IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 10/01/96
OF THE
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 93-KA-01462 COA
DENNIS EARL COLE
APPELLANT
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
APPELLEE
THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION AND
MAY NOT BE CITED, PURSUANT TO M.R.A.P. 35-B
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. LARRY EUGENE ROBERTS
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LAUDERDALE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:
JAMES A. WILLIAMS
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENREAL
BY: JOLENE M. LOWRY
DISTRICT ATTORNEY: BILBO MITCHELL
NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - KIDNAPPING AND AGGRAVATED ASSAULT
TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: APPELLANT CONVICTED OF BOTH CRIMES AND
SENTENCED TO SERVE THIRTY YEARS WITH TEN YEARS SUSPENDED TO BE
FOLLOWED BY FIVE YEARS ON PROBATION FOR KIDNAPPING AND TWENTY YEARS
FOR AGGRAVATED ASSAULT TO RUN CONCURRENTLY WITH THE SENTENCE FOR
KIDNAPPING
BEFORE FRAISER, C.J., COLEMAN, AND KING, JJ.
COLEMAN, J., FOR THE COURT:
A grand jury in Lauderdale County indicted Appellant, Dennis Earl Cole, for the commission of three
felonies: (1) attempted murder of Reginald Neely, (2) aggravated assault on Cole’s wife, Lavesa
Cole, and (3) kidnapping of Lavesa Cole. When the State rested, it moved to dismiss the charge of
attempted murder of Reginald Neely, which motion the trial court sustained. The jury convicted Cole
of the remaining two felonies of aggravated assault on and kidnapping of Lavesa Cole, Dennis Earl
Cole’s wife. The trial court sentenced Cole to serve a term of thirty years in the Mississippi
Department of Corrections with ten years suspended and five years on probation after completing this
sentence for the felony of kidnapping and a term of twenty years on the felony of aggravated assault,
the latter sentence to run concurrently with the sentence for kidnapping. In his appeal, Cole poses
five issues for this Court’s consideration, analysis, and resolution. We affirm the trial court’s
judgment of Cole’s guilt of kidnapping and its sentence of thirty years in the Mississippi Department
of Corrections with ten years suspended and five years on probation after completing this sentence
for the felony of kidnapping. Because there was a variance between the elements of aggravated
assault as the indictment charged Cole and as the State’s instruction explained them to the jury,
which we find to be plain error, we reverse and remand the trial court’s judgment of Cole’s guilt of
aggravated assault.
I. Facts
The Appellant, Dennis Earl Cole, married Lavesa Cole on January 15, 1992. When they married,
Lavesa Cole was the mother of one child, a daughter, whose name was Sky. Reginald Neely was
Sky’s father; but he and Lavesa Cole never married. On or about February 9, 1993, Cole and his wife
Lavesa separated. On February 18, 1993, Appellant Cole entered his plea of guilty to an indictment
for the crime of burglary of a Rex electronics store in Meridian. The saga which resulted in Cole’s
triple indictment for attempted murder, kidnapping, and aggravated assault occurred three days later
on the night of February 21, 1993.
Earlier that day, February 21, Cole had visited his wife at her mother’s house located at 1927 20th
Street in Meridian to discuss their separation and proposed divorce. Later that night Cole came to a
hospital in Meridian where Lavesa Cole’s mother was a patient; but Lavesa Cole testified that she
and her husband did not "say anything to each other." Cole left the hospital with Lavesa Cole’s
sister’s ex-boyfriend at about nine o’clock that evening. As Lavesa Cole and her sister were leaving
the parking lot at the hospital to return to their mother’s home, Sky told her mother that she saw
Cole driving a car in the hospital parking lot. Lavesa testified that she was not sure that it was Cole
because the car’s lights were not on.
On their way to their mother’s home, Lavesa Cole and her sister stopped by the Mississippi
Employment Security Commission office so that her sister could drop off her claim by slipping it
under the door of the office, which was closed at that hour of the night. When Lavesa Cole and her
sister arrived at their mother’s home, they each put their children to bed, and then they went to bed.
Dennis Cole came to his wife’s mother’s house after his wife and her sister had gone to bed and
knocked on the door. Lavesa Cole responded to her husband’s knock by telling him to leave and
suggesting that she would call the police if he didn’t leave. According to Lavesa Cole’s testimony,
her husband pretended to leave. Next, Reginald Neely, Sky’s father, drove his pick-up to Lavesa
Cole’s mother’s house, perhaps in response to Lavesa Cole’s telephone call after Dennis Cole had
left.
After Neely arrived in his pick-up, Lavesa Cole left her mother’s house and got into the pick-up with
Neely. After Neely drove about a half a block down the street, Dennis Cole, stood up in the back of
Neely’s pick-up with what Lavesa Cole and Neely thought was a gun in his hand. Neely’s pick-up
had a sliding glass partition in the rear window of the cab, which apparently was open. Lavesa Cole
described what happened next in the following testimony:
A. And that's when I got out and Reg got out and he went one way and then I
was going up a hill and that's when Dennis came behind me.
Q. Okay. Reginald stopped the truck?
A. Well, no, not really.
Q. You got out with the truck moving?
A. Uh-huh.
Q. And Reginald got out with the truck moving?
A. Yes.
Q. Even though he was driving?
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. And Dennis jumped out with the truck moving.
A. Yeah. He jumped off.
Q. And I believe you said he followed you instead of following Reginald?
A. Right.
Q. What, did the truck crash?
A. It ran into a stop sign and that's what stopped the truck.
When Dennis Cole caught up with his wife, they began fighting. According to Lavesa Cole’s version
of the evening’s unfolding events, "that’s when he hit me [on the forehead] with [the butt of a] gun
and bit me." The resulting wound required thirteen stitches to close. She described the gun as a nine-
millimeter pistol which looked "pretty long" to her. According to his wife, Dennis Cole also hit her
about ten times with his fists. Cole then bit his wife on her left jaw. When Melvin Glenn Moore
arrived on the scene, he told Cole to stop, that he had messed up his wife’s face. In response to
Moore’s intervention on behalf of Lavesa Cole, Dennis Cole "turned around and pointed the gun at
Melvin." Melvin "threw up his hands, and he left."
