Case Information
*1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2013-KA-00390-SCT
JAMES McCOY a/k/a ROBERT JOHNSON a/k/a
JAMES DESEAN McCOY
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/01/2011
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ANDREW K. HOWORTH TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: LATRICE WESTBROOKS
KELLY LUTHER MICKEY MALLETTE COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: UNION COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER
BY: W. DANIEL HINCHCLIFF GEORGE T. HOLMES ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY: SCOTT STUART JOHN R. HENRY, JR.
DISTRICT ATTORNEY: BENJAMIN F. CREEKMORE NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 09/18/2014 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE WALLER, C.J., CHANDLER AND KING, JJ.
WALLER, CHIEF JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT: ¶1. James McCoy appeals his convictions and sentences in the Union County Circuit Court for two counts of armed robbery. McCoy’s appellate counsel argues that McCoy’s sentences are excessive and the result of vindictiveness, that McCoy was denied a fair trial *2 due to the prosecutor’s use of the golden-rule argument, and that McCoy received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial. McCoy has filed a pro se supplemental brief, raising four additional assignments of error. Finding no reversible error, we affirm McCoy’s convictions and sentences.
FACTS
¶2. This case arises out of the March 8, 2006, armed robbery of Michael and Heather Whittington at their home in Union County. During the evening on that date, Michael, Heather, and their two daughters were at their home on County Road 56 in Myrtle, Mississippi, when two men forcibly entered their house. The men entered the master bedroom and demanded that Michael give them all of his money or they would kill his children. Michael attempted to fight the men, but one of them struck him over the head with a pistol, knocking him unconscious. One of the men searched the pockets of Michael’s pants and took his cash, credit cards, and wallet. Michael had cashed a check at the Bank of New Albany earlier that day and had roughly four thousand dollars on his person. The men then entered the master bathroom, held Heather at gunpoint, and took her engagement ring, her wedding band, and another diamond ring from her. After the intruders left the house, Heather called 9-1-1.
¶3. Jimmy Dean Whitten, a criminal investigator with the Union County Sheriff’s Department, was one of the first law-enforcement officers to arrive at the Whittington residence after Heather’s 9-1-1 call. Investigator Whitten attempted to take statements from Michael and Heather at the scene, but Michael was barely conscious due to his injuries, and Heather was too distraught to give an accurate description of the robbery.
¶4. Mickey Baker, an investigator with the Mississippi Highway Patrol, also was called to investigate the robbery. Investigator Baker was notified that some sheriff’s deputies had located a black GMC pickup truck, still running, abandoned a short distance from the Whittingtons’ house. The truck had been reported stolen two days earlier in Memphis, Tennessee. Investigator Baker went to search the truck. Inside the truck, Investigator Baker found purple Bank of Albany money wrappers, which were later identified as the ones that had been wrapped around the cash Michael had received at the Bank of New Albany earlier that day. The wrappers contained the teller’s initials and the date “March 8, 2006.” After searching the truck, Investigator Baker received a call from a resident in the area claiming he had seen the black truck driving in the area earlier in the day, followed by a small light- blue car.
¶5. Investigator Baker visited the Whittingtons in the hospital at around 11:30 p.m. on the night of the robbery. At that time, the Whittingtons were able to give him a description of the robbers. Michael described one of the men as a medium-build, dark-skinned, African- American male wearing a dark jacket and some kind of head covering, either a hood or a hat. This man was carrying a revolver. He believed the other man may have been white, but stated that he never got a good look at him. Heather described one of the robbers as a dark- skinned African-American male with a “round chubby face” and rough complexion and at least one gold tooth. She stated that this man was wearing a camouflage hooded jacket. Heather described the other robber as a light-skinned African-American or white male with smoother complexion. This man was wearing a black or brown jacket and either a hood or *4 a hat. Heather estimated that both men were between 5' 10" and six feet tall and weighed between 180 and 200 pounds.
