Christopher Edward Thomas v. State of Mississippi , 180 So. 3d 756 ( 2015 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2014-KA-00243-COA
    CHRISTOPHER EDWARD THOMAS A/K/A                                    APPELLANT
    CHRISTOPHER THOMAS A/K/A CHRIS
    THOMAS
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI                                                 APPELLEE
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                     02/06/2014
    TRIAL JUDGE:                          HON. SMITH MURPHEY
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:            PANOLA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:               OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER
    BY: GEORGE T. HOLMES
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: LAURA HOGAN TEDDER
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                    JOHN W. CHAMPION
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                   CRIMINAL - FELONY
    TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION:              CONVICTED OF CONSPIRACY TO
    COMMIT ARMED ROBBERY AND
    SENTENCED TO FIVE YEARS, AND
    CONVICTED OF CAPITAL MURDER AND
    SENTENCED TO LIFE IMPRISONMENT
    WITHOUT PAROLE, WITH THE
    SENTENCES TO RUN CONSECUTIVELY,
    IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, AND
    TO PAY $11,000 IN RESTITUTION
    DISPOSITION:                          AFFIRMED - 11/24/2015
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE GRIFFIS, P.J., MAXWELL AND JAMES, JJ.
    MAXWELL, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.   Christopher Thomas appeals his conspiracy-to-commit-armed-robbery conviction.
    He also challenges his capital-murder conviction. He raises weight and sufficiency-of-the-
    evidence issues on both. After review, we find his co-conspirators’ testimony, along with
    expert testimony and physical evidence from the murder scene, was sufficient to support the
    conspiracy-to-commit-armed-robbery conviction.         And we find both his conspiracy
    conviction and capital-murder conviction were supported by the weight of the evidence.
    Because we find no merit to these or the other issues raised on appeal, we affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    ¶2.    On the afternoon of May 3, 2013, Taneille “Nay” Burgess had some friends over to
    her home in Panola County. Among those present were DeShaun “Shaun” Alexander, John
    “Little John” Market, LaDaron “Little Bit” Taylor, Quendravious “Bug Eye” Taylor, and
    Christopher “Lucky” Thomas (Chris).1 After drinking and smoking marijuana, the five men
    left Taneille’s house in Taneille’s red jeep. They next stopped by a liquor store, then made
    their way to a dice game at Markes “Cat Daddy” Jones’s house. Shaun and John dropped the
    other three men off at Markes’s house and went to buy cigarettes. After picking up smokes,
    they returned to Markes’s house but remained in the car.
    ¶3.    Meanwhile, Chris, LaDaron, and Quendravious hung out at Markes’s house. Tovell
    “Taco” Henderson was one of several men shooting dice. Tovell won about $1,250, and
    Chris lost all the money he wagered.
    ¶4.    According to LaDaron, Chris was “mad because he lost all his money[,]” and “he
    1
    Chris, LaDaron, and Quendravious are all first cousins.
    2
    wanted to rob the whole dice game.” LaDaron also mentioned Chris said he was “going to
    get something back from Tovell.” LaDaron claimed Chris decided to rob Tovell.
    ¶5.    After Chris gambled away his money, the five men left in the jeep. Shaun testified
    Chris wanted to get some marijuana, but Quendravious remembered the group going to
    Chris’s mom’s house to pick up more gambling money. LaDaron recalled there was already
    one gun in the jeep before they stopped by Chris’s mother’s home. When they arrived at
    Chris’s mom’s house, Chris went inside. Shaun saw Chris come back out to the jeep holding
    a big, black pistol. This gun was different from the one LaDaron said was already in the
    jeep. And LaDaron remembered Chris got “more money, . . . some weed[,] and another gun”
    before getting back in the car at his mom’s house.
    ¶6.    The men then returned to Markes’s house so Chris could continue shooting dice.
    Shaun and John remained in the jeep, while Chris, LaDaron, and Quendravious went back
    inside. About twenty minutes later, the three men came back outside with Tovell.
    ¶7.    Chris and Tovell left Markes’s house together in Tovell’s white truck. Shaun, John,
    LaDaron, and Quendravious hopped back in the jeep and followed Chris and Tovell until the
    white truck pulled into a driveway. The four men circled the block. LaDaron, who admitted
    he and Chris were both armed, testified he got out to see what Chris was doing because he
    and Quendravious planned on getting “money and dope.” Quendravious got out of the jeep
    too.
