IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2015-KA-01900-COA
NICHOLAS DEMORST A/K/A NICHOLAS APPELLANT
MARCEL DEMORST A/K/A NICHOLAS M.
DEMORST A/K/A NICHOLAS DE MORST
A/K/A MARCEL DENEGAL A/K/A LA
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/04/2015
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DALE HARKEY
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JACKSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER
BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES
PHILLIP BROADHEAD
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY: BARBARA WAKELAND BYRD
DISTRICT ATTORNEY: ANTHONY N. LAWRENCE III
NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY
TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: CONVICTED OF CAPITAL MURDER AND
SENTENCED TO LIFE IN THE CUSTODY
OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF
CORRECTIONS, WITHOUT ELIGIBILITY
FOR EARLY RELEASE, EARNED CREDIT,
OR PAROLE, AND TO PAY A $10,000 FINE
AND $2,500 IN RESTITUTION
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED: 06/20/2017
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE GRIFFIS, P.J., FAIR AND GREENLEE, JJ.
FAIR, J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Hunter Miller was shot and killed during a robbery attempt while trying to illegally
buy prescription narcotics from a friend of a friend (of a friend, of a friend). Nicholas
Demorst was linked to the botched drug deal by phone records, and he was subsequently
identified as the killer by the other participants in the abortive deal. Demorst was convicted
of capital murder, and on appeal he contends he received constitutionally ineffective
assistance of counsel and that the trial court committed plain error in allowing into evidence
recordings of phone calls Demorst made from jail, as well as his identification as the shooter
by the two eyewitnesses. We find no error and affirm.
FACTS
¶2. Miller was addicted to prescription pain medication, and his supply had run out. On
January 14, 2014, he encountered an acquaintance he knew to also be addicted to pain killers.
Miller asked whether she knew someone who could sell him the particular pills he preferred,
and the acquaintance put him in touch with her supplier, Kenneth Knox. Knox did not have
the pills Miller wanted, but he said he would try to find them. Knox asked around, and his
friend Freddie Lawrence put him in touch with another man, who Lawrence called “L.A.”
(the man identified himself to Knox as “T.T.”). He had the pills and would sell them to
Miller. For arranging the deal, Knox would be paid a small amount of marijuana (or,
depending on the testimony, synthetic marijuana). Miller’s friend, Collin Cooper, agreed to
come along. A meeting was arranged, but the dealer did not show. Later that same day,
however, the various parties to the deal resumed contact and agreed to meet near University
Street in Gautier.
¶3. Miller, Knox, and Cooper drove together to University Street around 8 p.m., when it
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was dark outside. Between them, Miller and Cooper were holding more than a thousand
dollars in cash for the purchase. They had difficulty locating the dealer, so Knox called him
and was told the dealer was standing in front of one of the houses on University Street and
that they had already passed him. They turned around and subsequently encountered an
African-American man standing in front of a vehicle in a driveway on University Street.
Knox saw the man while he was still speaking to him on the phone. Cooper later said he saw
another man inside the vehicle, though Knox did not. The man standing outside told them
to pull into the driveway, and Miller complied. Knox got out and spoke to the man, who
asked whether they had the money and how many pills they wanted to buy. Knox asked to
see the pills first, which prompted the man to draw a pistol. Knox warned Miller and Cooper
that it was a robbery, and he fled on foot. The man attempted to take Miller’s money as
Miller put the vehicle into reverse and backed out of the driveway. The man pursued, and
as Miller began driving forward, the man shot Miller through the driver’s side window.
Mortally wounded, Miller lost control of the vehicle, and it crashed into a fence. The shooter
fled.
¶4. Cooper got out of the vehicle and initially denied being present during the shooting.
Cooper explained at trial that he had had prior run-ins with the law and was concerned that
his involvement would lead to him being imprisoned. Eventually, both Cooper and Knox
identified Demorst as the shooter. Knox testified at trial that he had previously met Demorst
at some point in the past, but had not realized it at the time of the drug deal. Phone records
3
indicated that a cell phone in Demorst’s name had been in frequent contact with Knox and
Lawrence throughout the day of the murder, including calls with Knox moments before the
shooting and numerous calls with Lawrence less than ten minutes later.1 Phone records also
corroborated Knox’s testimony that Demorst had called him after the murder and warned him
not to speak to the police.2 Finally, the State introduced jailhouse recordings of phone calls
involving Demorst from the week or so after he was arrested. In the recordings, Demorst
appeared to rehearse an alibi defense with his girlfriend and suggested she pay a man to
provide him with another alibi. Demorst also mentioned a large loss he had incurred shortly
before being arrested, apparently from gambling, which he referred to as his “downfall.”
