IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2010-DP-00510-SCT
BOBBY BATISTE a/k/a BOBBY L. BATISTE a/k/a
BOBBY L. BATISTE, JR. a/k/a BOBBY LIONEL
BATISTE, JR. a/k/a BOBBY LIONEL BATISTE
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/31/2009
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JAMES T. KITCHENS, JR.
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: OKTIBBEHA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER
BY: ALISON R. STEINER
JAMES LAPPAN
ANDRE DE GRUY
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY: JASON L. DAVIS
MARVIN L. WHITE, JR.
DISTRICT ATTORNEY: FORREST ALLGOOD
NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - DEATH PENALTY - DIRECT
APPEAL
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/16/2013
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
EN BANC.
CHANDLER, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Bobby Batiste was convicted of capital murder with the underlying felony of robbery
for the slaying of his roommate, Andreas Galanis. After a sentencing hearing, the jury
determined that Batiste should suffer the death penalty. The Circuit Court of Oktibbeha
County denied Batiste’s post-trial motions. Now Batiste has appealed, raising fifteen
assignments of error. After carefully reviewing the record and Batiste’s arguments, we find
that no reversible error occurred. Therefore, we affirm Batiste’s conviction and sentence.
FACTS
¶2. Batiste, Galanis, and Jaewoo Joo were Mississippi State University students who
shared an apartment at Ace 21 Apartments, an apartment complex in Starkville, Mississippi.
Their apartment had four bedrooms situated off a common area that included a dining area,
living room, kitchen, and laundry area. Each tenant had a key that opened the front door of
the apartment and that particular tenant’s bedroom door.
Events of March 6, 2008
¶3. The following events culminated in Deputy Charlie McVey’s discovery of Galanis’s
body inside the shared apartment. On March 6, 2008, at about 1:30 or 1:40 p.m., Galanis and
Batiste went to a branch of the Merchants and Farmers Bank in Starkville. A teller, Aloysius
Rice, waited on Galanis, who had a checking account at the bank. Galanis cashed a $200
check and asked Rice for the balance on his account. Rice gave Galanis a one-hundred-dollar
bill and five twenty-dollar bills. Rice noticed that there were a lot of debit-card transactions
on the account. Rice testified that Galanis was shocked about the debit-card transactions
because he did not use his debit card. Rice testified that Batiste seemed very concerned and
empathetic.
¶4. Galanis spoke with Candace Dailey, a customer-service representative, about the
unauthorized debit-card transactions. Dailey testified that Galanis and Batiste sat across from
her desk; they were elbow to elbow. Galanis told her someone was taking money out of his
account, he had never activated his debit card, and his debit card was in his apartment in a
2
box. After Dailey reported Galanis’s debit card as stolen, Dailey and Galanis went over the
transactions together and discovered that the total amount missing from Galanis’s account
was $4,507.54. Dailey testified that Batiste was behaving like a supportive friend. Galanis
left to go to class but promised to return.
¶5. Dailey and Rice testified that Galanis returned briefly with a young Asian man and
again discussed the unauthorized debit-card transactions.1 At 3:30 p.m., Galanis returned
alone and waited to talk to Dailey, who was with another customer. A teller, Shannon
Watson, observed that Galanis was agitated. Galanis told Dailey that Batiste had admitted
that his girlfriend had been using Galanis’s debit card. Galanis had demanded that Batiste
return the money by tomorrow, but Batiste had responded that that was impossible. Galanis
told Dailey he wanted to file a police report and press charges, and he left the bank just after
4:00 p.m.
¶6. Watson testified that, when she left the bank for the day at about 4:10 or 4:15 p.m.,
she observed Galanis and Batiste in the parking lot having a heated argument. Each was
standing next to his parked car, and a cement barrier was between the cars. Watson said
Galanis was speaking loudly and exhibited angry body language, and Batiste was listening.
¶7. Rice testified that Batiste returned to the bank lobby between the hours of 4:00 p.m.
and 5:00 pm. and asked how long the bank kept ATM video images. When Rice responded
that the images are kept for up to a year, he heard Batiste say, “Dog.”
¶8. Deputy Steven Woodruff of the Oktibbeha County Sheriff’s Department testified that,
1
Presumably, the Asian man was Galanis’s other roommate, Jaewoo Joo. Joo did not
testify because he had returned to his home country of South Korea by the time of trial.
3
at about 5:00 p.m., Galanis made a complaint at the sheriff’s department to the effect that he
had noticed money missing from his checking account.
Events of March 7, 2008
¶9. The next day, March 7, 2008, was the Friday before spring break. Galanis’s mother
testified that Galanis had planned to drive home to Biloxi, and then fly to Florida for a
spring-break trip. When she did not hear from Galanis, she called the Oktibehha County
Sheriff’s Department and asked for a deputy to go to Ace 21 Apartments to check on him.
That afternoon, shortly before 5:00 p.m., McVey went to Ace 21 Apartments in response to
the call.
¶10. McVey testified that, when he arrived at Galanis’s building, many students were
packing up and leaving for spring break. Batiste was standing next to a green Ford Explorer
that was backed up to the sidewalk in front of the building. The Explorer’s rear hatch door
was open. McVey told Batiste that he was there to check on Galanis. Batiste, who was
smiling and seemed to be in a good mood, said “well, that’s my roommate.” Batiste told
McVey that Galanis had left that morning with a friend, who was going to drive him to
Biloxi. Batiste pointed to Galanis’s car, and said that it was broken down.
¶11. McVey called the sheriff’s department to report what he had learned, and was
instructed to check the apartment physically for Galanis. McVey knocked on the door of the
apartment, and Batiste let him in. It was very dim inside. McVey asked Batiste which
bedroom belonged to Galanis, and Batiste pointed out Bedroom D, which was locked.
McVey called the apartment’s office to get a key. He observed that Batiste was acting
normally.
4
¶12. When McVey arrived at the office, Batiste abruptly pulled up in his Explorer. McVey
asked Batiste to wait and let him back into the apartment. Batiste asked, “Am I a suspect?”
McVey said “no,” that he was there to locate Galanis. After McVey got the key, Batiste sped
back to the apartment. When McVey arrived, Batiste let him inside the apartment. With
Batiste standing behind him, McVey unlocked the door to Bedroom D. He immediately saw
a large pool of blood at the end of the bed. McVey testified that, at that point, he knew that
everything Batiste had told him was a lie. He placed Batiste under arrest and called for
backup.
¶13. Deputies Ford and West arrived and opened the door of Bedroom B, the unrented
bedroom. They discovered the body of Galanis wrapped in blankets inside a wheelbarrow.
Search warrants were obtained for Batiste’s apartment, vehicle, and person. Batiste was
transported to the Oktibehha County Hospital, where Casey Hill, a registered nurse, took
samples from his body and prepared a kit. Hill noticed no injuries on Batiste, but he had a
blood spot on his leg.
Autopsy
¶14. Forensic pathologist Dr. Stephen Hayne testified that the autopsy revealed that
Galanis had sustained approximately thirty-six separate external injuries inflicted with a blunt
object. The cause of death was cranial cerebral trauma. Galanis’s face was severely bruised
and abraded from numerous instances of blunt-force trauma. He had been struck numerous
times in the face and head, and his hands had injuries consistent with defensive posturing.
A blow to the upper left scalp had fractured Galanis’s skull. He had sustained multiple
fractures to the left side of the skull and to the base of the skull. His right orbital plate was
5
fractured, and he had severe trauma to the brain.
Batiste’s Statements
¶15. After his arrest, Batiste gave two statements at the sheriff’s department. He gave the
first statement to Sheriff Dolph Bryan and Deputy Arthur Sallis. Bryan advised Batiste of his
rights and Batiste signed a rights-waiver form. Batiste said that he was a criminal-justice
major and he understood his rights and wanted to waive them. Batiste related his version of
events to Bryan, who wrote down what Batiste said, then read it back to him and allowed him
to make corrections. Batiste read and signed each page of the written statement, and Bryan
and Sallis signed each page.
¶16. Batiste’s two statements were similar. According to the first statement, Batiste had
used Galanis’s debit card with his permission, except for two charges. He stated that, the
night before, he and Galanis had reached an agreement for Batiste to repay the money.
Batiste had stayed at his girlfriend’s house that night. When he returned the next morning,
Galanis became angry about the missing funds. Galanis came into his room, “got in [his]
face,” and hit his arm. Galanis threatened to get a gun and shoot Batiste in the head. Then,
Galanis took Batiste’s katana sword, pointed it at Batiste, and called him a “black bitch.”
Galanis said “f— you” and jabbed the sword at Batiste, before retreating into his own room
with Batiste’s sword. Batiste got his rim adaptor2 out of his Explorer, put it in his book bag,
went into Galanis’s room, and said “what was that [you were] saying.” Galanis jabbed at him
with the sword again, and Batiste hit him with the book bag, knocking the sword out of his
hand. When Galanis bent down to get the sword, Batiste hit him again. Batiste claimed that
2
The rim adaptor was a gear-shaped heavy metal object.
6
he struck Galanis three or four times. Batiste said he realized that Galanis was having a hard
time breathing and he started to call 911. However, he was scared, so, instead, he bought the
wheelbarrow and cleaning supplies “to try to cover up the crime but it just didn’t work out.”
¶17. A short time later, Batiste gave a videotaped statement to Sallis and McVey. Sallis
read Batiste his rights, and Batiste indicated he understood and signed a rights-waiver form.
Here Batiste provided additional details. He said that Galanis had come into his room cursing
and had hit Batiste’s hand. They began arguing, and Galanis said he would get a gun and
shoot Batiste in the head. Then, Galanis grabbed the sword, said “f---- you, you black bitch,”
and jabbed it at Batiste. Batiste got the rim adaptor from his truck, put it in his book bag, and
went to his own room. Galanis was still talking, and Batiste said “what’s that you’ve been
saying again?” Galanis said “you heard, me, m-----f-----“ and jabbed at him with the sword.
Batiste knocked it out of his hand with the book bag, then struck Galanis in the head with the
book bag. Galanis bent over to pick up the sword, and Batiste hit him over the head again.
Galanis got back up, and Batiste hit him again. Galanis fell down, and Batiste hit him a
fourth time. Although Galanis was severely injured, Batiste was afraid to call 911, so he left
Galanis inside Galanis’s bedroom with the door closed and went to his girlfriend’s house.
This was at about 9:25 a.m. He returned at about 11:00 a.m. and checked on Galanis, who
had not moved. He “panicked” and began a clean-up effort. Batiste bought a wheelbarrow,
paint, cleaning fluid, and towels. He wrapped up the body and put it in the wheelbarrow in
the empty bedroom. Batiste admitted that he removed Galanis’s wallet from his body. He put
his own clothes, the wallet, the book bag, and rim adaptor in a bag and put the bag in his
truck. He was about to put the body in the truck when he was interrupted by McVey.
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Batiste’s Clean-up Effort
¶18. Deputy Brett Watson testified that the apartment bore evidence of a clean-up effort.
Investigators found bottles of cleaning fluid, a Rug Doctor carpet-cleaning machine, a paint
tray with paint and a paint roller, and bloody rags and towels in the apartment. The Rug
Doctor had blood leaking out of it. Several dark spots were on the living room carpet; the pad
and concrete slab underneath were blood-stained. In Galanis’s bedroom, blood was in the
doorway and a very large blood stain was between the foot of the bed and closet. There were
bloodstains throughout the room, with fresh paint thinly covering some of the stains on the
walls. A bloody buckle from a book bag was found in Galanis’s bedroom. Testing showed
the blood found in the Rug Doctor and in the apartment was Galanis’s.
¶19. Deputy Watson testified that a katana sword was inside the Ford Explorer. A quilt was
laid in the rear cargo area, and an empty gas can was in the rear passenger area. A black bag
in the back seat of the Ford Explorer contained Galanis’s wallet, which had no cash or debit
or credit cards inside. The bag also contained blood-spattered bank statements of Galanis’s
checking account, a set of shoes, a T-shirt with vomit on it, a large rim adaptor with blood
on it, a bloody book bag with a missing buckle, a study guide with Batiste’s name on it,
bloody clothing, and a tire iron with blood and hair on it. Testing revealed that the blood on
the tire iron, rim adaptor, and book bag belonged to Galanis.
¶20. Additionally, Galanis’s Visa credit card was inside a black jacket found in the kitchen
area. On the kitchen counter was a receipt for paint from Sherwin Williams. Galanis’s
checkbook and car keys were found in Batiste’s bedroom. The search of Batiste’s person
revealed Galanis’s debit card, receipts dated that day from Piggly-Wiggly, Dollar General,
8
and Sears, and receipts for prior purchases with Galanis’s debit card. The Dollar General
receipt was for cleaning fluids and washcloths, totaling $9.10, for which Batiste had paid $20
in cash on March 7, 2008, at 11:42 a.m.
¶21. Hewitt Rogers, a Sherwin Williams employee, testified that he had waited on Batiste
at about 12:45 p.m. on March 7, 2008. Batiste had a sheetrock sample and wanted custom-
matched paint to cover up stains. He also wanted a wheelbarrow, so Rogers referred him to
Sears. Batiste left to get the wheelbarrow; when he returned, he was in a hurry, and paid $47
in cash for the paint and a roller kit. Havest Glover, an employee of Sears, testified that he
sold the wheelbarrow to Batiste at about 12:45 p.m. on March 7, 2008. Batiste tendered $100
in cash for the wheelbarrow, which cost $85.59. Nicole May, a Piggly-Wiggly employee,
testified that a black male had called at 3:30 p.m. with numerous questions about carpet
cleaners. At about 4:00 p.m., Batiste rented a Rug Doctor and bought carpet cleaning fluid
from Piggly-Wiggly. Batiste paid with Galanis’s Visa credit card.
Batiste’s Trial
¶22. Batiste was indicted for capital murder with the underlying felony of robbery. He did
not testify at the trial. The trial court instructed the jury on capital murder with the underlying
felony of robbery, murder, and self-defense. The jury found Batiste guilty as charged. After
a sentencing hearing, the jury found beyond a reasonable doubt that Batiste had actually
killed, had attempted to kill, had intended that a killing take place, and had contemplated that
lethal force would be employed. The jury found the following aggravating circumstances
beyond a reasonable doubt: the capital murder was committed during the commission of a
robbery, the capital murder was committed for the purpose of avoiding arrest, and the capital
9
murder was especially heinous, atrocious, and cruel. The jury further found after weighing
the mitigating circumstances and the aggravating circumstances that the mitigating
circumstances did not outweigh the aggravating circumstances and that Batiste should suffer
the penalty of death. Accordingly, the trial court sentenced Batiste to suffer death by lethal
injection until death is pronounced.
ISSUES 3
I. Whether the jury was erroneously instructed that it could convict Batiste of capital
murder without finding that Batiste had any intent to rob Galanis at all.
II. Whether the trial court erred in refusing to require the State to provide adequate notice
to Batiste – either in the indictment or when requested thereafter – regarding the
specific property that was the object of the robbery alleged as the capitalizing crime.
III. Whether the foregoing errors were exacerbated and made even more prejudicial by
the trial court’s constitutionally erroneous denial of Batiste’s remaining jury
instructions pertaining to robbery.
IV. Whether as a consequence of the trial court’s erroneous rulings, proof of robbery at
trial was insufficient to establish the robbery element of capital murder in a statutorily
or constitutionally requisite fashion.
V. Whether the trial court also committed reversible error in its other instructions to the
jury at the culpability phase.
VI. Whether the jury selection process was constitutionally infirm and reversal of
Batiste’s conviction and death sentence is therefore required.
VII. Whether reversal is required for the erroneous and unconstitutional admission of
certain evidence against Batiste at the culpability phase of the trial.
VIII. Whether the trial court erred in sua sponte ordering that the jury be rewarded for its
verdict of guilt with a special dinner and special activities during the break between
that verdict and the sentencing phase of the trial.
3
The issues are listed verbatim from Batiste’s brief.
10
IX. Whether over Batiste’s objection, the State improperly cross-examined his sentencing
phase witness with, and offered rebuttal testimony about, inadmissible prior bad acts
allegedly committed by Batiste.
X. Whether the victim impact testimony presented violated the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments and should not have been admitted.
XI. Whether the trial court erred in refusing the Defendant’s proposed penalty phase
instructions and relying instead on a single omnibus instruction submitted to it by the
State that was deficient without the refused instructions.
XII. Whether all of the aggravating circumstances on which the jury was instructed were
either legally or factually unsupported, and Batiste’s death sentence therefore invalid.
XIII. Whether the death sentence in this case must be vacated because it was imposed in
violation of the constitution of the United States.
XIV. The death sentence in this matter is constitutionally and statutorily disproportionate.
XV. The cumulative effect of the errors in the trial court mandates reversal of the verdict
of guilt and/or the sentence of death entered pursuant to it.
¶23. We have restated or combined several of Batiste’s issues for the purposes of this
opinion.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶24. “[T]his Court applies heightened scrutiny to capital-murder convictions where a
sentence of death has been imposed.” Fulgham v. State, 46 So. 3d 315, 322 (Miss. 2010)
(citing Bishop v. State, 812 So. 2d 934, 938 (Miss. 2002)). “Under this method of review,
all doubts are to be resolved in favor of the accused because ‘what may be harmless error in
a case with less at stake becomes reversible error when the penalty is death.’” Moffett v.
State, 49 So. 3d 1073, 1079 (Miss. 2010) (quoting Loden v. State, 971 So. 2d 548, 562
(Miss. 2007)).
LAW AND ANALYSIS
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Guilt Phase
I. WHETHER THE JURY WAS ERRONEOUSLY INSTRUCTED THAT IT COULD
CONVICT BATISTE OF CAPITAL MURDER WITHOUT FINDING THAT
BATISTE HAD ANY INTENT TO ROB GALANIS AT ALL.
A. Written Instructions: Felonious Intent.
¶25. Batiste was convicted of capital murder with the underlying felony of robbery. The
robbery was shown by Batiste’s admission that, after he killed Galanis, he took his wallet;
he also removed his car keys, his Visa card, his checkbook, and cash that, considering
Galanis’s recent withdrawal of $200, reasonably may be inferred to have been inside the
wallet. Batiste argues that the jury was not properly instructed on the crime of robbery. He
contends that the trial court erred by granting the State’s proffered robbery instruction and
denying Batiste’s proffered robbery instruction. In determining whether the trial court erred
in the grant or denial of jury instructions, this Court reads the instructions as a whole.
Fulgham v. State, 46 So. 3d 315, 323 (Miss. 2010). “When so read, if the instructions fairly
announce the law of the case and create no injustice, no reversible error will be found.” Id.
(quoting Edwards v. State, 737 So. 2d 275, 305 (Miss. 1999)).
¶26. The State’s robbery instruction, SGP-4, stated:
The Court instructs the Jury that Robbery, as mentioned in these
instructions, is defined as unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously taking,
stealing and carrying away some property from the presence of another person;
either by violence to the person or by threats and intimidation.
Batiste’s proffered robbery instruction, D-34, stated:
For you to find Bobby Batiste committed robbery upon Andreas
Galanis as charged in the indictment, you must find from the evidence in this
case beyond a reasonable doubt that:
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1. Bobby Batiste, on or about the 7th day of March 2008 in
Oktibbeha County;
2. willfully took personal property of Andreas Galanis;
3. from his person or in her [sic] presence; and
4. against Andreas Galanis’s will;
5. by violence toward Andreas Galanis; and
6. at the time, Bobby Batiste had the intent to permanently
deprive Andreas Galanis of the property.
If, on the other hand, the prosecution has failed to prove any of the
above listed elements to you beyond a reasonable doubt, then you shall find
Bobby Batiste not guilty [of] capital murder as charged in the indictment.
(Emphasis added.) Batiste argues that instruction SGP-4 was defective because it did not
properly instruct the jury that the State had to prove Batiste had the intent to rob Galanis.4
He contends that his requested instruction properly stated the intent element because it
required the jury to find that, at the time Batiste took Galanis’s personal property, Batiste had
the intent to deprive Galanis permanently of the property.
¶27. The crime of robbery is defined as follows: “Every person who shall feloniously take
the personal property of another, in his presence or from his person and against his will, by
violence to his person or by putting such person in fear of some immediate injury to his
person, shall be guilty of robbery.” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-73 (Rev. 2006). We have stated
4
We note that, although Batiste did not object to the grant of SGP-4, his proffer of
an alternative robbery instruction preserved this issue for appeal. Ballenger v. State, 667 So.
2d 1242, 1252 (Miss. 1995) (quoting Gray v. State, 472 So. 2d 409, 416 (Miss. 1985)
(abrogated on other grounds by Willie v. State, 585 So. 2d 660 (Miss. 1991)).
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that the elements of robbery are “that the defendant: (1) feloniously took (2) the personal
property of another (3) in his presence or from his person and (4) against his will, (5) by
violence to his person or by putting such person in fear of some immediate injury to his
person.” Fulgham v. State, 46 So. 3d 315, 323-24 (Miss. 2010). Certainly, the intent to rob
(felonious intent) is an essential element of capital murder with the underlying felony of
robbery. Gillett v. State, 56 So. 3d 469, 492 (Miss. 2010). The question before us is whether
the jury was properly instructed on that element.
¶28. Instruction SGP-4 stated that the jury could find Batiste guilty of robbery if it found
that he unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously took Galanis’s property by violence. Unlike
Batiste’s proffered instruction, instruction SGP-4 did not inform the jury that it had to find
Batiste intended to permanently deprive Galanis of his property. Citing Croft v. State, 992
So. 2d 1151, 1157-58 (Miss. 2008), Batiste argues that, because robbery is a specific-intent
crime, the robbery instruction had to require the jury to find that, when he took Galanis’s
personal property, he did so with the intent to permanently deprive him of the property.
¶29. This Court resolved this issue in Wales v. State, 73 So. 3d 1113 (Miss. 2011). In
Wales, the defendant requested, and was denied, an armed-robbery jury instruction stating
that “the State [has] to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant took the personal
property of another with the intent to permanently deprive that person of their property.”
Like Batiste, Wales relied on Croft. In Croft, the defendant had argued that, when he took
money at gunpoint, he was in fact reclaiming his own gambling proceeds. Croft, 992 So. 2d
at 1157-58. This Court held that “the State [was] required to prove that the defendant took
the personal property of another with the intent to permanently deprive that person of his
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property.” Id. at 1157. In Wales, this Court distinguished Croft, and held that “a jury
instruction defining felonious intent as the intent to deprive the victim permanently of his or
her property is necessary only when there is an issue as to whether the defendant had the
intent to permanently deprive the victim of his or her property.” Wales, 73 So. 2d at 1124-25.
We stated:
[I]n this case, there was “no uncertainty that [Wales] intended to permanently
deprive” the victims of their personal property. Wales’s defense theory did not
call into question his intent in taking the property. The jury instructions
charged that the jury could convict Wales if it found he did willfully,
unlawfully, intentionally and feloniously take or attempt to take the property
of Michael and Owens. The jury instructions adequately instructed the jury on
the element of felonious intent, and this issue is without merit.
Id. at 1124-25 (citation omitted).
¶30. Batiste argues that he was entitled to instruction D-34 because his defense to robbery
was that he took Galanis’s property after his death with the intent to conceal the killing, not
with the intent to permanently deprive Galanis of the property. This argument is specious.
Taking property to conceal a killing does not negate felonious intent. Batiste admitted that
he killed Galanis and then removed items from his person or presence. Because Galanis was
dead, Batiste could not have intended to return the items to Galanis. As in Wales, Batiste’s
defense theory created no uncertainty that Batiste intended permanently, rather than
temporarily, to deprive Galanis of his personal property when he removed it from his dead
body and his bedroom. Therefore, Batiste was not entitled to instruction D-34. Further,
instruction SGP-4 properly set out the element of felonious intent by requiring the jury to
find Batiste “unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously” took, stole, or carried away the property.
The jury was properly instructed on the elements of robbery.
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B. Written Instructions: Nexus Between Killing and Robbery
¶31. Batiste stated in his confession that he killed Galanis during a fight, left the apartment
for approximately an hour and a half, and then returned and began his clean-up effort.
During the clean-up effort, he removed Galanis’s wallet and other personal items. Other
evidence showed that Batiste used Galanis’s cash and credit card to purchase cleaning
supplies with which to conceal the crime. Batiste argues that this evidence showed that he
was guilty of deliberate-design murder because, at the time he killed Galanis, he had lacked
the intent to rob him, and that he was entitled to jury instructions to that effect.
¶32. Specifically, Batiste argues that the trial court should have reformed D-34 to instruct
the jury that, if he lacked the intent to rob when he killed Galanis, he was not guilty of capital
murder, but guilty only of deliberate-design murder. See Miss. Valley Silica Co., Inc. v.
