Terrance Watts v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 2025
Docket2023-KA-00893-SCT
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Terrance Watts v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2023-KA-00893-SCT

TERRANCE WATTS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/13/2023 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ADRIENNE ANNETT HOOPER- WOOTEN TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: KEVIN DALE CAMP JODY EDWARD OWENS, II JAMES KURT GUTHRIE SHAUNTÉ DENISE WASHINGTON ESEOSA GWENDLINE AGHO COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: ABBIE EASON KOONCE DISTRICT ATTORNEY: JODY EDWARD OWENS, II NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/20/2025 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE RANDOLPH, C.J., MAXWELL AND ISHEE, JJ.

RANDOLPH, CHIEF JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. In October 2020, a grand jury for the First Judicial District of Hinds County indicted

Terrance Watts for the first degree murder of his half brother Yancy Williams pursuant to

Mississippi Code Section 97-3-19(1)(a) (Supp. 2017). In July 2023, Watts stood trial and

was convicted of first degree murder. The trial judge sentenced him to serve a term of life imprisonment. Watts raises three issues on appeal. First, whether the evidence was

sufficient to support a guilty verdict for first degree murder, or, in the alternative, whether

the verdict was contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Second, whether jury

instruction S-4 on deliberate design killing, which was given without objection, was

improper as a matter of law. Lastly, whether jury instruction S-2, informing that malice

aforethought could be inferred from the use of a deadly weapon, was an improper comment

on the weight of the evidence. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. Shortly after midnight on March 23, 2020, Crime Scene Investigator Andrew Harris

of the Jackson Police Department (JPD) was dispatched to a shooting at a Marathon gas

station on Hanging Moss Road. Harris photographed the scene and collected evidence.

Several of Harris’s photographs depicted a deceased male lying on the ground with a gunshot

wound to his head. Harris photographed and collected one spent shell casing with a 9 mm

Luger marking next to the deceased. Harris photographed the driver’s license of the

deceased individual, which revealed that his name was Yancy Williams and that he was a

firefighter for the Jackson Fire Department (JFD). Harris also photographed several

surveillance cameras positioned around the exterior and interior of the Marathon.

¶3. Harris was subsequently dispatched to photograph a recovered black Chevrolet Tahoe

that had been identified by the surveillance footage as involved in the shooting. After

obtaining a warrant to search the inside of the vehicle, Harris photographed and collected one

live round with a 9 mm Luger marking on the driver side floorboard.

2 ¶4. Also dispatched to the Marathon was Kevin McNeal, who was a detective with JPD

at the time. McNeal obtained the surveillance footage from the Marathon. These video

recordings were played in front of the jury. McNeal also spoke with the firemen who

responded to the shooting and was informed that Williams had visited Jackson Fire Station

Number 20 on March 22, 2023, with a man named Terrance, later identified as Terrance

Watts.

¶5. The exterior surveillance footage of the Marathon revealed that the Tahoe parked at

a gas pump around 11:30 p.m. The interior surveillance footage revealed that Williams and

Watts were similar in height and weight, Williams being slightly taller and bulkier than

Watts. Each video revealed that Williams was visibly very intoxicated.

¶6. The surveillance footage revealed Williams and Watts talking to each other in front

of the entrance after exiting the store. Williams handed Watts some cash, and Watts re-

entered the store with Williams following behind. After the two had exited the store for the

second time, the exterior surveillance footage showed Williams bumping into Watts in the

gas station parking lot. Watts said something, and Williams’s behavior became more

animated. Watts pulled out some cash from his pocket and dropped it on the ground.

Williams squared up to Watts, but Watts walked back toward the Tahoe. Williams started

to chirp at Watts. Watts turned back around. For the next several minutes, the two wrestled

each other in the parking lot before Watts broke away and re-entered the driver side door of

the Tahoe.

3 ¶7. Williams attempted to pump gas while Watts sat in the driver’s seat. As the two

spoke, Watts got out of the vehicle and in Williams’s face. Watts re-entered the Tahoe, and

Williams turned facing the gas pump. Watts then stood on the running board of the Tahoe

and shot Williams once in the head with a hand gun while Williams stood at the pump.

Watts drove away immediately thereafter.

¶8. Around 8:00 a.m., Watts turned himself in at the Flora Police Department. Watts

agreed to be interviewed by McNeal. During the video and audio recording of the interview,

Watts recounted that he had just met Williams after finding out they were half brothers.

Williams had met up with Watts on March 22, 2020, to get to know each other. According

to Watts, Williams had a gallon of corn whiskey in his vehicle. Williams let Watts drive his

vehicle throughout their time together that day.

¶9. The two visited the fire station where Williams worked. According to Watts,

Williams was acting in an aggressive manner and hurt one of the other firemen there,

Michael Stinson. Watts also stated that another JFD fireman, David Friday, warned him that

Williams could be dangerous when he drank and that Williams had choked him on a prior

occasion. After leaving the fire station, Watts drove Williams to a party in Flora,

Mississippi. After returning to Jackson following the party, Watts pulled into the Marathon

gas station on Hanging Moss Road.

¶10. Watts informed McNeal that Williams became aggressive in the parking lot when

Watts informed him that he did not have any money to help pay for gas. According to Watts,

Williams thought he was lying and would not let him enter the Tahoe for fifteen minutes.

4 According to Watts, he began to grow nervous that the gas station clerk would call the police

and was concerned because he knew there were outstanding warrants for his arrest.

¶11. Watts informed McNeal that Williams owned the hand gun that he used in the

shooting and that Williams showed him its location in the center console in case they needed

it for protection later. According to Watts, he knew that Williams just wanted to fight and

was concerned that the police would get called, but Williams would not listen and continued

to act aggressively. Watts told McNeal that “I know he probably just wanted to fight I should

have just fought but I panicked and I just shot him.”

¶12. Watts informed McNeal that he did not see Williams with any weapons. Watts also

denied that he felt threatened by Williams and stated his belief that Williams meant no harm.

Watts repeated to McNeal that Williams was probably just mad that he did not have any gas

money, and “I think he probably just wanted to fight or something so I should have just

fought him.” Watts informed McNeal that after he drove away from the gas station, he threw

the hand gun into some bushes on Beasley Road and put the keys to the Tahoe in a trash can

down the street from his friend’s house.

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