Nathaniel Cooper v. State of Mississippi

200 So. 3d 1065, 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 524, 2016 WL 4376489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 16, 2016
DocketNO. 2015-KA-00355-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 200 So. 3d 1065 (Nathaniel Cooper 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
Nathaniel Cooper v. State of Mississippi, 200 So. 3d 1065, 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 524, 2016 WL 4376489 (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

CARLTON, J.,

FOR THE COURT:

¶ 1. A Rankin County jury convicted Nathaniel Cooper of dog fighting and conspiracy to fight dogs, and the trial court sentenced Cooper as a habitual offender to serve three years for the dog-fighting conviction and five years for conspiraey-to-fight-dogs conviction, with the sentences to run consecutively to each other. Cooper filed a motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) and a motion for a new trial, both of which the trial court denied..

¶2. Cooper now appeals, asserting the following assignments of error: (1) the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to grant a proffered circumstantial-evidence instruction; (2) the trial court improperly excluded certain jurors and impeded public access to voir dire; (3) prosecutorial misconduct violated Cooper’s due-process rights and his right to a fair trial; (4) the trial court erred in allowing , the State to introduce extrinsic evidence; (5) the trial court erred in failing to grant a mistrial; *1068 and (6) the evidence was insufficient to sustain a guilty verdict. Finding no error, we affirm Cooper’s conviction and sentence.

FACTS

¶ 3. A Rankin County grand jury indicted Cooper for dog fighting, in violation of Mississippi Code Annotated section 97-41-19 (Rev. 2014), and conspiracy to fight dogs, in violation of Mississippi Code Annotated section 97-1-1 (Rev. 2014). The State amended Cooper’s indictment prior to trial to reflect his habitual-offender status pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated section 99-19-81 (Rev. 2015).

¶4. A trial was held on December 8, 2014. The jury heard testimony from Officers Trey Peeples, Fred Lovett, James Rutland, and Ken Sullivan of the Rankin County Sheriffs Department; Lance Cooper of the Rankin County Tax Assessor’s Office; Dr. Richard Kirby, an expert in the field of veterinary medicine; and Domingo Deering, who was co-indicted with Cooper on the charges of dog fighting and conspiracy to fight dogs.

¶ 5. Officer Lovett, an intelligence analyst at the Rankin County Sheriffs Department, testified that on January 11, 2014, he responded to a 911 call reporting dog fighting at 141 Bee Summers Road in Rankin County. Officer Lovett arrived at the scene approximately seventeen minutes after receiving the call. He observed approximately eighteen cars at the address. Officer Lovett stated that when he stopped in the middle of the road at the scene, he observed two people with flashlights and two pit bulls “[take] off through the weeds.” Officer Lovett pulled into the driveway, where he observed a male standing in the front yard close to the residence. Officer Lovett testified that when he exited his vehicle, the man “took off running.” Officer Lovett then observed “people dragging dogs through the woods” and “people running out of the woods [and] running across the street.” Officer Lovett testified that Cooper, the homeowner, and his brother, Kyre Cooper, eventually approached him and asked him why he was on the premises. Officer Lovett stated that Cooper assured him that he did not have any pit bulls at the house, and that no dog fighting occurred on the premises. Officer Lovett testified that despite these assurances, Kyre later brought out a pit bull from inside the house and showed it to him, explaining that the pit bull was only a pet.

¶ 6. Officer Sullivan, the sergeant over animal control at the Rankin County Sheriffs Department, testified that when he arrived on the scene on January 11, 2014, he observed that the front yard of Cooper’s residence “was just full of vehicles, cars, [and] trucks.” At that time, officers from the sheriffs department were still in the process of securing the scene, so Officer Sullivan stated that he “walked to the back of the property and saw a dog fighting pit[,]” which he described as a square structure with blood-stained carpet inside. Officer Sullivan also observed several items around the pit, including a bucket with fresh water, a brand new box of baking soda, a brand new bottle of Dawn dishwashing liquid, measuring tape, a post-hole digger, two lights, and a plastic bag containing “ice cold beer.”

¶ 7. After the officers obtained a search warrant for the entire property, Officer Sullivan proceeded to search the property. During the search, Officer Sullivan discovered posts in the ground near the dog-fighting pit with ropes and cables attached to them, “where you could tie dogs up.” Near a chain-link dog pen, he also observed a digital scale hanging from a tree with a cord dangling off the scale. Officer Sullivan explained that “before you fight *1069 dogs, you have to weigh them ... to make sure they’re evenly matched.”

¶ 8. Inside Cooper’s residence, Officer Sullivan found two pit bulls. He also found a bottle of injectable B-12 vitamin marked “for animal use only” inside of the refrigerator. Officer Sullivan testified that “it’s common to find [vitamin B-12] at dog fighting operations.”

¶ 9. Officer Sullivan explained at trial that a single-wide trailer was located behind Cooper’s residence, and the single-wide trailer contained another bottle of B-12 injectable vitamins, and a paper sack full of syringes, dog chew treats, and dog toys. Officer Sullivan testified that in the back of the trailer, he observed “a treadmill that had boards that would hold a dog on the treadmill for ... exercising a dog.” Another room in the trailer “was covered in dog feces like [Cooper] had been housing dogs” in the room.

¶ 10. Officer Sullivan stated that twenty-four cars, trucks, and SUVs were on the property on the night of January 11, 2014. Officer Sullivan testified that after searching the vehicles, the sheriffs department recovered plastic dog crates “like you would put a dog in to transport a dog,” three-inch-thick heavy collars, three-foot heavy lead ropes “like you would lead a dog with,” and a break stick, which Officer Sullivan explained “is something you use if a pit bull grabs onto another dog and won’t release it.” Officer Sullivan stated that two more pit bulls were eventually discovered on the property.

¶ 11. The defense objected to numerous statements by Officer Sullivan on the grounds that the State repeatedly tried to inappropriately elicit expert opinion testimony from Officer Sullivan. The record reflects that the trial court sustained the defense’s objections to this testimonial evidence.

¶ 12. Dr. Kirby, the State’s proffered expert in veterinary medicine, testified that he examined one of Cooper’s pit bulls a few days after officers removed the pit bull from Cooper’s residence. While the dog was at the veterinary clinic, Dr. Kirby observed that the dog had mutilated , himself by aggressively attacking the cage in an attempt to get through the cage to another dog. Dr. Kirby stated that inter-species aggression is more of a learned behavior than a genetic behavior, and he opined that based on that dog’s aggressive behavior toward other dogs, the dog had been taught to fight.

¶ 18. The jury also heard an audio tape of a jailhouse phone call between Cooper and his brother, Kyre, wherein Cooper asked Kyre how the sheriffs department discovered that Deering owned the dogs. The jury heard Cooper tell Kyre, “you just made a case against me[;] ... you just prosecuted me,” explaining “that’s going to let them know they was coming to my house with the intention to do that.”

¶ 14.

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200 So. 3d 1065, 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 524, 2016 WL 4376489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nathaniel-cooper-v-state-of-mississippi-missctapp-2016.