Ronald Hood v. State of Mississippi ( 2007 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2008-KA-00099-SCT
    RONALD HOOD
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                          12/19/2007
    TRIAL JUDGE:                               HON. JANNIE M. LEWIS
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                 YAZOO COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                    TRENT L. WALKER
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                     OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: W. GLENN WATTS
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                         JAMES H. POWELL, III
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                        CRIMINAL - FELONY
    DISPOSITION:                               AFFIRMED - 07/30/2009
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE CARLSON, P.J., LAMAR AND CHANDLER, JJ.
    CARLSON, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    Ronald Hood was convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court of Yazoo County of the
    crime of exploitation of children under Mississippi Code Sections 97-5-31 and 97-5-33(5)
    (Rev. 2006). Hood was sentenced by the trial court as a habitual offender to twenty years
    in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections without the possibility of parole.
    In today’s appeal, Hood alleges certain errors committed in the trial court, none of which we
    find to have merit. We thus affirm the judgment of conviction and sentence of the Circuit
    Court of Yazoo County.
    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT
    ¶2.    On March 13, 2006, Melissa Hood, the defendant’s wife, found a videotape with no
    title or other identifying information located in a box of her husband’s belongings within an
    extra bedroom at their home. She decided to view the tape on her VCR to determine its
    contents. Melissa testified that when she witnessed the videotape she became sick to her
    stomach. The videotape depicted nude male children, and Melissa believed the children to
    be between the ages of five and seven years old. She showed the tape to her sister, who
    attempted to rip it up and threw it in the garbage.1 Melissa’s sister also confronted the
    defendant, Ronald Hood, about the contents of the tape. According to Melissa, Hood’s
    response to why he had the tape was, “I’ve got it because I started the stuff.” He also made
    the statement that, “if he had to, he would go back to California where it was legal so he
    could do it again.” Melissa and her sister directed Hood to leave the home.
    ¶3.    Melissa further testified that, prior to their marriage, Hood admitted to possessing this
    type of videotapes and showed her a videotape of naked male children’s exposed genitals.
    Melissa was shocked and told Hood, “if you’re going to marry me, if you’re going to live in
    my house, you’ve got to get rid of this stuff. I can’t take this.” He stated that he would get
    rid of it and would not bring it into her house.
    ¶4.    After again discovering similar material subsequent to her marriage to Hood, Melissa
    contacted Detective Larry Davis. Davis received the tape from Melissa, and he testified that
    1
    The tape later was retrieved from the garbage and “fixed.”
    2
    it contained images of “young boys in their nudity, running around.” According to Davis,
    the boys appeared to be between the ages of ten and sixteen years old. Davis obtained a
    search warrant for a storage unit belonging to Hood. In the storage unit, law enforcement
    authorities discovered two small camcorder tapes and approximately one hundred VCR
    tapes.2
    ¶5.       On July 10, 2006, Ronald Hood was indicted for “exploitation of children” in
    violation of Mississippi Code Sections 97-5-31 and 97-5-33(5) (Rev. 2006). The indictment
    was amended to reflect Hood’s status as a habitual offender. Subsequently, Hood was tried
    before a jury for exploitation of children in the Circuit Court of Yazoo County, Judge Jannie
    M. Lewis presiding. In addition to the videotape that Melissa turned over to Davis, one of
    the small camcorder tapes retrieved during the execution of the search warrant also was
    entered into evidence. On December 11, 2007, Hood was found guilty by the jury and
    sentenced by the trial court as a habitual offender to serve twenty years in the custody of the
    Mississippi Department of Corrections, without the possibility of parole. From this verdict
    and sentence, Hood appeals to this Court.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶6.       Hood presents four issues for this Court’s consideration: (1) whether the marital
    privilege caused Melissa Hood to be incompetent to testify; (2) whether the males in the
    2
    Interestingly, law enforcement officials conducted a random check of some of the
    approximately one hundred VCR tapes, and a majority of these tapes were of the Little
    League World Series.
    3
    video were engaged in “sexually explicit conduct;” (3) whether the statutes in question are
    unconstitutionally vague; and (4) whether the prosecution made improper arguments which
    tended to inflame the passions and prejudices of the jury against the defendant.
