Wagner v. State

624 So. 2d 60, 1993 WL 323811
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 1993
Docket90-KA-0837
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 624 So. 2d 60 (Wagner v. State) 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
Wagner v. State, 624 So. 2d 60, 1993 WL 323811 (Mich. 1993).

Opinion

624 So.2d 60 (1993)

Darrell Joe WAGNER
v.
STATE of Mississippi.

No. 90-KA-0837.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

August 19, 1993.

*61 James L. Davis, III, Gulfport, for appellant.

Michael C. Moore, Atty. Gen., John R. Henry, Jr., Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.

Before DAN M. LEE, P.J., and McRAE and SMITH, JJ.

DAN M. LEE, Presiding Justice, for the Court:

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

After a change of venue from Harrison to Hinds County, Darrell Joe Wagner was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life in prison in connection with the death of his 18 year old half-sister, Wanda Faye Wagner. Evidence introduced at trial showed that the victim was beaten, raped, strangled, and crushed beneath a pickup truck.

Wagner properly appealed his conviction, asserting the following assignments of error:

*62 I. The lower court erred in not dismissing the charges as Wagner's Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial was denied.
II. The lower court erred in not dismissing the charges as Wagner's statutory right to a trial within 270 days of arraignment was denied.
III. The lower court erred in not recusing Joseph Meadows and the District Attorney's staff from this case.
IV. The lower court erred in not suppressing the Appellant's statement of December 28, 1987, because the statement was the product of a warrantless arrest without probable cause.
V. The lower court erred in not suppressing the Appellant's statement of December 28, 1987, because the Appellant had requested an attorney and none had been made available to him and the police, after a short break, continued to question the Appellant.
VI. The lower court erred in not suppressing the Appellants's statement of December 28, 1987, because it was involuntary and the product of intimidation and coercion.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS

On December 26, 1987, the body of Wanda Faye Wagner was found alongside a small logging road leading down to the Big Biloxi River in Harrison County. The body was discovered by a couple on their way to the river to fish. The authorities were summoned and evidence was gathered at that location. The victim was later taken to a funeral home where an autopsy was performed.

Immediately prior to her death, Wanda was living with her mother and stepfather in a mobile home in a small community called Lizana, close to Saucier, Mississippi. For approximately three weeks before the murder, the Defendant Darrell Joe Wagner also resided in the trailer. Before that time Darrell Joe Wagner lived in Buena Vista, Georgia, for a period of about four years.

On December 25, 1987, the family, comprised of Darrell, Wanda, their mother Gloria Daniels, and Gloria's then husband Lonnie Bond, traveled to the Wiggins area in Stone County for a holiday visit to the home of Bond's relatives. After lunch, Darrell and Wanda returned to the mobile home in Lizana in Bond's white 1982 Isuzu pickup truck. Gloria and Lonnie Bond remained at the home of Lonnie's grandparents in the Wiggins area.

Early on the evening of December 25, Darrell (still using Bond's white 1982 Isuzu) dropped his sister off at a party attended by seven or eight of Wanda's acquaintances and friends. Several of the party-goers testified that Wanda left around 10:00 or 10:15 in the company of Leo Craven. Craven testified that he gave both Wanda and a young man a ride to their respective homes. Craven also stated that he dropped off the other passenger first and that he declined an invitation from Wanda to come in at the apparently empty trailer. Craven and Wanda had dated in the past, but he denied having sex with her that night. Jimmy McKay, a local deputy sheriff, testified that he saw Wanda, alone, and talking on a pay telephone at the country grocery store very close to her home at approximately 10:55 p.m. that night. McKay was apparently the last person to see Wanda alive other than Darrell Wagner.

After leaving Wanda at the party, Darrell visited one of his mother's former husbands with whom he was on good terms. Next he went to a bar, then left, and visited a married sister at her residence. Wagner then returned to the bar known as the Ed Owens Club. Darrell testified that he drank beer heavily throughout the night, beginning with cans but culminating with four or five pitchers at the club. According to Darrell, he returned home around 3:00 a.m.

The following account of the events after Darrell's return comes from his testimony and a recorded statement he gave investigators after his ultimate arrest. According to Darrell, Wanda was in her room when he returned from the club. As he sat on the couch he was using for a bed, Wanda came to him and asked him to drive her somewhere, but Darrell could not remember where. He never remembered the destination but he testified that he changed his mind about *63 taking her there as they were traveling Old Highway 49. He pulled off the road. An argument ensued over whether to continue, he claimed Wanda slapped him and he hit her back ("a pretty good lick" at the top of her nose). This was Wagner's explanation for the droplets of blood later found in the cab. Next, according to Wagner, they both got out of the truck, apologized, calmed down and reconciled. Then Wanda asked Darrell if they could continue their ride. According to Darrell, during the ride Wanda asked him to have sex with her. Darrell further testified that he had engaged in sexual activity with Wanda "numerous of times before."

After the assertedly consensual sex acts in the cab of the truck, Wanda allegedly left the truck, naked, "not really running, but she was in a fast walk going south on old 49." According to Darrell, she blurted that she was going to walk to Uncle Oscar's, referring to the home of a nearby relative, to wake them up and tell them what had happened. At his trial Darrell testified that as he drove towards her to try to talk to her, the beer, the wet road, locking brakes, and the bad tires on the truck all combined to cause him to accidentally veer towards Wanda at about the time she slipped and fell. In contrast, in his earlier statement to the authorities he said, "[S]he was gonna walk up there to Uncle Oscar's house and wake them up and I ran her down with the pick-up truck."

At trial Darrell told the following story of the events after the "accidental" killing of his sister:

And when I — when I got her out from beneath the truck, I was — I was horrified of what I had — what I had done by accident.
And I looked at her and I noticed that she was not breathing. And I picked her up, put her on the back of the truck and drove down to where the officers found the body.
* * * * * *
When I got there, I wasn't wasn't [sic] for sure what to do. I — I've never been through or done anything like that. I was scared, frightened, and I sat there for a while in the truck. Then I got out of the truck, took Wanda's body off the back and placed her body off to the right of the back of the truck, and I pulled her body where they found it.

Next, Darrell threw out his sister's purse and clothing and returned home where he went to sleep. The next day, December 26, 1987, he returned to Wiggins where his mother was staying. Darrell inquired as to whether anyone had heard from Wanda, stating that she had not returned home the night before.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
624 So. 2d 60, 1993 WL 323811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-state-miss-1993.