Eastman, 92 So. 3d 666, 671 (Miss. 2012) (holding that “[w]hen a party submits a jury
instruction on an important issue not covered in the other instructions, it is the trial court’s
ultimate duty to instruct the jury properly”). He further argues that the trial court erred by
denying his proffered jury instructions D-36 and D-37. Instruction D-36 stated that the jury
could not find Batiste guilty of capital murder unless Batiste had formed the intent to rob
before Galanis died. Instruction D-37 stated that the jury could not find Batiste guilty of
capital murder unless “the conduct which caused death was a natural probable consequence
of the robbery itself.”
¶33. For this Court to adopt Batiste’s arguments, we would have to abandon settled law
governing capital-murder convictions. Mississippi Code Section 97-3-19(e) states that “the
killing of a human being without the authority of law by any means or in any manner shall
16
be murder . . . [w]hen done with or without any design to effect death, by any person engaged
in the commission of the crime of . . . robbery.” Miss. Code Ann. 97-3-19(e) (Rev. 2006).
Mississippi follows the “one-continuous-transaction” rule for determining whether the
evidence establishes the requisite nexus between the killing and the underlying felony to
constitute capital murder. Gillett v. State, 56 So. 3d 469, 492 (Miss. 2010). “[W]here the two
crimes [e.g., murder and robbery] are connected in a chain of events and occur as part of the
res gestae, the crime of capital murder is sustained.” Id. (quoting Pickle v. State, 345 So. 2d
623, 627 (Miss. 1977)). Regarding the underlying felony of robbery, “[i]f the intervening
time between the time of the murder and the time of taking of the property formed a
continuous chain of events, the fact that [the victim] was dead when he took the property
[cannot] absolve the defendant from the crime of robbery.” West v. State, 463 So. 2d 1048,
1055-56 (Miss. 1985) (quoting Cobern v. State, 273 Ala. 547, 142 So. 2d 869, 871 (1962));
Hightower v. State, 901 P.2d 397, 402 (Wyo. 1995) (“the time sequence of the felony and
the murder is not important as long as the evidence and its inferences demonstrate one
continuous transaction”). The State need not prove the defendant had the intent to rob prior
to the killing. Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 492; Francis v. State, 463 S.E. 2d 859, 860-61 (Ga. 1995)
(“[w]here . . . the evidence is sufficient to authorize a finding that the theft was completed
after force was employed against the victim, a [felony-murder] conviction . . . is authorized
‘regardless of when the intent to take the victim’s [property] arose . . . .’”) (citations omitted).
Rather, the State has the burden to prove that “the two crimes are connected in a chain of
events and occur as part of the res gestae.” Id. (quoting Pickle, 345 So. 2d at 627).
¶34. In Spicer v. State, 921 So. 2d 292, 317 (Miss. 2006), “[t]he fact that the actual
17
moment of the victim’s death preceded consummation of the underlying felony does not
vitiate the capital charge.” Accordingly, in Spicer, we approved of the following instruction:
This Court instructs the Jury that in a case of Capital Murder the fact that the
victim was dead at the time of taking his property does not mitigate against the
conclusion of robbery. If the intervening time between the murder, if any, and
the time of the taking of the property, if any, formed a continuous chain of
events, the fact that the victim was dead when the property was taken cannot
absolve the Defendant from the crime. If you should find from the evidence in
this case beyond a reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of every reasonable
hypothesis consistent with innocence that the Defendant, Freddie Spicer, Jr.,
killed and murdered Edmond Hebert and then, after the said Edmond Hebert
was dead, took his property; and if you should further find beyond a
reasonable doubt that the intervening time of the murder, if any, and the time
of the taking of the property, if any, formed a continuous chain of events, the
fact that Edmond Hebert was dead when the property was taken does not
absolve the Defendant from the crime of Capital Murder.
Id. at 315 n.8.
¶35. In this case, the trial court gave the following instruction on capital murder:
The Court instructs the jury that if you find from the evidence beyond
a reasonable doubt, that the defendant, BOBBY BATISTE, did on or about
March 7, 2008, unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously kill and murder Andreas
Galanis, a human being, with or without the deliberate design to effect death,
while engaged in the commission of the crime of Robbery, without authority
of law and not in necessary self-defense, then you shall find the defendant
guilty as charged of Capital Murder.
If the State has failed to prove any of the above elements beyond a
reasonable doubt, then you shall find the defendant not guilty.
The trial court correctly instructed Batiste’s jury on the one-continuous-transaction rule as
follows: “The Court instructs the jury that the phrase ‘while engaged in the commission of’
includes the attempt to commit the crime, the completed crime, as well as the immediate post
crime acts of the defendant so connected to the homicide as to become a part of it.” As
discussed below in our analysis of the sufficiency of the evidence, a rational juror could find
18
beyond a reasonable doubt that Batiste’s killing of Galanis and removal of his property in
order to conceal the killing were part of a continuous chain of events, such that Batiste was
guilty of capital murder with the underlying felony of robbery.5 Because the jury properly
was instructed on the one-continuous-transaction rule, it was able to determine whether the
killing and the robbery had occurred as part of a continuous chain of events. Batiste was not
entitled to further jury instructions on the matter, and this issue is without merit.
C. Oral Instructions
¶36. Batiste also argues that the trial court erred by instructing the jury orally that it could
convict him of capital murder even if it found Batiste never formed the intent to rob Galanis.
He contends this occurred during the closing arguments by the defense, during the following
exchange:
BY MR. LAPPAN: You’re going to have a jury charge. You’re going
to have all the instructions. Okay?
One of them reads, “The Court instructs the jury that the phrase ‘while
engaged in the commission of,’ includes – the attempt to commit the crime, the
completed crime, as well as the immediate post-crime acts of the defendant so
connected to the homicide to become a part of it.”
“So connected to the homicide to become a part of it.”
Do any of you think that when Bobby Batiste was swinging the bag,
fatally injuring Andreas Galanis, that he was thinking, I’m going to take
money off of him, and I’m going to buy cleaning solution for the floor, and
paint for the wall, and a wheelbarrow, and a Rug Doctor, to cover up my
5
In Gillett, this Court explicitly rejected the dissent’s contention that, for capital
murder with the underlying felony of robbery, the intent to rob must have formed prior to
the killing. Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 492 n.15. Thus, we rejected Gillett’s argument that a
defendant tried for capital murder with the underlying felony of robbery is entitled to have
the jury instructed that the intent to rob must have formed before the killing occurred. Id. at
493. Our ruling today follows our precedent in Gillett. While ours is a broader interpretation
of “while engaged in the commission of the crime of robbery” than the dissent would adopt,
we find no compelling reason to depart from precedent.
19
killing of him? Who thinks that?
If it is your decision that he killed Andreas, and he has no defense, he’s
guilty of murder, then. He murdered him. And after he murdered him, he used
money to cover up the murder.
Where is the intent to rob him? Where is it?
BY MR. ALLGOOD: If your Honor please, I’m going to object. We
don’t have to prove intent to rob. That’s in the instructions. I object to that.
BY MR. LAPPAN: They have to prove robbery, though, Your Honor.
BY THE COURT: Sustained. I instructed the jury.
BY MR. LAPPAN: Your Honor, with respect to – let me find the
Court’s robbery instruction, ladies and gentlemen.
The Court instructs you that robbery is defined as the unlawful –
unlawfully, willfully, feloniously taking, stealing, and carrying away some
property from the presence of another person either by violence to the person
or by threats or intimidation.
You’d have to find – you’d have to – this is instruction SGP-4. You’d
have to find that this was Bobby’s intent at the time –
BY MR. ALLGOOD: If Your Honor please, that is not the law. I
object.
BY THE COURT: Spicer v. State. I’ve already ruled on that. Do not
go there again. 921 So. 2d. I’ve ruled on that. That’s not the law.
BY MR. LAPPAN: SGP-4 is in your charge, is the Court’s charge.
Read it and please apply it to the case. This is the law as told to you by Judge
Kitchens.
¶37. Batiste notes that the prosecutor stated that he “did not have to prove intent to rob”
and argues that the “only message the jury could have received from the trial court’s rulings
was the one that the prosecutor was arguing to them.” We disagree. The trial court sustained
the State’s objection to Batiste’s erroneous argument that Batiste had to have formed an
intent to rob Galanis at the time he struck the fatal blows. The trial court correctly held that
Batiste’s argument was not the law; as explained above, the State did not have to prove that
20
Batiste had the intent to rob prior to the killing, but that the killing and the robbery were part
of a continuous chain of events and part of the res gestae. Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 492. And the
trial court never instructed the jury orally that the State did not have to prove intent. Rather,
the trial court stated “I instructed the jury.” As previously discussed, instruction SGP-4
properly instructed the jury on the intent requirement for robbery. We presume that the jury
followed the instructions given by the trial court; “[t]o presume otherwise would be to render
the jury system inoperable.” Pitchford v. State, 45 So. 3d 216, 240 (Miss. 2010). Because
the trial court did not instruct the jury erroneously from the bench, this issue is without merit.
¶38. Batiste also complains that, during closing arguments, the prosecutor instructed the
jury that the State did not have to prove Batiste had intended to rob Galanis. The prosecutor
stated
The law is that if he kills him in the commission of a robbery, then he is guilty
of capital murder. And the phrase ‘in the commission of’ includes those acts
that happen after the homicide that are so closely connected to it as to be part
of the same transaction. I don’t have to prove that he intended to rob him at all.
I can prove that he killed him and robbed him as an afterthought, and it’s still
capital murder.
Batiste did not object to this argument. We have stated “[i]f no contemporaneous objection
is made, the error, if any, is waived. This rule’s applicability is not diminished in a capital
case.” Walker v. State, 913 So. 2d 198, 227 (Miss. 2005) (quoting Foster v. State, 639 So.
2d 1263, 1270 (Miss. 1994)).
¶39. Notwithstanding the procedural bar, this issue is without merit. “[A]ny allegedly
improper prosecutorial comments must be considered in context, considering the
circumstances of the case, when deciding on their propriety.” McGilberry v. State, 741 So.
21
2d 894, 910 (Miss. 1999) (citing United States v. Bright, 630 F.2d 804, 825 (5th Cir. 1980);
United States v. Austin, 585 F.2d 1271, 1279 (5th Cir. 1978)). While it appears problematic
that the prosecutor stated the State did not have to prove intent to rob, the remark was made
in the context of describing how the one-continuous-transaction rule applied to the case.
Even if the comment was improper, it would not constitute grounds for reversal unless “the
natural and probable effect of the prosecuting attorney’s improper argument created unjust
prejudice against the accused resulting in a decision influenced by prejudice.” McGilberry,
741 So. 2d at 910 (quoting Rushing v. State, 711 So. 2d 450, 455 (Miss. 1998)). Here, the
jury received proper instruction on the elements of capital murder and on the one-continuous-
transaction rule. Alternatively, and without waiving the procedural bar, we cannot say that
the prosecutor’s comment unjustly prejudiced Batiste such that the verdict was influenced
by prejudice.
II. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN REFUSING TO REQUIRE THE
STATE TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE NOTICE TO BATISTE – EITHER IN THE
INDICTMENT OR WHEN REQUESTED THEREAFTER – REGARDING THE
SPECIFIC PROPERTY THAT WAS THE OBJECT OF THE ROBBERY
ALLEGED AS THE CAPITALIZING CRIME.
¶40. Batiste argues that the indictment was fatally defective because it did not specify the
items alleged to have been taken in the robbery. Batiste’s indictment charged that
BOBBY BATISTE
late of the County aforesaid, on or about the 7th day of March, 2008, in the
County and State aforesaid, did unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously, with or
without the deliberate design to effect death, kill Andreas Galanis, a human
being, without authority of law and not in necessary self defense, while
engaged in the commission of a Robbery, in violation of Section 97-3-19(2)(e)
MCA 1972 as amended; contrary to the form of the statutes in such cases made
and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State of Mississippi
22
....
Batiste filed a pretrial motion requesting that the trial court require the State to identify the
item feloniously taken against Galansis’s will. The trial court denied the motion, finding the
indictment to be sufficient because “the State is not required to set out the elements of the
underlying felony in an indictment for capital murder.”
A. Whether the Indictment Deprived Batiste of Notice.
¶41. Batiste argues that the trial court’s failure to require the State to specify the items
stolen violated his due-process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution and Article 3, Section 14 of the Mississippi Constitution. U.S. Const. amend.
XIV; Miss. Const. art 3, § 14. He argues that the deficiency in the indictment also deprived
him of his constitutional right to “a jury determination that [he] is guilty of every element of
the crime with which he is charged, beyond a reasonable doubt.” Apprendi v. New Jersey,
530 U.S. 466, 477,120 S. Ct. 2348, 2356, 147 L. Ed. 2d 435 (2000); U.S. Const. amend V;
U.S. Const. amend. VI; U.S. Const. amend. XIV. He argues that, because robbery is a
specific-intent crime, the defense must be notified of the object claimed to have been stolen.
Batiste argues that the indictment violated his constitutional rights because, since it did not
recite the item or items taken, it failed to charge the essential elements of the offense. The
evidence presented several items the State could have selected to charge as the subject of the
robbery: Galanis’s wallet, his car keys, his Visa card, his checkbook, and cash that may
reasonably be inferred to have been inside the wallet and used by Batiste to buy cleaning
supplies. Batiste argues that the State’s failure to specify an item or items prejudiced his
defense because he was forced to guess which of the objects the State would claim were the
23
subject of the robbery and part of the res gestae of the crime.
¶42. “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be informed of
the nature and cause of the accusation.” U.S. Const. amend. VI; see also Miss. Const. art. 3,
§ 26 (1890) (“In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right . . . to demand the
nature and cause of the accusation.”). “The purpose of an indictment is to furnish the
defendant with notice and a reasonable description of the charges against him so that he may
prepare his defense.” Goff v. State, 14 So. 3d 625, 665 (Miss. 2009). An indictment must
contain “a clear and concise statement of the elements of the [charged] crime.” Id. It “must
contain (1) the essential elements of the offense charged, (2) sufficient facts to fairly inform
the defendant of the charge against which he must defend, and (3) sufficient facts to enable
him to plead double jeopardy in the event of a future prosecution for the same offense.”
Gilmer v. State, 955 So. 2d 829, 836-37 (Miss. 2007) (quoting Hamling v. United States,
418 U.S. 87, 117, 94 S. Ct. 2887, 2907, 41 L. Ed. 2d 590 (1974)).
¶43. In general, an indictment tracking the language of the criminal statute is sufficient to
inform the defendant of the charged crime. Stevens v. State, 808 So. 2d 908, 912 (Miss.
2002). In capital-murder cases, unless the underlying felony is burglary,6 “the underlying
felony that elevates the crime to capital murder must be identified in the indictment along
with the section and subsection of the statute under which the defendant is being charged.”
Goff, 14 So. 3d at 665 (citing Bennett v. State, 933 So. 2d 930, 952 (Miss. 2006)); Miss.
6
In State v. Berryhill, 703 So. 2d 250, 255 (Miss. 1997), this Court held that “capital
murder indictments that are predicated on burglary are required to state the underlying
offense to the burglary.”
24
Code Ann. § 99-17-20 (Rev. 2007). No further detail is required. Goff, 14 So. 3d at 665.
Because Batiste’s indictment complied with these requirements, it met the legal requirements
for an indictment for capital murder with the underlying felony of robbery. We note that the
elements of robbery are such that a robbery indictment need not list the specific item that is
the subject of the robbery. Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-73 (Rev. 2006). Therefore, a requirement
that an indictment for capital murder predicated on robbery list the allegedly stolen items
would require even more detail than a robbery indictment. Batiste cites no authority holding
that due process requires that a robbery indictment list the allegedly stolen items. This issue
is without merit.
B. Whether the Indictment was Sufficient to Provide Batiste with the
Protections Afforded by Double Jeopardy.
¶44. Batiste argues that the indictment was insufficient to protect him from reprosecution
for the same offense. The Fifth Amendment’s Double Jeopardy Clause states that “nor shall
any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb. . . .”
U.S. Const. amend. V; U.S. Const. amend. XIV; see also Miss. Const. art 3, §22 (“[n]o
person’s life or liberty shall be twice placed in jeopardy for the same offense”). An
indictment must contain sufficient facts to enable the defendant to plead double jeopardy if
the State attempts a future prosecution for the same crime. Goforth v. State, 70 So. 3d 174,
188 (Miss. 2011) (quoting Berry v. State, 996 So. 2d 782, 786 (Miss. 2008)); Blockburger
v. U.S., 284 U.S. 299, 304, 52 S. Ct. 180, 182, 76 L. Ed. 306 (1932).
¶45. Batiste argues that the failure to specify the item taken in the robbery in the capital-
murder indictment left him open to a future prosecution for larceny of any of the objects.
25
Batiste cites no authority for the proposition that an indictment for capital murder or robbery
must specify the item alleged to have been taken in order to avoid double jeopardy. We find
that the indictment was sufficient such that any future prosecution for larceny of an item
taken as part of the res gestae of the capital murder would be barred.
C. Whether this Court will Apply its Reasoning from Berryhill to the
Underlying Felony of Robbery.
¶46. This Court has held that, when the predicate felony is burglary, a capital-murder
indictment must state the underlying offense to the burglary. Berryhill, 703 So. 2d at 255.
This is because:
“The crime of burglary of a dwelling has two elements: (1) the burglarious
breaking and entering a dwelling, and (2) the felonious intent to commit some
crime therein.”
...
[T]he level of notice that would reasonably enable a defendant to defend
himself against a capital murder charge that is predicated upon burglary must,
to be fair, include notice of the crime comprising the burglary. Burglary is
unlike robbery and all the other capital murder predicate felonies in that it
requires as an essential element the intent to commit another crime. While it
is true that the general rule finds indictments that track the language of the
criminal statute to be sufficient, the fairer rule in case of capital murder arising
out of burglary . . . would require the indictment to name the crime underlying
the burglary in addition to tracking the capital murder statute.
...
As the facts in this case demonstrate, a defendant such as Berryhill who has
been indicted without specifying the burglary may find out on the eve of trial
that the State might try to prove the burglary on different theories. Needless to
say, different theories would plainly invite different defenses. Such “trial by
ambush” is at odds with this Court’s jurisprudence on the need for an
indictment to give enough notice for a defendant to prepare a defense.
The second reason that we hold that murder indictments made capital must
specify the nature of the underlying burglary is predicated upon the
well-settled law that a defendant cannot be put in jeopardy for crimes except
26
those which a grand jury of his peers has presented.
Id. at 255-57 (citations omitted).
¶47. In Berryhill, we recognized that, when the underlying felony is robbery, “[i]n the
context of capital murder, this Court has further held that a bare allegation of robbery in an
indictment, without further specification of the facts in support of that, is sufficient.” Id.
(citing Mackbee v. State, 575 So. 2d 16, 35 (Miss. 1990)). Batiste urges this Court to “revisit
its conclusion that robbery is in all instances different from burglary.” He argues that the
intent requirements for burglary and robbery are analogous, because burglary requires the
intent to commit a specific felony, while robbery requires the specific intent to steal property.
Batiste argues that, due to these similarities, applying the reasoning of Berryhill, this Court
should require that an indictment for capital murder predicated on robbery specify the item
taken. Since his indictment lacked this specificity, Batiste argues, he was deprived of notice,
forced to defend against evolving theories, and subjected to double jeopardy and trial by
ambush. See Berryhill, 703 So. 2d at 255-57.
¶48. This Court has not required indictments for capital murder with the underlying felony
of robbery or indictments for robbery to list the objects taken in the robbery. In Berryhill,
this Court specifically distinguished robbery from burglary, stating “this Court has further
held that a bare allegation of robbery in an indictment, without further specification of the
facts in support of that, is sufficient . . . . [b]urglary is unlike robbery and all the other capital
murder predicate felonies in that it requires as an essential element the intent to commit
another crime.” Id. at 256. While burglary requires as an essential element the intent to
commit some specific crime, a defendant is guilty of robbery if the State proves he
27
feloniously took another’s personal property by force or by putting that person in fear, no
matter what that property was. Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-73 (Rev. 2006). We find that Batiste
has put forth no compelling reason to expand Berryhill’s holding to require that a capital-
murder indictment predicated on robbery list the object taken.
D. Whether the Failure to Furnish Batiste with Notice of the Object of the
Robbery Requires that his Death Sentence be Set Aside.
¶49. Batiste argues that, without notice of the specific item that is the subject of the
robbery, the State failed to narrow his conduct to a level of egregiousness that could support
the imposition of the death penalty. Under the Eighth Amendment, states must ensure that
the death penalty is appropriate and not randomly imposed. Romano v. Oklahoma, 512 U.S.
1, 7, 114 S. Ct. 2004, 2009, 129 L. Ed. 2d 1 (1994). “To pass constitutional muster, a capital
sentencing scheme must ‘genuinely narrow the class of persons eligible for the death penalty
and must reasonably justify the imposition of a more severe sentence on the defendant
compared to others found guilty of murder.’” Id. (quoting Lowenfield v. Phelps, 484 U.S.
231, 108 S. Ct. 546, 98 L. Ed. 2d 568 (1988)). To accomplish this narrowing, the “State must
establish rational criteria that narrow the decisionmaker’s judgment as to whether the
circumstances of a particular defendant’s case meet the threshold.” Romano, 512 U.S. at 7,
114 S. Ct. at 2009.
¶50. Our capital-murder statute narrows the class of murders to those with additional
egregious characteristics. Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-19(2)(a)-(h) (Rev. 2006). Batiste’s
indictment placed him on notice that the capitalizing crime was robbery. Section 97-3-
19(2)(e) states that “the killing of a human being without the authority of law by any manner
28
or in any means shall be capital murder . . . when done with or without any design to effect
death, by any person engaged in the commission of the crime of . . . robbery . . . .” Miss.
Code Ann. § 97-3-19(2)(e) (Rev. 2006). Because Batiste’s indictment charged him with
capital murder predicated on robbery, the State sufficiently narrowed Batiste’s conduct to a
level of egregiousness sufficient to support imposition of the death penalty. See Romano, 512
U.S. at 7, 114 S. Ct. at 2009. The particular item stolen in the robbery is immaterial. This
issue is without merit.
E. Whether the Prosecutor’s Comment about Batiste’s Withdrawals from
Galanis’s Checking Account Constituted Reversible Error.
¶51. Batiste raised this issue briefly in his challenge to the indictment. During initial
closing arguments, the prosecutor argued that the killing had occurred in the course of a
robbery because Batiste had admitted to having taken Galanis’s wallet from his body. Then,
the prosecutor stated:
That’s robbery, ladies and gentlemen. But there’s more. Because you
see, ladies and gentlemen, there’s that relationship that he had with Andreas
Galanis. It was that of a parasite. He’d literally been living off the man for
months, bleeding him dry of his checking account. He saw Andreas Galanis
more as a source of revenue than as a human being, and he used him for that.
There was no objection from Batiste, and the prosecutor proceeded to argue that the jury
reasonably could infer that Batiste had taken Galanis’s money from his wallet. During final
closing arguments, the prosecutor stated “He used him. He used his checking account[,] he
used his Visa card, and yes, ladies and gentlemen, I think he used the money in his wallet.”
¶52. Batiste argues that the prosecutor erroneously argued that the jury could consider
Batiste’s prior theft of money from Galanis’s checking account as establishing the robbery.
29
But this theft could not have constituted robbery, because the element of force or putting in
fear was missing. See Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-73 (Rev. 2006). Batiste argues that, because
no jury instruction was given that specified the items taken, the jury improperly may have
believed that the robbery had occurred when Batiste took money from Galanis’s checking
account. This issue is procedurally barred, because Batiste did not object to the prosecutor’s
comments. Foster v. State, 639 So. 2d 1263, 1288-89 (Miss. 1994). Nor did Batiste preserve
the issue for appeal by requesting a jury instruction prohibiting the jury from considering the
money stolen from the checking account as proof of robbery. Havard v. State, 94 So. 3d 229,
235 (Miss. 2012).
¶53. Notwithstanding the procedural bar, we find no error. Attorneys are afforded wide
latitude in closing arguments. McGilberry v. State, 741 So. 2d 894, 910 (Miss. 1999).
“Given the latitude afforded an attorney during closing argument, any allegedly improper
prosecutorial comments must be considered in context, considering the circumstances of the
case, when deciding on their propriety.” Id. (citing United States v. Bright, 630 F.2d 804,
825 (5th Cir. 1980)); United States v. Austin, 585 F.2d 1271, 1279 (5th Cir. 1978). Here, the
prosecutor’s comments, taken in context, show that the prosecutor was not arguing that
Batiste had committed robbery by using Galanis’s debit card without permission. Rather, the
prosecutor was urging the jury to draw the inference from Batiste’s prior clandestine use of
the debit card that he later had removed the money from Galanis’s wallet, which constituted
robbery. Considered in context, we cannot say the prosecutor’s comments were improper.
Notwithstanding the procedural bar, this issue is without merit.
