Terence Jerome Richardson, s/k/a Terrence Jerome Richardson v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 21, 2022
Docket0361212
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Terence Jerome Richardson, s/k/a Terrence Jerome Richardson v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

VIRGINIA: In the Court of Appeals of Virginia on Tuesday the 21st day of June, 2022. PUBLISHED

Terence Jerome Richardson, s/k/a Terrence Jerome Richardson, Petitioner,

against Record No. 0361-21-2

Commonwealth of Virginia, Respondent.

Upon a Petition for a Writ of Actual Innocence

Before Judges Beales, O’Brien, and Fulton

Terence Jerome Richardson filed with this Court a Petition for a Writ of Actual Innocence Based on

Nonbiological Evidence pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 19.3 of Title 19.2 of the Code of Virginia. He

contends that he is actually innocent of involuntary manslaughter, of which he was convicted upon a guilty

plea in the Circuit Court of Sussex County on March 8, 2000.

BACKGROUND

On April 25, 1998, Waverly Police Officer Allen Gibson, Jr. was shot in the abdomen with his service

weapon. Virginia State Police Trooper T. Jarrid Williams testified at a preliminary hearing in the Sussex

County General District Court that he received an alert on the morning of April 25 informing him that a

police officer had been shot near the Waverly Village Apartments. When Trooper Williams arrived, he found

a large crowd of people gathering outside the apartment complex, including Waverly Chief of Police Warren

Sturrup. Chief Sturrup told Trooper Williams that Officer Gibson had been shot and that Officer Gibson was

“behind the apartments in the woods.”

Trooper Williams “ran back to the woods behind the apartments,” where he found Officer Gibson

lying on the ground with Corporal Rick Aldridge of the Sussex County Sheriff’s Office kneeling near his

head. Officer Gibson was conscious and speaking to Corporal Aldridge. Trooper Williams began trying to talk to Officer Gibson and asked Officer Gibson who had shot him.1 Williams testified at the preliminary

hearing:

I asked him, I said Allen, who did this to you? He stated that there were two black males. One sort of medium build with short, balding hair. Real short, narrow. He described one as tall and skinny. He described one of them with hair that would resemble dreadlocks pulled back into a pony tail. He said they were both wearing dark jeans. One of them had on a white T-shirt. One of them had on an old blue baseball cap. He said that he had got in a scuffle with them and one of them got his gun. He referred to the one that had the gun as the skinny one. He said that he was fighting with him and he was – he was trying to move his hands and show me. He said I tried to move the gun away from me and he said they shot me with my own gun.

Officer Gibson’s condition deteriorated quickly, which prompted Trooper Williams to call for a

helicopter evacuation. In the meantime, a rescue squad ambulance arrived and the paramedics began treating

Officer Gibson. Trooper Williams rode in the ambulance with Officer Gibson to the Waverly Police

Department, where Officer Gibson would be transferred to the helicopter. According to Trooper Williams,

Officer Gibson repeated the description of the perpetrators several times in the ambulance. Just as the

helicopter landed, Officer Gibson went into cardiac arrest. The paramedics were able to resuscitate him, but

he then remained unconscious. Officer Gibson was transferred to a hospital in Petersburg, where he died

from his injuries. He was twenty-five years old.

Shawn Wooden also testified at the preliminary hearing. Wooden testified that petitioner Terence

Richardson was at Wooden’s residence on the day of the shooting. Wooden testified that he and Richardson

met Ferrone Claiborne in Waverly earlier that day, intending to go to Petersburg to buy drugs.2 Wooden

testified that Richardson was wearing blue jeans, a white t-shirt with a marijuana leaf on it, and a plaid shirt