    ¶7.    The standard of review for admission of evidence is abuse of discretion. Debrow v.
    State, 
    972 So. 2d 550
    , 552 (Miss. 2007). However, when a question of law is raised, the
    applicable standard of review is de novo. 
    Id. “[O]ur constitutional scheme
    contemplates the
    power of judicial review of legislative enactments; however, that power may be exercised
    affirmatively only where the legislation under review be found ‘in palpable conflict with
    some plain provision of the . . . constitution.’” State v. Roderick, 
    704 So. 2d 49
    , 52 (Miss.
    1997) (quoting In re T.L.C., 
    566 So. 2d 691
    , 696 (Miss. 1990); Hart v. State, 
    87 Miss. 171
    ,
    176, 
    39 So. 523
    , 524 (1905)). In determining whether a lawyer made improper arguments
    which require reversal, the test is “‘whether the natural and probable effect of the improper
    argument . . . create[s] an unjust prejudice against the [opposing party] result[ing] in a
    decision influenced by the prejudice so created.’” Eckman v. Moore, 
    876 So. 2d 975
    , 986
    (Miss. 2004) (quoting Davis v. State, 
    530 So. 2d 694
    , 701-02 (Miss. 1988)).
    ¶8.    Having already stated the issues which Hood presents for today’s consideration, we
    now restate the issues for the sake of clarity in discussion.
    I.     WHETHER THE MARITAL PRIVILEGE RENDERED
    MELISSA HOOD’S TESTIMONY INADMISSIBLE.
    ¶9.    Hood argues that the testimony of his wife, Melissa, “should have been stricken as
    incompetent or subject to the marital privilege set out in M.R.E. 504.” Even though Hood
    4
    injects spousal “incompetence” into his discussion of this issue, he does not cite the spousal
    competency statute, Mississippi Code Section 13-1-5 (Rev. 2002).3 Instead, Hood focuses
    his argument on the husband-wife privilege found in Mississippi Rule of Evidence 504,4 and
    the general rule of competency found in Mississippi Rule of Evidence 601.
    ¶10.   Rule 504(b) states that “[i]n any proceeding, civil or criminal, a person has a privilege
    to prevent that person’s spouse, or former spouse, from testifying as to any confidential
    communication between that person and that person’s spouse.” Miss. R. Evid. 504(b).
    However, we find that an exception applies in today’s case because “[t]here is no privilege
    under this rule . . . in a proceeding in which one spouse is charged with a crime against (1)
    the person of any minor child . . . .” Miss. R. Evid. 504(d). On the other hand, Hood asserts
    3
    Husbands and wives may be introduced by each other as witnesses in all cases,
    civil or criminal, and shall be competent witnesses in their own behalf, as
    against each other, in all controversies between them. Either spouse is a
    competent witness and may be compelled to testify against the other in any
    criminal prosecution of either husband or wife for a criminal act against any
    child, for contributing to the neglect or delinquency of a child, or desertion or
    nonsupport of children under the age of sixteen (16) years, or abandonment of
    children. But in all other instances where either of them is a party litigant the
    other shall not be competent as a witness and shall not be required to answer
    interrogatories or to make discovery of any matters involved in any such other
    instances without the consent of both.
    Miss. Code Ann. § 13-1-5 (Rev. 2002).
    4
    “There are two areas of law which govern if and when one spouse may testify against
    the other, spousal competency and marital privilege. M.C.A. § 13-1-5 governs matters of
    spousal competency. On the other hand, marital privilege protects certain communications
    made during the marriage.” Miss. R. Evid. 504 cmt.
    5
    that Rule 504 is in conflict with Mississippi Rule of Evidence 601, the general rule of
    competency. Rule 601 states:
    Every person is competent to be a witness except as restricted by the
    following:
    (a) In all circumstances where one spouse is a party litigant the other spouse
    shall not be competent as a witness without the consent of both, except as
    provided in Rule 601(a)(1) or Rule 601(a)(2):
    ...
    (2) Either spouse is a competent witness and may be compelled to
    testify against the other in any criminal prosecution of either husband or wife
    for a criminal act against any child . . . .
