Jairus Collins v. State of Mississippi

172 So. 3d 813, 2014 Miss. App. LEXIS 563, 2014 WL 4977498
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedOctober 7, 2014
Docket2013-KA-00761-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 172 So. 3d 813 (Jairus Collins v. State of Mississippi) 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
Jairus Collins v. State of Mississippi, 172 So. 3d 813, 2014 Miss. App. LEXIS 563, 2014 WL 4977498 (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

CARLTON, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. A Forrest County jury found Jai-rus Collins guilty of murder pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated section 97-3-19(l)(a) (Rev. 2006). Collins now appeals his conviction and raises the following issues: (1) whether the circuit court erred by denying his motion to suppress his statement to police; (2) whether the Double Jeopardy Clause bars his retrial on the charge of murder; (3) whether the circuit court erred by refusing him the opportunity to challenge his statement during closing arguments; (4) whether the circuit court erred by allowing a witness to testify as an expert over his objections; (5) whether he was unconstitutionally sentenced as a habitual offender; and (6) whether his conviction is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 2. On December 9, 2011, Ebony Jenkins’s body was discovered behind a building in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. During the course of their investigation, police officers identified Collins as a suspect in Jenkins’s murder. In November 2012, a grand jury indicted Collins as a habitual offender for Count I, the murder of Jenkins, and Count II, possession of a weapon by a convicted felon. The circuit court granted Collins’s motion to sever the offenses charged in his indictment.

¶ 3. At Collins’s murder trial, the State called Louis Dixon, Jenkins’s father, as a witness. Dixon testified that he drove to Hattiesburg and filed a missing person’s report after receiving a telephone call that his daughter failed to report to work. On the same day that Dixon filed the report, the Hattiesburg Police Department received a phone call about a homeless person sleeping behind, a daycare. When police officers arrived at the scene, they discovered the person was actually Jenkins, who had died as a result of two gunshot wounds.

¶ 4. The jury also heard testimony from Craig Mitchell, who lived in a house behind the daycare. Mitchell testified that on the night of December 7, 2011, he was smoking a cigarette on his porch when he heard three or four gunshots. Mitchell testified that the gunshots sounded very close, and he immediately locked himself inside his house and peered out the window. According to Mitchell’s testimony, he saw a man running away from the area. Mitchell testified that the man was of medium build and wore a “hoodie-type sweater” that was '“[ejither blue or light gray or black.”

¶ 5. The State showed Mitchell a gray sweater belonging to Collins that police officers discovered in the woods. As later testimony revealed, police officers found the sweater wrapped around the suspected murder weapon in a bag hidden in the woods. Upon seeing the gray sweater, Mitchell testified that he was “[pjretty positive” that it was the same sweater he saw the man wearing the night of December 7, 2011.

¶ 6. The State also called Jenkins’s friend, Jessie Miles, .as a witness. Miles testified that he and Jenkins spoke around 9:30 p.m. on December 7, 2011, about riding to work together the next morning. However, Miles testified that Jenkins failed to show up at work the next day. Miles also provided testimony regarding a gun that he bought in February 2010. According to Miles’s testimony, he began experiencing problems with the gun and Collins’s brother, Joshia, told Miles that Collins could fix the gun. Miles testified that he gave the gun to Collins around *817 November 2011 after Collins confirmed that he could repair the gun. During Miles’s testimony, the State showed him an exhibit, which Miles identified as the gun he bought and gave to Collins to repair. Although the gun’s serial number was no longer visible at the time of trial, Miles testified that the serial number had been clearly visible when he gave the gun to Collins in November 2011.

¶ 7. Collins’s father, Melvin, also provided trial testimony about the time period surrounding Jenkins’s murder. Melvin testified that his sons stopped by his house on either December 7, 2011, or December 8, 2011. Melvin testified that he picked up a bag inside his sons’ vehicle and noticed that the bag felt “a little bit weighty.” Although Melvin did not know what the bag contained, he told his sons that the bag made him feel uncomfortable. After Melvin instructed his sons to take the bag and its contents away from his house, Collins and Joshia took the bag and left.

¶ 8. The jury heard additional testimony from Collins’s brother, Joshia, who stated that both he and Collins had been friends with Jenkins. Joshia testified that he lived at an apartment complex located within walking distance of the place where the police found Jenkins’s body. Joshia testified that his brother called him around 10:54 p.m. on December 7, 2011, from their sister’s phone. Collins arrived at Joshia’s apartment complex later that night. According to Joshia’s testimony, Collins wore a gray hoodie when he arrived at the apartment complex and appeared to be out of breath.

¶ 9. Joshia testified that he and his brother stopped by their father’s house the next day. Joshia confirmed that his father told him and his brother to get rid of the bag they had in their car. Joshia maintained during his trial testimony that he neither looked inside the bag nor saw his brother with a weapon at any point in time. According to the statement he gave to police officers, however, Joshia said that, upon feeling the bag, he could tell the bag contained a weapon. Joshia also told officers that, when he and Collins left their father’s house, they drove along Highway 59, and Collins hid the bag in the woods.

¶ 10. The State called two detectives as witnesses, and both men testified that Jos-hia led them and another officer to the location where Collins hid the bag in the woods. The detectives further testified that the bag contained a gray hoodie wrapped around a gun. Although the gun’s serial number was partially scratched off, a crime scene investigator examined the gun and determined it was the gun registered to Miles. After performing additional tests, a forensic scientist concluded that the gun fired the shell casing police officers found near Jenkins’s body.

¶ 11. In addition to finding the shell casing at the crime scene, officers discovered Jenkins’s cell phone and car keys on her body. Jenkins’s phone records revealed that the last call she received came from a phone owned by Collins’s father. ' Police learned that Collins’s sister normally used the phone but that she allowed Collins to use the phone around the time of Jenkins’s murder. When Detective Joey Scott interviewed Collins, Collins confirmed that he had possession of the phone around the time of Jenkins’s murder. 1

*818 ¶ 12. Detective Scott testified that Collins initially told officers he did not know Jenkins very well and was working the night of December 7, 2011. Officers subpoenaed Collins’s work schedule, however, which showed that Collins was not at work on December 7, .2011.. After officers showed Collins some phone records for December 7, 2011, Collins admitted to having contact with Jenkins that night. Detective Scott testified that Collins then told officers that Jenkins called him and asked for a ride.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 So. 3d 813, 2014 Miss. App. LEXIS 563, 2014 WL 4977498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jairus-collins-v-state-of-mississippi-missctapp-2014.