williams] to please don’t shoot me because I was

pregnant. He told me to shut up. So I just sat there. They were looking at some stuff behind

2 the counter and went over to look at the hats.” At that time, James Serigny pulled up to the

store in his truck and walked in. Minton testified that Serigny:

looked at me on the floor and he looked at them. Then he looked back at me and he walked to the back of the store. The one with the gun [Williams] followed him.

And I didn’t see it, but the next thing I heard was a shot and [Serigny] falling on the floor. I didn’t look over or say anything at that time. I know [Hymes] was standing by the door, waiting for [Williams]. The next thing I know, they were gone and I called 9-1-1.

Minton’s 911 call was received at 12:56 p.m.

¶4. At approximately 1:15 p.m., Detective Davis Haygood of the Pike County Sheriff’s

Department arrived at the crime scene, ten minutes after other officers first arrived. Minton

informed Haygood that the video surveillance camera was operational at the time of the

incident.1 Additionally, Haygood testified that Minton “advised that one of the defendants

. . . had come in previously, a couple days prior, and had left a [Southwest] ID, which was

taken back during the [incident].”

¶5. Haygood then took Minton to Southwest “to try and attempt to identify the individual

on the ID.” At Southwest, Haygood testified that he:

received a phone call from Detective James Sparacello, because when we were on the scene earlier, we had been talking about possible suspects and we had remembered that we had an attempted armed robbery at the Highway 24 BP,

1 The store surveillance video corroborated Minton’s account. As the State’s brief notes:

[i]n the surveillance video you see Hymes and Williams exit their vehicle, and then enter the store. When Serigny enters the store, Williams is seen walking up behind the victim and brutally shooting Serigny in the forehead. Next you see Williams running toward the door and the two exit the store.

3 and also that Amite County had contacted us earlier in the month that they had . . . a burglary on Irene Road, right along the Amite County line, where a .40 caliber gun had been stolen.[2 ] During that time they had gave us some names of some possible suspects that we were looking at for the Highway 24 attempted robbery, and also the burglary. Detective Sparacello contacted them, was able to get the names back from them. We knew that one of the individuals went to [Southwest].

Detective Sparacello contacted me while I was there with [Minton] and gave me the name of [Hymes]. At that time, I asked the lady that was operating the computer to pull the photo up. . . . [A]s soon as it become full face, [Minton] stated, . . . that’s him.

¶6. Hymes was subsequently arrested, his home was searched,3 and Sparacello obtained

a written statement from him. Based upon Hymes’s written statement, Williams was arrested

at his residence later that evening. Williams’s uncle, Henry Sibley, gave consent to search

the trailer, during which Haygood testified that “the black hat . . . we recovered in his

bedroom . . . matched the description of hats at the store where the armed robbery took

place.” 4 At the sheriff’s department, Haygood testified that he read Williams “his rights and

2 On January 5, 2007, a .40 caliber Smith & Wesson handgun was reported stolen by Raymond Price. Price testified that Williams was his “cousin’s son, step-son.” According to Price, Williams lived in a trailer “about 300 yards from where I stay[,]” and would “come over [to] shoot basketball with my daughter and his brothers.” Price testified that Williams had seen him take his guns out shooting, although he was unsure if Williams knew where the guns were kept. 3 According to Haygood, “[t]he white shirt that [Hymes] was wearing at the time of the robbery was recovered during the search . . . .” Moreover, Haygood testified that Hymes’s Southwest ID card was found inside his wallet and that a hat was recovered from his closet “which was described by [Minton] and the [store] owners as being hats that they had in their store and taken during the [incident].” 4 According to Haygood, “there is a price tag and it’s notated on the sticker of the brand of the hat. That is the same price tag that is used by the convenience store where the armed robbery took place.” Furthermore, Bonds testified that she first saw the hats found in the residences of Williams and Hymes “[w]hen they returned from the store.”

4 waiver of rights, which he signed, stating that he understood both of those, I [then] conducted

an interview with him . . . .” According to Haygood:

[Williams] . . . stated . . .

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Eric Lewis Williams v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-lewis-williams-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2008.