¶6. Through further investigation, the Union County Sheriff’s Department determined that the robbers were likely from the Memphis area. Several days prior to the robbery, Michael had called the police to report a black Volvo with Memphis tags driving past his house. The [1] Whittingtons’ credit cards also had been used in the Memphis area after the robbery, prior to being cancelled. Michael owned a scrap-metal business and dealt primarily in cash, so Investigator Baker asked him to notify the sheriff’s department if he could think of anyone from the Memphis area with whom he recently had done business.
¶7. On April 4, 2006, Michael called the Union County Sheriff’s Department and stated that a man from Memphis named Steven Ryan Davis had just come to his shop to sell some scrap metal. Michael had done business with Davis on numerous occasions and always paid Davis in cash. Officers with the Union County Sheriff’s Department located Davis and stopped his vehicle. Davis was driving his father’s truck with a suspended license and no proof of insurance, so he was taken into custody. When questioned about the robbery, Davis denied any involvement in or knowledge of the crime. However, Davis did admit that he owned a light blue Plymouth Colt, which matched the description of the car seen near the Whittingtons’ house on the night of the robbery. Davis posted bond for his traffic offenses and was released from police custody the same day.
*5 ¶8. Investigator Baker later questioned Davis a second time while he was in custody in Memphis. At this interview, Davis admitted to his involvement in the robbery and provided Baker with information on two men nicknamed “Alligator” and “Baby J,” the other men involved in the robbery.
¶9. “Alligator,” also known as Allery Hopson, was arrested after the police recovered Heather’s rings from two pawn shops in Memphis and determined that he had pawned them. Hopson owned a black Volvo with Memphis tags matching the license-plate number recorded by Michael several days prior to the robbery. Investigator Baker described Hopson as a light-skinned African American with a smooth complexion, while he described McCoy as a dark-skinned African American with a round face and gold teeth.
¶10. “Baby J,” also known as James McCoy, subsequently contacted the Union County Sheriff’s Department and denied any involvement in the crime. After being told that the police were checking surveillance video from several places in Memphis where the Whittingtons’ credit cards had been used, McCoy contacted the sheriff’s department again and told them that Hopson and Davis had implicated him in the robbery in an attempt to keep Davis’s family from finding out about his involvement in the crime. He stated that he had loaned Hopson his phone on the night of the robbery and had met up with Hopson and Davis at a gas station in Memphis after the robbery. McCoy subsequently was arrested for the robbery, as well.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶11. McCoy, Hopson, and Davis were indicted for two counts of robbery using a deadly
weapon in violation of Section 97-3-79 of the Mississippi Code. On November 14, 2007,
*6
McCoy pleaded guilty to both counts. The trial court sentenced McCoy to thirty years’
imprisonment for each count, with five years suspended from each sentence and five years
of post-release supervision. The court ordered McCoy’s sentences to run concurrently.
¶12. On February 9, 2009, McCoy filed a petition for post-conviction relief in the trial
court, claiming that he had received incorrect information regarding his eligibility for parole.
The trial court denied McCoy’s petition, and his appeal was assigned to the Court of
Appeals.
McCoy v. State
,
¶13. McCoy was tried before a jury in the Union County Circuit Court on November 15, 2011. At trial, Davis testified that he had done business with Michael on several occasions, knew where he lived, and knew he dealt in large quantities of cash. Davis stated that he owed a large drug debt to Hopson prior to the robbery. Hopson asked Davis if he knew someone he could rob to pay back the debt, and Davis gave him Michael’s name. Prior to the robbery, Davis and Hopson drove to the Whittingtons’ house in Hopson’s black Volvo to show Hopson where where Michael lived. On the night of the robbery, McCoy drove Davis’s car to the Whittingtons’ house, while Davis rode with Hopson in a black truck. Davis stated that he had met McCoy before but knew him only as “Baby J” at the time. Davis noticed that the steering column on Hopson’s truck was broken, indicating that it had been stolen. Before *7 arriving at the Whittingtons’ house, Davis switched vehicles with McCoy, and Hopson and McCoy drove off while Davis waited in his car. He stated that he waited behind because he did not think he could have gone into the Whittingtons’ house without Michael recognizing him. After about five minutes, Hopson and McCoy returned in the black truck, and Davis followed them away from the Whittingtons’ house. A few miles later, Hopson left the truck on the side of the road, and he and McCoy rode with Davis back to Memphis. On the way back to Memphis, Davis dropped McCoy off at a gas station, where his car was waiting. ¶14. At the conclusion of the trial, the jury entered a verdict finding McCoy guilty of both counts of armed robbery. The jury could not agree to fix a life sentence, so the trial court sentenced McCoy to thirty-five years’ imprisonment for each charge, with five years suspended from each sentence and five years of post-release supervision. McCoy’s sentences were ordered to run consecutively.
