Eric Moffett v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 2006
Docket2008-DP-00541-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Eric Moffett v. State of Mississippi (Eric Moffett 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 Moffett v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2008-DP-00541-SCT

ERIC MOFFETT

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/26/2006 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. W. SWAN YERGER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF CAPITAL DEFENSE COUNSEL BY: ANDRE DE GRUY ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: JASON LEWIS DAVIS MARVIN L. WHITE, JR. DISTRICT ATTORNEY: ROBERT SHULER SMITH NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - DEATH PENALTY - DIRECT APPEAL DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 09/16/2010 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

RANDOLPH, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Eric Moffett was convicted of capital murder. Moffett was sentenced to death by

lethal injection by a jury of his peers after the jury determined that the murder of a five-year-

old child was: (1) committed while Moffett was engaged in felonious abuse and/or battery

of a child; and (2) especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel. Finding no reversible error, we

affirm his conviction and sentence.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY ¶2. Felicia Griffin was sexually abused,1 battered,2 and murdered during the early morning

hours of December 31, 1994. Felicia lived in Jackson with her two sisters; mother, Pennie

Griffin; and, Pennie’s boyfriend, Moffett. On December 30, 1994, Moffett, Pennie, and the

three girls were at home. Moffett left the house at approximately 9:45 p.m. while Pennie was

preparing to go to work. Pennie expected Moffett’s mother, Florence Moffett Powell, to

arrive soon to take her to work. When Powell did not timely arrive, Pennie went to a nearby

gas station to phone her employer and Powell. Pennie checked on the children before

leaving, and locked the door and burglar bars as she departed. After going by Pennie’s home,

Powell picked up Pennie at the gas station and proceeded to take Pennie to work. It was

disputed at trial whether Powell was alone when she arrived at the gas station, or whether she

was accompanied by her daughter, Sheritha Moffett. Sheritha testified that she had

accompanied Powell and had observed Powell enter the house looking for Pennie. Powell

did not testify, as she died before trial. The jury heard evidence that Moffett returned to the

house a few hours later, took Felicia into the bedroom he shared with Felicia’s mother,

abused Felicia, and savagely raped her with his fingers and fist.

¶3. Moffett reported Felicia’s death via a 911 call and awaited the arrival of officers from

the Jackson Police Department (JPD). After the police officers arrived, Moffett exhibited

anger and began to behave strangely. His behavior escalated to the point that he was “out

of control” and “throwing furniture, ” according to the testimony of police officers. Four

1 The perineum had been savagely ripped or torn, resulting in open communication of the excretory opening of the alimentary canal with her genital orifice. 2 She had bruises on her neck, face, and left leg; and petechial hemorrhages on her face.

2 officers subdued Moffett. He was handcuffed and arrested. From his arrest on December

31, 1994, Moffett remained incarcerated until September 7, 1995, when a grand jury returned

no true bill. Moffett was released the same day. He had been in custody 250 days.

¶4. Years later, a JPD cold-case unit reviewed the file and submitted its findings to the

district attorney. Moffett was indicted in April 2002. Moffett was tried, convicted, and

received a death sentence in February 2006. Substantial evidence was presented at trial,

including the live testimony of numerous witnesses. Witnesses included, but were not

limited to, Pennie Griffin; LaQuandia Griffin, the victim’s sister; Donald Davis, a prison

inmate; Mary Esther Pearson, a nurse practitioner; Huma Nasir, a forensic DNA analyst for

a private DNA laboratory; and Detective Rod Eriksen, a JPD officer.

¶5. LaQuandia testified that she was seven years old at the time of the murder. The night

of the crime, Pennie helped her and her sisters, Jessica and Felicia, get ready for bed and

checked on them before she left for work. The three girls were sleeping on a pallet in a room

across the hall from the bedroom shared by Pennie and Moffett. Lights were on in the girls’

bedroom, the hallway, and bathroom. LaQuandia woke up and saw Moffett standing in the

doorway of the girls’ bedroom. She saw Moffett pick up Felicia, who was sleeping closest

to the door. He took Felicia to his bedroom. He did not close the doors all the way, so she

could see him. He placed Felicia down on the bed and started touching and rubbing on her

chest and stomach areas. She heard Felicia making “all kind of painful cries.” She then

dozed off, only to be awoken later. She saw someone 3 in the hallway going into Pennie’s

bedroom. She remembered looking into the bedroom and seeing Felicia “laying in the bed

3 This person was later determined to have been a paramedic.

3 and the covers were real bloody.” After the police arrived, Moffett approached her, hugging

and attempting to reassure her. She recalled seeing Moffett “throw a fit, . . . he was . . .

yelling and screaming, . . . picking up chairs and . . . throwing things as if he cared.” She

saw the paramedics take Felicia away on a stretcher. She was not sure what she told the

policeman who questioned her about the murder, but she did recall being afraid to tell him

about Moffett, as he was still in the house at the time.

¶6. Donald Davis, an inmate with Moffett during the 1994-95 confinement, testified.

During his testimony, he read a statement he had written on September 15, 1995,4 when he

was interviewed by a JPD officer at the Hinds County Detention Center. Moffett had

confessed the crime to Donald Davis at a Bible study on September 3, 1995. The confession

had included graphic details of the crime and Moffett’s attempt to seek forgiveness by

inflicting injury upon himself (smashing his hand in a steel door at the detention center).

¶7. Mary Esther Pearson testified that she was a nurse practitioner who provided medical

services to inmates at the detention center where Moffett was incarcerated. She testified that

she treated Moffett in March 1995 for an injury to the middle and ring fingers of his right

hand. Moffett told her he had “mashed [his fingers] in a door.”

¶8. Huma Nasir testified about DNA tests performed on laboratory samples taken at the

emergency room, at autopsy, and at the murder scene, as well as known samples drawn from

Moffett. She stated that the vaginal swab, vaginal wash, and anal swab were all positive for

semen on the presumptive test, but were negative for sperm cells on the confirmatory test,

indicating that there were no “physical sperm cells” remaining in the semen samples. She

4 This was after the no-bill report of the September 1995 grand jury.

4 testified at length about DNA tests done on cuttings from the bath towel found in the bed

where Felicia had been found by paramedics. The towel was positive for semen and

epithelial cells, but was negative for blood. There were two stains on the towel. The first

was a semen stain and the other was a mixed stain, including semen and epithelial cells.5 The

semen stain was found to match Moffett’s DNA on all fifteen markers. Nasir testified that

there was less than one chance in five trillion, nine hundred billion (5,900,000,000,000)6 that

the semen had come from anyone other than Moffett.

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