    ¶8.    After dropping LaDaron and Quendravious off, Shaun and John drove around for two
    3
    or three minutes. Meanwhile, LaDaron and Quendravious approached the truck. Tovell was
    sitting in the driver’s seat, and Chris was in the passenger’s seat. LaDaron got in behind
    Tovell, and Quendravious sat behind Chris. Quendravious and LaDaron both testified they
    saw Chris with a gun in the truck.
    ¶9.    According to Quendravious, Chris wanted to sell Tovell $300 worth of marijuana.
    But LaDaron recalled Tovell did not want to buy any weed. Quendravious testified that
    Tovell pulled out a wad of cash, and LaDaron jumped out of the truck and yelled, “Give me
    that,” referring to the money. At trial, LaDaron testified he “demanded [Tovell] give [him]
    everything he [had].” According to Quendravious, at this point, Tovell rushed LaDaron to
    the ground, and LaDaron “let out one gunshot.”2 LaDaron also testified Tovell “jumped out
    on [him] and rushed [him] to the ground and the gun went off.” LaDaron said after he shot
    Tovell once, he pushed Tovell off of him and grabbed $1,500 in cash3 from him. He then
    ran away and heard four or five more gunshots. When Quendravious heard the initial
    gunshot, he too took off running. Right before he got back in the jeep, he heard more
    gunshots. LaDaron testified Chris was the only person still back at the truck with a gun when
    he heard the last four or five shots. So he believed Chris fired those last shots.
    ¶10.   Tina Flowers lived across the street from the shooting and recalled hearing two
    2
    In his initial statement to police, Quendravious said LaDaron shot Tovell twice. But
    at trial, he insisted LaDaron only shot Tovell once. According to Quendravious, the officer
    mistakenly wrote two shots were fired when taking his statement.
    3
    Police recovered $1,087 in blood-soaked cash next to Tovell’s body.
    4
    gunshots. When she asked her daughter, Paige Flowers, to look outside, Paige started
    screaming, “they are shooting that man!” Then, Tina and Paige heard several more gunshots
    and called 911. Paige saw a single shooter standing over a man on the ground. The man on
    the ground was not moving. Another neighbor, Ruby Henderson, was getting out of the
    shower when she heard five or six gunshots. When she looked out the window, she saw two
    men running up the road.
    ¶11.   As Shaun and John were driving around the neighborhood, Shaun heard a total of
    seven gunshots with some pauses between shots. Shaun then heard someone yelling, “stop!”
    He saw Quendravious, followed by LaDaron, running towards them. Shaun picked up the
    two men in the jeep.4 After hearing police sirens, the four men went back to Taneille’s
    house. Chris was nowhere in sight. While en route, Shaun recalled Quendravious being very
    quiet, but LaDaron “was talking loud like something had happened” and hollering that “Chris
    had killed a man.” According to Shaun, LaDaron admitted shooting Tovell twice before
    running off.
    ¶12.   All the men except Chris returned to Taneille’s house around 10 p.m. that night. Once
    there, they smoked more marijuana and drank liquor.5 Very early the next morning, Chris
    called Taneille’s cell phone, and Quendravious answered. Chris asked Quendravious to
    4
    Quendravious claimed the first time he saw LaDaron with the gun was in the jeep
    after the shooting. Quendravious and LaDaron both testified that they had seen both pistols
    in the past, and that both guns belonged to Chris.
    5
    Once Shaun got his car from Taneille’s house, he immediately left and went home.
    5
    come pick him up. And Quendravious and his cousin, Jerrick Todd, went to get Chris, who
    had been hiding on a school bus with one of the pistols used in the shooting. Chris told the
    two men he hid the gun on the school bus. This particular gun was found around two weeks
    later by a student on the school bus.
    ¶13.   According to Quendravious, he, John, LaDaron, and Chris divvied up the stolen
    money at Taneille’s house that night. Quendravious also claimed LaDaron wrapped the
    pistol he had used in a shirt, and Quendravious hid the gun “outside[,] behind the fence line.”
    The police never recovered this pistol. The next morning, police arrested LaDaron,
    Quendravious, and Chris at Taneille’s house. Shaun was arrested four days later.
    ¶14.   Chris, LaDaron, and Quendravious were jointly indicted for conspiracy to commit
    armed robbery. They were also charged with capital murder. Shaun was charged as an
    accessory after the fact. The defendants’ trials were severed. And at the time of Chris’s trial,
    none of the defendants had pled guilty or gone to trial.