III. WHETHER THE FOREGOING ERRORS WERE EXACERBATED AND MADE
30
MORE PREJUDICIAL BY THE TRIAL COURT’S CONSTITUTIONALLY
ERRONEOUS DENIAL OF BATISTE’S UNANIMITY INSTRUCTION
PERTAINING TO ROBBERY.
¶54. Batiste requested a unanimity instruction, which stated:
For you to find Bobby Batiste guilty of capital murder, you must also
agree, unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt, that Mr. Batiste robbed
Andreas Galanis of the same item. If all twelve of you do not agree on the
same criminal act which supports the State’s allegation of robbery, you must
find Bobby Batiste not guilty of capital murder.
The trial court refused the instruction. Batiste argues that the denial of the instruction
violated his federal and state constitutional rights to a unanimous verdict.
¶55. This Court will affirm the trial court’s grant or denial of a requested jury instruction
if the jury instructions, read as a whole, fairly announce the case and create no injustice.
Fulgham, 46 So. 3d at 323. In Fulgham, this Court found that the trial court properly had
refused a jury instruction identical to the one requested by Batiste. Id. at 323, 326. At
Fulgham’s trial, the State had presented evidence that Fulgham had robbed the victim of his
wallet or a computer CPU. Id. at 323. Fulgham also argued that the verdict was fatally flawed
because it was not necessarily unanimous, as some jurors could have found that Fulgham
robbed the victim of the wallet, while other jurors could have found she had taken the CPU.
Id. We addressed whether Fulgham had been entitled to a unanimity instruction under those
facts. Id. at 324.
¶56. First, we determined that the United States Constitution does not bestow a federal
constitutional right to a unanimous verdict by a twelve-member jury in state court. Id. (citing
Apodaca v. Oregon, 406 U.S. 404, 410-12, 92 S. Ct. 1628, 32 L. Ed. 2d 184 (1972); Johnson
v. Louisiana, 406 U.S. 356, 359-63, 92 S. Ct. 1620, 32 L. Ed. 2d 152 (1972); but see Burch
31
v. Louisiana, 441 U.S. 130, 99 S. Ct. 1623, 60 L. Ed. 2d 96 (1979) (requiring unanimity for
conviction of a nonpetty offense by a six-person jury)).
¶57. Second, we determined that, while there is a state constitutional right to a unanimous
twelve-member jury, that right was not violated by the denial of the instruction. Fulgham,
46 So. 3d at 324. The United State Supreme Court has stated that:
We have never suggested that in returning general verdicts in such cases, the
jurors should be required to agree upon a single means of commission, any
more than the indictments were required to specify one alone. In these cases,
as in litigation generally, “different jurors may be persuaded by different
pieces of evidence, even when they agree upon the bottom line. Plainly there
is no general requirement that the jury reach agreement on the preliminary
factual issues which underlie the verdict.”
Schad v. Arizona, 501 U.S. 624, 631-32, 111 S. Ct. 2491, 2467, 115 L. Ed. 2d 555 (1991)
(citation omitted). “[A] federal jury need not always decide unanimously which of several
possible sets of underlying brute facts make up a particular element, say, which of several
possible means the defendant used to commit an element of the crime.” Richardson v. U.S.,
526 U.S. 813, 817, 119 S. Ct. 1707, 1710, 143 L. Ed. 2d 985 (1999). Additionally, reversal
is not warranted when the jury is presented with alternative factual theories, but one of those
theories is factually inadequate to sustain the conviction. Griffin v. United States, 502 U.S.
46, 59, 112 S. Ct. 466, 474, 116 L. Ed. 2d 371 (1991). This is because “jurors are well
equipped to analyze the evidence.” Id.
¶58. In Fulgham, we found that the jury properly had been instructed that an element of
robbery is the taking, stealing, and carrying away the personal property of another.
Fulgham, 46 So. 3d at 326. We reasoned that, while that element could be fulfilled by
alternative fact patterns, the facts still lead to the conclusion that the defendant was guilty of
32
a single offense, that of robbery. Id. The Court was “satisfied that this jury was perfectly
capable of sifting through the evidence presented and was able to discard any factually
insufficient theories.” Id. We further noted that requiring a unanimous verdict on the item
taken could have fostered an absurd result. Id. “For example, while all twelve jurors might
agree that Fulgham had killed Joey and had stolen some of his personal property, acquittal
would be required if six believed she had stolen his money and the other six believed she had
stolen the CPU.” Id. We concluded that Fulgham was not entitled to the unanimity
instruction. Id.
¶59. Batiste’s case is not distinguishable from Fulgham’s. As in Fulgham, Batiste’s jury
properly was instructed that one of the elements of robbery is taking, stealing, and carrying
away the personal property of another. As in Fulgham, the evidence supported alternative
theories regarding exactly what property was stolen. There was sufficient evidence from
which a juror could have found, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Batiste had robbed Galanis
of his wallet, his car keys, his Visa card, his checkbook, or cash that reasonably may be
inferred to have been inside the wallet and used by Batiste to buy supplies to clean up the
crime scene. Under Fulgham, jury unanimity is not required regarding which item or items
were the subject of the underlying felony of robbery. Id. Batiste was not entitled to his
proffered unanimity instruction.
¶60. Batiste seeks to distinguish Fulgham. He argues that, in Fulgham, the Court rested
its holding upon the fact that the State did not argue erroneously to the jury that life insurance
proceeds that were the subject of an earlier theft could support the robbery conviction. Id.
at 323. Here, Batiste argues, the prosecutor did argue in closing that the money he withdrew
33
from Galanis’s account could have supported a jury finding that the killing had occurred in
the course of a robbery. As previously discussed in Issue II.E, Batiste’s challenge to the
prosecutor’s comments is procedurally barred; notwithstanding the procedural bar, no error
resulted, because the comments, taken in context, did not urge the jury to find Batiste guilty
of robbery for his prior theft of money from Galanis’s checking account. Rather, the
prosecutor argued that Batiste’s prior theft from Galanis’s checking account made it more
likely that he had removed cash from Galanis’s wallet, constituting robbery. Thus, this case
is not distinguishable from Fulgham, and this issue is without merit.
IV. WHETHER AS A CONSEQUENCE OF THE TRIAL COURT’S ERRONEOUS
RULINGS, PROOF OF ROBBERY AT TRIAL WAS INSUFFICIENT TO
ESTABLISH THE ROBBERY ELEMENT OF CAPITAL MURDER IN A
STATUTORILY OR CONSTITUTIONALLY REQUISITE FASHION.
¶61. Batiste challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his capital-murder
conviction. He argues that, because the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict, the
trial court erred by denying his motion for a directed verdict, his request for a peremptory
instruction, and his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV). Batiste’s
sufficiency argument is intertwined with his prior arguments that the jury instructions, in
combination with the trial court’s oral statements to the jury and the prosecutor’s closing
argument, left the jury free to convict him of capital murder without a finding of intent to rob.
Because we already have found those arguments to be without merit, we proceed to review
the sufficiency of the evidence of capital murder with the underlying felony of robbery.
¶62. In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence “the critical inquiry is whether the
evidence shows ‘beyond a reasonable doubt that accused committed the act charged, and that
34
he did so under such circumstances that every element of the offense existed; and where the
evidence fails to meet this test it is insufficient to support a conviction.’” Bush v. State, 895
So. 2d 836, 843 (Miss. 2005). “[T]he relevant question is whether, after viewing the evidence
in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the
essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. (quoting Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307, 315, 99 S. Ct. 2781, 61 L. Ed. 2d 560 (1979)). The evidence will be found
sufficient if “it is of such quality and weight that, ‘having in mind the beyond a reasonable
doubt burden of proof standard, reasonable fair-minded men in the exercise of impartial
judgment might reach different conclusions on every element of the offense.’” Bush, 895 So.
2d at 843 (quoting Edwards v. State, 469 So. 2d 68, 70 (Miss. 1985)). But, if the facts and
inferences, so considered, “point in favor of the defendant on any element of the offense with
sufficient force that reasonable men could not have found beyond a reasonable doubt that the
defendant was guilty,” then we will reverse and render. Bush, 895 So. 2d at 843.
¶63. Under the capital-murder statute, “the killing of a human being without the authority
of law by any manner or in any means shall be capital murder . . . when done with or without
any design to effect death, by any person engaged in the commission of the crime of . . .
robbery . . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 99-3-19(2)(e) (Rev. 2007). The robbery statute provides:
Every person who shall feloniously take the personal property of
another, in his presence or from his person and against his will, by violence to
his person or by putting such person in fear of some immediate injury to his
person, shall be guilty of robbery.
Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-73 (Rev. 2006). The essential elements of robbery are: “that the
defendant: (1) feloniously took (2) the personal property of another (3) in his presence or
35
from his person and (4) against his will, (5) by violence to his person or by putting such
person in fear of some immediate injury to his person. Fulgham, 46 So. 3d at 323-24.
¶64. The element of felonious intent may be shown by the facts surrounding the crime.
Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 492 (quoting Walker v. State, 913 So. 2d 198, 224 (Miss. 2005)). For
example, when a defendant is discovered in possession of the dead victim’s personal
property, the jury reasonably may infer that the defendant had the requisite intent to rob.
Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 492. Further, “[i]f the intervening time between the time of the murder
and the time of taking of the property formed a continuous chain of events, the fact that [the
victim] was dead when [the defendant] took the property [cannot] absolve the defendant from
the crime of robbery.” West v. State, 463 So. 2d 1048, 1055-56 (Miss. 1985) (quoting
Cobern v. State, 273 Ala. 547, 142 So. 2d 869, 871 (1962)).
¶65. We find that the evidence was sufficient to sustain Batiste’s capital-murder
conviction. The State presented evidence that Batiste killed Galanis and took his personal
property. Batiste admitted that he had killed Galanis, left the apartment briefly, and returned
to clean up the crime scene. He admitted that he had removed Galanis’s wallet from his dead
body. Galanis’s car keys and checkbook were found in Batiste’s room. Batiste used Galanis’s
Visa card to rent a Rug Doctor and buy cleaning fluid. The facts that Batiste admitted to
having taken Galanis’s wallet, that the empty wallet was found in a bag in Batiste’s truck,
that Galanis had withdrawn $200 in cash the previous day, that Batiste had stated that he had
to borrow $10 from Galanis for gas the previous day, and that Batiste had paid cash for the
paint, wheelbarrow, and cleaning supplies created a reasonable inference that Batiste had
removed cash from Galanis’s wallet.
36
¶66. Because Batiste was in the midst of disposing of Galanis’s body and cleaning up the
crime scene when the crime was discovered, a rational jury could have found beyond a
reasonable doubt that Batiste had killed Galanis and robbed him of any or all of the items as
part of a continuous chain of events. See Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 492 (quoting Pickle v. State,
345 So. 2d 623, 627 (Miss. 1977)). Because Batiste was found in possession of Galanis’s
property after his death, it was within reason for the jury to find the killing had occurred in
the commission of a robbery. Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 492 (quoting Walker v. State, 913 So. 2d
198, 224 (Miss. 2005)); see also Knox v. State, 805 So. 2d 527, 531 (Miss. 2002).
Additionally, the jury reasonably could have inferred from Batiste’s prior theft of money
from Galanis’s checking account that Batiste had formed the intent to rob Galanis. While the
jury could have rejected the State’s theory that Batiste had the intent to rob, the fact that a
number of competing inferences may be drawn from the facts surrounding a defendant’s
intent is of no matter. Goff, 14 So. 3d at 650. Considering the evidence and all reasonable
inferences to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the verdict, we find that a
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of capital murder beyond a
reasonable doubt.
¶67. Batiste further argues that this Court’s decision that the “one continuous transaction”
evidentiary doctrine is sufficient to establish all the elements of capital murder in this case
violates Batiste’s due process rights to a fair trial under the Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution, and his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment
rights to have the jury properly instructed and to a jury determination of guilt of every
element of the crime charged based upon sufficient, admissible evidence. Batiste claims that
37
his trial was unfair because he was deprived of a jury determination that he was guilty of
every element of the crime charged beyond a reasonable doubt. He contends that the State
was not required to prove intent to rob. However, as previously discussed, the jury was
instructed properly on the elements of robbery, including the element of felonious intent.
Instruction SGP-5 correctly set out the “one continuous transaction” rule. We find that,
because the jury was instructed on all the elements of capital murder, Batiste was not
deprived of his constitutional rights to a fair trial and to a jury determination of every element
of the crime charged.
V. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR IN ITS
OTHER INSTRUCTIONS TO THE JURY AT THE CULPABILITY PHASE.
A. The Manslaughter Instruction
¶68. The jury was instructed on the theories of capital murder, deliberate-design murder,
and Batiste’s self-defense theory. Batiste argues that he was entitled to jury instructions on
his theories of heat-of-passion manslaughter and imperfect self-defense manslaughter. Batiste
proffered a manslaughter instruction stating:
If you find from the evidence in this case beyond a reasonable doubt that:
1. On or about March 7, 2008, in Oktibbeha County;
2. That Andreas Galanis was a human being; and
3. That Bobby Batiste did kill Andreas Galanis without malice,
in the heat of passion, in a cruel and unusual manner, or by the
use of a dangerous weapon, without authority of law and not in
necessary self-defense;
then you shall find the defendant guilty of manslaughter.
If the prosecution has failed to prove any one or more of the above listed
elements beyond a reasonable doubt, then you shall find Mr. Batiste not guilty
of manslaughter.
38
See Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-35 (Rev. 2006). The trial court refused the instruction, finding
it lacked evidentiary support.
¶69. “A defendant is entitled to have jury instructions given which present his theory of the
case. This entitlement is limited, however, in that the Court is allowed to refuse an instruction
which incorrectly states the law, is covered fairly elsewhere in the instructions, or is without
foundation in the evidence.” Spicer, 921 So. 2d at 313 (citing Parks v. State, 884 So. 2d 738,
746 (Miss. 2004)). Manslaughter is a lesser-included offense of capital murder. Miss. Code
Ann. § 97-3-19(3) (Rev. 2006). We have held that a lesser-included-offense instruction
should be granted unless the trial judge and ultimately this Court can say,
taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the accused and considering
all the reasonable inferences which may be drawn in favor of the accused from
the evidence, that no reasonable jury could find the defendant guilty of the
lesser-included offense (conversely, not guilty of at least one element of the
principal charge).
Anderson v. State, 79 So. 3d 501, 505 (Miss. 2012) (quoting Mease v. State, 539 So. 2d
1324, 1330 (Miss. 1989)). There must be an evidentiary basis in the record to support a
lesser-included-offense instruction. Anderson, 79 So. 3d at 505.
¶70. Mississippi Code Section 97-3-35 codifies the crime of manslaughter and provides
that “[t]he killing of a human being, without malice, in the heat of passion, but in a cruel or
unusual manner, or by the use of a dangerous weapon, without authority of law, and not in
necessary self-defense, shall be manslaughter.” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-35 (Rev. 2006).
“Heat of passion” has been defined as:
[a] state of violent and uncontrollable rage engendered by a blow or certain
other provocation given, which will reduce a homicide from the grade of
murder to that of manslaughter. Passion or anger suddenly aroused at the time
by some immediate and reasonable provocation, by words or acts of one at the
39
time. The term includes an emotional state of mind characterized by anger,
rage, hatred, furious resentment or terror.
McCune v. State, 989 So. 2d 310, 319 (Miss. 2008) (quoting Agnew v. State, 783 So. 2d 699,
703 (Miss. 2001)). Passion and anger alone are insufficient to support manslaughter. Agnew,
783 So. 2d at 703. “[T]here must be such circumstances as would indicate that a normal mind
would be roused to the extent that reason is overthrown and passion usurps the mind
destroying judgment.” McCune, 989 So. 2d at 319 (quoting Agnew, 783 So. 2d at 703-704).
¶71. Batiste argues that his confessions created an evidentiary basis for a manslaughter
instruction. He contends that Galanis’s angry confrontation with him, in which Galanis
aggressively jabbed at him with a sword and called him a “black bitch,” were sufficient
provocation to justify a heat-of-passion manslaughter instruction. According to Batiste’s first
statement, the initial confrontation ceased when Galanis retreated into his own room with the
sword. Batiste went to his truck, got the rim adaptor, and confronted Galanis, stating “what
was that [you were] saying,” and then struck Galanis four times after Galanis had again
jabbed at him with the sword. In Batiste’s second statement, Batiste stated that he got the rim
adaptor and retreated to his own room after the initial confrontation. Galanis was still talking,
and Batiste said “what’s that you’ve been saying again,” and Galanis cursed at him and
jabbed at him with the sword, prompting Batiste to strike Galanis four times with the rim
adaptor.
¶72. We find that the evidence was insufficient to support Batiste’s heat-of-passion
manslaughter theory. Manslaughter must be committed in the heat of passion. Id. at 319. But
Batiste said nothing in his confessions to indicate he was in a state of “violent and
40
uncontrollable rage.” Rather, Batiste, in a calculating manner, left the apartment and obtained
a weapon. “Denial of a manslaughter instruction is proper where the record is clear that the
decedent was [killed] with malice or deliberate design.” Simmons v. State, 805 So. 2d 452,
474 (Miss. 2001). Batiste’s claim that he struck Galanis just four times with the rim adaptor
was strongly undermined by the evidence that Galanis had suffered thirty-six separate
injuries, and that his blood was found on both the rim adaptor and also on a tire iron found
in Batiste’s truck. This was overwhelming evidence that Batiste had killed Galanis with
deliberate design.
¶73. Further, Galanis’s conduct, as described by Batise, was not reasonable provocation.
Batiste stated that, early in the argument, Galanis had threatened to get a gun and shoot him
in the head. Later, Galanis yelled at him, called him a name, and jabbed at him with a sword.
Batiste never said Galanis injured him with the sword, and no injuries were observed on
Batiste’s body. Galanis’s conduct would not have roused a normal mind “to the extent that
reason is overthrown and passion usurps the mind destroying judgment.” Id. Instead, the
confrontation between Galanis and Batiste was similar to that in Phillips v. State, 794 So. 2d
1034, 1038 (Miss. 2001), in which “the record [did] not reflect that [the victim] was using
deadly force against [the defendant], but instead that [the victim] pushed [the defendant]’s
hand a few times and [the defendant] pushed [the victim] back.”
¶74. Batiste also argues that there was an evidentiary basis for his imperfect-self-defense
manslaughter theory. “Imperfect self-defense is a theory that can reduce intentional killings
from murder to manslaughter where the killing is committed ‘without malice but under a
bona fide (but unfounded) belief that it was necessary to prevent great bodily harm.’” Young
41
v. State, 99 So. 3d 159, 165 (Miss. 2012) (quoting Moore v. State, 859 So. 2d 379, 383
(Miss. 2003)). “The apprehension or fear that will justify killing another in self-defense must
appear objectively real to a reasonable person of average prudence.” Hart v. State, 637 So.
2d 1329, 1339 (Miss.1994).
¶75. In Wade v. State, 748 So. 2d 771, 775 (Miss. 1999), an imperfect-self-defense
instruction was properly denied where there was no evidence that the defendant killed the
victim from a fear of death or great bodily harm. Likewise, there was little evidence in this
case showing that Batiste feared death or great bodily harm from Galanis. Batiste and Galanis
were roughly the same height and weight. While Batiste stated that he armed himself against
Galanis, this was insufficient to justify the manslaughter instruction in light of the
overwhelming evidence of premeditation. Simmons, 805 So. 2d at 474. We note that an
imperfect-self-defense instruction is not necessarily warranted every time a self-defense
instruction is granted. Young, 99 So. 3d at 166. There was no evidentiary basis for an
imperfect-self-defense theory, and Batiste was not entitled to a manslaughter instruction.
B. “Fighting words” Instruction
¶76. Batiste requested a “fighting words” instruction, that stated:
Insulting, offensive or abusive words directed to the defendant, accompanied
by conduct indicating a present intention and ability to cause the defendant
bodily harm may be adequate provocation to incite violent and irresistible
passion in a reasonable person.
The trial court denied the instruction. Batiste argues that the evidence that Galanis came into
his room, used physical force against Batiste, and called him a “black bitch” entitled him to
the above instruction. Batiste strenuously argues that “black bitch” is a racial epithet
42
sufficient to provoke heat of passion. We find that, because Batiste was not entitled to a
manslaughter instruction, the “fighting words” instruction was not warranted. But even if
Batiste had been granted a manslaughter instruction, he would not have been entitled to this
instruction, because “[m]ere words, no matter how provocative, are insufficient to reduce an
intentional and unjustifiable homicide from murder to manslaughter.” Anderson, 79 So. 3d
at 506 (quoting Phillips, 794 So. 2d at 1037).
C. Depraved-Heart Murder
¶77. The trial court granted an instruction on deliberate-design murder but refused Batiste’s
proffered instruction on depraved-heart murder. Batiste argues that a depraved-heart murder
instruction should have been granted based on “the same evidentiary facts” as argued in
support of the manslaughter instruction.
¶78. Under Mississippi Code Section 97-3-19(1)(b), depraved-heart murder is
the killing of a human being without the authority of law and by any means or
in any manner . . . when done in the commission of an act eminently dangerous
to others and evincing a depraved heart, regardless of human life, although
without any premeditated design to effect the death of any particular
individual.
Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-19 (1)(b) (Rev. 2006) (emphasis added). As discussed above in Issue
V.A., overwhelming evidence existed that Batiste had acted with premeditation when he
killed Galanis. Therefore, no evidentiary foundation for a depraved-heart murder instruction
existed.
D. Whether the trial court erroneously restricted Batiste from arguing that
the jury could convict him of the lesser offense of murder without first
acquitting him of capital murder.
¶79. Batiste requested and the trial court granted instruction D-38, which stated:
43
I instruct you that, if warranted by the evidence, you may find the
defendant guilty of a crime lesser than the capital murder of Andreas Galanis.
However, it is your duty to accept the law as given to you by the Court, and if
the facts and law warrant a conviction of the crime of capital murder, then it
is your duty to make such a finding uninfluenced by your power to find a
lesser offense. This provision is included to prevent a failure of justice if the
evidence fails to prove the original charge of capital murder but does justify
a verdict for the lesser crime of murder.
At the jury-instruction conference, Batiste’s counsel contended that, based on instruction D-
38, he should be able to argue that the jury could consider murder before acquitting Batiste
of capital murder. The trial court found that would be “contrary to the court’s instructions,
which is that they may convict of capital murder, they may acquit of capital murder, . . . then
they may proceed on to a determination of murder.” The trial court found that the jury must
acquit of capital murder before considering murder, not consider murder first. At the
conclusion of the discussion, Batiste’s counsel stated “I mean you’re – you’re just saying that
the law is going to be acquittal first.” The Court responded, “correct.” Batiste’s counsel
stated “I’m not going to argue that. I’ve always read D-38 to contravene that, but I will not
argue that.”
¶80. On appeal, Batiste contends that the result of the trial court’s ruling was that the jury
would have to unanimously acquit him of capital murder before it could consider the lesser
offense of murder. Our reading of the jury instructions belies this contention. While the jury
was given a unanimity instruction requiring a unanimous verdict, none of the instructions
required the jury to unanimously acquit Batiste of capital murder before considering murder.
Rather, under Batiste’s requested instruction D-38, the jury merely had to acquit Batiste of
capital murder before proceeding to deliberate on his guilt of murder. The burden of proof
44
was not shifted to Batiste. Considering the jury instructions as a whole, the jury was properly
instructed, and the jury instructions created no injustice. See Fulgham, 46 So. 3d at 323.
VI. WHETHER THE JURY-SELECTION PROCESS WAS CONSTITUTIONALLY
INFIRM AND REVERSAL OF BATISTE’S CONVICTION AND DEATH
SENTENCE IS THEREFORE REQUIRED.
A. Batson Challenges
¶81. Batiste, an African-American man, was tried by an all-white jury. He argues that the
State exercised peremptory challenges on two African-American jurors in violation of
Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 106 S. Ct. 1712, 90 L. Ed. 2d 69 (1986). In Batson, the
United States Supreme Court held that racial discrimination through the use of peremptory
challenges is prohibited by the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution.
Batson, 476 U.S. at 79, 106 S. Ct. at 1719. Under Batson and its progeny, the trial court must
adhere to a three-step process for determining whether the State’s use of a peremptory
challenge was discriminatory. Pitchford v. State, 45 So. 3d 216, 224 (Miss. 2010).
First, the party objecting to the peremptory strike of a potential juror must
make a prima facie showing that race was the criterion for the strike. Second,
upon such a showing, the burden shifts to the [other party] to articulate a
race-neutral reason for excluding that particular juror. Finally, after a
race-neutral explanation has been offered . . . the trial court must determine
whether the objecting party has met its burden to prove that there has been
purposeful discrimination in the exercise of the peremptory strike, i.e., that the
reason given was a pretext for discrimination.
Id. (citing Flowers v. State, 947 So. 2d 910, 917 (Miss. 2007)).