1 Trooper Williams testified that he did not see Officer Gibson’s weapon. However, Corporal Aldridge told him that Chief Sturrup had picked up the gun shortly after arriving at the scene. Chief Sturrup later acknowledged that he improperly picked up Officer Gibson’s weapon before it could be examined for any evidence such as fingerprints or DNA evidence. 2 Claiborne was Richardson’s co-defendant at the preliminary hearing and ultimately pled guilty to being an accessory after the fact to involuntary manslaughter in connection with Officer Gibson’s killing. Claiborne also filed with this Court a petition for a writ of actual innocence to challenge his misdemeanor conviction. See Claiborne v. Commonwealth, No. 0360-21-2 (Va. Ct. App. June 21, 2022) (this day decided). -2- that was open over the t-shirt. Claiborne told Wooden that they did not need to go to Petersburg because

Claiborne knew somewhere else to buy drugs. The three then went to the Waverly Village Apartments.

When they arrived at the Waverly Village Apartments, Wooden testified that Richardson and

Claiborne went around the back of the apartments, leaving Wooden as a lookout. Wooden was told “to make

a holler or something if I see somebody come.” He testified that he lost sight of Richardson and Claiborne

when they turned the corner behind the apartments. Within minutes, a Waverly police car pulled up and

stopped. Wooden saw an officer exit the vehicle and walk toward the woods. Wooden made an audible

signal to warn Richardson and Claiborne. At that point, Wooden said that he fled. As he was fleeing the

apartment complex, Wooden heard a single gunshot.

Wooden testified that he first went to his grandmother’s home but returned to his home after he found

no one at his grandmother’s residence. Richardson arrived back at Wooden’s home shortly thereafter.

According to Wooden, when Richardson “came into the house he looked nervous.” Wooden “asked him then

did they get the stuff,” and Richardson replied, “No.”

While they were at Wooden’s home, Wooden received a phone call from a woman who was looking

for one of Wooden’s friends. The caller said that a police officer had been shot, and Wooden’s friend asked

the caller which police officer had been shot. Richardson could not hear the telephone conversation, but

when Wooden’s friend asked the caller which police officer had been shot, Richardson “said it was a new

cop.” Wooden testified that he did not know how Richardson would have known whether the injured officer

was a new cop or not because “nobody, you know, know who was shot, so how would he [Richardson]

know.” Wooden was asked what happened after Richardson made this comment, and he testified, “We went

out on the front deck in the front of my trailer and we stood there and talked. And then he just said it was a

accident. . . . That he accidentally shot the cop, and if I tell anybody, something will be done to me and my

family.”

On cross-examination, Wooden admitted that he initially told investigators that he did not know

anything about the shooting, that Richardson had stayed at his house the night before the shooting, and that -3- neither of them awoke until noon the next day (after the shooting had occurred). Wooden testified under oath

that this initial statement was a lie. He acknowledged that he had also told police to investigate Leonard

Newby as a suspect in the shooting. He said that he mentioned Newby to the police because “that’s the only

person I could think about other than Terence [Richardson] that had dreads. Or plaits in their head.”

Following the preliminary hearing, a grand jury indicted Richardson for capital murder. However,

Richardson and the Commonwealth subsequently reached a plea agreement. As part of the plea agreement,

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Related

United States v. Watts
519 U.S. 148 (Supreme Court, 1997)
United States v. Richardson
51 F. App'x 90 (Fourth Circuit, 2002)
Carpitcher v. Com.
641 S.E.2d 486 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2007)
Lysable Transport, Inc. v. Patton
702 S.E.2d 596 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2010)
Kelly v. Commonwealth
592 S.E.2d 353 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2004)
Dennis v. Jones
393 S.E.2d 390 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1990)
Gooden v. Commonwealth
311 S.E.2d 780 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1984)
United States v. Claiborne
388 F. Supp. 2d 676 (E.D. Virginia, 2005)

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Terence Jerome Richardson, s/k/a Terrence Jerome Richardson v. Commonwealth of Virginia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terence-jerome-richardson-ska-terrence-jerome-richardson-v-commonwealth-vactapp-2022.