    ¶15.   At Chris’s trial, several experts testified. Dr. Lisa Funte, a forensic pathologist,
    performed Tovell’s autopsy and confirmed he suffered seven different gunshot wounds. She
    testified the cause of death was multiple gunshot wounds, and the death was ruled a
    homicide. Chad Suggs, an expert in trace evidence and gunshot-residue analysis, reviewed
    the gunshot-residue-kit results obtained from Chris. He found there were “particles
    indicative of gunshot residue” on Chris’s hands and palms. Starks Hathcock, a firearms
    expert, testified that four of five shell casings were from a Hi-Point Model C9 9mm
    6
    pistol—the particular gun Chris took from the scene, which was later recovered from the
    school bus.
    ¶16.   Chris testified in his own defense. He blamed the others for the robbery and murder.
    Chris claimed he panicked after LaDaron shot Tovell and picked up the pistol Quendravious
    left at the crime scene. He hid with the gun on a nearby school bus until around 3 a.m. when
    Quendravious and Jerrick picked him up. He admitted hiding the gun on the bus, but denied
    shooting Tovell with it.
    ¶17.   A jury found Chris guilty of conspiracy to commit armed robbery. They also found
    him guilty of capital murder. He was sentenced to concurrent sentences of five years and life
    imprisonment. Chris appealed.
    Discussion
    I.     Conspiracy to Commit Armed Robbery & Sufficiency of the Evidence
    ¶18.   Chris first challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conspiracy-to-
    commit-armed-robbery conviction. To test the legal sufficiency of the evidence, “we
    consider all evidence in the light most favorable to the State.” Grossley v. State, 
    127 So. 3d 1143
    , 1147 (¶10) (Miss. Ct. App. 2013) (citing Bush v. State, 
    895 So. 2d 836
    , 843 (¶16)
    (Miss. 2005)). “Credible evidence consistent with guilt must be accepted as true.” 
    Id.
     The
    State receives the benefit of all favorable inferences reasonably drawn from the evidence.
    
    Id.
     After viewing the evidence in this light, we consider whether “any rational trier of fact
    could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id.
    7
    (quoting Bush, 895 So. 2d at 843 (¶16)).
    ¶19.   To establish conspiracy to commit armed robbery, the State must prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt Chris agreed with one or more persons to commit an armed robbery.6 See
    
    Miss. Code Ann. § 97-1-1
    (1) (Rev. 2014) (defining conspiracy as “two (2) or more persons
    conspir[ing] either: (a) [t]o commit a crime; or . . . (h) [t]o accomplish any unlawful purpose,
    or a lawful purpose by any unlawful means”); see also Moore v. State, 
    105 So. 3d 390
    , 394
    (¶15) (Miss. Ct. App. 2012) (holding conspiracy requires the State to show two or more
    persons agreed to commit the underlying crime). “[U]nder Mississippi law, the criminal
    agreement alone is sufficient to establish the completed crime of conspiracy, [so] no overt
    act need be prove[n] in furtherance of the conspiracy.” Stokes v. State, 
    141 So. 3d 421
    , 428
    (¶31) (Miss. Ct. App. 2013) (citing Ford v. State, 
    546 So. 2d 686
    , 688 (Miss. 1989)). The
    agreement does not have to be “expressed or formal.” 
    Id.
     Instead, the jury may infer a
    conspiracy from the circumstances, “particularly by declarations, acts, and conduct of the
    alleged conspirators.” Young v. State, 
    910 So. 2d 26
    , 29 (¶11) (Miss. Ct. App. 2005). “Once
    the existence of a conspiracy is shown, only slight evidence is required to connect a particular
    defendant with the conspiracy.” Stokes, 
    141 So. 3d at 428-29
     (¶31). And conspiracy can be
    proven “entirely by circumstantial evidence.” Young, 910 So. 2d at 29 (¶11).
    6
    Armed robbery is: (1) a felonious taking or attempt to take, (2) from the person or
    from his presence, (3) the personal property of another, (4) against his will, (5) by violence
    to his person or by putting such person in fear of immediate injury to his person by the
    exhibition of a deadly weapon. 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-79
     (Rev. 2014).
    8
    ¶20.   The jury found an agreement to commit armed robbery had been proved. And we find
    the circumstances, statements, and actions of the conspirators were sufficient to support this.