¶15. McCoy, assisted by counsel, now appeals his convictions and sentences to this Court, raising the following issues:
I. Whether McCoy’s sentences were unconstitutionally excessive, disproportionate, or the result of vindictiveness.
II. Whether the trial court erred by failing sua sponte to declare a mistrial due to counsel’s use of the “Golden Rule” argument.
III. Whether McCoy was denied effective assistance of counsel. ¶16. Whitten also has filed a pro se supplemental brief raising the following assignments of error:
IV. Whether the trial court erred in finding that the State had provided sufficient race-neutral reasons for striking two African-American alternate jurors.
V. Whether the State violated McCoy’s right to be told about any promises made to Davis in exchange for his testimony.
VI. Whether McCoy’s in-court identification was so suggestive as to violate due process of law.
VII. Whether McCoy was entitled to a circumstantial-evidence instruction.
DISCUSSION
I. Whether McCoy’s sentences were excessive, vindictive, or otherwise contrary to constitutional protections.
¶17. McCoy argues that his consecutive thirty-five-year sentences constitute “the very
definition of unfairness and disproportionality.” He also claims that the difference between
his sentence after his initial guilty plea and the sentence he received after his subsequent jury
trial “smacks of a penalty exacted for exercising statutory and constitutional rights.”
¶18. “[T]he general rule in this state is that a sentence cannot be disturbed on appeal so
long as it does not exceed the maximum term allowed by statute.”
Fleming v. State
, 604 So.
2d 280, 302 (Miss. 1992) (citing
Corley v. State
, 536 So. 2d 1314, 1319 (Miss. 1988)).
However, a sentence that leads to an inference of “gross disproportionality” to the crime
committed is subject to an attack on Eighth-Amendment grounds.
Solem v. Helm
, 463 U.S.
277, 290-91,
A. Whether McCoy’s sentences are unconstitutionally excessive or disproportionate to the offense.
¶19. McCoy was convicted of two counts of armed robbery in violation of Section 97-3-79
of the Mississippi Code, which provides for the imposition of a life sentence “if so fixed by
the jury.” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-79 (Rev. 2006). As in this case, though, where the jury
fails to impose a life sentence, “the court shall fix the penalty at imprisonment in the state
penitentiary for any term not less than three (3) years.”
Id.
Because the imposition of a life
sentence is within the sole province of the jury, the trial court must impose a sentence
reasonably expected to be less than life.
Friday v. State
,
¶20. We find that McCoy’s sentences are not constitutionally disproportionate to the crime
charged. At McCoy’s sentencing hearing, the trial court reviewed mortality tables to
determine that McCoy’s life expectancy was 40.06 years. Accordingly, McCoy’s thirty-five-
year sentences fit well within the statutory limits.
See, e.g.,
Johnson v. State
,
¶21.
In addition, a review of McCoy’s sentences and the facts of this lurid case do not lend
themselves to an extended proportionality review under
Solem
. McCoy argues that his
*10
sentences are unfair because his codefendants were never prosecuted. But this allegation is
not supported by the record. Davis testified that he expected to be tried for the robberies
after McCoy and Hopson. Hopson had not been tried at the time of McCoy’s trial, but there
is no evidence that the charges against him were dismissed. Moreover, there is no
requirement that codefendants receive identical punishment for an offense.