    Miss. R. Evid. 601(a).
    ¶11.   In Fisher v. State, 
    690 So. 2d 268
    , 272 (Miss. 1996), this Court noted the difference
    between the marital privilege and spousal incompetency, stating: “Rule 601(a)(2) abolishes
    spousal incompetence to testify in certain circumstances. The non-offender spouse may be
    called to testify, but the other spouse may still invoke the privilege regarding confidential
    communications that do not fall into an exception set out in 504(d).” 
    Fisher, 690 So. 2d at 272
    (citing Dycus v. State, 
    396 So. 2d 23
    , 28 (Miss. 1981)). Conflict does not exist between
    these rules, and in today’s case, spousal incompetence was not applicable because Hood was
    being prosecuted for “a criminal act against any child.” See Miss. R. Evid. 601(a)(2). Also,
    Hood was unable to invoke the privilege regarding confidential communication because of
    the “crime against the person of any minor child” exception in Rule 504(d). See Miss. R.
    Evid. 504(d).
    6
    ¶12.   Hood, however, urges this Court to determine that the aforementioned exception in
    Mississippi Rule of Evidence 504(d) cannot apply in today’s case, arguing that exploitation
    of children is not a “crime against the person of any minor child,” and only those crimes
    specifically listed in Title 97, Chapter 3 of the Mississippi Code are such crimes. 
    Id. This argument is
    without merit. In Fisher, this Court recognized that “Miss. R. Evid. 601(a)(2)
    indicates an obvious growing concern about sexual and violent abuse against children,” and
    as a result, amended Rule 504(d) to “reflect the same.” 
    Fisher, 690 So. 2d at 272
    . Rule
    504(d) was amended to reflect the same intentions as Rule 601(a)(2);5 therefore, prosecution
    for “a criminal act against any child” absolves the husband-wife privilege as set out in Rule
    504. There is no indication that Rule 504(d) was intended to apply only to the crimes listed
    in Title 97, Chapter 3 of the Mississippi Code, as crimes against persons, as Hood contends
    to this Court. Exploitation of children is a crime against the persons of minor children;
    therefore, the trial judge did not abuse her discretion in admitting Melissa’s testimony.6
    ¶13.   Furthermore, Mississippi Rule of Evidence 504 has no bearing on Melissa’s
    testimony. Melissa testified about a conversation between herself and Hood that occurred
    before they were married; a conversation that also involved her sister; and a conversation that
    5
    Rule 601 of the Mississippi Rules of Evidence is essentially the same as Mississippi
    Code Section 13-1-5, as amended. See Miss. Code Ann. § 13-1-5 (Rev. 2002).
    6
    It must also be remembered that Melissa had a four-year-old son living in the home
    with her and Hood.
    7
    took place with Detective Davis, none of whom are protected by the marital privilege. All
    relevant conversations between Hood and Melissa occurred either before their marriage or
    in the presence of third persons. No protected confidential communication is at issue in
    today’s case.
    ¶14.   At trial, Melissa testified as follows regarding the first tape which she discovered prior
    to her marriage to Ronald Hood:
    Q:       Okay. All right. Now, I'm going to come back to that in a minute with
    that tape. But prior to that date, prior to March 16th of 2006, had you
    ever seen a tape or tapes like that one before?
    A:       Yes, sir, I did. Uh -- in November, when he was at his sister's trailer,
    out off of Dover Road, I was staying out there with them, helping him
    take care of his elderly sister that's in a wheelchair, we were sitting in
    his room watching TV, and I asked him what was in his, in the doors
    under where his TV was setting, and he told me it was his duffle bags
    and stuff, and that's when we started the conversation. And I'm like,
    "What stuff?" And he said, "There's tapes." I said, "Get one of them
    out and let me see what it is." He did, and when he put it in, I said,
    "Whoa! Hold." I said, "Unh-unh, I can't watch that. That's stomach
    turning." And I turned to him, and I said, "I've got a little one." I said,
    "If you're going to marry me, if you're going to live in my house, you've
    got to get rid of this stuff. I can't take this." And he said, "You don't
    got nothing to worry about. Before" – . . . .
