Lemuel G. Williams v. State of Missouri

490 S.W.3d 398, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 553
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 2016
DocketWD78412
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 490 S.W.3d 398 (Lemuel G. Williams v. State of Missouri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lemuel G. Williams v. State of Missouri, 490 S.W.3d 398, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 553 (Mo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Mark D. Pfeiffer, Judge

Mr. Lemuel G. Williams (“Williams”) appeals from the Judgment of the Circuit Court of Clay County, Missouri (“motion court”), denying his Rule 29.15 amended motion for post-conviction relief, based on ineffective assistance of trial counsel, after an evidentiary hearing. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural History 1

Late in the afternoon on November 16, 2009, a gold Pontiac Grand Prix pulled into the parking lot of a strip mall on North Oak in Gladstone. The car parked in front of an iTalk store. The iTalk store’s video surveillance camera showed that, from 4:24 until 4:30 p.m., when the iTalk store closed, no one got out of the gold Pontiac.

The iTalk store was located next to a PDQ Title Loans store. Ms. Savannah Waller-Hudson was working at PDQ Title Loans that day. Sometime around 4:40 p.m., she was talking on the phone to her supervisor, Ms. Lisa Boone, about the day’s business when she saw a man walking quickly toward her. The man was African-American and was wearing a black, pinstriped, button-up dress shirt with a black long-sleeved shirt underneath *401 and black jeans. He was ¡also wearing gold removable teeth and a black stocking cap. As he moved toward her, he pulled the stocking cap over his face.

The man demanded that Ms. Waller-Hudson get off the phone. Before hanging up, Ms. Waller-Hudson yelled at Ms. Boone to call 911. The man proceeded to rob PDQ Title Loans, displaying his gun to Ms. Waller-Hudson to compel her cooperation with the cash heist.

Meanwhile, after Ms. Waller-Hudson hung up on her, Ms. Boone called Mr. Victor Caruso, the owner of PDQ Title Loans. Mr. Caruso called 911 and pulled up the live feed of his store webcam on his computer in time to see the man grab Ms. Waller-Hudson’s shoulder and lead her behind the cash register. Mr. Caruso watched the webcam live feed as the man left the store. From the time Mr. Caruso first saw the man robbing the store until he saw the police, approximately ten minutes elapsed. Approximately five minutes elapsed between the time he saw the man exit the store and he saw the police arrive at 5:00 p.m.

The police were dispatched to the robbery at 4:56 p.m. The dispatch described the suspect as an African-American male, wearing a black shirt with pinstripes and possibly a black jacket and black hat. The dispatch also stated that the suspect had fled southbound on foot. One of the police officers who responded was Captain Stanley Dobbins (“Officer Dobbins”). On his way to the PDQ Title Loans store at approximately 5:00 p.m., Officer Dobbins saw a gold Pontiac Grand Prix traveling southbound on North Oak, about four to seven blocks away from PDQ Title Loans. Officer Dobbins saw two African-American men in the car. He noticed that the passenger was “scrunched down” in the seat, so he was unable to get a good look at the passenger at that time. Because Officer Dobbins knew that a similar car was part of an investigation of another robbery at the same PDQ Title Loans store about a month earlier, he began to follow the car. Eventually, Officer Dobbins pulled his car alongside the gold Pontiac Grand Prix and saw that the passenger fit the description of the suspect in the current robbery. Officer Dobbins reported this to dispatch and waited for other officers to arrive before executing a traffic stop.

Upon stopping the car, the police learned that Williams was the driver and that Andre • Williams (“Andre”), 2 who matched the description of the robbery suspect, was the passenger. Initially, Andre gave the police several false names. Williams told Officer Dobbins that he and Andre were just out driving around. Both Williams and Andre were arrested. Ms. Waller-Hudson was brought to the scene and identified Andre as the person who robbed the PDQ Title Loans store. As the police were booking Andre, he tried to hide a set of gold teeth in his hand.

When questioned by the police the day after the robbery, Williams said that he was from Jackson County, but his girlfriend lived in the Gladstone area, and he stayed with her from time to time. He said that Andre was his cousin from Oklahoma, whom he had known for five years. Williams said that Andre had been in Kansas City for two months, and he was helping Andre get around town by driving him places. Williams told the police that he had recently taken Andre to buy a set of gold teeth.

Williams told the police that, on the day of the robbery, he arrived in Gladstone around 3:30 p.m. and picked up Andre. *402 According to Williams, he and Andre drove to a CVS on Shady Lane and North Oak. After initially indicating it was a CVS, however, Williams then remembered that it might have been a Walgreens. Williams said that Andre waited in the car as he went inside the pharmacy for thirty minutes and bought lotion. After leaving the pharmacy, Williams drove on North Oak and pulled into the parking lot of a sub shop and CD store located on North Oak. Williams told the police that he had been to another CD store located on Antioch, but on the day of the robbery, he went only to the CD store on North Oak. Williams said that he went into the sub shop, bought a cookie and a drink, and then went into the CD store. According to Williams, the clerk at the CD store had fluffy hair. Williams told the police that he was in the CD store for thirty minutes, while Andre stayed in the car. When he came out of the CD store, Andre was still in the car. Williams said that they left the parking lot and were pulled over shortly thereafter.

Williams denied any knowledge of the robbery and told the police that Andre must have taken his car while he was in the pharmacy or the CD store. Williams was confident that he could take the police to the stores he had been to that afternoon, so a detective drove him to North Oak to find the stores. They found a CD store on North Oak, but Williams did not remember that store.

Later that day, the detective took Williams out again, but this time they drove on Antioch instead of North Oak. They found a CD Warehouse and a Mr. Goodeents on Antioch, and Williams then remembered those stores as the ones he had been in on the day of the robbery. When the detective showed the clerk at CD Warehouse a picture of Williams, however, the clerk said that he did not notice that Williams was in the store on the day of the robbery. The clerk did not have fluffy hair, and he said that no one who worked there had fluffy hair. And, upon searching the gold Pontiac Grand Prix, the police did not find the lotion that Williams claimed to have bought or the trash from Mr. Goodeents, which Williams said he put in a plastic bag in the car. Finally, the police timed the driving distance between the CD Warehouse and PDQ Title Loans and confirmed that Williams’s purported timeline of events (and the location of the gold Pontiac) simply did not match up with the PDQ Title Loans webcam, nor the time stamp of the police dispatch from the 911 call from Mr. Caruso when the robbery was taking place.

The State charged Williams with first-degree robbery for acting in concert with Andre to forcibly steal money from PDQ Title Loans. The first jury trial of the case ended in a mistrial due to juror misconduct. During the second trial, Williams testified in his defense. Williams testified that he was not the getaway driver in the robbery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
490 S.W.3d 398, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemuel-g-williams-v-state-of-missouri-moctapp-2016.