Lucky Turner a/k/a Lucky Leroy Turner a/k/a Chino v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 2023
Docket2022-KA-00236-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Lucky Turner a/k/a Lucky Leroy Turner a/k/a Chino v. State of Mississippi (Lucky Turner a/k/a Lucky Leroy Turner a/k/a Chino v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucky Turner a/k/a Lucky Leroy Turner a/k/a Chino v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2022-KA-00236-SCT

LUCKY TURNER a/k/a LUCKY LEROY TURNER a/k/a CHINO

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/14/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. WINSTON L. KIDD TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: ROBERT SHULER SMITH SUE MILLER PERRY SHAUNTE’ DENISE WASHINGTON TERRI DENISE MURRY-WHALEN COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES JUSTIN TAYLOR COOK ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: CASEY BONNER FARMER DISTRICT ATTORNEY: JODY EDWARD OWENS II NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/22/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE KING, P.J., MAXWELL AND GRIFFIS, JJ.

MAXWELL, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Lucky Turner admittedly shot Jeffrey Johnson in the back following a confrontation

outside a convenience store. At his trial for aggravated assault, Turner claimed he acted out

of fear for himself and his sixteen-year-old nephew. But video surveillance and eyewitness

testimony supported the State’s theory that Turner was the aggressor. A jury convicted Turner of aggravated assault. And he was sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment, with

three years suspended.

¶2. On appeal, Turner claims his counsel was constitutionally ineffective for not making

certain objections. He also claims that admission of unchallenged evidence was plain error.

But deciding whether to object to particular evidence is generally deemed trial strategy. And

such actions typically do not form the basis for an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim.

Moreover, Turner cannot show that any of this evidence would have been excluded by the

trial court had his counsel in fact objected. Nor has he proved that admission of this evidence

caused prejudice or manifest injustice. Even absent the complained-of evidence, eyewitness

testimony, surveillance video, and Turner’s own admission overwhelmingly supported the

jury’s guilty verdict.

¶3. We affirm Turner’s aggravated-assault conviction and sentence.

Turner’s Trial

I. State’s Case

A. Victim’s Physician Dr. Robert Finley

¶4. At Turner’s trial, the State first called Johnson’s treating emergency room physician,

Dr. Richard Finley. Dr. Finley testified that Johnson presented to the ER with a serious

bullet wound. The bullet clipped his lung, injured his diaphragm, and ruptured his spleen

before exiting his side. This wound required emergency surgery and a one-week hospital

stay.

2 B. Eyewitness Deidra Lowe

¶5. The State next called eyewitness Deidra Lowe. Lowe testified that she was hanging

out in the Chuk Stop parking lot on West Northside Drive in Jackson, Mississippi, when

Johnson appeared. He was visibly intoxicated. Soon after, Turner, whom Lowe knew,

pulled up to the Chuk Stop in a Cadillac SUV. The Cadillac SUV was driven by another

man, later identified as Turner’s nephew, Jah’Quez Wiggins. Turner went over to Lowe’s

car to speak to her. And Johnson began yelling at them, calling them names. Turner and

Wiggins then had a verbal altercation with Johnson. Wiggins pulled a gun out of the SUV,

but Turner took the gun away and returned it.

¶6. Lowe testified that Johnson did not appear armed or threatening—just drunk and

“talking crazy.” At some point, Turner entered the store, while Wiggins stood outside the

door, still having words with Johnson. Wiggins got the gun again and followed Johnson

around the side of the store. Lowe then heard shots ring out and saw Turner run out of the

store. Lowe testified she saw Turner take the gun from Wiggins. Lowe then heard more

gunshots but did not see Turner shoot Johnson. Turner and Wiggins then ran to the SUV and

sped off.

C. Responding Officer Lincoln Lampley

¶7. Jackson Police Officer Sergeant Lincoln Lampley also testified. A patrol officer at

the time of the shooting, Sergeant Lampley arrived at the Chuk Stop to find Johnson with a

severe gunshot wound. According to Sergeant Lampley, it “appeared that the bullet entered

on a flat trajectory coming into the lower left part of his back and then tumbled because the

3 exit wound was large and a gaping wound.” Johnson’s breathing was labored, and Sergeant

Lampley “could actually see lung tissue coming in and out of the gaping wound under his

chest on the left side.”

¶8. According to Sergeant Lampley, Johnson was very intoxicated, was not aggressive

at all, and was not armed. Johnson told Lampley that he (Johnson) had been “approached

by two black males in a black SUV who attempted to engage him in a verbal and physical

altercation.” Johnson said he “attempted to avoid the verbal and physical altercation by

walking away down Union Street.” But “once he got . . . not too far from the guys that were

in the SUV they started shooting at him and shot him in the back.”

D. Detective Kevin Nash

¶9. The State next called Detective Kevin Nash, who had arrived at the Chuk Stop after

Lampley. Detective Nash went inside the store, talked to store clerk, and viewed the

surveillance video of the incident. The release of this video to the news media led to both

Turner and Wiggins being identified and turning themselves in. During Nash’s testimony,

the State entered the surveillance video into evidence, with Nash describing the footage to

the jury.

E. Surveillance Video

¶10. The video showed that, before Turner entered the store, he actually got Wiggins’s gun

from the SUV and raised it toward Johnson. Johnson walked away, and Turner and his

friend followed. Turner then stopped at Lowe’s car, gave the gun to his friend, and gestured

to his friend to return to the car. Johnson can be seen walking down a side street, eventually

4 out of view of the cameras. Wiggins then left the SUV and walked in the direction Johnson

last had been seen on camera, but not before he went back to the car and got the gun. The

video showed Wiggins pointing the gun in the direction Johnson last had been seen. Another

camera captures Turner exiting the store, heading toward Wiggins. Turner took the gun from

Wiggins, raised it, and walked off view of the camera. Turner then reappeared on the

camera, and he and Wiggins got into their SUV and left. Soon after, Johnson walked into

the camera view, visibly bleeding.

II. Turner’s Defense

¶11. After the State rested, Turner testified in his defense. He told the jury that his sixteen-

year-old nephew, Wiggins, had driven him to the Chuk Stop to buy a beer that night. Turner

saw his friend Lowe and went over to talk to her. At some point in this conversation,

Johnson “buzzed in on it.” Johnson said, “think you going, bitch.” Turner had no idea why

Johnson called him a bitch. Turner testified that he was concerned because he had been shot

before and was worried by the way Johnson was talking. Turner testified that Wiggins was

also worried, so he got the gun out of the SUV when he heard Johnson say he was going to

kill Turner. Turner told Wiggins it was unnecessary to pull a gun and that he was fine.

Turner put the gun back in the truck, but Johnson continued to mouth off.

¶12. The defense played the surveillance video again during Turner’s testimony. Turner

explained he thought Johnson had a gun—though Turner admitted he never saw one—and

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Bluebook (online)
Lucky Turner a/k/a Lucky Leroy Turner a/k/a Chino v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucky-turner-aka-lucky-leroy-turner-aka-chino-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2023.