State v. Brice

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedOctober 22, 2024
Docket1 CA-CR 23-0348
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Brice, (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

STATE OF ARIZONA, Appellee,

v.

JERRY MARVETTE BRICE, Appellant.

No. 1 CA-CR 23-0348

FILED 10-22-2024

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. CR2020-002330-001 The Honorable Kevin B. Wein, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix By Alice M. Jones Counsel for Appellee

Bain & Lauritano, PLC, Glendale By Amy E. Bain Counsel for Appellant STATE v. BRICE Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Presiding Judge Jennifer B. Campbell delivered the decision of the Court, in which Judge Kent E. Cattani and Judge Paul J. McMurdie joined.

C A M P B E L L, Judge:

¶1 Jerry Marvette Brice appeals his felony convictions and sentences arising from a nightclub shooting and his later attempts to target witnesses using the jail telephone. Brice argues that the charges from the two events were improperly consolidated for trial, some convictions were unsupported by sufficient evidence, and the sentencing ranges for two convictions were improperly enhanced. For the reasons below, we affirm the convictions and sentences.

BACKGROUND

I. Nightclub Shooting

¶2 One evening in October 2017, Brice and Donald Ray drove a Dodge Magnum to a nightclub in Avondale. The car was on loan from Owen Mitchell, who had himself been loaned the car by a girlfriend. Brice and Ray went into the nightclub and socialized.

¶3 When the club closed in the early morning hours, patron Victor Rice went out to the parking lot, where a man ran up behind him and shot him with a handgun. There were at least three initial shots. Rice’s cousin, Ralph Clark, returned fire as the shooter ran away and climbed into the passenger side of a Dodge Magnum.

¶4 Rice collapsed and soon died. A forensic examination showed that the cause of death was gunshot wounds to his head and back. Bystander Jacqueline Benson also sustained a gunshot wound to her leg. Forensic tests showed that both Rice and Benson were shot by one of two handguns the police found on the ground in the parking lot after the incident. Shell casings found at the scene appeared to have been fired from the same handgun.

¶5 Later, police located the Dodge Magnum that Mitchell had loaned Brice and Ray. It had bullet holes in the hood, and the windshield had been replaced. Inside the car was a cigarette package bearing Brice’s

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fingerprint. At the time of the shooting, Brice was a high-ranking member of the West Side City Crips, a criminal street gang, and Ray and Mitchell were also linked to the gang.

¶6 Ray participated in a “free talk” interview with police in February 2018. He explained that he drove Brice away from the scene in the loaned Dodge Magnum, which had a new bullet hole through the windshield, and then left the car with Brice. Mitchell participated in a “free talk” a year later. Mitchell told detectives that he missed multiple phone calls from Ray’s phone number just after the shooting. When Mitchell finally called back, Brice answered the phone and told Mitchell to get the car. Brice told Mitchell that the car had bullet holes in it because a girl in the club had “said something to him . . . about the kid” and then “some shit went down[,] and he ended up shooting the kid” in the head. Brice also told Mitchell that he had thrown “the guns” out as he and Ray left. Brice told Mitchell he was looking for Ray because he wanted “to get their story right.”

¶7 When witnesses Karly Flick and Candice Drake were shown photo lineups that included Brice, Flick selected a photo other than Brice’s, and Drake selected no photo—but Drake began visibly shaking when she held Brice’s photo. Clark was also unable to identify the shooter in a photo lineup, but he suggested that he might pick Brice’s photo if the image were of better quality. Clark told police that he recognized the shooter as “Shaka”—Brice’s nickname—and he showed police a social-media photo of Brice. At trial, he testified that he was certain Brice was the shooter.

II. Witness-Targeting

¶8 After the shooting, Brice was incarcerated in the Fourth Avenue Jail. While there, Brice made many phone calls speaking to or about other known members of the West Side City Crips. He initiated some of the calls—all of which were recorded with his knowledge—using other inmates’ booking numbers, knowingly violating jail rules.

¶9 Brice spoke often with his children’s mother, Talia Adams, and had her organize three-way calls with gang members, pass her phone to members, and relay messages to members. Using their nicknames, Brice identified Ray and Mitchell as snitches in multiple calls. He also mentioned a “bitch named [Natalie]”—the name of one of the witnesses to the shooting. He wrote “Natalie” on the envelope of a letter he sent to Adams and then, during a call, directed her to look at that name. He told a male on the call that Adams would be giving him a name.

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¶10 In a call initiated under a different inmate’s booking number, Brice told Adams to tell gang member Frank Sims to not “fuck with”—i.e., not conduct gang business with—either Ray or Mitchell and to “hammer”—i.e., take action. Adams retrieved a police report referencing Ray’s “free talk,” and Brice told Sims directly that he knew about Ray’s cooperation with the police and had “work”—i.e., police reports—on Ray. Brice also told Sims that he already knew what he wanted him to do.

¶11 In another call, again made under a different inmate’s booking number, Brice mentioned Ray’s nickname and stated that he wanted “that movie”—i.e., a “free talk”—to be “stomp[ed].” Some months later, West Side City Crips member Mark Bench called Brice’s cousin, told her he was in the same jail pod as Ray, and asked for an “official whistle.” She understood Bench to be asking Brice’s permission to take action against Ray. She conveyed that information to Brice the next day. Brice responded that Bench already knew what to do, “he can have the bitch,” “holler at that bitch and treat that bitch how he’s supposed to be treated,” “just beat the bitch ass,” and “smash that bitch and kick that bitch to the curb.”

¶12 Soon after, Bench attacked and beat Ray in the jail pod. Later, when describing the attack to another, Bench stated that Brice had “blessed [him] with the LT status”—i.e., a promotion within the gang.

III. Charges and Consolidation for Trial

¶13 For the nightclub shooting, Brice was indicted for second- degree murder and aggravated assault (shooting charges).1 For the jail communications, he was indicted for two counts of participating in a criminal street gang, and one count each of fraudulent schemes and artifices, influencing a witness, and obstructing criminal investigations or prosecutions (witness-targeting charges). A co-defendant was also indicted on some of the witness-targeting charges.

¶14 Brice moved to sever his case from his co-defendant’s and to sever the shooting charges from the witness-targeting charges. The court denied Brice’s motion and oral request for reconsideration. Brice then filed a written motion for reconsideration, which the court denied as moot just before voir dire because the co-defendant pled guilty. Brice never renewed his charge-severance request. The case against Brice proceeded to a 17-day trial.

1 Brice was also indicted for misconduct involving weapons, but that charge was severed before trial and is not the subject of this appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Brice, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brice-arizctapp-2024.