Theotus Barnett v. State of Mississippi , 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 557 ( 2015 )


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  •          IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2013-KA-01946-COA
    THEOTUS BARNETT                                                              APPELLANT
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI                                                           APPELLEE
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                           10/15/2013
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                HON. C.E. MORGAN III
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                  ATTALA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                     OFFICE OF STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER
    BY: JUSTIN TAYLOR COOK
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                      OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: ALICIA MARIE AINSWORTH
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                          DOUG EVANS
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                         CRIMINAL - FELONY
    TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION:                    CONVICTED OF DELIBERATE DESIGN
    MURDER AND SENTENCED TO LIFE IN
    THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
    DISPOSITION:                                AFFIRMED - 11/03/2015
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE GRIFFIS, P.J., CARLTON AND WILSON, JJ.
    WILSON, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    An Attala County Circuit Court jury convicted Theotus Barnett of deliberate design
    murder, and the trial judge sentenced him to life in the custody of the Mississippi Department
    of Corrections. On appeal, Barnett raises one issue: whether the trial judge’s failure to grant
    him funds to hire an expert violated due process. Finding no error, we affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2.    On Friday, May 25, 2007, Danny Tavares, then fifty-two years old, went to work at
    his family’s used car lot, Tavares Motors in Kosciusko, which his father had operated before
    him. Tavares typically talked to his wife, Cindy, several times a day, and on this day, he last
    spoke to her around 1:00 p.m. Tavares usually came home early on Fridays, so when he had
    not come home by around 6:00 or 6:30 p.m., Cindy and their daughter, Jenny, went to check
    on him.
    ¶3.    When Cindy and Jenny arrived at Tavares Motors, they noticed that the front door of
    the office building was pushed out from its frame. Upon entering the building, Cindy saw
    that the lobby area was torn apart, a table was knocked over and broken, and there were
    blood stains on the carpet and walls. Cindy then saw her husband’s legs protruding from the
    adjacent bathroom, and she found him kneeling with his head over the toilet, clutching the
    rim. She tried to pull him off, hoping he was alive, but his body was extremely stiff so that
    moving him was difficult. Once she was able to pry his body from the toilet and saw that he
    was dead, she called the police.
    ¶4.    The police and the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation took swabs from the numerous
    blood stains in the building. There was a large pool of blood in the lobby and significant
    blood spattered on the bathroom walls and floor, on the toilet seat and lid, and inside the
    toilet. The pattern of blood and hair on the underside of the toilet seat was consistent with
    the seat having been forced down on the back of Tavares’s head. There was also an empty
    bottle of Clorox bleach, and the bleach had been poured out in the bathroom and on
    Tavares’s body.
    2
    ¶5.    Nearly all of the blood was Tavares’s, but one sample taken from the bathroom floor
    was later found to match Barnett’s DNA profile. Almost four years later, Barnett turned up
    in Tennessee, where he had been arrested and was awaiting trial on charges of aggravated
    kidnapping and aggravated robbery.1 Law enforcement officers from Mississippi traveled
    to Tennessee to interview Barnett. The interview was recorded and transcribed, and a
    partially redacted version of the transcript was introduced into evidence at trial.
    ¶6.    In the interview, Barnett initially denied that he had ever been to Tavares Motors.
    However, after officers told him that DNA evidence linked him to the crime scene, Barnett
    admitted he had been there on the day of Tavares’s death. Barnett first stated that he went
    there to look at a truck. Then he claimed that he went there both because he was interested
    in buying a truck for himself and also to confront Tavares about having “sold [his] son a
    lemon car” (a red Cadillac). Barnett said that things “got out of hand” after he and Tavares
    exchanged “words.” Barnett said that Tavares accused his son of “lying,” which led to
    shoving and a fistfight; however, Barnett told the interviewers that he “didn’t get injured”
    in the fight and that Tavares was still alive when he left.
    ¶7.    As the interview progressed, Barnett claimed that the fight started because Tavares
    “had a mouth on him” and, specifically, called Barnett’s son a “lying . . . nigger . . . son of
    1
    In September 2010, Barnett robbed a Memphis self-storage facility after pretending
    to be interested in renting a storage unit. Only one employee was present at the time, and
    she was eight months pregnant. Barnett choked her, repeatedly struck her in the face and
    head with his fists and a gun, held a knife to her throat, and threatened to kill her. Barnett
    was convicted of aggravated robbery and aggravated kidnapping and sentenced to thirty-five
    years in prison, and his convictions and sentence were affirmed on appeal. See State v.
    Barnett, No. W2012-00048-CCA-R3CD, 
    2013 WL 2297128
     (Tenn. Crim. App. May 22,
    2013). No evidence of the Barnett’s crimes in Tennessee was introduced at trial in this case.
