Sedrick Buchanan and Armand Jones a/k/a Armond Jones a/k/a A.J. Jones v. State of Mississippi;

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedDecember 3, 2019
DocketNO. 2017-KA-01082-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Sedrick Buchanan and Armand Jones a/k/a Armond Jones a/k/a A.J. Jones v. State of Mississippi; (Sedrick Buchanan and Armand Jones a/k/a Armond Jones a/k/a A.J. Jones v. State of Mississippi;) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Sedrick Buchanan and Armand Jones a/k/a Armond Jones a/k/a A.J. Jones v. State of Mississippi;, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2017-KA-01082-COA

SEDRICK BUCHANAN AND ARMAND JONES APPELLANTS A/K/A ARMOND JONES A/K/A A.J. JONES

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/15/2017 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. W. ASHLEY HINES COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED LEFLORE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS DANIEL HINCHCLIFF KEVIN HORAN BRADLEY D. DAIGNEAULT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: BARBARA WAKELAND BYRD DISTRICT ATTORNEY: WILLIE DEWAYNE RICHARDSON NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 12/03/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., CARLTON, P.J., AND C. WILSON, J.

CARLTON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. A shooting occurred on Highway 82 West outside of Itta Bena, Mississippi, late on

a Saturday evening in August 2015. A group of men in a light-colored Tahoe pulled up next

to a red Pontiac and one or more of the men began shooting as both vehicles were traveling

west on Highway 82. Shortly after the shooting, Jacarius Keys, accompanied by counsel,

gave a statement to the chief investigator on the case. In his statement, Keys said that he was

driving the Tahoe, and he also implicated four other men, namely Armand Jones, Sedrick

Buchanan, Michael Holland, and James Earl McClung Jr. In July 2016, all five men, Keys, Jones, Buchanan, Holland, and McClung, were co-indicted for the murder of one man in the

red Pontiac and for the attempted murders of the three other men in the Pontiac.

¶2. Keys was killed on December 28, 2016—a year and a half after the shooting and from

when Keys gave his statement, and approximately five months after the joint indictment was

returned. The remaining four co-indictees were subsequently tried together in the Leflore

County Circuit Court in May 2017. Keys’s videotaped statement was admitted into evidence

and played at the defendants’ trial.

¶3. This appeal concerns only Jones and Buchanan. After a four-day trial, the jury found

Jones guilty of first-degree murder with respect to the victim who was killed, and guilty of

three counts of attempted first-degree murder with respect to the other three surviving

victims. Jones was sentenced to serve life in prison for his first-degree murder conviction,

and three terms of thirty years for his other convictions, all to run consecutively. Buchanan

was found guilty of three counts of the lesser-included offense of aggravated assault. He was

sentenced to serve three consecutive terms of twenty years in the custody of the Mississippi

Department of Corrections.1 Jones and Buchanan appeal. Finding no error, we affirm

Buchanan’s and Jones’s convictions and sentences.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

1 Co-defendants McClung and Holland were also found guilty and appealed their convictions and sentences. The appeals filed by McClung, Jones, and Buchanan were initially docketed by the Mississippi Supreme Court Clerk under one docket number, 2017-KA-01053-COA. This Court subsequently entered an order keeping McClung’s appeal under the original docket number and assigning a new docket number to Buchanan’s and Jones’s appeals. Holland’s separate appeal is pending in this Court under docket number 2018-KA-00872-COA.

2 ¶4. The record reflects that D’Alandis Love, Perez Love, Kelsey Jennings, and

Ken-Norris Stigler were traveling west on Highway 82 about 11:00 pm on August 15, 2015.2

They were in “Munchie” Brown’s red Pontiac and were going to a club in Itta Bena called

the Moroccan Lounge. As they were driving, a light-colored Tahoe sped past them, spraying

bullets as it went by. D’Alandis Love was killed, and Perez Love, Jennings, and Stigler were

seriously injured.

¶5. Shortly after the shooting, Keys, accompanied by his lawyer, went to the Leflore

County Sheriff’s office to give a statement. He was interviewed by the chief investigator on

the case, Bill Staten, on September 2, 2015. When Investigator Staten learned the video

equipment had failed during that interview, he re-interviewed Keys, with his lawyer present,

on September 3.

¶6. In his interview, Keys said that he was driving the Tahoe, and he also provided

information that implicated Jones, Buchanan, McClung, and Holland. After Keys gave his

incriminating statement to law enforcement, he went to Attorney Kevin Horan, who

represented Jones at trial, and told him that he had done so. To avoid repetition, the details

of Keys’s statement are addressed below.

¶7. In July 2016, the Grand Jury of Leflore County indicted Jones, Buchanan, Keys,

Holland, and McClung for “acting alone or in concert with each other or others” on one

count of deliberate-design murder of D’Alandis Love in violation of Mississippi Code

Annotated section 97-3-19(1)(a) (Rev. 2014); and three separate counts of attempted murder

2 Jennings and Stigler were D’Alandis and Perez Love’s cousins. For ease of reference we will sometimes collectively refer to these four men as the Loves.

3 of Perez Love, Jennings, and Stigler in violation of Mississippi Code Annotated section

97-1-7 (Rev. 2014) and section 97-3-19(1)(a).

¶8. On December 28, 2016, a year and a half after the shooting and when Keys gave his

statement, and approximately five months after Jones, Keys, Holland, Buchanan, and

McClung were indicted, Keys was killed. To avoid repetition, the details of Keys’s murder

will be addressed during the Court’s discussion of Buchanan’s and Jones’s Confrontation

Clause assignment of error, below.

¶9. Jones, Buchanan, McClung, and Holland were tried together before a jury in Leflore

County Circuit Court in May 2017. Each were represented by their own counsel.

¶10. Pretrial the defendants moved to exclude Keys’s videotaped statement. The trial court

denied the defendants’ motions. The trial court’s ruling will be discussed below when the

Court addresses Jones and Buchanan’s Confrontation Clause assignment of error. After the

trial court denied defendants’ motions to exclude Keys’s videotaped statement, each

defendant moved pretrial to sever their case from the others. The trial court also denied those

motions. The trial court’s ruling on the severance issue will also be discussed below.

¶11. Buchanan also moved pre-trial to exclude testimony and evidence related to his post-

shooting arrest that occurred in Carroll County six months after the shooting when Buchanan

was out on bond. Buchanan was a passenger in the vehicle that was stopped. In the course

of the arrest, the Carroll County deputies recovered a .40-caliber pistol from the console

between the driver’s seat and front-passenger seat of the vehicle. Buchanan argued that the

gun should be excluded at trial on relevancy grounds and that such evidence was prejudicial

4 because Buchanan did not own the gun, nor was it tied to the Love shooting. The trial court

ruled that Buchanan’s motion was premature and that the issue should be raised at trial

outside the presence of the jury if the State sought to introduce the recovered gun.

¶12. The gun was admitted into evidence at trial, and the trial court allowed limited

testimony about the gun’s recovery. Jones and Buchanan both assert on appeal that the trial

court erred in doing so. The Court will discuss this issue in further detail below.

¶13. Trial began on May 16, 2017. The State’s witness, Matthew Brown, a deputy with

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Sedrick Buchanan and Armand Jones a/k/a Armond Jones a/k/a A.J. Jones v. State of Mississippi;, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sedrick-buchanan-and-armand-jones-aka-armond-jones-aka-aj-jones-v-missctapp-2019.