Savion Winters v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 2026
Docket2024-KA-01105-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Savion Winters v. State of Mississippi (Savion Winters 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
Savion Winters v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2024-KA-01105-SCT

SAVION WINTERS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/01/2024 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. MICHELLE DEAN EASTERLING TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: LEOGHAIN STRNAD FAIR COLLEN LEIGH HUDSON SCOTT WINSTON COLOM COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: OKTIBBEHA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES STACY L. FERRARO ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: INDIA MARIAH SPRINKLE DISTRICT ATTORNEY: SCOTT WINSTON COLOM NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/04/2026 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

EN BANC.

SULLIVAN, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Savion Winters was convicted of aggravated assault and attempted armed robbery

following a jury trial in the Oktibbeha County Circuit Court. Winters appeals, claiming that

his convictions rested on tainted and unreliable eyewitness identification, untrustworthy

testimony of codefendants awaiting sentencing, along with a complete lack of physical

evidence connecting Winters to the crimes. Therefore, Winters claims, the trial court erred by denying Winters’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV), or, in the

alternative, a new trial. Finding no reversible error, we affirm Winters’s convictions.

FACTS

¶2. Around 11:00 p.m. on April 25, 2022, Zykerious Birchfield1 was shot in the chest by

a masked man who had accompanied Zykirus Johnson to Birchfield’s apartment to purchase

$10 of marijuana. Birchfield and Johnson worked together at a waste-management plant, and

although the two had known each other for three weeks, Birchfield considered Johnson a

friend. The shooting left Birchfield paralyzed from the chest down.

¶3. On the morning of the shooting, Johnson skipped work and spent the afternoon

smoking “a couple times” with Winters. Winters discussed needing a job, and Johnson

offered to help him get a job at the waste-management plant. The two men parted ways after

Winters dropped Johnson off “on the west side.”

¶4. Johnson and Winters met up again later that evening and began riding around in

Winters’s “black sedan.” Johnson invited his friend Asheem Harris to come hang out with

them and texted Harris’s address to Winters around 10:00 p.m. that night. Johnson and

Winters then drove to Harris’s address in Winters’s vehicle.

¶5. Harris testified that this was his first time to meet Winters, who introduced himself

as “Savo.” Harris said the three men first drove to Chandler Park where Harris could get

“some weed.” They next drove to Brooksville Gardens where Johnson tried to get “some

weed.” After leaving Brooksville Gardens, the three headed to the 21 Apartments where

1 The trial transcript spells Birchfield as Burchfield throughout; however, the record shows the correct spelling is Birchfield.

2 Birchfield lived.

¶6. According to Harris, on the way to the 21 Apartments, Winters began complaining

about not having any money and suggested they “mask up and take [Birchfield] down.”

Harris claimed he wanted no part of Winters’s plan.

¶7. Harris said that when they arrived at the 21 Apartments, Johnson got out of the vehicle

and went up to Birchfield’s apartment to “get the weed.” That “is when Savo went to the

trunk and grabbed some little white thing and put it on and went to the door” with a gun in

his hand. Harris heard numerous shots fired and took off running. Harris said “the next

thing I know [Winters] was shooting at me too.”

¶8. Harris later turned himself in to authorities after hearing he was a suspect in the

shooting. Harris said he told authorities that “somebody named Savo” had committed the

crime.

¶9. Harris told the jury that he (Harris) had already pleaded guilty as an accessory to

attempted robbery and aggravated assault and had yet to be sentenced. Harris said he had not

been promised anything in exchange for his testimony, and he chose to testify because of

what had happened to Birchfield.

¶10. Johnson testified that he and Winters were riding around in Winters’s vehicle the night

of the shooting when he received a message from Harris to come pick him up. Johnson

texted Harris’s address to Winters. A record of the text messages that Johnson sent to

Winters the night of the shooting was exhibited to the jury. Johnson testified that after

picking up Harris, he (Johnson) “was suppose to get some weed from [Birchfield]” and meet

3 a woman who also lived at the 21 Apartments.

¶11. According to Johnson, as the three men were driving to the 21 Apartments, Winters

began talking about needing money “because he was going through some things and his girl

and stuff.” Johnson said they all three “talked about robbing [Birchfield].”

¶12. Johnson said the plan was for him to go up to Birchfield’s apartment and get

Birchfield to open the door. Winters and Harris were then “suppose to come in behind me.”

¶13. Johnson told the jury that he went up to Birchfield’s door and, when Birchfield opened

the door, Winters told Johnson to “run, run,” which according to Johnson is a saying similar

to this “is a stick up.” At that point, Birchfield said, “y’all for real[?]” Birchfield then

reached for his gun and pointed it at them, and Winters began firing shots. Johnson said he

panicked when he saw that Birchfield had been shot, and he began rendering aid to

Birchfield. He said Birchfield’s roommates ran out of their rooms “and caught me,” and one

of them called 911.

¶14. When authorities arrived at the scene, Johnson told them that Birchfield was his

cousin and that he did not know who had shot Birchfield. Johnson testified that a few days

later, he had someone contact the authorities to let them know that Winters was the shooter

and not him. Johnson told the jury that he was later indicted for attempted robbery and

aggravated assault and that he had pleaded guilty to a felony charge related to the shooting.

¶15. Birchfield testified that Johnson had texted him before the shooting asking to purchase

$10 worth of marijuana, which Birchfield had agreed to do. Birchfield said that Johnson then

texted him to come outside for the transaction, which Birchfield thought sounded suspicious.

4 Birchfield said he would not come outside and told Johnson to come to the door. Johnson

came to the door, and Birchfield handed Johnson the marijuana. The two agreed to use Cash

App for the transaction. As Birchfield was typing his Cash App address into his phone, a

man wearing a ski mask came up, pointed a gun in Birchfield’s face, and told Birchfield “to

give him everything I got.”

¶16. Birchfield described the assailant to the jury as “a stocky dude” and “bald headed”

because of the way the ski mask fit his head “perfectly.” Birchfield said the assailant’s eyes

were “distinctive like he wasn’t sober or in his right state of mind.”

¶17. Birchfield said he initially froze; then, he reached for his “AR rifle” to protect himself.

Birchfield next heard shots fired. “A few hit the wall and one hit me in the chest and it came

out the left side of my back.” Immediately afterwards, the masked man left, and Johnson

stayed behind. Birchfield said he knew this was a “set up” because Johnson came “to buy

weed and the person who shot me was with him.” Birchfield tried to call 911 but “was going

unconscious” as he was dialing. Birchfield said one of his roommates called 911 while

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Savion Winters v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savion-winters-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2026.