A jury found Willie Lee Hightower guilty of the malice murder of Ms. Mae Brown. He appeals from the judgment of conviction and the life sentence entered by the trial court on the jury’s guilty verdict. 1
2. Hightower moved to exclude from evidence the statements which he made prior to receiving the Miranda warnings. After conducting a Jackson-Denno hearing, the trial court upheld the admissibility of the statements. Hightower enumerates this evidentiary ruling as error.
Miranda
applies only to statements which result from an in-custody interrogation of the accused.
Moses v. State,
The questioning took place at the police station. However, the officers did not demand that Hightower submit to interrogation at that or any other site. Instead, it is undisputed that he willingly responded to a request to come to the station, where he cooperated fully by responding to the officers’ general questioning which was calculated to determine whether he was completely innocent, merely a potential witness or an actual suspect.
Hodges v. State,
supra at 873 (2) ;
Hardeman v. State,
Moreover, Hightower’s statements were not inculpatory as to his commission of the murder. He consistently and repeatedly denied that he killed Ms. Brown, and provided an alternative exculpatory explanation for the presence of his fingerprints at the scene. Considering that Hightower made no admission or confession as to the actual murder and that the evidence of his guilt of that crime, including the DNA tests, was overwhelming, the admission of his statements would constitute harmless error, if error at all. See
McAllister v. State,
supra at 228 (1);
Johnson v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The murder was committed on July 23, 1997. The grand jury indicted Hightower on November 3, 1997. The jury returned its guilty verdict on October 20, 1998 and, on that same date, the trial court entered its judgment of conviction and imposed the life sentence. Hightower filed his notice of appeal on November 10, 1998. The case was docketed in this Court on September 28, 1999. Oral argument was heard on January 19, 2000.