Dennis Cole forced his wife to accompany him up the hill where he coerced her into entering a school
bus parked on 22nd Avenue. Once they were inside the bus, Cole ordered his wife at gunpoint to
disrobe, which she did; and then he engaged in sexual intercourse with her "to make a baby." After
the sexual activity, Lavesa Cole asked if she could put on her clothes, to which her husband
consented. He asked her to lay back down after she had dressed. Then, according to his wife’s
testimony, Dennis Cole saw the police cars pull up at both ends of the parked school bus. Meridian
police lieutenant John Nelson came to the side of the bus and began to talk to Dennis Cole through
the open bus window. When he saw the police cars, Dennis Cole got down on the floor of the bus.
According to his wife’s testimony, Cole then reached over her, and the gun went off while he was
holding it in his right hand. The bullet struck her in the left side of her face and exited from the back
of her neck.
Dennis Cole had earlier asked Lieutenant Nelson to call his mother. She arrived at the school bus
about the time her son shot Lavesa Cole. When his mother told her son Dennis that she couldn’t help
him "like this," Dennis Cole shot himself in the leg. Lavesa Cole estimated that perhaps forty five
minutes elapsed between the time her husband shot her and then shot himself. After he shot himself,
Dennis Cole dropped the gun, and Lavesa Cole picked it up and threw it out the window. Just after
she threw the gun through the window, the police stormed the school bus. One officer picked up
Lavesa Cole, and she was taken to a hospital in Meridian. The police also arrested Dennis Cole.
Thus, the siege ended.
II. Trial
The indictment by which the grand jury on Lauderdale County charged Cole with aggravated assault
read in part as follows:
The Grand Jury for the State of Mississippi . . . upon their oaths present that:
DENNIS EARL COLE
as a part of a common scheme of
as a part of the same occurrence or transaction
. . . did unlawfully, feloniously, and knowingly and purposely cause serious bodily injury to another,
Lavesa R. Cole, with a deadly weapon, to-wit: a 9MM handgun, by shooting her,
in violation of Section 97-3-7(2) of the Mississippi Code Annotated as amended . . . .
Without objection from Cole’s counsel, the State submitted, and the trial court granted, the following
instruction, in which the State defined the elements of the crime of aggravated assault, all of which
the jury must find Cole to have committed, before it could return a verdict of guilty of aggravated
assault:
INSTRUCTION S-2
The Court instructs the Jury that should you find from the evidence in this case, beyond a reasonable
doubt that:
1. On or about the 21st day of February, 1993, in Lauderdale County, Mississippi;
2. That defendant, Dennis Earl Cole, did purposely, knowingly or recklessly under circumstances
manifesting an extreme indifference to the value of human life cause bodily injury to Lavesa Cole;
3. With a deadly weapon, a handgun, by shooting her, and
4. That the Defendant was not laboring under such defect of reason from disease of mind as to know
the nature and quality of the act he was doing, or, if he did know it, that he did know what he was
doing was wrong; then it is your sworn duty to find the Defendant guilty of AGGRAVATED
ASSAULT under Count II.
Should the State fail to prove any one (1) of more of these essential elements, beyond a reasonable
doubt, then you shall find the Defendant not guilty of AGGRAVATED ASSAULT under Count II.
Insanity was Cole’s fortress of defense to both charges of kidnapping and aggravated assault,
although with regard to aggravated assault only, his counsel flirted with the defense that Cole’s
shooting his wife was an accident. We reserve further discussion of what occurred at the trial for our
analysis and resolution of the issues which Cole has raised for our review in his appeal.
We note that after the Mississippi Supreme Court had docketed this appeal on or about December
29, 1993, Cole’s trial counsel filed a motion in that court to withdraw as his trial counsel because
Cole had not paid her fee as he and his family had agreed. His counsel also filed Cole’s affidavit of
poverty and motion to proceed in forma pauperis in the supreme court. The supreme court
responded to these motions by remanding this case to the trial court "for 45 days for the limited
purpose of that court’s determination and entry of an order indicating that Cole is entitled to in
forma pauperis status and to appointment of counsel." On remand, the trial court entered its
judgment granting leave to proceed in forma pauperis and appointing counsel. In its judgment the
trial court adjudicated that Cole’s present counsel was most familiar with the issues in this case and
that it was not in Cole’s best interest for her to be allowed to withdraw from representing him. It
accordingly appointed her as counsel for the indigent Cole. Still later, Cole’s counsel filed another
motion in the Mississippi Supreme Court to withdraw as Cole’s counsel because she was engaged in
a campaign to be elected chancellor of the Twelfth Chancery Court District in the fall of 1994. The
supreme court sustained that motion; hence Cole’s representation in this appeal is by his present
counsel, James A. Williams.
III. Issues and the law
We quote verbatim Cole’s expression of the five issues in the Statement of Issues found on page 1 of
his brief, and we will consider them in the same order in which he has listed them in his Statement of
Issues. We so explain because in his brief, Cole changes the order presentation of these issues for
argument, and he rewrites the issue as a slightly different proposition as his introduction to his
argument on that issue. We adopt his order of presentation and language found in his Statement of
Issues because Mississippi Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a)(3) requires that such a Statement of
Issues be included in a party’s brief and explains the significance of the Statement of Issues with
regard to the appellate court’s consideration of those issues.
Issue one:
Whether a defendant pleading insanity is denied a fair trial, due process of law, right to counsel and
the right of confrontation, when the State fails to disclose (1) the true possible mental disorder
diagnosis and the results of a mental test its experts performed which was substantially similar and
taken under similar circumstances, in results, while attacking the results of the same test performed
by the defendant’s mental expert.