    3
    a bitch.” Barnett then said that he could not recall if Tavares ever hit him and reiterated that
    he was not injured in the fight. Still later, Barnett told the interviewers that Tavares initially
    denied having sold his son a car but eventually recalled his son, uttered the racial slur, and
    then told Barnett that he was “sick of talking to [him].” Barnett said “that’s when . . . all hell
    broke loose.” Barnett then claimed: “[Tavares] hit me with something, and then I don’t know
    . . . what exactly it was but I took it from him,” “[a]nd that’s when I started whooping him
    up with it.” Barnett said that Tavares hit him only once in the arm—and, again, did not
    injure him—with the unknown object. Barnett stated that when he took the object from
    Tavares and began striking him with it, he knocked Tavares into the bathroom and to the
    floor. Barnett then poured bleach on Tavares’s body, washed his own hands, and left.
    Barnett claimed that he did not know whether Tavares was alive when he left. Barnett said
    that he could not “remember everything” that happened, but the “main part [he did]
    remember” was hitting Tavares with the object. In his subsequent written statement, Barnett
    identified the object as a leg from the broken table in the building’s lobby.
    ¶8.    At trial, the State proved that, contrary to Barnett’s claims, Tavares had never sold
    Barnett’s son a car. Rather, about fourteen months before Tavares was killed, Barnett’s son
    bought a red Cadillac from Lindsay’s Auto Sales, a used car dealer down the street from
    Tavares Motors. In 2005, Barnett had also purchased a used car from Lindsay’s.
    ¶9.    Dr. Steven Hayne performed Tavares’s autopsy. At trial, Dr. Hayne testified that there
    were numerous bruises, scrapes, lacerations, stab wounds, and slash wounds on multiple sites
    on Tavares’s body, including his face, head, neck, back, chest, legs, arms, and hands. Dr.
    4
    Hayne testified that Tavares’s most extensive injuries were to his neck. Dr. Hayne found to
    a reasonable degree of scientific certainty that the cause of death was not blunt force trauma
    or stabbing. Rather, he found that the cause of death was strangulation brought on by
    compression of the blood vessels in the neck, which stopped blood flow to the brain. Dr.
    Hayne based his opinion on the significant bleeding he found in the soft tissue of the neck,
    including extensive hemorrhaging around the right and left carotid arteries and the jugular
    veins. He testified that death would have occurred within one and a half to two minutes of
    compression of the blood vessels and that Tavares would have lost consciousness within five
    to thirty seconds of compression. Dr. Hayne’s opinion was consistent with the crime scene
    investigators’ findings of blood and hair on the underside of the toilet seat (see supra ¶4).
    ¶10.   The State initially indicted Barnett for capital murder, with robbery as the underlying
    felony.2 On December 17, 2012, Barnett’s counsel filed three motions for funds—one for
    “an independent expert in the fields of cause of death analysis and investigation,” one for “an
    independent expert in the fields of DNA analysis and investigation,” and one for a fact
    investigator.3 A hearing on these motions was held the same day, and the court granted funds
    for both a DNA expert and an investigator.
    ¶11.   At the December 17 hearing, one of Barnett’s attorneys stated, “[W]hat we would like
    to have is an opportunity . . . to have another medical examiner go back and review Dr.
    2
    The State later indicted Barnett for deliberate design murder and robbery and
    dismissed the capital murder indictment.
    3
    A fourth motion for funds for a mitigation expert became moot after the State opted
    not to pursue the capital murder indictment.
    5
    Hayne’s . . . reports and autopsies and procedures . . . . You know, there may be another
    possible cause of death that would be a nice defense for our client.” The district attorney
    argued that there was no basis for such an expenditure of funds in this case. In response,
    Barnett’s attorney cited only Dr. Hayne’s general “history” as an expert and argued that she
    did not “think it would . . . be cost prohibitive to have some other medical examiner review”
    his work in this case. The trial judge noted that the State had only recently named a new state
    medical examiner, and he suggested that the new examiner review the autopsy. One of
    Barnett’s attorneys seemed to agree with this suggestion, but the other stated that he felt
    “duty bound” to ask for a completely independent expert. However, counsel was unable to
    provide a name of such an expert, and so the trial judge granted Barnett four weeks to
    provide a name and details of the analysis that the expert would conduct.
    ¶12.   On December 31, 2012, the trial judge signed an order granting Barnett the funds “to
    obtain expert assistance in the field of cause of death analysis and investigation.” The order
    also stated, “The defendant shall provide the court with the name and qualifications of the
    proposed expert and details of the cost associated with the investigation by January 14,
    2013.” On January 4, Barnett’s counsel filed supplemental information with the court, which
    provided only the name, curriculum vitae, and hourly rate of his proposed expert. In the
    supplement, Barnett asked “that he be provided adequate funding to acquire her services to
    review the autopsy, cause of death, and the work of the medical examiner in this matter, and
    to provide information that may be beneficial to Mr. Barnett.” Barnett’s supplement
    provided no additional detail on the need for her services in this case.
