Michael Holland v. State of Mississippi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 4, 2020
DocketNO. 2018-KA-00872-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Holland v. State of Mississippi (Michael Holland 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
Michael Holland v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-KA-00872-COA

MICHAEL HOLLAND APPELLANT

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/28/2017 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. W. ASHLEY HINES COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LEFLORE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ALI MUHAMMAD SHAMSIDDEEN ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: BARBARA WAKELAND BYRD DISTRICT ATTORNEY: WILLIE DEWAYNE RICHARDSON NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/04/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., GREENLEE AND McDONALD, JJ.

BARNES, C.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. One man was killed and three others were seriously injured in a drive-by shooting on

Highway 82 outside Itta Bena, Mississippi. Jacarius Keys provided a statement to law

enforcement, implicating himself and four other men in the shooting—Sedrick Buchanan,

Michael Holland, Armand Jones, and James Earl McClung Jr. In July 2016, all five men

were co-indicted for the murder and attempted murders of the vehicle’s occupants. On

December 28, 2016, Keys was killed. The remaining co-indictees were tried together in the

Leflore County Circuit Court in May 2017. After a four-day trial, the jury found Holland guilty of second-degree murder and of three counts of attempted first-degree murder.1

Holland was sentenced to serve forty years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of

Corrections (MDOC) for the second-degree murder conviction and three terms of thirty years

in the MDOC’s custody for his other convictions, with all sentences set to run consecutively.

He appeals his convictions, and finding no error, we affirm.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. At 11:00 p.m. on August 15, 2015, D’Alandis Love, Perez Love, and their cousins,

Kelsey Jennings and Ken-Norris Stigler,2 were traveling west on Highway 82 in “Munchie”

Brown’s red Pontiac when a light-colored Tahoe sped past them, spraying bullets into the car.

D’Alandis was killed, and Perez, Jennings, and Stigler were seriously injured.

¶3. Keys and his lawyer went to the Leflore County Sheriff’s Office to give a statement

regarding the incident. The chief investigator, Bill Staten, interviewed Keys on September

2, 2015, but after the video equipment failed during that interview, Investigator Staten

re-interviewed Keys, again with counsel, on September 3. Keys said that he was driving the

Tahoe. He also implicated Buchanan, Holland, Jones, and McClung in the shooting. In July

2016, all five men were indicted for “acting alone or in concert with each other or others”

1 Holland’s co-defendants—McClung, Buchanan, and Jones—were also found guilty and have appealed their convictions and sentences. Initially, these appeals were docketed by the Supreme Court Clerk under case number 2017-TS-1053. After assignment, this Court entered an order keeping McClung’s appeal under case number 2017-KA-1053-COA and assigning a new case number to Buchanan’s and Jones’s appeals. 2 We will collectively refer to all four men as the Loves.

2 on one count of deliberate-design murder in violation of Mississippi Code Annotated section

97-3-19(1)(a) (Rev. 2014) and three separate counts of attempted murder in violation of

Mississippi Code Annotated sections 97-1-7 (Rev. 2014) and 97-3-19(1)(a).

¶4. Keys was killed on December 28, 2016. Prior to trial, the defendants moved to

exclude Keys’s videotaped statement and sever the trial. The trial court denied the

defendants’ motions. Jones, Buchanan, McClung, and Holland were tried before a Leflore

County Circuit Court jury in May 2017, each represented by his own counsel.

¶5. Matthew Brown, a deputy with the Leflore County Sheriff’s Office, testified that he

was on patrol on August 15 when he discovered a car on fire in a field off Highway 82.

Deputy Brown helped Perez get out through the car window, and he also pulled Stigler and

D’Alandis out of the vehicle.3 Deputy Brown radioed for emergency services, and after

realizing that it was “not just a car wreck,” he called the sheriff and investigators.

¶6. Staten, the chief investigator, testified that he responded to the scene at approximately

12:20 a.m. and approached the Pontiac. Investigator Staten observed what he believed were

gunshot wounds on D’Alandis’s body. D’Alandis was later pronounced dead at the scene.4

The other three victims had already been transported to the hospital. Investigator Staten said

he “noticed bullet holes on the driver’s side of the vehicle, . . . and along the rear passenger

door the driver’s window had been shot out and there were other bullet holes along that side

3 Jennings was already outside of the vehicle. 4 Lisa Funte, a medical examiner, testified D’Alandis died as a result of multiple gunshot wounds, and his manner of death was homicide.

3 of the vehicle.” He took photographs and collected evidence, including a number of 7.62mm

shell casings and one .40-caliber shell casing recovered within the immediate area of where

the vehicle had left the highway. The next morning, after the vehicle had been towed to a

secure location, Investigator Staten retrieved a .40-caliber Smith & Wesson pistol from the

Pontiac. Mark Steed, an investigator with the Mississippi Bureau of Investigations (MBI),

also assisted with the investigation and identified the handgun that Investigator Staten

recovered from the Pontiac.

¶7. Investigator Staten testified that Jasmine Cage, Perez’s girlfriend, was at the scene of

the incident. She told a deputy that she knew the people in the car and had witnessed the

shooting. Cage was transported to the Sheriff’s Office so that Investigator Staten could take

her statement.

¶8. Amber Conn, a crime scene analyst with the MBI, was accepted as an expert in crime-

scene investigation. Conn opined that the Pontiac was shot from the back toward the front

on the driver’s side. During her investigation, Conn recovered another .40-caliber Smith &

Wesson pistol from the front passenger floorboard of the Pontiac. Conn testified that the gun

was fully loaded (one bullet was in the chamber), and its safety was locked when she found

it.

¶9. Starks Hathcock was accepted as an expert in firearms and tool-marks identification.

Examining both .40-caliber pistols recovered from the Pontiac and comparing them to the

.40-caliber bullet recovered from Perez’s head, Hathcock was able to confirm that the bullet

4 was not shot by either of the guns recovered from the Pontiac. He also examined the .40-

caliber pistol recovered when Buchanan was stopped after his arrest, while out on bond.

Hathcock testified that he could not positively determine whether that gun had fired the

recovered shell casing; however, the gun could not be excluded as having done so. Hathcock

also testified that the 7.62mm (.30-caliber) shell casings recovered from the highway could

have been fired from an AK-47 or SKS—a semiautomatic assault rifle “designed for war.”

However, he could not link the .30-caliber shell casings recovered to a specific weapon.

Hathcock did testify that the projectile jackets recovered from the Pontiac bore similar

characteristics to the bullets recovered from D’Alandis’s right chest and his right leg.

¶10. Bentravious “Munchie” Brown testified that on the night of the incident, he had

loaned his car, a red Pontiac Grand Prix, to the Loves. He testified that Perez drove the

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