    ¶21.   After Chris lost all his money to Tovell at the dice game, LaDaron said Chris was mad
    and wanted to “get something back from Tovell.” LaDaron also testified that it was Chris’s
    idea to rob Tovell, and that both guns used in the robbery belonged to Chris. Quendravious
    confirmed Chris owned both guns. Chris retrieved a pistol from his mom’s house. And the
    men returned to the dice game armed with two pistols. From there Chris got in the truck with
    Tovell, while his co-conspirators followed close behind. LaDaron admitted he and Chris
    were both armed. They followed Chris and Tovell because he and Quendravious planned on
    getting some money and dope. LaDaron and Quendravious got into Tovell’s truck with Chris
    and Tovell.    Both claimed Chris had a gun.         LaDaron explained how the robbery
    happened—when Tovell pulled out a wad of cash, LaDaron jumped out and demanded all
    of Tovell’s money. Tovell then wrestled LaDaron to the ground and at least one shot was
    fired immediately. LaDaron grabbed some cash and took off. The men later split the stolen
    money.
    ¶22.   Viewing this evidence in the light most favorable to the State, we find it more than
    sufficient to prove Chris’s participation in a conspiracy to commit armed robbery.
    II.    Conspiracy to Commit Armed Robbery & Weight of the Evidence
    ¶23.   Chris’s next challenge is to the weight of the evidence supporting his conspiracy-to-
    commit-armed-robbery conviction. He requests a new trial. A motion for a new trial
    9
    challenges the weight of the evidence. Grossley, 
    127 So. 3d at 1149
     (¶19) (citing Bush, 895
    So. 2d at 844 (¶18)). We will grant a new trial “only in exceptional cases in which the
    evidence preponderates heavily against the verdict.” Id. This court views “the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the verdict and ‘will only disturb a verdict when it is so contrary
    to the overwhelming weight of the evidence that to allow it to stand would sanction an
    unconscionable injustice.’” Id. (quoting Bush, 895 So. 2d at 844 (¶18)).
    ¶24.   For reasons already discussed in section I, viewing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the verdict, we find Chris’s conspiracy-to-commit-armed-robbery conviction
    was supported by the weight to the evidence.
    III.   Capital Murder & Weight of the Evidence
    ¶25.   Chris also challenges the weight of the evidence supporting his capital-murder
    conviction.7 Capital murder is the “killing of a human being without the authority of law by
    any means or in any manner . . . [w]hen done with or without any design to effect death, by
    any person engaged in the commission of the crime of . . . robbery[.]” 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-19
    (2)(e) (Supp. 2015).
    ¶26.   As previously discussed, the evidence supported the jury’s inference that Chris
    conspired with LaDaron and Quendravious to commit armed robbery. LaDaron testified he
    and Chris were both armed with both of Chris’s guns during the robbery. LaDaron admitted
    7
    Chris does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his capital-
    murder conviction.
    10
    he tried to snatch the cash from Tovell, but when Tovell tackled him, LaDaron shot him once
    and ran. Quendravious also said LaDaron only shot Tovell once before they ran off.8 Both
    LaDaron and Quendravious said they heard several more gunshots right before they got into
    the jeep. LaDaron specifically recalled hearing four or five more shots after he ran off. And
    Chris was the only person left back at the truck when the last four or five shots were fired.
    Ruby testified that she looked out the window, saw two men running, and then heard five to
    six gunshots, which would corroborate the evidence that Chris shot Tovell five to six times.
    This testimony is consistent with the autopsy evidence showing Tovell died from seven9
    separate gunshot wounds. Further, Chris’s hands and palms contained “particles indicative
    of gunshot residue.”       Also telling was that when LaDaron returned to the jeep, he
    immediately informed the other men Chris had killed someone. Finally, Chris hid on a
    school bus with one of the two murder weapons until the wee hours of the next morning.
    And four of five shell casings recovered from the scene had been fired from the gun Chris
    admitted hiding on the bus.
    ¶27.   Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, we find the weight of
    the evidence supports Chris’s capital-murder conviction.
    IV.      Exclusion of Co-Conspirator’s Statement Based on Hearsay
    8
    The evidence consistently showed LaDaron shot Tovell either once or twice. In
    Quendravious’s first statement to police, he said LaDaron shot Tovell twice. Tina, the
    neighbor, said she heard two gunshots, then a long pause, and then several more gunshots.