Jones v.
State
,
B. Whether McCoy’s sentences were the result of vindictiveness.
¶22. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits vindictiveness
against a defendant for having attacked his first conviction from playing any part in the
sentence he receives upon reconviction.
North Carolina v. Pearce
,
¶23. However, no presumption of judicial vindictiveness arises “when the first sentence
was based upon a guilty plea, and the second sentence follows a trial.”
Id.
at 795. This Court
has followed the United States Supreme Court’s holding in
Smith
when dealing with claims
of vindictiveness in cases involving successor judges, holding that “[a] judge imposing the
second sentence but not the first has no reason to be vindictive concerning the defendant’s
attack of the first conviction.”
Bush v. State
,
¶24. Here, Judge Howorth, the judge who sentenced McCoy after his trial, did not sentence
him after his guilty plea. Because Judge Howorth did not impose McCoy’s original sentence,
he had “no personal stake in the prior conviction and no motivation to engage in self-
vindication.”
See
Chaffin v. Stynchcombe
,
¶25. Upon review of the record, we find that McCoy has failed to prove any actual vindictiveness in his sentencing. Prior to McCoy’s sentencing hearing, Judge Howorth ordered a presentencing investigation and report of McCoy to be made. URCCC 11.02. *12 Judge Howorth reviewed this report prior to the sentencing hearing and referred to it at the hearing. Judge Howorth also reviewed mortality tables to determine McCoy’s life expectancy. At the sentencing hearing, McCoy was allowed to present mitigation testimony through his sister and through a letter from his wife. The defense also noted that McCoy had no prior criminal history. Judge Howorth took these factors into consideration but also stated several aggravating factors on the record, including the seriousness of the crime, that there were two victims, and that McCoy continued to deny responsibility for the crime. Judge Howorth used these aggravating factors to conclude that McCoy’s sentences should run consecutively rather than concurrently. Having heard the circumstances of the crime through the evidence presented at trial, Judge Howorth was entitled to impose a harsher sentence than a judge who merely accepted McCoy’s initial guilty plea. See Bush , 667 So. 2d at 29. McCoy has failed to prove that his sentences were the result of vindictiveness.
II. Whether the trial court erred by failing sua sponte to declare a mistrial due to counsel’s use of the golden-rule argument.
¶26. “It has long been the law in this state that “golden rule” arguments, i.e., asking the jurors to put themselves in the place of one of the parties, will not be permitted in civil cases.” Chisolm v. State , 529 So. 2d 635, 640 (Miss. 1988). In Chisolm , this Court expanded the prohibition against the “golden rule” argument to criminal cases. id. at 641. The reason behind such a prohibition is the premise that a person should not be the judge of his own case, which has been stated by this Court as follows:
It is the essence of our system of courts and laws that every party is entitled to a fair and impartial jury. It is a fundamental tenet of our system that a man may not judge his own case, for experience teaches that men are usually not impartial and fair when self interest is involved.
Danner v. Mid-State Paving Co.
,
¶27. McCoy argues that both the prosecutor and his own counsel made use of the golden- rule argument during trial. We address McCoy’s attorney’s statements as an ineffective- assistance claim below in Section III of this discussion.
¶28. McCoy argues that the following statement by the prosecutor during opening statements constituted an impermissible golden-rule argument:
[The Whittingtons] are in their bedroom . . . . It’s not another normal day in paradise, but it’s another day in Union County with normal people like me and you and everyone else , and all of a sudden all of that changed. It wasn’t a day in paradise anymore.
(Emphasis added.) McCoy claims this statement should have prompted the trial court to declare a mistrial.
¶29. McCoy did not object to the prosecutor’s statement during opening statements and is
therefore procedurally barred from raising this issue for the first time on appeal.
See
Edwards v. State
,
*14
plain-error doctrine to raise this assignment of error on appeal.
