Mark Allen Williams a/k/a Mark A. Williams a/k/a Mark Williams v. State of Mississippi; ( 2020 )


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  •          IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2018-KA-00631-COA
    MARK ALLEN WILLIAMS A/K/A MARK A.                                            APPELLANT
    WILLIAMS A/K/A MARK WILLIAMS
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI                                                           APPELLEE
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                           04/16/2018
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                HON. JANNIE M. LEWIS-BLACKMON
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                  YAZOO COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                    JAMES H. POWELL III
    RICHARD T. STARRETT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                     OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: SCOTT STUART
    JEFFREY A. KLINGFUSS
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                          AKILLIE MALONE OLIVER
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                         CRIMINAL - FELONY
    DISPOSITION:                                REVERSED AND REMANDED - 02/25/2020
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    TINDELL, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    A Yazoo County grand jury indicted Mark Williams for two counts of simple assault
    against a law-enforcement officer. A jury convicted Williams of Count I but found him not
    guilty of Count II. The Yazoo County Circuit Court fined Williams $500 and sentenced him
    to five years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC), with
    three years to serve, two years suspended, and two years of supervised probation. On appeal,
    Williams raises the following issues: (1) he was denied his constitutional and statutory rights
    to a speedy trial; (2) the circuit court erroneously excluded the testimony of his treating
    psychiatrist Dr. Sudhakar Madakasira; (3) the State committed prosecutorial misconduct; (4)
    the circuit court erred by admitting into evidence his pretrial statement to law enforcement;
    (5) the circuit court erroneously refused his jury instruction on the right to defend against an
    unlawful arrest; and (6) cumulative error entitles him to a new trial.
    ¶2.    Upon review, we find that it was error to exclude Dr. Madakasira’s expert testimony
    and that, coupled with the acts of prosecutorial misconduct contained in the record, these
    issues constitute reversible error. We therefore reverse Williams’s conviction and sentence
    and remand this case to the circuit court for a new trial on the merits. Even though we find
    reversible error on these grounds, we must also address Williams’s speedy-trial arguments.
    See Newell v. State, 
    175 So. 3d 1260
    , 1267-68 (¶5) (Miss. 2015). In so doing, we find that
    Williams waived his statutory right to a speedy trial and that his constitutional claim to a
    speedy trial lacks merit. After considering Williams’s remaining claims, we find they also
    lack merit. We therefore decline to further address those assignments of error on appeal.
    FACTS
    ¶3.    At the time of his arrest on April 19, 2014, Williams worked as a supervisor at a
    chemical plant, where he had been employed for thirty-two years. Williams and his wife
    Douglas had been married for thirty-three years, and during their marriage, they had two
    daughters, Lauren and Kristen. At Williams’s trial, Douglas testified that she began to notice
    after the first year of marriage that Williams would go into rages for no apparent reason.
    Douglas stated that Kristen had also experienced her own terrible rages before her suicide
    2
    in 2003. According to Douglas, she “lost” Williams as soon as they buried Kristen. Douglas
    testified that Williams “ended up being unable to stop crying night[ and] day. He couldn’t
    . . . move.” Williams eventually sought treatment from a psychiatrist and was admitted for
    inpatient treatment at Saint Dominic’s behavioral health center for about two weeks.
    Douglas testified that Williams then went to outpatient care at Psycamore, a psychiatric
    treatment facility, where he received treatment all day every weekday for about three months.
    After Williams’s release from Psycamore, Douglas testified that he was calmer for about six
    months.
    ¶4.    The week before Williams’s arrest on Saturday, April 19, 2014, Douglas testified that
    Williams seemed angry about something but that he would not discuss the issue with her or
    their daughter, Lauren. Douglas recalled advising Lauren that something was wrong with
    Williams and that Lauren should stay out of his way. That Thursday evening, Williams
    drove to Best Buy to return an item. Douglas testified that Williams was angry when he left
    the house. When Williams returned home, he told Douglas that he had hit a pole in front of
    Best Buy with his truck. Douglas looked outside and observed a dent in the side of
    Williams’s truck. When Douglas questioned Williams the next morning about what had
    happened at Best Buy, Williams appeared to have no recollection of the previous night’s
    events. Douglas testified that Williams usually either did not recollect or would have trouble
    remembering what had occurred during his rage episodes.
    ¶5.    When Williams returned home from work that Friday evening, Douglas testified that
    he once again became angry. Douglas testified that Williams hit her in the face and threw
    3
    Lauren against the kitchen counter. Until that Friday evening, Douglas stated that Williams
    had never before hit her or ever come close to hitting her. When Lauren asked why Williams
    was acting so crazy, Williams responded, “I will show y’all crazy.” Williams then walked
    toward the bedroom. Afraid that Williams was headed for his gun case, Douglas and Lauren
    got into their cars and tried to leave. When they reached the gate at the end of their
    driveway, they found Williams’s truck blocking their way. As Lauren moved Williams’s
    truck, Douglas testified that they heard a gunshot from the direction of the house. Although
    they feared that Williams might have shot himself, Douglas and Lauren drove to the home
    of Douglas’s sister, Lelouise Davis, for help.
    ¶6.    Douglas and Lauren shared with Lelouise their fear that Williams had shot himself.
    Lelouise, a nurse practitioner, returned to the Williamses’ house with Douglas and Lauren,
    but the women saw no signs of Williams in the yard. Lelouise testified that she entered the
    home first and found Williams sitting in his underwear. Lelouise further testified that
    Williams was normally “a modest individual” and that “for him to sit in front of me in
    underwear with no clothes was very unusual.” When Lelouise asked Williams what was
    going on, Williams did not appear to know what she meant. Williams simply sat in his chair
    staring at the wall with his gun leaning nearby. Williams eventually stood up, got dressed,
    and left the house. Douglas testified that she and Lauren barricaded themselves inside
    Lauren’s bedroom for the night and that they did not see Williams again until the next day.
    ¶7.    The following morning, on Saturday, April 19, 2014, Douglas drove to her in-laws’
    home to check on her sick mother-in-law. Douglas asked Tonya Cresswell, a friend and
    4
    neighbor, to be on standby in case anything happened while Douglas was gone. Douglas
    later called Tonya back and asked if Tonya would drive to the Williamses’ house to check
    on Lauren. Tonya testified that a hysterical Lauren met her when she arrived at the
    Williamses’ house and that Lauren stated her father was “going crazy.” Tonya looked
    outside and observed Williams speeding around the yard in his truck. Tonya testified that
    Williams kept “going from one place to another outside and getting in his truck and getting
    out of his truck.” Tonya also characterized Williams’s behavior as “crazy” and testified that
    she could not tell what he was trying to do.