Issue two:
Whether a defendant pleading insanity during a crime occurring three days after entry of a guilty plea
which recited no mental problems is denied due process of law, the effective assistance of counsel,
the right to confrontation and a fair trial, when the State, over objection, is allowed to probe
defendant’s expert concerning said guilty plea, without adequate preparation of the witness and the
State’s mental expert testifies such temporal connection was the foundation of his opinion of sanity at
the time of the crime.
Issue three:
Whether a defendant pleading insanity during a crime occurring three days after entry of a guilty plea
which recited no mental problems and an adjudication of sanity is denied due process of law and a
fair trial by a jury instruction that requires the jury to first find a reasonable doubt of sanity to remove
the presumption of sanity before it can require the State to prove sanity beyond a reasonable doubt
and further recites that mental illness is not necessarily equated to insanity.
Issue four:
Whether a defendant pleading insanity is denied fundamental fairness, due process of law, equal
protection of the law, a fair trial when the State during closing argument raises the specter that if the
jury finds the defendant not guilty by reason of insanity the defendant will be freed.
Issue five:
Whether a defendant pleading insanity is denied fundamental fairness, due process of law, a fair trial
when the State is allowed to tell the jury that the defendant had a three-day old conviction of burglary
when he committed the crime being tried.
A. Issue one:
Whether a defendant pleading insanity is denied a fair trial, due process of law, right to counsel and
the right of confrontation, when the State fails to disclose (1) the true possible mental disorder
diagnosis and the results of a mental test its experts performed which was substantially similar and
taken under similar circumstances, in results, while attacking the results of the same test performed
by the defendant’s mental expert.
1. Procedural background
By its order dated March 4, 1993, the Circuit Court of Lauderdale County appointed David
A. Stephenson to represent Cole because it found Cole to be indigent. Notwithstanding that order of
March 4, 1993, and in absence of any order in the record appointing him to represent Cole, Rogers J.
Druhet, a Meridian attorney, wrote a letter to the district attorney to request that pursuant to
Rule 4.06 of the Uniform Criminal Rules of Circuit Court Practice, the district attorney provide him,
among other items, "(1) Names and addresses of all witnesses in chief proposed to be offered by the
prosecution at trial; . . .(4) Copy of crime lab reports or report of any test made; and . . . (6) Copy of
any exculpatory material concerning the Defendant." The requested items were direct quotes from
Rule 4.06 of the Uniform Criminal Rules for Circuit Court Practice which were then in effect. This
letter was Druhet’s only appearance anywhere in the record on behalf of Cole. On April 27, 1993, the
trial court entered an order of arraignment and setting of case for trial and setting time for motions in
which it included the name of Sarah Springer as Cole’s attorney of record.
Two days later on April 29, Ms. Springer filed a motion for psychological examination and notice of
insanity defense on behalf of Cole. In that motion, Cole Stated:
2. The Defendant has submitted to certain evaluating tests, including the Minnesota
Multiphasic Personality Inventory-II, or MMPI-II, which is a tool frequently used by
psychologists and psychiatrists in the evaluation of a person suffering from mental illness.
3. The MMPI has detected a severe psychological disorder in the Defendant, and the most
likely diagnosis for the Defendant is schizophrenia, possible paranoid type, or paranoid
disorder.
The motion also informed the court that Jan Boggs, Ph. D., had examined Cole and had
recommended that he be hospitalized for evaluation and treatment of his mental condition. The trial
court granted Cole’s motion by its order for mental examination and evaluation. In that order the
court mandated that Cole be transported to the Mississippi State Hospital at Whitfield, and "there
undergo psychiatric examination and evaluation for the purpose of determining his competency in
regard to his ability to reasonably assist in his own defense in the trial of this cause as well as the
degree of his sanity and legal sanity condition at the same time of the alleged offense charged in the
indictment in this case."
On August 23, 1993, Reb McMichael, M. D., staff psychiatrist, and W. Criss Lott, Ph. D., clinical
psychologist, at the Mississippi State Hospital, wrote a letter to the trial judge to relate and to explain
the course of their examination of Cole pursuant to that order. A copy of this letter was filed in the
court file, and the last page of the letter indicates that its authors mailed a copy of their letter to
Cole’s counsel, Ms. Stringer. In their letter Drs. McMichael and Lott included the following forensic
opinions about Dennis Cole:
FORENSIC OPINIONS: We are unanimous in our opinion that Mr. Cole presently has
the mental capacity to confer with an attorney with a reasonable degree of rational
understanding and has a rational as well as factual understanding of the nature and object
of the legal proceedings against him.
We are also unanimous in our opinion that Mr. Cole was not suffering from any disease of
the mind at the time of the alleged offenses such that he would not have known the nature
and quality of his acts or would not have known that these alleged acts would be wrong.
Cole’s sole witness at his trial was Jan P. Boggs, Ph. D., a licensed psychologist and counselor. He
ultimately expressed his opinion that Cole suffered from paranoid schizophrenia. He based his
opinion on the results of Cole’s answers to the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-II, or
MMPI-II, and his interviews with Cole. On cross-examination, Boggs elaborated on his diagnosis by
stating, "I do not think [Cole] knew the difference between right and wrong at the time of his act."
Dr. Boggs reaffirmed on cross-examination that in his opinion Cole was "competent to stand trial and
participate in his own defense now."
On direct examination Dr. Boggs defended the MMPI-II as "a very useful and very reliable
dependable instrument, particularly when used in connection with observation on the client and
collection of history." Dr. Boggs opined that the results of the MMPI-II should be basically the same
if Cole was to take the test again within a reasonably brief time after he had administered it to him.
Nevertheless, the State exhaustively cross-examined Dr. Boggs, and the MMPI-II was the primary,
although not the only focus, of that cross-examination. The State emphasized in its cross-examination
that the results of the final one-third of the test were suspect because Cole had started giving answers
to the questions "just off the top of his head." Dr. Boggs described Cole’s answers to the last one
third of the test as "careless." The State inferred that Cole was "malingering" with his answers to the
test in that he was trying to rig the results of the test by answering them subjectively. In its cross-
examination of Dr. Boggs, the State mounted other attacks on the credibility of the results of the
MMPI-II, which are too numerous to describe in this opinion.
