State of Missouri v. Corliss F. Mack, Jr.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 2021
DocketED108483
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. Corliss F. Mack, Jr. (State of Missouri v. Corliss F. Mack, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Missouri v. Corliss F. Mack, Jr., (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION TWO

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ED108483 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of ) the City of St. Louis v. ) 1822-CR02030-01 ) CORLISS F. MACK, JR., ) Honorable Michael W. Noble ) Appellant. ) Filed: may 25, 2021

Corliss F. Mack, Jr. (Appellant) appeals from the trial court’s judgment, following a jury

trial, convicting him of two counts of second-degree murder and two counts of armed criminal

action. He was sentenced to four, concurrent 20-year sentences. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The State of Missouri (State) charged Appellant and his co-defendant, Qiana Fletcher

(Co-Defendant), with two counts of the class A felony of first-degree murder (Counts I and III)

and two counts of the unclassified felony of armed criminal action (Counts II and IV) for

knowingly causing the death of Ira Johnson (Johnson) and Sylvester Caston (Caston) with a

deadly weapon. They were also charged with first-degree robbery (Count V), first-degree

kidnapping (Count VII), and additional counts of armed criminal action (Counts VI and VIII) for

events occurring on May 19, 2018. Prior to trial, Appellant and Co-Defendant each filed a motion to sever Appellant’s case

from Co-Defendant’s case to hold separate trials. Appellant’s motion was based on Co-

Defendant’s out-of-court statement to police, which then denied her presence in the alleged

incidents. The court denied the motions, finding both Appellant and Co-Defendant would be

arguing they were victims, not perpetrators, and these defenses were not inherently

irreconcilable. Appellant also filed a motion in limine to prevent introduction of Co-Defendant’s

statement to police, which was agreed to by consent, unless it was offered as impeachment

evidence. The court noted if the statement became an issue, they would discuss it outside of the

presence of the jury.

A trial took place September 23-27, 2019. The State presented Keyshia Harris (Witness)

as its first witness, followed by several detectives and law enforcement officers, the property

manager for Shepherd Apartments, and a woman who lived in the area and testified she heard

gunshots. For the defense, Appellant testified but Co-Defendant did not. This case considers the

sufficiency of the evidence on appeal; thus, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to

the verdict, disregarding any contrary evidence and inferences. State v. Stewart, 560 S.W.3d

531, 533 (Mo. banc 2018). The evidence adduced at trial is as follows.

Witness and Appellant knew each other “almost over twenty years,” and he was a cousin

of her niece and nephews. Witness admitted she regularly sold heroin to Appellant. On May 19,

2018, at approximately 6 p.m., she had delivered “a fourth” of heroin to Appellant. Later, at

8:44 p.m., Appellant called Witness to trade her some marijuana for more heroin. Witness could

not find any heroin but decided to meet and offer Appellant $80 for the marijuana. She drove to

Appellant’s apartment building where she usually met him in the parking lot, but this time

Appellant met her in the street. He was with a woman whom Witness did not know but was later

2 identified as Co-Defendant. Appellant walked up to Witness’s car and sat in the front passenger

seat. Shortly thereafter, Co-Defendant sat behind Appellant in the rear passenger seat. Witness

recalled Appellant saying, “Sis[,] she want it,” and Co-Defendant moved around to get

something out of her pocket. Co-Defendant then pulled out a “little bitty small little . . . black

gun,” “put the gun up to [Witness],” and said, “[B]----, give it up, because this is your last night

anyway.” Co-Defendant was wearing blue latex gloves. Witness believed Co-Defendant meant

she would kill her, so Witness gave her the $80. Appellant did not say a word.

Co-Defendant told Witness to make a U-turn, and continue driving until she drove up to

two men in the street where Co-Defendant ordered Witness to stop. The two men, later

identified as Johnson and Caston, walked up to Witness’s car. Caston punched Witness in the

face, threw her into the back seat, then sat down next to her. Johnson sat in the driver’s seat.

They also wore blue latex gloves, but Appellant did not. They told Witness to take them to her

house. Appellant, still in the front passenger seat, spoke to Witness for the first time since the

two men joined them and said, “[T]ell them where you stay because they are going to kill us.”

She told them Grand and Natural Bridge, but that was not where she lived. Johnson drove the

car to the East Side in Illinois. They stopped near a wooded area where Caston ordered Co-

Defendant to strip-search Witness while Appellant and Johnson searched her car. Co-Defendant

told Witness that “[she] like[d] everything about [Witness] [] because [she’d] had this gun on

[Witness], and [she] once not [sic] beg for [her] life.”

They returned to the car and drove back to St. Louis. Witness said she was mad at

Appellant and was “going off on him” for doing this to her. Johnson “just kept on talking” and

said Appellant had nothing to do with this, but Witness did not believe him. She believed

“[Appellant] was part of it” because he was “the one that called [her]” and she did not know the

3 others. They arrived in St. Louis approximately an hour after they left. Witness thought

“everything was over” and she was going to be released. Johnson stopped the car in the street

and Appellant, Co-Defendant, and Caston got out and walked a little way down the street

together. Witness and Johnson remained in the car, and Johnson told her she needed to get out of

“whatever [she] [was] doing” because it was “not for [her].” Appellant returned to the car, sat in

the front passenger seat and shot Johnson in the head. Witness testified Appellant used the same

gun that Co-Defendant held throughout the night. She said, “[Johnson] never had a gun” and

that she only saw one gun the whole time.

Witness further testified that Appellant got out of the car and ran down the street in the

same direction he previously went with Co-Defendant and Caston. Witness was hiding for cover

and scared when she heard approximately five gunshots from the same direction. Witness hid in

a backyard for a short time, then came out to find her car was gone. She was crying and was

walking to a gas station with some kids when Appellant drove her car up beside her with Co-

Defendant in the passenger seat. He told her, “Sis, sis, get in, I did that for you.” Witness

replied, “ah, no you didn’t,” and ran to the gas station to call the police.

The police responded at approximately 10:15 or 10:30 p.m. They found Johnson’s dead

body in the street with a gunshot wound to his right ear, $80 cash in his pocket, and loose change

in another pocket. They found Caston lying dead on a sidewalk around the corner with five

gunshot wounds, including one to the left side of his chest that caused his death. Both victims

were still wearing blue latex gloves. Police found a cluster of seven cartridge casings

approximately 30 to 40 feet down the street from Johnson. They were all .380 caliber and were

later determined to have been fired from the same firearm.

4 Witness testified that she found her car the next morning after Appellant and his cousin

told her where it was. Johnson’s blood was visible on the driver’s seat. Police found a cartridge

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