    ¶8.    Douglas testified that she arrived home around 1:30 p.m. that Saturday after Lauren
    called her and stated that Williams was again acting crazy. In addition to Tonya, Douglas
    had asked her sister and her brother-in-law, Francis and Chuck Dawkins, to come help her
    with Williams. Francis confirmed during her testimony that Douglas had asked her and
    Chuck to come over because Williams had gone crazy. When the Dawkinses arrived at the
    Williamses’ house, Francis testified that she “watched . . . [Williams] drive crazy around the
    yard. And he flew through the pasture and up the driveway across the actual part of the yard
    over to the side of the house. He was just driving like a maniac.”
    ¶9.    At Francis’s urging, Chuck got into Williams’s truck. Williams and Chuck drove over
    to where Williams had ripped up about thirty or forty feet of fencing, and Chuck asked why
    Williams had torn down those sections of the fence. Williams responded that the men’s
    father-in-law had told Williams to get his stuff off the father-in-law’s land. Williams told
    Chuck that he was therefore moving his dog pen off the father-in-law’s land. Williams
    5
    further claimed that the fence’s gate had been too narrow to move the dog pen through so he
    had torn down some of the fencing to create a wider opening. Chuck testified, however, that
    the dog pen could have been transported through the fence’s double gate without tearing
    down the sections of fence. Despite Williams’s unusual behavior, Chuck began to help
    Williams move the pieces of the dog pen. While the men were working, Douglas came over
    and stated that her father had never told Williams that he had to move the dog pen. Chuck
    testified that he did not remember Williams give Douglas any type of response. Instead,
    Williams simply kept working to move the dog pen.
    ¶10.   After the men moved the dog pen, Francis got into the truck to speak to Williams
    while Chuck stood by the porch. Francis testified that Williams was a great guy and had
    always been wonderful to her. Francis stated that she hoped to help Williams by speaking
    with him and urging him to seek treatment. Francis commented on the crazy way Williams
    was driving and acting, and she asked Williams what he was doing. Francis testified that in
    response to her comments and question, Williams got a “weird” look on his face and asked
    her what she meant. Francis stated that she again told Williams he was not acting normally
    and that they needed to get him some help. Francis testified that she was scared for Williams
    and felt as though the day in question was a “pretty critical” time for Williams. She stated
    that Williams told her that at 3 p.m. no one would have to worry about him anymore and that
    he would no longer be a problem. As she was urging Williams to seek treatment, Francis
    stated that deputies from the Yazoo County Sheriff’s Department arrived. Francis testified
    that Williams drove so quickly across the lawn to where the deputies had parked that he
    6
    scared her. When Williams stopped his truck by the deputies, Chuck yelled for Francis to
    get out of the truck. Francis exited the truck and joined Chuck by the porch.
    ¶11.   Douglas testified that she had called 911 to request assistance in dealing with her
    husband. Douglas stated that she told the 911 operator that Williams was pulling up the
    concrete fence posts that corralled her father’s cattle and that he appeared to be going crazy.
    According to Douglas, she informed the operator that Williams had never been the same after
    Kristen’s suicide, that Williams was sick, and that she needed help getting him somewhere
    for treatment. Douglas testified that Williams’s actions during the week leading up to his
    arrest were not rational, and she stated that in her opinion, Williams did not know what he
    was doing on the day in question.
    ¶12.   Deputy Loraine Hudson responded to Douglas’s 911 call. According to Deputy
    Hudson, the dispatcher reported that the caller had claimed Williams was not taking his
    antidepressant medication and had been drinking. Upon arriving at the Williamses’ house,
    Deputy Hudson testified that Douglas approached her and stated that Williams was taking
    street drugs and “had been on street drugs the whole weekend and that he had torn down . . .
    her father’s fence.” Deputy Michael Wilson, who also responded to the 911 call, similarly
    testified that Douglas told the deputies Williams was on drugs and had been drinking.
    ¶13.   The deputies both testified that Williams drove up to the house after they arrived and
    that Deputy Wilson stated they wanted to speak with him. The deputies testified that
    Williams then cursed at them and drove away. With the deputies following him in their
    respective vehicles, Williams drove to a shed across the street from his house and parked his
    7
    truck. Testimony reflected that Deputy Wilson arrived at the shed next, followed by Deputy
    Hudson, and finally, by Chuck.
    ¶14.    Deputy Wilson testified that after he exited his vehicle, Williams charged toward him
    in a rage and eventually knocked him to the ground. Both deputies testified that Williams
    got on top of Deputy Wilson and began to fight with him. Deputy Wilson stated that
    Williams grabbed his (Deputy Wilson’s) neck and tried to force his head toward the ground.
    As the two men rolled around on the ground, Deputy Wilson testified that they bit each
    other’s hands. Deputy Hudson testified that Williams was on top of Deputy Wilson at one
    point and was “[j]ust pounding” Deputy Wilson. Deputy Hudson climbed on Williams’s
    back to try to get him off Deputy Wilson, but Williams managed to throw her off his back.
    The deputies testified that Williams abruptly stopped fighting, got up, and headed in the
    direction of his shed.
    ¶15.    Chuck stated that he arrived at the shed as Williams and the deputies were getting up
    from the ground. Chuck, a retired state trooper, testified that he never witnessed Williams
    assault anyone. Both deputies testified that Deputy Wilson told Williams to stop walking
    toward his shed after the altercation but that Williams responded that the deputies would
    have to tase him. The deputies further stated that after Williams refused to stop walking
    toward his shed, Deputy Wilson tased him. Chuck testified, however, that he never heard
    either deputy order Williams to stop and that Deputy Wilson instead tased Williams in the
    back.
    ¶16.    After being tased, Williams fell to the ground. Chuck stated that he then identified
    8
    himself to the deputies and recommended that they restrain Williams before Williams
    regained consciousness. Deputy Wilson managed to place one handcuff on Williams before
    Williams recovered and stood back up.
    ¶17.   Deputy Wilson testified that he backed away from Williams, and thinking that
    Williams was about to charge him again, he dropped his taser and drew his gun. The
    deputies and Chuck all testified that Williams told Deputy Wilson to shoot him and stated
    that Deputy Wilson did not have the “balls” to shoot him. Deputy Wilson testified that even
    though his gun was drawn, Williams steadily walked toward him with a smile on his face.
    The deputies testified that Chuck advised them not to shoot because Williams wanted to
    commit “suicide by cop.” The deputies stated that Williams finally stopped approaching
    Deputy Wilson and allowed Deputy Hudson to place the other handcuff on him.