¶82. When the defendant makes a prima facie case of discrimination, the prosecutor must
offer a race-neutral reason for the strike. Chamberlin v. State, 989 So. 2d 320, 337 (Miss.
2008). A prosecutor’s reasons for a strike “need not be persuasive, or even plausible; so long
45
as the reasons are not inherently discriminatory, they will be deemed race-neutral.”
Chamberlin, 989 So. 2d at 337 (citing Rice v. Collins, 546 U.S. 333, 338, 126 S. Ct. 969,
163 L. Ed. 2d 824 (2006)). Once the trial court determines the prosecutor has proffered a
race-neutral reason for the strike, the trial court must determine whether the prosecutor was
motivated by discriminatory intent. Id. (citing Purkett v. Elem, 514 U.S. 765, 767-68, 115
S. Ct. 1769, 131 L. Ed. 2d 834 (1995)). Disparate treatment between the challenged juror and
jurors of the opposite race who share the same characteristics given as the basis for a
challenge is an indication of discrimination. Flowers, 947 So. 2d at 917.
¶83. In deciding whether the defendant has made a sufficient showing of discrimination,
the trial court must consider all relevant circumstances. Chamberlin, 989 So. 2d at 337
(citing Batson, 476 U.S. at 96,106 S. Ct. 1712). “This Court gives great deference to a trial
court’s determination under Batson because it is based largely on credibility.” Chamberlin,
989 So. 2d at 336-37 (citing Batson, 476 U.S. at 98, n. 21, 106 S. Ct. 1712; Flowers v. State,
947 So. 2d 910, 917 (Miss. 2007)). We will not overturn the trial court's ruling unless it was
clearly erroneous or against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Hughes v. State, 90
So. 3d 613, 626-27 (Miss. 2012) (citing Pitchford, 45 So. 3d at 226).
1. Kenya Clark
¶84. The State exercised a peremptory challenge on Kenya Clark, an African-American
single mother of two. Because the prosecution had struck all three of the African Americans
on the panel, Batiste made a Batson objection. The State proffered the following race-neutral
reasons for the strike of Clark: (1) she would have to have her mother care for her three
children to serve on the jury; (2) if something happened to Clark’s mother, Clark would have
46
her aunt take care of them; (3) Clark said she was “fifty percent for and fifty percent against”
the death penalty and would not impose the death penalty on a first-time offender; (4) Clark
watched a lot of Lifetime TV, which was a “red flag” for the prosecutor. The trial court ruled
that the prosecutor’s reasons for the strike were race-neutral.
¶85. Batiste argued that the State’s reasons were a pretext for racial discrimination because
Clark stated that her mother definitely would be able to take care of her children. Further, he
argues that two white jurors also had expressed concern about the interference of their
domestic obligations with jury service. Linda Jo Templeton was a caregiver for her elderly
mother and handicapped sister, but the prosecutor did not question her about that issue. And
Adam Baird was supposed to move out of his apartment during the trial, but the prosecutor
did not question him about that issue. Batiste argues that this disparate treatment of Clark and
the two white jurors evinces discriminatory intent. Batiste also argues that another white
juror, Deborah Bruckner, expressed ambiguity about the death penalty and was not
questioned on that subject or challenged by the State. Finally, Batiste argues that the race-
neutral reason that Clark watched Lifetime television was not credible.
¶86. This Court has found that the fact that a juror is single with children is a race-neutral
reason for a strike. Lockett v. State, 517 So. 2d 1346, 1356 n.14 (Miss. 1987) (citing
Townsend v. State, 730 N.W. 2d 24, 26 (Tex. Ct. App. 1987)). We find no indication of
disparate treatment, as the domestic problems expressed by Templeton and Baird did not
involve child care, as did Clark’s. This Court also has found that a juror’s views on the death
penalty are a race-neutral reason for a strike. Pitchford, 45 So. 3d at 228-29. We find that
the trial court’s ruling that there was no Batson violation was not clearly erroneous or against
47
the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
2. Lionel Bibbs
¶87. Batiste challenged the strike of Lionel Bibbs. The prosecutor said he struck Bibbs
because one of his uncles had killed the other, because Bibbs lived near a former Sheriff’s
Department employee who had made disparaging, hostile public remarks about the Sheriff’s
Department, and because the prosecutor suspected Bibbs was related to a man he had
prosecuted for murder. The trial court found the reasons were race-neutral. Batiste argues
these reasons were pretextual. However, he did not argue pretext at trial. Therefore, this issue
is procedurally barred. Pitchford, 45 So. 3d at 227 (stating that “[w]e will not now fault the
trial judge with failing to discern whether the State’s race-neutral reasons were overcome by
rebuttal evidence and argument never presented”).
¶88. Notwithstanding the procedural bar, the trial court did not clearly err by finding that
the prosecutor’s reasons for the strike were race-neutral. One of Bibbs’s relatives had been
murdered by another, the prosecutor thought Bibbs was related to someone he had prosecuted
for murder, and Bibbs lived close to someone who was publicly hostile to law enforcement.
Without waiving the procedural bar, we cannot say that the trial court’s determination that
the reasons were race-neutral were clearly erroneous or against the overwhelming weight of
the evidence.
B. Death-qualification Process: Equal Protection Clause
¶89. Batiste argues that the death-qualification process itself disproportionately impacted
black venire persons and created a prima facie case that the Equal Protection Clause was
violated. The original qualified venire of ninety-five was thirty-percent nonwhite, with
48
twenty-eight African-American members. After voir dire and excusals for cause, the venire
from which the jury was struck consisted of thirty-one persons. Of these, three were African-
American, roughly ten percent. Batiste argues that the twenty-one-percent decrease in
nonwhite venire persons was due to the discriminatory impact of the death-qualification
process, which resulted in the disproportionate exclusion of racial minorities because more
minorities oppose the death penalty.
¶90. The Court rejected Batiste’s exact argument in Pitchford v. State. Pitchford had
argued that, because a higher percentage of blacks than whites opposed the death penalty, the
death-qualification process had resulted in the disproportionate exclusion of blacks from the
venire. Pitchford, 45 So. 3d at 228. We held that “a defendant has no right to a petit jury
composed in whole or in part of persons of his own race.” Id. (quoting Underwood v. State,
708 So. 2d 18, 28-29 (Miss.1998)). “[I]n the context of the right to a trial by a jury of one’s
peers—one’s peers are not determined by one’s race, so this argument has no merit.” Id. We
find this issue to be without merit.
C. Death-qualification Process: Particular Jurors
1. Disqualification Under Witherspoon and Wainwright
¶91. Batiste argues that two jurors were excluded for cause who had conscientious scruples
against the death penalty, but who still were eligible to serve under Witherspoon v. Illinois,
391 U.S. 510, 88 S. Ct. 1770, 20 L. Ed. 2d 776 (1968), and its progeny. “In Witherspoon,
the United States Supreme Court held that ‘a sentence of death cannot be carried out if the
jury that imposed or recommended it was chosen by excluding veniremen for cause simply
because they voiced general objections to the death penalty or expressed conscientious or
49
religious scruples against its infliction.’” Wilcher v. State, 863 So. 2d 776, 813-14 (Miss.
2003) (quoting Witherspoon, 391 U.S. at 522, 88 S. Ct. at 1777)). However, a venire person
can be excluded for cause due to his or her views on capital punishment if “the juror’s views
would ‘prevent or substantially impair the performance of [her] duties as a juror in
accordance with [her] instructions and [her] oath.’” Wilcher, 863 So. 2d at 814 (quoting
Wainwright v. Witt, 469 U.S. 412, 424, 105 S. Ct. 844, 83 L. Ed. 2d 481 (1985)). This Court
gives deference to the trial court’s decision to exclude a juror for cause, and we will not
disturb the trial court’s decision unless there was an abuse of discretion. Moffett v. State, 49
So. 3d 1073, 1094 (Miss. 2010).
¶92. In this case, jury questionnaires were mailed to each prospective juror. The
questionnaires included questions about the death penalty. Each juror was asked whether he
or she strongly agreed, mildly agreed, had no opinion, mildly disagreed, or strongly disagreed
with the death penalty. Each juror was asked if, in spite of his or her level of agreement or
disagreement, he or she could ever personally vote to impose the death penalty, and whether
he or she had been to any gatherings in the last year where the death penalty had been
discussed. At trial, the trial court held general voir dire. Then, each juror was questioned
individually by the court and counsel for both sides on whether the juror’s views on the death
penalty would prevent or substantially impair his or her performance of the duties of a juror.
After the voir dire of each individual juror, the trial court heard arguments on whether that
juror should or should not be excluded for cause, and then rendered a decision.
¶93. Batiste argues that the trial court’s exclusion for cause of prospective jurors Kristen
Armstrong and Mark Lehman was erroneous, because these jurors did not meet the
50
requirements for removal announced in Witherspoon and Wainwright. Armstrong had
indicated on her juror questionairre that she strongly disagreed with the death penalty. In
Armstong’s individual voir dire, the prosecutor explained that the jury would be asked to
weigh the aggravators and mitigators, and if the mitigation did not outweigh the aggravation,
the jury would have to decide what sentence to render. Because Armstrong indicated that,
even after weighing the aggravators and mitigators, she would “start off favoring life,” the
trial court excluded her for cause.
¶94. Lehman’s questionnaire indicated that he mildly disagreed with the death penalty. In
individual voir dire, he stated that he was opposed to the death penalty from a Christian
standpoint, and would prefer that the penalty was not imposed. He stated that, if the jury had
weighed the aggravators and mitigators and it was at the point where the jury had to
determine life or death, he would favor life. The trial court removed him for cause. Both of
these jurors indicated that they automatically would favor life over death. We find that the
trial court was within its discretion in excluding Armstrong and Lehman for cause, because
their views would “prevent or substantially impair the performance of [their] duties as a juror
in accordance with [their] instructions and [their] oath.” Wilcher, 863 So. 2d at 814 (quoting
Wainwright v. Witt, 469 U.S. 412, 424, 105 S. Ct. 844, 83 L. Ed. 2d 481 (1985)).
2. Disqualification Under Morgan
¶95. Batiste also argues that the trial court should have struck four jurors for cause under
Morgan v. Illinois, 504 U.S. 719, 112 S. Ct. 2222, 119 L. Ed. 2d 492 (1992). Morgan
provides that a “juror who will automatically vote for the death penalty in every case will fail
in good faith to consider the evidence of aggravating and mitigating circumstances as the
51
instructions require him to do.” Morgan, 504 U.S. at 729, 112 S. Ct. at 2229. “[B]ased on
the requirement of impartiality embodied in the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, a capital defendant may challenge for cause any prospective juror who
maintains such views. If even one such juror is empaneled and the death sentence is
imposed, the State is disentitled to execute the sentence.” Id. at 729, 112 S. Ct. at 2229-30.
¶96. Batiste argues that the trial court erred by denying his challenges of Carl Cox, Nancy
McGinnis, Robert LaFrance, and Sharon Ingram. Batiste’s argument on this issue consists
solely of the assertion that “the trial court’s ruling on them did not follow the criteria of
Morgan, and was therefore legally erroneous.” We find no error concerning the four
prospective jurors. While Cox initially stated that he believed death was the appropriate
punishment for capital murder, he stated that he would impartially follow the jury
instructions in determining life or death. McGinnis stated she would determine punishment
based on the circumstances and would not favor death over life without parole. LaFrance
stated he would not favor death over life, and Ingram stated she could follow the law and the
instructions. All four jurors indicated that they would not vote automatically for the death
penalty. Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Batiste’s challenges
to these jurors for cause.
VII. WHETHER REVERSAL IS REQUIRED FOR THE ERRONEOUS AND
UNCONSTITUTIONAL ADMISSION OF CERTAIN EVIDENCE AGAINST
BATISTE AT THE CULPABILITY PHASE OF THE TRIAL.
¶97. Batiste makes several arguments concerning the trial court’s admission of evidence
during the culpability phase. This Court reviews the trial court’s decision admitting or
excluding evidence for abuse of discretion. Green v. State, 89 So. 3d 543, 549 (Miss. 2012).
52
We will not reverse unless the ruling resulted in prejudice to the accused. Id.
A. Testimony of Deputy Steven Woodruff
¶98. Over Batiste’s Confrontation Clause objection, the trial court permitted Deputy
Woodruff to testify that, at about 5:00 p.m. on March 6, 2008, Galanis had made a complaint
that money was missing from his account. In Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 124 S.
Ct. 1354, 158 L. Ed. 2d 177 (2004), the United States Supreme Court held that the
Confrontation Clause prohibits testimonial statements by a witness who did not appear at trial
“unless the witness is unavailable to testify, and the defendant had a prior opportunity for
cross-examination.” Id. at 53-54, 124 S. Ct. at 1365. “‘Testimony,’ . . . is typically ‘[a]
solemn declaration or affirmation made for the purpose of establishing or proving some
fact.’” Id. at 68, 124 S. Ct. at 1374 (citation omitted).
¶99. Initially, the State sought to admit Woodruff’s testimony about the substance of his
conversation with Galanis. Batiste made a Confrontation Clause objection to any testimony
by Woodruff concerning the conversation between Galanis and Woodruff. During the
discussion of the issue, the trial court determined that Galanis’s statements to Woodruff
constituted testimonial hearsay and were inadmissible under Crawford. But later, the State
argued that Woodruff’s testimony that Galanis had reported the theft to the sheriff’s
department was admissible to show Batiste’s motive for the crime, because it supported the
inference that Galanis’s action had threatened Batiste. The trial court agreed, finding that the
statement was not hearsay, but was admissible to show motive.
¶100. On appeal, Batiste argues that Woodruff’s statement was testimonial hearsay that was
admitted in violation of the Confrontation Clause. In Crawford, however, the Court reiterated
53
that the Confrontation Clause “does not bar the use of testimonial statements for purposes
other than establishing the truth of the matter asserted.” Id. at 59 n.9 (citing Tennessee v.
Street, 471 U.S. 409, 414, 105 S. Ct. 2078, 2081-82, 85 L. Ed. 2d 425 (1985)). We find that
the trial court’s ruling was correct, because the statement was not admitted to establish the
truth of the matter asserted. Galanis’s statement was not admitted to prove as truth that
money was missing from Galanis’s account, but only to show that Galanis had reported the
theft to the authorities. This tended to show that Batiste had felt threatened, and that he had
a motive for the crime. Therefore, this use of the statement did not offend the Confrontation
Clause, and this issue is without merit.
B. Testimony of the Bank Employees and Galanis’s Mother
¶101. Batiste filed a motion in limine to exclude the testimony of the bank employees about
the statements Galanis had made to them at the bank. He also made a standing objection to
all out-of-court declarations of Galanis. The trial court found that Galanis’s statements to
the bank employees and to his mother were admissible under Mississippi Rule of Evidence
804(b)(5). Rule 804 sets out several hearsay exceptions applicable to statements by an
unavailable witness. M.R.E. 804. Rule 804(b)(5), the residual exception, states:
(b) Hearsay Exceptions. The following are not excluded by the
hearsay rule if the declarant is not available as a witness:
...
(5) Other Exceptions. A statement not specifically covered by
any of the foregoing exceptions but having equivalent
circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness, if the court
determines that (A), the statement is offered as evidence of a
material fact; (B) the statement is more probative on the point
for which it is offered than any other evidence which the
proponent can procure through reasonable efforts; and (C) the
54
general purposes of these rules and the interests of justice will
best be served by admission of the statement into evidence.
However, a statement may not be admitted under this exception
unless the proponent of it makes known to the adverse party
sufficiently in advance of trial or hearing to provide the adverse
party with a fair opportunity to prepare to meet it, his intention
to offer the statement and the particulars of it, including the
name and address of the declarant.
M.R.E. 804(b)(5).
¶102. This Court has identified five criteria that must be met before hearsay may be admitted
under the residual exception in Rule 804(b)(5):
(1) The adverse party must have notice of intended use; (2) The statement must
have circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness; (3) It must be offered as
evidence of a material fact; (4) It must be more probative than other evidence;
and (5) The purpose of the rules and the interests of justice must be best served
by admitting the statement.
Randall v. State, 806 So. 2d 185, 201 (Miss. 2001) (quoting Butler v. State, 702 So. 2d 125,
128 (Miss. 1997)). Each requirement must be met before the hearsay statement is admitted.
Randall, 806 So. 2d at 201.
1. Unavailability/Notice
¶103. Because Galanis was deceased, he was unavailable under Rule 804(a)(4). It was
undisputed that Batiste had notice of the State’s intent to present the hearsay statements of
Galanis through the bank employees. However, Batiste complains that, because Galanis’s
mother was not listed on the State’s witness list, the trial court should have excluded her
testimony about Galanis’s statements. This Court has held that the trial court should
determine whether notice was sufficient. Randall, 806 So. 2d at 204 (quoting Cummins v.
State, 515 So. 2d 869, 873 (Miss. 1987) (overruled on other grounds by Morgan v. State, 703
55
So. 2d 832 (Miss. 1997)). “Great latitude is usually allowed depending on the facts and
circumstances of each case and the context in which the evidence arises.” Id. Here, the trial
court admitted the testimony because its substance had been disclosed to Batiste in discovery.
Thus, although Mrs. Galanis was not on the witness list, the trial court found that Batiste had
knowledge of the substance of her testimony and was not unfairly surprised. We find that the
trial court was within its discretion in finding that Batiste had sufficient notice of Galanis’s
mother’s testimony.
2. Trustworthiness
¶104. For admissibility, the hearsay statement must have circumstantial guarantees of
trustworthiness. Randall, 806 So. 2d at 205; M.R.E. 804(b)(5). Batiste argues Galanis’s
declarations to the bank employees were unreliable because they were made to exonerate
himself for the withdrawals and to have the money restored to his account. He does not
challenge the trustworthiness of Galanis’s mother’s statements.
¶105. The trial court found the following regarding Galanis’s statements to the bank
employees: Galanis lacked any motive to lie, given his genuine surprise about the missing
money; Galanis was mature and his general character was good because there was nothing
to show he had been convicted of crimes of dishonesty; more than one person had heard the
statements, and they were spontaneous; the statements were made close in time; Galanis and
the bank employees had no close connection that would have led the employees to invent
something favorable to Galanis; the risk of the employees’ faulty recollection was remote
because their statements were taken just days after the event; nothing undermined their
credibility; and nothing indicated that suggestive techniques were used to elicit the
56
statements. We find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by finding that Galanis’s
statements to the bank employees had circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness.
3. Probative Value, Materiality and the Interests of Justice
¶106. Batiste makes no argument that Galanis’s statements lacked probative value, were
immaterial, or that their admission did not serve the best interests of justice. Certainly, the
statements were probative and material, because they formed the basis of the dispute between
Batiste and Galanis. We find that the purpose of the rule and the interests of justice were
served by the statements’ admission, and that the trial court’s admission of the statements
was not an abuse of discretion.
¶107. Batiste also argues the statements constituted testimonial hearsay and were
inadmissible under the Confrontation Clause. Crawford indicated that a statement is likely
to be determined testimonial if it was made “with an eye toward” using the statement at trial.
Crawford, 541 U.S. at 56 n.7.
Statements are nontestimonial when made in the course of police interrogation
under circumstances objectively indicating that the primary purpose of the
interrogation is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency.
They are testimonial when the circumstances objectively indicate that there is
no such ongoing emergency, and that the primary purpose of the interrogation
is to establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal
prosecution.
Davis v. Washington, 547 U.S. 813, 822, 126 S. Ct. 2266, 2273-74, 165 L. Ed. 2d 224
(2006). “[W]hen a court must determine whether the Confrontation Clause bars the
admission of a statement at trial, it should determine the ‘primary purpose of the
interrogation’ by objectively evaluating the statements and actions of the parties to the
encounter, in light of the circumstances in which the interrogation occurs.” Michigan v.
57
Bryant, ___ U.S. ___, 131 S. Ct. 1143, 1162, 179 L. Ed. 2d 93 (2011).
¶108. Galanis made the statements to the bank employees for the purpose of resolving the
problem of money being missing from his account. Galanis made the statements to the bank
employees while in the course of his discovering that money was missing and determining
what remedies might be available. Galanis did not make the statements “with an eye toward”
their use at trial. Because Galanis’s statements to Rice and Dailey were not primarily made
for a prosecutorial purpose, they were nontestimonial, and their admission did not violate
Batiste’s Confrontation Clause rights.
C. Exacerbating Effect on Other Errors
¶109. Batiste briefly argues that the erroneous admission of Galanis’s statements to the bank
employees concerning the prior withdrawals from Galanis’s account exacerbated the
prejudice that resulted from the indictment’s failure to specify the items robbed. Presumably,
Batiste’s contention is that there was a danger that the jurors erroneously believed the
elements of robbery were met by Batiste’s theft of money from the account. We have found
that there was no error in the indictment, that the jury was properly instructed on the elements
of robbery, and that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting Galanis’s
statements to the bank employees. Therefore, we find this issue to be without merit.
D. Pretrial Identification Procedures
¶110. Two of the State’s witnesses, Candace Dailey and Hewett Rogers, made in-court
identifications of Batiste. Dailey, a bank employee, identified Batiste as having been present
at the bank with Galanis. Rogers, who worked at the Sherwin-Williams paint store, identified
Batiste as the person who had bought paint and rollers from him on the afternoon of the
58
crime. Prior to trial, Batiste moved to exclude the in-court identifications on the ground that
they had been tainted by unduly suggestive pretrial identification procedures. After a hearing,
the trial court found the that the pretrial identifications were reliable. Batiste argues that this
finding constituted an abuse of discretion, and that the pretrial identification and in-court
identifications were inadmissible. He also argues that the trial court failed to make the
requisite findings on reliability.
¶111. This Court’s “standard of review for trial court decisions regarding pretrial
identification is ‘whether or not substantial credible evidence supports the trial court’s
findings that, considering the totality of the circumstances, in-court identification testimony
was not impermissibly tainted.’” Outerbridge v. State, 947 So. 2d 279, 282 (Miss. 2006)
(quoting Roche v. State, 913 So. 2d 306, 310 (Miss. 2005)). We review a trial court’s
decision admitting or excluding evidence for abuse of discretion. Id. We will reverse the trial
court’s decision admitting or excluding identification testimony only if it is unsupported by
substantial, credible evidence. Id. “An accused who seeks to exclude identification testimony
based upon an alleged due process violation faces a very heavy burden.” Whitlock v. State,
47 So. 3d 668, 673 (Miss. 2010) (quoting York v. State, 413 So. 2d 1372, 1384 (Miss.
1982)).
¶112. A pretrial identification is impermissibly suggestive if the lineup or series of
photographs conspicuously singles out the accused in some manner from the others, either
by appearance, or by statements of the officer conducting the lineup or show-up. York, 413
So. 2d at 1383 (citing Foster v. California, 394 U.S. 440, 89 S. Ct. 1127, 22 L. Ed. 2d 402
(1969); Simmons v. United States, 390 U.S. 377, 88 S. Ct. 967, 19 L. Ed. 2d 1247 (1968)).
59
However, under Neil v. Biggers, 409 U.S. 188, 199, 93 S. Ct. 375, 382, 34 L. Ed. 2d 401
(1972), the central question is “whether under the ‘totality of the circumstances’ the
identification was reliable even though the confrontation procedure was suggestive.” “An
impermissibly suggestive pretrial identification does not preclude in-court identification by
an eyewitness who viewed the suspect at the procedure, unless: (1) from the totality of the
circumstances surrounding it (2) the identification was so impermissibly suggestive as to give
rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.” York, 413 So. 2d at
1383 (citing Stovall v. Denno, 388 U.S. 293, 87 S. Ct. 1967, 18 L. Ed. 2d 1199 (1967);
Simmons v. United States, 390 U.S. 377, 88 S. Ct. 967, 19 L. Ed. 2d 1247 (1968)). The
factors to be considered in determining the likelihood of misidentification are:
(1) the opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the time of the crime,
(2) the witness’[s] degree of attention, (3) the accuracy of the witness’[s] prior
description of the criminal, (4) the level of certainty demonstrated by the
witness at the confrontation, (5) and the length of time between the crime and
the confrontation.
York, 413 So. 2d at 1383 (quoting Neil, 409 U.S. at 199-200, 93 S. Ct. at 382).7
¶113. At the hearing, the officers who had conducted the photo lineups testified Dailey and
Rogers both were shown different photo arrays with six pictures of African-American males,
including Batiste. Batiste moved to exclude the pretrial identifications on the ground that the
photo arrays were unduly suggestive and unreliable. The trial court admitted the pretrial
identifications.
7
Batiste argues that this Court should adopt New Jersey’s new state constitutional
standards for evaluating the admissibility of identification testimony, articulated in State v.
Henderson, 27 A.3d 872 (N.J. 2011). We decline to do so, and will continue to follow the
standards set out by this Court and the United States Supreme Court.