¶5. Demorst did not testify at trial, but he did testify before the grand jury and gave an
interview to police investigators, and these were entered into evidence at the trial. Demorst
denied not only the murder, but the drug deal as well. Of the participants, Demorst claimed
only to know Lawrence, and not well. Demorst claimed to have been with a mechanic or his
1
The phone records show literally dozens of calls between Demorst and Knox and
between Demorst and Lawrence on the day of the shooting. The last call prior to the
shooting was made by Knox to Demorst at 8:15:33 p.m. and lasted 128 seconds. The
shooting occurred shortly before 8:19:59, when the records indicate Knox called Miller.
According to Knox, this call was made to check on Miller immediately after the shooting.
At 8:27:31, Demorst called Lawrence, and the two exchanged numerous calls shortly
thereafter.
2
These calls were actually made from Lawrence’s cell phone (with Lawrence initially
speaking on the phone) and a cell phone belonging to Demorst’s girlfriend’s sister. This
phone was also used to call Lawrence several times starting approximately thirty minutes
after the shooting; from that point on Demorst did not call Lawrence from his own cell
phone.
4
“friend girl” (who later became his girlfriend3) at the time of the murder. At trial, the defense
produced the girlfriend’s mother, who testified that she had seen Demorst at her home, some
distance from the shooting, a short time before it happened. Demorst also claimed that he
used a different cell phone from the one in his name that was linked to the deal, and –
somewhat inconsistently – that his phone had been broken at the time.
¶6. Demorst was convicted of capital murder, and he appeals. Phillip W. Broadhead,
clinical professor and director of the University of Mississippi School of Law Criminal
Appeals Clinic, was appointed as Demorst’s appellate counsel. Third-year law students
under Professor Broadhead’s supervision were appointed as special counsel pursuant to the
Mississippi Law Student Limited Practice Rule. Darian R. Etienne and Reginald Lewis
assisted in the preparation of Demorst’s brief, and Kaeley N. Gemmill and William H. Holley
presented oral argument.
DISCUSSION
1. Witness Identifications – Plain Error
¶7. Demorst contends that the trial court committed plain error in failing to sua sponte
suppress the in-court and out-of-court identifications of Demorst as the shooter by the two
3
Demorst was somewhat inconsistent on this point; at times he suggested they had
been together longer, “on and off.” This was important because, when initially contacted
by investigators, the girlfriend’s family gave a false or incorrect name for Demorst, calling
him “Marcel Denegal.” Investigators found that one of the sisters was “friends” on
Facebook with a “Marcel D,” but she and another sister of the girlfriend denied knowing the
man. The girlfriend’s mother – who provided Demorst with an alibi – testified at trial that
she met him for the first time the night of the murder.
5
eyewitnesses, Knox and Cooper, based on what Demorst contends were overly suggestive
identification procedures. The record reflects that Demorst made no motion to suppress the
identifications and no contemporaneous objections to the in-court identifications – in fact,
Demorst was the one who brought out testimony regarding Knox’s somewhat equivocal out-
of-court identification of him. “[I]ssues not presented to the trial court for lack of
contemporaneous objection are procedurally barred, and error, if any, is waived.” Goff v.
State, 14 So. 3d 625, 655 (¶118) (Miss. 2009) (citation omitted).
¶8. Demorst can proceed on this issue, if at all, only under a plain error standard, which
our courts will allow “only in unusual circumstances” to “prevent[] a manifest miscarriage
of justice.” Id. (citation omitted). As the Mississippi Supreme Court has repeatedly
explained, appellate courts will only find plain error in cases where “a defendant’s
substantive or fundamental rights are affected.” Willie v. State, 204 So. 3d 1268, 1279 (¶29)
(Miss. 2016) (citation omitted). More precisely, the appellant must show that the trial court
deviated from a legal rule, that the error is plain, clear, or obvious, and that the error
prejudiced the outcome of the trial. Id.