    ¶18.   As a result of the altercation with Williams, Deputy Wilson suffered torn ligaments
    in his right shoulder that required surgery. Both deputies described Williams as being in a
    state of rage when they interacted with him, but they both stated that they had done nothing
    to enrage Williams or to cause him to curse at or charge them. Deputy Wilson testified that
    blood tests performed on Williams after his arrest showed no street drugs or alcohol in
    Williams’s system. Although Deputy Wilson stated that he did not consider Williams’s
    conduct at the time of the altercation to be normal, he further testified that he had
    encountered many suspects over the course of his career who displayed abnormal behavior
    during their interactions with law enforcement. Chuck testified, however, that on the day of
    the altercation Williams “was not the normal Mark” he had known for the past thirty-plus
    9
    years and that Williams “was not in his right mind.” Chuck further stated that he had “never
    seen . . . [Williams] act like he acted that day” and that Williams had been “out of control.”
    ¶19.   Yazoo County Sheriff Jacob Sheriff arrived at Williams’s home and transported
    Williams to jail. Sheriff testified that during the drive Williams voluntarily gave him an
    unprompted statement about the altercation. Sheriff stated that Williams apologized for the
    trouble he had caused the deputies and expressed regret that he had not stopped when the
    deputies commanded him to do so. Sheriff testified, however, that Williams was smiling and
    smirking as he made the statement.
    ¶20.   Investigator William Gilmore interviewed Williams two days after the altercation
    occurred. After Williams waived his Miranda1 rights, Investigator Gilmore took Williams’s
    statement, which the State introduced into evidence. Williams told Investigator Gilmore that
    he had been disassembling a large dog pen when the two deputies arrived at his house. When
    Williams drove by the deputies, they asked to speak to him. Williams told the deputies that
    he did not have time to speak to them and that he had work to do. Williams stated that he
    then drove to his shed to get what he needed to repair his fence. The two deputies followed
    Williams to the shed and told him he was under arrest. Williams stated that he “was hot,
    tired, and irritated” by that point and that he cursed at the deputies even though he knew
    better. Williams also admitted to fighting with Deputy Wilson. Investigator Gilmore
    testified that Williams “was laughing the whole time he gave me the statement” and that
    Williams “thought it was funny.”
    1
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    10
    ¶21.   Following his release from jail, Williams returned to Saint Dominic’s behavioral
    health center for treatment. Douglas testified that Williams then returned to Psycamore for
    intensive outpatient treatment with Dr. Madakasira, whom Williams was still seeing at the
    time of trial. Douglas testified that Williams started to receive a monthly Abilify shot and
    that his rage episodes had stopped.
    ¶22.   Four days prior to the August 28, 2017 trial, the State moved to exclude Dr.
    Madakasira’s expert testimony about Williams’s sanity at the time of the altercation. The
    State asserted that Dr. Madakasira’s opinions failed to comply with the M’Naghten2 test
    utilized in Mississippi criminal cases to prove insanity and that his opinions were therefore
    neither relevant nor reliable. Following a hearing on the State’s motion, the circuit court
    concluded that Dr. Madakasira’s testimony relied on an “inappropriate standard for
    determining whether a defendant was insane at the time of the crime.” The circuit court
    therefore granted the State’s motion to exclude Dr. Madakasira’s testimony.
    ¶23.   After the circuit court excluded Dr. Madakasira’s testimony, Williams retained
    psychiatrist Dr. Mark Webb to examine and evaluate him. At trial, the circuit court accepted
    Dr. Webb as an expert in psychiatry. In addition to his court testimony, Dr. Webb provided
    a written report about his evaluation of Williams. The defense entered Dr. Webb’s report
    into evidence. Based on his evaluation, Dr. Webb concluded to a reasonable degree of
    probability that at the time of the alleged crime, “Williams was psychotic[;] was in a bipolar
    manic state that was characterized by irrational thoughts, irrational behavior, inappropriate
    2
    M’Naghten’s Case (1843) 8 Eng. Rep. 718, 10 Clark & F. 200.
    11
    activities[;] and basically as a result of all of that[, Williams was] unable to understand and
    comprehend the quality of his actions . . . .” Dr. Webb further opined that Williams was
    unable at the time of the altercation to “know the difference between right and wrong.”
    ¶24.   On rebuttal, Dr. Criss Lott testified for the State. The circuit court accepted Dr. Lott
    as an expert in clinical forensic psychology. Upon the circuit court’s order, Dr. Lott had
    evaluated Williams’s “ability to stand trial, his mental state at the time of the alleged
    offenses, and other questions regarding his ability to waive his rights, and whether . . . his
    capacity to form his conduct was impaired at the time of the alleged offenses.” Dr. Lott did
    not dispute that Williams had “a genuine mental illness” or that Williams had bipolar
    disorder. In addition, Dr. Lott agreed that on the day in question Williams “was very
    agitated” and “may [even] have been manic . . . .” Dr. Lott opined, however, that while
    Williams’s mental disorder significantly impaired his judgment and behavior, Williams still
    clearly knew the nature and quality of his actions, the difference between right and wrong,
    and that his actions at the time of the altercation were wrong. Unlike Dr. Webb, Dr. Lott
    concluded that Williams failed to meet the criteria for legal insanity at the time in question.
    ¶25.   After considering all the evidence and testimony, the jury found Williams guilty of
    Count I, simple assault against Deputy Wilson, but not guilty of Count II, simple assault
    against Deputy Hudson. The circuit court sentenced Williams to five years in MDOC’s
    custody, with three years to serve, two years suspended, and two years of supervised
    probation. The circuit court fined Williams $500 and credited him for the five days he had
    already served in jail. In addition, the circuit court ordered Williams to undergo a mental-
    12
    health evaluation and treatment. Williams filed an unsuccessful motion for a judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, a new trial. Aggrieved, Williams appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Speedy Trial
    a.      Statutory Right
    ¶26.   Williams alleges that his statutory right to a speedy trial was violated. Mississippi
    Code Annotated section 99-17-1 (Rev. 2015) provides that “[u]nless good cause be shown,
    and a continuance duly granted by the court, all offenses for which indictments are presented
    to the court shall be tried no later than two hundred seventy (270) days after the accused has
    been arraigned.” As we have previously recognized, though, “if a defendant fails to raise the
    statutory right to a speedy trial within 270 days of his arraignment, he acquiesces to the
    delay.” Ford v. State, 
    281 So. 3d 1109
    , 1114 (¶15) (Miss. Ct. App. 2019). The Mississippi
    Supreme Court has likewise held that “a defendant may effectively waive his right to
    complain of not being tried within the 270-day period set out in [section] 99-17-1[] when the
    defendant does not request or assert his right to a speedy trial or object to a delay, especially
    when the defendant fails to show any prejudice in the failure to be tried within the statutory
    270-day period.” Guice v. State, 
    952 So. 2d 129
    , 142 (¶28) (Miss. 2007).