    Rule 504 states, “A communication is confidential if it is made privately by any person to
    that person’s spouse and is not intended for disclosure to any other person.” Miss. R. Evid.
    504(a). Melissa’s testimony about Hood’s statements prior to their marriage, discussing the
    video of nude boys, is not covered by the husband-wife privilege, and the statements were
    admissible in evidence as statements against interest. Miss. R. Evid. 804(b)(3). The
    following exchange also took place at trial, during the State’s direct examination of Melissa:
    8
    Q:    And so then on March 13th, you found this tape?
    A:    Yes, sir.
    Q:    All right. Now, you were telling us that when you found it, the first
    thing you did was take it to your sister?
    A:    No, sir. I left it at my house, and I went to get my sister.
    Q:    Okay.
    A:    Took her back to my house, showed her what it was, and she got
    furious!
    Q:    Okay. What did she do after you showed it to your sister?
    A:    She took it out, she ripped it up, threw it in the garbage can, waited for
    him to come home, and she told him, said, "I've got a four-year-old
    nephew that I'm concerned about."
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL] Objection, Your Honor, to hearsay.
    THE COURT: Sustained.
    [PROSECUTOR]: Don't say what your sister said.
    Q:    So she confronted him about the tape?
    A:    Right.
    Q:    Did Mr. Hood say anything in response to her?
    A:    To be honest with you, I don't recall.
    Q:    You don't recall him saying anything about the tape?
    A:    No, sir. The only thing that he did say is "I've got it because I started
    the stuff."
    Q:    Okay. At that point, what, if anything, was said to Mr. Hood about him
    remaining in the house?
    A:    She told him he had to get out.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection to hearsay.
    THE COURT: Sustained.
    Q:    Did Mr. Hood leave?
    A:    Yes, sir.
    Q:    What happened then?
    A:    Me and my sister went down to Mr. Larry Davis's office, and I told him
    what I had found, and I told him that my nephew had got the tape out
    of the garbage, fixed it, put it back together, and he come to my daddy's
    trailer and got it.
    Q:    And did you turn the tape over to Detective Davis?
    A:    Yes, sir, I did.
    ¶15.   The conversation among Hood, Melissa, and Melissa’s sister was not confidential, due
    to the presence of a third party. “[T]he presence of another person, even a family member,
    9
    is deemed to mean that the communication was not intended to be confidential.” Fanning
    v. State, 
    497 So. 2d 70
    , 74 (Miss. 1986) (citations omitted). Further, statements Melissa
    made to the detective outside her husband’s presence are not privileged. See Shell v. State,
    
    554 So. 2d 887
    , 894 (Miss. 1989). Rule 504 also does not require the suppression of the
    evidence retrieved as a result of Davis’s discussion with Melissa. See Ladner v. State, 
    584 So. 2d 743
    , 748 (Miss. 1991).
    ¶16.   Based on our discussion, we find as a matter of law that Melissa was competent to
    testify against her husband, Ronald Hood, and that she was not prevented from testifying
    against her husband by the husband-wife privilege set out in Mississippi Rule of Evidence
    504. The trial judge thus acted within her discretion in admitting the testimony of Melissa
    Hood. Accordingly, this issue is without merit.
    II.    WHETHER THE MALES IN THE VIDEO WERE ENGAGED IN
    “SEXUALLY EXPLICIT CONDUCT.”
    ¶17.   Hood contends that this case is “fatally defective in that the children involved in the
    video at issue in this matter, while photographed in their naked state, are not engaged in
    sexually explicit behavior.” Hood was indicted and convicted under Mississippi Code
    Sections 97-5-31 and 97-5-33(5), as amended. Section 97-5-33(5) states: “No person shall,
    by any means including computer, possess any photograph, drawing, sketch, film, video tape
    or other visual depiction of an actual child engaging in sexually explicit conduct.” Miss.
    Code Ann. § 97-5-33(5) (Rev. 2006). Section 97-5-31 defines “‘sexually explicit conduct’”
    as “actual or simulated: . . . (v) Lascivious exhibition of the genitals or pubic area of any
    10
    person . . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-5-31 (Rev. 2006). Further, “‘[s]imulated’ means any
    depicting of the genitals or rectal areas that gives the appearance of sexual conduct or
    incipient sexual conduct.” 
