State v. Thomas Mosley

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 28, 2024
Docket2022-0013-C.A.
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Thomas Mosley, (R.I. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court

No. 2022-13-C.A. (P1/16-2491AG)

State :

v. :

Thomas Mosley. :

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or Email: opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.

OPINION

Justice Goldberg, for the Court. On the afternoon of August 13, 2014, a

gunman entered Yusef A’Vant’s Krazy Kuts barbershop in East Providence, Rhode

Island. A scuffle ensued, the result of which ended with A’Vant sustaining a fatal

gunshot wound to the chest. After two trials, the defendant, Thomas Mosley

(Mosley or defendant), was convicted on multiple counts, including second-degree

murder. On appeal, the defendant identifies twenty-one appellate issues for our

consideration. Having carefully scoured the voluminous record and the parties’

arguments, we discern no error. The judgment of conviction is affirmed.1

1 It is evident that many of the appellate issues were conceived and researched by the defendant. We take this opportunity to express the Court’s sincere appreciation to court-appointed defense counsel, who graciously included the defendant’s legal arguments in an able and professional manner. -1- Facts and Travel

Derek Winslow and A’Vant had an acrimonious relationship, leading

Winslow to declare that he wanted A’Vant “got,” which in street parlance evidently

signifies “murdered.” Winslow enlisted the assistance of Evan Watson; and after

initially agreeing to kill A’Vant, Watson declined, advising Winslow that he “had a

bad feeling,” which proved prophetic. Undeterred, Winslow conscripted a

replacement, Mosley; and in a subsequent conversation, Watson agreed to supply

the gun and to drive Mosley to and from the barbershop. Thereafter, Watson testified

against defendant and for the prosecution.

At trial, Watson provided critical testimony implicating Mosley in A’Vant’s

murder. He admitted providing a loaded .38 caliber revolver and driving Mosley to

the barbershop. Watson detailed the route driven and described that, as they

approached the barbershop, defendant reached into the glove compartment, retrieved

the loaded revolver, and proceeded in the direction of the barbershop. He was not

gone long. Watson testified that within minutes he heard gunshots and

“immediately” thereafter witnessed defendant jogging back to the vehicle. As

Watson drove away, Mosley stated to Watson, “it wasn’t, like, supposed to go down

like that” and “someone might have saw [me].”

Seth Waters also testified and explained that he visited the barbershop during

his lunch break for a haircut. According to Waters, within minutes of his arrival, a

-2- male opened the barbershop door, pointed a gun at his head, and told him “to get on

the floor.” Waters complied, and although he was not an eyewitness—because he

was face-down on the floor—Waters recalled hearing A’Vant exclaim, “[y]ou’ve

got to be kidding me,” the sounds of a scuffle, and then the explosion of a gunshot.

After the gunman fled the barbershop, Waters stood up and discovered A’Vant,

bleeding from his stomach or chest area. Waters described the assailant to police

and later assisted in compiling a composite sketch of the gunman.

According to Rithy Suon, Mosley’s then-girlfriend and the mother of his

child, one evening Mosley showed her a composite sketch. After Suon inquired

concerning the significance of the sketch, Mosley smirked and mused that the sketch

“was supposed to look like him.” While Suon testified that she was not, at that time,

unduly alarmed by defendant’s comment, Suon recounted that later, after Mosley’s

arrest, he advised her that she was going to hear a recording of himself and a person

Mosley referred to as “Little” (Michael Drepaul), with their infant son in the

background. Suon related that Mosley directed her to tell “them” that she did not

recognize any of the voices on the recording, an instruction she assumed meant the

police.

Drepaul testified concerning firsthand knowledge of the forewarned

conversation, which he had recorded surreptitiously at defendant’s home. Drepaul

related that, with the assistance of officers from the Providence Police Department,

-3- he concealed a recorder in the pocket of his shorts, visited Mosley at his residence,

and engaged Mosley in a lengthy conversation. After discussing matters not

germane to this opinion, the conversation changed to a different topic. Without

specifically mentioning the barbershop or A’Vant, Mosley recalled exiting a

building and “hearing sirens. Like, I’m thinking that shit’s for me.” Mosley

continued and described that he

“rushes out and as I coming out * * * I’m hearing the sirens. * * * So in my mind I’m like * * * I, I, I looked, walked for a second and dipped * * * as I’m hitting the corner I see Staties flying by.[2] * * * Soon as I hit that corner, soon as I could -, soon as I hit that corner where they couldn’t see me, ‘boom,’ took off. Floated. And fucking jumped in the wheels, jumped in the wheels.”

Mosley’s recitation of events also largely corroborated Watson’s testimony

concerning statements made by defendant during the getaway:

“[W]hat happened was I was supposed to shake [A’Vant] up. [A’Vant] got funky fresh. You know what I’m saying? I had to give it to him. You know what I’m saying? I was supposed to shake [A’Vant] up. Yo drop to the floor. You know what I’m saying? Bust a shot and be out.”3

2 Kris Ellinwood, a then-patrol officer with the East Providence Police Department, testified that in the moments before the report of the shooting, a dispatch call was received concerning another incident. In responding to that incident, Officer Ellinwood activated the vehicle’s emergency lights and siren and drove past the barbershop. Upon receiving the dispatch for the report of a shooting at the barbershop, Officer Ellinwood turned around and responded to the barbershop. 3 The transcript uses a racial epithet, which we have replaced with A’Vant’s name.

-4- After Drepaul questioned whether “[h]e was the only one,” defendant replied: “No,

I’m saying I let the other one go. I don’t think the other one, he got a good look at

me, know what I’m saying”; and “[t]he other [person] stayed laying down.”4

Providence Police Detective Theodore Michael also testified and was

qualified as an expert in digital forensics, specifically geolocation with respect to

Wi-Fi, GPS, and cellular site locations. After obtaining a search warrant to seize

Wi-Fi location data associated with defendant’s Google account, Det. Michael

testified that he was able to trace the location of defendant’s cellular telephone

through its connection to Wi-Fi access points. Utilizing this method and data, Det.

Michael determined that on August 13, 2014—the date of the murder—defendant’s

cellular telephone was located in Cranston at 1:45 p.m., moved in the direction of

East Providence, and remained within a twenty-seven-to fifty-three-yard radius of

the vicinity of the barbershop from 1:56 p.m. until 2:03 p.m. At 2:13 p.m.,

defendant’s cellular telephone was tracked to within an approximate thirty-yard

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