60
¶114. Batiste argues that the trial court did not consider the reliability of the identifications
under the totality of the circumstances, but only whether the pretrial identification procedures
were unduly suggestive. However, it is obvious from the trial court’s ruling that the court
considered the totality of the circumstances surrounding the photo lineups in making the
determination that they were not unduly suggestive, and it considered the identifications to
be reliable. See York, 413 So. 2d at 1383. Therefore, this issue is without merit.
¶115. Batiste complains that the photo array shown to Dailey was impermissibly suggestive
because Dailey had said that Galanis was accompanied to the bank by one Asian person and
one black person, but all the persons in Dailey’s photo array were black. The trial court found
that the photo array was not impermissibly suggestive, noting that the array had been created
using a computer that matched certain characteristics, like height, weight, and skin color. We
find that the inclusion of only African-American persons was proper. Although Dailey had
said that an Asian person and an African-American person had accompanied Galanis to the
bank, the purpose of the lineup was to determine whether Galanis’s African-American
companion had been Batiste. “The purpose of a photo lineup is to provide witnesses a set of
individuals who are similar in physical characteristics so that only someone who was actually
familiar with the accused would be able to identify them.” Outerbridge, 947 So. 2d at 284.
The trial court’s decision that the lineup was not impermissibly suggestive and was reliable
was supported by substantial, credible evidence and was not an abuse of discretion.
¶116. Batiste objected to the Rogers identification because the background of Batiste’s
photo was lighter than the backgrounds of the other images, rendering the lineup
impermissibly suggestive. The trial court overruled the objection, finding that the difference
61
in color did not render the lineup impermissibly suggestive. In general, courts will find a
lineup to be impermissibly suggestive if the defendant is the only one depicted with
distinctive features. Butler v. State, 102 So. 3d 260, 265 (Miss. 2012). But “‘minor
differences’ with the suspects or differences in the photograph backgrounds will not render
a lineup impermissibly suggestive.” Id. In Anderson v. State, the Court of Appeals found that
the use of a different photographic technique and a white background around the suspect’s
photo were minor differences that did not create “a very substantial likelihood of irreparable
misidentification.” Anderson v. State, 724 So. 2d 475, 478 (Miss. Ct. App. 1998) (quoting
York, 413 So. 2d at 1384). As in Anderson, the lighter background of Batiste’s photo was
a minor difference that did not render the lineup impermissibly suggestive.
¶117. But even if the lineup was impermissibly suggestive, applying the five-prong test from
Neil, the identification was not “so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very
substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.” York, 413 So. 2d at 1383 (quoting
Neil, 409 U.S. at 199-200, 93 S. Ct. at 382). Rogers had a good opportunity to view and pay
attention to Batiste as he interacted with Batiste as a customer at Sherwin-Williams. While
there is no evidence regarding Rogers’s prior description of Batiste, the officer testified that
Rogers did not hesitate when identifying Batiste, displaying certainty. No evidence
established the exact length of time between the crime and the identification, but we know
that the identification took place sometime during the year and a half between the crime and
the trial. Considering the totality of the circumstances, the identification was reliable. We
find no error in the trial court’s admission of Rogers’s identification testimony.
D. Batiste’s Pretrial Statements: Miranda Violation
62
¶118. Batiste filed a motion to suppress his two pretrial statements, claiming they were
obtained in violation of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694
(1966). The trial court held a suppression hearing. At the suppression hearing, the officers
who were present at the time of Batiste’s statements testified, with the exception of Archer
Sallis, who was unavailable because he had been deployed to Iraq. Sheriff Dolph Bryan
testified that, immediately after Batiste had been brought to the sheriff’s department, Sallis
brought Batiste to his office and said “Sheriff, he wants to tell you all about it.” Bryan
testified that Batiste had nodded his head in the affirmative. Sallis and Batiste sat down, and
Bryan told Batiste he had to advise him of his rights and make sure he understood them
before he talked to him. Bryan told Batiste he knew Batiste was a smart man, but he was
going to read him his Miranda rights while Batiste read along on a rights form. After the
rights and waiver of rights were read, Batiste assured Bryan he understood his rights, that he
knew his rights, and that he was a criminal-justice major. Batiste signed the rights and waiver
portions of the form, then gave his first statement. Charlie McVey testified that, after Bryan
took Batiste’s statement, Sallis asked him to help him take a video statement of Batiste. After
waiving his rights, Batiste gave the second statement.
¶119. Batiste argued the statements should have been suppressed based on certain comments
Bryan made to Batiste after his arrest, when Batiste was sitting in a patrol car outside the
apartment. Bryan testified that McVey called and told him that a student had been killed and
he had a suspect in custody. When Bryan arrived at the scene, he walked up to a patrol car,
and Batiste was inside. Batiste asked Bryan what was going on. Bryan replied that “he had
killed his roommate, that we were not here playing a game, that he was probably fixing to
63
go to the penitentiary for the rest of his life if he didn’t get the death penalty.” He also told
Batiste “that I had a lot of questions to ask him when I got time to ask them.” Bryan testified
that he said this to Batiste just after 6:00 p.m., and Batiste gave his first statement at 9:35
p.m. Batiste argued that, under Rhode Island v. Innis, 446 U.S. 291,100 S. Ct. 1682, 64 L.
Ed. 2d 297 (1980), and Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U.S. 600, 124 S. Ct. 2601, 159 L. Ed. 2d 643
(2004), the sheriff’s statements had induced his Miranda waiver. The trial court found that,
despite Bryan’s comments, Batiste had knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently waived his
rights prior to giving both statements, and that his statements were freely and voluntarily
given.
¶120. Under the Fifth Amendment, a person who undergoes custodial interrogation must
first be informed of the right to remain silent and the right to counsel. Miranda, 384 U.S. at
467-68, 471, 86 S. Ct. at 1626. “If the individual indicates in any manner, at any time prior
to or during questioning, that he wishes to remain silent, the interrogation must cease.” Id.
at 473-74, 86 S. Ct. at 1627. “If the individual states he wants an attorney, the interrogation
must cease until an attorney is present.” Id. at 474, 86 S. Ct. at 1628.
¶121. Miranda warnings must be given before a suspect is subjected to custodial
interrogation. “Custodial interrogation” means the suspect is both in custody and undergoing
interrogation. “‘[I]nterrogation’ under Miranda refers not only to express questioning, but
also to any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to
arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an
incriminating response from the suspect.” Innis, 446 U.S. at 301, 100 S. Ct. at 1689-90. The
prosecution is prohibited from using statements against the accused obtained in violation of
64
Miranda. Miranda, 384 U.S. at 444, 86 S. Ct. at 1612.
¶122. The trial court must consider the totality of the circumstances to determine whether
a Miranda waiver was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. Scott v. State, 8 So. 3d 855, 861
(Miss. 2008). This Court will reverse the trial court’s admission of a confession “if [an]
incorrect legal principle was applied; if there was no substantial evidence to support a
voluntary, knowing, and intelligent waiver of Miranda rights; and if the denial was a result
of manifest error.” Id. Because the standard of manifest error is high, we will not reverse
unless the trial court’s ruling contravened the substantial weight of the evidence. Id.
¶123. Batiste argues that, before Miranda warnings were administered, Bryan interrogated
him in a manner that posited his guilt before eliciting incriminating statements from him in
violation of Innis. We begin by noting that, according to the trial testimony of McVey, he
had administered a Miranda warning to Batiste at Batiste’s arrest, prior to placing him in the
patrol car. However, the fact that Batiste had been warned was not before the trial court at
the suppression hearing. Therefore, with the assumption that Batiste was unwarned at the
time Bryan spoke to him, we proceed to determine whether Bryan interrogated Batiste in a
manner that elicited the confession Batiste gave three hours later, after having been
administered the Miranda warnings and signing a rights-waiver form.
¶124. The trial court found that Batiste knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily had waived
his Miranda rights before confessing. Bryan testified that he spoke to Batiste only after
Batiste had asked him what was going on. Bryan responded that Batiste had killed his
roommate, that they were not playing a game, that he was about to go to the penitentiary for
life and if not, receive the death penalty, and that he would talk to him when he had time.
65
At that point, the conversation ended. Bryan did not ask Batiste any questions, nor did Batiste
volunteer any information. Approximately three hours later, Batiste confessed to Bryan after
having been administered the Miranda warnings and waiving his rights.
¶125. Batiste argues that, under Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U.S. 600, 124 S. Ct. 2601, 159 L.
Ed. 2d 643 (2004), his statements were tainted by Bryan’s earlier comments. Seibert held that
police may not fail to warn, question the suspect, and obtain a confession, and then
administer Miranda warnings in hopes of having the accused repeat the confession given
prior to the warnings. Id. at 617, 124 S. Ct. at 2613. In Seibert, the Miranda warnings were
given mid-interrogation, after the suspect already had confessed. Id. at 615, 124 S. Ct. at
2612. But here, Batiste said nothing in response to Bryan’s comments. Rather, Batiste gave
his first statement approximately three hours later, after he had been transported to the
hospital and then to the sheriff’s department and administered the Miranda warnings, and
had signed a rights-waiver form. Prior to waiving his rights, Batiste assured Bryan that he
understood his rights; for further emphasis on that point, he stated that he was a criminal-
justice major. We find that the trial court did not manifestly err in finding from the totality
of the circumstances that Batiste’s rights waiver was knowing, voluntary, and intelligent, and
the trial court’s ruling was supported by substantial evidence.
¶126. Batiste also argues that his second, videotaped statement was taken without an explicit
waiver of rights. This interview took place in the commander’s office with McVey and Sallis
present. Before taking the statement, Sallis advised Batiste of his Miranda rights and asked
Batiste if he understood. In response, Batiste nodded. Sallis read his waiver of rights, and
asked if Batiste understood. Batiste nodded. Then, Sallis asked Batiste to sign the rights
66
waiver form, and Batiste complied. McVey testified that Batiste was behaving very
cooperatively.
¶127. Batiste argues that, because Sallis simply asked Batiste to sign the rights-waiver form,
Batiste did not effectively waive his rights. The government must show a Miranda waiver
“was voluntary in the sense that it was the product of a free and deliberate choice.” Berghuis
v. Thompkins,130 S. Ct. 2250, 2260, 176 L. Ed. 2d 1098 (2010) (quoting North Carolina
v. Butler, 441 U.S. 369, 373, 99 S. Ct. 1755, 60 L. Ed. 2d 286 (1979)). A person may waive
his rights without expressly saying so. Butler, 441 U.S. at 373, 99 S. Ct. at 1755. We hold
that the trial court did not manifestly err in finding that Batiste’s affirmative nod and signing
of the rights waiver form constituted an effective waiver of his rights.
E. Seized Evidence
¶128. Batiste filed a motion to suppress evidence that was seized pursuant to the warrants
to search his person, apartment, and vehicle. Justice Court Judge Mills issued these warrants
on March 7, 2008, and March 10, 2008. Pursuant to these warrants, the authorities searched
Batiste’s person on one occasion and his apartment and truck on two occasions. After a
hearing, the trial court denied the motion to suppress. On appeal, Batiste argues that, because
the warrants to search his body and his vehicle were issued without probable cause, the trial
court should have suppressed the evidence seized under the warrants.
¶129. A person’s right of freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures is secured by
the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 3, Section 23 of the
Mississippi Constitution. U.S. Const. amend. IV; Miss. Const. art. 3, § 23. The issuing court
may issue a warrant based only upon probable cause, which is determined from the totality
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of the circumstances. Hughes v. State, 90 So. 3d 613, 628 (Miss. 2012). “The task of the
issuing magistrate is simply to make a practical, common-sense decision whether, given all
the circumstances set forth in the affidavit before him, including the ‘veracity’ and ‘basis of
knowledge’ of persons supplying hearsay information, there is a fair probability that
contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.” Lee v. State, 435 So.
2d 674, 676 (Miss.1983) (quoting Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 238-39, 103 S. Ct. 2317,
2332, 76 L. Ed. 2d 527 (1983)). On review of a challenge to the issuance of a search warrant,
this Court will affirm if there was a substantial basis for the conclusion that probable cause
existed. Hughes, 90 So. 3d at 628.
¶130. At the suppression hearing, it was established that Judge Mills issued the warrants at
the request of Deputy McVey. McVey’s Affidavit for Search Warrant for the apartment and
vehicle contained an Underlying Facts and Circumstances sheet. This sheet described how
McVey had come to the apartment at the behest of Galanis’s mother, that he had met Batiste
and obtained the key to Galanis’s room from the office, that Batiste had hurried to get back
to the apartment, that he had observed blood spots in Galanis’s room, that police had
observed more blood spots on the floor of the common area, and that the truck registered to
Batiste had been backed up to the building with a blanket spread in the back storage area.
¶131. Further, McVey testified that he orally had told Judge Mills that he had placed Batiste
under arrest, that they had found Galanis’s body in a wheelbarrow, and that it was a bloody
crime scene. Deputy McVey subsequently filed a similar Affidavit for Search Warrant and
Underlying Facts and Circumstances sheet to obtain the warrant to search Batiste’s person.
Deputy McVey testified that Judge Mills had the same information before him when he
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issued the warrant to search Batiste’s person as he did for the apartment and vehicle.
¶132. Batiste argues that the facts conveyed by McVey to the trial court did not establish
probable cause because they did not link him, personally, to the crime. Although Batiste
contends that the facts were insufficient to link him to the crime, McVey told Judge Mills
that the police had found a body in Batiste’s apartment, and that Batiste had behaved
suspiciously. He reported that it was a very bloody crime scene, a fact which increased the
likelihood that evidence would be found on the person of the perpetrator. He also provided
facts that raised a reasonable inference that the vehicle registered to Batiste had been readied
for loading the body. Considering the totality of the circumstances, the Underlying Facts and
Circumstances sheet and McVey’s oral testimony raised a fair probability that evidence of
the crime would be found on Batiste’s person and in his vehicle. We find that the trial court
did not err by finding that there was a substantial basis for the finding of probable cause to
issue the search warrants for Batiste’s person and vehicle.
Sentencing Phase
VIII. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN SUA SPONTE ORDERING THAT
THE JURY BE REWARDED FOR ITS VERDICT OF GUILT WITH A SPECIAL
DINNER AND SPECIAL ACTIVITIES DURING THE BREAK BETWEEN THAT
VERDICT AND THE SENTENCING PHASE OF THE TRIAL.
¶133. Batiste complains that, at the conclusion of the guilt phase, the trial court made
comments that had the potential to influence the jury’s sentencing decision. Specifically,
after the verdict of guilt of capital murder, the trial court told the jury:
BY THE COURT: The verdict is unanimous, and it is in the proper
form, and the Court will accept the verdict as the verdict of the jury. It’s been
a long day, and I know it’s been a long week for y’all. What I intend on doing
is you know now that we will go to a second phase. We will start that at 9 in
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the morning. I’m going to – hopefully, they’re going to take you to a good
restaurant tonight.
BY THE SHERIFF: Yes, Your Honor.
BY THE COURT: And if we can find some activity for them all to do
together. They – they may not want to, but if we can take them somewhere
where maybe they can get out of the hotel for a little bit all together, if they
want to do that, I – I don’t have any problem with that.
BY THE SHERIFF: Yes, Your Honor.
¶134. Batiste argues that the trial court’s statements about taking the jurors to a good
restaurant and finding an activity for them outside of the hotel gave an imprimatur of
approval to the jury’s verdict and encouraged them to impose the ultimate punishment.
Because Batiste did not object to these statements, this issue is procedurally barred.
Blanchard v. State, 55 So. 3d 1074, 1077 (Miss. 2011). Further, Batiste cites no relevant
precedent in support of his contention. “The [appellant’s f]ailure to cite relevant authority
obviates the appellate court’s obligation to review such issues.” Simmons v. State, 805 So.
2d 452, 487 (Miss. 2001). Notwithstanding the procedural bar, the issue is without merit,
because the trial court’s comments cannot be construed reasonably either to convey approval
of the jury’s verdict or to direct the jury to impose the ultimate punishment.
IX. WHETHER THE FAILURE TO INSTRUCT THE JURY ON THE INTENT
ELEMENT OF ROBBERY ALSO MADE THE IMPOSITION OF THE DEATH
SENTENCE A VIOLATION OF THE EIGHTH AMENDMENT AND ARTICLE
3, SECTION 28 OF THE MISSISSIPPI CONSTITUTION.
¶135. In the sentencing phase, the jury was instructed that it could consider as an
aggravating circumstance whether the killing was committed during the commission of the
crime of robbery. See Miss. Code Ann. 99-19-101(5)(d) (Rev. 2007) (stating that
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“aggravating circumstances [include] . . . the capital offense was committed while the
defendant was engaged . . . in the commission of . . . any robbery”). The instructions on the
elements of capital murder and robbery used in the guilt phase were sent to the jury in the
sentencing phase. The sentencing jury also was instructed that it could consider the
proceedings from the guilt phase in reaching its decision.
¶136. Batiste repeats his argument from Issue I that the jury instructions did not require the
jury to find that he had the intent to rob. Therefore, he contends, the sentencing jury was
permitted to find the aggravating circumstance of robbery without a finding of intent to rob.
In Issue I, we held that the jury was properly instructed on the elements of robbery, including
on the element of felonious intent. Because the jury was given proper instruction on the
crime of robbery, we find that this issue is without merit.
X. WHETHER, OVER BATISTE’S OBJECTION, THE STATE IMPROPERLY
CROSS-EXAMINED HIS SENTENCING-PHASE WITNESS WITH, AND
OFFERED REBUTTAL TESTIMONY ABOUT, INADMISSIBLE PRIOR BAD
ACTS ALLEGEDLY COMMITTED BY BATISTE.
A. Prior Bad Acts
¶137. In 2004, Batiste pleaded guilty to a felony charge of credit-card fraud in Kemper
County, which was disposed of with a nonadjudication order. At the sentencing hearing,
Batiste offered nine mitigation witnesses, including neighbors, friends, former teachers and
school administrators, his high school basketball coach, and a former employer during high
school. Each witness offered an opinion of Batiste’s good character. Over Batiste’s objection,
the trial court allowed the State to impeach these witnesses by asking if the witness was
aware that Batiste had pleaded guilty to a felony charge of credit-card fraud.
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¶138. Batiste argues that the trial court’s ruling permitted the jury to draw the improper
inference that Batiste had been convicted of credit-card fraud when, in reality, the charge had
been disposed of with a nonadjudication order. Batiste did not object to the impeachment on
the basis that the jury was permitted to draw an improper inference from the credit-card-fraud
charge. Instead, on redirect examination, his counsel repeatedly referred to the charge as a
“conviction,” thus fostering the very inference of which he now complains. Because Batiste
did not specifically object on the basis that the charge had been nonadjudicated, and instead
contributed to the problem of which he now complains, we find that Batiste waived his
argument that the jury was permitted to draw the improper inference that he was convicted.
Spicer v. State, 921 So. 2d 292, 305 (Miss. 2006) (the failure to make a contemporaneous
objection on one or more specific grounds waives all other grounds).
¶139. Notwithstanding the procedural bar, this issue is without merit. Batiste contends that
the danger that the jury drew an improper inference from the impeachment was equivalent
to the prosecution’s use of false testimony to obtain a conviction. “[A] conviction obtained
through use of false evidence, known to be such by representatives of the State, must fall
under the Fourteenth Amendment.” Naupue v. Illinois, 360 U.S. 264, 269, 79 S. Ct. 1173,
1177, 3 L. Ed. 2d 1217 (1959). In Naupue, a State’s witness falsely testified that he had
received no promise of consideration in exchange for his testimony, when in fact he had been
promised consideration. Id. at 268, 79 S. Ct. at 1176. This case is distinguishable from
Naupue because the State did not knowingly introduce false evidence. Rather, the State
impeached Batiste’s witnesses by asking if they were aware that Batiste had pleaded guilty
to credit-card fraud, which was true.
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¶140. Batiste also argues that the trial court erred by finding that the credit-card-fraud
charge rebutted the evidence of his good character that he elicited on direct examination. Our
familiar standard of review of the trial court’s admission or exclusion of evidence is abuse
of discretion. We will affirm unless the trial court abused its discretion and the erroneous
ruling resulted in prejudice to the accused. Shaw v. State, 915 So. 2d 442, 445 (Miss. 2005).
Regarding the character of the accused, Mississippi Rule of Evidence 404(a)(1) allows
“[e]vidence of a pertinent trait of his character offered by an accused, or by the prosecution
to rebut the same.” M.R.E. 401(a)(1).
¶141. While Batiste casts his argument in terms of whether the impeachment was
“pertinent,” in substance, his argument is that the credit-card-fraud charge was not relevant
to rebut the evidence of his good character. In the context of a defendant’s challenge to the
State’s use of prior bad acts as impeachment at sentencing, we have held that Section 99-19-
101(1) “allows any evidence that the court deems relevant to sentence.” Wilson v. State, 21
So. 3d 572, 587 (Miss. 2009) (quoting Taggart v. State, 957 So. 2d 981, 995 (Miss. 2007)).
Further, “the State is allowed to rebut mitigating evidence through cross-examination,
introduction of rebuttal evidence or by argument.” Id. Batiste argues that the credit-card-
fraud charge was too attenuated from the testimony about his general good character to
function as rebuttal. We disagree, because the evidence that Batiste had pleaded guilty to
credit-card fraud, a charge involving dishonesty, impeached the witnesses’ testimony that
Batiste generally displayed good character. The trial court’s ruling allowing the impeachment
was not an abuse of discretion.
¶142. Batiste also complains about the impeachment of his former girlfriend, Vakesha
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Hodges. Hodges testified that Batiste had borrowed money from her and always returned
what he borrowed. Over Batiste’s objection, the State impeached Vakesha by asking if she
knew that Batiste had failed to make timely payments on his vehicle. Also over Batiste’s
objection, the State called the car dealer in rebuttal, who testified that Batiste had failed to
make the payments on his vehicle.
¶143. Batiste argues that the trial court should have sustained his objections to this testimony
on relevance grounds, or because it was more prejudicial than probative under Mississippi
Rule of Evidence 403. The trial court found the evidence was probative and not unduly
prejudicial. We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s ruling. As stated above,
Section 99-19-101(1) “allows any evidence that the court deems relevant to sentence.”
Wilson, 21 So. 3d at 587 (quoting Taggart, 957 So. 2d at 995). The impeachment of Vakesha
and the car dealer’s testimony were relevant to rebut the defense’s assertion that Batiste
always had paid back borrowed money. See M.R.E. 402 (relevant evidence is “evidence
having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the
determination of the action more probable than it would be without the evidence”). Under
Rule 403, “evidence which is deemed admissible . . . may still be excluded if its probative
value is substantially outweighed by the danger of its resultant unfair prejudice.” Jones v.
State, 920 So. 2d 465, 475 (Miss. 2006). “Rule 403 is an ultimate filter through which all
otherwise admissible evidence must pass.” Id. (quoting Hoops v. State, 681 So. 2d 521, 531
(Miss. 1996)). The trial court has broad discretion under Rule 403. Id. We find no abuse of
discretion in the trial court’s ruling that the evidence was more probative than prejudicial.
B. Golden-Rule Violation
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¶144. Hodges’s mother, Sandra Hodges, testified in mitigation. During the prosecutor’s
cross-examination of Hodges, the following exchange occurred:
Q. If somebody, for example, beat Vakesha – that’s your daughter, right?
A. That’s – that’s my daughter.
Q. If somebody beat her to death, would you think that [the death penalty] was
appropriate for them?
Batiste objected to this testimony as improper golden-rule testimony. The trial court
overruled the objection without comment. Then, Sandra testified that it was her belief “that
the Lord would enable me to forgive that person . . . . Does not necessarily mean that I would
think that they should walk the street and be free, but I would hope that I would be able to
forgive them to the point where I could say, you know, life in prison or whatever.” Sandra
further stated “I would hope that I would not be to the point where I felt like they needed to
die.”
¶145. “Golden rule” arguments, which ask the jury to put themselves in the place of one of
the parties, are prohibited. Chisholm v. State, 529 So. 2d 635, 639-40 (Miss. 1988). The
Court has stated:
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. Therefore, it is improper to
permit an attorney to tell the jury to put themselves in the shoes of one of the
parties or to apply the golden rule. Attorneys should not tell a jury, in effect,
that the law authorizes it to depart from neutrality and to make its
determination from the point of view of bias or personal interest.
Id. (quoting Danner v. Mid-State Paving Co., 252 Miss. 776, 786, 173 So. 2d 608 (1965)).
This Court has found error when, in closing arguments, the prosecutor has asked the jury to
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put itself in the place of a parent of a child victim of capital murder. Wells v. State, 698 So.
2d 497, 507 (Miss. 1997). However, because the improper argument was “sufficiently
insignificant in the overall context of the case,” the Court found the error was harmless.
¶146. This case does not involve a claim of improper argument, but rather a claim of
improper questioning by the prosecution. In Pitchford v. State, 45 So. 3d 216, 236 (Miss.