    6
    ¶13.   The record is silent as to what, if anything, occurred between the filing of the
    supplemental information and a pretrial hearing held on May 10, 2013. At the end of the
    May 10 hearing, the following exchange occurred:
    COUNSEL: The . . . other motion that was pending was for an independent
    forensic pathologist. The Court refused to grant us funds for
    that.4 And you . . . told us at the time that if our investigation
    led us to believe that there was some concrete reason for one to
    be appointed. We wanted one basically to review Dr. Hayne’s
    work due mainly to the questions and concerns that had . . . been
    raised about his legitimacy as an expert.
    COURT:       Well, you can do that on [a] Daubert hearing. . . . You can file
    a motion and have a Daubert hearing. And if that . . . reveals
    some reason we should do that, I will. But y’all have not
    furnished me any reason why, why there is any debate about
    whether this is a homicide or not.
    COUNSEL: Okay.
    COURT:       [T]he details of Mr. Tavares’s death are out there in the autopsy.
    If there is some . . . reason to believe that maybe he was shot or
    maybe somebody beat him or maybe he had a heart attack, then
    . . . that would be reason for there to be some independent
    forensic pathology. Y’all have not presented me with anything
    other than speculation as to it at this point. I am not going to
    order it on speculation.
    Now, if you want to file a motion for a Daubert hearing on Dr.
    Hayne, we can have a Daubert hearing. And . . . if in that
    Daubert hearing something comes up that would indicate that
    there needs to be [an] independent analysis of it we will do that.
    ....
    I can’t determine what you are looking for.
    4
    Barnett’s counsel referred to the motion as both “pending” and “refused.”
    However, as noted above, the only motion in the record appears to have been conditionally
    granted per the trial judge’s order signed on December 31, 2012.
    7
    COUNSEL: Specifically, initially we were looking for a review of his work.
    COURT:        For what purpose?
    COUNSEL: To determine if there is an issue there.
    COURT:        But you gotta determine what issue you are looking for. . . .
    [A]ll that is . . . is a fishing expedition is what you are doing.
    ....
    There’s nothing—you’ve produce nothing, no reason to fish.
    COUNSEL: Your honor, . . . what I would like the opportunity to do is revise
    that motion, refile it, and we can . . . revisit it later.
    COURT:        Certainly, you can file whatever you want to file, but until y’all
    get me some more specifics than what you’ve got, I mean your
    investigator may find some reason to do that. But you’ve got to
    have some factual basis to do that. And there again, you can
    have a Daubert hearing. I prefer the Daubert hearing to be
    pretrial. We will get Dr. Hayne up here.
    ....
    If something comes out of that, then I will be more than happy
    to give you an independent pathologist. But just to do it just to
    say we did it for no reason, I am not going to do that at this
    point.
    ....
    I mean if it’s an issue, I will get somebody to check the issue.
    But . . . this is way too general for me to order that at this time.
    I am not going to do that at this time.
    ¶14.   Despite the judge’s repeated suggestions that Barnett request a Daubert
    hearing—which the judge specifically offered to hold prior to trial—as a means of exploring
    his alleged need for an independent expert, Barnett never requested such a hearing at any
    8
    time prior to his trial in October 2013. Nor did Barnett ever “revise” and “refile” the motion
    for funds or seek to “revisit [the issue] later,” as counsel indicated he would. Rather, after
    the trial judge advised that he was not going to grant Barnett any funds “at this time,” the
    issue was simply abandoned. On the day of trial, Barnett’s counsel announced that Barnett
    was “withdraw[ing] any other motions that we may have pending before the court.”
    ¶15.   During Barnett’s two-day trial, the State called Cindy Tavares, Dr. Hayne, the county
    coroner, members of the Kosciusko Police Department, the crime scene investigator from the
    Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, two analysts from the state crime lab, and the owner of
    Lindsay’s Auto Sales. The jury found Barnett guilty of deliberate design murder but not
    guilty of robbery.5 The trial judge then sentenced Barnett to life without parole, as required
    by statute.
    ANALYSIS
    ¶16.   Barnett raises only one issue on appeal. He claims that the trial court erred by denying
    him funds to hire an independent forensic pathologist to rebut the testimony of the State’s
    witness, Dr. Hayne. Barnett argues that he was entitled to funds for his independent expert
    because Dr. Hayne’s testimony was the State’s sole basis for proving the deliberate design
    element of the murder charge. For the reasons that follow, we disagree.
    A.     The Constitutional Right to Expert Assistance at State Expense
    5
    The evidence of robbery was that Tavares’s wallet (in which he usually kept $300
    to $500) and his pocketknife were missing and never recovered. At trial, Barnett called one
    witness who testified that he saw someone else running from Tavares Motors the afternoon
    that Tavares was killed. Barnett’s attorneys argued that this unidentified man may have
    stolen Tavares’s wallet sometime after Barnett killed him.