    Id. As this Court
    has not adopted a test for determining whether
    a visual depiction of a child constitutes “lascivious exhibition of the genitals or pubic area,”
    we look to other jurisdictions. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
    applies the test of United States v. Dost, 
    636 F. Supp. 828
    (S.D. Cal. 1986), aff’d, 
    813 F.2d 1231
    (9th Cir. 1987). United States v. Grimes, 
    244 F.3d 375
    , 380 (5th Cir. 2001). See also
    United States v. Carroll, 
    190 F.3d 290
    , 297 (5th Cir. 1999). The factors to consider are as
    follows:
    1. whether the focal point of the visual depiction is on the child's genitalia or
    pubic area;
    2. whether the setting of the visual depiction is sexually suggestive, i.e. in a
    place or pose generally associated with sexual activity;
    3. whether the child is depicted in an unnatural pose, or in inappropriate attire,
    considering the age of the child;
    4. whether the child is fully or partially clothed, or nude;
    5. whether the visual depiction suggests sexual coyness or a willingness to
    engage in sexual activity;
    6. whether the visual depiction is intended or designed to elicit a sexual
    response in the viewer.
    
    Grimes, 244 F.3d at 380
    (citations omitted). This list is not exhaustive, and no single factor
    is dispositive. 
    Id. See also United
    States v. Knox, 
    32 F.3d 733
    , 746 (3d Cir. 1994). Also,
    the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit stated:
    A lascivious exhibition is pornographic, even if not obscene, and is considered
    in the context of “the depictions . . . imposed . . . by the attitude of the viewer
    or photographer.” United States v. Arvin, 
    900 F.2d 1385
    , 1391 (9th Cir. 1990).
    Accordingly, “applied to the conduct of children, lasciviousness is not a
    characteristic of the child photographed but of the exhibition which the
    11
    photographer sets up for an audience that consists of himself or likeminded
    pedophiles.” United States v. Wiegand, 
    812 F.2d 1239
    , 1244 (9th Cir. 1987).
    This focus results in a definition of lascivious that criminalizes images “so
    presented by the photographer as to arouse or satisfy the sexual cravings of a
    voyeur.” 
    Hill, 459 F.3d at 972
    (citation omitted).
    United States v. Banks, 
    556 F.3d 967
    , 979-80 (9th Cir. 2009).
    ¶18.   Today, we adopt the above-enumerated Dost factors, which previously were adopted
    by the Fifth Circuit in 
    Carroll, 190 F.3d at 297
    , and reaffirmed by the Fifth Circuit in
    
    Grimes, 244 F.3d at 380
    . Having done so, and in applying the Dost factors to the record
    before this Court in today’s case, we conclude that the jury was justified in its finding that
    the images it viewed depicted “sexually explicit conduct.” Also, this conduct can be actual
    or simulated lascivious exhibition of the genitals. See Miss. Code Ann. § 97-5-31. One tape
    shows numerous close-ups of only the genitals of young boys. The camera zooms in on the
    genital area and nothing else for extended periods of time, making that area the only focal
    point. The other tape also shows children’s genitals in almost every depiction and from
    numerous angles. Sufficient evidence was before the jury for its findings that the videotape
    it viewed contained visual depictions of children engaging in sexually explicit conduct, or
    lascivious exhibition of genitals. The jury was justified in its finding that the videos were
    clearly designed to elicit a sexual response in the viewer. Further, as stated by the prosecutor
    during closing arguments:
    Now, in the videos we have just seen, we not only have exhibition of the
    genitals in every shot, in the context of particularly in the second two, all male
    to male, all young males of different ages in poses that are specifically for the
    camera and to display the genital area. And in the last video that was taken,
    there is (sic) shots of every person who is posed in there of not only a photo
    12
    from a distance, but close-ups of the genital area, themselves, where nothing
    else can be seen after they go in these close ups, other than the genitals of the
    individuals involved.
    ...
