Spires v. State

10 So. 3d 477, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 260, 2009 WL 1546612
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 2009
Docket2008-KA-00794-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 10 So. 3d 477 (Spires v. State) 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
Spires v. State, 10 So. 3d 477, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 260, 2009 WL 1546612 (Mich. 2009).

Opinions

DICKINSON, Justice, for the Court.

¶ 1. In this capital-murder case, the defendant was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. He appeals to this Court, asserting that the trial court erred by improperly dismissing a juror, and by refusing to give a “stand-your-ground” jury instruction. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Joel Scott Spires was indicted by a Harrison County grand jury for the capital murder of Rodney Wade Saucier, and for the underlying crime of robbery.1 At trial, the State presented sevei*al witnesses who testified that Spires had confessed to killing Saucier. Cedric Page, an acquaintance of Spires, testified that, on the night of December 25, 2005, Spires came to his trailer and attempted to sell him a Cadillac. After Page inquired further about the Cadillac, Spires told him that he had been in a confrontation with the owner, and that the owner had kicked his teeth out. Page testified that he thought Spires was joking, so he asked Spires to open his mouth. When Spires opened his mouth and revealed that some of his teeth were, indeed, knocked out, Page realized he was not joking.

¶ 3. Page testified that Spires then “broke down and told me he ended up doing what he [had] to do,” and that he had stabbed the owner of the Cadillac. After Spires told him about the stabbing, Page decided not to purchase the Cadillac and told Spires to leave with the Cadillac and get rid of it. Page testified that he did not call the police, however, because he “ain’t too much take it too serious or noth[479]*479ing like that,” because he had smelled alcohol on Spires’s breath.

¶4. Denita Faireoneture, Page’s flaneé, testified that she had arrived at the trailer she shared with Page around 11:00 p.m. the night of December 25, 2005. When she pulled into the driveway, she noticed a burgundy Cadillac outside that she did not recognize. She went into the trailer and observed Spires attempting to sell Page the Cadillac. She testified that Spires’s knuckles were bloody, and that some of his front teeth were missing. Spires mentioned that he had been in a fight over drugs, and that he had killed somebody. Faireoneture also testified that she and Page thought Spires was joking at the time.

¶ 5. Alphonse Dedeaux, Spires’s roommate, testified that he had last seen Spires about 10:00 or 11:00 p.m. on Christmas night, and that Spires had returned to their trailer ai’ound 5:00 or 6:00 the next morning. When Dedeaux noticed that Spires was missing his front teeth, Spires told him that he and Saucier had gotten into a fight and that he had killed Saucier. Dedeaux then told Spires that “he had to go,” and Spires moved out of the trailer a couple of weeks later.

¶ 6. At some point not entirely clear from the record, Page observed the police pulling the Cadillac out of some woods down the road from his trailer. Page testified that, when he saw the Cadillac, he realized that Spires had not been joking, and he decided that he and Faireoneture should contact the police.2

¶ 7. Kenny Ladner testified that he, along with his wife and friends, were hunting on December 27, 2005, when they discovered a body, which was later identified as Saucier’s. They contacted the police and stayed near the body until the police arrived.

¶ 8. Nancy Kurowski, a Harrison County evidence and crime-scene technician, testified that she had arrived at the location of the body to process the crime scene. She had observed the body lying facedown in some tall weeds. She testified that no weapons or vehicles were present at the scene. Kurowski testified that she later processed the Cadillac and found no weapon, but that what appeared to be blood was on the driver’s headrest, in the rear passenger area, and on the exterior of the passenger door. Also present in the Cadillac were a number of beer bottles and what appeared to be a controlled substance.

¶ 9. Dr. Paul McGarry, the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy, testified that he had found forty-nine stab wounds on Saucier’s body. The stab wounds ranged from the top of Saucier’s head to his lower extremities. Some of the stab wounds had pierced the skull, lungs, heart and aorta, causing massive internal bleeding. The deepest stab wound was six and one-eighth inches deep. The wounds were located predominately on the left side of Saucier’s body and were in different directions, with no repeating pattern. Dr. McGarry also testified that the location of the wounds was consistent with two people being very close together, and probably moving.

¶ 10. The State’s final witness, investigator Joey Tracy, testified that he had arrived at the crime scene around 3:30 p.m. on December 27. He noticed that the victim’s left jacket pocket was pulled out, as though someone had gone through it. [480]*480He also found a crack pipe in that pocket. The body was not identified at the scene.

¶ 11. Tracy testified that, when the Cadillac was recovered, officers ran the tag and discovered that it belonged to Clifton Saucier. Investigators spoke to Clifton Saucier, who confirmed that he owned the Cadillac, but that his son Rodney actually used it. Investigators subsequently were able to identify the body as Rodney Saucier’s.

¶ 12. After Page and Fairconeture came forward, Tracy focused the investigation on Spires. Investigators went to De-deaux’s house in an attempt to locate Spires, but were unsuccessful. Unable to locate Spires anywhere in Harrison County, investigators registered a warrant with the National Crime Information Center. On January 12, 2006, Tracy was notified that Spires had been arrested in Texas. Spires waived extradition, and Tracy and another investigator traveled to Texas and picked him up. Spires subsequently was indicted by a Harrison County grand jury for the capital murder of Rodney Wade Saucier, with the underlying crime of robbery. The State rested after Tracy’s testimony, and Spires moved for a directed verdict, which the trial court denied.

¶ 13. Spires took the stand in his own defense. He testified that Saucier had picked him up in the Cadillac and asked him to go to the Broke Spoke bar with him, because somebody had given Saucier a black eye there earlier. However, Saucier proceeded to pull the Cadillac into a field along the way, stating that he “really just wanted to get away from there because he wanted somebody to get high with.” Saucier started smoking crack, and Spires joined him. Saucier started “tripping on his dope” and began rummaging around the glove compartment and the trunk. Spires suggested that they move the car further into the field, so as not to attract attention. Saucier agreed, and Spires moved the car further into the field, laying the keys in the floorboard after-wards.

¶ 14. Spires testified that Saucier began rummaging through the car again and began “cussing and griping about something.” When he asked Saucier what was wrong, Saucier replied: “[You] should know what’s wrong.” Saucier approached Spires in a “mad rage” and accused Spires of taking his money. When Spires denied taking the money, Saucier began poking Spires in the chest with his finger. Saucier continued to accuse Spires of taking his money, and Spires testified that he “unzipped [his] jacket,” because he “thought [they] was going to fight.”

¶ 15. Spires testified that Saucier pushed him and, as Spiers was going down, he grabbed Saucier, and both men went down.

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Bluebook (online)
10 So. 3d 477, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 260, 2009 WL 1546612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spires-v-state-miss-2009.