    9
    ¶17.   “Whether an indigent defendant must be provided expert funding is decided on a case-
    by-case basis, and we review this issue for an abuse of discretion.” Barksdale v. State,
    2013-KA-01949-COA, 
    2015 WL 1528975
    , at *4 (¶18) (Miss. Ct. App. Apr. 7, 2015) (citing
    Lowe v. State, 
    127 So. 3d 178
    , 183 (¶20) (Miss. 2013)). “[A] trial court must provide expert
    assistance to an indigent defendant when denial of such assistance would render the trial
    fundamentally unfair.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Lowe, 
    127 So. 3d at 181
     (¶13)). Thus, while the State
    need not “purchase for the indigent defendant all the assistance that his wealthier counterpart
    might buy,” he must have “access to the raw materials integral to the building of an effective
    defense.” Ake v. Oklahoma, 
    470 U.S. 68
    , 77 (1985).
    ¶18.   However, “[t]his does not ‘mean that an expert must be supplied any time an indigent
    defendant requests one.’” Barksdale, 
    2015 WL 1528975
    , at *4 (¶18) (quoting Fisher v. City
    of Eupora, 
    587 So. 2d 878
    , 883 (Miss. 1991)). Rather, “[a]n indigent’s right to defense
    expenses is ‘conditioned upon a showing that such expenses are needed to prepare and
    present an adequate defense.’” Green v. State, 
    631 So. 2d 167
    , 171 (Miss. 1994) (quoting
    Ruffin v. State, 
    447 So. 2d 113
    , 118 (Miss. 1984)); accord, e.g., King v. State, 
    960 So. 2d 413
    , 422 (¶10) (Miss. 2007) (defendant must establish a “substantial need” for expert
    assistance). “Concrete reasons for requiring an expert must be provided by the accused.”
    Green, 631 So. 2d at 171 (citing Hansen v. State, 
    592 So. 2d 114
    , 125 (Miss. 1991)).
    Accordingly, a court does not abuse its discretion by denying funds when an indigent
    defendant offers only “unsubstantiated assertions that assistance would be beneficial.”
    Brown v. State, 
    152 So. 3d 1146
    , 1166 (¶90) (Miss. 2014) (quoting Harrison v. State, 635
    
    10 So. 2d 894
    , 901 (Miss. 1994)); see also Caldwell v. Mississippi, 
    472 U.S. 320
    , 323 n.1 (1985)
    (“Given that [the indigent defendant] offered little more than undeveloped assertions that the
    requested [expert] assistance would be beneficial, we find no deprivation of due process in
    the trial judge’s decision [denying funds].”).
    ¶19.   When an indigent defendant is denied expert assistance despite having articulated a
    concrete need for it, our Supreme Court has identified several factors as relevant to
    “determining whether [he] was denied a fair trial because of the failure to appoint or allow
    funds for an expert.” Townsend v. State, 
    847 So. 2d 825
    , 829 (¶13) (Miss. 2003). “[S]ome
    of the factors to consider are whether and to what degree the defendant had access to the
    State’s experts, whether the defendant had the opportunity to cross-examine those experts,
    and lack of prejudice or incompetence of the State’s experts.” 
    Id.
     (citing Fisher, 587 So. 2d
    at 883). “[The Supreme] Court has also considered to what extent the State’s case depends
    upon the State’s expert, and the risk of error in resolving the issue for which the expert is
    requested.” Id. (citing Tubbs v. State, 
    402 So. 2d 830
    , 836 (Miss. 1981); Johnson v. State,
    
    529 So. 2d 577
    , 592 (Miss. 1988)); see also Brandon v. State, 
    109 So. 3d 128
    , 133 (¶16)
    (Miss. Ct. App. 2013) (trial judge properly “considered the factors from Townsend”).6
    ¶20.   Barnett argues that he was entitled to an independent forensic pathologist, at county
    expense, because the State relied on Dr. Hayne’s testimony to prove the deliberate design
    element of the murder charge. Barnett principally relies on three recent Mississippi Supreme
    Court decisions on the scope of an indigent defendant’s right to expert assistance at public
    6
    Barnett recites these factors in his opening brief but only addresses the significance
    of Dr. Hayne’s testimony to the State’s case.
    11
    expense: Lowe v. State,7 Brown v. State,8 and Isham v. State.9 However, Barnett’s reliance
    on these three decisions—which we discuss in detail below—is misplaced, as all three are
    distinguishable in relevant and significant respects.
    B.     The Mississippi Supreme Court’s Recent Decisions in Lowe,
    Brown, and Isham
    ¶21.   Brown and Isham each involved a young child (six months old and two years old,
    respectively) rushed to the hospital with serious internal injuries, but no visible external
    injuries, after being alone in the care of a parent or stepparent. See Isham, 161 So. 3d at
    1077-78 (¶¶2-8); Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1149-50 (¶¶2-6). In Brown, Dr. Hayne testified that
    the child’s injuries were consistent with “Shaken Baby Syndrome,” and in Isham experts
    testified that the child’s injuries were caused by abusive blunt force trauma to the head, rather
    than an accidental fall or some other cause. See Isham, 161 So. 3d at 1079-80 (¶¶14-17);
    Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1155-58 (¶¶41-49). In each case, the defendant denied having ever
    7
    Lowe, 
    127 So. 3d at 181
     (¶13) (“[T]he circuit court deprived Lowe of a
    fundamentally fair trial by denying him the assistance of a computer forensics expert when
    the State relied exclusively on its own expert to identify Lowe as the perpetrator[.]”).
