Robert D. Sherman v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 2012
Docket2012-KA-01573-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Robert D. Sherman v. State of Mississippi (Robert D. Sherman 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
Robert D. Sherman v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2012-KA-01573-SCT

ROBERT D. SHERMAN a/k/a ROBERT SHERMAN

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/03/2012 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ISADORE W. PATRICK, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: WARREN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: MOLLIE MARIE MCMILLIN GEORGE T. HOLMES ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: ELLIOTT GEORGE FLAGGS JOHN R. HENRY, JR. DISTRICT ATTORNEY: RICHARD EARL SMITH, JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 03/20/2014 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WALLER, C.J., KITCHENS AND COLEMAN, JJ.

KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Robert Sherman was indicted for willfully, unlawfully, and feloniously possessing

pseudoephedrine and sodium hydroxide, two ingredients used in the manufacture of

methamphetamine, with the unlawful intent to manufacture a controlled substance.1 He was

tried and convicted in the Warren County Circuit Court, then sentenced to twelve years in

the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections, with eight years to serve and four

years suspended, plus five years of post-release supervision. Sherman appeals, arguing that

1 See Miss. Code Ann. § 41-29-313(1)(a)(ii) (Rev. 2013). his conviction (1) was based upon insufficient evidence, or (2) was against the overwhelming

weight of the evidence. We affirm Sherman’s conviction and sentence.

FACTS

¶2. The following facts are gleaned from the testimony of the several witnesses who

testified at trial. On October 9, 2009, Dwayne Smith, a narcotics investigator for the

Vicksburg Police Department, received a complaint regarding possible methamphetamine

production at 4407 Halls Ferry Road in Vicksburg, Mississippi. He called Agent Norman

Harris of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics to accompany him to the site of the alleged

criminal activity. Smith testified that it was getting dark as the officers arrived around 7:30

or 8:00 p.m. Smith and Harris knocked on the door of the trailer at 4407 Halls Ferry Road,

and the knock was answered by Sherman’s girlfriend. The officers obtained her permission

to search the trailer, but the search yielded nothing.

¶3. Upon leaving the trailer, the officers saw two men, Sherman and Calvin Brewer,

walking out of the woods about fifteen feet behind Sherman’s trailer. Sherman was carrying

a fishing pole and tackle box, and Brewer was holding a machete. The officers instructed

Brewer to drop the machete, which he did. They patted him down, finding a marihuana

grinder on his person. Brewer was placed in police custody.

¶4. The officers began investigating the area around Sherman’s trailer with the aid of a

flashlight. Officer Smith found a bottle of liquid drain cleaner2 near someone else’s trailer

in the general vicinity of the area where Sherman and Brewer had walked out of the woods.

2 This kind of chemical product can be used as a precursor, or forerunner, of methamphetamine.

2 He acknowledged under cross-examination that the cleaner was not next to Sherman’s trailer.

The State’s Exhibit 12 showed that the cleaner was found two trailers away from Sherman’s,

near the path on which the two men had walked out of the woods. The drain cleaner formed

the basis for Sherman’s sodium hydroxide, precursor possession charge. Officer Smith

testified that drain cleaner can be used to manufacture crystal methamphetamine. According

to Smith, when Harris showed the bottle of drain cleaner to Sherman, Sherman dropped his

head and began to cooperate with the officers. Sherman agreed to show the officers where

the meth lab was located and led them to a “cook site” near the edge of the woods. Smith

testified that the cook site was “in some bushes, under some mud, probably about two feet

buried in mud.” Smith said that the visibility was poor and the officers would not have been

able to find the cook site without Sherman’s assistance.

¶5. The “cook” itself was a plastic, two-liter Mountain Dew bottle, which Smith testified

was used to make methamphetamine by means of the “shake-and-bake” method. He stated

that the chemicals found in the bottle “had just been cooked” when they found it. As

Sherman and the officers walked back from the cook site, toward Sherman’s trailer, the

officers noticed a black bag approximately fifteen to twenty feet away. Inside the bag was

a box of pseudoephedrine, a known precursor of methamphetamine. Sherman was placed

under arrest. Harris testified that another man on a motorcycle emerged from the woods

several hundred yards away from the place at which the officers were interviewing Sherman.

The man was never identified.

¶6. Brewer testified for the State in exchange for a deal which resulted in his being placed

in the drug court program. Brewer testified that, on the day the two were arrested, he had

3 been doing some electrical work for Sherman. The two men had made an arrangement by

which Sherman would pay Brewer for working with him with methamphetamine. According

to Brewer, he was to act as a decoy by fishing in the lake near the trailer park while Sherman

and a man named James Hawkins3 cooked the meth. He also testified that Sherman had

possession of the black bag, in which the police later found pseudoephedrine, approximately

thirty minutes before they were arrested. Brewer said Sherman had ditched the bag as he and

Sherman were walking back to the trailer park, and Sherman was the last person Brewer had

seen with the bag.

¶7. Sherman testified in his own defense. His version of events differs dramatically from

the officers’ testimony and Brewer’s. Sherman denied leaving the black bag containing

precursors in the woods, he denied possessing the bottle of drain cleaner, and he denied

performing a “one-pot cook” at the cook site in question. According to Sherman, on the day

he was arrested, he had been fishing in the pond behind the trailer park. He did not catch any

fish, he said. On the way out of the woods, he ran into Brewer just before the two were

arrested. Sherman denied having led the officers to the cook site, saying instead that he had

been showing them where he had been fishing that day and, on the way, the officers had

discovered the cook site and the black bag.

¶8. The jury found Sherman guilty, and he was convicted of having been in possession

of precursor substances in violation of Mississippi Code Section 41-29-313(1)(a)(ii).

Sherman filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV), or, in the

alternative, for a new trial. The trial court denied the motion, finding that sufficient evidence

3 Hawkins was not arrested in connection with this crime.

4 was presented to the jury to convict Sherman, and that the verdict was not against the

overwhelming weight of the evidence. Sherman was sentenced to twelve years in the custody

of the Mississippi Department of Corrections, with eight years to serve and four years

suspended, and five years of post-release supervision. Sherman appeals, arguing that his

motion for JNOV or new trial should have been granted, claiming that there was insufficient

evidence at trial to support a conviction, or, in the alternative, his conviction was against the

overwhelming weight of the evidence.

ANALYSIS

1.

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Related

Bush v. State
895 So. 2d 836 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2005)
Cunningham v. State
583 So. 2d 960 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1991)
Curry v. State
249 So. 2d 414 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1971)
Johnson v. State
81 So. 3d 1020 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2011)

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