Cole rested his case after his counsel and the State had completed their examination and cross-
examination of Dr. Boggs. The State called Dr. Reb McMichael, the co-author of the letter to the
trial judge dated August 23, 1993, to rebut Dr. Boggs’ opinion that Cole was insane as defined by the
M’Naghten Rule when he committed the crimes of kidnapping and aggravated assault for which he
was being tried. Dr. McMichael opined that "[Cole] manifestly . . . was not experiencing any major
organic mental disorder at the time that I examined him." Later Dr. McMichael further testified:
We were unanimous in our opinion that Mr. Cole was not suffering from any major mental
disorder which would have prevented him knowing right from wrong in relation to his
actions at that time.
Dr. McMichael next described the diagnosis of Cole as follows:
We gave him a diagnosis of alcohol abuse to reflect his continuing use of that substance
despite all the problems that it had caused for him in the past and a diagnosis of
personality disorder, not otherwise specified, with borderline features, which is "psych"
speak for a personality characterized by dependence on others, anger, often violence,
violence towards others, violence towards the self, impulsive behavior, intense feelings of
rage, intense fear of abandonment and rejection.
Earlier Dr. McMichael had explained the use to which Dr. Lott had put the Minnesota Multiphasic
Personality Inventory-II test. The record reveals this about Dr. McMichael’s explanation:
A. I believe that he also gave Mr. Cole an M.M.P.I.
Q. That was after you had all discussed it and had your decision regarding the
legal issues here?
A. We thought we were pretty clear on the issues. Because of the information
supplied to us and some of his responses on the previous M.M.P.I., Dr. Lott
wanted to repeat it to see if that would change our opinion, looking for any
other evidence that we may have missed in a clinical interview.
Q. Did it change your opinion?
BY MS. SPRINGER: Your Honor, I'm going to object to any
results of an M.M.P.I. This has not been provided to the defendant
and I believe we would be entitled to review that before this witness
goes into that information.
BY THE COURT: The question was did it change your opinion?
BY MR. ANGERO: Yes, sir.
BY THE COURT: Do you intend on trying to introduce some --
BY MR. ANGERO: No, sir.
BY THE COURT: All right. Objection is overruled.
A. No, it did not.
Cole’s counsel cross-examined Dr. McMichael about the value and accuracy of the Minnesota
Multiphasic Personality Inventory-II test in the following way:
Q. In your experience in being familiar with the M.M.P.I. test, have you found
it to be reliable?
A. It's a complicated question. Generally, yes. I have also found it to be of
limited utility in forensic situations because, and again I'm not a psychologist,
as far as I'm aware the main reliability of the M.M.P.I. is that so many other
people similar to the person taking the test have taken the test, but as far as I'm
aware, the M.M.P.I. was not standardized on a population of criminal
defendants, so it's of limited utility in a forensic setting. It's of more utility in a
clinical setting.
Q. The M.M.P.I. would be valuable to a psychologist in a clinical setting
evaluating a patient; would it not?
A. It would be more valuable to a psychologist or a psychiatrist in a clinical
setting than in a forensic setting.
Q. As you testified, a forensic setting such as the practice that you have is
limited, isn't it?
A. Certainly.
In his motion for new trial, Cole assigned the following grounds to support his request for a new
trial:
4. The court erred in allowing the State to use their expert in rebuttal without granting the
defense an opportunity to review test results used by the expert (including but not limited
to the MMPI test given to the Defendant at Whitfield); full disclosure would have allowed
the defense to more effectively cross-examine the State’s expert. Furthermore, on
information and belief, the test results would be exculpatory in nature, supporting the
Defendant’s insanity defense.
To support his position on this matter, Cole submitted to the court as an exhibit a letter which Dr.
Boggs wrote to the trial judge after the trial. In this letter Dr. Boggs wrote:
The results of the MMPI-2 [which Dr. Lott administered to Cole at Whitfield] are
remarkably similar to the one that I administered to Dennis approximately five months
earlier, on the heels of his arrest. I have superimposed the graphed results of these tests on
one sheet and it is attached . . . . Both profiles are reported as valid with the latter one-
third of the answers on both testings reported as answered in a random or careless
manner. The first testing [Dr. Boggs’] reported diagnostic considerations of
Schizophrenia, possibly Paranoid type, or a Paranoid Disorder; the second testing reported
diagnostic considerations of Personality Disorder, probably Paranoid or Passive-
Aggressive Personality; the possibility of a Paranoid Disorder was also suggested in the
second testing. . . . None of the three testings suggests the diagnosis Personality Disorder,
Not otherwise specified, with Borderline Features, given in the August 23, 1993, letter to
you from Dr. McMichael and Dr. Lott.
Dr. Lott then wrote that he had received by fax about forty pages of documents to which he had not
been privy, and that he was concerned about his not having had this information available to him or
to Cole’s attorney in the preparation of Cole’s case or available to the trial court for its review during
the trial. Nevertheless, the trial court denied Cole’s motion for new trial.
2. Application of the law to this procedural background
Rule 4.06(a) of the Uniform Rules for Criminal Practice in the Circuit Courts read as follows:
Upon written request by the defendant, the prosecution shall disclose to each defendant or
to his or her attorney, and permit him or her to inspect, copy, test, and photograph,
without the necessity of court order, the following which is in the possession, custody, or
control of the State, or the existence of which is known, or by the exercise of due
diligence may become known, to the prosecution:
....
(4) Any reports or Statements of experts, written, recorded, or otherwise preserved, made
in connection with the particular case, . . . ." (emphasis added).
This Court finds filed in the clerk’s papers a copy of a subpoena duces tecum issued for "Dr. Lott, or
the proper custodian of records at Mississippi State Hospital . . . to give evidence in a certain matter
under investigation . . . and then and there have all questions in the ‘Minnesota Multi-phasic
Personality Inventory-I’ and ‘Minnesota Multi-phasic Personality Inventory-II,’ and other records,
pertaining to Dennis Earl Cole, a Black male (Lauderdale County Circuit Court Cause No. 149-93)."
