Sneed v. State

31 So. 3d 33, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 556, 2009 WL 2595696
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 25, 2009
Docket2007-KA-00381-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 31 So. 3d 33 (Sneed 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
Sneed v. State, 31 So. 3d 33, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 556, 2009 WL 2595696 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

BARNES, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. A Coahoma County jury convicted Anthony Sneed, Anthony Smith, Thomas German, Jamario Brady, and Johnny Bick-ham of murder. The trial judge sentenced them each to life in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. The Defendants, each represented by separate counsel, now appeal raising several issues. Finding no error, we affirm their convictions and sentences.

SUMMARY OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. On the evening of August 11, 2006, law enforcement officer Kenneth Davis responded to a call in Friars Point, Mississippi about an assault at the Yates Street apartments. Arriving on the scene shortly thereafter, Officer Davis found Herman Fair lying on his back at the bottom of the apartments’ outdoor stairs with his head in a pool of blood, dead. Based upon interviews and his investigation of the incident, Sneed (a/k/a “Trigger”), Smith (a/k/a “Sticky”), German (a/k/a “Tommy C.”), Brady (a/k/a “Mario” or “Turtle”), and Bickham (collectively the “Defendants” or “Appellants”) were all apprehended as suspects.

¶ 3. Earlier that evening, Smith’s mother, Leanna Smith (a.k.a. “Baddy”), had *36 called the Friars Point Police Department and filed a complaint about an altercation involving herself and Fair. Rotandria Foster, an eyewitness to that incident and Leanna’s niece, testified that she called Smith to tell him that she had seen Leanna and Fair “get into it” in front of a club earlier that day. Foster had seen Leanna choking Fair, but Fair did not “do anything” to Leanna. Smith wanted to talk to Fair about the altercation with his mother, but Leanna stated, “[l]eave it alone.” He didn’t. After Foster called Smith, she and another individual met the five Defendants, and they all walked toward Fair’s apartment and waited at the bottom of the stairs for Fair to emerge from his upstairs apartment. Fair, who had been drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana that day, came out of his apartment, yelled, “Where that b* ⅜ * * a* * ‘Baddy’ at?” and descended the staircase. Smith punched Fair under the chin, knocking him to the ground. Foster stated all of the Defendants kicked Fair one time. She further testified that when Brady started hitting Fair hard in the head with a three-iron golf club, Smith tried to stop him and told Brady that they were not trying to kill Fair, just hurt him. The beating lasted five to ten minutes. Foster did not see the victim rise from the ground again. She claimed she and four of the defendants ran from the scene, leaving Brady still beating Fair with the golf club. Soon after the altercation, Foster heard Brady brag to the other defendants, “Yeah, I killed the b* * * *. I tried to kill him. My name is ‘Turtle Squirtle.’ ” When the police arrived at Kededria Hampton’s apartment, where the Defendants and Foster were assembled, all of the Defendants ran out of the back door. The police officers took Hampton and Foster to city hall to be interviewed. Foster admitted that she did not “tell everything” in her first statement to police. After spending the night in jail, Foster claimed she told law enforcement what actually happened.

¶ 4. All of the Defendants waived their Miranda rights and gave statements to Officer Mario Magsby, a criminal investigator with the Coahoma County Sheriffs Department. Brady gave a statement to Officer Magsby on August 12 stating he merely kicked Fair, but in a statement on August 14, Brady admitted he also hit Fair on the leg with the golf club. Also on August 14, Brady led law enforcement to a soybean field approximately one-half mile from the murder scene where the golf club was recovered. Officer Magsby reported that Smith claimed Foster had called him about Fair’s assaulting his mother. When Smith received the phone call, he and Brady were at Bickham’s house and had been drinking. Smith admitted when Fair came down the stairs at the Yates Street apartments, he punched Fair in the chin and knocked him down. Smith did not admit to kicking Fair. According to Officer Magsby, Sneed, German, and Bickham all admitted in their statements that they each kicked Fair one time in the right side.

¶ 5. At the preliminary hearing, the charges against the Defendants were reduced from capital murder to murder, as there was no evidence of robbery. A Coa-homa County grand jury indicted the Defendants “individually, or while aiding and abetting and/or acting in concert with each other” for deliberate-design murder pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated section 97-3-19(l)(a) (Rev.2006). Before trial, Sneed, Smith, and German each filed a motion to sever their trials from all other defendants, claiming they would be denied a fair trial if tried together. A hearing was held on the motions, which were all denied. The trial judge ordered that evidence of the statements of the respective defendants, and the statements themselves, would not be permitted during the *37 State’s case-in-chief, and “if admissible, [they] may be used only after the defendant who gave the statement takes the stand, in order to assure his availability for cross-examination by the other defendants.” The trial court then amended its order, stating that the Defendants’ statements could be used in the State’s case-in-chief, but only after they were redacted to delete reference to other defendants. The order included a cautionary statement to the State that “no witness or defendants’ statement may be utilized that refers to or in any way infers that others were involved with the defendant giving the statement.”

¶ 6. A four-day trial ensued on February 20, 2007. The State called four witnesses: Foster, Officer Davis, Officer Magsby, and forensic pathology expert Dr. Steven Hayne. Officer Magsby testified for the prosecution as to what each defendant said in his statement, but the trial judge instructed the jury before each statement that it was only to consider the statement as evidence against the defendant who gave the statement, not as evidence against any other defendant. Additionally, the shoes the Defendants had been wearing at the time of the incident, which were all tennis shoes, were admitted into evidence during Officer Magsby’s direct examination. The Defendants’ written statements were not introduced into evidence.

¶ 7. Dr. Hayne, having performed the autopsy on Fair, testified that the victim had external acute injuries. There were several scalp injuries ranging up to two inches in length that Dr. Hayne attributed to blunt force trauma to the head, consistent with being struck with a golf club. However, Dr. Hayne opined that the scalp injuries did not cause Fair’s death, as there were no internal brain injuries. Instead, he determined the cause of death to be blunt force trauma to the chest, and the manner of death to be homicide. Externally, Fair had significant chest bruising. Internally, Fair had a broken rib and over three quarts of blood in his chest cavity. Dr. Hayne also found bruises on Fair’s lungs measuring nearly four inches in some areas. Most significantly, Dr. Hayne reported tears of the right lung up to two and one-half inches in length, which were the sites of bleeding into the chest cavity that caused Fair’s death. Dr. Hayne ascribed the origin of the lung lacerations to “external compression of the chest pushing down and tearing the lungs.” He stated the chest injuries could be attributed to someone’s kicking or stomping Fair in the chest.

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Bluebook (online)
31 So. 3d 33, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 556, 2009 WL 2595696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sneed-v-state-missctapp-2009.