Foster v. State
, 639 So. 2d
1263, 1289 (Miss. 1994) (citing
Gray v. State
,
¶30. We find that the trial court did not err in failing to grant a mistrial
sua sponte
based
on statements by the prosecutor. The attorneys’ statements, when taken into context, did not
ask the jurors to put themselves in the victims’ place to determine McCoy’s guilt. By simply
mentioning “normal people like me and you,” the prosecutor did not ask the members of the
jury to place themselves in the position of the Whittingtons under the specific circumstances
of the crime.
See
,
e.g.
,
Holliman v. State
,
¶31.
Even assuming,
arguendo
, that this isolated statement could constitute a golden-rule
argument, there is no evidence suggesting that McCoy was unduly prejudiced by the
Edwards
,
statement. This Court has found harmless error in statements far more egregious than the one
at issue in the instant case. For example, in
Chisolm
, another armed-robbery case, this Court
found that the following statement by the prosecutor was not significantly inflammatory to
influence the jury: “Think about yourself being a seventy-one-year old person, minding your
own business, driving your own tractor on your own land, business as usual, and then one
day this happens to you and, all of a sudden, you are laying there on the ground.”
Chisolm
,
You know, this case hits kind of close to home to me. I’ve got a thirteen year old. Got another one that’s not much older than that . . . . I can’t imagine a set of circumstances when somebody could come into my house while my child is sitting on the couch watching television or asleep, stab them seventeen times– . . . [l]eave them on the floor to bleed to death, and then throw him in a shallow grave, and call that self-defense. I couldn’t call that anything but capital murder, and I would venture to say that if it was your child, you couldn’t call it anything else either . . . . If you and I expect the law to protect our children or anybody else’s children, then it has got to stand up for Gary Wells, too . . . .
“Exaggerated statements and hasty observations are often made in the heat of debate, which,
although not legitimate, are generally disregarded by the court, because in its opinion they
are harmless.”
Monk v. State
,
III. Whether McCoy was denied effective assistance of counsel.
¶32. “The benchmark for judging any claim of ineffectiveness must be whether counsel’s
conduct so undermined the proper functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot
be relied on as having produced a just result.”
Strickland v. Washington
,
¶33. McCoy asserts three claims of ineffective assistance: (1) his attorney failed to object to the prosecutor’s golden-rule argument during opening statements, (2) his attorney used a *17 golden-rule argument during closing arguments, and (3) his attorney failed to request a cautionary instruction regarding Davis’s testimony.
¶34. McCoy first claims that his trial attorney was ineffective for failing to object to an improper golden-rule argument made by the prosecutor during. We find that the record on appeal is sufficient to determine that this claim is without merit. As discussed above in Issue II, the prosecutor’s reference to “normal people like me and you” did not constitute an impermissible golden-rule argument. Accordingly, McCoy’s trial counsel could not have acted deficiently by failing to object to the that statement.
¶35. Second, McCoy argues that he received ineffective assistance of counsel when his own attorney used an impermissible golden-rule argument. As the basis for this argument, McCoy points to the following statement made by his attorney during closing arguments:
Now, I want you to understand that I empathize with the Whittingtons. I really, really do, and I understand what it’s like to have an evening interrupted by violence. I understand that. So nothing that I say here today is to undermine that or demean that in any way because I truly, truly empathize with them . I also want you to understand that as jurors, not only do you put yourself in the shoes of the victims, but you also put yourself in the shoes of the defendant. Also keep in mind that, as the Court has told you, every material element of the offense of armed robbery has to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt . . . .
(Emphasis added.) We find that the record is sufficient to find that this claim also is without
merit. This Court has approved the use of the golden-rule argument as a method of weighing
the credibility of a witness, as long as the jury’s neutrality on the issue of guilt is preserved.
Outerbridge
,
¶36. McCoy’s third claim of ineffectiveness is that his attorney failed to request a
cautionary jury instruction regarding the credibility of Davis’s testimony. We find that this
claim is not ripe for review on direct appeal, as it is not based on facts fully apparent from
the record. Whether to request a certain instruction generally is a matter of trial strategy.
