Jabrien Williams a/k/a Jabrien Duwan Williams a/k/a Jabrien D. Williams v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 2022
Docket2020-KA-00772-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Jabrien Williams a/k/a Jabrien Duwan Williams a/k/a Jabrien D. Williams v. State of Mississippi (Jabrien Williams a/k/a Jabrien Duwan Williams a/k/a Jabrien D. 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
Jabrien Williams a/k/a Jabrien Duwan Williams a/k/a Jabrien D. Williams v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2020-KA-00772-SCT

JABRIEN WILLIAMS a/k/a JABRIEN DUWAN WILLIAMS a/k/a JABRIEN D. WILLIAMS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/16/2020 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DEWEY KEY ARTHUR TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: JOHN K. BRAMLETT, JR. KATIE NICOLE MOULDS ASHLEY RIDDLE ALLEN BENTLEY E. CONNER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: MADISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: CYNTHIA ANN STEWART ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: BARBARA WAKELAND BYRD DISTRICT ATTORNEY: JOHN K. BRAMLETT, JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/24/2022 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE RANDOLPH, C.J., MAXWELL AND BEAM, JJ.

MAXWELL, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Jabrien Williams was twenty-two years old when he convinced fourteen-year-old JR1

to unlock the window of an unoccupied bedroom of her family’s ground-floor apartment.

Once inside, Williams had sex with the minor. Days later, Williams texted JR, attempting

1 To protect the identity of the minor victim, only her initials are used. to have sex with her again. Soon after, JR’s stepfather discovered the messages on the

family’s iPod. JR told her stepfather that Williams sent the messages to her. She then

informed her mother she had sex with Williams in their apartment.

¶2. Williams was indicted on one count of sexual battery. The specific charge was that

he engaged in sexual penetration with a child fourteen years or older but under sixteen years

of age, while Williams was at least thirty-six months older. See Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-

95(1)(c) (Rev. 2020). Before trial, Williams’s counsel disclosed that one of Williams’s

defense theories would be that someone else—namely, Williams’s younger brother, who

went to school with JR—sent the text messages from Williams’s phone. But at trial,

Williams employed a different defense. He steadfastly denied that the phone number used

to send JR the messages was his. His younger brother also testified the number was not

Williams’s.

¶3. Surprised by this, during the first day of trial, the State ran the phone number through

the Madison County Detention Center logs. After the State rested, it learned this exact phone

number was listed by Williams as his contact number when he received an ankle monitor for

an unrelated crime. Realizing Williams had been wearing the GPS monitor during the

relevant time frame, the State inquired further and learned GPS coordinates placed Williams

at JR’s apartment the night she reported he had sex with her. Over Williams’s objection, the

judge permitted the State to introduce this evidence during its rebuttal.

¶4. Williams was convicted and now appeals. He challenges several evidentiary rulings,

the most significant being the admissibility of the State’s rebuttal evidence. Williams now

2 alleges the State improperly withheld this evidence. He says the suppression violated not

only Mississippi Rule of Criminal Procedure 17.2, which mandates certain evidence be

produced pretrial, but also Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87, 83 S. Ct. 1194, 1196-97, 10

L. Ed. 2d 215 (1963), which constitutionally prohibits the prosecution from withholding

potentially exculpatory evidence. But the record does not support his contention.

¶5. Instead, the record shows the State had no knowledge that Williams had listed this

number when receiving an ankle monitor in an unrelated case—or any reason to know of its

potential materiality—before trial. So it had no duty to blindly search for or produce this

information under Rule 17.2. Further, upon the State’s discovery and assessment that the

number and tracker had become relevant, the State advised the trial court and Williams’s

counsel. After learning this information, Williams’s counsel was given an opportunity to

review the evidence. He conceded he was familiar with the witness who would sponsor the

GPS information and her qualifications as an expert. He reviewed the information overnight,

then chose not to seek a continuance.

¶6. Furthermore, the State had no pretrial duty to produce this evidence under Brady.

This evidence was not exculpatory—not even potentially exculpatory. And importantly, it

was not unknown to Williams, who—unlike the State—was well aware that he had been

wearing an ankle monitor during the charged offense. He was also the one who had listed

the number he later used to text JR as his official contact when he received the ankle monitor.

And because he had not pursued an alibi defense, the State had no duty to pursue and furnish

this evidence before trial.

3 ¶7. The bottom line is that the admission or exclusion of evidence falls within the trial

court’s discretion. We have reviewed all the trial court’s evidentiary calls that Williams

contests and discern no abuse of discretion. We therefore affirm.

Procedural History

¶8. Because Williams aims his appeal at evidence admitted or excluded at trial, in relaying

the procedural history, we focus on the trial court’s evidentiary rulings.

I. Pretrial Evidentiary Rulings

A. Statement by Williams’s Brother

¶9. Before trial, the State moved to exclude Williams’s younger brother’s statement. This

statement described JR’s playing with his hair and “twerking” on his lap during a bus ride

to school. The trial judge excluded the statement under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 412(a),

which prohibits evidence of the victim’s past sexual behavior in criminal cases alleging

sexual offenses. Williams’s counsel argued this evidence should be included because one

of Williams’s defense theories was misplaced blame. According to counsel, JR texted back

and forth with Williams’s brother, and Williams’s lawyer expressed that he “believed that

some of the text messages that the State intends to offer [against Williams] were actually

between the victim and [Williams’s] brother, not with him.” In response, the trial judge ruled

that Williams’s brother could testify that the messages the State intended to introduce were

from him, not Williams, but under Rule 412, the brother could not testify about JR’s flirting

with him or “twerking” on his lap.

B. Photographs of JR

4 ¶10. The State also moved to exclude photographs of JR taken as part of the forensic

medical exam. These photos showed bruising unrelated to the sexual battery. Williams

intended to show JR’s stepfather corporally punished her, thus establishing a motive for JR

to lie about Williams to avoid further punishment. The State objected to the photos as

irrelevant and more prejudicial than probative. See Miss. R. Evid. 402, 403.

¶11. Because Williams had not offered any evidence yet to establish the relevance of these

photos, the trial court sustained the State’s objections. Williams could proffer the photos,

but the trial court would not admit them unless and until JR testified and her testimony made

the photos relevant. When JR testified at trial, Williams’s counsel cross-examined her about

an alleged text-message exchange with Williams’s younger brother that occurred after

Williams was arrested. Williams’s counsel tried to get JR to say that she conveyed to the

brother that Williams was innocent.

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Jabrien Williams a/k/a Jabrien Duwan Williams a/k/a Jabrien D. Williams v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jabrien-williams-aka-jabrien-duwan-williams-aka-jabrien-d-williams-v-miss-2022.