Ross v. State

954 So. 2d 968, 2007 WL 1218023
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 2007
Docket1998-DP-01038-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by351 cases

This text of 954 So. 2d 968 (Ross v. State) 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
Ross v. State, 954 So. 2d 968, 2007 WL 1218023 (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

954 So.2d 968 (2007)

Charles Wayne ROSS
v.
STATE of Mississippi.

No. 1998-DP-01038-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

April 26, 2007.

*981 Office of Capital Defense Counsel by Alison R. Steiner, Andre De Gruy, for appellant.

Office of the Attorney General by Marvin L. White, Jr., for appellee.

EN BANC.

WALLER, Presiding Justice, for the Court.

¶ 1. Charles Wayne Ross was convicted of the capital murder of Hershel Ray Yancey by the Circuit Court of Tippah County and sentenced to death. Finding errors in both the guilt and sentencing phases of the trial, we reverse and remand for a new trial.

FACTS

¶ 2. The victim, Hershell Ray Yancey, was a construction worker who lived in rural Tippah County. On Friday, June 28, 1996, he was dropped off at his residence by a co-worker between 7:00 p.m. and 7:10 p.m.

¶ 3. Between 7:00 and 9:30 that night, a nearby neighbor, Linda Grey, noticed a loud vehicle driving up and down the road outside her home. Between 9:30 and 10:00, what sounded to her like the same vehicle turned into her yard, approximately 100 to 150 feet from her house. Grey walked outside to investigate and saw a dark-colored car whose make and model she could not specify. She saw a short person working under the hood of the vehicle, and, as the car drove away, she noticed that the right tail light was broken. Grey testified that the car drove away in the direction of Yancey's residence, and that she believed the car stopped near the residence and left its engine running.[1]

¶ 4. Yancey's mother, Marie Yancey, lived in a trailer across the road from him. That night, she had prepared dinner for her son and asked him to wait at her residence until she returned. Yancey was not there when she returned home around 9:10 p.m., but she saw that he had eaten *982 dinner and left the lights on. Yancey's mother also noticed that all of the lights in Yancey's residence were on, but there were no vehicles in the driveway. She assumed Yancey had gone home to take a shower and did not go to his residence to check on him.

¶ 5. Shortly after 9:10 p.m., Yancey's mother heard a loud vehicle coming down the road going south and passing both houses. It was too dark for Yancey's mother to determine whether the vehicle was a car or a truck or how many people were in it. At 9:28 p.m., she heard what sounded like the same vehicle start up at Yancey's residence. She then went to her kitchen window, and saw a vehicle drive away towards Dumas. She did not hear the car's engine between 9:10 and 9:28 p.m. Neither Yancey's mother nor any other witness remembered hearing any gunshots or any other loud noises that might have masked the sound of gunshots. Marie Yancey found her son's body in his residence the next morning after he failed to come over for breakfast.

¶ 6. An autopsy showed that Yancey had been fatally shot four times with a .22 caliber weapon. The initial investigation conducted by the Tippah County Sheriff's Office determined that Yancey's wallet, television, and VCR were missing and that there were no signs of a forced entry or struggle. The deputies found an uncashed payroll check for $438.64 in the residence. They also collected beer cans, a broken electrical cord, and shards of red plastic consistent with an automobile's tail lights from Yancey's residence.

¶ 7. Though not brought out at trial, the investigation initially determined that on the afternoon of June 28, an individual identifying himself as Charles Ross [hereinafter "Ross"] had called a local store asking for Yancey and had left the phone number of a rented trailer occupied by Tommy Hale, Hale's girlfriend Margaret Jones, and Jones' son, Jerry Sanders. Ross and Jones are half-siblings. Ross' and Jones' nephew, Donald Ross, Jr., stayed at the Hale residence on occasion and was a close companion of Sanders.

¶ 8. Based on the phone call reported by the store owner, the sheriff's office contacted the Hale household on Saturday, June 29. Hale and Jones initially denied having seen Ross. On Sunday, June 30, Donald Ross, Jr.'s mother contacted the sheriff's office and said that her son was willing to come to the police station and give a statement. Donald Ross, Jr. made his statement to the deputies, in which he averred that Ross had arrived at Hale's residence on the evening of June 29 with a television, VCR, wallet, and gun, and that he had admitted to murdering Yancey. When Donald Ross, Jr. made his statement, he did not claim to have personally seen Ross or to have heard the purported confession. At trial, he admitted that he had not witnessed Ross' arrival nor had he heard his uncle admit to the murder, but that he had been told by his Aunt Margaret that Ross had done so.

¶ 9. On the evening of Sunday, June 30, the sheriff's deputies came to the Hale residence to investigate. They took Jones and Hale into separate rooms to take their statements. At that time, Jones first stated that Ross had told her that he killed Yancey and stole Yancey's television, VCR, and wallet. Jones said that she saw Ross toss a pistol over his head into a sewage ditch behind the Hale residence and burn Yancey's wallet on an outdoor grill belonging to Hale.

¶ 10. Deputies found the television and VCR in Sanders' bedroom. They found the gun in the sewage ditch sixty-five feet from where Jones told the officers Ross had tossed it over his head. Deputies discovered an empty holster in Donald *983 Ross, Jr.'s Bronco, but did not search the vehicle for ammunition or other evidence. Jones and Hale testified that Hale's son found the holster for Hale's gun behind the commode in their trailer three weeks later. Hale said he called the sheriff's office and told them they discovered the actual holster, but no one from the sheriff's office came out to examine it.

¶ 11. The deputies also found a pile of ashes on the grill outside the Hale residence. One of the investigators, Deputy Wayne Wilbanks, testified at trial that he believed that the ashes were the by product of a wallet which had been burned with the assistance of an accelerant. The State did not conduct any forensic tests on the ashes to determine their composition. The photograph of the grill and ashes included in the record indicate that whatever was burned in the grill had completely disintegrated.

¶ 12. Ross drove a black, 1984 Ford Cougar which had a missing right tail light and ran loudly as a result of a missing muffler and a rattling motor. On Tuesday, July 2, officers found and confiscated Ross' vehicle, which was parked on the property of Ross' brother, Donald Ross, Sr. Inside the vehicle, deputies found seven empty Budweiser cans and one full Budweiser can, three of which matched the manufacturer's stamp of the beer cans in Yancey's trailer. About a quarter of a mile from the car, officers discovered Ross in the woods with bed clothes, cigarettes, food, rubbing alcohol, a thermos, and $50 to $60.

¶ 13. The only latent fingerprints the officers found at the murder scene were on the door of Yancey's trailer. Those prints did not match Ross' fingerprints, and the sheriff's office did not compare the prints to those of Jones, Hale, Sanders, or Donald Ross, Jr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
954 So. 2d 968, 2007 WL 1218023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-state-miss-2007.