    ¶27.   Here, the 270-day period began to run on August 25, 2015, when Williams waived
    arraignment. Williams’s trial did not start until April 9, 2018, which was clearly more than
    270 days later. However, Williams also failed to raise his statutory right to a speedy trial
    until his appeal to this Court. We therefore find that Williams waived his statutory right to
    13
    be tried within 270 days of arraignment.
    b.      Constitutional Right
    ¶28.   Williams also asserts a violation of his constitutional right to a speedy trial. For all
    criminal prosecutions, our federal and state constitutions provide that “the accused shall
    enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial . . . .” U.S. Const. amend. VI; accord Miss. Const.
    art. 3, § 26. To determine if a defendant’s constitutional speedy-trial right has been violated,
    we consider the following four factors: “1) the length of delay, 2) the reason for the delay,
    3) the defendant’s assertion of his right to a speedy trial, and 4) prejudice to the defendant.”
    Ford, 281 So. 3d at 1114 (¶17) (quoting Collins v. State, 
    232 So. 3d 739
    , 744 (¶18) (Miss.
    Ct. App. 2017)). “[C]ourts must engage in a difficult and sensitive balancing process of the
    four factors because none of the factors is either a necessary or sufficient condition to the
    finding of a deprivation of the right of speedy trial.” 
    Id.
     Instead, the factors are related “and
    must be considered together with such other circumstances as may be relevant.” Id.
    1.     Length of Delay
    ¶29.   “The constitutional right to a speedy trial attaches at the time of a formal indictment
    or information or else the actual restraints imposed by arrest and holding to a criminal
    charge.” Collins, 232 So. 3d at 745 (¶19) (internal quotation marks omitted). Our supreme
    court “has previously held that a delay of eight months or more is presumptively prejudicial.”
    Id. Because the delay in Williams’s case was well over eight months, this factor weighs
    against the State.
    2.     Reasons for the Delay
    14
    ¶30.   “Once the delay is deemed presumptively prejudicial, the burden shifts to the State to
    produce evidence justifying the delay and to persuade the trier of fact of the legitimacy of
    these reasons.” Id. at (¶20). We “must then determine whether the delay is attributable to
    the State or the defendant.” Id. In addition, we assign “different weights . . . to different
    reasons for delay.” Rowsey v. State, 
    188 So. 3d 486
    , 495 (¶25) (Miss. 2015). For instance,
    we weigh heavily against the State any delays the State intentionally causes “for the purpose
    of depriving a criminal defendant of his or her constitutional rights[,]” whereas we weigh less
    heavily against the State “[d]elays for good cause, [such as] a continuance for the purpose
    of finding a missing witness . . . .” 
    Id.
     By contrast, “continuances sought on behalf of the
    defendant toll the speedy[-]trial clock.” Id.
    ¶31.   Between the time of Williams’s arrest on April 19, 2014, and the start of his trial
    almost four years later on April 9, 2018, the State moved three times to continue the
    matter—once to allow Dr. Lott to conduct a mental evaluation of Williams and twice due to
    the unavailability of key witnesses. The record reflects that Williams twice moved for his
    own continuances—the first time was due to the State’s alleged delay in providing requested
    discovery, and the second time was due to Dr. Madakasira’s unavailability on the scheduled
    trial date. Because both parties filed their continuances for good cause, we find this factor
    to be neutral.
    3.      Assertion of the Right to a Speedy Trial
    ¶32.   “The failure to assert the right to a speedy trial ‘will make it difficult for a defendant
    to prove he was denied a speedy trial.’” Collins, 232 So. 3d at 745 (¶24) (quoting Fisher v.
    15
    State, 
    532 So. 2d 992
    , 996 (Miss. 1988)). As previously discussed, Williams’s first mention
    of his right to a speedy trial occurred in his appellate brief. Accordingly, we find this factor
    weighs against Williams.
    4.     Prejudice
    ¶33.   “To determine whether the delay resulted in actual prejudice[,] the Court considers
    three interests that the right to a speedy trial was meant to protect: ‘(i) to prevent oppressive
    pretrial incarceration; (ii) to minimize anxiety and concern of the accused; and (iii) to limit
    the possibility that the defense will be impaired.’” Ford, 281 So. 3d at 1116 (¶25) (quoting
    Collins, 232 So. 3d at 746 (¶26)). Williams bears the burden to show actual prejudice “since
    the defendant is clearly in the best position to show prejudice under this factor.” Id.
    ¶34.   Williams was released on bond four days after his arrest. His argument therefore does
    not focus on the first consideration under the “prejudice” prong. As to the second interest
    regarding the accused’s anxiety and concern, Williams merely states, without expounding or
    pointing to any supporting evidence, that his “anxiety and concern over the pending charges,
    over the four[-]year delay, was exacerbated by his severe mental disorder.” The focus of
    Williams’s argument instead appears to be the impairment his defense experienced due to the
    delay. Williams argues that the delays in proceeding to trial clearly prejudiced him because,
    had his trial occurred earlier, he would have had the benefit of Dr. Madakasira’s testimony.
    Williams’s argument assumes, however, that the State would not have moved to exclude Dr.
    Madakasira’s testimony had the trial begun earlier. No evidentiary support for this
    assumption exists in the record. Because Williams has failed to show an actual prejudice
    16
    resulting from the delay in proceeding to trial, we must conclude that this factor weighs
    against Williams.
    ¶35.   In summary, we find that the length of the delay weighs against the State while the
    reasons for the delay weigh in neither party’s favor. But because Williams never raised the
    issue of a speedy trial before the circuit court and because he now fails to articulate any
    actual prejudice resulting from the delay, we find these factors weigh against Williams. In
    balancing these four factors, we conclude that no violation of Williams’s constitutional right
    to a speedy trial occurred. We therefore find that this issue lacks merit.
    II.    Expert Testimony
    ¶36.   Williams argues the circuit court erred by excluding Dr. Madakasira’s testimony about
    his lack of sanity at the time of the altercation. We review the admission or exclusion of
    evidence, including expert testimony, for abuse of discretion. Emergency Med. Assocs. of
    Jackson PLLC v. Glover, 
    189 So. 3d 1247
    , 1260 (¶60) (Miss. Ct. App. 2016). “Unless this
    Court concludes that a trial court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence was arbitrary and
    clearly erroneous, that decision will stand.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Watts v. Radiator Specialty Co., 
    990 So. 2d 143
    , 145-46 (¶7) (Miss. 2008)). We may only reverse “if the admission or exclusion
    of evidence results in prejudice and harm or adversely affects a substantial right of a party.”
    Chaupette v. State, 
    136 So. 3d 1041
    , 1045 (¶7) (Miss. 2014).
    ¶37.   On January 4, 2016, Williams filed a notice that he intended to present an insanity
    defense. In asserting insanity as a defense to his charges, Williams provided the State with
    Dr. Madakasira’s November 23, 2015 letter in which Dr. Madakasira stated that Williams
    17
    suffered from previously undiagnosed and untreated bipolar disorder. Dr. Madakasira opined
    in his letter that Williams “was suffering from temporary insanity as part of [his] untreated
    bipolar condition on April 19, 2014[,] when he resisted and assaulted a police officer . . . .”