¶9. At the outset, we note that this issue is one particularly unsuited for plain error review
– we are aware of no legal rule requiring a trial court to sua sponte suppress evidence. See
Shaheed v. State, 205 So. 3d 1105, 1112 (¶21) (Miss. Ct. App. 2016). Furthermore, the
admissibility of identification evidence is a complicated, fact-intensive issue – requiring fact
finding and weighing of factors by the trial court. These findings can be made fairly only
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after both sides have had advance notice and an opportunity to present their full case as to
the admissibility of the identifications.
¶10. Objections to the admissibility of identification evidence should be made in a motion
to suppress. See United States v. Acox, 595 F.3d 729, 733 (7th Cir. 2010). Motions to
suppress evidence are generally required to be made in advance of trial, and the failure to do
so without good cause has been held to be not only a procedural bar, but a waiver of the issue
precluding even plain error review. See id. at 730-31; Houston v. State, 887 So. 2d 808, 812
(¶¶12-15) (Miss. Ct. App. 2004). The trial court in the instant case entered a scheduling
order requiring motions to suppress to be filed by a certain date, in advance of trial, and
Demorst did not file one.
¶11. Assuming for the sake of argument that the issue is still subject to plain error review,
Demorst has failed to show plain error. As to Knox’s identification, he was initially
presented with a photo array showing six individuals, but Demorst was not one of them.
Knox picked a man named Laterrance Adams, who was later determined to have been
imprisoned at the time of the shooting. After Demorst was identified as a suspect, Knox was
offered a second photo array, and he chose Demorst – though with the caveat that he was
only seventy or eighty percent certain. Knox testified that he was later (he was not clear as
to when) shown another photograph of Demorst from which he was able to confirm the
identification.
¶12. Demorst further alleges that the officer who showed Knox the single photograph also
7
made a statement confirming that Knox had made a correct tentative identification of the
suspect and urging him to confirm it, apparently before Knox himself had confirmed the
photograph was the killer with certainty. But the testimony, which was an affirmative
response to an ambiguous, compound question on cross-examination, fails to support this
claim.4 In fact, Knox subsequently made it clear that he was referring to the photograph of
Demorst that appeared in the second array, and his full account of the presentation of the
second photo array gives no reason to suspect that police officers suggested he choose
Demorst or confirmed his choice as being correct prior to presenting him the additional
photograph.
¶13. In order to suppress the pretrial identification, the burden of proof would have been
on Demorst to show, from the totality of the circumstances, that the identification was “so
impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of misidentification.”
Stewart v. State, 131 So. 3d 569, 572-73 (¶9) (Miss. 2014) (citation omitted). Even if we
were to ignore the fact that Demorst himself introduced this evidence, the out-of-court
identification by Knox is essentially moot because plain error requires prejudice to the
outcome of the trial, and that could not be found if we were to uphold the in-court
identification. See Willie, 204 So. 3d at 1279 (¶29). To suppress the in-court identification,
4
While Demorst contends in his brief on appeal that the officer asked, “[I]s this him,
you can’t hardly miss that, can you?,” the question directed to Knox actually appears in the
record as: “They said is this him; you can’t hardly miss that, can you?” Knox responded
simply “yes, sir.” The semicolon suggests some other meaning to the second part of the
question from the one Demorst asserts.
8
Demorst’s burden is even higher – Demorst would have to show that “the identification was
so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable
misidentification.” Stewart, 131 So. 3d at 573 (¶10) (citation omitted; emphasis in original).
The court would then have to determine whether there was an independent basis for the
identification – whether it was reliable enough to be admissible despite the suggestiveness
of the identification procedure. Id. at 572 (¶7). The trial court would look to five factors:
“(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, and (5)
the length of time between the crime and the confrontation.” Id. at (¶8) (citation omitted).
If the identification were found to be reliable notwithstanding an impermissibly suggestive
procedure, its credibility and weight would be left to the jury. Kimbrough v. State, 379 So.
2d 934, 936 (Miss. 1980).
