Gregory Stalling Hopkins v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 2013
Docket2013-KA-00301-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Gregory Stalling Hopkins v. State of Mississippi (Gregory Stalling Hopkins 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
Gregory Stalling Hopkins v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2013-KA-00301-SCT

GREGORY STALLING HOPKINS a/k/a GREGORY S. HOPKINS a/k/a GREGORY HOPKINS a/k/a GREG HOPKINS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/27/2013 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. LAWRENCE PAUL BOURGEOIS, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: BRAD A. SMITH DISTRICT ATTORNEY: JOEL SMITH NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/01/2014 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE DICKINSON, P.J., LAMAR AND CHANDLER, JJ.

LAMAR, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Gregory Stalling Hopkins was convicted as a habitual offender of possession of

cocaine with intent to distribute. In his appeal, he challenges the sufficiency and the weight

of the evidence as well as the admission of evidence of his prior bad acts. Finding no error,

we affirm. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶2. On December 11, 2009, the Biloxi Police Department conducted an undercover drug

operation at Hopkins’s residence 1 located at 224 Bowen Street in Biloxi, Mississippi. The

police enlisted the help of a confidential informant (CI) 2 who called Hopkins and requested

$50 worth of crack cocaine. Hopkins agreed to the sale. Officer Ricky Allen and Officer

Mike Mason drove the CI to Hopkins’s residence, searched her, wired her purse with audio

surveillance equipment, and gave her $50 in prerecorded bills to complete the buy. Police

officers stationed around the property watched the CI approach Hopkins’s residence and lost

sight of her only when she approached his door. After ten minutes, the CI returned with two

purses, no money, and one rock of crack cocaine, which she handed directly to the

investigator. The audio surveillance equipment recorded the entire transaction and revealed

that Hopkins would not let the CI into his residence but brought her a second purse and the

crack cocaine. Once the rock tested positive for crack cocaine, the investigator signaled to

secure the house. Upon entering the house, the police found Hopkins and a woman named

Hope Black in the bathroom trying to stuff a crack pipe down the sink drain after

flushingsomething down the toilet. A third person, Darryl Daniels, was found in the yard and

1 Hopkins resides at 224 Bowen Street in Biloxi, Mississippi. The residence is owned by his neighbor, who is also Darryl Daniels’s mother. However, the Biloxi Police Department lists 224 Bowen Street as Hopkins’s residence and the police have had numerous interactions with Hopkins there.

2 The CI was a well-known crack cocaine user. Prior to the operation, she signed a contract detailing what she could and couldn’t do, how the operation would work, and what she was and wasn’t supposed to say. The contract also explained that she wasn’t allowed to use drugs or participate in any other illegal activity during the operation.

2 brought inside. After securing the house, Sergeant Aldon Helmert prepared a search warrant

requesting permission to search the house for crack cocaine, confidential funds, drug

paraphernalia, and anything listed in Exhibit A of the warrant. Once the judge granted the

warrant, the police began a search of the house.

¶3. In addition to the crack pipe found while securing the house, the police found: money,

paperwork, and sandwich bags in the master bedroom; crack cocaine in the living room;

crack cocaine and a digital scale in the kitchen; and $500 in Hopkins’s pocket, fifty of which

was from the CI.3 Each of these items was recorded on the search warrant.

¶4. The money found in the bedroom totaled $3,604 in cash and $38.56 in change. The

money was found wrapped in a hat and concealed under other clothing in the bedroom

dresser. Also in the bedroom dresser was a bank card with Hopkins’s name on it and a car

title certificate. The title had been issued to Hopkins three months before the undercover

operation occurred and listed 224 Bowen Street as his address. The sandwich bags found in

the bedroom were identified by an officer at trial, without objection, as the type typically

used to package and distribute narcotics.

¶5. The rock found in the living room and the substance found in the kitchen were

confirmed by a drug analyst with the Mississippi Crime Laboratory to be crack cocaine. The

rock weighed .1 gram but the substance in the kitchen was only a trace amount, as it was in

powder form and lacked weight. Additionally, the digital scale found in the kitchen was

3 Each of the bills given to the CI had been copied before the sale and then was copied again after being recovered from Hopkins’s pocket.

3 identified by an officer as the type of scale typically used to weigh out individual crack

cocaine rocks.

¶6. The police arrested and charged Hopkins, Black, and Daniels. Hopkins was charged

with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶7. A grand jury indicted Hopkins a little more than a month after the undercover

operation and, on the same day, his attorney filed a motion to suppress evidence of his prior

bad acts. One month later, his attorney filed a request for discovery, a demand for speedy

trial, and additional motions to suppress.

Pretrial Motions

¶8. Exactly one year after he was indicted, Hopkins went to trial. Defense counsel filed

a motion to suppress/in limine under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 404(b) to keep out any

evidence of prior bad acts to show conformity. Specifically, defense counsel sought to

exclude three of Hopkins’s prior convictions: a 2005 conviction for possession of a

controlled substance; a 2003 conviction for transfer of a controlled substance4 ; and a 1989

conviction for two counts of possession of a controlled substance. The State claimed that it

intended to use only the 2003 transfer conviction. After considering several cases and

conducting a Rule 403(b) balancing test, the court denied the motion to suppress with regard

4 Hopkins’s 2003 transfer conviction was the product of a guilty plea and resulted in a sentence of ten years.

4 to Hopkins’s 2003 transfer conviction.5 Testimony regarding the conviction was elicited by

the State during its direct examination of Sergeant Freeman, and a certified copy of

Hopkins’s 2003 sentencing order was admitted into evidence.6

¶9. The defense also sought to suppress the search warrant, alleging: 1) that the officer

requesting the warrant relied solely on information from other officers and failed to conduct

an independent investigation, and 2) that the warrant was based on hearsay and an audio

recording of an unreliable CI. The judge denied the motion to suppress but limited Helmert’s

testimony to what brought the police to Hopkins’s residence and expressly prohibited

testimony about the hearsay statements in the CI’s recording.

Motions for Mistrial

¶10. Defense counsel moved for mistrial three times. The first motion occurred during voir

dire when a prospective juror said that he knew the defendant from being in jail.7 The second

occurred when Helmert testified that the undercover operation involved Hopkins, 8 and the

5 Following the denial, defense counsel requested a limiting instruction per Mississippi Rule of Evidence 105. The instruction was was provided in the jury instructions.

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