This subpoena duces tecum was dated September 4, 1993, thirty days before October 4, 1993, the
date that Cole’s trial began. While there is no return of service endorsed on the copy, this Court finds
that this subpoena duces tecum demonstrates that the State knew that Dr. Lott had used the MMPI
to test Cole at least thirty days before his trial began.
This Court further finds that the letter from Rogers J. Druhet to the district attorney in which he
requested him to furnish any "(4) Cop[ies] of crime lab reports or report of any test made" was
sufficient to trigger the requirement that the State furnish a copy of the Minnesota Multiphasic
Personality Inventory-II test which Dr. Lott had administered to Cole at the Mississippi State
Hospital at Whitfield. The issue becomes whether Cole may place the trial court in error because it
overruled his objection to the State’s direct examination of Dr. McMichael when the State failed to
furnish his counsel with the MMPI II which Dr. Lott administered to Cole.
We find the case of United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 105 S. Ct. 3375, 87 L. Ed. 2d 481 (1985)
to be apt authority on which to rest our resolution of this issue. In Bagley, the government failed to
disclose the nature of its agreement with the two main witnesses against Bagley even though Bagley
moved that the government furnish "any deals, promises or inducements made to witnesses in
exchange for their testimony." Bagley, 105 S. Ct. at 3377. It later developed that the government had
agreed to compensate these two witnesses for their testimony in return for their being paid $300.00.
Id. at 3378. The district court, which had convicted Bagley in a bench trial, refused to vacate
Bagley’s sentence because it found that had the existence of those agreements been disclosed to it
during Bagley’s trial, they would not have affected its finding that the government had proved
Bagley’s guilt of the offenses for which he had been convicted; and it denied Bagley’s motion to
vacate his sentence. Id. at 3379.
Bagley appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and that court reversed
the district court’s denial of Bagley’s motion. About the Ninth Circuit’s reason for reversing the
district court’s denial of Bagley’s motion to vacate his sentence, the United States Supreme Court
observed:
The Court of Appeals apparently based its reversal, however, on the theory that the
Government's failure to disclose the requested Brady information that respondent could
have used to conduct an effective cross-examination impaired respondent's right to
confront adverse witnesses. The court noted: "In Davis v. Alaska, ... the Supreme Court
held that the denial of the 'right of effective cross-examination' was ‘constitutional error of
the first magnitude’ 'requiring automatic reversal.’" 719 F.2d, at 1464 (quoting Davis v.
Alaska, 415 U.S. 308, 318, 94 S. Ct. 1105, 1111, 39 L. Ed. 2d 347 (1974)) (emphasis
added by Court of Appeals). In the last sentence of its opinion, the Court of Appeals
concluded: "we hold that the government's failure to provide requested Brady information
to Bagley so that he could effectively cross-examine two important government witnesses
requires an automatic reversal."
Bagley, 105 S. Ct. at 3379.
The Supreme Court declared that "Impeachment evidence, however, as well as exculpatory evidence,
falls within the Brady rule." Id. at 3380. That is because impeachment evidence is "evidence favorable
to an accused . . . so that, if disclosed and used effectively, it may make the difference between
conviction and acquittal." Id. Further in its opinion, the Supreme Court opined:
The constitutional error, if any, in this case was the Government's failure to assist the
defense by disclosing information that might have been helpful in conducting the cross-
examination. As discussed above, such suppression of evidence amounts to a
constitutional violation only if it deprives the defendant of a fair trial. Consistent with "our
overriding concern with the justice of the finding of guilt," United States v. Agurs, 427
U.S. at 112, 96 S. Ct. at 2401, a constitutional error occurs, and the conviction must be
reversed, only if the evidence is material in the sense that its suppression undermines
confidence in the outcome of the trial.
Bagley, 105 S. Ct. at 3381.
While the Supreme Court recognized three categories of prosecutorial failure to divulge evidence, i.
e., "no request," "general request," and "specific request," it found the Strickland formulation of the
Agurs test for materiality sufficiently flexible to cover all three categories. Bagley, 105 S. Ct. at 3383.
The term "Agurs test" applies to the situation where the defense makes a specific request and the
prosecutor fails to disclose responsive evidence. Id. The term "Strickland formulation" refers to the
criteria adopted in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 80 L. Ed. 2d 674
(1984), in which the United States Supreme Court held that a new trial must be granted when
evidence is not introduced because of the incompetence of counsel only if "there is a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different." Strickland, 104 S. Ct. at 2068; see Bagley, 105 S. Ct. at 3383.
The Supreme Court observed that the Strickland Court defined a "reasonable probability" as "a
probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome." Id. In Strickland, the Supreme Court
explained:
When a defendant challenges a conviction, the question is whether there is a reasonable
probability that, absent the errors, the factfinder would have had a reasonable doubt
respecting guilt."
Strickland, 104 S. Ct. at 2068-69.
We conclude this tedious discussion of Bagley to note that the Supreme Court reversed the judgment
of the court of appeals and remanded the case to that court "for a determination whether there is a
reasonable probability that, had the inducement offered by the Government to [the two witnesses]
been disclosed to the defense, the result of the trial would have been different." Bagley, 105 S. Ct. at
3385. Since we have held that the State was obligated to disclose the MMPI-II test results to Cole in
response to Roger Druhet’s letter to the district attorney, we must determine pursuant to Bagley
whether there is a reasonable probability that, had the MMPI-II test results been disclosed to Cole,
the result of the trial would have been different.
Cole does not suggest any basis on which to build a conclusion that the jury would have found him
not guilty by reason of insanity, or, alternatively, been unable to reach a verdict, if the MMPI-II test
results at the State hospital had been divulged. Cole only asks:
Had Ms. Springer been allowed these disclosures and been allowed the hour that the
District Attorney was given to review Boggs’ case file, what might the jury verdict have
been?