    These photographs certainly are for the purpose of stimulating lustfulness and
    sexual desire or sexual suggestive, which is all lascivious means. So those
    displays, themselves, there’s no other reason to do the close up shots of the
    genitals only, other than for some sexual connotation, and that meets the
    definition of the statute.
    The evidence before the jury undoubtedly justified a finding that the male children depicted
    in the videotapes were engaged in sexually explicit conduct. As such, this issue is without
    merit.
    III.   WHETHER THE STATUTES IN                           QUESTION          ARE
    UNCONSTITUTIONALLY VAGUE.
    ¶19.     Hood argues that the statutes in question are unconstitutionally vague stating, “they
    do not give adequate notice as to what is meant by the term ‘lascivious;’” therefore, he “was
    left to determine for himself whether the photos fell within the definition, and whether
    possession of the material in question was proscribed.” This Court, however, has been
    “consistent in holding that we need not consider matters raised for the first time on appeal,
    which practice would have the practical effect of depriving the trial court of the opportunity
    to first rule on the issue, so that we can then review such trial court ruling under the
    appropriate standard of review.” Alexander v. Daniel, 
    904 So. 2d 172
    , 183 (Miss. 2005).
    See, e.g., Triplett v. Mayor & Aldermen of Vicksburg, 
    758 So. 2d 399
    , 401 (Miss. 2000)
    (citing Shaw v. Shaw, 
    603 So. 2d 287
    , 292 (Miss. 1992)). See also Patterson v. State, 594
    
    13 So. 2d 606
    , 609 (Miss. 1992). Thus, Hood’s argument on appeal is procedurally barred due
    to his failure to assert it at the trial-court level.
    IV.     WHETHER THE PROSECUTION MADE IMPROPER
    ARGUMENTS WHICH TENDED TO INFLAME THE
    PASSIONS AND PREJUDICES OF THE JURY AGAINST THE
    DEFENDANT.
    ¶20.   Hood asserts that the prosecution made comments during opening statements and
    closing arguments which had the effect of prejudicing the jury. Hood contends that the
    following comments by the State during opening statements were improper: (1) “[T]he
    genital areas are exhibited for the purposes of the cameras;” and (2) “[I]n every instance, the
    camera drops down to the genital area. So you don’t see the faces of the boys. You don’t
    see anything but the genitals being shown. And this goes on for about thirty minutes.” The
    record, however, reveals that no objections were made to the State’s opening statements, and
    “[a]bsent a contemporaneous objection at the trial level as to a particular issue, that issue is
    waived on appeal.” Jones v. State, 
    856 So. 2d 285
    , 293 (Miss. 2003) (citing Smith v. State,
    
    724 So. 2d 280
    (Miss. 1998); Whigham v. State, 
    611 So. 2d 988
    , 995 (Miss. 1992)).
    Alternatively, in considering the merits of Hood’s contentions, there was nothing improper
    about the prosecutor’s comments. The prosecutor, during opening statements, merely
    informed the jury what he believed the evidence would show during the trial. The tapes,
    which were later admitted into evidence, revealed that which the prosecutor had stated to the
    jury they would reveal.
    14
    ¶21.   However, Hood further contends that these statements made by the prosecutor, when
    considered along with Melissa’s improper inflammatory testimony, constitute error. During
    her direct-examination testimony, in describing her sister’s initial reaction to seeing the tape,
    Melissa stated: “She took it out, she ripped it up, threw it in the garbage can, waited for him
    to come home, and she told him, said, ‘I’ve got a four-year-old nephew that I’m concerned
    about.’” Defense counsel made a hearsay objection to this statement, and the Court sustained
    the objection, whereupon the prosecutor admonished Melissa “[d]on’t say what your sister
    said.” There is no need to address the merits of whether this statement, made by Melissa’s
    sister in Hood’s presence, constituted hearsay, because, again, the prosecutor’s comments
    made to the jury during opening statements were not contemporaneously objected to, nor can
    they in any way be deemed to be improper. Thus, there can be no cumulative error.
