State v. Gibbs

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 5, 2020
Docket2017-002042
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Gibbs, (S.C. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

The State, Respondent,

v.

Jaron Lamont Gibbs, Appellant.

Appellate Case No. 2017-002042

Appeal From Pickens County Letitia H. Verdin, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 5760 Submitted May 8, 2020 – Filed August 19, 2020

AFFIRMED

Katherine Carruth Goode, of Winnsboro, and Jack B. Swerling, of Columbia, both for Appellant.

Attorney General Alan McCrory Wilson, Deputy Attorney General Donald J. Zelenka, Senior Assistant Deputy Attorney General Melody Jane Brown, and Assistant Attorney General Caroline M. Scrantom, all of Columbia, for Respondent.

HEWITT, J.: Jaron Lamont Gibbs appeals his convictions for murder and possessing a weapon while committing a violent crime. He claims the trial court erred in allowing a police officer to testify about single and double action revolvers when the officer was not qualified as an expert witness. Gibbs also claims the trial court erred in allowing the State to reference the officer's testimony in the State's closing argument and if these alleged errors do not independently justify reversal, reversal is warranted by their cumulative effect.

We respectfully disagree with both arguments. First, we find no abuse of discretion in allowing the officer to testify based on his experience with revolvers. Second, the State's closing argument was permissible advocacy based on its view of the evidence.

FACTS

Events Giving Rise to Charges

The circumstances of this mid-day shooting were disputed, but multiple witnesses testified the case arose out of a drug transaction. On a Saturday in August 2017, Hunter Raby, Robby Porter, and Kalyn Meadors were going to the lake near Clemson when they contacted Gibbs—the defendant—to buy drugs. Raby drove his white Ford Explorer with Porter in the front passenger seat. Meadors rode in the rear passenger seat. They met Gibbs near Clemson.

Gibbs gave them marijuana and pills in exchange for money. After the transaction, the occupants of Raby's Explorer weighed the marijuana they purchased. Believing they had been shorted, they drove Raby's Explorer back to the purchase location to look for Gibbs and saw him in a Chrysler. They contacted Gibbs by phone and began following the Chrysler.

According to Raby, the phone calls with Gibbs became heated. Shortly thereafter, the two cars arrived and stopped at a four-way intersection. At that point, Gibbs exited the Chrysler's front passenger seat, walked behind the Chrysler, and walked up to the Explorer's driver's side window where Raby was seated. Witness accounts differ as to what happened next.

Raby said Gibbs pulled out a gun, put the gun inside the Explorer's driver's side window, and yelled that Raby had messed up and "was really close to losing [his] life over it." Raby said that the gun was a silver revolver, Gibbs held the gun in his right hand, and Gibbs held the gun along the left side of Raby's face. Raby said he used both of his hands to push the gun away as Gibbs was threatening him. At that point, Raby said the gun fired. Raby denied touching the gun's trigger.

Meadors—the Explorer's backseat passenger—could not see the gun from her seat and only realized what it was after it fired. She assumed Raby had taken the gun away from Gibbs. Gibbs's story was significantly different. He said Raby and Porter called him and demanded he settle up for an unpaid bet made at a social event a few weeks earlier. Gibbs said he told them he was on his way to Atlanta and would pay the bet later, but he claimed Porter would not take "no" for an answer. He said Raby and Porter got increasingly upset as their phone calls went on and they began following closely behind Gibbs and driving aggressively.

Gibbs said the reason he got out of the Chrysler was to offer the gun as payment for the alleged bet. Gibbs purportedly thought the gun was unloaded. He agreed that he held the gun in his right hand but explained he was left-handed, he held the pistol by the grip, and his finger was never on the trigger. Gibbs said he pushed the gun inside the car in front of Raby's face and that Raby pushed the gun back out. Gibbs said the gun fired when this occurred a second time. Gibbs claimed he had no idea anyone had been shot after the gun fired.

Three other cars were stopped at the intersection when the shooting happened. The occupants of those cars all recalled waiting on a silver sedan—the Chrysler—to proceed through the intersection. All saw Gibbs exit the Chrysler from the passenger side, walk up to the driver's side of the Explorer, and address the driver.

Alexander Saidat, an off-duty EMT waiting at the intersection in his car with his wife and children, recalled seeing Gibbs exit the Chrysler's passenger side and walk to the back of the vehicle. Saidat said Gibbs had a gun in his right hand that looked like a silver revolver. Saidat testified Gibbs and the driver of the Explorer had an argument that lasted several seconds. He then witnessed Gibbs "thrust his right arm inside the vehicle with the gun" and heard the gunshot.

Although the remaining witnesses did not recall seeing a gun, they did recall hearing a gunshot. Saidat's wife said she witnessed yelling before she "saw the hand of the driver come out, and the gun went off." She also testified that "[w]hen the gun went off, the male who was in the Chrysler who had shot ran back to the Chrysler and they drove away." Another witness also recalled "seeing a hand go up and down."

The bullet grazed the top of Raby's head, leaving only a minor injury. However, the bullet struck Porter—the front seat passenger—in the left side of his temple, just above his ear. Porter died at the hospital the following day.

Autumn Gilstrap—the Chrysler's driver—testified Gibbs contacted her earlier that day requesting a ride to Atlanta. She noticed the Explorer trying to stop her from leaving the place where she picked up Gibbs. Gilstrap said that she drove around the Explorer, it kept following them, and Gibbs told her to keep driving as he answered a number of phone calls. Gilstrap said the Explorer was directly behind her when they reached the intersection where the shooting occurred.

Gilstrap saw Gibbs walk from her car to the Explorer and saw that he was armed. She said that Gibbs and the people in the Explorer were yelling at each other, and she saw Gibbs point the gun towards the Explorer's window. Gilstrap heard the gun go off and watched Gibbs walk back to her car and get in. Gilstrap said she did not see the gun when Gibbs got back in the car. Gibbs told Gilstrap to drive off and explained that the gun had gone off and hit the top of the Explorer's roof. Gilstrap testified she took Gibbs to Greenville Hospital to meet some other people and declined to drive him to Atlanta "because [she] was unsure of what really happened" at the intersection. Gilstrap said she drove directly to the Clemson Police Department and gave a statement.

Authorities recovered pills and other illegal substances from the Explorer. Raby and Meadors initially told officers that Gibbs had robbed them a few weeks earlier and owed them money. Both of them said later that their initial story was not true, and that the incident in fact stemmed from the aforementioned drug transaction. Gibbs was arrested in Atlanta two days after the shooting. No gun was recovered.

Revolver Testimony

Detective Michael Arflin testified at Gibbs's trial about his investigation of the shooting. The State asked Detective Arflin during direct examination if he was familiar with single action and double action revolvers. Gibbs objected, arguing Detective Arflin had not been qualified as an expert witness.

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Related

State v. Kelly
329 S.E.2d 442 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1985)
Humphries v. State
570 S.E.2d 160 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2002)
State v. Pagan
631 S.E.2d 262 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2006)
State v. Douglas
632 S.E.2d 845 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2006)
State v. Commander
721 S.E.2d 413 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2011)
Fowler v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance
764 S.E.2d 249 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Gibbs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gibbs-scctapp-2020.