Larmont Donzell Burchett a/k/a Larmont D. Burchett v. State of Mississippi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedDecember 6, 2022
Docket2021-KA-00776-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Larmont Donzell Burchett a/k/a Larmont D. Burchett v. State of Mississippi (Larmont Donzell Burchett a/k/a Larmont D. Burchett 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
Larmont Donzell Burchett a/k/a Larmont D. Burchett v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2021-KA-00776-COA

LARMONT DONZELL BURCHETT A/K/A APPELLANT LARMONT D. BURCHETT

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/27/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. GRADY FRANKLIN TOLLISON III COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: MARSHALL COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES CHARLES MITCHELL McGUFFEY SPENCER MARK RITCHIE LARMONT DONZELL BURCHETT (PRO SE) ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL: BY: ALLISON ELIZABETH HORNE DISTRICT ATTORNEY BEN CREEKMORE NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 12/06/2022 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

EN BANC.

McCARTY, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. A factory employee was accused of murdering his co-worker. Despite being

identified by other workers as having committed the crime, his theory of defense was that no

one saw him do it. The jury found him guilty. On appeal, he argues he should have received

a lesser-included instruction on heat of passion manslaughter. Finding there was no evidence

to support giving such an instruction and no other issues requiring reversal, we affirm. BACKGROUND

¶2. Larmont Burchett worked in Byhalia at Griffin Inc., where he assembled armored

cars. At the time Burchett worked there, the company had about 75 employees, who could

turn out 12 to 15 armored vehicles a month. Working close by him was Deandrae Jones.

Burchett would do the interior trim work on the vehicles, and Jones would do the exterior.

¶3. Although he had not worked long at Griffin, Burchett had complained to his

supervisor about how Jones treated him at work. Their supervisor, Carlos Young, would

later recall that the two were “joking around,” but Burchett “didn’t take the joke too well.”

After what he characterized as some teasing and “low jabs,” Burchett went to his supervisor

and told him “that he didn’t want to . . . continue to joke” with Jones.

¶4. The supervisor told them to knock it off, and according to him “both of them said that

there wouldn’t be anymore joking around with each other.” The two then “shook hands,”

and there did not seem to be any more trouble.

¶5. But on another day, something else happened. The supervisor would “normally get

with every employee early in the morning” to explain what was needed for the day. But

Burchett was not ready for work; instead, he was “just sitting like—he was just sitting

dazed,” his supervisor would later remember.

¶6. The supervisor asked him if he was okay, and Burchett said he was fine. Shortly

thereafter though he said, “[M]an I’m feeling bad. I’m feeling sick at my stomach.” The

supervisor called his immediate superior, who told him to let Burchett go to the doctor if he

did not feel well. So the supervisor gave Burchett permission to leave, and the worker agreed

2 he was going to the doctor. Young reminded Burchett that since he had not been working

at the plant longer than 90 days that he would need an excuse from his doctor. Burchett

asked if taking off sick would “count against” him, and the supervisor said no. Young

recalled telling him “Go get yourself taken care of and hopefully we’ll see you tomorrow.”

¶7. And then Young said Burchett “clocked out and went to his vehicle.” But Burchett

didn’t leave.

¶8. Less than five minutes later, the supervisor was stocking bins with nuts and bolts for

the workers when he “heard three shots.” Then he heard an “employee scream ‘Man, who

shooting firecrackers in here[?]’” But it wasn’t firecrackers—instead, the supervisor saw

Burchett shooting a gun. Because he thought Burchett was shooting at him, he ran and

“jumped behind the stairway and laid there until it was over with.” From his vantage point

he saw Burchett, who had moved his Jeep closer to the exit, get in and drive off.

¶9. It was after the shooting finally stopped when the supervisor learned Jones had been

shot multiple times. He would later die from the gunshot wounds.

¶10. Law enforcement later found Burchett some 30 miles away in Memphis, after the

company that had financed the Jeep shared its location. He was arrested and later indicted

for the deliberate-design first-degree murder of Jones.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶11. Before trial, Burchett indicated to the trial court that he wished to proceed without

counsel. The trial court ultimately determined that he could proceed as he desired but left

his appointed lawyer in a hybrid capacity. Burchett’s counsel announced to the jury during

3 opening statement that the theory of defense was “that there is a lot of gray here.” According

to the defense, the jury would not hear the State’s witnesses say that “they were there” when

Jones was shot or “that they saw the gun” or “that they saw [the shooting].”

¶12. Defense counsel was certain that “the one thing you won’t hear from any of the . . .

witnesses or from the law enforcement is [‘]I was there, I was standing there, I saw Larmont

shoot Deandrae Jones.[’]”

¶13. But the jury then heard testimony from two witnesses that they saw Larmont Burchett

shoot Deandrae Jones.

¶14. First was Samuel Klaus, who delivered parts to various sections of the plant. In his

words, he “was delivering parts to that building and then Larmont came around . . . and shot

Deandrae and then took off to his Jeep and got away.” When pressed repeatedly about

details, Klaus was steadfast that he saw Burchett shoot Jones with a handgun: “No doubt

about it.” On cross-examination, when defense counsel pressed if he could be mistaken

about the identity of the shooter, Klaus testified that he was sure—“No one looked like him

at all.”

¶15. The jury also heard from Jekiah Walton, who worked in quality control. That morning

he explained he had seen “Larmont and Deandrae into it”—well, more like “[n]ot into it, but

they [were] close to each other like talking to each other,” even though “they weren’t loud.”

He thought they should “chill out, whatever.”

¶16. According to Walton, he saw Burchett walk out of his area and ask where their

supervisor was. Walton then witnessed Burchett asking Young for permission to leave work

4 since he did not feel well. But he remembered being surprised when Burchett not only did

not leave, but came back inside the plant: “like I’ll say about five minutes later,” when he

thought, “I thought you were gone . . . I’d be gone in a minute.”

¶17. Walton then told the jury that Burchett “was walking around the truck where

Deandrae was and shot him.” He saw the gun in his hand because “I was standing behind

him,” and he “count[ed] about seven, seven shots.”

¶18. The witness also did not understand what had caused the conflict. Even though

people joked around at the plant—“We kept calling and checking each other”—there was

nothing so serious it would provoke violence. “[I]t was just joking to me.”

¶19. The State asked Walton about Burchett’s return to work after leaving that morning:

“did he seem calm to you?” Walton responded, “Yeah” and that he just “thought [Burchett]

had left his jacket or something.” And after Burchett shot Jones, the witness testified,

Burchett just “stepped over him and walked out.” He then “[w]alked out to his truck he had

parked beside the bay . . . and drove off.”

¶20. Next, the jury heard from Burchett and Jones’ supervisor, Young. He explained the

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Larmont Donzell Burchett a/k/a Larmont D. Burchett v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larmont-donzell-burchett-aka-larmont-d-burchett-v-state-of-mississippi-missctapp-2022.