¶14. Our courts have candidly acknowledged that this is a high burden for a defendant to
meet, even when the issue is properly preserved; “in practice, Mississippi tends to place a
heavy burden on defendants who are contesting the propriety of a pretrial identification
procedure.” Corrothers v. State, 148 So. 3d 278, 298 (¶38) (Miss. 2014).
¶15. While Demorst seems to fault the police for showing Knox a second photo array after
he already picked someone from the first one, he presents no authority that this procedure is
proscribed. The first photo array did not contain Demorst’s photograph, as Demorst had not
9
yet been identified as a suspect, and the man Knox selected was determined to have been
incarcerated at the time of the murder. Demorst cannot argue that the second array contained
other suggestive elements because it was never entered into evidence or otherwise made a
part of the record on appeal.
¶16. While we agree with Demorst that the presentation of a single photograph for
identification is generally unduly suggestive, that is not what occurred here. Knox was
shown the additional photograph only after picking Demorst from the second photo array.
Knox admitted he was only seventy or eighty percent sure of the identification based on that
photograph, and we are mindful that positive feedback from police officers can be suggestive
in the sense that it may boost a witness’s confidence in his identification. But we cannot say
that what occurred here was so suggestive that it precluded Knox from identifying Demorst
in court – that it “[gave] rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.”
Stewart, 131 So. 3d at 573 (¶10). Certainly it is not so suggestive that we can call it plain
error. And even if we were to find the procedure unduly suggestive, the five reliability
factors outlined above would support admitting the identification anyway: although it was
dark, Knox got out of the car and spoke directly to the shooter; the shooter had Knox’s full
attention prior to his drawing the pistol; Knox’s description of the shooter was generally
consistent with Demorst’s appearance; ultimately, Knox was unequivocal in his identification
of Demorst; and the length of time between the killing and Knox’s identification of Demorst
was only a few days. As to the prior misidentification, “an earlier failure to identify, or even
10
a positive identification of a different suspect, does not require exclusion of an in-court or
pretrial identification, if otherwise reliable.” Howard v. Bouchard, 405 F.3d 459, 484 (6th
Cir. 2005).
¶17. Moreover, Demorst fails to meet another requirement of plain error – a showing that
the alleged error affected the result of the case. See Willie, 204 So. 3d at 1279 (¶29). Knox’s
identification of Demorst was strongly corroborated by additional evidence. Knox was
always unequivocal that the man who shot Miller was the same man he had been speaking
with on the telephone moments before. Knox testified that the man on the phone directed
him to the location where he found the shooter and that he actually saw the shooter while the
two were still speaking on the phone. The shooter initially pretended to proceed with the
drug deal that had been previously discussed on the phone, and then he called Knox after the
shooting and warned him not to speak to the police. The phone records and Lawrence’s
testimony established, overwhelmingly, that Demorst was the man on the phone and thus the
killer of Hunter Miller.
¶18. The record as to the circumstances of Cooper’s initial identification of Demorst as the
shooter is even less developed. Cooper simply testified that – about five days after the
shooting, after Demorst was arrested – the police showed him a photograph of Demorst, and
he identified him as the shooter. While Cooper never testified whether he was or was not
shown other photographs at the same time, we could not find plain error here even assuming
Cooper’s identification of Demorst stemmed from a single photograph “show up.” Given
11
Knox’s identification of Demorst and the corroborating evidence we have previously
discussed, Cooper’s identification was cumulative and would not have changed the result of
the trial.
¶19. We cannot find plain error in the admission of in-court identifications by either
Cooper or Knox.
2. Jailhouse Recordings – Plain Error
¶20. Next, Demorst argues that this Court should find plain error on appeal in the
admission into evidence of five audio recordings (and accompanying transcripts) of
conversations between him and his girlfriend. The recordings were made during the week
after Demorst was arrested for the murder, through the jailhouse telephone system. At trial,
Demorst moved to suppress the recordings, but on the theory that they were illegally obtained
based on Demorst’s lack of consent to the conversations being recorded. The motion to
suppress was denied, and Demorst does not challenge that decision on appeal. Instead, he
contends that the trial court should have refused to admit the recordings into evidence, sua
sponte, because they were irrelevant, and that the failure to do so was plain error.
