Jonicqua Moffett v. State of Mississippi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 23, 2022
Docket2021-KA-00622-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Jonicqua Moffett v. State of Mississippi (Jonicqua Moffett 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
Jonicqua Moffett v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2021-KA-00622-COA

JONICQUA MOFFETT APPELLANT

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/21/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JON MARK WEATHERS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: FORREST COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: ALLISON KAY HARTMAN DISTRICT ATTORNEY: PATRICIA A. THOMAS BURCHELL NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/23/2022 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., LAWRENCE AND McCARTY, JJ.

LAWRENCE, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. A Forrest County jury found Jonicqua Moffett guilty of second-degree murder for the

fatal stabbing of her fiancé, Cordaeil Miller. The circuit court sentenced Moffett to serve

forty years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Moffett’s post-trial

motions were denied. Moffett appealed, claiming three errors justify a reversal of her

conviction: (1) she received ineffective assistance of counsel when she was “denied due

process” because the jury was not properly instructed on three “material defenses”; (2) her

inculpatory statement to law enforcement was coerced and therefore should have been

suppressed; and (3) the verdict was contrary to the sufficiency and weight of the evidence. Finding no reversible error, we affirm Moffett’s conviction and sentence.

FACTS

¶2. On August 4, 2017, at their residence in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, Moffett and Miller

got into an argument that lasted most of the day.1 That argument ultimately ended when

Moffett stabbed Miller one time in the heart with a knife, resulting in his death. When the

police arrived, Miller was lying next to a vehicle with the driver’s side door still open. The

police found a knife with a blade length of approximately seven inches near the vehicle.

¶3. Moffett initially told the police on scene that she and Miller were arguing and that he

left. She claimed she went inside the residence and later returned outside to find Miller

“leaning” against the home with a stab wound. Moffett told the police that she yelled at

family members inside the home to come help.

¶4. Later at the police station during a recorded interview, Moffett maintained the same

story, and the police told Moffett that they had eyewitnesses to the incident. At that point,

Moffett changed her story and told the police that she and Miller had been arguing all day

and that she stabbed him to protect herself. She explained that Miller was verbally abusive,

was intoxicated, and had punched her prior to the stabbing. Moffett stated that she retrieved

the knife from the kitchen to protect herself before returning outside and beginning the

argument again when the stabbing ultimately occurred. When Miller tried to get into the

vehicle to drive away, Moffett claimed she attempted to stop him, and he turned around and

1 The record is unclear as to what the argument was about and why it continued to escalate. Miller eventually died at the hospital from a single stab wound. He never gave a statement to the police. Moffett gave several statements to the police, which contained different descriptions of that day’s events.

2 struck her in the mouth with his elbow. Moffett stated that Miller bear-hugged her and that

is when he was “accidentally” stabbed.

¶5. Moffett was indicted for first-degree murder pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated

section 97-3-19(1)(c) (Rev. 2018). The indictment specified that Moffett killed Miller while

engaged in the commission of the felony crime of aggravated domestic violence.

¶6. A jury trial occurred from March 22 to March 24, 2021. The State called several

witnesses, the first of whom was crime scene Investigator Jeff Byrd. At the time of trial,

Investigator Byrd had worked for the Hattiesburg Police Department for thirty-five years.

He testified that he had been a crime scene investigator since 1991 and worked crime scenes

when requested. On August 5, 2017, the Hattiesburg Police Department requested assistance

for a crime scene investigator near the area where Miller had been stabbed. Miller had been

removed by the time Investigator Byrd arrived, but he observed Moffett while she was there.

Investigator Byrd testified that he photographed Moffett at the scene and did not observe any

“injuries to her person.” Those photographs were introduced into evidence. Investigator

Byrd also testified as to his photographs taken of the front of the house and the location of

the vehicle where Miller was found. He additionally identified physical evidence he

collected from the crime scene, including a cell phone and knife found lying on the ground.

Finally, Investigator Byrd testified as to a statement Moffett gave him at the scene. He stated

that Moffett indicated she had an argument with Miller and she went inside the residence

while he walked down the street. She later “came back outside and saw [Miller] standing

against the residence holding his chest.”

3 ¶7. The State also called Investigator Dale Bounds of the Hattiesburg Police Department,

who was the lead investigator at the time of incident. Investigator Bounds took a statement

from Moffett at the police station, which was recorded on video. The video was introduced

as an exhibit, but upon agreement of counsel, only portions of the video were actually played

for the jury.2 Investigator Bounds testified that Moffett continued to tell the same story that

she had originally told the first responding officers. After he told her he had “witnesses to

. . . them fussing and fighting all day long,” she “admitted to stabbing Mr. Miller” and gave

a written statement. Moffett’s written statement was admitted into evidence:

[Early] tonight around 8:30 my fiancé [(Miller)] walked out of the house with [another woman]. I asked him twice where he was going but he ignored me so I walked outside behind him and asked him again he [replied] nowhere girl but rudely. I then went inside got my shoes and then walked down the street he seen me and walked back with me to the house. [The other woman] came in shortly and I told her off then told my fiancé we will talk later. . . . [M]y fiancé was driving crazy so I got out the car on the corner . . . and walked the rest of the way . . . instead of accepting that he was wrong he started throwing my wrongs in my face . . . . I began to gather my things first while arguing back and forward with him we began to tussle and a few licks [were] passed so I got out went in and grabbed a knife from the kitchen for protecting because I was scared he would jum[p] on me[.] I came back out he was seated in the trunk I started yelling at him asking why he was treating me like I did him wrong[.] [H]e then got up said call the police and went for the driver’s side door[.] I grabbed his arm and he elbowed me then wrapped around me and at some point he got stabbed while I was trying to get him off of me.

¶8. The defense called two witnesses—Moffett and Maury Phillips with the Mississippi

Crime Laboratory. Moffett testified that she and Miller had been together “about five years.”

She claimed she had been a victim of domestic violence with a previous boyfriend, who was

the father of her child, and she was not “satisfied with how the police handled it.” Moffett

2 The jury had a copy of the entire videotaped statement during deliberations.

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