    ¶38.   After receiving notice of Williams’s intention to assert an insanity defense, the State
    filed no response claiming a defect in Dr. Madakasira’s opinion. Instead, on March 18, 2016,
    the State moved to have Dr. Lott also examine Williams. The State further requested a
    continuance to allow time for the examination to take place. As an exhibit to its motion, the
    State attached Dr. Madakasira’s November 23, 2015 letter. Following a hearing, the circuit
    court granted the State’s motion for a mental evaluation. Dr. Lott examined Williams on
    August 31, 2016.
    ¶39.   On December 7, 2016, the circuit court granted the State’s ore tenus motion for a
    continuance based on Dr. Lott’s unavailability on the date of trial. Without any objection
    from the defense, the circuit court rescheduled Williams’s trial for April 3, 2017. In its order,
    the circuit court noted “that the Defense will be allowed to call Dr. Sudhakar Madakasira,
    MD, on April 4, 2017, even if it is necess[ary] for him to be called out of turn.” On March
    17, 2017, the State again moved for a continuance based on Deputy Hudson’s unavailability
    for trial. Later that month, on March 29, 2017, Williams also requested a continuance based
    on Dr. Madakasira’s unavailability. By order dated March 29, 2017, the circuit court granted
    Williams’s motion for a continuance. The circuit court rescheduled Williams’s trial for
    August 28, 2017, and again stated that the defense would be allowed to call Dr. Madakasira
    as a witness even if it was necessary to call him out of turn.
    18
    ¶40.   On August 24, 2017, four days before trial, the State filed motions in limine to
    exclude the testimony of three defense witnesses, including Dr. Madakasira’s expert
    testimony about Williams’s lack of sanity at the time of the crime. At the hearing on the
    State’s motion, Dr. Madakasira testified to his credentials and experience in psychiatry. Dr.
    Madakasira then stated that he began treating Williams in May 2014, the month after the
    altercation with the deputies. On direct examination, Dr. Madakasira opined that Williams
    was unable on the day in question “to make a decision as to right or wrong in terms of what
    he was doing.”     Williams’s attorney asked whether Dr. Madakasira’s opinion as to
    Williams’s inability to know right from wrong at the time of the altercation was to a
    reasonable psychiatric probability, and Dr. Madakasira responded, “Yes, I would say so.”
    Williams’s attorney then asked whether Dr. Madakasira’s opinion remained the same to a
    reasonable psychiatric certainty, and Dr. Madakasira again answered, “Yes.”
    ¶41.   On cross-examination, the State asked Dr. Madakasira to clarify whether his opinion
    was based on Williams being “irrational” or “insane” at the time of the altercation. In
    response, Dr. Madakasira stated that he wished to correct something he had written in his
    November 23, 2015 letter. Dr. Madakasira explained that “[i]nsanity is a legal term” while
    “irrational thinking is a medical psychiatric term.” Dr. Madakasira testified that he therefore
    wished to correct the statement in his letter to provide that Williams “was temporarily out of
    his mind, irrational thinking, with poor judgments and poor decision making” at the time of
    the altercation with the deputies.
    ¶42.   On redirect, Williams’s attorney asked the following:
    19
    If the defendant was acting from a mental disease that existed to such a high
    degree [so] as to overwhelm his reason, judgment, and conscience, then under
    our legal definition he would be unable to distinguish right from wrong. In
    your opinion, was he [(Williams)] acting from a mental disease . . . [that] he
    had to such a high degree [so] as to overwhelm his reason, judgment, and
    conscience, that he was unable under those circumstances under that definition
    to form an opinion as to right and wrong?
    In response, Dr. Madakasira stated, “I would say that he did not know right from wrong.”
    ¶43.   After considering the parties’ arguments, the circuit court granted the State’s motion
    to exclude Dr. Madakasira’s expert testimony. By order filed October 24, 2017, the circuit
    court found that Dr. Madakasira’s testimony failed to comply with the M’Naghten test
    applied by Mississippi courts and instead appeared to discuss diminished capacity, which
    Mississippi fails to recognize as a defense to a criminal charge. The circuit court stated that
    Dr. Madakasira relied “on impaired thinking, irrational thinking, and poor judgment”
    throughout his testimony and that such a standard was inappropriate “for determining
    whether a defendant was insane at the time of the crime.” The circuit court therefore
    excluded Dr. Madakasira’s testimony.
    ¶44.   As the circuit court correctly noted, Mississippi applies the M’Naghten test (rather
    than a diminished-capacity standard) in criminal cases to determine whether a defendant was
    legally insane at the time of the crime. See Hearn v. State, 
    3 So. 3d 722
    , 738 (¶46) (Miss.
    2008). With regard to the applicable standard, the Mississippi Supreme Court has explained:
    The M’Naghten test for determining insanity is whether the accused knew right
    from wrong at the time the act was committed. Specifically, the Court has held
    that [to] prove insanity under M’Naghten, it must be proven that, at the time
    of the act, the accused was laboring under such defect of reason from disease
    of the mind as (1) not to know the nature and quality of the act he was doing
    or (2) if he did know it, that he did not know that what he was doing was
    20
    wrong.
    Ealey v. State, 
    158 So. 3d 283
    , 293-94 (¶32) (Miss. 2015) (citations and internal quotation
    mark omitted).
    ¶45.   In Ballard v. State, 
    768 So. 2d 924
    , 925 (¶1) (Miss. Ct. App. 2000), the defendant,
    Steven Ballard, faced multiple charges of simple assault against a law-enforcement officer.
    Ballard asserted he was insane at the time the crime had occurred, and to support his claim,
    he provided the written report of Dr. Joe Edward Morris, the clinical psychologist who had
    evaluated him. Id. at 927 (¶8). In his report, Dr. Morris diagnosed Ballard with “major
    depressive disorder with psychotic features[,]” and he opined that Ballard had experienced
    a “temporary psychotic state [that] sprung from his deep depression.” Id. “The State, on the
    ground[] of failure to disclose, objected to any opinion from Dr. Morris that Ballard could
    not distinguish right from wrong on the day of the incident.” Id. at (¶9). During the
    defense’s proffer, Dr. Morris opined that due to a psychotic state at the time of the incident,
    Ballard knew neither the nature and quality of his acts nor right from wrong. Id. On cross-
    examination, the State questioned whether the language Dr. Morris used in his written report
    equaled that of the opinion he provided during the proffer. Id. Dr. Morris responded “that
    it was not the same thing but that it inferred the same thing, [and] in the same breath[,] he
    went on to state that he and the prosecutor were in a semantical quandary and that his report
    used the terms ‘psychotic behavior’ and ‘break from reality’ as opposed to the legal terms
    to which the [c]ourt referred as used in the M’Naghten definition for insanity.” Id.
