James Turner a/k/a James Jafre Turner v. State of Mississippi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 28, 2020
DocketNO. 2018-KA-00945-COA
StatusPublished

This text of James Turner a/k/a James Jafre Turner v. State of Mississippi (James Turner a/k/a James Jafre Turner 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
James Turner a/k/a James Jafre Turner v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-KA-00945-COA

JAMES TURNER A/K/A JAMES JAFRE APPELLANT TURNER

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/05/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. CHARLES E. WEBSTER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: TUNICA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: ABBIE EASON KOONCE DISTRICT ATTORNEY: BRENDA FAY MITCHELL NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART - 01/28/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE J. WILSON, P.J., WESTBROOKS AND LAWRENCE, JJ.

LAWRENCE, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. On June 13, 2018, a Tunica County Circuit Court jury found James Turner guilty of

leaving the scene of an accident resulting in death. Turner was sentenced to eight years in

the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections, with five years suspended and

three years to serve. The trial court also ordered Turner to pay a $1,000 fine and $6,500 in

restitution.

¶2. Turner filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) or, in the

alternative, a new trial. The court denied Turner’s motion. On appeal, Turner argues that (1) the trial court erred in denying his two-theory circumstantial-evidence jury instruction;

(2) the trial court erred when excluding portions of his statement to investigators; (3) the

evidence was insufficient to sustain the jury’s verdict; (4) the verdict was against the

overwhelming weight of the evidence; and (5) the restitution portion of his sentence was

illegal. Finding no error in Turner’s first four issues, we affirm Turner’s conviction.

Because the trial court’s order of restitution was not based on any evidence, we reverse and

remand on that issue.

FACTS

¶3. On the night of August 19, 2014, Samantha McClain Spates was driving down a dark

highway in Tunica, Mississippi. As Spates continued down the highway, her vehicle stalled,

bringing the car to a halt on the shoulder of the road. She exited the vehicle to investigate

the issue. Suddenly, Spates was struck by a passing vehicle. The vehicle persisted forward

and left the scene of the accident, leaving Spates injured and alone. Eventually, the police

were alerted to the accident and arrived at the scene. Spates was found dead at the scene.

¶4. A few miles down the road, a vehicle crashed into a ditch outside a residence. When

the resident, Henry Williams, went outside to investigate, he saw a man, later identified as

Turner, walking toward him. Turner was walking away from the vehicle in the ditch. As

Turner neared Williams, he threw Williams a key and told him to get the car out of the ditch

because Turner would return to retrieve the car later that evening. Williams did not get the

car out of the ditch. When the police arrived at the scene, Williams described the interaction

2 with Turner, and the police began to investigate the accident contemporaneously with the hit-

and-run.

¶5. Two days after the incident involving Spates’s death, the police verified that the

vehicle belonged to Turner, and they brought him to the police station for questioning. After

the police obtained a valid waiver from Turner acknowledging his rights, two investigators

questioned Turner concerning the night of his accident. After a brief period, the first two

investigators were replaced by Lieutenant Katie Johnson. During the interrogation, Turner

admitted to driving the silver Jaguar that was in the ditch but did not confess to striking

Spates with his vehicle. Additionally, Turner claimed the damage to his vehicle was caused

by rocks. The next day, Lieutenant Johnson questioned Turner once more.

¶6. As a product of Turner’s questioning, the investigators learned that Turner walked

from the Williams residence to the home of Monique Walls, Turner’s cousin. Walls

cooperated with the police and described the events of the evening. Walls testified that on

the night in question, Turner arrived at Walls’s home, which is located three miles from the

Williams residence. Walls recounted that Turner asked for a ride to his home and told her

that he had run his car into a ditch. Notably, Turner told Walls that he had just purchased a

Jaguar but did not describe the color.

¶7. Meanwhile, the police collected and processed the evidence from the two scenes

involving Spates and Turner. After the evidence was processed by the police and analyzed

by a Mississippi Forensic Laboratory technician, the police determined that Turner’s silver

3 Jaguar was the vehicle that struck Spates on that dark night in Tunica. The State

subsequently indicted Turner for leaving the scene of an accident resulting in death—a

felony.

¶8. At trial, Henry Williams testified and identified Turner as the individual who crashed

the Jaguar into the ditch, tossed him the keys, and told him to have the vehicle removed.

¶9. In addition, the State called Jacob Burchfield, a trace-evidence technician from the

Mississippi Forensic Laboratory, to testify, and Burchfield was accepted as an expert in glass

examination and comparison. Burchfield described the test he performed on samples from

the shattered windshield on Turner’s Jaguar and glass fragments from Spates’s clothing.

Burchfield testified that glass from Spates’s clothing was consistent with the known glass

samples from the shattered windshield on Turner’s Jaguar. Burchfield based his findings on

the matching, color-refractive index, and elemental composition of the glass samples, stating

that to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, the glass could have originated from the

silver Jaguar. Burchfield confirmed that his results were peer reviewed.

¶10. On cross-examination, Burchfield admitted that a definitive match between glass

fragments could only happen if there was a physical in-fracture match. Thus, to be one-

hundred percent certain, the sample from Spates’s clothing would require finding its

originating position in the shattered windshield. Even so, Burchfield remained confident in

the test results between the two samples because the elemental composition, refractive index,

and the color of the samples matched.

4 ¶11. During the trial, the three investigators who conducted the interrogation of Turner

were called to testify. After Lieutenant Johnson was called to the stand, Turner’s counsel

asked the trial court to confine Lieutenant Johnson’s testimony to the first interrogation with

Turner and exclude the second interrogation that occurred. The trial court accepted the

request, and the prosecution agreed to limit its questions for Lieutenant Johnson to the first

interrogation. However, during cross-examination of Lieutenant Johnson, Turner’s counsel

questioned Lieutenant Johnson concerning admissions that Turner made during the second

interrogation. When the prosecution objected, the trial court sustained the objection and

reminded Turner’s counsel that the second interrogation was excluded at their own request.

¶12. At the conclusion of the trial, Turner’s counsel requested a two-theory jury instruction,

arguing that the evidence was circumstantial. Although the trial court agreed that the

evidence was purely circumstantial, the trial court denied Turner’s request and gave a general

circumstantial-evidence instruction.

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