See
Havard v. State
, 928 So. 2d 771, 790-91 (Miss. 2006). If McCoy’s trial attorney
intentionally failed to request a cautionary instruction regarding Davis’s testimony, she may
have done so as a part of her trial strategy. Post-conviction proceedings would give McCoy’s
trial attorney a fair opportunity to explain any possible strategy in foregoing to request such
an instruction.
See, e.g.,
Grossley v. State
,
IV. Whether the trial court erred in finding that the State had provided sufficient race-neutral reasons for striking two African-American alternate jurors. [3]
¶37. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution prohibits the use of peremptory challenges against jurors “solely based on their
race.”
Johnson v. State
,
(1) the defendant must make out a prima facie case by showing that the totality of the relevant facts gives rise to an inference of discriminatory purpose; (2) once the defendant has made out a prima facie case the burden shifts to the State to explain adequately the racial exclusion by offering permissible, race- neutral justifications for the strikes; and (3) if a race-neutral explanation is tendered, the trial court must then decide whether the opponent of the strike has proved purposeful racial discrimination. The burden remains on the opponent of the strike to show that the race-neutral explanation given is merely a pretext for racial discrimination.
Pruitt v. State
,
¶38. McCoy claims that the trial court erred in failing to find that the State had committed a Batson violation by using two of its peremptory strikes on African Americans. During the selection of alternate jurors, the State used peremptory strikes on Barbara Robertson, Juror 41, and Willie Siddell, Juror 42, both of whom are African American. McCoy objected to these peremptory strikes. The State then offered race-neutral reasons for its strikes on the alternate jurors. The State explained that both of the stricken jurors had indicated during voir dire that they did not know if they could impose a life sentence for the crime of armed robbery. McCoy’s counsel responded by claiming that the jurors in question had been rehabilitated during voir dire and therefore could not be challenged for that reason. The trial court ultimately denied McCoy’s Batson challenge, finding that the State had offered a sufficient race-neutral reason for striking Jurors Robertson and Siddell.
¶39. Considering the standard of review, and after careful scrutiny of the record, we find
that the trial judge’s denial of McCoy’s
Batson
challenge was not clearly erroneous. The
reasons offered by the State were race-neutral and supported by the record. When asked
whether they could impose a life sentence in an armed-robbery case, Barbara Robertson
stated, “I just don’t know whether I could say life in prison for whatever, I don’t know. If
it warranted it, I don’t know if I could or not . . . . I guess I could consider everything level
*21
to start with, but I just feel like that’s a lot for, you know, to decide somebody’s life in prison,
you know.” And Willie Siddell, stated, “I don’t know if I could be sending somebody for life
like that for a crime like this or not. I don’t really feel comfortable about doing nothing like
that.” “A peremptory challenge does not have to be supported by the same degree of
justification required for a challenge for cause.”
Stewart v. State
,
V. Whether the State violated McCoy’s right to be told about any promises made to Davis in exchange for his testimony.
¶40. McCoy asserts that evidence of a plea bargain or other agreement for leniency
between Davis and the State was relevant to his credibility as a witness, and the jury was
entitled to know of any such agreement. McCoy then claims that the State entered into a plea
agreement with Davis in exchange for his testimony and withheld this information from the
jury. McCoy argues that this withholding of evidence violated his right to due process.
*22
¶41. The State must disclose any evidence that is favorable to the accused and “material
either to guilt or to punishment[.]”
Brady v. Maryland
,
¶42. Nondisclosure of exculpatory or impeachment evidence does not automatically rise
to the level of reversible error. “[T]he prosecutor will not have violated his constitutional
duty of disclosure unless his omission is of sufficient significance to result in the denial of
the defendant’s right to a fair trial.”
