State v. Robert Lee Miller, III

CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 13, 2023
Docket2021-000985
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Robert Lee Miller, III (State v. Robert Lee Miller, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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. Robert Lee Miller, III, (S.C. 2023).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Supreme Court

The State, Respondent,

v.

Robert Lee Miller, III, Petitioner.

Appellate Case No. 2021-000985

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS

Appeal from Allendale County R. Lawton McIntosh, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 28178 Heard May 16, 2023 – Filed September 13, 2023

AFFIRMED

Appellate Defender Lara M. Caudy, of Columbia, for Petitioner.

Attorney General Alan McCrory Wilson, Chief Deputy Attorney General W. Jeffrey Young, Deputy Attorney General Donald J. Zelenka, Senior Assistant Deputy Attorney General Melody Jane Brown, and Senior Assistant Attorney General Mark Reynolds Farthing, all of Columbia; and Solicitor Isaac McDuffie Stone III, of Bluffton, all for Respondent. Hannah Lyon Freedman, of Justice 360, of Columbia, and John H. Blume, III, of Ithaca, New York, of Cornwell Juvenile Justice Project, Amici Curiae.

ACTING CHIEF JUSTICE KITTREDGE: Petitioner Robert Miller III was convicted of the brutal murder of eighty-six-year-old Willie Johnson (the victim). Following the murder, Petitioner—who was fifteen years old at the time—confessed four times: twice to his close friends and twice to law enforcement. All four confessions were admitted at trial, three without objection. This appeal centers around the voluntariness of Petitioner's fourth and final confession to two agents of the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED). After examining the totality of the circumstances surrounding the fourth confession, we hold that Petitioner's free will was not overborne, and his confession was voluntary. We therefore affirm.

I. The elderly victim lived alone in Allendale, South Carolina. On the night of the murder, three juveniles—Petitioner, his older brother (Kashawn Bynum), and his brother's friend (Gabriel Joyner)—knocked on the victim's door before overpowering the victim and forcing their way into the house. While inside, the juveniles bound the victim's hands before nearly beating the victim to death, resulting in the victim's dentures being shattered and scattered around the room. Petitioner then tied a plastic trash bag over the victim's head and left him while he was still breathing. The victim asphyxiated and was found two days later by members of his church who were concerned that they had not heard from the elderly victim. During the subsequent investigation, law enforcement found a single bloody handprint on the wall at the crime scene, which they later determined was made out of the victim's blood and definitively matched Petitioner's handprint.

One week after the murder, in an unrelated crime, a fourteen-year-old boy was shot in Fairfax, South Carolina (approximately five miles from Allendale). Petitioner and his best friend, Jonathan Capers, immediately became suspects and were brought in for questioning at around 3:00 or 4:00 p.m. by the Fairfax Police Department. Petitioner and Capers were accompanied by Capers's mother, Tiffany Sabb, who— in Petitioner's words—was "like a mother" to him. Slightly before 5:00 p.m., Chief Marvin Williams interviewed Petitioner alone in his office. After Chief Williams mirandized 1 Petitioner, he began questioning Petitioner in regards to the shooting in Fairfax. According to Chief Williams, Petitioner— unprompted—instead confessed his involvement with the victim's murder in Allendale:

[Petitioner] said that he didn't do the shooting in Fairfax. He thought we wanted him for the incident that took place in Allendale. And I stated, what are you talking about. And he went into the situation of . . . the beating of the old man in Allendale. . . . [Petitioner] stated that they pushed [the victim] down . . . , robbed him[,] beat him . . . and put a bag over his head. And I asked him, why [did] you put a bag over his head. He said [the victim] kept looking at him. That is why he put the bag over his head. Knowing he had no jurisdiction over the Allendale murder, Chief Williams left the room and contacted two SLED agents in the area—Agents Richard Johnson and Natasha Merrell—who were already investigating the matter. Over the next thirty minutes, Petitioner remained alone in the interview room while law enforcement talked to Capers; Capers gave a statement indicating Petitioner had confessed (to Capers) his role in the victim's murder. According to Capers, Petitioner told him that Bynum and Joyner had planned to "hit a lick" and pulled Petitioner into their scheme. Petitioner told Capers they knocked on the door of Joyner's across-the-street neighbor and asked the victim for some sugar, but the victim said he did not trust them because he had been "getting robbed lately and before." The three juveniles then rushed the victim "and hit him and then he fought." Bynum and Joyner ransacked the house while Petitioner tied up and beat "the old man." After stomping on the victim's face, Petitioner then put a plastic bag on the victim's head, and the three juveniles left.

After obtaining Capers's statement, SLED Agents Johnson and Merrell interviewed Petitioner for approximately one hour.2 At the outset of the interview, Petitioner

1 See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). 2 The interview was recorded (audio only) on Agent Merrell's SLED iPhone. Despite the interview lasting for an hour, the recording of the interview submitted at trial was only around thirty minutes long. Apparently, the interview was heavily redacted for all mentions of the Fairfax shooting and any mention of Petitioner's extensive use of marijuana. Additionally, the portion of the interview introduced at trial stops was in the room with Sabb, Agent Johnson, Agent Merrell, and Chief Williams. The three law enforcement officers did not re-mirandize Petitioner because Chief Williams advised the SLED agents that he had already done so during the initial interview thirty minutes earlier. Agent Johnson asked the questions at first, confirming Petitioner was "okay with talking to us" and "okay with [his mom not being present]." At Agent Johnson's inquiry, Petitioner confirmed he was in summer school after failing eighth grade but that he could read and write.

Chief Williams left the room, and Agent Johnson asked Sabb if she would mind if they talked to Petitioner without her present as well. Sabb agreed, but before she could leave the room, Petitioner interjected that he would like to speak to Agent Merrell alone. Agent Johnson stated, "Okay, that's fine, you don't like males? I intimidate you?," to which Petitioner replied, "I just got more respect for females." After Sabb left the room, but before Agent Johnson left, he asked Petitioner if he needed to use the restroom and if he was "good with just what we have done" so far in the interview (i.e., sending Sabb out). Likewise, Agent Johnson reiterated to Petitioner, "[I]t's up to you if you wanna talk to us now. You said you okay. Isn't that right?" Petitioner responded, "Yes, sir," and Agent Johnson left the room.

Agent Merrell then questioned Petitioner about his involvement in the murder, but Petitioner maintained he had an alibi. Specifically, Petitioner denied being in Allendale the Tuesday of the murder, claiming he had been in Fairfax for summer school until that Friday (three days later). Petitioner told Agent Merrell she could confirm his alibi with "Gail," a school bus driver who lived in a trailer "down the road." Agent Merrell pressed him, asking whether he was sure he had not been in Allendale on Tuesday night. Petitioner admitted that on Tuesday morning, he attended a hearing at an alternative school in Allendale. Agent Merrell asked how

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State v. Robert Lee Miller, III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robert-lee-miller-iii-sc-2023.