Nickey Williams v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 8, 2008
Docket2008-KA-02129-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Nickey Williams v. State of Mississippi (Nickey Williams 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
Nickey Williams v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2008-KA-02129-SCT

NICKEY WILLIAMS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/08/2008 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JAMES SETH ANDREW POUNDS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LEE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF INDIGENT APPEALS BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES LESLIE S. LEE ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: LADONNA C. HOLLAND DISTRICT ATTORNEY: JOHN RICHARD YOUNG NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: COUNT I: AFFIRMED; COUNT II: REVERSED AND RENDERED – 04/01/2010 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Nickey Williams was convicted of two counts of sexual battery, the first against his

daughter, Jane, and the second against his daughter, Ann.1 At the time of the offenses, Jane

was four years old and Ann was less than a year old. Williams was sentenced to thirty years’

incarceration on the first count and twenty years’ incarceration on the second count with ten

years suspended. The trial court ordered that those sentences run consecutively.

1 Jane and Ann are pseudonyms. ¶2. Finding that there was insufficient evidence to support a guilty verdict for sexual

battery of the younger daughter, we reverse the conviction on the second count and render

judgment here in favor of the defendant, vacating the sentence on the second count. As for

the conviction for sexual battery of the older daughter, we find no reversible error and affirm.

Facts

¶3. Nickey Williams and his wife Kimberly Williams are the biological parents of Jane,

born May 22, 2001, and Ann, born April 20, 2005. The defendant initially was indicted for

three counts of sexual battery and two counts of gratification of lust. Three of these charges

were dismissed by means of nolle prosequi, and Williams was tried on two counts of sexual

battery. The first count alleged that Williams inserted his finger into Jane’s vagina, and the

second count alleged that Williams inserted a part of his body or an object into Ann’s anus.

The jury convicted Williams of both counts.

¶4. In September of 2004, the Mississippi Department of Human Services (DHS) removed

then-three-year-old Jane from the Williams home, based on reports and findings of neglect.

The details surrounding her removal were not adduced at trial. Jane initially was placed with

a cousin, but was moved six months later, on March 11, 2005, to a foster home with Kay and

Michael Smith.

¶5. During the first night at the Smiths’ home, Jane told Mrs. Smith that she did not like

nighttime because her father would come in her room at night and spank her. According to

Mrs. Smith, Jane “patted herself between her legs in the front and said that he would hurt her

at night.” Mrs. Smith testified that she did not report the statement to DHS because she

2 assumed sexual abuse was the reason Jane had been placed in foster care. Mrs. Smith also

testified that Jane had frequent nightmares and would scream and cry out in her sleep.

¶6. Kimberly and Nickey Williams initially were allowed only supervised visits with Jane

twice a month, and the defendant was present at just two of those visits from March 2005 to

November 2005. The youth court eventually approved an unsupervised weekend visit, and

from Friday, November 11, 2005, until Sunday afternoon, November 13, 2005, Jane stayed

with her biological parents.

¶7. Mrs. Smith testified that on the Sunday evening after Jane returned to the Smiths’

house, she witnessed Jane “being inappropriate” with a baby doll. When Mrs. Smith asked

Jane what she was doing, Jane began crying and said that “her daddy had hurt her, he had

poked her with his fingernail, he had hurt her on the bottom.” When Mrs. Smith asked Jane

to demonstrate with the doll, she “jabbed her finger up its bottom between its legs.” Jane told

her that the incident had occurred while she was in the bathtub and that her mother had

witnessed it. Kimberly Williams testified at trial, but neither the State nor the defendant

asked her whether she had witnessed the alleged abuse.

¶8. Mrs. Smith immediately contacted the foster care agency and Wanda Jones, the DHS

social worker assigned to monitor Jane. Jones reported the incident to the Lee County

Sheriff’s Department and scheduled a forensic interview and a forensic medical examination

for Jane. The forensic interview was not presented at trial, but Dr. William Marcy testified

about the medical examination. Dr. Marcy had performed the medical examination on

November 15, 2005, the Tuesday following the weekend visit. He previously had examined

Jane in September 2004, based on an earlier report that she had been sexually abused. Dr.

3 Marcy had found no evidence of sexual abuse during the September 2004 examination, but

he did record the child’s hymenal diameter at that time. Dr. Marcy testified at trial that on

November 15, 2005, the diameter had increased significantly from the time of his previous

examination and that Jane’s vaginal area was abnormally inflamed. He found “to a

reasonable degree of medical certainty” that these conditions were consistent with vaginal

penetration and sexual abuse.

¶9. On December 8, 2005, Jane attended her regularly-scheduled counseling session with

Tina Ballard, a counselor for the foster care agency. When Ballard asked Jane about her

weekend visit with her parents, Jane told Ballard that her father had “hurt her down there”

while she was in the bathtub, and the child pointed to her vaginal area.

¶10. Jane gave testimony at trial that was consistent with the statements she had given to

Mrs. Smith and Ballard. She explained that the defendant had “stuck his finger up [her] front

private” while she was in the bathtub. Jane testified that Williams used his middle finger and

that his fingernail had hurt her. She also demonstrated this for the jury by jamming her index

finger into the vagina of a doll.

¶11. Kimberly Williams testified that during Jane’s weekend visit at her and the

defendant’s home, the defendant was alone in the bathroom with Jane on two different

occasions, Friday night and Sunday morning. Kimberly also testified that no other adults

were in her home that weekend and that she had never stuck anything in Jane’s vagina.

¶12. On February 13, 2006, when Williams and his wife Kimberly were arrested for sexual

battery against Jane, DHS took custody of Ann, Jane’s ten-month-old sister who was still

4 living with the Williamses.2 Two days later, Dr. Marcy examined Ann for signs of sexual

abuse and found that her anal area was inflamed and swollen and that the shape of her anus

was irregular. He testified that Ann’s anus was torn, which he found to be “very consistent

with sexual abuse.”

¶13. At trial, Kimberly Williams testified that since Ann’s birth, she had been cared for by

only three people: the defendant, herself, and Kimberly’s grandmother. The grandmother,

Iris Culver, testified that there was a period of time when the Williamses took Ann to another

woman to be cared for while they were working; but Culver could not remember the

woman’s name or the specific time period. Kimberly explained that, before Ann was taken

into DHS custody, Nickey Williams often was left alone with their child, Ann, while she, the

mother, was at work. Both Kimberly and her grandmother denied ever inserting anything

into Ann’s anus.

¶14.

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

Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
Idaho v. Wright
497 U.S. 805 (Supreme Court, 1990)
Hennington v. State
702 So. 2d 403 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1997)
Smith v. State
925 So. 2d 825 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2006)
Davis v. State
568 So. 2d 277 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1990)
Fowler v. State
566 So. 2d 1194 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1990)
Walker v. State
729 So. 2d 197 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1998)
Chase v. State
645 So. 2d 829 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1994)
Peterson v. State
671 So. 2d 647 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1996)
Bush v. State
895 So. 2d 836 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2005)
State v. Brown
966 So. 2d 727 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2007)
Edwards v. State
469 So. 2d 68 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1985)
Robinson v. State
662 So. 2d 1100 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1995)
Dycus v. State
875 So. 2d 140 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2004)
Bush v. State
585 So. 2d 1262 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1991)
Bell v. State
797 So. 2d 945 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2001)
Odom v. State
355 So. 2d 1381 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1978)
Fleming v. State
687 So. 2d 146 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1997)
Gibby v. State
744 So. 2d 244 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1999)
Massey v. State
992 So. 2d 1161 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Nickey Williams v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickey-williams-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2008.