Sims v. State

93 So. 3d 37, 2011 WL 5157660, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedNovember 1, 2011
DocketNo. 2010-KA-00777-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 93 So. 3d 37 (Sims v. State) 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.

Bluebook
Sims v. State, 93 So. 3d 37, 2011 WL 5157660, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 673 (Mich. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

CARLTON, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Johnny Ray Sims was indicted for capital murder for the kidnapping and murder of Jamaya Griffith. On appeal, Sims claims that the State failed to provide sufficient evidence to support his conviction. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 2. On March 1, 2006, Mary Glen Knight (Knight) spent the day caring for her three great-grandchildren — five-year-old Jamaya Griffith, four-year-old Jané1 [38]*38Griffith, and their baby sister, Jaylyn Knight. Knight lived on Doc Bass Lane in rural Jefferson Davis County, Mississippi. Sims and his sister, Margaret, lived down the street from Knight; Sims lived in a house he inherited from his parents, and Margaret lived in a trailer behind Sims’s house.

¶ 3. Jané, who was ten-years old at the time of trial, testified that on the day of March 1, 2006, she and Jamaya spent the day playing in the front yard of Knight’s house. Jané stated that Sims approached the girls and asked if their uncle, Lee Morris Knight, was at home. When Jané told Sims that their uncle was at the hospital, Sims asked Jané if she wanted to come over to his house and see his new big screen television. Jané responded that she would have to first check with her great-grandmother to obtain permission.

¶ 4. Knight testified that while Jamaya and Jané played outside in her front yard, she remained inside of the house. Knight explained that when she heard a man’s voice outside, she went to the porch to investigate. Knight spotted Sims, and she stated that once Sims saw her, he left the premises and walked down the road towards his house. Knight asked Jané what Sims had said to her, and Jané repeated that Sims had invited her over to see his big screen television. Knight testified that during this conversation, Jamaya was standing beside her on the porch.

¶ 5. Knight then went back inside of the house to retrieve her laundry, and when she returned to the porch, she testified that Jamaya was no longer in the yard. Jané told Knight she had last seen Jamaya riding her bike down the street and following Sims. Concerned, Knight began searching for Jamaya in the yard and inside of Knight’s house. When she failed to find Jamaya, Knight then went to Sims’s house, where she began knocking on the door and yelling for both Jamaya and Sims. Knight testified she never saw Ja-maya’s bicycle outside of Sims’s house during her search. Knight’s granddaughter, Regina Knight,2 and daughter, Marlene Asencio, arrived approximately thirty to forty minutes after Knight had started searching for Jamaya.

¶ 6. Knight testified that Sims’s sister, Margaret, eventually came home. Knight asked Margaret to go into Sims’ house and see if he was inside of the house. Margaret beat on the door, but no one answered. Margaret entered Sims’s house through a side door, and then she came out and told Knight that Sims had been asleep. Sims opened the door and exited the house, and he explained that he had been asleep when Knight banged on the door.

¶ 7. Marlene testified that upon arriving on Doc Bass Lane, she went to Sims’s house and found Sims outside. Marlene asked Sims to search his house, but in response, Sims walked next door to Margaret’s trailer. According to Marlene, Margaret eventually asked the women if they wanted to search Sims’s house. Marlene testified that she then observed Sims walk down from Margaret’s trailer and enter the house through a side window. Marlene heard Sims move furniture around before finally unlocking the door. Marlene stated that after entering the house, she smelled bleach in the bathroom. Upon entering the bathroom, she observed Sims’s shirt soaking in bleach, and Marlene testified that “it looked to me like there was blood” on the shirt. Marlene asked Sims why his shirt was soaking in bleach, and she also asked Sims why his shirt looked like it had blood on it. Sims denied that his shirt had any blood on it. [39]*39Marlene testified that she and Knight proceeded to search the house, but they did not check in the closets or in two of the bedrooms. After failing to find Jamaya, Knight and Marlene called the Jefferson Davis County’s Sheriffs Department.

¶ 8. Deputy Sheriff Ronnie Barnes of the Jefferson Davis County Sheriffs Departs ment responded to the call. When he arrived at Doc Bass Lane, he spoke with the family and then began searching for Jamaya. Barnes questioned Sims, and Sims claimed that he saw Jamaya riding down the road on her bike. Barnes continued to search for Jamaya until Sheriff Henry McCullum summoned him back to Sims’ house. Sheriff McCullum then asked Deputy Barnes to search Sims’s house.

¶ 9. Deputy Barnes testified that upon entering Sims’s house, he found Jamaya’s bicycle, covered by a blanket. He also noticed a strong smell of gasoline. Deputy Barnes eventually found Jamaya’s body, clothed only in a shirt and socks, and lying under a pile of clothes inside the closet of the southwest bedroom. Deputy Barnes called the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI) for assistance; he then roped off the crime scene and waited for the MBI investigators to arrive.

¶ 10. After his arrest, Sims denied harming Jamaya, and he informed the MBI investigators that earlier that day, he and a friend had driven to Bassfield, Mississippi. Sims explained to the investigators that his girlfriend, Angie Robinson, bleached his shirt that he had worn earlier in the day. Sims informed the investigators that a friend, whom Sims identified as Kenny, also visited his house that day. Sims was unable to provide any identifying details about Kenny; he did not know Kenny’s last name, his address, where he had met Kenny; and he could not describe Kenny’s vehicle. Sims stated that he went to sleep and woke up to knocking on his front door. Sims denied having visited Knight’s house earlier that day.

¶ 11. A crime scene analyst with the MBI testified as to his investigation of the crime scene. The investigator found Ja-maya’s underwear in the closet next to her body. Jamaya’s pants, one of her shoes, and a bloody knife were found in a piece of carpet rolled up in the laundry room. The investigator found Jamaya’s other shoe under the bed in the southwest bedroom. The investigator testified he found blood stains on the mattress in that same bedroom, as well as blood spatters on the wall beside the bed containing the bloody mattress.

¶ 12. Jamaya’s underwear, Jamaya’s pants, Sims’s underwear, the knife believed to have been used to kill Jamaya, and a swatch from the mattress in Sims’s bedroom all tested positive for blood. DNA tests established that a hair removed from Jamaya’s vaginal area belonged to Sims, and the blood on Sims’s underwear and on the mattress contained a mixture of Sims’s DNA and Jamaya’s DNA. Sims’s fingerprint and a palm print were also recovered from the middle of Jamaya’s bicycle handlebar.

¶ 13. At trial, Dr. Steven Hayne, the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy on Jamaya’s body, testified that he found a total of twelve stab wounds to Jamaya’s body. Dr. Hayne also found superficial injuries to Jamaya’s face and neck. Dr. Hayne testified that the bruising around Jamaya’s neck and the small areas of bleeding over the facial area were consistent with incomplete strangulation. Dr. Hayne also noted a one-inch tear to the vulva and vaginal area, which produced blood. Dr. Hayne ultimately listed the cause of Jamaya’s death as multiple stab wounds. Dr. Hayne testified that the knife found rolled up in the carpet in the [40]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Johnny Ray Sims v. State of Mississippi
227 So. 3d 1167 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2017)
Sims v. State
134 So. 3d 317 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 So. 3d 37, 2011 WL 5157660, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-state-missctapp-2011.