The heart of Cole’s complaint on this issue is the following sentence found in his brief:
Had this Whitfield MMPI been available on cross, all the State’s attacks on Boggs would
have been countered.
This Court interprets this sentence to mean that Cole really wanted these test results so that he might
demonstrate that the results of a MMPI-II should be essentially the same if the subject of the test
took it again. Even without the results in hand, Cole’s counsel cross-examined Dr. McMichael about
the MMPI-II test results. From the cross-examination that we previously quoted in this opinion, we
determine that Dr. McMichael opined that while it was a complicated question, he generally found
the MMPI-II results to be "generally reliable" although of little value in a forensic setting. On direct
examination, Dr. McMichael testified that the results of the MMPI-II test which Dr. Lott had
administered had not changed his opinion of Cole’s diagnosis and ability to know the difference
between right and wrong and to stand trial.
We conclude that even if the State had furnished Cole with the results of the MMPI-II which Dr.
Lott administered at the State Hospital, which were quite similar to the results of Dr. Boggs’
identical test, little would have changed in the "battle of the experts" which Drs. Boggs and
McMichael waged. We note that not even Dr. Boggs attempted to interpret the results of Cole’s
MMPI-II test results to mean that Cole did not know the difference between right and wrong on the
night of February 21, 1993, -- the relevant M’Naghten standard by which the jury was to determine if
Cole was not guilty "by reason of insanity." We can only conclude that there is no reasonable
probability that, had the MMPI-II test results been disclosed to Cole, the jury would have found Cole
to be not guilty by reason of insanity, or even been unable to reach any verdict. Thus, we refuse to
put the trial court in error on this issue, which we resolve adversely to Cole.
B. Issue two:
Whether a defendant pleading insanity during a crime occurring three days after entry of a guilty plea
which recited no mental problems is denied due process of law, the effective assistance of counsel,
the right to confrontation and a fair trial, when the State, over objection, is allowed to probe
defendant’s expert concerning said guilty plea, without adequate preparation of the witness and the
State’s mental expert testifies such temporal connection was the foundation of his opinion of sanity at
the time of the crime.
During the mid afternoon of the second day of trial, the trial court instructed the jury to retire to the
jury room for a break. After the jury had left the court room, the district attorney made the following
announcement to the trial judge:
BY MR. MITCHELL: Judge, the State would like to
make an ore tenus motion to be able to go into a prior
felony of Dennis Earl Cole, burglary of a commercial
building. There's a number of reasons that we feel like we
would be able to do this. For one, the guilty plea was
entered three days prior to the commission of the crime
here. And in the guilty plea, Item No. 12 in his sworn
document, [Cole] Stated, I do not claim to now be nor
have I ever suffered from any type of mental disease or
disorder, except: and he put "none." The second reason
we think it's relevant to this case is that Dr. Boggs has
Stated that he felt that the defendant has been suffering
from paranoid schizophrenia since August of 1992, and
the commission of this crime occurred on August 3rd,
1992, which leads me to believe that Dr. Boggs -- and I
would like to ask Dr. Boggs about whether he formed
that opinion because that's the time when the defendant
started his criminal activity. And the third reason is
because, as the Court well knows, that when a defendant
takes the stand, the State of Mississippi is allowed now
to use burglaries where someone is breaking in to steal as
a crime of dishonesty, in which we can impeach the
defendant's testimony. The defendant has made an
announcement that he is not going to take the stand in
this case, but Dr. Boggs has been on the stand telling the
defendant's version of this and we have a right to
impeach the defendant's version no matter where it's
coming from.
The trial judge, the district attorney, the assistant district attorney, and Cole’s defense counsel
engaged in a lengthy discussion of the prejudice, probative value, and appropriate manner in which
such testimony might best be elicited. Initially, the trial judge proposed:
Tell you what I'm going to do, Mr. D.A., and I want to do this as carefully as I can
because I have significant concern that whatever probative value this line of inquiry may
have in an effort to attack the credibility of the opinion testimony of Dr. Boggs, the
potential for the prejudicial effect is great. I don't want mentioned to the jury at this time
anything about the defendant having previously been convicted of a felony offense.
However, I would permit you to question Dr. Boggs about whether or not he was aware
of the fact that the defendant had, under oath, three days prior to February the 21st, 1993,
claimed in a court proceeding that he did not then and had not previously suffered from
any mental disorder or mental condition.
Cole’s counsel responded to this proposal by the trial judge by arguing that if anything at all went in
about her client’s conviction of burglary, she would be forced to try that case as well as the one
before the court. The district attorney advised the trial judge that he intended to question Dr.
McMichael about Cole’s plea of guilty to the burglary charge three days before the events in
question. After further discussion and argument, the trial judge ruled:
I'm going to permit the State to get into this line of inquiry. I will, at your request, submit
a limiting instruction to the jury which would effectively tell the jury that they could not
consider any prior criminal conviction of the defendant as evidence justifying a verdict of
guilty against him on a crime charged or crimes charged in this indictment. If you desire
such an instruction, I will give a limiting instruction to the jury to that effect.
The district attorney asked Dr. Boggs if he was aware that Cole had sworn in his petition to accept
his plea of guilty that he did not have any kind of mental problems and had never suffered from any
mental problems. Dr. Boggs answered that he didn’t "think [Cole] was aware of the mental problem .
. . and had not sought treatment or received treatment." In response to further cross-examination on
this point, Dr. Boggs testified that he was "aware that [Cole] did not consider himself to have a
mental problem." Dr. Boggs’ reconciliation of his opinion that Cole’s insanity may have begun as
early as August, 1992, with Cole’s sworn Statement that he had no mental illness as of February 18,
1993, may or may not have seemed plausible to the jury; but Cole’s Statement under oath that he
"did not have any kind of mental problems and had never suffered from any mental problems" only
three days before the night on which these events occurred was relevant to attempt to impeach Dr.
Boggs’ opinion that Cole was "M’Naghten insane" three days later.
