Terrell v. Mississippi

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In 2011, Robert Terrell, through a middleman Archie Nicholson, recruited Ricardo Hawthorne to record forged property deeds purporting to convey John McLendon’s property to Hawthorne. Terrell and his coconspirators then used the forged deeds to fraudulently induce a timber company to buy the timber rights for $20,300 and, unbeknownst to McLendon, harvest his timber. A jury found Terrell guilty of timber theft, conspiracy to commit timber theft, false pretenses, and conspiracy to commit false pretenses. Because the evidence was sufficient to convict Terrell of both timber theft and false pretenses, the Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed those convictions and sentences. However, the Court agreed with Terrell that the evidence supported only one conspiracy between Terrell, Nicholson, and Hawthorne, not two. The Court therefore vacated his two conspiracy sentences and remanded those conspiracy convictions to the trial court with instructions to dismiss, at the State’s election, one of the conspiracy counts and resentence Terrell on the remaining conspiracy count. View "Terrell v. Mississippi" on Justia Law