Kadarron Foreman a/k/a Khadarron Foreman a/k/a Kadarron D. Foreman a/k/a Kadarron Denario Foreman v. State of Mississippi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 19, 2026
Docket2024-KA-00728-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Kadarron Foreman a/k/a Khadarron Foreman a/k/a Kadarron D. Foreman a/k/a Kadarron Denario Foreman v. State of Mississippi (Kadarron Foreman a/k/a Khadarron Foreman a/k/a Kadarron D. Foreman a/k/a Kadarron Denario Foreman 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
Kadarron Foreman a/k/a Khadarron Foreman a/k/a Kadarron D. Foreman a/k/a Kadarron Denario Foreman v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2024-KA-00728-COA

KADARRON FOREMAN A/K/A KHADARRON APPELLANT FOREMAN A/K/A KADARRON D. FOREMAN A/K/A KADARRON DENARIO FOREMAN

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/07/2024 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ALAN D. LANCASTER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CARROLL COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: HUNTER NOLAN AIKENS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: INDIA MARIAH SPRINKLE DISTRICT ATTORNEY: WILLIAM ADAM HOPPER NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/19/2026 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., LAWRENCE AND EMFINGER, JJ.

LAWRENCE, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. On Christmas Day, December 25, 2022, Kadarron Foreman shot and killed Sammie

Bryant (Sammie) in the front yard of Sammie’s mother’s home. After a trial, a jury found

Foreman guilty of manslaughter, and he was sentenced to serve twenty years in the custody

of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Foreman appealed, challenging the sufficiency

and weight of the evidence supporting his conviction. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On April 18, 2023, Kadarron Foreman was indicted by a grand jury for one count of first-degree murder pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated section 97-3-19(1)(a) (Rev.

2020). A three-day jury trial was held from May 28-30, 2024.

¶3. The State first called Anthony Williams, who was an eyewitness. Williams testified

that he and his girlfriend, LaTasha Duren, went to Betty Bryant’s house on Christmas

evening, December 25, 2022. LaTasha is Betty’s niece and Sammie’s first cousin. Williams

was shown a picture of Betty’s house and asked to mark where the cars were parked and

people were standing on Christmas day. Betty’s house had a gravel driveway with a parking

area to the side of the driveway. LaTasha was parked in the gravel parking area closest to

the house, and Foreman’s car was parked next to LaTasha in the middle of the parking area.

¶4. When Williams and LaTasha arrived, Foreman and other family members were

already at the house. This was the first time Williams had ever met Foreman. Everyone was

“sitting down having dinner,” and Williams was “sitting on the couch.” “Shortly after [they]

had dinner[,]” Sammie arrived at the house. Foreman was already outside when Sammie

drove up, and LaTasha, Betty, and Betty’s sister Martha Duren “all went outside” because

they heard arguing. Williams knew that Foreman and Sammie did not get along, so Williams

“went outside after the argument had gone on a little bit longer.” He testified that he “knew

it was all women outside with two other men out there. So [he] went out to de-escalate” the

situation. Williams thought Sammie would listen to him, believing a “man is more likely to

listen to a man sometimes[.]”

¶5. Outside, “[e]verybody was yelling[,]” and Martha, Betty, and LaTasha were asking

2 Foreman to leave. Williams heard Sammie saying, “Get momma inside.”1 Williams stated

that Sammie had parked his car farther up the driveway, very near the house, but he was

standing farther down the driveway in the parking area. Williams walked toward Sammie

and noticed Foreman going toward Foreman’s car. Williams assumed Foreman was leaving.

Williams had to walk around the back side of LaTasha’s car to reach the place where

everyone was standing, which momentarily “obscured” his vision of Foreman and Sammie.

¶6. When Williams made it around the car, Williams stated that he “saw Khadarron come

out [of his car] with a gun, point the gun and shoot Sammie.” Williams stated that Foreman

“kind of walked” toward Sammie before shooting. Williams saw Sammie “kind of turn”

before the shot, but Williams “couldn’t see if he was grabbing for anything.” Williams stated

that he was behind Sammie, Martha was between Sammie and Foreman, and Betty was

farther away. Williams “only heard one shot,” and then he dropped to the ground.2

¶7. Williams saw Sammie had fallen to the ground and called 911. Williams stated that

he began administering CPR and first aid to Sammie. Williams saw Foreman walk back to

his vehicle with his girlfriend, Vanessa Duren, and then they left. Williams was “trying to

1 There was some dispute at trial on cross-examination between Williams and defense counsel as to whether Williams later told the Carroll County sheriff that he heard Sammie say this. At trial, Williams could not remember what all he had heard Sammie say. A portion of Williams’s interview with the sheriff was played for the jury. 2 There was further dispute at trial with Williams’s testimony as to whether he actually saw Foreman shoot Sammie. He testified to the jury that he saw Foreman shoot, but his recorded interview with the sheriff did not contain that statement. Williams’s entire interview was played for the jury for impeachment purposes. Williams then clarified that he did not “know who it was that shot.”

3 find out where [Sammie] was shot” and found a “bullet in the back of his head, like toward

the back side of the head.” Williams then noticed that Sammie had a gun that was upside

down and next to his left hand.

¶8. Next, the State called Martha, who was Betty’s sister and LaTasha’s mother. Martha

was at Betty’s house on Christmas Day when Vanessa and Foreman arrived. She stated that

Foreman had been at the house “maybe 20 minutes” visiting with Vanessa’s mother, Hattie

Mae, and then Foreman walked out the door. Martha was exiting Betty’s restroom when she

saw out the window that “Sammie had pulled up” to the house. She stated that she was

trying “to get out the house just as fast as [she] could” because she knew Foreman and

Sammie “didn’t like each other.”

¶9. When Martha walked outside, LaTasha and Betty were already outside, and according

to Martha, Foreman and Sammie were “out there hooping and hollering and stuff[.]”

Sammie had walked down the driveway from where he was parked. Martha “went straight

to Sammie” and told him, “It ain’t going to be no mess today. It’s Christmas.” She stated that

she had her “hands up,” and “had Sammie cornered off.” She was “steady watching”

Foreman and told him, “Get in the car. Get in the car, [Foreman].” She watched as Foreman

went to his car, “opened that door up, and that is when he come out with that gun and shoot.

Just like that. He did it so fast.” She stated that she thought she heard two shots but was not

certain that she heard the second one. She further stated that she saw Foreman shoot, and she

could not say whether Sammie reached for anything; however, she “never saw Sammie with

4 a gun in his hand.”

¶10. Martha testified that she heard Vanessa say, “Boy – God dang, boy.” Martha heard

Foreman react with, “He drawed on me first, Nessa. He drawed on me first, Nessa. He was

standing there with that gun in his hand and shaking.” Martha then watched as Williams

administered first aid to Sammie and Foreman left the house. Similar to Williams’s

testimony, Martha stated that she never saw Sammie with a gun until after he was shot and

fell to the ground. She stated that “that gun must have fell out then because I sure didn’t see

him with no gun.” She also stated that Sammie did not go back to his car at any point during

the argument with Foreman.

¶11. LaTasha, Betty’s niece and Martha’s daughter, testified next. She stated that it was

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Kadarron Foreman a/k/a Khadarron Foreman a/k/a Kadarron D. Foreman a/k/a Kadarron Denario Foreman v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kadarron-foreman-aka-khadarron-foreman-aka-kadarron-d-foreman-aka-missctapp-2026.