    ¶46.   The circuit court in Ballard excluded Dr. Morris’s expert testimony about Ballard’s
    21
    insanity on the day in question. Id. at 928 (¶10). The circuit court found that Dr. Morris’s
    report offered a clinical diagnosis but provided no opinions as to Ballard’s ability to
    understand the nature of his actions and to know the difference between right and wrong at
    the time of the offenses. Id. In noting that an expert may not deviate from the contents of
    his report without providing supplemental discovery before trial, the circuit court’s “ruling
    hinged on the fact that Dr. Morris himself stated in his . . . [proffer] that an ‘inference’ was
    necessary as a bridge from his report to his stated opinion.” Id. On appeal, this Court
    reversed and remanded for a new trial. Id. at 929 (¶13). In so doing, we stated:
    Although it is evident that . . . [Dr. Morris’s] report did not use the magic
    words for the M’Naghten test . . . [, the report] clearly notified to the State that
    it was Ballard’s basis for his insanity defense.
    ....
    To deny the defendant his substantial right to a fair trial on the basis of a ruling
    which ultimately turned on a matter of semantics would indeed be an injustice.
    The inference upon which the [c]ourt based its ruling was not one of substance
    but of form.
    Id. at 928 (¶¶11-12) (citation omitted).
    ¶47.   Similar to our holding in Ballard, we find that Dr. Madakasira’s report may not have
    used “the magic words for the M’Naghten test[,]” but his report still clearly notified the State
    that Dr. Madakasira’s opinion formed the basis for Williams’s assertion of the insanity
    defense. See id. As in Ballard, Dr. Madakasira and the State employed different terms when
    referring to the effects of Williams’s mental condition on the day in question. However, a
    review of Dr. Madakasira’s hearing testimony, especially his responses to the questions
    posed by Williams’s attorney, shows that despite the difference in semantics, Dr.
    22
    Madakasira’s expert opinion clearly comported with the M’Naghten test.
    ¶48.     During the hearing, Dr. Madakasira testified that he wished to correct the statement
    contained in his November 23, 2015 letter to provide that Williams “was temporarily out of
    his mind, irrational thinking, with poor judgments and poor decision making” at the time of
    the altercation. As Dr. Madakasira further explained, however, “[i]nsanity is a legal term”
    while “irrational thinking is a medical psychiatric term.” Although Dr. Madakasira used
    psychiatric rather than legal terms to describe Williams’s condition and its effects on the day
    in question, he still testified that to a reasonable psychiatric certainty, Williams’s condition
    prevented Williams from “mak[ing] a decision as to right or wrong in terms of what he was
    doing” at the time of the altercation. Dr. Madakasira reiterated this opinion at the end of his
    testimony when, in response to a question from Williams’s attorney, he answered, “I would
    say that he [(Williams)] did not know right from wrong.”
    ¶49.     On appeal, Williams argues that the circuit court “took an unreasonably narrow view
    of Dr. Madakasira’s testimony” in excluding the psychiatrist’s testimony for failure to
    comply with the M’Naghten test. We agree. In accordance with M’Naghten, Dr. Madakasira
    clearly opined that at the time of the altercation with the deputies, Williams’s mental disease
    prevented him from knowing that his actions were wrong. See Ealey, 
    158 So. 3d at 293-94
    (¶32).
    ¶50.     As stated, we only reverse a circuit court’s exclusion of expert testimony when the
    exclusion adversely affects a party’s substantial right. Chaupette, 
    136 So. 3d at 1045
     (¶7).
    Our caselaw establishes that “every accused has a fundamental right to have . . . [his] theory
    23
    of the case presented to a jury . . . .” Jones v. State, 
    281 So. 3d 137
    , 144 (¶18) (Miss. Ct.
    App. 2019) (quoting Chinn v. State, 
    958 So. 2d 1223
    , 1225 (¶13) (Miss. 2007)). Here,
    Williams’s theory of the case was that he was insane at the time of the altercation, and the
    circuit court’s exclusion of Dr. Madakasira’s testimony prevented Williams from fully
    presenting his theory of the case to the jury. As a result, we find that the circuit court
    erroneously excluded Dr. Madakasira’s expert testimony.3
    III.   Prosecutorial Misconduct
    ¶51.   Williams also contends that throughout his trial, and particularly during Dr. Webb’s
    cross-examination and during closing arguments, the State committed numerous acts of
    prosecutorial misconduct. In a prior case involving reversal for the same district attorney’s
    acts of prosecutorial misconduct, this Court stated:
    Where prosecutorial misconduct endangers the fairness of a trial and the
    impartial administration of justice, reversal must follow. The standard of
    review which appellate courts must apply to lawyer misconduct during
    opening statements or closing arguments is whether the natural and probable
    effect of the improper argument is to create unjust prejudice against the
    accused so as to result in a decision influenced by the prejudice so created.
    The purpose of a closing argument is to fairly sum up the evidence.
    Prosecutors are not allowed to employ tactics which are inflammatory, highly
    prejudicial, or reasonably calculated to unduly influence the jury. The
    prosecutor may comment upon any facts introduced into evidence, and he may
    draw whatever deductions and inferences that seem proper to him from the
    facts. Counsel cannot, however, state facts which are not in evidence, and
    which the court does not judicially know, in aid of his evidence. Neither can
    he appeal to the prejudices of men by injecting prejudices not contained in
    some source of the evidence.
    3
    While a harmless-error analysis would normally be warranted due to the admission
    of Dr. Webb’s testimony, we find that this error, in conjunction with the prosecutorial
    misconduct directed at Dr. Webb’s testimony, as discussed in part III of this opinion, renders
    such an analysis unnecessary.
    24
    Under the cumulative-error doctrine, individual errors, which are not
    reversible in themselves, may combine with other errors to make up reversible
    error, where the cumulative effect of all errors deprives the defendant of a
    fundamentally fair trial. The caselaw of our state allows an accumulation of
    otherwise harmless error to result in reversal. Aggregate instances of
    prosecutorial misconduct can lead to reversal.
    White v. State, 
    228 So. 3d 893
    , 904-05 (¶¶28-29) (Miss. Ct. App. 2017) (citations and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶52.   Upon review, we find that the district attorney made improper and prejudicial
    comments throughout Williams’s trial. “While the comments may not be reversible standing
    alone, the cumulative effect of the otherwise harmless errors warrants reversal.” Id. at 905
    (¶30). We therefore reverse and remand based on this ground as well.
    a.     Comments During Dr. Webb’s Cross-Examination
    ¶53.   During voir dire, the potential jurors were asked whether they knew Dr. Webb. One
    woman, who was later empaneled as Juror 11, responded that she knew of Dr. Webb through
    her work as a paralegal.      The woman explained that when dealing with workers’
    compensation cases, her law firm sometimes sent employees to Dr. Webb for a second
    opinion. In reference to Juror 11’s voir dire statement, the district attorney questioned Dr.