    And Shaun claimed LaDaron said he shot Tovell twice.
    9
    Shaun also testified that he heard a total of seven gunshots.
    11
    ¶28.   Next, Chris argues the circuit court erred in limiting his attorney’s cross-examination
    of Shaun, pointing to the following exchange between Shaun and Chris’s trial attorney:
    Q:                   Speaking of guns, what do you know about [LaDaron]
    having a gun?
    A:                   I didn’t know if he had one or not.
    Q:                   Did [Quendravious] tell you earlier that [LaDaron] –
    earlier that night –
    [State:]             Judge, I’m going to object. This is hearsay.
    [Court:]             Response?
    [Chris’s Attorney:] Your Honor, . . . [the State has them] indicted as co-
    conspirators. I think anything a co-conspirator says –
    that’s the way he’s indicted it and that’s the way he’s got
    to travel. I think it falls under the exception.
    [Court:]             You’re conceding that there’s been a conspiracy
    established?
    [Chris’s Attorney:] No, sir.
    [Court:]             Okay. Then lay your predicate. At this point in time the
    objection will be sustained.
    [Chris’s Attorney:] I’ll withdraw the question.
    (Emphasis added).
    ¶29.   Under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E), an admission by a party-opponent
    is not hearsay if the statement is offered against a party and is “a statement by a co-
    conspirator of a party during the course and in furtherance of the conspiracy.” In this
    evidentiary context, the “contents of the statement shall be considered but are not alone
    12
    sufficient to establish the . . . existence of the conspiracy and the participation therein of the
    declarant and the party against whom the statement is offered[.]” M.R.E. 801(d)(2). But
    “before the statement of an alleged co-conspirator can be admitted as evidence, the trial
    court must determine that there is preliminary evidence of a conspiracy.” Sullivan v. State,
    
    749 So. 2d 983
    , 988 (¶5) (Miss. 1999) (emphasis added).
    ¶30.   The trial judge was certainly aware of Rule 801(d)(2)’s dictates. He accepted defense
    counsel’s concession that a predicate for conspiracy had not been established. So he
    sustained the objection until a proper predicate was laid. At this point, Chris’s counsel
    elected to withdraw his question. And the record shows he abandoned this line of
    questioning by failing to pursue it later. Thus, this issue is waived.
    V.      Newly Discovered Evidence, Brady, and Weathersby
    ¶31.   Chris filed a supplemental pro se appellate brief. In it, he insists newly discovered
    evidence shows he did not commit capital murder. He also generally mentions Brady v.
    Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
     (1963), and claims the State withheld exculpatory evidence that his
    co-conspirator LaDaron killed Tovell.10 As Chris sees it, if LaDaron had “appropriately
    10
    Chris also cites Weathersby v. State, 
    165 Miss. 207
    , 209, 
    147 So. 481
    , 482 (1933),
    and argues his version of the facts must be accepted as true. Under the so-called Weathersby
    rule:
    [W]here the defendant or the defendant's witnesses are the only eyewitnesses
    to the homicide, their version, if reasonable, must be accepted as true, unless
    substantially contradicted in material particulars by a credible witness or
    witnesses for the [S]tate, or by the physical facts or by the facts of common
    knowledge.
    13
    admitted that he had in fact killed [Tovell],” instead of testifying Chris killed him, “then the
    jury would not have convicted” Chris of capital murder.
    ¶32.   But what he pitches is not really newly discovered evidence. To qualify as “newly
    discovered evidence,” there must be (1) evidence not discoverable by the exercise of due
    diligence at trial, (2) that is almost certainly conclusive that if discovered would have caused
    a different result. In re Hill, 
    460 So. 2d 792
    , 796 (Miss. 1984).
    ¶33.   First, Chris has not unearthed anything new. Indeed, LaDaron testified at Chris’s trial,
    so his testimony was not unknown. LaDaron admitted shooting Tovell, whom he claimed
    was still alive when he fled. And after LaDaron snatched cash from Tovell and ran, he heard
    four or five more shots—the gunshots he blamed on Chris. Indeed, LaDaron was cross-
    examined by Chris’s attorney, and LaDaron’s testimony never changed during Chris’s trial.