2010), this Court found that a question by the prosecution was “an improper attempt to incite
the jurors’ emotions and anger.” Here, the prosecutor asked that Sandra put herself in the
place of a grieving parent of a capital-murder victim for the purposes of giving an opinion
on the appropriate punishment. While the prosecutor’s question to Sandra did not tell the jury
to put itself in the shoes of the victim’s mother, the question plainly invited the jury to ponder
the question for itself. Certainly, by attempting to elicit golden-rule-type testimony from
Sandra, the prosecutor improperly attempted to “incite the jurors’ emotions and anger.” See
id. The trial court should have sustained the objection. Nonetheless, we find that no
reversible error resulted. “This Court will deem harmless an error where ‘the same result
would have been reached had [it] not existed.’” Id. at 235 (quoting Tate v. State, 912 So. 2d
919, 926 (Miss. 2005)). Sandra’s testimony that she would aspire to forgive and favor a life
sentence was favorable to Batiste. We find that the same result would have been reached
without Sandra’s testimony and that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
XI. WHETHER THE VICTIM-IMPACT TESTIMONY PRESENTED VIOLATED THE
EIGHTH AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS AND SHOULD NOT HAVE
BEEN ADMITTED.
¶147. Batiste challenges the introduction at the sentencing phase, over Batiste’s objection,
of victim-impact testimony of Galanis’s mother, Katerina Galanis. “Victim impact statements
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are those which describe the victim’s personal characteristics, the emotional effect of the
crimes on the victim’s family, and the family’s opinions of the crimes and the defendant.”
Edwards v. State, 737 So. 2d 275, 291 (Miss. 1999). The United States Supreme Court has
held that there is no per se Eighth Amendment bar to victim-impact testimony. Payne v.
Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 827, 111 S. Ct. 2597, 2609, 115 L. Ed. 2d 720 (Miss. 1991). This
testimony is admissible at the sentencing phase, but not in the culpability phase. Havard v.
State, 928 So. 2d 771, 792 (Miss. 2006). We will allow relevant victim-impact testimony in
narrow circumstances as is constitutionally permissible. Id. When the evidence is proper,
necessary to a development of the case and the true characteristics of the victim, and could
not incite the jury, the testimony is admissible. Id. (quoting Jenkins v. State, 607 So. 2d
1171, 1183 (Miss. 1992)). Batiste argues that this Court should bar victim-impact testimony
in anticipation that the United States Supreme Court will abrogate Payne. We decline to
disregard the United States Supreme Court’s pronouncement in Payne, and will continue to
adhere to the standard enunciated above.
¶148. Katerina testified about her relationship with her son, and the impact his death has had
on the family. Katerina testified that Galanis had been the protector of the family, and that,
after his death, her daughter became involved with a man who had raped her, broken into
their home, and stolen items. “The use of victim impact statements that have some probative
value, measured against the evidence as a whole, and that are not so inflammatory as to
prejudice the defendant have been affirmed by this Court.” Swindle v. State, 881 So. 2d 174,
177 (Miss. 2004). “Impermissible testimony must be unduly prejudicial and render the trial
fundamentally unfair.” Havard, 928 So. 2d at 792 (citing U.S. v. Bernard, 299 F.3d 467,
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480-81 (5th Cir. 2002)). Katerina’s revelation that her daughter had been raped was one
fragment of her description of the adverse impact of Galanis’s loss on her and her family. In
the larger context of the evidence as a whole, it had some probative value. Further, the jury
could not reasonably have inferred from Katerina’s testimony that Galanis’s death had
caused the rape of his sister by a third party. We cannot say that Katerina’s victim-impact
testimony was so inflammatory as to have prejudiced Batiste or to have rendered his trial
fundamentally unfair.
XII. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN REFUSING THE DEFENDANT’S
PROPOSED PENALTY-PHASE INSTRUCTIONS AND RELYING INSTEAD ON
A SINGLE OMNIBUS INSTRUCTION SUBMITTED TO IT BY THE STATE
THAT WAS DEFICIENT WITHOUT THE REFUSED INSTRUCTIONS.
¶149. Batiste argues that the trial court erroneously refused several of his penalty-phase
instructions and erroneously granted one of the State’s penalty-phase instructions. As stated
previously, on a challenge to the trial court’s grant or denial of a requested jury instruction,
we will affirm if the jury instructions, read as a whole, fairly announce the case and create
no injustice. Fulgham, 46 So. 3d at 323.
A. Instruction DA-4
¶150. Batiste proffered Instruction DA-4, which instructed the jury that the death penalty
is a unique punishment that is final and irrevocable, and that the jury must render a decision
free from anger and prejudice. The trial court refused this instruction based on Thorson v.
State, 895 So. 2d 85, 109 (Miss. 2004). In Thorson, the Court ruled that a death-eligible
defendant is not entitled to a jury instruction that, in pertinent part, was virtually identical to
that requested by Batiste. The instruction requested by Thorson stated that “The death
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penalty is a unique punishment. It is final and irrevocable. You must render a decision based
on the evidence free from passion and prejudice.” Id. at 109-110.
¶151. The Court in Thorson found that the precedent cited by Thorson was not relevant to
his claim of entitlement to the instruction. Id. at 110 (citing Woodson v. North Carolina, 428
U.S. 280, 303-04, 96 S. Ct. 2978, 2991, 49 L. Ed. 2d 944 (1976) (“[D]eath is a punishment
different from all other sanctions in kind rather than degree.”); Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S.
153, 187, 96 S. Ct. 2909, 2931, 49 L. Ed. 2d 859 (1976) (“[D]eath as a punishment is unique
in its severity and irrevocability.”); Flores v. Johnson, 210 F.3d 456, 459 (5th Cir. 2000)
(“Death is the most final, and most severe, of punishments.”)). Because Thorson had cited
no relevant authority, his argument was procedurally barred. Id. Batiste cites the same
irrelevant precedent as the defendant in Thorson. Therefore, based on Thorson, this issue
is procedurally barred.
¶152. Notwithstanding the procedural bar, the issue is without merit. The jury was instructed
properly by the trial court to “objectively consider the detailed circumstances of the crime”
and the defendant’s character. The jury was instructed to “consider and weigh any
aggravating and mitigating circumstances” consistent with the requirements of Mississippi
Code Section 99-19-101. The jury was instructed properly and completely, and Batiste was
not entitled to instruct the jury further that its decision was to be free from anger and
prejudice. See Thorson, 895 So. 2d at 110.
B. Instruction DA-45
¶153. Batiste proffered an instruction that explained the permanence of a life-without-parole
sentence. The trial court denied the instruction. On appeal, Batiste cites no authority for the
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proposition that such an instruction is required. Therefore, this issue is procedurally barred.
Id. Notwithstanding the procedural bar, the issue is without merit. This Court specifically has
held that, while the jury must be informed of the sentencing options of death or life without
parole, no instruction clarifying what life without parole means is necessary. Gillett, 56 So.
3d at 518 (citing Flowers v. State, 842 So. 2d 531, 556-57 (Miss. 2003)). The jury was
informed properly of the sentencing options in this case, and Batiste was not entitled to an
explanatory instruction on life without parole.
C. Instructions SSP-4A and DA-30
¶154. The trial court granted the State’s instruction SSP-4A, an omnibus instruction that
instructed the jury on weighing the mitigating circumstances versus the aggravating
circumstances in accordance with Mississippi Code Section 99-19-101. That instruction
stated, inter alia, that the death penalty could be imposed if the jury unanimously found “that
the mitigating circumstances do not outweigh the aggravating circumstances.” Batiste argues
this language was improper because it allowed the imposition of the death penalty even if the
jurors were at equipoise, because, if the jurors were at equipoise, then the mitigating
circumstances would not outweigh the aggravating circumstances. Essentially, Batiste argues
that a “tie” cannot go to death.
¶155. We begin by finding that the jury instruction at issue did not instruct the jury that a
“tie” must go to death. To the extent that the jury instruction permitted a “tie” to go to death,
the United States Supreme Court resolved the issue in Kansas v. Marsh, 548 U.S. 163, 173,
126 S. Ct. 2516, 2524, 165 L. Ed. 2d 429 (2006). Like Batiste, Marsh argued that the death
penalty could not constitutionally be imposed if the jurors were at equipoise. Id. at 171, 126
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S. Ct. at 2523. The Court rejected that argument, holding that “Kansas’ death penalty statute,
consistent with the Constitution, may direct imposition of the death penalty when the State
has proved beyond a reasonable doubt that mitigators do not outweigh aggravators, including
where the aggravating circumstances and mitigating circumstances are in equipoise.” Id. at
173, 126 S. Ct. 2524. Batiste argues that Marsh is distinguishable because its holding rested
on the fact that a mercy instruction was given, and no mercy instruction was given in
Batiste’s case. Batiste argues that the trial court should have granted his proffered mercy
instruction.
¶156. Contrary to Batiste’s contention, the holding in Marsh did not rest on the grant of a
mercy instruction, but on “the general principles set forth in our death penalty jurisprudence
[that] lead us to conclude that the Kansas capital sentencing system is constitutionally
permissible.” Id. at 173, 126 S. Ct. at 2525. Marsh did not determine that a mercy instruction
is required, but held that “the States enjoy a constitutionally permissible range of discretion
in imposing the death penalty.” Chamberlin v. State, 989 So. 2d 320, 342 (Miss. 2008)
(quoting Marsh, 126 S. Ct. at 2525). Marsh stands for the proposition that “‘the States are
free to determine the manner in which a jury may consider mitigating evidence,’ i.e., whether
the evidence should be viewed through the lens of mercy.” Chamberlin v. State, 989 So. 2d
320, 342 (Miss. 2008) (quoting Marsh, 126 S. Ct. at 2525).
¶157. Further, “this Court has repeatedly held that ‘capital defendants are not entitled to a
mercy instruction.’” Id. (quoting Jordan v. State, 728 So. 2d 1088, 1099 (Miss. 1998)). This
is because such an instruction encourages a jury verdict based on emotion, whim, and
caprice. Id. (quoting Nixon v. State, 533 So. 2d 1078, 1100 (Miss. 1987) (overruled on other
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grounds by Wharton v. State, 734 So. 2d 985 (Miss. 1998)). We find that the trial court
committed no error in granting the State’s omnibus instruction and denying Batiste’s
proffered mercy instruction.
D. Various Instructions
¶158. Batiste argues that his constitutional rights were violated by the trial court’s denial of
four jury instructions on the presumption of life. This Court has held that a defendant is not
entitled to a presumption-of-life instruction. “We have repeatedly said that we reject the
‘proposition that a defendant should go into the sentencing phase with a presumption that life
is the appropriate punishment.” Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 514-15 (quoting Brown v. State, 890 So.
2d 901, 920 (Miss. 2004)). The trial court properly denied the instruction.
¶159. Batiste also complains that the trial court erroneously denied five instructions that told
the jury how to evaluate the aggravation evidence, nine instructions that advised the jury how
to conduct weighing and sentencing, and ten instructions that more specifically defined
mitigation and explained how mitigation evidence should be evaluated. The trial court found
the mitigation instructions to be duplicative and repetitious in light of the catchall mitigation
instruction in the State’s omnibus sentencing instruction, and denied the other instructions
as unnecessary because the jury had been instructed properly on aggravating circumstances
and the weighing process.
¶160. Batiste argues that the denial of these instructions violated his Eighth Amendment
rights under Abdul-Kabir v. Quarterman, 550 U.S. 233, 264, 127 S. Ct. 1654, 1675, 167 L.
Ed. 2d 585 (2007), and Smith v. Texas, 550 U.S. 297, 127 S. Ct. 1686, 167 L. Ed. 2d 632
(2007). Abdul-Kabir held that “sentencing juries must be able to give meaningful
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consideration and effect to all mitigating evidence that might provide a basis for refusing to
impose the death penalty on a particular individual.” Abdul-Kabir, 550 U.S. at 246, 264 S.
Ct. at 1664. Under Smith, if there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury believed it was not
permitted to consider some mitigating evidence, the defendant has demonstrated error. Smith,
550 U.S. at 315-16, 127 S. Ct. at 1698.
¶161. The jury was instructed properly on aggravating circumstances, mitigating
circumstances, and the weighing process by the omnibus instruction, SSP-4A. Batiste argues
that this instruction did not permit the jury to give meaningful consideration to all mitigating
evidence. The jury was instructed on mitigation with a catchall instruction that stated:
[Y]ou must proceed to weigh against the aggravating circumstances you find
to exist any of the following mitigation circumstances which you find to exist:
a. Any circumstances you deem mitigating;
b. Any circumstances or combination of circumstances
surrounding the offense which reasonably mitigates against the
imposition of the death penalty;
c. Any circumstance or combination of circumstances
surrounding the Defendant’s life and character which reasonably
mitigates against the imposition of the death penalty.
¶162. We agree with the trial court that the omnibus instruction was a correct statement of
the law regarding mitigation, and that no further instruction was required. This Court has
approved of the use of catchall mitigation instructions. “[T]he use of the catch-all instruction
eliminates the possibility ‘that the jury was unconstitutionally foreclosed from considering
all mitigating circumstances.’” Gillett, 56 So. 2d at 512 (quoting Manning v. State, 735 So.
2d 323, 352 (Miss. 1999)). Further instruction on nonstatutory circumstances is unnecessary,
83
provided a catch-all instruction is given that allows the jury to consider any factors it deems
mitigating. Id. at 511. We further find that the requirements of the Eighth Amendment were
met in this case because the jury was instructed in manner that permitted it to “give
meaningful effect or a ‘reasoned moral response’ to a defendant's mitigating evidence.”
Abdul-Kabir, 550 U.S. at 264, 127 S. Ct. at 1675. There was no liklihood that the jury failed
to consider some of the mitigating evidence. Smith, 550 U.S. at 315-16, 127 S. Ct. at 1698.
E. Directed Verdict
¶163. During the jury’s deliberations, Batiste moved for a directed verdict based on
Mississippi Code Section 99-19-103. Mississippi Code Section 99-19-103 states in part: “If
the jury cannot, within a reasonable time, agree as to punishment, the judge shall dismiss the
jury and impose a sentence of imprisonment for life.” Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-103 (Rev.
2007). Batiste sought a directed verdict on two occasions, after the jury had been deliberating
for two hours, and after they had been deliberating for three hours and still had not reached
a verdict. The trial court denied the motions.
¶164. Batiste claims that the trial court erred by denying the motions. However, the
determination of what is a reasonable time for deliberation is within the trial judge's
discretion. Id. This Court previously has held that a four-hour-and-forty-minute deliberative
period is not an unreasonable time for deliberation on punishment. Smith v. State, 729 So.
2d 1191, 1221 (Miss. 1998). Therefore, we find that the trial court was within its discretion
in denying Batiste’s motions for a directed verdict.
XIII. WHETHER ALL OF THE AGGRAVATING CIRCUMSTANCES ON WHICH THE
JURY WAS INSTRUCTED WERE EITHER LEGALLY OR FACTUALLY
UNSUPPORTED, AND BATISTE’S DEATH SENTENCE THEREFORE
84
INVALID.
¶165. Over Batiste’s objections, the trial court instructed the jury on the following three
aggravating circumstances, which the jury found: (1) the capital murder was committed
during the commission of the crime of robbery; (2) the capital murder was committed for the
purpose of avoiding arrest; and (3) the capital murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or
cruel. Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-101(5) (Rev. 2007). Batiste argues that each aggravating
circumstance was legally or factually unsupported. We hold that the evidence supported the
jury’s finding of each statutory aggravating circumstance. Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-
105(3)(b) (Rev. 2007).
A. Robbery
¶166. Citing Ring v. Arizona, 536 U.S. 584, 122 S. Ct. 2428, 153 L. Ed. 2d 556 (2002),
Batiste argues that, because the fact that the killing occurred in the course of a robbery was
used to capitalize the offense, it could not be used to aggravate the offense. But we have held
“that the alleged felony underlying the capital-murder conviction may properly be used as
an aggravator . . . .” Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 510 (quoting Ross v. State, 954 So. 2d 968, 1014
(Miss. 2007)). “The United States Supreme Court has held that use of an underlying felony
as an aggravator is not a constitutional error.” Moffett v. State, 49 So. 3d 1073, 1116 (Miss.
2010) (citing Tuilaepa v. California, 512 U.S. 967, 971-72, 114 S. Ct. 2630, 2634-35, 129
L. Ed. 2d 750 (1994); Lowenfield v. Phelps, 484 U.S. 231, 233, 108 S. Ct. 546, 548, 98 L.
Ed. 2d 568 (1988)). There was no impediment to the use of the robbery to aggravate the
offense. This issue is without merit.
B. “For the purpose of avoiding arrest”
85
¶167. The jury found the aggravating circumstance that “[t]he capital offense was committed
for the purpose of avoiding or preventing a lawful arrest or effecting an escape from
custody.” Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-101(5)(e) (Rev. 2007). Batiste argues that insufficient
evidence supported this aggravating circumstance. We have held that “[i]f there is evidence
from which it may be reasonably inferred that a substantial reason for the killing was to
conceal the identity of the killer or killers or to ‘cover their tracks' so as to avoid
apprehension and eventual arrest by authorities, then it is proper for the court to allow the
jury to consider this aggravating circumstance.” Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 505-06 (quoting
Leatherwood v. State, 435 So. 2d 645, 651 (Miss. 1983)).
¶168. Evidence was before the jury that supported a reasonable inference that Batiste had
killed Galanis to avoid arrest or apprehension for his theft of money from Galanis’s bank
account. But Batiste argues that the avoiding-arrest aggravating circumstance cannot apply
if the defendant killed to avoid arrest for a crime other than the underlying felony. He argues
that, because there was little evidence that Batiste had killed to avoid arrest for the
underlying felony of robbery, there was no evidence to support this aggravating
circumstance.
¶169. We have never limited the aggravating circumstance that the crime was committed
for the purposes of avoiding arrest to situations where the defendant killed to avoid arrest for
the underlying felony. Other courts have determined that this aggravator applies to murders
committed to avoid arrest for crimes other than the underlying felony. In State v. Melson,
638 S.W. 2d 342, 367 (Tenn. 1982), the Tennessee Supreme Court found that this aggravator
was present where a victim was bludgeoned to death after she had threatened to expose the
86
defendant’s earlier theft of gasoline. Because there was sufficient evidence that Batiste killed
Galanis to avoid arrest or apprehension for his prior theft of money, we find that the evidence
was sufficient to support the jury’s finding of this aggravating circumstance.
C. Heinous, Atrocious, or Cruel
¶170. The trial court instructed the jury that the jury could consider the aggravating
circumstance that “the capital offense was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel.” Miss.
Code Ann. § 99-19-101(5)(h) (Rev. 2007). The trial court also gave a limiting instruction
defining what the jury could consider in reaching its findings on the HAC aggravating
circumstance. This instruction stated that “an especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel Murder
is one accompanied by such additional acts as to set the homicide apart from other Murders;
a conscienceless or pitiless crime which is unnecessarily torturous to the victim.”
¶171. Batiste argues that the limiting instruction was unconstitutionally vague and self-
referential, and did not properly limit the aggravator in violation of the Eighth Amendment.
In King v. State, 960 So. 2d 413, 440 (Miss. 2007), this Court held that, at a minimum, a
HAC instruction must define a “heinous, atrocious, or cruel” offense as “a conscienceless or
pitiless crime which is unnecessarily torturous to the victim.” We noted that, in Bell v. Cone,
543 U.S. 447, 125 S. Ct. 847, 160 L. Ed. 2d 881, 893 (2005), the United States Supreme
Court held that “this narrowing construction was not unconstitutionally vague.” Id. (citing
Bell, 543 U.S. at 458, 125 S. Ct. at 854-55). We find that the limiting instruction was a
proper statement of the law.
¶172. Batiste also argues that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s finding that
the killing was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel. Evidence showed that Batiste brutally
87
beat Galanis to death with a tire iron and a rim adaptor. Dr. Hayne testified that Galanis had
suffered thirty-six separate injuries to the head, including a three-inch gash to the top of the
head that caused severe injury to the brain. He testified that congestion in Galanis’s organs
showed that he was alive after the initial blows were struck, and he had injuries to his hands
consistent with defensive posturing. Batiste indicated in his statement that he had left Galanis
to die. We have held that “‘[t]he number of wounds, the number of lethal weapons used to
inflict these wounds, and the fact that death was not immediate, but prolonged’ may all be
considered as evidence supporting a jury's finding of the HAC aggravator.” King, 960 So.
2d at 441 (quoting Manning v. State, 735 So. 2d 323, 349 (Miss. 1999)). We find that
sufficient evidence supported the jury’s finding of this aggravating circumstance.
D. Entitlement to New Sentencing Proceeding
¶173. Batiste argues that, if this Court finds one of the aggravating circumstances to be
invalid, he is entitled to a new sentencing hearing. Because this Court has not invalidated any
of the aggravating circumstances, this argument is moot.
XIV. WHETHER THE DEATH SENTENCE IN THIS CASE MUST BE VACATED
BECAUSE IT WAS IMPOSED IN VIOLATION OF THE CONSTITUTION OF
THE UNITED STATES.
A. Indictment
¶174. Batiste argues that Ring v. Arizona, 536 U.S. 584, 122 S. Ct. 2428, 153 L. Ed. 2d 556
(2002), and Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 120 S. Ct. 466, 147 L. Ed. 2d 435 (2000),
required that his indictment have set forth the aggravating circumstances. He argues that,
because the indictment failed to set forth the aggravating circumstances, it did not set forth
all of the elements necessary to impose the death penalty in violation of his right to due
88
process under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments and his right to notice and a jury trial
under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. While Batiste did not raise this argument in the
trial court, challenges to the indictment may be raised for the first time on appeal. Spicer, 921
So. 2d at 319.
¶175. Apprendi states that “under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment and the
notice and jury trial guarantees of the Sixth Amendment, any fact (other than prior
conviction) that increases the maximum penalty for a crime must be charged in an
indictment, submitted to a jury, and proven beyond a reasonable doubt.” Apprendi, 530 U.S
at 476, 120 S. Ct. at 2355. Ring addressed Arizona’s death-penalty sentencing scheme, which
had allowed the trial judge, sitting alone, to find an aggravating circumstance. Ring, 536 U.S.
at 592-93, 122 S. Ct. at 2434-35. The Court held that, because Arizona’s aggravating factors
operated as “‘the functional equivalent of an element of a greater offense,’ the Sixth
Amendment requires that they be found by a jury.” Id. at 609, 122 S. Ct. at 2443 (quoting
Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 494 n.19, 120 S. Ct. 2348).
¶176. In Berry, we determined that Apprendi and Ring do not invalidate Mississippi’s
capital-murder sentencing scheme. Berry v. State, 882 So. 2d 157, 172 (Miss. 2004).
Apprendi’s statement that any fact that increases the maximum penalty must be charged in
an indictment relates to the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial, not to requirements for an
indictment. Havard v. State, 928 So. 2d 771, 801 (Miss. 2006). Neither Apprendi nor Ring
addressed state indictments. See Berry v. State, 882 So. 2d at 170. We have held that “these
cases . . . address issues wholly distinct from our law, and do not address indictments at all.”
Brown v. State, 921 So. 2d 901, 918 (Miss. 2004) (citing Stevens v. State, 867 So. 2d 219
89
(Miss. 2003)). Batiste argues that Apprendi and Ring should apply to Mississippi’s capital-
sentencing scheme after Kansas v. Marsh, 548 U.S. 163, 126 S. Ct. 2516, 165 L. Ed. 2d 429
(2006). Because Kansas did not address the requirements for indictments, it does not alter
our analysis of this issue. Accordingly, this issue is without merit.
B. Enmund Factors
¶177. Enmund v. Florida, 458 U.S. 782, 102 S. Ct. 3368, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1140 (1982), and
Tison v. Arizona, 481 U.S. 137, 107 S. Ct. 1676, 95 L. Ed. 2d 127 (1987), require that, to be
sentenced to death, a person convicted of capital murder actually must have killed, attempted
to kill, intended to kill, or intended that lethal force be used in a felony. Batiste challenges
the constitutionality of Mississippi Code Section 99-19-101(7)(d). Section 99-19-101(7)
states that:
In order to return and impose a sentence of death the jury must make a written
finding of one or more of the following:
(a) The defendant actually killed;
(b) The defendant attempted to kill;
(c) The defendant intended that a killing take place;
(d) The defendant contemplated that lethal force would be employed.
Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-101(7) (Rev. 2007).
¶178. Batiste argues that Section 99-19-101(7)(d) is unconstitutional because it allows the
jury to impose a sentence of death if “the defendant contemplated that lethal force would be
employed.” He argues that the statute unconstitutionally allows the jury to impose a death
sentence without a finding of the intent required by Enmund and Tison. This Court has
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determined that Section 99-19-101(7)(d) is constitutional. Knox v. State, 901 So. 2d 1257,
1268 (Miss. 2005). Further, the jury found that all four factors were present in this case.