    Webb as follows on cross-examination:
    [D]uring our voir dire section, the question was raised regarding you. And it
    was stated . . . that you have a history in the profession that if you have a
    doctor that you want to say whatever it is that you want him to say, then you’ll
    call Dr. Webb. Is that kind of true regarding your reputation in the
    community?
    ¶54.   During the recess that followed Dr. Webb’s testimony, Juror 11 informed the circuit
    judge that she did not make any such statement about Dr. Webb. After reviewing the
    25
    transcript, the circuit judge found that Juror 11 never made such a statement. Williams’s
    attorney explained that he was having trouble hearing all the questioning due to the
    courtroom’s acoustics and that he had not heard the district attorney’s question to Dr. Webb.
    Williams’s attorney further stated that if he had heard the question, he would have objected
    to it. Following the recess, the circuit court instructed the jury that in judging Dr. Webb’s
    credibility, it must disregard the district attorney’s question because no such voir dire
    statement had ever been made.
    ¶55.   The district attorney also questioned Dr. Webb about research not in evidence that she
    had obtained by conducting an Internet search. With regard to her out-of-court research, the
    district attorney asked Dr. Webb the following:
    I did a little Googling myself, you know, regarding a couple of cases. And
    isn’t it true that in over 95 percent of the cases that you testify in, that . . .
    [whoever] the person is . . . [who] hired you, that that’s pretty much the
    opinion that you give based off the person . . . [who’s] hired you? If . . . they
    hired you[,] then 95 percent of the cases that you’ve testified in, then that’s
    pretty much your opinion?
    ¶56.   Our caselaw holds that an attorney may not “state facts which are not in evidence, and
    which the court does not judicially know, in aid of his evidence.” Wilson v. State, 
    194 So. 3d 855
    , 864 (¶30) (Miss. 2016). Williams’s attorney objected to the district attorney
    questioning Dr. Webb with out-of-court evidence, but the circuit court overruled the
    objection and stated that Dr. Webb could respond if he knew the answer.
    ¶57.   While the district attorney’s comments during Dr. Webb’s cross-examination may not
    have been sufficient, standing alone, to reverse Williams’s conviction and sentence, we find
    that, when combined with the remaining acts of prosecutorial misconduct discussed below,
    26
    they resulted in cumulative error that deprived Williams of a fundamentally fair trial. See
    White, 228 So. 3d at 905 (¶29).
    b.     Closing-Argument Comment on Dr. Webb’s Hiring
    Date
    ¶58.   Prior to closing arguments, Williams’s attorney moved to prohibit the State from
    arguing that the jury should consider during its deliberations the late date at which Williams
    retained Dr. Webb. Williams’s attorney pointed out that Dr. Madakasira had been prepared
    from the outset to testify as to Williams’s lack of sanity and that Dr. Webb was retained three
    months before trial only after the circuit court granted the State’s motion to exclude Dr.
    Madakasira’s testimony. Williams’s attorney therefore argued that it would be improper and
    unfairly prejudicial to the defense for the State to assert that Williams had purposely waited
    until three months before trial to obtain an expert.
    ¶59.   In denying the defense’s motion, the circuit court noted that Williams’s attorney raised
    no objection when the district attorney questioned Dr. Webb on cross-examination about the
    date on which Williams retained him. After the circuit court’s denial of Williams’s motion,
    the following occurred during the district attorney’s closing argument:
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY: Now, they had Dr. Webb[,] and Dr. Webb, you
    know, he had one opinion from Dr. Lott and four
    months prior to this trial–
    DEFENSE ATTORNEY: Your Honor, we object for the same reason stated
    earlier.
    THE COURT:                   Overruled.
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY: Four months prior to the trial, that’s when he
    came in and he told this court that he charged
    27
    $5,000. And he was not appointed by the Court.
    He was hired by the Defendant. Dr. Lott was not
    hired by the victims, and he was not hired by me.
    The expert that came in to say that he wasn’t
    insane was specifically hired by him.
    ¶60.   On appeal, Williams contends the circuit court’s reason for denying his motion in
    limine “was flawed because the Defendant’s objection was not to establishing the date [Dr.]
    Webb had been hired but to unfairly using that date as a reason to disbelieve his [(Dr.
    Webb’s)] opinion.” Williams agrees that no valid objection existed to the district attorney
    asking the date on which Williams retained Dr. Webb. Williams argues, however, that “[t]he
    proper objection, and the one [that] defense counsel made, was to the State unfairly arguing
    that the jury should disbelieve Dr. Webb’s testimony because he was not consulted until
    shortly before trial.”
    ¶61.   In White, the State moved pretrial to prevent the defendant from using social-media
    evidence to show that the victim was lying and that the alleged events never occurred. White,
    228 So. 3d at 899-900 (¶13). The circuit court granted the State’s motion and excluded both
    the social-media evidence and any references to such evidence. Id. at 908 (¶42). During
    closing arguments, however, the State focused heavily on the defense’s failure to present
    motive evidence that showed the victim had a reason to lie about the allegations. Id. On
    appeal, this Court found that the State exploited the circuit court’s pretrial ruling excluding
    the social-media evidence. Id. at (¶43). In so finding, we explained:
    It is improper for a prosecuting attorney to comment on evidence
    excluded by the court. Here, because the circuit court went to such lengths to
    exclude evidence even remotely connected to the social-media evidence, the
    defense was deprived of the ability to present evidence supporting the
    28
    defense’s theory regarding . . . [the victim’s] motive to fabricate the
    allegations. Both the district attorney and the assistant district attorney used
    the circuit court’s exclusion of the evidence to argue that the defense did not
    provide evidence of . . . [the victim’s] motive for fabrication because none
    existed. The exploitation of the court’s pretrial ruling in this manner was
    misleading to the jury, prejudicial to the defendant, and improper under the
    findings of this Court.
    Id. at (¶44) (citation omitted).
    ¶62.   In the present case, Williams filed a January 4, 2016 notice of his intent to assert an
    insanity defense. The record further reflects that by March 18, 2016, the State had received
    Dr. Madakasira’s opinion that Williams was temporarily insane at the time of the assault.
    Despite having received ample notice of Williams’s insanity defense and Dr. Madakasira’s
    opinion, the State waited until August 24, 2017, four days before trial, to move to exclude
    Dr. Madakasira’s testimony. By order filed October 24, 2017, the circuit court granted the
    State’s motion and excluded Dr. Madakasira’s testimony. Williams then retained Dr. Webb,
    who examined Williams on January 18, 2018. Williams’s trial began a little less than three
    months later on April 9, 2018.
