Thompson v. State

97 So. 3d 800, 2011 WL 6278306, 2011 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 122
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 16, 2011
DocketCR-10-0714
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 97 So. 3d 800 (Thompson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. State, 97 So. 3d 800, 2011 WL 6278306, 2011 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 122 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

BURKE, Judge.

Darryl David Thompson appeals his conviction for manslaughter, see § 13A-6-3, Ala.Code 1975, and his resulting sentence of 15 years in prison. We affirm.

In September 2009, Thompson was indicted for murder. On August 3, 2010, Thompson filed a motion to suppress recorded statements that he made to law-enforcement officers shortly after midnight on February 17, 2009. Thompson argued that he was in custody when he made the statements and that the officers continued to interrogate him after he had asserted his right to counsel. On December 1, 2010, the State filed a response to Thompson’s motion to suppress, arguing that, [803]*803during the questioning that occurred on February 17, 2009, Thompson was not in custody and did not invoke his right to counsel. After conducting a hearing, the trial court denied Thompson’s motion to suppress on December 7, 2010.

At trial, the State’s evidence indicated the following. On February 16, 2009, at approximately 10:00 p.m., Melissa Garrett suffered a fatal gunshot wound to the neck while at her house. Thompson and Garrett’s 12-year-old daughter were at the house when the incident occurred.

Thompson had been staying with Garrett for about a week before her death, and he and Garrett had been drinking and using drugs during that time. On the day of Garrett’s death, she and Thompson had been drinking and using drugs at her house all day. The daughter, who had been staying with a friend for about a week, arrived at her mother’s house at approximately 6:00 p.m. on the day of the incident. When she arrived home, she went to her bedroom.

Later that evening, her daughter went into Garrett’s bathroom, and she could hear Garrett and Thompson arguing in the living room. The daughter then returned to her room, where she could hear the argument escalating. The daughter then confronted Garrett and Thompson and told them that “they needed to keep it down or someone would call the cops.” (R. 315-16.) She then retrieved dirty clothes from her room and took them into the laundry room so that she could wash them.

While in the laundry room, the daughter could clearly hear Garrett and Thompson arguing. The daughter testified that she heard Garrett say that Thompson had broken her phone. The daughter also heard Garrett tell Thompson to give her gun back to her. According to the daughter, Thompson responded: “So what, you are going to shoot me now?” (R. 820.) Then Garrett replied: “How am I supposed to shoot you? You have my gun.” (R. 320.) A short time after that exchange, the daughter heard the gun fire. After the gunshot, the daughter “froze,” and one or two minutes of complete silence passed before Thompson came to the laundry room and told her that he needed to use her phone because, he said, Garrett had shot herself. (R. 321.) The daughter ran into the living room and saw Garrett lying on the couch. The daughter wanted to call emergency 911, but Thompson instructed her to call Kathy, a family friend, first because “there were drugs everywhere.” (R. 325.) After calling Kathy, the daughter called 911. After she spoke briefly with the 911 operator, the operator asked to speak to Thompson. Shortly thereafter, Kathy, law-enforcement officers, and emergency-medical personnel arrived at the house.

After the law-enforcement officers and emergency-medical personnel arrived at Garrett’s house, Thompson was asked to go outside so that the emergency personnel could do their jobs. Thompson initially complied with the request to go outside, but he repeatedly tried to reenter the house. Because Thompson repeatedly tried to reenter the house, law-enforcement officers placed him in the back of a patrol car and did not allow him to get out of the car; however, he was not handcuffed or placed under arrest.

After being in the back of the patrol car for approximately one hour, Thompson was taken to the police department and interviewed by Travis Clemons, the chief investigator for the Lauderdale County Sheriffs Office. That interview was recorded and presented at trial. Thompson objected to the admission of the interview at trial. As he did in his motion to suppress, Thompson argued that he was in custody and that the officers continued to [804]*804interrogate him after he had asserted his right to counsel.

At the beginning of the interview, Thompson stated: “Okay. I have nothing to hide. I’m not, I’m not wrong (unintelligible) nothing. You know what I’m saying? I guess I got to call an attorney if I needed one, right? Is this the time now when I need to?” Investigator Clemons responded: “No, I’ll let you know right here in just a second.” Thompson replied: “Okay, no problem.” After obtaining some biographical information from Thompson and before asking him any questions concerning Garrett’s death, Investigator Clemons read Thompson his Miranda1 warnings.2 Thompson orally acknowledged that he understood his rights, and he signed a form that listed those rights and that stated that he understood and waived those rights, including his right to an attorney. Investigator Clemons also informed Thompson that he was not under arrest. At one point during the interview, Thompson asked to telephone his mother so that he could let her know what was happening, and he stated that “if she thinks I need an attorney, she will call an attorney.” Thompson was immediately allowed to call his mother, and he told her that “I don’t know if, uh, I need a lawyer or not.” After the telephone conversation with his mother ended, the interview resumed and nothing else was said about an attorney. After the interview ended, Thompson was allowed to leave.

During the interview, Thompson described how he was sitting upright immediately to Garrett’s left on the couch as they argued and as she waived the gun around in her right hand. Thompson stated that he knew that Garrett had chambered a round in the gun. Thompson stated that he grabbed Garrett’s arm in an effort to take the gun away from her, but she pulled away from him and the gun immediately fíred a bullet into her neck. During the interview, Thompson demonstrated the relative positions of Garrett and himself while they were on the couch, and he demonstrated how she pulled away from him and shot herself.

At trial, Investigator Clemons testified that he examined the couch from Garrett’s house, and he determined that the bullet that fatally wounded Garrett traveled through the right armrest of the couch and into the back, bottom-right portion of the couch, where it was found. Investigator Clemons further testified that the trajectory of the bullet was wholly inconsistent with Thompson’s description of how Garrett was shot. Also, Investigator Clemons found a broken necklace and a broken cell phone near the couch.

Valerie Green, the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy on Garrett, testified that Garrett died from a gunshot wound to the right side of her neck. Green determined that the gunshot wound occurred from a very close range and that the gun was held at an angle to Garrett’s neck at the time the gun was fired. The entrance wound was just below Garrett’s right ear and slightly behind the ear. Green testified that, based on the soot deposition on Garrett’s skin from the gunshot and the searing and tearing of Garrett’s skin, the gun had to be actually placed against Garrett’s skin and held at a particular angle when it was fired. The exit wound was at the back-bottom portion [805]*805of Garrett’s scalp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 So. 3d 800, 2011 WL 6278306, 2011 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-state-alacrimapp-2011.