¶21. The record reflects that, at trial, Demorst’s attorney successfully moved to have one
of the recordings redacted, but he otherwise did not object to their admission into evidence.
So Demorst once again must travel under the plain error standard.
¶22. On appeal, Demorst makes much of the fact that the trial judge observed several times
on the record that he did not know if the recordings were relevant (as he had not yet heard
12
them), and that the record does not contain much in the way of argument on that point since,
as we said, the recordings were admitted into evidence without objection.
¶23. We find no merit to this issue, as the recordings were clearly relevant. In some of the
recordings, Demorst and his girlfriend repeatedly rehearse an alibi defense, sometimes in the
third person as if they were talking about other people. In another, they discuss getting a man
(who Demorst had claimed to have been with in his interview with the police) to provide
Demorst with an alibi. Demorst’s girlfriend tells him that the man has refused, and Demorst
urges her to continue her efforts, apparently suggesting that she pay the man to do so.5 Later
in the recording the girlfriend cautions Demorst about what they say on the phone, and
Demorst acknowledges her concern and says he is “not dumb.”
¶24. Under Mississippi law, evidence of consciousness of guilt is evidence of guilt itself.
McClendon v. State, 387 So. 2d 112, 115 (Miss. 1980). Evidence that the defendant
attempted to fabricate an alibi or to pay someone to falsely provide him with one is relevant
and admissible as evidence of consciousness of guilt. A similar scenario occurred in Dickey
v. State, 86 Miss. 525, 38 So. 776 (1905), where the defendant wrote a letter offering to pay
$200 for fabricated exculpatory testimony from a witness. Although the letter was never
delivered, our supreme court found it to be an attempted fabrication and relevant and
admissible. In support, it quoted Wigmore’s “recent” treatise on evidence:
5
After being told the man has firmly refused, Demorst says: “Shid [sic]. Them green
guys, you hear me? You hear me?” “Them green guys.” “You know what I’m talking
about?” Then, perhaps jokingly, Demorst suggests she perform oral sex on the man.
13
It has always been understood – the inference, indeed, is one of the simplest
in human experience – that a party’s falsehood or other frauds in the
preparation and presentation of his cause, his fabrication or suppression of
evidence by bribery or spoliation, and all similar conduct, is receivable against
him as an indication of his consciousness that his case is a weak or unfounded
one, and from that consciousness may be inferred the fact itself of the cause’s
lack of truth and merit. The inference thus does not apply itself necessarily to
any specific fact in the cause, but operates indefinitely, though strongly,
against the whole mass of alleged facts constituting his cause.
Id. at 536, 38 So. at 777-78 (quoting Wigmore on Evidence § 278 (1904)).
¶25. In another recording, Demorst speaks about his “downfall,” which he attributed to
“the streets,” gambling, and a large loss he suffered immediately before he was incarcerated.
We cannot call its admission plain error because it was evidence of a motive for robbery, and
evidence of the defendant’s motive is relevant and generally admissible. See, e.g., O’Connor
v. State, 120 So. 3d 390, 397-98 (¶19) (Miss. 2013).
¶26. We find no plain error in the admission of the jailhouse recordings.
3. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
¶27. Finally, Demorst contends that he received constitutionally ineffective assistance of
counsel at trial.
¶28. To succeed on an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, Demorst must meet both
prongs of the test laid out in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984), and
adopted by the Mississippi Supreme Court in Stringer v. State, 454 So. 2d 468, 476-77 (Miss.
1984). “First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687. Second, the defendant must “show that there is a reasonable
14
probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would
have been different.” Id. at 694.
¶29. Mississippi Rule of Appellate Procedure 22(b) requires claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel to be raised on direct appeal if they are “based on facts fully apparent
from the record.” But the Mississippi Supreme Court has observed:
It is unusual for this [C]ourt to consider a claim of ineffective assistance of
counsel when the claim is made on direct appeal. This is because we are
limited to the trial court record in our review of the claim[,] and there is
usually insufficient evidence within the record to evaluate the claim . . . .
