Yates v. State

227 So. 3d 1240, 2016 WL 3655298
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJuly 8, 2016
DocketCR-14-1151
StatusPublished

This text of 227 So. 3d 1240 (Yates 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
Yates v. State, 227 So. 3d 1240, 2016 WL 3655298 (Ala. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinions

WELCH, Judge.

The appellant, Brandon Yates, was convicted, as an accomplice, of murdering Brandarius Hill, see § 13A-6-2, Ala.Code 1975; two counts of attempting to murder Tyris Miller1 and Jamar Thompson, see § 13A-6-2 and § 13A-4-2, Ala.Code 1975; and shooting into an occupied vehicle, see § 13A-11-61, Ala.Code 1975.2 Yates was sentenced to 40 years in prison for the murder conviction, 30 years for each attempted-murder conviction, and 10 years for the conviction for firing into an occupied vehicle, the sentences to be served concurrently.

The State’s evidence tended to show that in the early morning hours of September 18, 2011, police were dispatched to the Selebras Club (“the Club”), a nightclub in Silas, Alabama, in response to a 911 emergency call that a shooting had taken place in the parking lot of the Club. Dr. Erin Barnhardt, Deputy Chief Medical Examiner of the Mississippi State Medical Examiner’s Office, testified that Brandarius Hill died as a result of a gunshot wound to the right side of his head. (R. 208.) Testimony also established that Tyris Miller was shot in the leg and that Jamar Thompson was shot in the head, twice in the left leg, and once in his left arm.

Numerous people were in the parking lot of the Club at the time of the shootings and testified at Yates’s trial. Tyris Miller testified that he was at the Club at closing time at around 2:00 a.m. on the morning of September 18, 2011, and that he, Brandari-us Hill, Tony McGrew, and a few other people were standing in the parking lot talking. He was sitting on his car looking at his cellular phone, Miller said, when a “guy with [dreadlocks] came out of the club” and started talking to him. While he and the “guy with dreads” were, talking, a “white guy” walked between them. (Testimony established that Yates was the only person in the parking lot with dreadlocks at the time of the shootings. (R. 159.)) Miller asked the “white guy” for cigarettes, and the. guy with “dreads” started cursing and walked away. A .few minutes later Aaron Hicks grabbed him and turned him around. Miller said that he could see five or six guys standing in a line and the guy in the middle was holding what looked like an AK-47 assault rifle. He tried to move away, but Hill came up to him and put his arm around his neck. Miller said that he heard several “booms,” that Hill fell to the ground, and that he tried to get away but was shot in the leg and fell to the ground.

[1242]*1242. Aaron Hicks , testified that he was in the parking lot of the Club when the shooting occurred and that he was with Brandarius Hill, Ladarius HiU,. Terrance Boone, and Tyrjs.-Miller. ■ Miller, he. said, was sitting on his car and “looking funny.” Hicks asked what-was happening and Miller told him that one “dude” thought he was talking to him and got mad when he started talking to someone else. Hicks told Miller that he needed to talk with the “dude” but Miller thought there was no problem. Hicks testified that he thought he saw a guy running up with a gun so he took off running. The confrontation was over' ' Hicks said, when a “tall dudé” came ovér and made the other “dude” go toward the road, so he went back to his car. He heard Miller call Brandarius Hill and that is when the shooting started. The gun, he said, “looked like an AK with a drum on the bottom of it.” (R. 188.) There were two guns being shot, he said, the first "gun was the AK and then a pistol. After the shooting stopped he saw a white Tahoe3 sport-utility vehicle speeding off toward Mississippi.' When he went back to his car, he said, he saw Miller holding his leg and Brandarius Hill face down on the ground. Hicks testified 'that the guy shooting the gun was Melton Crosby.

Kelvin Hill testified that he was in the parking lot of the Club at the time of the shootings and that he saw Melton Crosby walk to his truck and come back with a gun. Crosby, he said, told him that he was going to talk with Tyris Miller. A' minute later, he said, he heard gunshots. The shots were coming from two guns, he said—a pistol and an AK-47. Hill testified' that Yates was at the Club that night, that he had his hair in dreadlocks, and that he had gold teeth.

Yavanda London testified that she was at the Club at the time of the shootings and that-she-was with two friends. She testified that she knew Cedrick Jones and Melton Crosby and that she knew Yates by sight. London testified that on the night of the shooting Yates was with Jones and Crosby and that they walked out of the Club together at closing time. About 15' minutes after the Club closed she was in the parking lot with her friends when they heard shots by “Aaron’s- [Hicks] car,” a green Crown -Victoria. London testified that there were many shots fired and that some gun fire was coming from a vehicle, a Tahoe. After the shooting stopped the Tahoe sped off toward Mississippi.

Jamar Thompson testified that he-was at the Club on the evening of the shooting and that when the Club closed he went to the parking lot. He was talking to Bran-darius Hill when his cousin told him to get into the car because something was about to happen. About five minutes later he heard gunshots, “like, a machine gun.” The shots, he said, were coming from a Tahoe. (R, 171.) Thompson said that he was shot in the head, twice in the left leg, and once in his left arm and that he spent three and a half weeks in the hospital. (R. 173-75.) Thompson said that he had to have rehabilitation to learn to walk, talk, and swallow again.

Quinton Whigham testified that he was at the Club in the parking lot at the time of the shootings, that the shooting started near Aaron’s car, that he saw the guy shooting the gun, and that the guy was Melton Crosby shooting what he described as the “long gun,” Multiple shots were fired, he said, and evéryone starting ducking behind and in the cars. Whigham said [1243]*1243that he observed a white Tahoe leave the parking lot and head toward Waynesboro after the shootings.

Danielle McGrew testified that she was at the Club in the parking lot at the time of the shootings and she was in a black Tahoe talking to two other people when they heard shots. They drove out of the lot and headed towards Mississippi. McGrew said that when they were about a half mile from the Club when a couple of vehicles pulled behind them and then passed them. The vehicles were both white, he said, and were traveling at a “high rate of speed” toward Mississippi, (R. 201.)

Dylan Mazingo testified that he was incarcerated with Yates at the Marengo County jail in October 2011, He testified that he overheard Yates say that “[tjhere wouldn’t be no evidence found because they wore socks on their hands, no fingerprints on the bullets because of the socks.” (R. 276.) Mazingo said that he also heard Yates say that “[tjhey got away with it once and they would get away.with it again.” (R. 276.) After Mazingo spoke with police, Mazingo testified, Yates told him that he better be careful what he said because he knew where his family lived. (R. 277.) Mazingo said that he also overheard Yates make telephone calls in which he discussed cleaning his house or getting “stuff out of his house.”

Darryl Linder, a special agent with the Department of Public Safety, testified that he seized cellular telephones from Yates and Crosby. He further testified concerning a telephone call made by Yates from the Marengo County jail.

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Bluebook (online)
227 So. 3d 1240, 2016 WL 3655298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-state-alacrimapp-2016.