    8
    Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1167 (¶93) (“Dr. Hayne offered the only evidence on both the
    underlying felony of child abuse and the cause and manner of death, and Brown had no way
    to rebut it.”).
    9
    Isham v. State, 
    161 So. 3d 1076
    , 1083 (¶34) (Miss. 2015) (denial of expert
    assistance violated due process because it was “unquestionable that the State’s experts were
    the only source of testimony concerning . . . essential components of the prosecution’s
    proof,” i.e., proof that Isham physically abused his stepchild and caused his injuries “to the
    exclusion of every reasonable hypothesis consistent with innocence”); see also 
    id.
     at (¶33)
    (“The mandate of Lowe and Brown is abundantly clear: if the State relies on expert
    testimony alone to prove or corroborate an element of the crime, then the defendant is
    entitled to an expert to assist in his defense and preparation for cross-examination.”).
    12
    abused the child, and there were no witnesses to any alleged abuse. Thus, in each case, the
    prosecution’s case was purely circumstantial and rested entirely on whether the jury believed
    its experts. See Isham, 161 So. 3d at 1083 (¶34); Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1164 (¶83).
    ¶22.   In Brown, the Court held that the trial court’s denial of funds for a defense expert was
    an abuse of discretion and a denial of due process because “Dr. Hayne offered the only
    evidence on both the underlying felony of child abuse and the cause and manner of death,
    and Brown had no way to rebut it.” Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1167 (¶93) (emphasis added); see
    also id. at 1170 (¶107) (Kitchens, J., joined by all other Justices, specially concurring)
    (“Utilization of an expert witness was the only way that Brown could defend himself against
    the testimony of Dr. Hayne.”). Indeed, the Court reasoned that, given the nature of Dr.
    Hayne’s testimony in that case, Brown needed his own expert “even to determine the proper
    questions to ask to challenge [him] on cross.” Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1166 (¶92) (majority
    opinion).
    ¶23.   Notably, in Brown, the Supreme Court specifically distinguished Brown’s claim from
    the claim that this Court rejected in McFadden v. State, 
    929 So. 2d 365
     (Miss. Ct. App.
    2006). See Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1167 (¶94). McFadden also involved allegations of child
    abuse, with Dr. Hayne as the State’s expert witness. See McFadden, 
    929 So. 2d at 367-69
    (¶¶3-14). However, in that case, we affirmed the trial court’s denial of expert assistance,
    finding that the defendant had failed to show that such assistance was necessary to his
    defense. See 
    id. at 368-69
     (¶¶9-14). And in Brown, the Supreme Court specifically
    recognized that McFadden was distinguishable for two reasons: unlike Brown, McFadden
    13
    (1) “had changed his story several times about how the injuries to the child occurred” and
    also (2) admitted to having caused the child’s death and disputed only the precise manner
    or cause of death. Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1167 (¶94).
    ¶24.   One year later, the Supreme Court applied Brown’s reasoning to Isham’s similar facts.
    The Court said that Brown’s “mandate . . . is clear: if the State relies on expert testimony
    alone to prove or corroborate an element of the crime, then the defendant is entitled to an
    expert to assist in his defense and preparation for cross-examination.” Isham, 161 So. 3d
    at 1083 (¶33). As in Brown, because “the State’s experts were the only source of . . . proof”
    that the child’s injuries resulted from abuse and not some other cause, the defendant was
    entitled to expert assistance of his own as a matter of due process.       Isham, 161 So. 3d at
    1083 (¶34). Because “[t]he State could not have proved its case against Isham without
    expert testimony, . . . the trial court deprived Isham of his right to a fair trial when it denied
    him funds to procure opposing experts.” Id. at 1084 (¶38). Moreover, Isham had provided
    the trial judge with concrete reasons why he needed funds for an expert by identifying
    experts who would offer specific alternative causes (medical conditions) for the child’s
    injuries. See id. at (¶37).
    ¶25.   Finally, Lowe was a different type of case but involved a similar need for an expert.
    Lowe was charged with downloading child pornography to his computer, but he offered
    proof that numerous others had access to and used his computer. See Lowe, 
    127 So. 3d at 179-80
     (¶¶3-9). No witnesses claimed personal knowledge that Lowe downloaded such
    material; rather, the State’s case rested entirely on its expert’s opinion that the “digital
    14
    fingerprint”—i.e., the times, passwords, and networks that the expert associated with the
    downloads—“pointed to Lowe as the individual who had downloaded the files.” 
    Id.
     at 180-
    81, 183 (¶¶11, 21). When Lowe initially requested funds for expert assistance, the trial court
    directed his attorney to speak with the State’s expert first; however, the State’s expert refused
    to discuss the specifics of his forensic analysis and was unwilling to meet until two weeks
    prior to the trial date. 
