Roy Milton Page v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 2010
Docket2010-KA-01126-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Roy Milton Page v. State of Mississippi (Roy Milton Page 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
Roy Milton Page v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2010-KA-01126-SCT

ROY MILTON PAGE

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/26/2010 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ROBERT B. HELFRICH COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: FORREST COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF INDIGENT APPEALS BY: JUSTIN TAYLOR COOK LESLIE S. LEE ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: W. GLENN WATTS SCOTT STUART DISTRICT ATTORNEY: PATRICIA BURCHELL NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/30/2011 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WALLER, C.J., LAMAR AND PIERCE, JJ.

PIERCE, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. On November 5, 2008, Officer Timothy Slade arrived at 301 McSwain Street,

Hattiesburg, in response to a 911 call. At the scene, Slade observed a male sitting in the

driver’s seat of a Kia Sorento, facing forward. The victim, Ray Spillman, (“Spillman”), was

suffering from a gunshot wound to the left side of his head and did not appear to be

breathing. Slade also observed that the driver’s side window was shattered in on the victim,

indicating that the window had been up when Spillman was shot. After advising dispatch that an ambulance was needed, Slade, along with other officers who had arrived, separated

the witnesses into separate vehicles until their statements could be taken. Cassandra

Spillman (“Cassandra”), a witness on the scene, identified the man in the car as her husband,

Spillman. Another witness on the scene identified the shooter as Roy Page and told Slade that

Page had run away from the crime scene. Cassandra is also Page’s sister.

¶2. Detective Eric Proulx, while in route to the crime scene, was advised by dispatch that

the shooter had been spotted at 1109 Deason Avenue, so he changed his course to help with

the apprehension of the suspect. As he pulled up at Deason Avenue, Proulx saw Officer

Sybert placing Page in handcuffs. While he was being handcuffed, Proulx heard Page say,

“I did it. It was self-defense.” After Page was placed under arrest the officers on the scene

of the arrest, recovered a nine-millimeter handgun that was lying on the ground and one

round of nine-millimeter ammunition from Page’s left pocket.

¶3. Jeff Byrd, an investigator with the Bureau of Forensic Services, was called to the

scene of the shooting to investigate.1 Byrd and his team began to photograph the scene. One

of the pictures of the scene shows that the front passenger door was left open. The picture

also shows the house located at 301 McSwain Street behind the Kia, with the couch on the

front porch. In another photograph, a cigarette lighter is shown in Spillman’s right hand. In

addition to taking the photographs, Byrd and his team also found a nine-millimeter shell

casing. The shell casing was located on the ground, several feet from the left rear tire. At

1 The Bureau of Forensic Services (“BFS”) was created through a $2 million grant to the University of Southern M ississippi. The BFS was a collaboration between Forrest, Lamar and Perry county sheriff’s offices, the Forrest General Hospital police, the Southern Miss police, and the Hattiesburg and Petal police departments to investigate crime scenes. Jessie Bass, Forensic Services Group to Disband, The Hattiesburg American (May 31, 2011).

2 no point in their investigation did Byrd or his team find a weapon in Spillman’s vehicle or

on his person.

¶4. Dr. Staci Turner, the State’s forensic pathologist, ruled Spillman’s cause of death to

be a gunshot wound to the head. She further testified that the manner of his death was

homicide. When cross-examined at trial by Page’s attorney, Dr. Turner testified that, while

she was not able to determine how far away the gun was from Spillman’s head when it was

fired, she was able to determine that the gun had been either more than three feet away from

Spillman’s head or that an object had been interposed between the end of the gun and

Spillman’s head when the gun was fired. Dr. Turner also testified that the side glass window

of a car could be considered an interposed target.

¶5. Lori Beall, a forensic scientist for the Mississippi Crime Laboratory who specializes

in firearms and tool-mark identification, confirmed that the bullet that killed Spillman had

come from Page’s gun.

¶6. Charles Dykes, the owner of Discount Pawn, testified that Page had purchased the

nine-millimeter gun from his shop. He identified the receipt from the purchase and matched

the serial number of the gun from the receipt to the serial number of the gun recovered by the

police. The date on the receipt is October 17, 2008.

¶7. At trial, Page testified that friction had existed between Spillman and himself, mostly

stemming from Page’s belief that Spillman was abusing Cassandra. He also testified that,

three to four weeks before the shooting, he and Spillman had been in a physical altercation.

At the time of the altercation, they had been at 301 McSwain Street, Page’s mother’s house.

As Page was sitting at the front door, Spillman had come in and pushed him and challenged

3 him. Spillman then had walked close to Page’s car with a razor in his hand. Page,

anticipating that Spillman was about to damage his car, had grabbed a stick and chased

Spillman for about a block. Page then had put down his stick and two of them had begun to

fight. During the fight, Page had been cut with the razor and needed to have thirty stitches.

As he was leaving, Page claims that Spillman had told him that he was going to kill him.

¶8. Page testified that, several days after the first violent altercation, he had gone to

Discount Pawn in Pearl, Mississippi, and had purchased the High Point nine-millimeter pistol

that was used to kill Spillman. He further testified that he had purchased hollow-point

bullets for the gun from Wal-Mart.

¶9. Page then testified that, on November 5, 2008, he had gone to Leticia Carson’s house

to find Spillman so the two of them could talk and make the situation between them better.

On cross-examination, Page admitted to having had his gun on his person when he arrived

at Carson’s house. Spillman was not at Carson’s house. After leaving Carson’s house, Page

drove to his mother’s house, then to a bar down the street. After a few beers, he started to

walk to his aunt’s house. In route to his aunt’s house, Page testified that he was attacked by

Spillman and a few of Spillman’s friends. Page claimed that the men pushed him down and

started kicking him. He further testified that Spillman had kicked him in the stomach. Page

testified that, as a result of the attack, he had vomited and had a bloody mouth. After the

attack, Page went back to the bar, got in his car and drove to his mother’s house.

¶10. Once at his mother’s house, Page sat on the couch that was located on the front porch.

However, before leaving, Page went and grabbed his gun from his car and sat back down on

the couch. Fifteen or twenty minutes later, Spillman and Cassandra pulled up. Page testified

4 that Cassandra entered the house, closing the door behind her. Once she was inside, Page

claimed that Spillman said to him “What’s up, you punk ass bitch.” Then, Page walked

toward the car to let him know “that the situation wasn’t about nothing and it would be all

right.” As he approached the vehicle he saw Spillman reach over to the right and saw

something metallic reflecting in the light. Fearing that Spillman had a gun, Page “backed up

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