    ¶22.   Hood further contends that the following statements made by the State during closing
    arguments were improper: “Will you tear him up when you get back there?” and in referring
    to the tapes of the Little League World Series, “that’s his preferred age, and that’s his
    preferred gender.” 7 During closing arguments, the prosecutor stated to the jury: “My
    question now is will you do what’s right? Will you follow the law? Will you follow the law?
    Will you tear him up when you get back there? He needs to be found guilty of what he’s
    7
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_League_World_Series. The Little League World
    Series is a baseball tournament held in August of each year in Williamsport, Pennsylvania,
    for children age eleven and twelve years old. (Last accessed June 22, 2009.)
    15
    done.” Hood alleges there is a cumulative prejudicial effect when one considers these
    alleged improper statements made by the prosecutor during closing arguments along with
    Melissa’s testimony that when she and her sister confronted Hood about the tape, Hood
    stated that “if he had to, he would go back to California where it was legal so he could do it
    again.” However, Hood objected to neither the prosecutor’s statements during closing
    arguments, nor this testimony by Melissa during trial. Nor was there an objection to the
    prosecutor’s statements during closing arguments pertaining to the Little League World
    Series and the “preferred age/preferred gender” comments. We thus consider this issue
    waived. 
    Jones, 856 So. 2d at 293
    .
    CONCLUSION
    ¶23.   For the reasons stated, the Yazoo County Circuit Court’s judgment of conviction
    against Ronald Hood for the crime of exploitation of children and the resulting sentence of
    twenty years imprisonment as a habitual offender without the possibility of parole is
    affirmed.
    ¶24. CONVICTION OF EXPLOITATION OF CHILDREN AND SENTENCE OF
    TWENTY (20) YEARS, AS A HABITUAL OFFENDER, WITHOUT THE
    POSSIBILITY OF PAROLE, IN THE CUSTODY OF THE      MISSISSIPPI
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, AFFIRMED.
    WALLER, C.J., RANDOLPH, LAMAR AND PIERCE, JJ., CONCUR.
    DICKINSON, J., CONCURS IN PART WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN
    OPINION. KITCHENS, J., CONCURS IN PART AND IN RESULT WITH
    SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY GRAVES, P.J., DICKINSON AND
    CHANDLER, JJ.
    KITCHENS, JUSTICE, CONCURRING IN PART AND IN RESULT:
    16
    ¶25.   Although I concur with Parts I, II, and IV of the majority’s opinion, as well as with
    today’s judgment, I do not join Part III because I would find that no procedural bar forbids
    Hood’s challenge to the constitutionality of the statute under which he stands convicted.
    ¶26.   Generally, an error that does not draw an objection in the trial court is deemed waived.
    We have held that this is true even for constitutional challenges; but where the challenge
    concerns a fundamental constitutional right, we will not allow a procedural omission to
    prevent our considering it. Graves v. State, 
    969 So. 2d 845
    , 846-47 (Miss. 2007). See also
    Fuselier v. State, 
    654 So. 2d 519
    , 522 (Miss. 1995).
    ¶27.   The rights guaranteed under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and Article
    3, Section 13, of the Mississippi Constitution are fundamental rights. See, e.g., Gitlow v. New
    York, 
    268 U.S. 652
    , 666, 
    45 S. Ct. 625
    , 
    69 L. Ed. 1138
    (1925) (“[F]reedom of speech and
    of the press . . . are among the fundamental personal rights and ‘liberties’ protected by the
    due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment from impairment by the states.”). Likewise,
    criminal defendants enjoy a fundamental right to due process. See, e.g., Luckett v. State, 
    582 So. 2d 428
    (Miss. 1991). Because the conviction from which Hood filed this appeal stems
    from conduct implicating the First Amendment, see Miller v. California, 
    413 U.S. 15
    , 93 S.
    Ct. 2607, 
    37 L. Ed. 2d 419
    (1973), and because the vagueness argument he presents is, at its
    core, a contention that he has been denied due process, we should analyze this assignment
    of error.
    ¶28.   Despite this disagreement, I maintain my concurrence with the majority’s judgment
    in this case because I conclude that the required analysis lends no aid to the appellant. The
    17
    U.S. Supreme Court has settled the point that, although some forms of pornography enjoy
    the protection of the First Amendment, see 
    id., child pornography is
    not among them. New
    York v. Ferber, 
    458 U.S. 747
    , 
    102 S. Ct. 3348
    , 
    73 L. Ed. 2d 1113
    (1982).