    Id. at 180
     (¶7). Nonetheless, the trial court denied Lowe’s request for
    funds. 
    Id.
     at (¶8).
    ¶26.   On appeal, the Supreme Court held that the trial court’s denial of Lowe’s renewed
    motion for expert assistance was an abuse of discretion because “the State relied solely on
    . . . its expert to establish that the files existed on Lowe’s laptop and that Lowe, rather than
    another individual using his laptop, downloaded the images from the internet.” 
    Id. at 183
    (¶21) (emphasis added). Put simply, “the State could not have convicted Lowe” without the
    expert, and yet Lowe had no reasonable means of cross-examining him or rebutting his
    testimony. 
    Id.
     at (¶¶21-22). The Supreme Court also emphasized that “Lowe’s counsel
    repeatedly explained to the trial court . . . specific needs for an independent expert in
    computer forensics”—i.e., “to examine the computer’s hard drive and to refute the State
    expert’s allegations that the hard drive contained [child pornography],” and “to determine
    who downloaded the content and under what user name and password.” 
    Id.
     at (¶22)
    (emphasis added).
    C.     Whether Barnett provided concrete reasons why he needed expert
    assistance and whether the denial of such assistance rendered his
    trial fundamentally unfair.
    15
    ¶27.   At the outset, we are tempted to conclude that Barnett waived his only claim on appeal
    by failing to develop it in the trial court. As discussed above, the trial judge specifically
    urged Barnett to notice a hearing at which he could cross-examine Dr. Hayne and thereby
    develop his need, if any, for independent expert assistance. For instance, the trial judge
    stated, “[Y]ou can have a Daubert hearing [prior to trial]. . . . We will get Dr. Hayne up
    here.” The judge continued, “If something comes out of that, then I will be more than happy
    to give you an independent pathologist.” The judge explained that he thought that a hearing
    was necessary because he could not “determine what [Barnett’s was] looking for”—i.e., what
    assistance Barnett thought an expert could provide. The judge’s comments are certainly
    understandable given that Barnett did not seem to know either. At the first hearing on the
    motion, his attorneys offered only speculation that “there may be another possible cause of
    death that would be a nice defense.” Months later, counsel still could only say that they
    wanted a “review” “[t]o determine if there [was] any issue.” The judge responded that this
    was “way too general,” and so he was not going to grant the request “at this time”—and he
    again urged Barnett to notice a hearing. Barnett’s counsel said that he would “revise” and
    “refile” the motion, but he never did. The trial judge’s urging to develop the record and his
    offers to hold a hearing were simply ignored.
    ¶28.   Moreover, “[t]he well-recognized rule is that a trial court will not be put in error on
    appeal for a matter not presented to it for decision.” Moffett v. State, 
    49 So. 3d 1073
    , 1088
    (¶41) (Miss. 2010) (quoting Mills v. Nichols, 
    467 So. 2d 924
    , 931 (Miss. 1985)). In this case,
    it is far from clear that the issue raised on appeal is the same “matter . . . presented to [the
    16
    trial judge] for decision.” 
    Id.
     On appeal, Barnett argues that an independent expert might
    have disagreed with Dr. Hayne’s finding that Tavares was strangled, which might have
    bolstered Barnett’s “theory of . . . manslaughter.” For reasons explained below, we find this
    argument unpersuasive, but we first note that the issue was never articulated to the trial judge
    in these terms. Again, defense counsel simply stated that they wanted someone to “review”
    Dr. Hayne’s opinions or that some other “possible cause of death” might be helpful to
    Barnett in some unspecified way. The trial judge questioned whether there was “reason to
    believe that maybe [Tavares] was shot or maybe somebody beat him or maybe he had a heart
    attack,” but Barnett provided no clarification in response. Prior to trial, Barnett never
    articulated his theory of the defense or why he thought the precise cause of death was
    important in this case; rather, he simply asked the trial judge to rule that he was entitled to
    funds for an independent forensic pathologist because Dr. Hayne was the State’s expert.
    ¶29.   Thus, Barnett not only failed to avail himself of the trial judge’s express invitation to
    develop the factual basis of his claim but also failed to present the claim to the trial judge
    with any degree of particularity. This arguably amounts to a waiver of the claim. In any
    event, it clearly demonstrates that Barnett failed to meet his burden of showing a “substantial
    need” for expert assistance. King, 960 So. 2d at 422 (¶10). “Concrete reasons for requiring
    an expert must be provided by the accused.” Green, 631 So. 2d at 171 (emphasis added).
    Barnett failed to support his motion with any concrete reasons. Because Barnett made only
    “unsubstantiated assertions that assistance would be beneficial,” the trial judge did not abuse
    his discretion by denying the request for funds. Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1166 (¶90) (quoting
    17
    Harrison, 635 So. 2d at 901); accord Caldwell, 
    472 U.S. at
    323 n.1. Indeed, in a prior case
    in which the only “reason given for [trial] counsel’s request for a state-funded expert was that
    she wanted to challenge Dr. Hayne’s autopsy,” we affirmed the trial judge’s ruling that the
    defendant had “failed to show a concrete need why a state-funded expert [should] be
    provided.” Brandon, 
    109 So. 3d at 132-33
     (¶¶15-16).
