Jesiah Flowers v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 18, 2025
Docket0228242
StatusPublished

This text of Jesiah Flowers v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Jesiah Flowers v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jesiah Flowers v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA PUBLISHED

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Malveaux and Callins Argued by videoconference

JESIAH FLOWERS OPINION BY v. Record No. 0228-24-2 CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER MARCH 18, 2025 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF PETERSBURG Dennis M. Martin, Sr., Judge

Andrew M. Sacks (Sacks & Sacks, P.C., on brief), for appellant.

Craig W. Stallard, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Jesiah Flowers appeals his convictions of two counts of malicious shooting within an

occupied building in violation of Code § 18.2-279, one count of which was classified as second-

degree murder under the statute because it resulted in the death of an innocent bystander. He

also appeals his convictions of attempted murder in the first degree, malicious wounding,

shooting in the commission of a felony, and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony in

violation of Code §§ 18.2-26, -32, -51, -53, and -53.1. The offenses stem from a shoot-out

between Flowers and Devin Mitchell that resulted in the death of a bystander and the injury of

another.

Flowers raises several distinct issues on appeal. He challenges the joinder of his charges

with Mitchell’s in a single trial. He also contends that the trial court erred by admitting into

evidence a video exhibit showing him and Mitchell arguing with each other about two years

before the shootings. Additionally, Flowers suggests that the trial court violated his

constitutional right to a public trial by excluding his mother from the courtroom before he testified. Finally, he argues that the Commonwealth’s evidence was insufficient to support his

convictions. We hold the trial court did not err and affirm the convictions.

BACKGROUND1

On July 2, 2022, Flowers and Mitchell apparently unexpectedly encountered each other

on the staircase of an apartment building. They each drew their firearms. Flowers fired three

times, and Mitchell fired twelve. Two innocent bystanders were caught in the crossfire. One

bystander died, and the other one was wounded.

The Commonwealth brought a number of charges against both Flowers and Mitchell as a

result of the shoot-out. It asked the court to try the offenses against the two in a single trial.

Over Flowers’s objection, the trial court granted the motion.

At trial, the primary evidence against Flowers and Mitchell was in the form of videos of

the shootings, recorded by the apartment building’s surveillance equipment. The

Commonwealth also introduced a video surveillance recording from January 14, 2020, more than

two years before the shoot-out. That recording captured the two co-defendants, high school

students at the time, having a brief argument at the school. The trial court admitted the video

over Flowers’s objection to explain motive and to prove the defendants knew each other.

After the close of the Commonwealth’s evidence, Flowers and Mitchell each testified in

his own defense. Each defendant claimed that the other instigated the gun violence.

During the trial, the court excluded Flowers’s mother from the courtroom for being

disruptive. Defense counsel asked the trial court to allow her back into the courtroom while

Flowers testified, but the court denied the motion.

1 On appeal, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party below. See Hargrove v. Commonwealth, 77 Va. App. 482, 491 n.1 (2023). -2- After hearing the evidence, the jury found Flowers guilty of two counts of maliciously

discharging a firearm within an occupied building. Although the jury also found him guilty of a

separate charge of second-degree murder, the Commonwealth’s theory for that offense was that

Flowers maliciously discharged a firearm within an occupied building and a death resulted. See

Code § 18.2-279 (providing that if someone maliciously discharges a firearm within an occupied

building and someone dies as a result, that person “is guilty of murder in the second degree”). In

accordance with the parties’ agreement, therefore, the trial court treated Flowers’s conviction for

second-degree murder as subsumed in one of his convictions for maliciously shooting within an

occupied building. As a result, the court set aside the separate murder conviction. In addition,

the jury found Flowers guilty of attempted murder in the first degree, malicious wounding, two

counts of use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, and three counts of shooting in the

commission of a felony.2 He was sentenced to a total of eighty-two years of incarceration, with

thirty-two years suspended.

ANALYSIS

Flowers challenges the trial court’s decisions to try Mitchell with him jointly, to admit

the video recording of the school altercation, to exclude his mother from the courtroom, and to

hold that the evidence was sufficient to support his convictions. We consider each issue in turn.

I. Joinder

Flowers contends the trial court erred by granting the Commonwealth’s motion to join his

trial with Mitchell’s. He argues this legal error was prejudicial to him and as such the

convictions should be reversed.

2 The jury found Flowers not guilty of one count of using a firearm in the commission of a felony and three counts of unlawful wounding while committing a felony. -3- The law regarding joinder is well settled. On the Commonwealth’s motion, “for good

cause shown, the court shall order persons charged with participating in contemporaneous and

related acts or occurrences or in a series of acts or occurrences constituting an offense or

offenses, to be tried jointly unless such joint trial would constitute prejudice to a defendant.”

Code § 19.2-262.1; see Rule 3A:10(a). Subject to these restrictions, the decision whether to try

individuals jointly rests within the discretion of the trial court. See Hargrove v. Commonwealth,

77 Va. App. 482, 496 (2023).

The “bell-shaped curve of reasonability” underpinning appellate review for an abuse of

discretion “rests on the venerable belief that the judge closest to the contest is the judge best able

to discern where the equities lie.” Commonwealth v. Barney, 302 Va. 84, 94 (2023) (quoting

Sauder v. Ferguson, 289 Va. 449, 459 (2015)). “[T]he abuse of discretion standard requires a

reviewing court to show enough deference to a primary decisionmaker’s judgment that the

[appellate] court does not reverse merely because it would have come to a different result in the

first instance.” Commonwealth v. Thomas, 73 Va. App. 121, 127 (2021) (first alteration in

original) (quoting Lawlor v. Commonwealth, 285 Va. 187, 212 (2013)). Stated another way, “[a]

reviewing court can conclude that an abuse of discretion occurred only when reasonable jurists

could not differ about the correct result.” Howard v. Commonwealth, 74 Va. App. 739, 753

(2022).

As a threshold matter, in the trial court, the Commonwealth bears the “initial burden of

persuasion” of “showing good cause for a joint trial.” Allen v. Commonwealth, 58 Va. App. 618,

622 (2011). Once this obligation is met, the defendant seeking severance bears the burden of

“demonstrat[ing] that [the] joint trial” would “cause[] ‘actual,’ ‘legally cognizable prejudice’ to

his rights.” Hargrove, 77 Va. App. at 496 (quoting Allen, 58 Va. App. at 623). This is a very

high hurdle.

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