Hillard v. State

950 So. 2d 224, 2007 Miss. App. LEXIS 61, 2007 WL 446929
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 13, 2007
DocketNo. 2005-KA-01781-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 950 So. 2d 224 (Hillard v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hillard v. State, 950 So. 2d 224, 2007 Miss. App. LEXIS 61, 2007 WL 446929 (Mich. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

ROBERTS, J.,

for the Court.

SUMMARY OF THE CASE

¶ 1. This criminal appeal arises from a casino robbery. On June 29, 2005, a jury sitting before the Tunica County Circuit Court found Latori Hillard guilty of armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery. On August 16, 2005, the circuit court sentenced Hillard to fifteen years for the armed robbery charge and four years for the conspiracy to commit armed robbery charge. Additionally, the circuit court set the conspiracy charge to run concurrent with the armed robbery charge.. Aggrieved, Hillard appeals and raises the following issue, listed verbatim:

I. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT ADMITTED INTO EVIDENCE THE PRIOR, ACCUSATORY TESTIMONY OF MR. HILLIARD’S PUTATIVE ACCOMPLICE (MR. QUARRELS) [SIC], BUT FAILED TO AFFORD THE APPELLANT AN OPPORTUNITY TO CROSS-EXAMINE THE ALLEGED ACCOMPLICE?

¶ 1. Finding that the circuit court erred when it allowed the prosecution to submit evidence in violation of Hillard’s right to confront his accusers, we reverse and remand both Hillard’s conspiracy conviction and his armed robbery conviction for a new trial.

FACTS

¶ 2. This case arises from an armed robbery that took place at Harrah’s Casino in Tunica, Mississippi. At approximately 12:00 a.m. on September 12, 2003, Greg Hollis was working his shift as a cashier at the casino. Hollis worked inside what is commonly called “the cage.”

¶ 3. During Hollis’s shift, a man walked up to Hollis and tossed a piece of paper on the counter. Hollis initially thought the note was a coupon. When Hollis read the note and realized that the man had a pistol, he quickly understood that he was being robbed. The gunman told Hollis, “hurry up, don’t play me, f-.” The gunman passed Hollis a pillowcase and Hollis put money in it.1

¶ 4. Bobby Carmon, the surveillance supervisor for Harrah’s, observed that Hollis was being robbed. Carmon contacted the Tunica County Sheriffs Department and reported the robbery. Carmon also made a “dub” of the casino’s surveillance video system and called the security department.2

¶ 5. Barbara Kuchenmeister, the security lead at Harrah’s at the time of the robbery, received a report from the surveillance department that Hollis was being robbed. Kuchenmeister ran towards the cage. As she entered the casino floor, she saw two men run in the opposite direction. Kuchenmeister followed them out of the casino entrance where she saw a white car with a dark roof leave the parking lot. Kuchenmeister returned to the cage, posted a guard there, and called Bob Casey, the security manager for Harrah’s. Casey went to the casino and waited for authorities to arrive.

[227]*227¶ 6. Nathaniel Dawson, a deputy with the Tunica County Sheriffs Department, was on his way to Harrah’s in response to Cannon’s robbery report. Before he arrived, he saw a white Ford car that matched Kuchenmeister’s description of the car that left Harrah’s. After the white Ford ran a stop sign, Deputy Dawson turned on his blue lights, stopped the white Ford, and radioed for assistance.

¶ 7. Deputy Dawson found one person in the white Ford. That occupant was Mario Clark. Deputy Dawson placed Clark in handcuffs, put him in the back seat of his patrol car, and waited for Allen Thompson, an agent with the Mississippi Bureau of Investigations. After Clark consented to a search of the car, Agent Thompson found a .32 caliber revolver in the glove compartment. Clark claimed that he owned the pistol. A subsequent check with the NCIC database revealed that the pistol had been reported as stolen. Agent Thompson had the white Ford towed to the crime lab.

¶ 8. Meanwhile, Detective Sheila McKay of the Tunica County Sheriffs Department was on her way to the casino. Before she arrived, she found a hat and a pillow case on the side of the road. Detective McKay collected the hat and pillow case and continued to the casino.3 At the casino, Detective McKay reviewed the surveillance footage. According to Detective McKay, she recognized the man who robbed Hollis as Latori Hillard.

¶ 9. Hillard turned himself into custody on September 15, 2003. To be exact, Hil-lard’s father called the Tunica County Sheriffs Department and asked Deputy Dennis Allen to pick up Hillard. Deputy Allen met with Hillard’s father and took Hillard into custody. Within an hour, Agent Thompson met with Hillard. Agent Thompson fingerprinted Hillard and later delivered those fingerprints to Steve Chancellor at the Mississippi Crime Lab.

¶ 10. Chancellor, a crime scene investigator with the Mississippi Bureau of Investigations, processed the white Ford for fingerprints. Chancellor found nineteen sets of latent fingerprints on the car’s exterior. However, he was not able to find any fingerprints inside the car. Agent Chancellor collected the fingerprints but he could not say to whom the prints belonged. Andre Nagoski of the Mississippi Crime Lab, however, compared Hillard’s fingerprints with the latent prints from the exterior of the white Ford. Nagoski found that ten sets of prints taken from the exterior of the Ford matched the fingerprints Agent Thompson collected from Hil-lard.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 11. On February 8, 2005, the Tunica County Grand Jury returned an indictment against Hillard. By that indictment, the grand jury charged Hillard with armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery. Hillard pled not guilty. Accordingly, the matter proceeded to trial. On the first day of trial, the prosecution called Greg Hollis, Deputy Dawson, Detective McKay, Agent Thompson, Agent Chancellor, and Andre Nagoski. After Nagoski testified, the court recessed for the evening.

¶ 12. The next morning, the prosecution intended to call Ronnie Quawrells as a witness. Prior to Hillard’s trial, Quawrells had been convicted of conspiracy to commit armed robbery of the same crime for which Hillard faced trial. When deputies retrieved Quawrells, he refused to testify against Hillard. The circuit court judge warned Quawrells that he would be in [228]*228contempt if he continued to refuse to testify. Regardless, Quawrells remained adamant that he would not testify against Hillard. The circuit court judge found Quawrells in contempt and ordered him returned to custody. An hour later, the circuit court judge again ordered Quaw-rells before the court. Again, Quawrells refused to testify against Hillard.

¶ 13. Quawrells’s testimony severely implicated Hillard as the principle participant in the casino robbery. Because Quawrells refused to testify, the prosecution sought alternative means to introduce Quawrells’s prior testimony. The prosecution sought to read Quawrells’s prior testimony before the jury.

¶ 14. Hillard objected and sought to exclude Quawrells’s prior testimony. Hil-lard submitted that his Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses against him would be violated if the circuit court allowed the prosecution to read Quawrells’s prior testimony before the jury. Hillard noted that he never had an opportunity to cross-examine Quawrells during Quaw-rells’s conspiracy trial and he would not be able to cross-examine Quawrells if his pri- or testimony was read to the jury.

¶ 15.

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950 So. 2d 224, 2007 Miss. App. LEXIS 61, 2007 WL 446929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillard-v-state-missctapp-2007.