U.S. v. Augurs
,
VI. Whether McCoy’s in-court identification was so suggestive as to violate due process of law.
¶44. Usually, the suggestiveness of an identification is raised to challenge an in-court
identification after a pretrial identification has been made. In such a case, the trial court
would evaluate the factors announced in
Neil v. Biggers
,
¶45. Here, though, McCoy was not subjected to a pretrial identification. Rather, McCoy
claims that Heather’s in-court identification of him as one of the men who robbed her was
impermissibly suggestive. In such a case, the general rule is that an in-court identification
is not subject to suppression or objection unless it is shown to have been tainted by some
suggestive out-of-court identification.
Smith v. State
,
¶46. In this case, as in Gayten , no one made a pretrial identification of McCoy as a perpetrator of the robbery. Instead, Heather identified him at trial as one of the robbers. McCoy, who sat at the counsel table with his attorney, took no steps to avoid a suggestive in-court identification. Accordingly, McCoy cannot now complain that his due-process rights were violated by Heather’s identification testimony. id. ; Amos v. State , 911 So. 2d 644, 653 (Miss. Ct. App. 2005). In addition, on review of all the evidence presented at trial, including the descriptions of McCoy offered by Heather and the other witnesses, we conclude that a fair-minded jury was entitled to find Heather’s in-court identification of McCoy credible. This argument is without merit.
VII. Whether McCoy was entitled to a circumstantial-evidence instruction.
¶47. When the evidence against the accused is wholly circumstantial in nature, the trial
court must instruct the jury that the State is required to prove the accused’s guilt not only
beyond a reasonable doubt, but to the exclusion of “every reasonable hypothesis other than
*26
that of guilt.”
Manning v. State
,
¶49. Notwithstanding the procedural bar, the evidence against McCoy was not wholly
circumstantial in nature. This Court has held that direct evidence includes eyewitness
testimony to the gravamen of the offense or a confession by the defendant.
Grayer v. State
,
CONCLUSION
¶50. For the foregoing reasons, we affirm McCoy’s convictions and sentences. ¶51. COUNT I: CONVICTION OF ARMED ROBBERY AND SENTENCE OF THIRTY-FIVE (35) YEARS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, WITH FIVE (5) YEARS SUSPENDED AND THIRTY (30) YEARS TO SERVE, AFFIRMED. COUNT II: CONVICTION OF ARMED ROBBERY AND SENTENCE OF THIRTY-FIVE (35) YEARS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, WITH FIVE (5) YEARS SUSPENDED AND THIRTY (30) YEARS TO SERVE, AFFIRMED. SENTENCE IN COUNT I TO RUN CONSECUTIVELY TO SENTENCE IN COUNT II FOR A TOTAL TERM OF IMPRISONMENT OF SEVENTY (70) YEARS, WITH TEN (10) YEARS SUSPENDED, AND SIXTY (60) YEARS TO SERVE. UPON HIS RELEASE, APPELLANT SHALL BE PLACED ON FIVE (5) YEARS OF POST- *27 RELEASE SUPERVISION. IN ADDITION, DURING THE PERIOD OF POST- RELEASE SUPERVISION, APPELLANT SHALL PAY $4,600 IN RESTITUTION TO THE VICTIMS, ALONG WITH ALL COURT COSTS.
DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, P.JJ., LAMAR, KITCHENS, CHANDLER, PIERCE, KING AND COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR.
Notes
[1] Michael testified that he followed the black Volvo away from his house and reported the license plate number to the police because he knew that no one living on County Road 56 drove that particular car.
[2] McCoy also briefly argues that the prosecutor’s reference to the people of Union County constituted an improper “send a message” argument. Again, because McCoy did not object to this statement at trial, he is procedurally barred from raising the issue on appeal.
[3] Throughout his pro se brief, McCoy seems to suggest that the trial court erred in requiring the defense to provide race-neutral reasons for its peremptory strikes. The record does not support this allegation, as the State did not object to any of the defense’s peremptory strikes. Thus, we discuss only the State’s peremptory strikes that were challenged by McCoy.
