O People of Michigan v. Jamar Terrelle Purdle

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 22, 2024
Docket353821
StatusUnpublished

This text of O People of Michigan v. Jamar Terrelle Purdle (O People of Michigan v. Jamar Terrelle Purdle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O People of Michigan v. Jamar Terrelle Purdle, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, FOR PUBLICATION February 22, 2024 Plaintiff-Appellee, 9:05 a.m.

v No. 353821 Kent Circuit Court JAMAR TERRELLE PURDLE, LC No. 19-003606-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

ON REMAND

Before: CAMERON, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and SHAPIRO, JJ.

M. J. KELLY, J.

This case returns to us on remand from our Supreme Court. People v Purdle, 997 NW2d 215 (2023). For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm.

I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Defendant, Jamar Purdle, was convicted of second-degree murder, MCL 750.317, carrying a concealed weapon, MCL 750.227, felon in possession of a firearm, MCL 750.224f, and two counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (felony-firearm), MCL 750.227b. The basic facts underlying his convictions are set forth in our prior opinion:

On March 31, 2019, Mikeya Day was shot dead. The prosecution presented evidence that prior to Day’s death, she and Purdle travelled to a residence on Hancock Street in Grand Rapids. Day’s uncle called her while Purdle was outside the vehicle, and Day asked him to “hold” just before Purdle returned. As a result, he was on the line when Day was shot. He testified that Day and Purdle got into an argument over drugs and money. During the argument, Day demanded that Purdle give her money and drugs and that he leave the vehicle. Purdle refused. As the argument escalated, Day’s uncle heard a struggle followed by Day saying, “You ain’t going to do me like that.” He stated that it sounded like the phone was dropped, and, after that he overheard Purdle say “Fuck you” just before he heard a loud noise. Later, he learned that the noise had been a gunshot.

-1- Surveillance footage from a nearby residence showed Day exiting the driver’s side door and staggering across the street. Purdle got out of the front passenger side door at the same time. He reached back into the vehicle as if to pick something up and then walked out of view of the camera. Takeah Hill, a resident of one of the houses, testified that Purdle had been at her home approximately eight minutes before the shooting. She stated that he returned, banged on the door, and told her that Day had shot herself. The surveillance footage shows Purdle returning to usher Day, who appears to be covered in blood from her neck to her waist, back into the vehicle. When Day exited the vehicle again, Purdle put her back inside and then drove away.

Day’s uncle recalled that after hearing the gunshot, it was quiet for two or three minutes and then he heard the doors slam a couple of times. He heard Day say that she thought she was dying and that she could not [breathe]. Purdle told her she was not going to die. He also said, “Tell them that we got robbed, we got robbed,” three or four times. Day’s uncle heard sounds of traffic, so he surmised that they were driving to a hospital. He stated that he yelled, but no one responded to him so he eventually hung up and called hospitals in the area to find where Day had been taken.

Purdle brought Day into the emergency department. He told a nurse that Day had been shot and suggested that he might have also been shot. The nurse examined Purdle and determined that he had not been shot. She stated that, over approximately 30 minutes, Purdle made a number of statements regarding the shooting. First, he explained that he and Day were in a car preparing to purchase marijuana when the person they were going to purchase the marijuana from attempted to rob them. Purdle said that he tried to push the gun away, but it went off. The second time Purdle explained what happened, he stated that he was outside the vehicle and tried to push the gun away when it went off. In his third version, Purdle said that the gun discharged while he “tussled” with a person who was trying to sell him a gun.

In the meantime, a police sergeant investigating the shooting was informed that a bullet had entered Day’s right cheek and exited the left side of her throat. Determining that the shot could have been fired while Purdle was sitting in the passenger seat, the sergeant went to speak to another officer, who was talking to Purdle in a small room. While they were discussing things outside the room, Purdle fled. He was located in the stairwell, “frantically pulling on the [locked] doors” to other floors. After his arrest, Purdle told the police that he and Day were attempting to sell a gun to a person near downtown Grand Rapids, and the gun accidentally went off when Purdle handed it to the person through the passenger side window. When the detectives suggested that the gun was in Purdle’s hand when it was fired, Purdle insisted that it was in the hand of the unknown third person. When the detectives suggested that Purdle shot Day and that there was an argument in the car, Purdle denied that there was an argument. Purdle did not tell the detectives what happened to the gun, and the gun was never recovered.

-2- At trial, Purdle testified that Day attempted to rob him at gunpoint. He stated that he handed her drugs and when she demanded his phone, he dropped it in an attempt to distract her so he could escape. When she demanded his diamond- studded sunglasses, he went to remove them from his neck and Day lurched her body away from him. He testified that in the process the gun when off and Day accidentally shot herself. Believing he had been shot, he got out of the vehicle and then reached back in to get a liquor bottle. He testified that when he saw the blood in the driver’s seat, he realized that Day had shot herself. Purdle recounted that once he realized Day had shot herself, he got her back into the vehicle so he could take her to the hospital. He stated that while they were heading to the hospital, Day threw what sounded like a gun and some drugs out of the window and then she concocted a plan to tell people that she had been shot when some other third person tried to rob them. [People v Purdle, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued February 1, 2022 (Docket No. 353821), pp 1-3.]

Purdle was sentenced as a fourth-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.12. After consideration of the advisory sentencing guidelines, the trial court determined that Purdle’s minimum sentencing guidelines range for the second-degree murder conviction was 315 to 1050 months.1 The court imposed a within-guidelines sentence of 680 to 960 months’ incarceration for the second-degree murder conviction. Purdle appealed his convictions and sentence to this Court. In relevant part, he argued that he was entitled to resentencing because his 680-month minimum sentence was not proportionate to the circumstances surrounding the offense and the offender because the sentence amounted to a de facto life sentence. We held that, under MCL 769.34(10),2 review of his proportionality challenge was precluded because his minimum sentence was within the guidelines range, there was no error in the scoring of the guidelines, and the trial court did not rely upon inaccurate information when determining his sentence. Purdle, unpub op at 6.

Our Supreme Court subsequently addressed the constitutionality of MCL 769.34(10) in People v Posey, 512 Mich 317, 326; ___ NW2d ___ (2023) (Docket No. 162373) (lead opinion by

1 Second-degree murder is listed as a Class M2 felony with a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. See MCL 777.16p. The trial court assessed 100 points for Purdle’s prior record variable (PRV) score, which means that he was scored at PRV Level F. See MCL 777.61.

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