C. Constitutionality of Capital-Punishment Scheme
¶179. Mississippi Code Section 99-19-105(3)(c) provides that this Court shall determine
whether the death sentence is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar
cases, considering the defendant and the crime. Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-105(3)(c) (Rev.
2007). Batiste argues that Section 99-19-105 is unconstitutional on its face because it fails
to provide for adequate or meaningful appellate review in violation of the Sixth, Eighth, and
Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and corresponding sections of the
Mississippi Constitution. Specifically, Batiste argues the statute allows the arbitrary and
capricious imposition of the death penalty because it does not provide for consideration of
cases where the death penalty was not imposed.
¶180. This argument was considered and rejected in Lester v. State, 692 So. 2d 755, 802-03
(Miss. 1997) (overruled on other grounds by Weatherspoon v. State, 732 So. 2d 158 (Miss.
1999)). Like Batiste, Lester argued that all cases where the death penalty was not imposed
should be considered. Id. We found that “the current guidelines are sufficiently specific, and
we find no reason to undertake the overwhelming task of considering all death-eligible cases
in our review.” Id. We adhere to our decision in Lester and find this issue entitles Batiste to
no relief.
¶181. Batiste also argues that Mississippi’s death-penalty scheme is unconstitutional because
it has been applied in a discriminatory and irrational manner in violation of the Eighth
Amendment, due process, and equal protection. We note that Batiste admits that the United
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States Supreme Court has not held that racial and gender disproportion, without more, is
sufficient to violate due process and equal protection. Batiste also argues that the death-
penalty statutes are unconstitutionally overbroad and vague.8 He further argues that the
death-penalty scheme is unconstitutional because it does not allow the death penalty in cases
of simple murder, no matter how premeditated or atrocious. We find that Batiste is entitled
to no relief. This Court has held that “the death penalty in Mississippi does not violate the
U.S. Constitution.” Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 525.
D. Lethal-Injection Protocol
¶182. Batiste claims Mississippi’s lethal-injection protocol violates Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S.
35, 128 S. Ct. 1520, 170 L. Ed. 2d 420 (2008), and constitutes cruel and unusual punishment.
Because Batiste failed to challenge the method of execution at trial, this issue is procedurally
barred. Chamberlin v. State, 55 So. 3d 1046, 1056 (Miss. 2010). Notwithstanding the
procedural bar, this issue is without merit. This Court “has held unequivocally that
Mississippi’s method of lethal injection does not violate the Eighth Amendment.” Id. (citing
Bennett v. State, 990 So. 2d 155, 161 (Miss. 2008)). In Chamberlin, we stated:
If differences exist between Mississippi’s execution protocols and those used
in Kentucky, then, the inquiry is whether Mississippi's lethal-injection protocol
meets Constitutional muster in light of this recent Supreme Court decision.
The Fifth Circuit, when considering inmate Dale Leo Bishop’s Eighth-
Amendment challenge to Mississippi’s lethal-injection procedures, recently
announced that “Mississippi’s lethal injection protocol appears to be
substantially similar to Kentucky’s protocol that was examined in Baze.” We
agree with the Fifth Circuit’s analysis, and hold that Bennett’s Eighth
8
In his overbreadth/vagueness argument, Batiste again attacks the adequacy of the
trial court’s limiting instruction on the heinous, atrocious, or cruel aggravator. Because we
have found that the instruction is proper, we do not revisit this argument.
92
Amendment challenge to the lethal injection protocol in Mississippi is without
merit.
Chamberlin, 55 So. 3d at 1056 (quoting Bennett, 990 So. 2d at 161) (citations omitted).
XV. W H ETH ER TH E D EA TH SEN TEN C E IN TH IS M A TTER IS
CONSTITUTIONALLY AND STATUTORILY DISPROPORTIONATE.
¶183. Batiste argues that the sentence of death is disproportionate to the crime. Mississippi
Code Section 99-19-105(3)(c) requires this Court to determine “[w]hether the sentence of
death is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering
both the crime and the defendant[.]” Miss. Code Ann. § 99-19-105(3)(c) (Rev. 2007). After
reviewing the record in this case and the death-penalty cases listed in the attached appendix,
we find that Batiste’s death sentence was proportionate to his crime. On numerous occasions,
this Court “has upheld the death penalty in cases involving capital murders committed during
the commission of a robbery.” Gillett v. State, 56 So. 3d 469, 524 (Miss. 2010); see Fulgham
v. State, 46 So. 3d 315, 323 (Miss. 2010); Goff v. State, 14 So. 2d 625, 650 (Miss. 2009);
Chamberlin v. State, 989 So. 2d 320, 345 (Miss. 2008); Doss v. State, 709 So. 2d 369, 401
(Miss.1997). Further, we find from our review of the record that the death sentence was not
imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor. Miss. Code
Ann. § 99-19-105(3)(a) (Rev. 2007).
XVI. WHETHER THE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF THE ERRORS IN THE TRIAL
COURT MANDATES REVERSAL OF THE VERDICT OF GUILT AND/OR THE
SENTENCE OF DEATH ENTERED PURSUANT TO IT.
¶184. Batiste argues that the cumulative effect of the errors in this case requires reversal of
his conviction and sentence. Under the cumulative-error doctrine, “individual errors, which
are not reversible in themselves, may combine with other errors to make up reversible error,
93
where the cumulative effect of all errors deprives the defendant of a fundamentally fair trial.”
Ross v. State, 954 So. 2d 968, 1018 (Miss. 2007). We have found that a single, nonreversible
error occurred at Batiste’s trial. Because only a single error occurred, there are no errors that
could combine with other errors to establish cumulative error. This issue is without merit.
CONCLUSION
¶185. We affirm Batiste’s conviction and sentence.
¶186. CONVICTION OF CAPITAL MURDER AND SENTENCE OF DEATH BY
LETHAL INJECTION, AFFIRMED.
WALLER, C.J., RANDOLPH, P.J., PIERCE AND COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR.
LAMAR J., CONCURS IN PART AND IN RESULT WITHOUT SEPARATE
WRITTEN OPINION. KITCHENS, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN
OPINION JOINED BY DICKINSON, P.J., AND KING, J.
KITCHENS, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
¶187. The majority finds that “[t]he State need not prove the defendant had the intent to rob
prior to the killing.” Maj. Op. ¶33. With respect, I disagree. The longstanding rule in
Mississippi regarding intent to commit the underlying felony has always been, until very
recently, that it was a jury question to be determined from the facts and surrounding
circumstances of the murder. Batiste was not permitted to argue that the facts and
circumstances surrounding the death of Galanis did not support an inference that Batiste
killed Galanis with the intention of robbing him. Instead, the jury was told that robbery as
an “afterthought” to the murder was sufficient to convict. Because I believe that the decision
of the majority is the product of a fundamental misapprehension of the relevant and
longstanding capital murder jurisprudence of this State, and in clear contravention of the
plain language of Mississippi’s capital murder statute, I respectfully dissent.
94
¶188. To understand why the State must prove that a defendant intended to rob a victim prior
to the victim’s death to support a capital murder conviction, it is important to review the
purposes and goals underlying what has come to be called the felony murder doctrine. “The
purpose underlying the modern felony-murder rule is one of deterrence; the rule is intended
to deter dangerous conduct by punishing as a first degree murder a homicide resulting from
dangerous conduct in the perpetration of a felony, even if the defendant did not intend to kill.”
State v. Allen, 875 A.2d 724, 729 (Md. 2005). See also Nay v. State, 167 P.3d 430, 434 (Nev.
2007) (citing Allen, 875 A.2d at 729-30); State v. Kimbrough, 924 S.W.2d 888, 890 (Tenn.
1996) (“One of the original purposes of the felony-murder rule was to deter the commission
of certain felonies in a dangerous or violent way.”); Commonwealth v. Spallone, 406 A.2d
1146, 1147-48 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1979) (“The purpose of the rule is to deter one about to commit
a felony in which a reasonable man knows, or should know, that death may result, by making
him criminally responsible for any such deaths.”). This Court has espoused a similar view.
“[T]he purpose of the felony-murder statute is to reduce the disproportionate number of
accidental homicides which occur during the commission of the enumerated predicate felonies
by punishing the party responsible for the homicide not merely for manslaughter, but for
murder . . . .” Smith v. State, 499 So. 2d 750, 754 (Miss. 1986) (quoting People v. Miller, 297
N.E.2d 85, 87-88 (N.Y. 1973) (emphasis added)). This view is reflected in the plain language
of the statute itself. A person is guilty of murder with the underlying felony of robbery if he
kills a human being “with or without any design to effect death . . . [while] engaged in the
commission of the crime of . . . robbery, . . . or in any attempt to commit [robbery].” Miss.
Code Ann. 97-3-19 (Rev. 2006) (emphasis added).
95
¶189. The concept of felony murder was instituted to provide a sort of strict criminal liability
for deaths occurring during the commission of certain enumerated crimes. It is important to
deter criminals who are willing to engage in certain crimes from recklessly or willfully taking
or endangering human life to further those crimes. In that context, it becomes abundantly clear
that the intent to rob someone must form in a killer’s mind before the victim is killed in order
for that person to be guilty of murder with the underlying felony of robbery. Other
jurisdictions which have addressed this question have come to the same conclusion.
[W]here an actor kills prior to formulating the intent to commit the underlying
felony, we cannot say the actor knew or should have known death might occur
from involvement in a dangerous felony because no involvement in a dangerous
felony exists since the intent to commit the felony is not yet formulated. Also,
the greater deterrent is not necessary, and the rule has no application.
Commonwealth v. Legg, 417 A.2d 1152, 1154 (Pa. 1980); see also State v. Buggs, 995
S.W.2d 102, 107 (Tenn. 1999) (stating that “the rationale for the felony murder rule underlies
the requirement” that the intent to commit a crime must occur prior to the victim’s death for
the defendant to be guilty of capital murder in the majority of jurisdictions that enforce that
rule). The purpose is to punish those who intend to commit a crime, and are willing to kill or
recklessly endanger life to accomplish their goal. This is why the majority of U.S.
jurisdictions require that the defendant must have formed an intention to commit the
underlying felony when the murder occurred.9 Under the majority’s analysis, in which the
9
See e.g., United States v. Bolden, 514 F.2d 1301, 1309 (D.C. Cir. 1975); Ex parte
Johnson, 620 So. 2d 709, 713 (Ala. 1993) (stating that a robbery committed as a mere
afterthought and unrelated to the murder will not sustain a conviction of felony murder);
Todd v. State, 884 P.2d 668, 683 (Alaska 1994) (“[T]he defendant’s intent to commit one of
the listed felonies constitutes the culpable mental state that makes any resulting homicide
murder . . . .”); Grigsby v. State, 542 S.W.2d 275, 280 (Ark. 1976) (“We find no room for
96
timing of the intent to rob is irrelevant to guilt of felony murder, the deterrent purpose of our
capital murder statute is not served. The only thing that is accomplished by such a rule is that
those who already are willing to kill someone will think twice about taking the victim’s
property after the murder.
¶190. Perhaps the most powerful argument against the majority’s interpretation of our capital
murder statute is the language of the statute itself. “If [a statute] is not ambiguous, the court
should simply apply the statute according to its plain meaning. . . .” City of Natchez v.
Sullivan, 612 So. 2d. 1087, 1089 (Miss. 1992). Under the plain language of the statute, a
person is guilty of capital murder if, “with or without design to effect death,” the person kills
a human being “while engaged in the commission of the [underlying] crime.” Miss. Code Ann.
§ 97-3-19 (Rev. 2006) (emphasis added). In my view, the only logical reading of this language
indicates that the victim must be killed contemporaneously with the intent or attempt to
quarrel with appellant’s assertion that larceny from the body of one killed, as an afterthought,
would not constitute a capital felony.”); People v. Ainsworth, 755 P.2d 1017, 1037 (Cal.
1988) (“Under the felony-murder rule, the evidence must establish that the defendant
harbored the felonious intent either prior to or during the commission of the acts which
resulted in the victim’s death.”) (citation omitted); People v. Brannon, 486 N.W.2d 83, 85-
86 (Mich. App. 1992), app. denied, 495 N.W.2d 384 (Mich. 1992) (“It is not necessary that
the murder be contemporaneous with the enumerated felony. The statute requires only that
the defendant intended to commit the underlying felony at the time the homicide occurred.”);
State v. Newman, 605 S.W.2d 781, 787 (Mo. 1980) (approving jury instruction stating
defendant must have had intent to commit underlying felony when killing occurred); State
v. Montgomery, 215 N.W.2d 881, 883 (Neb. 1974) ; People v. Joyner, 257 N.E.2d 26, 27
(N.Y. 1970); Commonwealth v. Legg, 417 A.2d at 1154; Buggs, 995 S.W.2d at 106 (“[I]n
a felony-murder case, intent to commit the underlying felony must exist prior to or
concurrent with the commission of the act causing the death of the victim . . . .”); Robertson
v. State, 871 S.W.2d 701, 705 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (“In order for the murder to qualify
as capital murder . . . the intent to rob must be formed prior to or concurrent with the
murder.”)
97
commit the underlying felony. To be sure, the intent to commit the underlying crime may
form much earlier than the murderous act, and the victim’s death may occur after the
underlying felony is completed;10 but the bottom line is this: the actions which cause the
victim’s death must be done while the perpetrator is engaged in the commission of one or
more of the felonies listed in the statute. The intent to commit the underlying felony must have
formed in the mind of the defendant before the victim’s death. If a human being is killed for
a reason completely unrelated to any of the enumerated underlying felonies, it simply cannot
be said that the killer struck “while engaged in the commission of the crime.”
¶191. The majority finds that the trial court properly instructed the jury that “the phrase
‘while engaged in the commission of’ includes the attempt to commit the crime, the complete
crime, as well as the immediate post crime acts of the defendant. . . .” Maj. Op. ¶ 35. As
explained below, that interpretation of the phrase consistently had been used by this Court to
mean that acts by the defendant surrounding the commission of the crime could be used to
support an inference that the defendant was engaged in the underlying crime when the victim
was killed. Now, the majority holds that any potential crime committed before, during, or after
the victim’s death such that the two form a continuous chain of events makes the defendant
guilty per se of capital murder. The majority’s interpretation of our capital murder statute is
an extreme expansion of the plain language of the statute. It was invented by this Court – not
by the Legislature – and I, respectfully, cannot agree with it.
¶192. Until this Court’s decision in Gillett v. State, 56 So. 3d 469 (Miss. 2010), Mississippi
10
For example, killing a victim after committing the crime to aid in escape and avoid
identification and punishment still would be done in furtherance of the underlying crime.
98
juries were required to weigh competing evidence to determine whether the defendant
possessed the requisite intent to commit the underlying felony before the death of the victim.
An analysis of our capital murder jurisprudence up to that point is necessary to illustrate that
Mississippi required an intent to rob to form before the death of the victim to support a
conviction for capital murder, and that the jury was permitted to weigh the evidence and infer
from the evidence whether the requisite intent existed when the murder occurred.
¶193. The progenitor of our current approach to felony murder is this Court’s decision in
Pickle v. State, 345 So. 2d 623 (Miss. 1977). The defendant in that case was charged with
capital murder with the underlying felony of rape. Id. at 625. He argued that, in order to be
guilty of capital murder, the State would have had to prove that the rape was committed
“while effecting the death of the victim . . . .” Id. This Court held that “where the two crimes
are connected in a chain of events and occur as part of the res gestae, the crime of capital
murder is sustained.” Id. at 627. In reaching its conclusion, the Court relied in part on two
other state court decisions, MacAvoy v. State, 15 N.W.2d 45 (Neb. 1944), and Lipscomb v.
State, 165 A.2d 918 (Md. 1960).11 In MacAvoy, in holding that a murder which could have
occurred after the rape was completed was sufficient to charge the defendant with felony
murder, the Nebraska Supreme Court held that a killing “committed within the res gestae of
the felony charged” is sufficient to support a charge of felony murder. MacAvoy, 15 N.W.2d
at 832-33. In Lipscomb, the Maryland court held that “it would make no difference as to guilt
11
Both Maryland and Nebraska require the state to prove that the defendant intended
to rob the victim before the victim’s death to support a conviction for felony murder. See
State v. Allen, 875 A.2d 724, 729 (Md. 2005); State v. Montgomery, 215 N.W.2d 881, 883
(Neb. 1974).
99
under the above statute whether death occurred after the rape had been accomplished or in an
attempt to perpetrate it.” Lipscomb, 165 A.2d at 922.
¶194. This Court found the reasoning in those cases persuasive. It apparently was moved by
a concern that without a “res gestae” rule, the State would be forced to prove that the killing
and the felony coincided in time, and that would actually give criminals incentive to kill their
victims after the crime was completed.
If the crime of capital murder could not be sustained unless the homicide
occurred during the actual attack upon a victim or during the actual burglary,
kidnapping, arson or robbery, such could be an inducement for an assailant to
kill his victim after the commission of the first crime in order to silence her/him
as a witness. The rule stated in the foregoing cases is the more reasonable, and
we hold that where the two crimes are connected in a chain of events and occur
as part of the res gestae, the crime of capital murder is sustained.
Pickle, 345 So. 2d at 626-27. In essence, the Court in Pickle held that a defendant did not
literally have to be killing the victim while simultaneously committing one of the specified
felonies to be guilty of capital murder. Instead, it correctly stated that the two crimes have to
be part of the same transaction, connected in a chain of events and occurring as part of the res
gestae, to support a conviction for felony murder.
¶195. For more than twenty years after this Court’s decision in Pickle, Mississippi required
the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant accused of murder with the
underlying felony of robbery had intended to rob the victim before the killing occurred. “To
be clear, our ‘continuous transaction’ doctrine as applied to robbery requires the existence of
the intent to rob at a point prior to the death of the victim.” Arthur v. State, 735 So. 2d 213,
220 (Miss. 1999) (Banks, J., concurring) (emphasis added) (citing Duplantis v. State, 708 So.
2d 1327, 1342 (Miss. 1998)). The question this Court faced many times after the decision in
100
Pickle was not whether the timing of the intent was irrelevant, but whether the facts and
circumstances surrounding the victim’s death supported an inference that the intent to rob had
formed in the defendant’s mind before the victim’s death.
¶196. In 1978, a little more than a year after Pickle, this Court decided Voyles v. State, 362
So. 2d 1236 (Miss. 1978). There, the defendant was convicted of capital murder with the
underlying felony of robbery. Id. The defendant argued that the evidence did not support the
jury’s finding beyond a reasonable doubt that he had intended to rob the victim before he
killed her. Id. at 1242. The evidence showed that the defendant and victim had been dating
for two months, that the defendant had told his nephew that “he had killed the [victim]
because she wouldn’t put the car in his name,” and that the two previously had gotten into an
argument because the victim would not let the defendant have her car. Id. at 1243. In
determining that the evidence was sufficient to support a conviction, the Court stated “[t]he
record is devoid of any other reason for the killing, and this Court cannot say that there is any
other reasonable hypothesis upon which to reverse the jury’s findings.” Id. (emphasis added).
Also, the Court approved the jury instructions which stated “that it was necessary for [the
jury] to find that appellant had the intent to rob when the act of killing was done.” Id.
(emphasis added). Clearly, the Court found it important that the “reason” for the murder be
tied to the underlying felony. Just as clearly, the Court stated that the jury had to find the
defendant had intended to rob the victim when he killed her.
¶197. In West v. State, 553 So. 2d 8 (Miss. 1989), the defendant was charged with capital
murder with the underlying felony of sexual battery. West argued that the victim was dead
when he committed the sexual battery. Id. at 13. This Court cited cases of other jurisdictions
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which reasoned that, “because the use of force is an essential element to the crime of rape, the
use of deadly force, if done with the intent to coerce the victim into engaging in a sexual act,
satisfies the factual nexus between the killing and the underlying felony to elevate the killing
to a capital crime.” Id. (emphasis added). Importantly, the Court noted that “the underlying
crime begins where an indictable attempt is reached.” Id. (quoting Pickle, 345 So. 2d at 626).
In finding that the evidence was sufficient to support a capital murder conviction, the Court
stated that there was “certainly evidence in this record from which the jury could have found
[the victim] alive when West’s assault reached this point.” Id. (emphasis added). The Court
concluded that the “consummation of the underlying felony” after the victim’s death did not
“vitiate the capital charge.” Id.
¶198. Again, it is clear in West that this Court required the intent to commit the underlying
crime to have formed before the death of the victim. The use of force had to be “done with
the intent to coerce the victim into engaging in a sexual act.” Id. The Court differentiated
between an “indictable attempt,” which had to occur before the victim’s death, and the
“consummation of the underlying felony,” which could occur after the victim’s death. West
stood for the proposition that the intent to commit the underlying felony had to form in the
defendant’s mind before the victim’s death, that the full crime could be “consummated” after
the victim’s death, and that the jury was to determine whether the evidence supported an
inference that the reason for the use of force was to perpetuate the underlying crime.
¶199. In case after case, this Court strongly subscribed to the position that the intent to
commit the underlying felony had to have formed in the defendant’s mind before the victim’s
death, and it was a jury question with respect to whether the evidence supported such a
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finding.
Intent to do an act or commit a crime is also a question of fact to be gleaned by
the jury from the facts shown in each case. The intent to commit a crime or to
do an act by a free agent can be determined only by the act itself, surrounding
circumstances, and expressions made by the actor with reference to his intent.
Wheat v. State, 420 So. 2d 229, 238 (Miss. 1982) (quoting Shanklin v. State, 290 So. 2d 625,
627 (Miss. 1974)). In Wheat, the defendant contended that the evidence was insufficient to
show that he had intended to rob the murder victim. Id. The Court found that, considering the
position of the victim, the injuries to the victim, and the fact that the defendant was found in
possession of the victim’s car, whether the defendant had robbed the victim of his car was a
question for the jury. Id. at 239. See also Fisher v. State, 481 So. 2d 203, 212-14 (Miss. 1985)
(holding that the circumstantial evidence permitted a reasonable juror to find beyond a
reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of every reasonable hypothesis that defendant was
guilty of rape and robbery); Walker v. State, 671 So. 2d 581, 593-96 (Miss. 1995) (finding
that the evidence was sufficient to support capital murder with underlying felony of rape
conviction because jury could have inferred that victim “was still clinging to life” when sexual
battery occurred); Duplantis v. State, 708 So. 2d 1327, 1342 (Miss. 1998) (evidence
supported an inference that the defendant, an escapee from jail, “first developed the intent to
rob [the victim] . . . and then killed [the victim] when he did not cooperate,” and so jury was
justified in finding intent to rob when victim’s death occurred); Arthur v. State, 735 So. 2d
213, 219 (Miss. 1999) (jury permitted to infer that robbery was a “total afterthought” to
murder and therefore no indictable attempt to rob began until the victim was dead; “therefore,
no continuous transaction linking Arthur with the murder”); Knox v. State, 805 So. 2d 527,
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532 (Miss. 2002) (finding that circumstantial evidence showing defendant possessed victim’s
car keys supported jury’s finding that State had proved elements of robbery beyond a
reasonable doubt).
¶200. The unifying factor in all of the cited cases is that circumstantial evidence existed to
show that each defendant had possessed the intent to commit the underlying felony when the
victim’s death occurred. It was properly the province of the jury to weigh the circumstantial
evidence against any arguments of the defendant in an effort to establish a reasonable alternate
hypothesis, and to determine whether the State had proven that the defendant possessed the
requisite intent to commit the crime before the victim’s death. Appropriately, the claimed
intent could be supported by “the actions of the defendant leading up to the felony, the
attempted felony, and flight from the scene of the felony.” West, 553 So. 2d at 13. Also, the
consummation (but not the intent) of the felony could occur after the victim’s death. “It is not
necessary that the victim be deprived of property prior to death to sustain a conviction for
robbery.” Knox, 805 So. 2d at 531. Walker evidenced yet again that the State is required to
prove that the intent to commit the underlying felony had to form before the victim’s death,
and that the defendant was permitted to argue other alternatives. “Fully considering the
surrounding circumstances of [the victim’s] murder, Walker was unsuccessful for obvious
reasons in convincing the jury that he formed the intent to commit the sexual battery only after
killing Edwards.” Walker, 671 So. 2d at 595 (emphasis added). Our capital murder
jurisprudence was clear that the intent to commit the predicate felony had to have formed
before the victim’s death, that such intent could be inferred from the surrounding facts and
circumstances, and that the timing of the actual commission of the underlying offense was
104
irrelevant with respect to the victim’s death.