[W]here the record cannot support an ineffective assistance of counsel claim
on direct appeal, the appropriate conclusion is to deny relief, preserving the
defendant’s right to argue the same issue through a petition for post-conviction
relief. This Court will rule on the merits on the rare occasions where (1) the
record affirmatively shows ineffectiveness of constitutional dimensions, or (2)
the parties stipulate that the record is adequate to allow the appellate court to
make the finding without consideration of the findings of fact of the trial
judge.
Wilcher v. State, 863 So. 2d 776, 825 (¶171) (Miss. 2003) (internal citations and quotations
omitted).
¶30. Demorst raises numerous contentions under the umbrella of this issue, only a few of
which are capable of being addressed on direct appeal. First, Demorst contends that his
attorney was ineffective in failing to contemporaneously object to what he calls false factual
claims made by the prosecutors during their closing arguments. But it is apparent from
reviewing the record that any of these objections, even if they had been timely, would have
been futile. In closing arguments, prosecutors are allowed “wide latitude [that] extends not
only to the facts presented in evidence, but also to deduction and conclusions he may
15
reasonably draw therefrom.” Dampier v. State, 973 So. 2d 221, 235 (¶39) (Miss. 2008)
(citation omitted). What Demorst calls unsupported factual claims are actually arguments
– for example, a witness testified that the shooter picked something up after the shooting, and
the prosecutor contended that it was a shell casing. This argument was an attempt to
reconcile the witnesses’ testimony that there were multiple gunshots with the fact that only
one shell casing was found at the scene; the prosecutor argued that the shooter picked up the
second casing. Without belaboring the point, this was not an unsupported factual claim but
a permissible argument, and it was clearly presented as such by the prosecutor. Likewise,
Demorst’s contention that prosecutors “invaded the province of the jury” by “telling [it] how
to deliberate” is without merit; the instances he cites are just arguments as to how the jury
should weigh various pieces of evidence. Finally, Demorst’s challenge to defense counsel’s
failure to object to the relevance of the jailhouse recordings is also without merit. As we
explained above, the jailhouse recordings were relevant, and any objection on the basis of
relevance would have been futile.
¶31. Demorst’s remaining contentions are based on issues not fully apparent from the
record and thus not capable of being decided on direct appeal. Demorst devotes several
pages of argument to the contention that his attorney was constitutionally ineffective for
failing to introduce the second photographic “lineup” into evidence – but the lineup does not
appear in the record and thus it is impossible for this Court to address the second prong of
the Strickland analysis – to determine whether it really would have helped Demorst’s
16
defense. Likewise, Demorst contends that his counsel was ineffective for failing to introduce
evidence that would successfully authenticate a Facebook post allegedly made by Cooper
suggesting uncertainty about Demorst’s guilt, but Cooper denied making the post and on
appeal Demorst just begs the question of whether such evidence actually existed in the first
place. Finally, Demorst challenges counsel’s decision not to move to suppress the
identifications, but “[t]he decision to make certain objections falls within the ambit of trial
strategy and cannot give rise to an ineffective assistance of counsel claim.” Willie v. State,
204 So. 3d 1268, 1275 (¶16) (Miss. 2016) (citation omitted). The record gives this Court no
basis to find ineffective assistance of counsel, and, indeed, it strongly suggests that the
decision not to move to suppress the identifications was strategic. Demorst’s attorney
thoroughly cross-examined Knox and Cooper, and he appears to have had good reason to try
to frame the reliability of their identifications as the central issue of the case, given the
strength of the other evidence against Demorst. Nonetheless, as we have said, this issue is
not fully developed in the record and cannot be conclusively decided on direct appeal.
¶32. We deny relief on these contentions without prejudice to a future post-conviction
claim. See Wilcher, 863 So. 2d at 825 (¶171).
¶33. THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT OF JACKSON COUNTY OF
CONVICTION OF CAPITAL MURDER AND SENTENCE OF LIFE IN THE
CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, WITHOUT
ELIGIBILITY FOR EARLY RELEASE, EARNED CREDIT, OR PAROLE, AND TO
PAY A $10,000 FINE AND $2,500 IN RESTITUTION, IS AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS
OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO JACKSON COUNTY.
17
LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, ISHEE, CARLTON,
WILSON, GREENLEE AND WESTBROOKS, JJ., CONCUR.
18