Singleton v. State

1 So. 3d 930, 2008 Miss. App. LEXIS 641, 2008 WL 4634539
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedOctober 21, 2008
Docket2007-KA-00911-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 So. 3d 930 (Singleton 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
Singleton v. State, 1 So. 3d 930, 2008 Miss. App. LEXIS 641, 2008 WL 4634539 (Mich. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

BARNES, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. A Clarke County jury convicted Shawn Michael Singleton of robbery and the capital murder of Elmer “Shubbie” Dobbins. The circuit court judge sentenced Singleton to life imprisonment in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) without eligibility for parole. Singleton now appeals, raising one issue: whether the trial court erred when it allowed the State to refer to the statement of Doris Vann, a co-defendant who passed away before Singleton’s trial. Singleton claims his constitutional right to confront the witness was violated. We find no reversible error and affirm.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. On the morning of July 27, 2005, Dobbins’s son, Phillip Dobbins, was called by family members to check on Dobbins, as he was missing. At the time, the elder Dobbins, also known as “Shubbie,” was seventy-three years old and fixed lawn mowers in a little shop behind his house in Clarke County, Mississippi, near the Alabama state line. Phillip proceeded to his father’s house early that morning and ultimately found Dobbins’s cold body lying against a back wall in the lawn mower shop. Blood covered the shop’s floor, and several dollar bills were lying near Dobbins’s body. Law enforcement officials described the crime scene in the shop as “very heinous.” Phillip testified that his father usually had about $200 to $300 in his pocket at any given time, but Dobbins’s wallet was never found. Law enforcement secured the crime scene and began their investigation of the murder.

¶ 3. Later that day, information was obtained that led to three suspects: Singleton, Doris Vann, and Joseph McHenry. At the crime scene, a woman related to law enforcement that she had seen a white Ford Taurus leaving Dobbins’s residence the preceding afternoon of July 26. Another individual related that he had seen a white Taurus that day at his store in Melvin, Alabama, close to the crime scene, and he identified two individuals in the vehicle. A sheriff in Butler, Alabama was then able to surmise the third individual’s identity. *932 On the afternoon of July 27, Singleton and Vann were stopped in a white Ford Taurus in Gilbertown, Alabama, where they resided, and were taken into custody. Both individuals cooperated with law enforcement, were properly Mirandized, and gave statements.

¶ 4. That day, Singleton gave two statements implicating McHenry as the murderer. The next day, July 28, because of new evidence in the case that caused the interviewers to believe Singleton was being deceptive during the two prior interviews, Singleton was interviewed again. After he waived his rights, Singleton gave a dictated, three-and-one-half-page confession. There, he related in detail the events surrounding Dobbins’s murder. Singleton stated that he and his girlfriend, Vann, violently beat and robbed Dobbins and then went on a drug and alcohol binge with McHenry.

¶ 5. In his confession, Singleton related that he and Vann went to “Shubbie’s” residence to “borrow” some money. Dobbins gave them twenty dollars, and the couple went to Gilbertown. The couple then returned to Dobbins’s empty residence at approximately noon; Singleton stated he was going to steal some gas from Dobbins, but did not. When Dobbins returned home soon thereafter, Singleton and Vann asked him for some more money, but Dobbins said “no.” They left Dobbins’s residence and picked up “Joey” McHenry. The three individuals went to Bank’s Store and purchased vodka. Next, they went to Melvin’s Store. As they were driving, McHenry and Vann talked about returning to Dobbins’s residence and robbing him. When they arrived back at Dobbins’s house, McHenry stayed in the vehicle, while Singleton and Vann got out. Singleton stated he and Dobbins “got to tussel-ing [sic]” and ended up in the back room of Dobbins’s shop, where Singleton picked up a screwdriver and Vann picked up a hammer. Singleton stated he stabbed Dobbins twice in the abdomen with the screwdriver, and Dobbins fell to the ground; Vann hit Dobbins with the hammer. Singleton then left the shop, but Vann remained for a few more minutes. After the three individuals left the scene, Singleton commented in the vehicle that he did not know if Dobbins was dead or not, but Dobbins dropped to the ground after the second stabbing. Vann, however, offered that “if he ain’t dead then he will be a vegetable because I beat him in the head.” The threesome proceeded to purchase crack cocaine from two different dealers for $140. Vann then decided it would be in their best interest if they disposed of their clothes. First, however, they smoked some crack cocaine in a cemetery near Tokeo Frost Bridge Road. Then, they purchased approximately thirty more dollars’ worth of crack cocaine from yet another drug dealer. After purchasing gasoline, cokes, cigarettes, and vodka at a package store, they purchased an additional twenty dollars’ worth of crack cocaine. Returning to the cemetery, Vann took off her pants, shirt, and shoes and disposed of them in the woods, putting on a long shirt. They then returned to a logging road where McHenry and Vann disposed of trash from the vehicle. Further down the logging road, Singleton changed clothes. Vann disposed of Singleton’s clothes for him. McHenry, Vann, and Singleton then rode around for a while and drank the rest of the vodka. Singleton suggested to Vann that they go and check to see if Dobbins were alive or dead, but Vann rejected the idea.

¶ 6. A Clarke County grand jury returned a two-count indictment against Singleton, Vann, and McHenry for capital murder and robbery of Dobbins’s checkbook and $200 in cash. Of the three defendants, Singleton was the only one who stood trial — Vann passed away while incar *933 cerated in September 2006; McHenry accepted a deal with the State where he would testify for the State at Singleton’s trial in exchange for a reduced sentence of five years as an accessory-after-the-fact.

¶ 7. Singleton’s two-day trial commenced on May 1, 2007. Five witnesses testified for the State. Todd Kemp, Sheriff of Clarke County, testified he was involved with the interviews of both Singleton and Vann on July 27. He stated that Vann was cooperative, was placed in a patrol car, and directed Sheriff Kemp and other law officers on a guided “treasure hunt” of evidence. After being informed of her rights, Vann took them through the trio’s various stops the day of Dobbins’s murder. First, she walked the officers through the crime scene at Dobbins’s shop. Then, they went on a “road trip” where Vann directed them south to a logging road in Wayne County, where shoes, clothing items, and vodka bottles were retrieved. Vann next directed them to a cemetery in Wayne County where female clothing was retrieved. When Sheriff Kemp was asked whether Vann’s guided route matched Singleton’s statement, he responded that it matched “[pjretty much to a T.” Over the objection of the defense, when asked whether Vann’s statement was consistent with Singleton’s statement, Sheriff Kemp said it was.

¶ 8. J.G. Kufel, a criminal investigator for the Clarke County Sheriffs Department, testified for the State that he collected “mounds” of evidence at the scene and at the “treasure hunt” locations, including: a vodka bottle and women’s shoes splattered in blood at the Wayne County Hunting Club; a pair of women’s jeans on Tokeo Frost Bridge Road; and a blood-splattered hammer.

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Related

Williams v. State
136 So. 3d 446 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
1 So. 3d 930, 2008 Miss. App. LEXIS 641, 2008 WL 4634539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singleton-v-state-missctapp-2008.