    ¶30.   Barnett’s failure to provide any concrete need for an expert distinguishes this case
    from Lowe, Brown, and Isham. The defendant in Lowe explained that he needed an expert
    to rebut the State’s expert testimony that child pornography was downloaded to his computer
    and that he, as opposed to someone else, had downloaded it. Lowe, 
    127 So. 3d at 183
     (¶22).
    In both Brown and Isham, the defendant needed an expert to rebut the State’s expert
    testimony that the victim’s injuries were the result of child abuse, rather than some other
    cause. See Isham, 161 So. 3d at 1084 (¶¶36-37); Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1166-67 (¶¶92-94).
    Here, in contrast, Barnett simply asserted—without explanation—that an expert might
    identify some other possible cause of death which might be helpful to him. Such assertions
    are insufficient to establish a substantial need for the testimony.
    ¶31.   Moreover, the cases on which Barnett relies are also distinguishable because the
    State’s case against Barnett did not rest entirely or even primarily on Dr. Hayne’s testimony.
    Barnett argues that he is entitled to relief under the holdings of Lowe, Brown, and Isham
    because the State relied solely on Dr. Hayne’s testimony to prove the deliberate design
    element of the murder charge. Specifically, Barnett emphasizes that in his closing argument,
    the assistant district attorney characterized Dr. Hayne’s testimony that Tavares was strangled
    18
    as “the most damning evidence” against Barnett. However, although the assistant district
    attorney ultimately turned to Dr. Hayne’s testimony, he first emphasized the many
    inconsistencies and apparent contradictions in Barnett’s own version of events as well as the
    brutal nature of the attack as a whole—the significant blood throughout the lobby and
    bathroom, including a large pool of blood in the lobby area, and the numerous wounds that
    Barnett inflicted on Tavares before he died. Thus, although Dr. Hayne’s testimony was
    certainly cited as evidence, it was far from the only evidence that the State offered to convict
    Barnett of deliberate design murder.
    ¶32.   DNA evidence placed Barnett at the scene, and—after he changed his story more than
    once—Barnett admitted that he killed Tavares. Specifically, he admitted beating Tavares to
    the ground and then pouring Clorox on him as he lay motionless on the bathroom floor.
    Thus, Barnett’s own changing statements to law enforcement provided ample evidence that
    he murdered Tavares. As the Supreme Court recognized in Brown, once the defendant has
    not only admitted that he killed the victim but also “changed his story several times about
    how the [crime] occurred,” expert testimony concerning the precise cause of death is no
    longer so essential to the State’s case that the defendant is entitled to funds for an expert.
    Brown, 152 So. 3d at 1167 (¶94) (citing McFadden, 
    929 So. 2d at 367-69
     (¶¶3-14)); see also
    Lowe, 
    127 So. 3d at 184
     (¶24) (holding that a defendant is entitled to his own expert where
    “the State relies on expert testimony alone to connect the defendant to the offense charged”
    (emphasis added)).
    ¶33.   Beyond Barnett’s own statements, additional evidence supported the jury’s verdict
    19
    finding Barnett guilty of deliberate design murder. As our Supreme Court has explained,
    “Deliberate design to kill a person may be formed very quickly, and perhaps only moments
    before the act of consummating the intent.” Brown v. State, 
    965 So. 2d 1023
    , 1030 (¶28)
    (Miss. 2007) (quotation marks and brackets omitted). Deliberate design “may be inferred
    through the intentional use of any instrument which, based on its manner of use, is calculated
    to produce death or serious bodily injury.” 
    Id.
     The blood and hair found on the underside
    of the toilet seat indicated that the seat had been forced down on Tavares’s head. The blood
    that had pooled and spattered throughout the lobby and bathroom and Tavares’s many
    injuries showed that Barnett beat Tavares brutally and thoroughly. In addition, almost all of
    the blood at the crime scene was Tavares’s, and crime scene investigators recovered only one
    small sample of Barnett’s DNA. Barnett himself told law enforcement that Tavares never
    hit him (or maybe hit him once) and did not injure him. After Barnett had killed Tavares, he
    washed his hands and poured Clorox on the body before leaving. All of this was evidence
    of deliberate design murder.10 Thus, unlike in Lowe, Brown, and Isham, the expert testimony
    in this case was far from the only evidence on which the State relied to prove its case.
    ¶34.   This case is also distinguishable from Lowe, Brown, and Isham in that Barnett was
    able to advance his theory of defense through “rigorous cross-examination” of Dr. Hayne.