    Still, even removing LaDaron’s testimony, there was ample independent evidence supporting
    Chris’s guilt, including other conspirator testimony, his bus-hiding episode, gunshot residue
    on Chris’s hands, shell casings from the scene that were fired from Chris’s pistol, and
    witness testimony about additional shots fired and two men seen running. So we find his
    new-evidence argument fails.
    ¶34.   Chris also mentions Brady, so we consider if favorable material exculpatory or
    
    Id.
     But Chris did not bring up the Weathersby rule as a defense at trial or in his motion for
    a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. So he is procedurally barred from raising it on
    appeal. Page v. State, 
    64 So. 3d 482
    , 489 (¶29) (Miss. 2011). Furthermore, his version was
    contradicted by other witnesses and physical evidence, so the rule is inapplicable on these
    facts.
    14
    impeachment evidence was suppressed. Brady, 
    373 U.S. at 87
    . Before any Brady violation
    can arise, there must be a suppression, but Chris shows none.
    ¶35.   What Chris does mention is that after his own trial and conviction, LaDaron later pled
    guilty to manslaughter for Tovell’s death. However, Chris has shown no evidence that
    LaDaron had a plea agreement in hand or was promised leniency for his testimony during or
    before Chris’s trial.     Absent evidence of undisclosed exculpatory or impeachment
    information, we refuse to speculate such into the record.
    ¶36.   Furthermore, LaDaron’s supposed guilty plea and colloquy are not in the record, nor
    could they have been, without supplementation, since LaDaron had not pled guilty at the time
    of Chris’s trial. So it is questionable whether issues involving the later manslaughter plea
    are properly before us. See Ross v. State, 
    16 So. 3d 47
    , 60 (¶35) (Miss. Ct. App. 2009) (As
    a reviewing court, “we limit our inquiry to those facts contained strictly in the record, . . . not
    . . . mere assertions in the briefs.” (quotation marks omitted)).
    ¶37.   Chris also suggests improprieties in the firearms expert’s discussion of the shell
    casings purportedly fired from his firearm and the gunpowder residue recovered from his
    hands. But like his challenge to LaDaron’s credibility, these witnesses were also subject to
    cross-examination, and the jury was responsible for the weight and credibility given to their
    testimony. See Grossley, 
    127 So. 3d at 1149
     (¶21) (“weight and credibility of a witness’s
    testimony are within the sole province of the jury as fact-finder”). To the extent Chris argues
    the State sponsored perjured testimony, he again offers nothing more than his own
    15
    suggestions to support this. We thus find no error here.
    VI.    Fair Trial
    ¶38.   Chris’s last pro se argument mentions a shocking device he says he was required to
    wear at trial. But the record shows that before trial, Chris objected to wearing the ankle
    security device. And the circuit judge allowed him to remove it.
    ¶39.   The judge initially noted, “You are in civilian clothes, a brown checked tweed jacket,
    matching tie, black slacks, corresponding brown shoes. The pants do appear to fit you a little
    bit loosely and the device that is being discussed in this matter is one that is contained inside
    of your pants leg. It’s nonvisual to anyone. And [it] is not apparent as you having any sort
    of restraint.” As the judge appreciated it, the device would only administer a shock if the
    defendant tried to flee or pose a danger to someone. Until the device was brought to the
    court’s attention, the judge “saw nothing that indicated [Chris] was wearing anything. I
    couldn’t see anything different about his gait, how he walked, or the clothing he was
    wearing.” But the court was concerned the jury might somehow hear an “audible signal”
    from the device. So the anklet was removed, with a warning that if Chris later posed “a
    specific danger to anyone, including [himself], that [he would] be wearing this device.”
    Because Chris did not ultimately wear the device and there is no indication the jury saw the
    anklet before its removal, his claim lacks merit.
    ¶40.   We thus affirm.
    ¶41. THE JUDGMENT OF THE PANOLA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT OF
    CONVICTION OF CONSPIRACY TO COMMIT ARMED ROBBERY AND
    16
    SENTENCE OF FIVE YEARS, AND CONVICTION OF CAPITAL MURDER AND
    SENTENCE OF LIFE IMPRISONMENT WITHOUT PAROLE, WITH THE
    SENTENCES TO RUN CONSECUTIVELY, ALL IN THE CUSTODY OF THE
    MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, AND TO PAY $11,000 IN
    RESTITUTION, IS AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED
    TO PANOLA COUNTY.
    LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, ISHEE, CARLTON, FAIR,
    JAMES AND WILSON, JJ., CONCUR.
    17