As the trial court had indicated would be appropriate, Cole requested a limiting instruction, which
read:
JURY INSTRUCTION D-10
The Court instructs the jury that the fact that Dennis Cole did not testify in this case may
not be considered by you as evidence of his guilt nor may you draw any inferences
therefrom. You are further instructed that any evidence in this case regarding any prior
felony conviction of Dennis Cole may be considered by you only as it may relate to the
issue of sanity at the time of the commission of the offenses.
The record reflects that Cole’s counsel did not object to Jury Instruction D-10, although the State
objected to it for several reasons which need not be recited here. When he granted the instruction, the
trial judge Stated, inter alia:
I'll try to articulate, for the record, why I'm going to give this instruction. This is a peculiar
set of circumstances because the defense is primarily one of insanity. The Ph.D.
psychologist has testified and given his opinion that the defendant was M'Naghten insane
on February 21st, 1993. Due to the nature of the practice of psychology, the psychologist
must obtain verbal information from the patient, very detailed information about the
patient's prior history, test results and assorted other information, to be able to give an
opinion. I felt like that hearsay was admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule for
Statements made by the patient to the doctor for the purpose of diagnosis and treatment
of the condition of the patient. By necessity, evidence came out from Dr. Boggs about
what the defendant had told him throughout his sessions with the defendant that permitted
him or justified him in making a determination of M'Naghten insanity. The other side of
the two-edged sword is that part of that information is that the defendant is a prior
convicted felon to the point that three days prior to the alleged commission of these
offenses, the 21st of February, that is, on February the 18th this defendant stood up before
Judge Bailey in open court and entered a free and voluntary, apparently free, voluntary,
and intelligent guilty plea to a felony. I want to try to remove, if possible through a jury
instruction, any inference that the jury as laymen may tend to have to desire to convict this
defendant solely based upon his prior criminal history or criminal record. The purpose of
this limiting language is to try to instruct the jury that the fact that the defendant may
well be a prior convicted felon can only relate to the issue of his sanity or lack thereof on
February 21st, 1993, and could not be considered and cannot be considered by them as
any proof that he's a bad character or ought to be convicted of this offense because he
previously pled guilty to a prior felon y. I'm going to give it for those reasons. (emphasis
added).
Cole’s argument on this issue is somewhat lengthy and not entirely focused; but the gist of his
argument is that the prejudicial nature of this earlier conviction far outweighed its probative value as
impeachment of Dr. Boggs’ opinion that Cole’s mental illness had begun as early as August, 1992,
and that three days after Cole made this Statement under oath, he had become M’Naghten insane.
Among the cases which Cole cites in his argument on this issue are Hunter v. State, 489 So. 2d 1086
(Miss. 1986), and White v. State, 542 So. 2d 250 (Miss. 1989). We find these two cases dispositive
of this issue.
In Hunter v. State, the appellant relied on insanity as his defense to the charge of having murdered his
aunt, whom he thought was the devil’s wife. Hunter, 489 So. 2d at 1090. Dr. Charlton Stanley, a
forensic psychologist, testified for the State that Hunter was a paranoid schizophrenic but that he was
M’Naghten sane and competent to stand trial. Id. at 1087. During the State’s direct examination of
Dr. Stanley, and over Hunter’s objection, he testified about Hunter’s conflicting Statements to him
about Hunter’s having killed his aunt and what happened afterwards. Id. at 1090. The Mississippi
Supreme Court held that the trial court committed no error in permitting Dr. Stanley to testify about
Hunter’s Statements. Id. The supreme court opined:
When a defendant relies upon the defense of insanity, the doors open for the admission of
evidence of all kinds. Every act of the party’s life is relative to the issue and is admissible
in evidence.
Id. (citations omitted). Hunter renders Cole’s sworn Statement admissible because as a previous act
of his life, it became relevant to the issue of his sanity. This is particularly true because the act
occurred only three days before the events which spawned the charges occurred.
In White v. State, Roosevelt White relied on insanity as his defense to the charge of having murdered
his employer by having shot her three times in the face and neck. White, 542 So. 2d at 251. The
appellant objected to the State’s asking Dr. Guild, one of the State’s experts, if his opinion that White
was M'Naghten insane would change if he knew that White had been taking money and that White’s
victim was the bookkeeper? Id. at 254. The supreme court held that while this questioning was not
appropriate without supporting proof by the State, any error had been cured by a limiting instruction
which contained the following sentence: "If any argument, statement or remark has no basis in the
evidence, then you should disregard that argument, statement or remark." Id. The supreme court
opined: "Therefore, it being a presumption that jurors follow instructions presented to them, any
error was harmless." Id.
The trial court did not err when it allowed the State to cross-examine Cole’s expert, Dr. Boggs,
about Cole’s sworn Statement which he had made only three days before the events in question that
he suffered from no mental illness and had not suffered from any mental illness preparatory to
entering a plea of guilty to a charge of burglary and subsequently granted a limiting instruction that
"any evidence in this case regarding any prior felony conviction of Dennis Cole may be considered by
you only as it may relate to the issue of sanity at the time of the commission of the offenses." This
Court presumes that the jury followed this instruction. We therefore resolve this issue adversely to
Cole.
C. Issue three:
Whether a defendant pleading insanity during a crime occurring three days after entry of a guilty plea
which recited no mental problems and an adjudication of sanity is denied due process of law and a
fair trial by a jury instruction that requires the jury to first find a reasonable doubt of sanity to remove
the presumption of sanity before it can require the State to prove sanity beyond a reasonable doubt
and further recites that mental illness is not necessarily equated to insanity.
The instruction about which Cole complains reads as follows:
INSTRUCTION S-4A
The Court instructs the jury that there is a presumption that every defendant is sane and, therefore,
the burden is initially on the defendant to introduce evidence creating a reasonable doubt as to his
sanity at the time of the act. If the defendant fails to introduce evidence creating a reasonable doubt
as to his sanity, then you shall not consider this point.
