WELCH, Judge.
Jarvis Maurice Williams was convicted of felony murder, a violation of § 13A-6-2(a)(3), Ala.Code 1975. The trial court sentenced him to life in prison. This appeal follows.
On October 3, 2008, at approximately 11:40 a.m., Cory Landrum was shot and killed in the Alabama Village neighborhood in Prichard. Terry Parnell and C.D., a juvenile, were arrested shortly after the murder, and both individuals admitted their involvement, pleaded guilty, and testified at Williams's trial. Parnell testified at trial that a couple of days before the murder Williams came by Parnell's grandmother's house and asked to borrow Parnell's pistol. Williams claimed that he needed it for protection. Parnell testified that on the day of the murder Williams told Parnell that he was going to rob someone. The plan was to rob someone driving through the Village to buy marijuana. Parnell agreed to participate, and C.D. agreed to participate to the extent that he was going to try to take any item of value in the victim's vehicle. According to Parnell, drugs were regularly sold in the neighborhood. People would flag down individuals driving through the neighborhood and sell them marijuana. Parnell testified that Williams wanted to stop and rob a white person because, according to Williams, white people tended not to carry weapons. The three males stood on Dunlap Street and waited. Landrum, the victim, drove up and requested marijuana. Williams acted as if he were going to retrieve some marijuana, but, instead, Williams drew Parnell's pistol and demanded that Landrum give him everything he had. Landrum handed Williams a five-dollar bill from his pocket and told Williams that was all the money he had. Landrum showed Williams his empty wallet, and Williams shot Landrum in the
C.D. testified that he was with Williams and Parnell shortly before the shooting. He realized that Williams wanted to rob someone when he asked Parnell for the pistol. C.D. was in agreement with the plan. C.D. testified that the victim approached them and that Williams robbed and shot him. C.D. testified that Parnell got the victim's cellular phone and threw it on the ground. C.D. picked up the cellular phone, but when he could not get the phone to work, he threw it back down. C.D.'s testimony contradicts Parnell's testimony that Parnell got the cellular phone from Williams after the murder.
Nicholas Smalley testified that he and a coworker were driving through the Village on the day of the shooting to retrieve some money and keys from the coworker's house. As they entered the neighborhood, Smalley saw several males on the corner of Dunlap Street and Marengo Street. According to Smalley, the men were trying to wave him down to sell him drugs. Williams was among the group of men; however, Smalley testified, Williams was not one of the men flagging down motorists. As Smalley arrived at his coworker's house, he heard a gunshot. When he and the coworker drove out of the neighborhood, he saw Landrum's truck and several people standing at the driver's side door. Smalley left the area.
On appeal, Williams argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a judgment of acquittal. Specifically, Williams argues that there was no evidence connecting him to the crime other than Parnell's and C.D.'s testimony. Williams contends that their testimony was not sufficiently corroborated under § 12-21-222, Ala.Code 1975.
Section 12-21-222, Ala.Code 1975, provides:
In addressing whether evidence was sufficient to corroborate accomplice testimony in Ex parte Christopher McCullough, 21 So.3d 758 (Ala.2009), the Alabama Supreme Court stated:
21 So.3d at 761-62.
Applying the rule that requires that Parnell's and C.D.'s testimony must first be subtracted and the remaining evidence examined, the only testimony that references Williams, the testimony with which we are left with, is the testimony of Smalley. Smalley's testimony does not connect Williams to the crime. Without the accomplices' testimony, Smalley's testimony does no more than place Williams in the proximity of the crime. Smalley's testimony did not even place Williams with the accomplices. Smalley did not identify any of the men he saw Williams with on the day of the murder. The fact that Williams was in the area at the time of the murder, without more, does not "raise a suspicion of [Williams's] guilt." Ex parte Bullock, 770 So.2d 1062, 1067 (Ala.2000). Even if nonaccomplice testimony had been presented that Williams was seen in the presence of the accomplices near the crime scene shortly before the murder, and even if we found, which we would not, that such testimony connected Williams to the murder, the evidence would still be insufficient corroboration of the accomplices' testimony because this evidence would only connect Williams to the offense when given direction or interpretation by, and read in conjunction with the testimony of the accomplices.
Smalley's testimony does not tend to connect Williams to the murder. Because the evidence was insufficient under § 12-21-222, Ala.Code 1975, to corroborate the accomplices' testimony that Williams had participated in the murder, we reverse the trial court's judgment and render a judgment of acquittal for Williams.
REVERSED AND JUDGMENT RENDERED.
WINDOM, KELLUM, and MAIN, JJ., concur. WISE, P.J., dissents, with opinion.
WISE, Presiding Judge, dissenting.
I disagree with the majority's conclusion that the evidence was insufficient under § 12-21-222, Ala.Code 1975, to corroborate the accomplices' testimony that Williams had participated in the murder. "Corroboration need only be slight to suffice," Ingle v. State, 400 So.2d 938, 940 (Ala.Crim.App.1981), and "need not be sufficiently strong by itself to warrant a conviction." Miles v. State, 476 So.2d 1228, 1234 (Ala.Crim.App.1985). Also, "[c]orroborative evidence need not directly connect the accused with the offense but need only tend to do so." Ware v. State, 409 So.2d 886, 891 (Ala.Crim.App.1981). Finally, "[t]he corroboration of an accomplice may be shown by circumstantial evidence." Id.
In this case, Smalley's testimony placed Williams in Alabama Village near the scene of the murder with other males shortly before the murder occurred. His testimony also corroborated accomplice testimony about drugs being sold in Alabama Village and about dealers flagging down vehicles to make sales. Further, his testimony corroborated testimony about the gunshot and the victim attempting to drive away and wrecking his vehicle. Finally, forensic testing linked the gun Parnell helped officers locate to the murder.
The corroborating evidence in this case did not merely show the commission of the offense or the circumstances thereof. Rather, it tended to connect Williams with the commission of the murder. See Ware, supra. Although the corroborative evidence alone may not have supported a conviction, such was not required. See Miles, supra. Finally, the corroborative evidence tended to support a conclusion that, at the very least, portions of the