    Isham, 161 So. 3d at 1084 (¶34). This case did not involve complex or highly technical
    10
    See, e.g., Westbrook v. State, 
    29 So. 3d 828
    , 832 (¶11) (Miss. Ct. App. 2009) (jury
    could infer deliberate design from the fact that the defendant struck the unarmed victim three
    times with a baseball bat); Wright v. State, 
    915 So. 2d 527
    , 531 (¶8) (Miss. Ct. App. 2005)
    (jury could infer deliberate design from the severity of the victim’s injuries and the
    defendant’s use of a broken bottle and wooden tray).
    20
    issues of computer forensics and “digital fingerprinting,” the validity or applicability of
    “Shaken Baby Syndrome,” or a claim that a small child’s unwitnessed internal injuries were
    the result of a medical condition. The issue at trial was whether deliberate design could be
    inferred from the evidence of a brutal killing to which Barnett admitted. Barnett’s counsel
    was able to advance Barnett’s position on this issue through cross-examination of Dr. Hayne.
    For example, Dr. Hayne admitted on cross-examination that he could testify only that his
    findings were “consistent with strangulation,” which he acknowledged meant that there was
    some degree of uncertainty as to the cause of death. Dr. Hayne also admitted that some of
    the usual signs of strangulation were not present—for example, there was no definitive line
    around the neck and no apparent facial swelling. Thus, Barnett’s theory of what the physical
    evidence showed—that he beat Tavares brutally and thoroughly but without malice or
    deliberate design—was fairly presented through cross-examination. See King, 960 So. 2d
    at 422-23 (¶10) (defendant failed to show a substantial need for an independent expert
    pathologist where the State’s expert admitted on cross-examination that the defendant’s
    theory was possible); King v. State, 
    784 So. 2d 884
    , 888-89 (¶15-18) (Miss. 2001) (same).
    ¶35.   Finally, “whether and to what degree the defendant had access to the State’s experts”
    is a factor to be considered in determining whether there is a substantial need for funds for
    an independent expert. McFadden, 
    929 So. 2d at 368
     (¶12) (citing Townsend, 847 So. 2d at
    829 (¶13)). In this case, as discussed above, the trial judge offered Barnett an opportunity
    to explore Dr. Hayne’s opinions at a pretrial hearing. See Wilkerson v. State, 
    731 So. 2d 1173
    , 1179 (¶19) (Miss. 1999) (trial judge’s orders granting the defendant an opportunity to
    21
    depose all of the State’s expert witnesses weighed against the need for an independent
    expert). That Barnett failed to avail himself of that opportunity does not alter the fact that
    the court expressly offered him meaningful pretrial access to Dr. Hayne.11
    CONCLUSION
    ¶36.   The trial judge did not abuse his discretion by denying Barnett’s motion for public
    funds to retain an independent forensic pathologist. First, the trial judge’s ruling was not an
    abuse of discretion because Barnett offered no concrete reason why such assistance was
    necessary to an adequate defense—indeed, Barnett arguably waived the claim by failing to
    develop the issue and articulate the claim clearly in the trial court. Second, the trial judge’s
    ruling was not an abuse of discretion because Dr. Hayne’s testimony was not essential to the
    State’s case, the State presented ample additional evidence of deliberate design, Barnett was
    able to present his theory of manslaughter through cross-examination, and Barnett was
    offered meaningful pretrial access to Dr. Hayne. Accordingly, we find no error and affirm
    Barnett’s conviction and sentence.
    ¶37. THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ATTALA COUNTY OF
    CONVICTION OF MURDER AND SENTENCE OF LIFE IN THE CUSTODY OF
    11
    The Supreme Court has also listed the “lack of prejudice or incompetence of the
    State’s experts” as a factor to be considered. Townsend, 847 So. 2d at 829 (¶13). While
    “[w]e acknowledge that Dr. Hayne’s work has received criticism,” “we note [that] the
    [S]upreme [C]ourt [has] made abundantly clear that ‘Dr. Hayne is qualified to proffer expert
    opinions in forensic pathology[.]’” Cooper v. State, 
    76 So. 3d 749
    , 755 (¶24) (Miss. Ct.
    App. 2011) (quoting Edmonds v. State, 
    955 So. 2d 787
    , 792 (¶8) (Miss. 2007)) (emphasis
    added in Cooper). “And since Edmonds, the [S]upreme [C]ourt has consistently found Dr.
    Hayne qualified to render expert opinions in the field of forensic pathology in criminal
    cases.” Cooper, 
    76 So. 3d at 755
     (¶24) (collecting additional cases). Dr. Hayne’s opinions
    in this case were restricted to issues of forensic pathology, and Barnett did not object to his
    being allowed to testify as an expert in that field.
    22
    THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS IS AFFIRMED. ALL
    COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO ATTALA COUNTY.
    LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, ISHEE, CARLTON,
    MAXWELL, FAIR AND JAMES, JJ., CONCUR.
    23
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2013-KA-01946-COA

Citation Numbers: 192 So. 3d 1033, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 557

Judges: Griffis, Carlton, Wilson, Lee, Irving, Barnes, Ishee, Maxwell, Fair, James

Filed Date: 11/3/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024