    ¶29.   Hood contends that the term “lascivious,” as used by Section 97-5-31 of the
    Mississippi Code to define the term “sexually explicit conduct” under Section 97-5-33, is
    unconstitutionally vague and that his conviction therefore violates the constitutional
    guarantee of due process. See Grayned v. City of Rockford, 
    408 U.S. 104
    , 108-09, 
    92 S. Ct. 2294
    , 
    33 L. Ed. 2d 222
    (1972). The test for vagueness is whether a statute proscribing or
    requiring conduct does so “in terms so vague that men of common intelligence must
    necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application . . . .” Connally v. Gen.
    Constr. Co., 
    269 U.S. 385
    , 391, 
    46 S. Ct. 126
    , 
    70 L. Ed. 322
    (1926). For example, in Smith
    v. Goguen, 
    415 U.S. 566
    , 
    94 S. Ct. 1242
    , 
    39 L. Ed. 2d 605
    (1974), the high court voided for
    vagueness a Massachusetts statute that proscribed “contemptuous[ ]” treatment of the flag
    of the United States because the law failed “to draw reasonably clear lines between the kinds
    of nonceremonial treatment that are criminal and those that are not.” 8 
    Id. at 574. On
    the other
    hand, in Grayned, 
    408 U.S. 104
    , the justices upheld an Illinois statute that proscribed
    disturbance of the peace on school campuses under the expectation that state courts would
    8
    Obviously, the high court greatly abrogated this holding, as it relates to desecrations
    of the American flag, by ruling in 1989 that the First Amendment protects communicative
    destruction of the banner. Texas v. Johnson, 
    491 U.S. 397
    , 
    109 S. Ct. 2533
    , 105 L. Ed. 2d
    (1989). Nevertheless, the case remains an example relevant to the topic of the vagueness
    doctrine.
    18
    limit application of the law to conduct clearly unprotected by the First Amendment. 
    Id. at 111-12. Although
    the Grayned Court recognized that the ordinance had been crafted by
    words of “flexibility and reasonable breadth, rather than meticulous specificity,” 
    id. at 110 (quoting
    Esteban v. Central Missouri State College, 
    415 F.2d 1077
    , 1088 (8th Cir. 1969)),
    the nation’s highest court found no constitutionally fatal lack of specificity, concluding that
    “it is clear what the ordinance as a whole prohibits.” 
    Id. ¶30. Similarly, it
    is clear what Section 97-5-33 prohibits, particularly in light of the great
    lengths to which the U.S. Supreme Court has gone to identify the boundary between the
    realm of material protected by the First Amendment and material properly labeled
    constitutionally unprotected child pornography. See, e.g., Ferber, 
    458 U.S. 747
    ; Ashcroft v.
    Free Speech Coalition, 
    535 U.S. 234
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 1389
    , 
    152 L. Ed. 2d 403
    (2002); United
    States v. Williams, 553 U.S. ___, 
    128 S. Ct. 1830
    , 
    170 L. Ed. 2d 650
    (2008). As long as the
    language of the statute remains sufficiently clear that we are given no indication that this
    state’s trial courts will apply their punitive power against constitutionally protected conduct,
    we should not apply the vagueness doctrine as Hood urges. Indeed, the record in this case
    reveals that Hood mentioned the possibility of relocating to a jurisdiction in which he
    believed his conduct would enjoy greater protection. Maj. Op. at ¶2. Therefore, not only can
    we say, in accordance with Grayned, that it is clear to us what Section 97-5-33 prohibits;
    apparently, it also was clear to Hood himself.
    19
    ¶31.   Therefore, I would find no merit in Hood’s contention that he has been subjected to
    punishment under an unconstitutionally vague provision of law. But because I thought it
    important to address this issue, I concur in today’s opinion in part and in its correct result.
    GRAVES, P.J., DICKINSON AND CHANDLER, JJ., JOIN THIS OPINION.
    20