Moton v. State

999 So. 2d 1287, 2009 WL 116983
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 20, 2009
Docket2007-KA-01389-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 999 So. 2d 1287 (Moton v. State) 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
Moton v. State, 999 So. 2d 1287, 2009 WL 116983 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

¶ 1. A Coahoma County jury found Kevin Moton guilty of burglary, kidnapping, and sexual battery. The jury sentenced Moton to life imprisonment in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) for the kidnapping charge. The trial judge sentenced Moton to twenty years each for the burglary and sexual battery charges, to run concurrently with the life imprisonment sentence. Moton now appeals his convictions and sentences, raising issues regarding the weight and sufficiency of the evidence and whether the trial court erred in granting the State's *Page 1289 motion in limine to exclude a used condom and the related crime lab report.

SUMMARY OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 2. On the night of September 17, 2004, Henry Wright was at home with his two children in Jonestown, Mississippi. Wright lived with his girlfriend, Shaneta Johnson, in a trailer. Johnson had asked Wright to meet her after work and walk her home, as she was working her first shift at night. Thus, at approximately 11:00 p.m., Wright left the two children, a two-year-old and an infant, sleeping in the trailer, locked all of the doors, and went to meet Johnson. On the way to Johnson's workplace, Wright met some neighbors and spoke to them. Additionally, Wright spoke with Moton, who lived in the neighborhood and was riding his bicycle down the street. Moton, who was seventeen years old at the time, is well known by Johnson and her family, who have known Moton since he was seven years old. Wright told Moton he was on his way to meet "his old lady," and they parted ways. When Wright and Johnson returned home, Johnson discovered that her two-year-old daughter, S.W., was missing; so she checked at her aunt's house down the street.1 When they discovered S.W. was not there, Johnson and Wright began searching the entire neighborhood.

¶ 3. About an hour later, they found S.W. in an abandoned trailer in the couple's back yard about 100 yards from their own residential trailer. They had been calling S.W.'s name, and Wright heard her say "huh" from the abandoned trailer. Entering the trailer through a broken window, Wright found S.W. After exiting the trailer with S.W., Johnson told Wright she heard glass crunching inside the trailer, as if someone were still in it walking around. Wright reentered the trailer through the same window. Someone called out, "It's me." Wright responded, "Who is me?" The person responded, "It's me. You know me." Then, Johnson, who was standing outside, heard the abandoned trailer's front door shut and noticed Moton running from the trailer down the street. Wright caught up with Moton. When Wright challenged him, Moton said, "bring it." Wright found Moton's bicycle lying in some weeds near the abandoned trailer; so he took the bicycle as "evidence," but the next morning it had disappeared from his possession.

¶ 4. After retrieving S.W. from the abandoned trailer, Johnson took her to her aunt's house twice. At trial, Johnson's aunt explained that Johnson initially brought S.W. to her house after the incident, and Johnson examined her daughter. Then, after Johnson took S.W. home, S.W. "went to screaming" when she urinated. Therefore, Johnson returned to her aunt's house so the aunt could inspect S.W.'s genital area. Johnson also wanted to compare her child to her niece, who was about the same age. She testified that S.W.'s genital area did not look "normal" for a two year old. She found S.W.'s vagina to be red, bloody, and scratched.

¶ 5. Further, after Johnson reassured her daughter, S.W. told her "that boy" took her out of the house. When Johnson asked if he touched her or hurt her, S.W. pointed down to her privates and to her mouth. Johnson's aunt also confirmed at trial that when S.W. was asked what Moton did to her, "she opened her mouth and patted down between her legs." The next day, Johnson took her child to the hospital, *Page 1290 where a rape kit and examination were performed on S.W. for possible sexual battery.

¶ 6. Upon investigating S.W.'s abduction, Officer Mario Magsby of the Coahoma County Sheriffs Office interviewed Moton, who, after waiving his Miranda rights, admitted in a sworn statement to being in the abandoned trailer with S.W. However, according to his version of the night's events, he was rescuing S.W. In his statement, which was entered into evidence at trial, Moton explained he was going to buy some beer when, as he passed the abandoned trailer, he heard a voice coming from it. He entered the trailer and found the little girl, whom he recognized as Wright's child. He was about to take her to her home when Wright jumped through the window and demanded to know what was going on. Moton claims that the next day Wright came over to his house, and the two men got into a fist fight over the situation.

¶ 7. A Coahoma County grand jury indicted Moton on three counts: burglary, kidnapping, and sexual battery. Before trial, the State filed a motion in limine to exclude a condom that was found in the abandoned trailer, along with the respective crime lab report, which excluded both S.W.'s and Moton's DNA from the DNA found on the condom. The trial judge ruled that the condom and report were irrelevant and granted the State's motion in limine.

¶ 8. At trial, the State called several witnesses, including: Wright, Johnson, Johnson's aunt, a nurse who performed the rape kit, a physician, and a criminal investigator. S.W. did not testify due to her tender age. During the State's case-in-chief, Wright testified that he had noted, while searching for S.W., that the back door to the trailer appeared to be tampered with, and its lock picked. He definitively remembered locking the trailer door when he went to pick up Johnson from work. Photographs and testimony were entered into evidence by the State proving the back trailer door was elevated off the ground about two feet, in an effort to demonstrate that S.W. could not have walked out of the trailer unassisted. Wright specifically testified that, while S.W. could walk, she had never walked out of the trailer unassisted and could not unlock the door by herself. Further, Moton had no permission from either parent to come into the trailer and take S.W.

¶ 9. Johnson testified that generally, since the evening at issue, S.W. has had several behavioral changes. "[I]t took her back to being a baby." Johnson claimed S.W. started urinating in her bed and would not go around the house in the dark. She also clarified that when S.W. accused "that boy" of taking her out of the trailer, Moton was not present in the room.

¶ 10. Cynthia Robertson, a nurse at the regional hospital where S.W. was brought the day after the incident, testified that she took a photograph of S.W.'s genital area that day, which was entered into evidence "to show what appears to be . . . unusual redness [and] irritation to the vaginal area." Robertson also admitted the possibility that the redness could be compatible with an infection.

¶ 11. Next, Dr. Rodney Baine, the medical director of the emergency room at the same regional hospital, testified that he examined S.W. as well, stating, "[o]n physical exam the only pertinent physical findings were an irritation of the vagina; a vaginitis type thing, red. . . . swollen and irritated." He could not say that there was an infection present. Finally, the last witness for the State to take the stand was Officer Magsby. He noted that S.W. was not interviewed by law enforcement during their investigation. *Page 1291

¶ 12. The State rested, and the defense moved for a directed verdict, which was denied.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Luis Felipe Torres Mendez v. State of Mississippi;
Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2020
Jerome Mack Austin, Jr. v. State of Mississippi
Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2019
Roberts v. State
53 So. 3d 803 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
999 So. 2d 1287, 2009 WL 116983, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moton-v-state-missctapp-2009.