Jason Davis v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 2008
Docket2008-KA-01715-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Jason Davis v. State of Mississippi (Jason Davis 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
Jason Davis v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2008-KA-01715-SCT

JASON DAVIS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/11/2008 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. FRANK G. VOLLOR COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: WARREN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: MICHAEL ELIAS WINFIELD ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: LAURA HOGAN TEDDER DISTRICT ATTORNEY: RICHARD EARL SMITH, JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 09/16/2010 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE CARLSON, P.J., RANDOLPH AND KITCHENS, JJ.

RANDOLPH, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Jason Davis alleged that, on multiple occasions, he had been subjected to threatening

and/or unlawful conduct by Thaddeus Jeffery. See infra ¶ 4-6. On the evening of September

2, 2007, Davis claimed that Jeffery “ran up on” him in an Exxon station parking lot, began

verbally confronting him, then stepped back and reached for his gun. At that point, allegedly

acting in self-defense, Davis removed his gun and fatally shot Jeffery. Contrastingly,

eyewitnesses at the Exxon station testified that they never saw Jeffery confront Davis and

that they did not see Jeffery possessing a weapon. ¶2. Davis subsequently was indicted for the murder of Jeffery pursuant to Mississippi

Code Section 97-3-19. See Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-19 (Rev. 2006). Following a jury trial

in the Circuit Court of Warren County, Mississippi, Davis was found guilty as charged and

sentenced to life imprisonment in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections

(“MDOC”). Soon thereafter, Davis filed a motion styled “Motion New Trial” based upon

the “newly discovered evidence” of another witness to the shooting. Following a hearing,

the circuit court denied Davis’s motion, concluding that the evidence was both previously

available and cumulative. Davis then filed a “Notice of Appeal.”

FACTS

¶3. Davis alleges that he had a lengthy history of being subjected to threatening and/or

unlawful conduct by Jeffery, whom he claims that he “didn’t even know.” Davis

acknowledged that none of these alleged threatening and/or unlawful incidents, see infra ¶

4-6, were reported to the police.

¶4. According to Davis, in the first such incident, he suspected that Jeffery had broken

into his car and had stolen his CD player. Several days later, Davis’s friend informed Davis

that Jeffery had robbed him of $300 at gunpoint. While discussing this incident with his

friend, Davis testified that Jeffery “pulled up . . . and was like, ‘Yeah, b****, I robbed you.

What you gonna do about it? I see you got that old weaky a** n***** with you. I’ll blast

him,’ . . . referring to me.” According to Davis, Jeffery further stated that “he was already

facing time, he might as well kill us b****es.” Davis testified that he “didn’t say nothing”

as he “didn’t want to lead it on in no kind of way.”

2 ¶5. Davis testified that on a subsequent occasion, while he was walking up the steps to

his aunt’s home, which was near Jeffery’s home, Jeffery allegedly “said, ‘Don’t bring your

weaky a** around here.’ And then I said, ‘What?’ . . . Then he said, ‘Yeah, you’ll get your

b****y a** blasted on,’ and was lifting up his shirt showing me his weapon . . . . I just ran

on in the house . . . .” Davis and his friend, Marcus Luckett, testified regarding another

alleged incident in which Jeffery pulled up next to Davis’s car at a stop light and “flashed”

his pistol at them.1 Davis also testified about a different alleged incident where Jeffery

“flashed” his gun at him.2

¶6. On the afternoon of September 2, 2007, Davis testified that as he entered the Exxon

convenience store,3 Jeffery entered behind him with “a real mean look on his face, but he

never said nothing to me.” According to Davis, as he was then driving away, Jeffery “was

1 According to Luckett, Jeffery did not speak or point the weapon at them, but held it in his right hand “like showing it to us.” 2 Multiple witnesses also testified to Jeffery’s reputation within the community. Lieutenant Linda Hearn, a crime-scene investigator for the Vicksburg Police Department, testified that she had heard of Jeffery and calls relating to him in the past, but never had any “personal dealings” with him. Likewise, Officer Damon Jacoby, an investigator with the Vicksburg Police Department, testified that “I knew that he had some cases pending, but for what, I don’t know.” According to Davis, he heard that Jeffery “killed somebody at the club before[,]” and that “he’s shot people, too, not necessarily killing them . . . .” Davis further recounted an incident where Jeffery allegedly robbed an “old man” of $50. By contrast, Eddie Graves, Jeffery’s close friend, testified that Jeffery was not a bully and “I’d never seen him just pick on nobody for no reason.” Demetrus Banks, a friend of Davis and an acquaintance of Jeffery, testified that she heard Jeffery had a reputation of being “pretty tough,” but that in her personal experience “he was . . . nice and cool.” 3 This Exxon station was the scene of the subsequent shooting at issue.

3 like, ‘Yeah, b****, next time I see you, you better have your strap.’ He lifted up his shirt

again and showed me his gun . . . .”

¶7. On the evening of September 2, 2007, Davis was at the home of his cousin, Kaleshia

Bowman. According to Bowman, Davis was intoxicated and:

was telling us that . . . he had a pistol for [Jeffery] because he had been picking. And Crystal asked me to ride with her because she was going to follow him home. And we were going down Clay [S]treet and . . . she was trying to tell him to slow down. He looked at us, he smiled and kept going. Well, he went to the store, and we was following.

Conversely, Davis testified that he was not intoxicated, that they had left Bowman’s home

“because I wanted to show them my new girlfriend[,]” and that he intended to stop first at

the Exxon station “to get some beer, some cigarettes, and some gas.” According to Davis,

while driving he:

was in the far right lane. And [Jeffery] was in the left lane, and that’s when I seen him. . . . As we were coming down the street pulling on to the store, like coming up to the light, he was like, “Hey, old b**** a** n*****.” He had three other guys with him. And I . . . turned left in front of McDonald’s and pulled right up to my pump [at the Exxon station].

¶8. Multiple witnesses testified to their recollections of the killing in the Exxon station

parking lot. According to Graves, he was talking with Banks in the northwest corner of the

parking lot when Jeffery arrived.4 Graves testified that Jeffery exited his vehicle with a cell

phone to his ear, was “talking loud,” and “moments later I heard gunshots, three or four

gunshots.” 5 Banks testified that she was talking to Graves and another individual when she

4 By contrast, Davis testified that Graves was one of the three individuals in Jeffery’s vehicle. 5 According to Graves, he was at such a distance that he could not decipher who was shooting.

4 “heard gunshots. So we looked up. So we seen two guys running. We seen somebody

running behind somebody with a gun. . . . And we seen somebody ducking.” According to

Bowman, as Davis exited his car, Jeffery backed his vehicle up to Davis’s vehicle,6 such that

Davis “could have went to the left, but not backwards or forward.” Bowman testified that

Jeffery then exited his car “with his right hand in his pocket and approached [Davis].” 7

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