¶201. This interpretation of Mississippi was consistently applied by this Court through and
including the recent capital murder cases decided by this Court in Spicer v. State, 921 So. 2d
292 (Miss. 2006), and Goff v. State, 14 So. 3d 625 (Miss. 2009). In Spicer, the defendant had
moved for a directed verdict, arguing that his having been in possession of the victim’s truck
could not support the jury’s verdict that he had robbed the victim. The Court cited Knox, 80
So. 2d at 531, in holding that “possession of a deceased’s property creates a reasonable
inference that the property was stolen.” Spicer, 921 So. 2d at 311-12. The Court found that
the post-death possession of the victim’s property supported the jury’s verdict. Id. It did not
announce that the timing of the intent to rob the victim was irrelevant, and that the State did
not have to prove that the defendant had intended to rob the victim before the victim’s death.
Instead, this Court simply said the issue was one for the jury, and that the circumstantial
evidence in this case supported a guilty verdict.
¶202. Similarly, in Goff, the defendant was charged with murder with the underlying felony
of robbery because the victim’s wallet was found in his car. Goff, 14 So. 3d at 646. Goff
contended that he had been with the victim for some time, that she had left her wallet in the
vehicle before her death, and that no proof was adduced to show that he intentionally had
robbed her of the wallet. Id. In affirming the jury’s verdict, this Court again stated that the
weighing of the circumstantial evidence regarding the intent to rob and the robbery itself were
within the province of the jury. Id. at 648. The Court found that Goff’s argument did have
some value, since the evidence did not “leave indifferent” his offered alternative hypothesis.
Id. However, the evidence weighed against him, and nothing pointed “in favor of Goff with
105
sufficient force that no rational trier of fact could have found this essential element of the
crime beyond a reasonable doubt, and to the exclusion of every reasonable hypothesis
consistent with innocence.” Id. The jury did not buy it, but Goff was permitted to argue that
he had not formed the intent to rob the victim before her death; and had he persuaded the jury
of his theory of the case, he would not have been convicted of capital murder.
¶203. To summarize, as recently as this Court’s decision in Goff, the intent to commit the
underlying felony in a capital murder case had to be proved to have existed in the mind of the
defendant before the victim’s death. To prove such intent, the State could offer evidence of
the acts and statements of the defendant before the crime, during the crime, and after the crime
which supported his conviction of capital murder. The defendant was permitted to offer his
own evidence to show that he had not possessed the requisite intent to commit the underlying
felony. It was within the province of the jury to weigh the facts and circumstances and
determine whether the State had proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt. The majority
contends that requiring the State to prove that Batiste had the intent to rob Galanis before the
murder would force this Court “to abandon settled law governing capital-murder convictions.”
Maj. Op. ¶33. As stated above, the “settled law” in Mississippi was, until 2010, that the State
was required to prove that the defendant had intended to commit the underlying felony prior
to the victim’s death.
¶204. In concluding that “the State need not prove the defendant had the intent to rob prior
to the killing[,]” the majority cites Gillett v. State, 56 So. 3d 469 (Miss. 2010). Gillett
represented a significant departure from our established capital murder jurisprudence. There,
the defendant was convicted of murdering two people, then stealing the vehicle of one of the
106
victims several days after the murders occurred. Id. at 476. The “robbery” of the truck was
the underlying felony which the State contended elevated Gillett’s crime to capital murder.
Id. The jury instructions, to which Gillett objected, stated that the jury had to find Gillett
guilty of capital murder if the State showed that he killed the victims and then took the female
victim’s personal property (her truck), and that the two crimes were part of a continuous chain
of events. Id. at 491. In approving the jury instructions, the majority relied on the “one-
continuous-transaction” rule, which states that “where the two crimes . . . are connected in a
chain of events and occur as part of the res gestae, the crime of capital murder is sustained.”
Id. at 492 (citing Pickle, 345 So. 2d at 627). Saying that “the intent to rob . . . can be shown
from the facts surrounding the crime,” and that the jury may infer that the defendant intended
to rob the victim when he is discovered in possession of the victim’s property, the majority
stated that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting the jury instructions tendered
by the State. Gillett, 56 So. 3d at 492-93.
¶205. The cases cited by Gillett in reaching its conclusion stood for the proposition that two
crimes connected in a continuous chain of events could support a finding by the jury that the
defendant was guilty of capital murder when considering all of the facts and circumstances
surrounding the crime (e.g., acts of the defendant leading up to the felony, during the
commission of the felony, and flight from the scene of the felony). See Pickle, 345 So. 2d at
627; West, 553 So. 2d at 13; Walker v. State, 913 So. 2d 198, 224 (Miss. 2005). The Court
took the proposition that such evidence supported a capital murder conviction, and then
expanded the doctrine to mean that such evidence required a murder conviction. In one fell
swoop, the necessity of proving intent to commit the underlying crime in advance of the
107
victim’s death was dismissed, and what had constituted only a prima facie case for capital
murder suddenly became an airtight conviction. With that, I cannot agree. Gillett was a
significant departure from the long-settled capital felony murder jurisprudence of this state,
and its application in this case or any other runs counter to the established purpose of our
felony murder law.
¶206. Here, the jury instructions stated that Batiste had to have been “engaged in” the crime
of robbery when Galanis was killed. However, the defense was forbidden from arguing that
Batiste had lacked the intent to rob Galanis when he was killed, and so Batiste could not have
been engaged in the crime of robbery. The State argued that no intent to rob had to have
formed in the mind of Batiste before he murdered Galanis, and the trial court agreed. Again,
in closing, the prosecution stated that the robbery could be a mere “afterthought,” and the
conviction of capital murder could still be sustained. This is plainly incorrect. The majority
states that the remark was made “in the context of describing how the one-continuous-
transaction rule applied to the case.” Maj. Op. ¶ 39. However, the one-continuous-transaction
rule merely supports a conviction of capital murder, it does not mandate one, which is what
the State was arguing, and this is the position the trial court took when it refused the defense’s
“intent” argument.
¶207. Before Gillett, the State would have had a strong prima facie case of capital murder
against Batiste; but in light of the flawed reasoning of that case, its burden of proof has been
significantly lessened. Batiste should have been permitted to offer his alternate theory
regarding his intent when he killed Galanis: that, before or during his killing of the victim, no
intent to rob him had formed in his mind. The jury should have been permitted to weigh this
108
argument, along with the State’s, and after considering all of the facts and circumstances
surrounding the murder, determine whether the State had proved beyond a reasonable doubt
that Batiste intended to kill Galanis for the purpose of robbing him, or whether Batiste’s
alternate hypothesis was believable. This procedure was followed in this State until this
Court’s incorrect departure from it in Gillett, and it is the only way to ensure that the purpose
of the felony murder rule is served by severely punishing those who are willing to kill while
committing one of the underlying felonies. The concepts of the one-continuous-transaction
rule and intent to commit the predicate underlying felony are not incompatible. The murder
and crime forming one continuous transaction establish a baseline for a capital murder case,
and the facts and surrounding circumstances must be used by the State to prove that the
defendant committed the murder while engaged in the commission of the underlying crime.
Instead, under the Court’s ruling today, what once merely supported a conviction for felony
murder now mandates one.
¶208. In short, the State should have to prove that a defendant in a capital murder case
formed the intent to commit the underlying felony before the victim’s death. Not to require
this neuters the purpose of the felony murder statute. Two crimes occurring as part of a
continuous chain of events should support a conviction of capital murder, not mandate one.
A defendant should be permitted to offer evidence and arguments that he did not have the
requisite intent to commit the underlying felony before the victim’s death, and the jury should
determine whether the defendant was “engaged in the commission of the crime . . . of
robbery” when the victim’s death occurred, as required by our capital murder statute. None
of these things happened in this case, and I therefore respectfully dissent. The jury was
109
improperly instructed on the intent element of the capital murder charge. The jury was
properly instructed on the lesser-included offense of murder, and the State adduced sufficient
evidence to sustain a murder conviction. Accordingly, I would reverse and render the
conviction of capital murder, and remand the case for sentencing on the conviction of the
lesser-included offense of murder.
DICKINSON, P.J., AND KING, J., JOIN THIS OPINION.
110
APPENDIX
DEATH CASES AFFIRMED BY THIS COURT
Roger Lee Gillett v. State, 56 So. 3d 469 (Miss. 2010).
Moffett v. State, 49 So. 3d 1073 (Miss. 2010).
Goff v. State, 14 So. 3d 625 (Miss. 2009).
Wilson v. State, 21 So. 3d 572 (Miss. 2009).
Chamberlin v. State, 989 So. 2d 320 (Miss. 2008).
Loden v. State, 971 So. 2d 548 (Miss. 2007).
King v. State, 960 So. 2d 413 (Miss. 2007).
Bennett v. State, 933 So. 2d 930 (Miss. 2006).
Havard v. State, 928 So. 2d 771 (Miss. 2006).
Spicer v. State, 921 So. 2d 292 (Miss. 2006).
Hodges v. State, 912 So. 2d 730 (Miss. 2005).
Walker v. State, 913 So. 2d 198 (Miss. 2005).
Le v. State, 913 So. 2d 913 (Miss. 2005).
Brown v. State, 890 So. 2d 901 (Miss. 2004).
Powers v. State 883 So. 2d 20 (Miss. 2004)
Branch v. State, 882 So. 2d 36 (Miss. 2004).
Scott v. State, 878 So. 2d 933 (Miss. 2004).
Lynch v. State, 877 So. 2d 1254 (Miss. 2004).
Dycus v. State, 875 So. 2d 140 (Miss. 2004).
Byrom v. State, 863 So. 2d 836 (Miss. 2003).
-i-
Howell v. State, 860 So. 2d 704 (Miss. 2003).
Howard v. State, 853 So. 2d 781 (Miss. 2003).
Walker v. State, 815 So. 2d 1209 (Miss. 2002). *following remand.
Bishop v. State, 812 So. 2d 934 (Miss. 2002).
Stevens v. State, 806 So. 2d 1031 (Miss. 2002).
Grayson v. State, 806 So. 2d 241 (Miss. 2002).
Knox v. State, 805 So. 2d 527 (Miss. 2002).
Simmons v. State, 805 So. 2d 452 (Miss. 2002).
Berry v. State, 802 So. 2d 1033 (Miss. 2001).
Snow v. State, 800 So. 2d 472 (Miss. 2001).
Mitchell v. State, 792 So. 2d 192 (Miss. 2001).
Puckett v. State, 788 So. 2d 752 (Miss. 2001). * following remand.
Goodin v. State, 787 So. 2d 639 (Miss. 2001).
Jordan v. State, 786 So. 2d 987 (Miss. 2001).
Manning v. State, 765 So. 2d 516 (Miss. 2000). *following remand.
Eskridge v. State, 765 So. 2d 508 (Miss. 2000).
McGilberry v. State, 741 So. 2d 894 (Miss. 1999).
Puckett v. State, 737 So. 2d 322 (Miss. 1999). *remanded for Batson hearing.
Manning v. State, 735 So. 2d 323 (Miss. 1999). *remanded for Batson hearing.
Hughes v. State, 735 So. 2d 238 (Miss. 1999).
Turner v. State, 732 So. 2d 937 (Miss. 1999).
Smith v. State, 729 So. 2d 1191 (Miss. 1998).
-ii-
Burns v. State, 729 So. 2d 203 (Miss. 1998).
Jordan v. State, 728 So. 2d 1088 (Miss. 1998).
Gray v. State, 728 So. 2d 36 (Miss. 1998).
Manning v. State, 726 So. 2d 1152 (Miss. 1998).
Woodward v. State, 726 So. 2d 524 (Miss. 1997).
Bell v. State, 725 So. 2d 836 (Miss. 1998).
Evans v. State, 725 So. 2d 613 (Miss. 1997).
Brewer v. State, 725 So. 2d 106 (Miss. 1998).
Crawford v. State, 716 So. 2d 1028 (Miss. 1998).
Doss v. State, 709 So. 2d 369 (Miss. 1996).
Underwood v. State, 708 So. 2d 18 (Miss. 1998).
Holland v. State, 705 So. 2d 307 (Miss. 1997).
Wells v. State, 698 So. 2d 497 (Miss. 1997).
Wilcher v. State, 697 So. 2d 1087 (Miss. 1997).
Wiley v. State, 691 So. 2d 959 (Miss. 1997).
Brown v. State, 690 So. 2d 276 (Miss. 1996).
Simon v. State, 688 So. 2d 791 (Miss.1997).
Jackson v. State, 684 So. 2d 1213 (Miss. 1996).
Williams v. State, 684 So. 2d 1179 (Miss. 1996).
Davis v. State, 684 So. 2d 643 (Miss. 1996).
Taylor v. State, 682 So. 2d. 359 (Miss. 1996).
Brown v. State, 682 So. 2d 340 (Miss. 1996).
-iii-
Blue v. State, 674 So. 2d 1184 (Miss. 1996).
Holly v. State, 671 So. 2d 32 (Miss. 1996).
Walker v. State, 671 So. 2d 581 (Miss. 1995).
Russell v. State, 670 So. 2d 816 (Miss. 1995).
Ballenger v. State, 667 So. 2d 1242 (Miss. 1995).
Davis v. State, 660 So. 2d 1228 (Miss. 1995).
Carr v. State, 655 So. 2d 824 (Miss. 1995).
Mack v. State, 650 So. 2d 1289 (Miss. 1994).
Chase v. State, 645 So. 2d 829 (Miss. 1994).
Foster v. State, 639 So. 2d 1263 (Miss. 1994).
Conner v. State, 632 So. 2d 1239 (Miss. 1993).
Hansen v. State, 592 So. 2d 114 (Miss. 1991).
*Shell v. State, 554 So. 2d 887 (Miss. 1989); Shell v. Mississippi, 498 U.S. 1 (1990)
reversing, in part, and remanding; Shell v. State, 595 So. 2d 1323 (Miss. 1992) remanding for
new sentencing hearing.
Davis v. State, 551 So. 2d 165 (Miss. 1989).
Minnick v. State, 551 So. 2d 77 (Miss. 1989).
*Pinkney v. State, 538 So. 2d 329 (Miss. 1989); Pinkney v. Mississippi, 494 U.S. 1075
(1990) vacating and remanding; Pinkney v. State, 602 So. 2d 1177 (Miss. 1992) remanding
for new sentencing hearing.
*Clemons v. State, 535 So. 2d 1354 (Miss. 1988); Clemons v. Mississippi, 494 U.S.
738 (1990) vacating and remanding; Clemons v. State, 593 So. 2d 1004 (Miss. 1992)
remanding for new sentencing hearing.
Woodward v. State, 533 So. 2d 418 (Miss. 1988).
Nixon v. State, 533 So. 2d 1078 (Miss. 1987).
-iv-
Cole v. State, 525 So. 2d 365 (Miss. 1987).
Lockett v. State, 517 So. 2d 1346 (Miss. 1987).
Lockett v. State, 517 So. 2d 1317 (Miss. 1987).
Faraga v. State, 514 So. 2d 295 (Miss. 1987).
*Jones v. State, 517 So. 2d 1295 (Miss. 1987); Jones v. Mississippi, 487 U.S. 1230
(1988) vacating and remanding; Jones v. State, 602 So. 2d 1170 (Miss. 1992) remanding for
new sentencing hearing.
Wiley v. State, 484 So. 2d 339 (Miss. 1986).
Johnson v. State, 477 So. 2d 196 (Miss. 1985).
Gray v. State, 472 So. 2d 409 (Miss. 1985).
Cabello v. State, 471 So. 2d 332 (Miss. 1985).
Jordan v. State, 464 So. 2d 475 (Miss. 1985).
Wilcher v. State, 455 So. 2d 727 (Miss. 1984).
Billiot v. State, 454 So. 2d 445 (Miss. 1984).
Stringer v. State, 454 So. 2d 468 (Miss. 1984).
Dufour v. State, 453 So. 2d 337 (Miss. 1984).
Neal v. State, 451 So. 2d 743 (Miss. 1984).
Booker v. State, 449 So. 2d 209 (Miss. 1984).
Wilcher v. State, 448 So. 2d 927 (Miss. 1984).
Caldwell v. State, 443 So. 2d 806 (Miss. 1983).
Irving v. State, 441 So. 2d 846 (Miss. 1983).
Tokman v. State, 435 So. 2d 664 (Miss. 1983).
Leatherwood v. State, 435 So. 2d 645 (Miss. 1983).
-v-
Hill v. State, 432 So. 2d 427 (Miss. 1983).
Pruett v. State, 431 So. 2d 1101 (Miss. 1983).
Gilliard v. State, 428 So. 2d 576 (Miss. 1983).
Evans v. State, 422 So. 2d 737 (Miss. 1982).
King v. State, 421 So. 2d 1009 (Miss. 1982).
Wheat v. State, 420 So. 2d 229 (Miss. 1982).
Smith v. State, 419 So. 2d 563 (Miss. 1982).
Johnson v. State, 416 So. 2d 383 (Miss.1982).
Edwards v. State, 413 So. 2d 1007 (Miss. 1982).
Bullock v. State, 391 So. 2d 601 (Miss. 1980).
Reddix v. State, 381 So. 2d 999 (Miss. 1980).
Jones v. State, 381 So. 2d 983 (Miss. 1980).
Culberson v. State, 379 So. 2d 499 (Miss. 1979).
Gray v. State, 375 So. 2d 994 (Miss. 1979).
Jordan v. State, 365 So. 2d 1198 (Miss. 1978).
Voyles v. State, 362 So. 2d 1236 (Miss. 1978).
Irving v. State, 361 So. 2d 1360 (Miss. 1978).
Washington v. State, 361 So. 2d 6l (Miss. 1978).
Bell v. State, 360 So. 2d 1206 (Miss. 1978).
*Case was originally affirmed in this Court but on remand from U. S. Supreme Court,
case was remanded by this Court for a new sentencing hearing.
-vi-
DEATH CASES REVERSED AS TO GUILT PHASE
AND SENTENCING PHASE
Ross v. State, 954 So. 2d 968 (Miss. 2007).
Flowers v. State, 947 So. 2d 910 (Miss. 2006).
Flowers v. State, 842 So. 2d 531 (Miss. 2003).
Randall v. State, 806 So. 2d 185 (Miss. 2002).
Flowers v. State, 773 So. 2d 309 (Miss. 2000).
Edwards v. State, 737 So. 2d 275 (Miss. 1999).
Smith v. State, 733 So. 2d 793 (Miss. 1999).
Porter v. State, 732 So. 2d 899 (Miss. 1999).
Kolberg v. State, 704 So. 2d 1307 (Miss. 1997).
Snelson v. State, 704 So. 2d 452 (Miss. 1997).
Fusilier v. State, 702 So. 2d 388 (Miss. 1997).
Howard v. State, 701 So. 2d 274 (Miss. 1997).
Lester v. State, 692 So. 2d 755 (Miss. 1997).
Hunter v. State, 684 So. 2d 625 (Miss. 1996).
Lanier v. State, 684 So. 2d 93 (Miss. 1996).
Giles v. State, 650 So. 2d 846 (Miss. 1995).
Duplantis v. State, 644 So. 2d 1235 (Miss. 1994).
Harrison v. State, 635 So. 2d 894 (Miss. 1994).
Butler v. State, 608 So. 2d 314 (Miss. 1992).
Jenkins v. State, 607 So. 2d 1171 (Miss. 1992).
-vii-
Abram v. State, 606 So. 2d 1015 (Miss. 1992).
Balfour v. State, 598 So. 2d 731 (Miss. 1992).
Griffin v. State, 557 So. 2d 542 (Miss. 1990).
Bevill v. State, 556 So. 2d 699 (Miss. 1990).
West v. State, 553 So. 2d 8 (Miss. 1989).
Leatherwood v. State, 548 So. 2d 389 (Miss. 1989).
Mease v. State, 539 So. 2d 1324 (Miss. 1989).
Houston v. State, 531 So. 2d 598 (Miss. 1988).
West v. State, 519 So. 2d 418 (Miss. 1988).
Davis v. State, 512 So. 2d 129l (Miss. 1987).
Williamson v. State, 512 So. 2d 868 (Miss. 1987).
Foster v. State, 508 So. 2d 1111 (Miss. 1987).
Smith v. State, 499 So. 2d 750 (Miss. 1986).
West v. State, 485 So. 2d 681 (Miss. 1985).
Fisher v. State, 481 So. 2d 203 (Miss. 1985).
Johnson v. State, 476 So. 2d 1195 (Miss. 1985).
Fuselier v. State, 468 So. 2d 45 (Miss. 1985).
West v. State, 463 So. 2d 1048 (Miss. 1985).
Jones v. State, 461 So. 2d 686 (Miss. 1984).
Moffett v. State, 456 So. 2d 714 (Miss. 1984).
Lanier v. State, 450 So. 2d 69 (Miss. 1984).
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Laney v. State, 421 So. 2d 1216 (Miss. 1982).
-ix-
DEATH CASES REVERSED
AS TO PUNISHMENT AND REMANDED
FOR RESENTENCING TO LIFE IMPRISONMENT
Reddix v. State, 547 So. 2d 792 (Miss. 1989).
Wheeler v. State, 536 So. 2d 1341 (Miss. 1988).
White v. State, 532 So. 2d 1207 (Miss. 1988).
Bullock v. State, 525 So. 2d 764 (Miss. 1987).
Edwards v. State, 441 So. 2d 84 (Miss. l983).
Dycus v. State, 440 So. 2d 246 (Miss. 1983).
Coleman v. State, 378 So. 2d 640 (Miss. 1979).
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DEATH CASES REVERSED AS TO
PUNISHMENT AND REMANDED FOR A NEW TRIAL
ON SENTENCING PHASE ONLY
Fulgham v. State, 46 So. 3d 315 (Miss. 2010).
Rubenstein v. State, 941 So. 2d 735 (Miss. 2006).
King v. State, 784 So. 2d 884 (Miss. 2001).
Walker v. State, 740 So. 2d 873 (Miss. 1999).
Watts v. State, 733 So. 2d 214 (Miss. 1999).
West v. State, 725 So. 2d 872 (Miss. 1998).
Smith v. State, 724 So. 2d 280 (Miss. 1998).
Berry v. State, 703 So. 2d 269 (Miss. 1997).
Booker v. State, 699 So. 2d 132 (Miss. 1997).
Taylor v. State, 672 So. 2d 1246 (Miss. 1996).
*Shell v. State, 554 So. 2d 887 (Miss. 1989); Shell v. Mississippi, 498 U.S. 1 (1990)
reversing, in part, and remanding; Shell v. State 595 So. 2d 1323 (Miss. 1992) remanding for
new sentencing hearing.
*Pinkney v. State, 538 So. 2d 329 (Miss. 1989); Pinkney v. Mississippi, 494 U.S. 1075
(1990) vacating and remanding; Pinkney v. State, 602 So. 2d 1177 (Miss. 1992) remanding
for new sentencing hearing.
*Clemons v. State, 535 So. 2d 1354 (Miss. 1988); Clemons v. Mississippi, 494 U.S.
738 (1990) vacating and remanding; Clemons v. State, 593 So. 2d 1004 (Miss. 1992)
remanding for new sentencing hearing.
*Jones v. State, 517 So. 2d 1295 (Miss. 1987); Jones v. Mississippi, 487 U.S. 1230
(1988) vacating and remanding; Jones v. State, 602 So. 2d 1170 (Miss. 1992) remanding for
new sentencing hearing.
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Russell v. State, 607 So. 2d 1107 (Miss. 1992).
Holland v. State, 587 So. 2d 848 (Miss. 1991).
Willie v. State, 585 So. 2d 660 (Miss. 1991).
Ladner v. State, 584 So. 2d 743 (Miss. 1991).
Mackbee v. State, 575 So. 2d 16 (Miss. 1990).
Berry v. State, 575 So. 2d 1 (Miss. 1990).
Turner v. State, 573 So. 2d 657 (Miss. 1990).
State v. Tokman, 564 So. 2d 1339 (Miss. 1990).
Johnson v. State, 547 So. 2d 59 (Miss. 1989).
Williams v. State, 544 So. 2d 782 (Miss. 1989); sentence aff'd 684 So. 2d 1179 (1996).
Lanier v. State, 533 So. 2d 473 (Miss. 1988).
Stringer v. State, 500 So. 2d 928 (Miss. 1986).
Pinkton v. State, 481 So. 2d 306 (Miss. 1985).
Mhoon v. State, 464 So. 2d 77 (Miss. 1985).
Cannaday v. State, 455 So. 2d 713 (Miss. 1984).
Wiley v. State, 449 So. 2d 756 (Miss. 1984); resentencing affirmed, Wiley v. State, 484
So. 2d 339 (Miss. 1986); cert. denied, Wiley v. Mississippi, 479 U.S. 906 (1986); resentencing
ordered, Wiley v. State, 635 So. 2d 802 (Miss. 1993) following writ of habeas corpus issued
pursuant to Wiley v. Puckett, 969 F.2d 86, 105-106 (5th Cir. 1992); resentencing affirmed.
Williams v. State, 445 So. 2d 798 (Miss. 1984). *Case was originally affirmed in this
Court but on remand from U. S. Supreme Court, case was remanded by this Court for a new
sentencing hearing.
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