    ¶63.   Upon review, we agree with Williams that the district attorney’s closing-argument
    comment about Dr. Webb’s late date of hire was improper, misleading, and unfairly
    prejudiced the defense. After successfully moving to have Dr. Madakasira’s testimony
    excluded, the district attorney then used the circuit court’s pretrial ruling to assert that
    Williams waited until just a few months before trial to hire an expert who would support his
    theory of the case. As in White, we hold that “[t]he exploitation of the court’s pretrial ruling
    in this manner was misleading to the jury, prejudicial to the defendant, and improper under
    29
    the findings of this Court.” Id.
    c.     Closing-Argument Comments that “Something Is
    Wrong with Our Justice System”
    ¶64.   Multiple times during her closing argument, the district attorney told the jury that
    something was wrong with the justice system if a defendant such as Williams could be
    allowed to assert an insanity defense. The district attorney’s comments included the
    following:
    [W]hen I think about this case[,] something is wrong with our justice system
    where we can have a case where there’s undisputed evidence that someone
    committed a crime, undisputed. They didn’t call not one witness and say that
    these officers were not assaulted. Not one. Something is wrong if that’s okay.
    And then they come in and say well he was insane–
    ....
    Something is wrong [when] a person is able to do all of this, say all of this,
    clearly he understands[,] and then he comes in and says, well, I didn’t
    understand what was going on. I was insane. Really. No, no, no, no. That’s
    not right.
    ....
    [Y]ou can’t treat our law enforcement like this and then admit that you did it
    and then come in and say, I was insane. I didn’t know what was going on.
    You’re not allowed to do that.
    ....
    Something is wrong if you got this in writing with the man who’s written it
    himself, and he’s still coming in here saying he’s insane and telling you that.
    ....
    Something is wrong when a man tells you he did it and apologizes for doing
    it and then you still say not guilty. Go home. Something is wrong with our
    system when that happens.
    30
    ¶65.   In conjunction with the other instances of misconduct discussed in this assignment of
    error, we find that the district attorney’s improper closing-argument comments on Williams’s
    right to assert an insanity defense endangered the fairness and impartiality of his trial.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶66.   Because we find that the circuit court erroneously excluded the testimony of
    Williams’s treating psychiatrist and that the State committed prosecutorial misconduct, we
    reverse Williams’s conviction and sentence and remand this case to the circuit court for a
    new trial. In considering Williams’s remaining claims on appeal, we find that his failure to
    timely assert his statutory right to a speedy trial waived the claim and that no violation of his
    constitutional right to a speedy trial occurred. Because we find that Williams’s other claims
    lack merit, we decline to further address those arguments on appeal.
    ¶67.   REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    J. WILSON, P.J., GREENLEE, WESTBROOKS, LAWRENCE, McCARTY
    AND C. WILSON, JJ., CONCUR. BARNES, C.J., AND McDONALD, J., CONCUR
    IN PART AND IN THE RESULT WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
    CARLTON, P.J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
    CARLTON, P.J., DISSENTING
    ¶68.   I dissent because I find that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in excluding
    Dr. Madakasira’s expert testimony, an expert who Williams had retained to opine about his
    mental state with respect to his insanity defense. As recognized by the majority, the
    applicable standard of review regarding the exclusion of testimony, including expert
    testimony, is as follows:
    A trial court’s admission of testimony is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
    31
    We give great deference to the discretion of the trial judge, and unless we
    conclude that the discretion was arbitrary and clearly erroneous, amounting to
    an abuse of discretion, the trial judge’s decision will stand. Moreover, we may
    reverse a case only if the admission or exclusion of evidence results in
    prejudice and harm or adversely affects a substantial right of a party.
    Chaupette, 
    136 So. 3d at 1045
     (¶7) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). I do not
    find that the circuit court abused its discretion by excluding Dr. Madakasira’s expert
    testimony because the circuit court’s decision on this issue did not “prejudice and harm or
    adversely affect” a “substantial right” belonging to Williams. Id.
    ¶69.   As the majority recognizes, after the circuit court excluded Dr. Madakasira’s expert
    testimony, Williams retained Dr. Webb, a psychiatrist, to examine and evaluate him. Dr.
    Webb was accepted as an expert in psychiatry at trial, and he testified about Williams’s
    mental state at the time of the alleged crime and Williams’s ability to tell right from wrong,
    as follows:
    [Defense counsel:] Based upon your interview or your evaluation of Mr.
    Williams and those records and circumstances of this
    incident, were you able to reach or come to a conclusion
    or an opinion to a reasonable degree of psychological
    probability of what the mental state would have been of
    Mr. Williams at the time of these crimes that he’s alleged
    to have committed?
    [Dr. Webb:]          I did.
    [Defense counsel:] Okay. And, Doctor, could you tell us what opinion that
    was?
    [Dr. Webb:]          That at the time of the alleged crime that Mr. Williams
    was psychotic, was in a bipolar manic state that was
    characterized by irrational thoughts, irrational behavior,
    inappropriate activities, and basically as a result of all of
    that unable to understand and comprehend the quality of
    32
    his actions and know the quality of his actions. And also
    know the difference between right and wrong.
    Dr. Webb also prepared a written evaluation of Williams, and this report was admitted into
    evidence. As the majority details above, based on his evaluation, Dr. Webb concluded to a
    reasonable degree of probability that at the time of the alleged crime, “Williams was
    psychotic[;] was in a bipolar manic state that was characterized by irrational thoughts,
    irrational behavior, inappropriate activities[;] and basically as a result of all of that[, Williams
    was] unable to understand and comprehend the quality of his actions . . . .” Dr. Webb further
    opined in his report that Williams was unable at the time of the altercation to “know the
    difference between right and wrong.”
    ¶70.   In short, Williams was allowed to present Dr. Webb’s expert testimony and his expert
    report that supported Williams’s insanity defense. As such, Williams was not prejudiced, nor
    did the circuit court affect a substantial right of Williams when it excluded Dr. Madakasira’s
    expert testimony. Based upon the applicable standard of review, I therefore find that reversal
    of the circuit court’s decision on this issue is not warranted, and I find that the alleged
    prosecutorial misconduct addressed by the majority does not constitute a sufficient basis,
    standing alone, to warrant reversal in this case. Because I find that Williams’s other claims
    likewise lack merit, I would affirm Williams’s conviction and sentence.
    33
    

Document Info

Docket Number: NO. 2018-KA-00631-COA

Judges: Tindell, Wilson, Greenlee, Westbrooks, Lawrence, McCarty, Wilson, McDonald, Carlton

Filed Date: 2/25/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/18/2024