If the defendant overcomes this initial burden, then, in order to find the defendant guilty under Count
I and Count II, you must find beyond a reasonable doubt that on the 21st day of February, 1993, the
defendant was not laboring under such defect of reason from disease of mind as to not know the
nature and quality of the act he was doing, or, if he did know it, that he did not know what he was
doing was wrong. Stated more plainly, the test for insanity is whether the defendant was able to
distinguish right from wrong at the time of the crime. The fact that a person is mentally ill does not
necessarily mean that they are legally insane or that you should find them not guilty by reason of
insanity.
In response to Cole’s argument on this issue, the State reminds this Court that Cole’s counsel did not
object to the trial court’s granting this instruction. The record discloses that when the trial court
asked, "Any objections to the redrafted [instruction] S-4A?", Cole’s counsel replied, "No."
In Young v. State, 420 So. 2d 1055 (Miss. 1982), the appellant’s counsel argued that the trial court
had erroneously granted a certain jury instruction. Id. at 1057. Young’s counsel alleged that the
lower court erred when it instructed the jury on its own motion that Young’s fellow indictees were
accomplices rather than "alleged accomplices." Id. He argued that the trial judge instructed the jury
on a question of fact which the jury should have decided. Id. The supreme court noted that Young
had not objected to the instruction after the court had amended and given it. Id. That court decided
that issue adversely to Young because, as the court wrote:
In Reed v. State, 237 Miss. 23, 30, 112 So. 2d 533, 535 (1959), we stated, "We will not
reverse the trial court for an error created by the defendant's own instruction," and in
Bieller v. State, 275 So. 2d 97, 99 (Miss. 1973), we held, "the acceptance of an
instruction after its amendment by the trial court amounts to a waiver of an objection to
the amendment." We therefore find Young's third assignment without merit.
Young, 420 So. 2d at 1057.
Cole’s counsel’s failure to object to the trial court’s granting of Instruction S-4A waived his right to
object to its granting this instruction, and we accordingly resolve this issue against Cole.
D. Issue four:
Whether a defendant pleading insanity is denied fundamental fairness, due process of law, equal
protection of the law, a fair trial when the State during closing argument raises the specter that if the
jury finds the Defendant not guilty by reason of insanity the Defendant will be freed.
Cole complains of the following argument which the assistant district attorney made in rebuttal to
Cole’s counsel’s closing argument, in the final sentence of which she urged the jury to find Cole not
guilty by reason of insanity:
I guess after hearing the closing argument of defense counsel, on what I call the form of
the verdict instruction, which is instruction S-5A, you can just forget about number four
on each one of these counts because they deal with not guilty, just plain not guilty, not the
choice of not guilty by reason of insanity. So the choices that you have in this case are the
defendant is guilty of both of these counts or the defendant is not guilty by reason of
insanity. If by some extreme leap of faith you decide that it is not guilty by reason of
insanity, then you have three choices there. And I assume that since defense counsel didn't
specify, I assume that what they want you to do is say the defendant was not guilty by
reason of insanity but the defendant has been restored to his reason now and y'all should
just let him go and walk the streets and we don't have to worry about him anymore. Or
you have not guilty by reason of insanity and he has not been restored to his reason, in
which case I don't know exactly what we do. Or not guilty by reason of insanity and he
hasn't been restored to reason and he's a danger to the community. I don't know whether it
specifies to which one of those they want, but I assume they want you to let him walk
free.
In Gambrell v. State, 120 So. 2d 758, 762 (Miss. 1960), the Mississippi Supreme Court held that it
was error for the trial court to have granted the following instruction for the State:
The Court instructs the Jury for the State that in the event you should find the defendant
not guilty by reason of insanity and certify that he is dangerous, to the community, then it
would be the duty of the Court to commit him to the asylum until such time as he regained
his sanity at which time he would go free.
The supreme court held that the instruction was "not in accordance with the provisions of Section
2575, Mississippi Code of 1942, which provided that if a person indicted for an offense and is
acquitted on the ground of insanity the jury shall state therein such ground, and whether the accused
has since been restored to his reason, and whether he be dangerous to the community." Id. It also
observed that it "told the jury in effect that a verdict of not guilty on the grounds of insanity would
result in freeing the accused. It is very probable that this erroneous instruction was partly responsible
for the verdict [of appellant’s guilt] in this case." For this and other errors, that court reversed and
remanded Gambrell’s conviction of murder.
In Smith v. State, 220 So. 2d 313, 315 (Miss. 1969), the appellant complained of a nearly identical
instruction which the trial court granted the State. In Smith, the district attorney "indulged in the
following language over appellant’s objection":
And then to have the audacity, the brazen effrontery, to come before the jury of twelve
fine citizens and say, 'Walk him out. . . . .walk him out.' Now, gentlemen, if you don't want
to walk him out, let him go over here to the insane hospital, and when they announce he is
restored to sanity, if it's two years, if it's two months, from that time he will be released
upon the public.
By Mr. Prewitt: We object to that, Your honor, and take exception to his remarks.
Id. at 317. About this argument, the supreme court opined:
We are of the opinion that this argument was completely unnecessary and could only
result in prejudice to the defendant. We repeat, the issue before the jury was the
defendant's sanity or insanity at the time of the shooting and not what disposition was to
be made of him. The improper argument gave emphasis to the erroneous instruction
referred to above and logically would operate to give the jury concern over whether the
defendant would be placed back in society after a short period of confinement in the
asylum. All of the justices except Robertson are of the opinion that the instruction, plus
the improper argument, constitutes reversible error.
Id.
As before in the immediately preceding issue, Cole’s counsel did not object to the previously quoted
rebuttal argument which the assistant district attorney made. In Box v. State, 610 So. 2d 1148, 1153
(Miss. 1992), the district attorney Stated in his closing argument to the jury: "This doper over here,
you can read from the lines, detests Mike Hutchinson." Appellant’s counsel did not object to the
district attorney’s comment that his client was a "doper" when the comment was made. Id. Instead,
he moved for a mistrial on that basis the following day after the jury had returned its verdict. Id. at
1153-54. The supreme court held that his motion for mistrial was too late. The supreme court
opined: