Tina Marie Hunt v. State of Mississippi ( 1991 )


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  •                         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 92-KA-00475-SCT
    TINA MARIE HUNT
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                             12/4/91
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                  HON. WILLIAM R. LAMB
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                    MARSHALL COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                       PHIL R. HINTON
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                       OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: DEWITT T. ALLRED, III
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                            NA
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                           CRIMINAL - FELONY
    DISPOSITION:                                  AFFIRMED - 8/8/96
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:                   8/22/96
    MANDATE ISSUED:                               2/6/97
    EN BANC.
    PRATHER, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    I. STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    ¶1. Tina Marie Hunt was convicted for the murder of her husband, Thomas A. Hunt, and sentenced
    to life imprisonment. Her motion for a new trial was denied. She appeals, in forma pauperis, and
    raises the following issues:
    A) WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING INTO EVIDENCE A
    STATEMENT TAKEN IN VIOLATION OF TINA HUNT'S CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS?
    B) WHETHER TINA HUNT WAS DENIED A FAIR TRIAL BECAUSE THE STATE
    INTERFERED WITH DEFENSE COUNSEL'S FREE ACCESS TO WITNESSES?
    C) WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION WHEN IT DENIED
    TINA HUNT FUNDS TO EMPLOY AN INVESTIGATOR, DENYING HUNT HER
    CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS?
    D) WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY REFUSING TO INSTRUCT THE JURY
    AS TO THE PROPER BURDEN OF PROOF BORNE BY THE STATE, SINCE THE
    PROOF AGAINST TINA HUNT WAS CIRCUMSTANTIAL?
    E) WHETHER THE COURT ERRED BY ADMITTING INTO EVIDENCE A COPY OF A
    DOCUMENT, UNDER CIRCUMSTANCES UNFAIR TO TINA HUNT AND WHERE
    ALTERATION WAS SUSPECTED?
    F) WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ALLOWED INTO EVIDENCE PROOF OF OTHER
    CRIMES OR OTHER WRONGS WHICH WERE IRRELEVANT OR, IF RELEVANT,
    SUBSTANTIALLY OUTWEIGHING THE PROBATIVE VALUE OF THE EVIDENCE?
    G) WHETHER THE COURT ERRED BY DENYING TINA DISCOVERY, DUE UNDER
    RULE 4.06 OF THE UNIFORM CRIMINAL RULES OF CIRCUIT COURT PRACTICE,
    AND BY DENYING A DELAY IN THE TRIAL SETTING?
    H) WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY APPOINTING TINA'S ATTORNEY TO
    REPRESENT HER ON APPEAL WITHOUT COMPENSATION, IN VIOLATION OF THE
    CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS OF BOTH TINA HUNT AND HER APPOINTED
    ATTORNEY?
    II. STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
    ¶2. Thomas Hunt (Thomas) married Tina Marie Hunt (Tina) in February 1989. On the evening of
    December 15, 1990, Thomas, age twenty-two, Tina, age twenty, and their 15-month-old son rode in
    Thomas' blue Mustang to Ashland, Mississippi. In Ashland, Thomas and Tina met two friends from
    junior college, Scott Hindman (Hindman) and Russ Brown (Brown). Hindman and Tina were
    allegedly lovers.
    ¶3. Those five then traveled to Holly Springs in Brown's Chevrolet. Hindman was driving; he pulled
    the car onto a dirt road, and the three men got out of the car. Tina, who remained in the car with her
    baby, heard "several licks" coming from behind the car. Later, Brown told Tina that they had beaten
    Thomas with an axe handle. Hindman, Brown, and Tina left Thomas on the roadside, where he
    subsequently died of asphyxiation.
    ¶4. Hindman, Brown, and Tina returned to Ashland with the baby and picked up Thomas' blue
    Mustang. Officer R. D. Marlar of the Mississippi Highway Patrol was working a roadblock on
    Highway 4, east of Ripley that night. At 11:10 p.m., Officer Marlar saw Thomas' car; Hindman was
    driving, and he had a woman and a baby as passengers. Brown followed closely behind in the
    Chevrolet.
    ¶5. Brown had no driver's license, he smelled of alcohol, and there were beer cans in his car.
    Patrolman Marlar asked Brown to perform a field sobriety test, which was under the statutory limit.
    During the stop Officer Marlar saw an axe handle in the Chevrolet and noticed red stains on Brown's
    pants. Brown explained that the red stains were ketchup. Because there were spilled french fries in
    the Chevrolet, Officer Marlar accepted this explanation and allowed both cars to pass.
    ¶6. Later, Brown drove Thomas' Mustang to a field and took Thomas' wallet from the vehicle.
    According to Tina, Brown said he was going to make the murder look as if someone had robbed
    Thomas and stolen his car.
    ¶7. At dawn, on December 16, 1990, a passerby discovered Thomas' body near a field road about ten
    miles outside Holly Springs, Mississippi. Mr. Reece went to a nearby store and notified the Marshall
    County Sheriff's Office. Because there were indications that the deceased might be from Benton
    County, the Benton County Sheriff, Arnie McMullen, was called to identify the body. Sheriff
    McMullen, however, could not identify Thomas.
    ¶8. Around noon on Sunday, the day after the murder, Tina Hunt and Scott Hindman went to Sheriff
    McMullen's office in Ashland to report Thomas as missing. Tina told the sheriff of the last occasion
    on which she had seen Thomas. The sheriff noted that her description of Thomas matched the
    description of the body that he had just attempted to identify in Marshall County. He asked Tina to
    go with him to identify Thomas' body, which she did. At 3:30 p.m., they returned to Ashland. Sheriff
    McMullen asked Tina to talk to Lieutenant Dickerson, a State Investigator. Lieutenant Dickerson
    noted a conflict between the statement Tina gave him and his understanding of what she had told the
    sheriff earlier. At some point, after 4:00 p.m. Tina telephoned her parents; they called Attorney Joey
    Langston of Booneville.(1) Lieutenant Dickerson advised Tina of her Miranda rights at 5:00 p.m. She
    signed a waiver of rights form at 5:10 p.m. Lieutenant Dickerson proceeded to question other
    witnesses but did not question Tina again until 6:40 p.m. Telephone records showed that Attorney
    Langston telephoned for Tina at 6:21 p.m. and again at 6:28 p.m., but was not allowed to speak to
    her. Lieutenant Dickerson interviewed Tina from 6:40 p.m. to 7:05 p.m.; during this interview, Tina
    made self-incriminating statements.
    ¶9. At trial witnesses testified that Tina did not like being married to Thomas and that she wanted
    Thomas to be killed because he would not give her a divorce. Hindman and Tina were allegedly
    lovers. Witness Matt Crocker testified that he had seen notes passed between Tina and Hindman,
    which discussed Thomas' death. In addition, Crocker had overheard Tina and Hindman discuss the
    purchase of a gun with which to kill Thomas, and he had seen Hindman with an axe handle the night
    before the murder was committed.
    ¶10. Tina, Brown, and Hindman were indicted on February 19, 1991, and charged with the capital
    murder of Thomas Hunt on or about December 15, 1990. Tina's co-defendants, Brown and Hindman,
    prior to trial entered pleas of guilty to the reduced charges of manslaughter, and the State moved to
    reduce Tina's charge to that of murder.
    ¶11. Tina's case was tried before a jury on December 2, 3, and 4, 1992. Following all the evidence,
    the jury returned a verdict of guilty on the charge of murder. Subsequently, the trial court entered a
    judgment sentencing Tina Marie Hunt to life in prison.
    III. ANALYSIS
    A) WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING INTO EVIDENCE A
    STATEMENT TAKEN IN VIOLATION OF TINA'S CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS?
    ¶12. Tina voluntarily went to the sheriff to give a false "missing person" report on her husband. She
    gave details to Sheriff McMullen and agreed to go with him to identify a body. Sheriff McMullen
    then asked her to talk to Lieutenant Dickerson to give the statement of her "missing" husband for him
    to record. She was not the target of any investigation at this time, nor a suspect in Thomas' murder.
    When Lieutenant Dickerson noted a conflict between the statement Tina gave him and his
    understanding of what she had told the sheriff earlier, he advised Tina of her Miranda rights at 5:00
    p.m. She signed a waiver of rights form at 5:10 p.m. During this interview, Tina made self-
    incriminating statements of the murder of her husband.
    ¶13. Tina contends that she made two requests for counsel. First, she asked if she needed an attorney
    before she made a statement. She did not request an attorney be appointed for her. Officer Dickerson
    told her "not yet," Tina also alleges that later, after she received her Miranda warnings, she asked for
    an attorney. She asserts that Dickerson then told her she could not have an attorney.
    ¶14. Tina contends that her Fifth Amendment right to counsel was violated in this case. The standard
    of reviewing the admission of a confession is well-settled. "Determining whether a confession is
    admissible is a finding of fact which is not disturbed unless the trial judge applied an incorrect legal
    standard, committed manifest error, or the decision was contrary to the overwhelming weight of the
    evidence." Lee v. State, 
    631 So. 2d 824
    , 826 (Miss. 1994) (quoting Balfour v. State, 
    598 So. 2d 731
    , 742 (Miss. 1992)); Ricks v. State, 
    611 So. 2d 212
    , 214 (Miss. 1992). The trial judge ruled that
    the statement was freely and voluntarily given after the Miranda rights had been administered.
    ¶15. Whether Tina's Fifth Amendment right to counsel was violated depends on whether she was (a)
    in custody and (b) being interrogated. A person's Fifth Amendment right to counsel is not triggered
    by general on-the-scene questioning and/or any voluntary statement. Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 477-78 (1966); Porter v. State, 
    616 So. 2d 899
    , 907 (Miss. 1993). Clearly, when a person who
    is in custody and is being interrogated requests an attorney, the police's questioning must cease until
    one is provided. Miranda, 384 U.S. at 445; Minnick v. Mississippi, 
    498 U.S. 146
    , 147 (1990);
    Mettetal v. State, 
    602 So. 2d 864
    , 868 (Miss. 1992). On the other hand, if Tina's first alleged request
    for an attorney took place in a non-custodial setting, her Fifth Amendment right to counsel was not
    implicated. McNeil v. Wisconsin, 
    501 U.S. 171
    , 177-78 (1991); United States v. Harrell, 
    894 F.2d 120
    , 125 (5th Cir. 1990).
    ¶16. Clearly, Tina had been asked to give a statement and she was being questioned; therefore, she
    was being interrogated. Thus, whether Tina was denied her Fifth Amendment right to counsel
    depends on whether she was "in custody."(2) The test for whether a person is in custody is whether a
    reasonable person would feel that she was in custody. That is, whether a reasonable person would
    feel that she was going to jail -- and not just being temporarily detained. Compton v. State, 
    460 So. 2d
     847, 849 (Miss. 1984). See also, Berkemer v. McCarty, 
    468 U.S. 420
     (1984). The officer's
    subjective intent is irrelevant. Stansbury v. California, 
    511 U.S. 318
     (1994).
    ¶17. Whether a reasonable person would feel that she was "in custody" depends on the totality of the
    circumstances. Factors to consider include: (a) the place of interrogation; (b) the time of
    interrogation; (c) the people present; (d) the amount of force or physical restraint used by the
    officers; (e) the length and form of the questions; (f) whether the defendant comes to the authorities
    voluntarily; and (g) what the defendant is told about the situation. See People v. Goyer, 
    638 N.E.2d 390
    , 393-94 (Ill. App. Ct. 1994).
    ¶18. Considering the totality of the circumstances, the record reflects that Tina and Dickerson's
    conversation about an attorney occurred prior to her being in custody. It is undisputed that she
    voluntarily went to the sheriff's office to report Thomas as missing. She was questioned during the
    late afternoon for a relatively short period of time, during which, she was alone with Officer
    Dickerson. She was not physically restrained, but she contends that she was told she could not leave
    until she gave a statement to Officer Dickerson. Thus, Tina was detained temporarily in order to
    obtain a missing-person report. More importantly, she went voluntarily to the sheriff's office for the
    express purpose of making such a report.(3) Therefore, the trial judge did not commit manifest error
    by admitting her self-incriminating statement.
    ¶19. "Once the trial judge has determined at a preliminary hearing, that a confession is admissible, the
    defendant/appellant has a heavy burden in attempting to reverse that decision on appeal." Sills v.
    State, 
    634 So. 2d 124
    , 126 (Miss. 1994) (quoting Frost v. State, 
    483 So. 2d 1345
    , 1350 (Miss.1986)
    ). "Such findings are treated as findings of fact made by a trial judge sitting without a jury as in any
    other context." Foster v. State, 
    639 So. 2d 1263
    , 1281 (Miss. 1994) (citations omitted). The trial
    judge's decision will not be reversed on appeal unless it is manifestly in error, or is contrary to the
    overwhelming weight of the evidence. Id. Where the evidence is contradictory, this Court "generally
    must affirm." Lesley v. State, 
    606 So. 2d 1084
    , 1091 (Miss. 1992) (citations omitted). Based on the
    foregoing analysis, the trial judge's admission of Tina's statement is affirmed.
    B. WHETHER THE DEFENDANT WAS DENIED A FAIR TRIAL BECAUSE THE STATE
    INTERFERED WITH DEFENSE COUNSEL'S FREE ACCESS TO WITNESSES?
    ¶20. Tina contends that she was denied a fair trial because the State advised State witnesses to have a
    prosecutor's representative present when they were interviewed by defense counsel. Prior to trial,
    Tina's Motion to Enjoin Prosecutor from Interfering with Defendant's Investigation was denied.
    ¶21. Witnesses Roberta Leonard, and her mother, Mary, testified that a State investigator told them
    to contact the prosecutor's office if another attorney called, but that they were not barred from
    speaking to other attorneys. They stated that the investigator asked them to postpone any interviews
    with defense attorneys until a prosecutor could be present. Witness Leah Poteet testified that she
    asked if the State would send a representative to be present when defense counsel asked her
    questions.
    ¶22. Mississippi case law has not addressed this question directly, but this Court has stated that trial
    courts should not allow "arbitrary" denial of a defendant's right to consult State witnesses, if they are
    willing to talk to the defendant's counsel. Scott v. State, 
    359 So. 2d 1355
    , 1358 (Miss. 1978). This
    Court has upheld a trial court in requiring State's counsel to be present during a defendant's interview
    of a rape victim and her grandmother, where the rape victim was a minor. Cannon v. State, 
    190 So. 2d
     848, 850 (Miss. 1966). Here, however, the State suggested or advised that it would be best for a
    State representative to be present, while making it clear that the witnesses were free to speak to
    Tina's counsel.
    ¶23. This Court recognizes that the State's refusal to allow any defense interviews with State
    witnesses violates due process guarantees. Gregory v. United States, 
    369 F.2d 185
     (D.C. Cir. (1966)
    , cert. denied, 
    396 U.S. 865
     (1993). However, in the case sub judice, the State advised these
    witnesses to have a State representative present at interviews; they did not refuse to allow the
    witnesses to speak with defense counsel. Thus, there was no reversible error in the trial court's denial
    of Tina's pre-trial motion regarding this matter. Accord, Nichols v. State, 624 So. 2d 1325,1327
    (Ala. 1992)
    C. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION WHEN IT DENIED
    TINA HUNT FUNDS TO EMPLOY AN INVESTIGATOR, DENYING TINA HER
    CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS?
    ¶24. Tina also argues that her motion for funds to hire an investigator should have been granted
    because the State provided only partial information on only thirty of the seventy-two anticipated
    witnesses listed by the State. The State conceded that several of the witnesses they listed lacked
    addresses or phone numbers.
    ¶25. However, the trial court denied Tina's motion and ruled that it could not find a sufficient need to
    justify an investigator. Tina's counsel moved unsuccessfully for a continuance; the motion was based
    on the demands of investigating the discovery still being produced by the State. Defense counsel
    noted he had forty-five to fifty witnesses left to interview, and that he could not complete those
    interviews in the time remaining prior to trial.
    ¶26. The standard of review in Mississippi on this issue is as follows: to reverse, the trial court's
    denial of expert assistance must be an abuse of discretion "so egregious as to deny [the defendant]
    due process and where [the defendant's] trial was thereby rendered fundamentally unfair." Fisher v.
    City of Eupora, 
    587 So. 2d 878
    , 883 (Miss. 1991). See Johnson v. State, 
    529 So. 2d 577
    , 590
    (Miss. 1988). "Undeveloped assertions" that expert assistance will be helpful are insufficient. Griffin
    v. State, 
    557 So. 2d 542
    , 550 (Miss. 1990).
    ¶27. Tina has failed to demonstrate how her inability to interview these witnesses hurt her at trial.
    Specifically, Tina does not show any prejudice from her inability to interview all of these witnesses.
    Therefore, this issue lacks merit.
    D. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY REFUSING TO INSTRUCT THE JURY
    AS TO THE PROPER BURDEN OF PROOF, SINCE THE PROOF AGAINST TINA HUNT
    WAS CIRCUMSTANTIAL?
    ¶28. At trial, the State requested and received jury instruction S-1, which stated that the burden of
    proof for the State is proof beyond a reasonable doubt. The trial court refused Tina's proposed
    "circumstantial evidence" instruction, which would have stated that the burden of proof is proof
    beyond a reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of every other reasonable hypothesis consistent with
    innocence. The trial court found that the evidence of Tina's oral statements in which she wished for
    Thomas' death was direct evidence, making S-1 correct. In addition, the State argues that since Tina
    gave an inculpatory statement to the police, the circumstantial evidence instruction was
    inappropriate.
    ¶29. This Court has held that a circumstantial evidence instruction is necessary only where the
    evidence is "wholly circumstantial." Windham v. State, 
    602 So. 2d 798
    , 800 (Miss. 1992). See cf.,
    Jones v. State, 
    635 So. 2d 884
    , 886-87 (Miss. 1994). Where a confession exists, a circumstantial
    evidence instruction is unnecessary. Ladner v. State, 
    584 So. 2d 743
    , 750 (Miss.), cert. denied, 
    502 U.S. 1015
     (1991). Tina admits that her statement wishing Thomas dead is circumstantial evidence of
    intent in the crime charged. However, this Court has recently distinguished the element of intent from
    other elements by allowing the State to use circumstantial evidence to prove intent, without the
    circumstantial evidence instruction. Jones v. State, 
    635 So. 2d 884
    , 886-87 (Miss. 1994). Therefore,
    this Court affirms on this issue. (4)
    E. WHETHER THE COURT ERRED BY ADMITTING INTO EVIDENCE A COPY OF A
    DOCUMENT UNDER CIRCUMSTANCES UNFAIR TO TINA HUNT AND WHERE
    ALTERATION WAS SUSPECTED?
    ¶30. Tina alleged that her attorney was barred from speaking to her. Joey Langston, a Booneville
    attorney, testified that he attempted to speak by telephone at 6:21 and 6:28 p.m. -- shortly before she
    gave her written statement. Langston alleged that the police dispatcher told him that Tina could not
    come to the telephone. The dispatcher disputed Langston's assertion, and testified that Langston did
    not call. She used a phone log from the Benton County Sheriff's Department, which she maintained,
    to refresh her memory that Langston did not call. The phone log was not admitted into evidence, but
    marked Exhibit No. 1 for Identification Only.
    ¶31. Tina asserts that the admission of this phone log violated the Best Evidence Rule, as stated in
    Mississippi Rule of Evidence 1002. However, the telephone log was not admitted. Furthermore, a
    document used to refresh one's recollection under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 612 does not have to
    be admissible under the Mississippi Rules of Evidence. Livingston v. State, 
    525 So. 2d 1300
    , 1303
    (Miss. 1988); Gardner v. State, 
    455 So. 2d 796
    , 799-800 (Miss. 1984). The only requirement is that
    the witness have no present memory of the event. Scott v. State, 
    446 So. 2d 580
    , 585 (Miss. 1984).
    ¶32. It is clear that Ada Tucker, the police dispatcher, stated that she could not "remember all those
    calls" on the day in question. Thus, she testified to her lack of memory before she received a copy of
    the phone log. Therefore, the necessary predicate for use of the log was made.
    ¶33. Tina complains that Tucker did not make the copy which was used to refresh her memory.
    There is no requirement under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 612 that the witness make and use her
    own copy of the document used to refresh her recollection. Tina also complains that she did not see
    the original of the document which Tucker used to refresh her memory. Mississippi Rule of Evidence
    612 states that the adverse party has the right to review the document used to refresh a witness'
    memory, but makes no mention of the original of a document. Lambert v. State, 
    524 So. 2d 576
    , 579
    (Miss. 1988). Furthermore, Tina did not object on that ground. As a result, this assertion of error is
    barred for lack of timely objection. Box v. State, 
    610 So. 2d 1148
    , 1154 (Miss. 1992). Therefore,
    this assignment of error has no merit.
    F. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ALLOWED INTO EVIDENCE PROOF OF OTHER
    CRIMES OR OTHER WRONGS WHICH WERE IRRELEVANT OR, IF RELEVANT,
    WITH PREJUDICIAL EFFECT SUBSTANTIALLY OUTWEIGHING THE PROBATIVE
    VALUE OF THE EVIDENCE?
    ¶34. Two witnesses testified that Tina was having affairs with Hindman and another person. Tina
    argues that the admission of evidence of these affairs was incorrect under Mississippi Rule of
    Evidence 404(b), which governs character evidence. Tina further asserts that, even if admission of
    evidence of these affairs was valid under Mississippi Rule of Evidence 404(b), it was substantially
    more prejudicial than probative, and thereby violated Mississippi Rule of Evidence 403. The State
    asserts that evidence of her affairs was probative under Mississippi Rules of Evidence 403 and 404(b)
    , to show intent to eliminate Thomas Hunt.
    ¶35. Evidence of wrong acts is admissible to prove motive, provided that such evidence conforms
    with Mississippi Rule of Evidence 403. Hogan v. State, 
    580 So. 2d 1275
    , 1277 (Miss. 1991). Bad
    acts, such as adultery, may be admissible to prove motive. However, they are inadmissible, if (1) the
    affairs are not proven as more than suspicions, (2) they took place years before the crime, and (3)
    they involved people unrelated to the crime. Lesley v. State, 
    606 So. 2d 1084
    , 1090 (Miss. 1992).
    ¶36. In contrast, Tina's affair with Hindman was amply supported by evidence. Hindman was openly
    calling Tina his girlfriend in her presence only weeks before the murder, without any objection from
    Tina. At the same time, Tina was saying that she could not get a divorce, and that she would like to
    see Thomas Hunt dead. In addition, Hindman was a principal to the killing, and he pled guilty to
    manslaughter in connection with this case. Furthermore, Hindman went to the police station with
    Tina to report the fact that Thomas was missing.
    ¶37. One witness testified that Tina was having an affair with another person, who was not involved
    in Thomas Hunt's death. Although this alleged paramour did not assist in killing Thomas, the
    information was admissible since Tina admitted that her ongoing love for this man occurred just three
    months before Thomas' death. There is no reversible error here.
    G. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY DENYING TINA HUNT DISCOVERY,
    DUE UNDER RULE 4.06 OF THE UNIFORM CRIMINAL RULES OF CIRCUIT COURT
    PRACTICE, AND BY DENYING A DELAY IN THE TRIAL SETTING?
    ¶38. Tina asserts that the State failed to supply her with the names of the witnesses it intended to call
    at trial. Less than two weeks before trial, the State gave Tina a potential witness list, which consisted
    of 72 names. The trial court denied Tina's motion for the State to produce the names of witnesses
    who would actually testify. Tina requested a continuance because she had 45 people on the list left to
    interview. The request was denied.
    ¶39. Tina argues that the State's failure to provide the intended witness list deprived her of a fair trial.
    In addition, Tina states that her inability to interview all of these witnesses warranted a continuance
    until her counsel could interview them and prepare for trial.
    ¶40. Clearly, a request for the State's witnesses in chief is sufficient to compel the State's production
    of this information, under Uniform Circuit Court Rule 4.06. This Court addressed the requirements
    of Rule 4.06 in Reuben v. State, 
    517 So. 2d 1383
    , 1385-86 (Miss. 1987):
    [The appellant] filed a motion which, under Rule 4.06, was sufficient to impose upon the State
    the duty of disclosing the names and addresses of all witnesses that the State intended to call
    during their case-in-chief. (emphasis added).
    Reuben, 517 So. 2d at 1385-86.
    ¶41. Thus, at first blush, it appears that Tina was entitled to the requested information under Rule
    4.06. However, the purpose of Rule 4.06 is to avoid ambush or unfair surprise to either party at trial.
    Frierson v. State, 
    606 So. 2d 604
    , 607 (Miss. 1992) (citing Robinson v. State, 
    508 So. 2d 1067
    ,
    1070 (Miss. 1987)); Holland v. State, 
    587 So. 2d 848
    , 866-67 (Miss. 1991). Tina has not shown that
    a lack of discovery worked to her detriment. Moreover, Mississippi Rule of Evidence 103(a)
    provides that "[e]rror may not be predicatedupon a ruling which admits or excludes evidence unless a
    substantial right of the party is affected." Tina has neither contended nor demonstrated that
    previously undisclosed evidence introduced at trial took her by surprise, prejudiced her, or affected
    one of her substantial rights. Therefore, her arguments on this point are without merit.
    H. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY APPOINTING TINA HUNT'S
    ATTORNEY TO REPRESENT HER ON APPEAL WITHOUT COMPENSATION, IN
    VIOLATION OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS OF BOTH TINA AND HER
    APPOINTED ATTORNEY?
    ¶42. The trial court denied Tina's counsel any fees for appellate preparation because Tina's counsel
    agreed to a contract to represent Tina before trial. Tina's counsel asserts that this denial is an
    unconstitutional taking of his property (time). Tina asserts her Sixth Amendment right to counsel and
    claims that an unpaid attorney might not produce the quality of work a compensated attorney would
    give.
    ¶43. Phil Hinton was eventually employed by Tina Hunt to defend her against the murder charge on
    an hourly basis. Tina's family guaranteed Hinton a minimum amount of $10,000. In addition to this
    criminal charge, Hinton also represented Tina in a civil child custody case against the Department of
    Human Services. The record does not indicate whether the $10,000 minimum applied solely to the
    criminal case or included both cases.
    ¶44. After the murder trial, Hinton moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (J.N.O.V.). At
    the hearing on that motion, Hinton also moved to represent Tina on appeal. He stated that the
    possibility of representation on appeal was not discussed when he was hired by Tina. Hinton had
    already received a fee of $11,000 for his representation at trial. (R. 890).
    ¶45. Hinton also presented evidence of Tina's indigence and of her inability to pay for an appeal. The
    trial court allowed Tina to proceed on appeal in forma pauperis and appointed Hinton to represent
    Tina on appeal. By court order, the matter of appeal fees for Hinton was taken under advisement and
    subject to further hearings. On the record, the trial judge denied at that time any fee to appeal the
    case, and held the attorney to his initial fee arrangement with Tina on an hourly rate.
    ¶46. Hinton's argument before this Court is that he is entitled to be paid an additional fee of $2,000
    for the trial and appeal under Miss. Code Ann. § 99-15-17 (1994 Supp.), which provides that defense
    counsel may receive a maximum of $1,000 for a criminal trial and $1,000 in appeal fees. This Court
    has provided that additional monies for the defense counsel's overhead expenses are also to be paid.
    Wilson v. State, 
    574 So. 2d 1338
    , 1340-41 (Miss. 1990); Pruett v. State, 
    574 So. 2d 1342
     (Miss.
    1990).
    ¶47. In the case at hand, Tina paid her counsel $11,000 to defend her. According to Miss. Code Ann.
    § 99-15-17, Tina's counsel could have been entitled to $2,000 for the trial and appeal. Subtracting $2,
    000 from the $11,000 actually paid leaves $9,000 that Tina's counsel received, over the statutory
    maximum. Tina's counsel does not show how his overhead expenses exceeded that $9,000 figure.
    Therefore, there is no merit in this assignment of error.
    ¶48. Furthermore, this case raises concerns about the propriety of an attorney's receiving a large sum
    of money from the client, having the client declared indigent, and then petitioning the court for more
    money with which to defend that client. Although the attorney is entitled to the statutory sum as well
    as to overhead costs, this Court interprets the statute and related case law very narrowly. That is, an
    attorney who has received from a client an amount equal to or greater than that which he would have
    been entitled to by law is not allowed to receive more money from the county when that client is
    declared indigent.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    ¶49. The issues raised by the appellant in this case are without merit. Tina was not in custody when
    she asked for an attorney; her Fifth Amendment right to counsel had not yet attached and, therefore,
    was not violated. Furthermore, the trial court did not commit reversible error by denying Tina's
    Motion to Enjoin Prosecutor from Interfering with Defendant's Investigation or by denying Tina
    funds with which to employ an investigator. The jury was properly instructed with regard to the
    burden of proof; the facts in this case did not require that a circumstantial evidence instruction be
    given. Moreover, the phone log was properly used to refresh the memory of witness Tucker, the
    police dispatcher. Evidence of Tina's alleged affair(s) was more probative than prejudicial and was,
    therefore, properly admitted. In addition, Tina has not shown that she was prejudiced by the State's
    pre-trial failure to provide more specific information regarding some of the witnesses. Finally, no
    error was committed by the trial court's refusal to allow additional payment of $2,000 from the
    county to Tina's attorney, when the attorney had already received over $11,000 from private sources.
    Thus, this appeal lacks merit, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    ¶50. CONVICTION OF MURDER AND SENTENCE OF LIFE IMPRISONMENT IN THE
    CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AFFIRMED.
    LEE, C.J., ROBERTS, SMITH AND MILLS, JJ., CONCUR. SULLIVAN, P.J., CONCURS
    IN PART AND DISSENTS IN PART WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY
    PITTMAN, BANKS AND McRAE, JJ.
    SULLIVAN, PRESIDING JUSTICE, CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN
    PART:
    ¶51. Because I feel that the majority has misrepresented the facts and the law in this case, I dissent. It
    is the majority's affirmance on the first (A), third (C), and seventh (G) issues with which I must
    emphatically disagree.
    ¶52. Hunt's first assertion on appeal is that her written statement was taken in violation of her right
    against self-incrimination. The majority holds that Hunt's statement was not made in violation of her
    Miranda rights because her requests for counsel were made in a non-custodial interrogation.
    ¶53. The majority states that "[c]learly, Tina had been asked to give a statement and she was being
    questioned; therefore, she was being interrogated." I certainly agree that Hunt was being
    interrogated, but the fault I see in the majority's thinking is that Hunt was not in custody. According
    to our jurisprudence, the establishment of custody depends on whether a reasonable person, under
    the totality of the circumstances, would feel that she was in custody.
    ¶54. The case law shows that the presence of certain factors tends to establish the existence of
    custody in connection with the determination of whether one was subjected to custodial interrogation
    for Miranda purposes. Certain factors are generally relevant to the analysis of custody, and the
    majority includes these factors. We have emphasized, however, that no single element is dispositive in
    this determination, nor must all of the factors be present to find a custodial interrogation.
    Furthermore, we must engage in a case-by-case analysis with respect to an evaluation of these
    factors.
    ¶55. Because I feel that the majority misrepresents the relevant facts of this case which ineluctably
    develops the finding of custody, I will provide a chronology:
    Noon
    Tina Hunt arrives at the Benton County Sheriff's office.
    3:30 p.m.
    Tina returns to the Benton County Sheriff's Office with Sheriff McMullen after identifying the body
    of Thomas Hunt. (Trial Transcript 551). Tina was told that she could not leave until she was
    interrogated by Lt. Dickerson. (Trial Transcript 107-09).
    5:10 p.m.
    Lt. Dickerson advised Tina of her Miranda rights and she signed a Rights Waiver. (Trial Transcript
    108, 143). Thereafter she was told she could not leave while Lt. Dickerson got the written
    statement of Scott Hindman. Tina asked Lt. Dickerson if she needed to call an attorney and he
    said no not yet. (Trial Transcript 111, 137).
    6:21 p.m. and 6:28 p.m.
    Attorney Langston called the Benton County Sheriff's Office and attempted to speak with Tina. (Trial
    Transcript 152-54). Tina overheard the dispatcher tell Langston that she was not allowed to
    speak with anyone. (Trial Transcript 112).
    6:30 p.m.
    Lt. Dickerson came out of an interrogating room where he had gotten the written confession of Scott
    Hindman and Tina again asked for her attorney. Lt. Dickerson told her no. (Trial Transcript 111,
    137).
    6:40 p.m.
    Lt. Dickerson took a written statement from Tina.
    ¶56. Dickerson adequately informed Hunt of her Miranda right to counsel. She understood that
    right. Thus, when Hunt verbally indicated that she wanted to talk to a lawyer, after she signed her
    rights waiver, she invoked her right to counsel. The law provides that the interrogation must cease
    if the suspect indicates in any manner, at any time prior to or during questioning that she wishes to
    remain silent or that she wants an attorney.
    ¶57. Thus, it is not what the majority states about Hunt's interrogation but what the majority does not
    state about her interrogation that makes it custodial. A reasonable person in Hunt's situation, having
    been read her Miranda warnings, hearing the dispatcher tell her lawyer that she was not allowed to
    speak to anyone, asking to leave and then being told that she could not, and being at the station for
    several hours, would believe that she was in custody.
    ¶58. Hunt had been at the police station for several hours and had undergone interrogation. It was
    after this that Hunt was read her Miranda rights. We have found that once custodial interrogation
    arises, then it must be preceded by advising the defendant of her right to remain silent and her right to
    an attorney. Holland v. State, 
    587 So. 2d 848
    , 855 (Miss. 1991) (citing Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 479 (1966)). Other courts hold that the reading of Miranda warnings does not raise a non-
    custodial interrogation to a custodial one. However, these cases, unlike Hunt's, do not involve other
    indicia of arrest. See Davis v. Allsbrooks, 
    778 F.2d 168
    , 172 (4th Cir. 1985) (Conditions at the
    station were as informal and the detectives took a dinner break at a reasonable hour, gave appellant a
    ride home, and agreed to meet later at a mutually convenient time. Appellant apparently understood
    that he was free to reject police requests for information; after initially agreeing to take a polygraph,
    he changed his mind and refused); Commonwealth v. Mayfield, 
    500 N.E.2d 774
    , 781-82 (Mass.
    1986) (Mayfield, who was then only one of several suspects, went to the police station voluntarily by
    prearrangement. The officials told him he was free to leave anytime, and he did leave at the end of the
    session); People v. McDaniel, 
    619 N.E.2d 214
    , 224 (Ill. App. Ct. 1993) (Defendant repeatedly told
    that he was not in custody. The defendant responded that he understood. Further, he was allowed to
    take breaks from the questioning and speak with his family); People v. Kircher, 
    520 N.Y.S.2d 611
    ,
    611 (N.Y. App. Div. 1987) (Miranda warnings given at origin of an encounter, did not suggest that
    defendant was then in custody).
    ¶59. Another indication of custody in Hunt's case is the fact that an attorney was barred from
    speaking to her, before she gave incriminating statements. The majority asserts that the police do not
    have to tell a suspect when their attorney is trying to get in touch with them under Moran v.
    Burbine, 
    475 U.S. 412
     (1986). Numerous jurisdictions have found otherwise. See U.S. v. Scarpa,
    
    701 F. Supp. 379
     (E.D.N.Y 1988), cert. denied 
    498 U.S. 816
     (1990); People v. McCauley, 
    645 N.E.2d 923
     (Ill. 1994); West v. Commonwealth, 
    887 S.W.2d 338
     (Ky. 1994); State v. Reed, 
    627 A.2d 630
     (N.J. 1993); State v. Stoddard, 
    537 A.2d 446
     (Conn. 1988); DeJesus v. State, 
    655 A.2d 1180
     (Del. Super. Ct. 1995); People v. Page, 
    907 P.2d 624
     (Colo. Ct. App. 1995); Heitman v.
    State, 
    815 S.W.2d 681
     (Tex. Crim. App. 1991); Bryan v. State, 
    571 A.2d 170
     (Del. Super. Ct. 1990)
    ; Roeder v. State, 
    768 S.W.2d 745
     (Tex. Ct. App. 1988).
    ¶60. The facts of Burbine and the one at hand differ in several important aspects. In Burbine the
    Court held that "[e]vents occurring outside of the presence of the suspect and entirely unknown to
    him surely can have no bearing on the capacity to comprehend and knowingly relinquish a
    constitutional right . . . ." Burbine, 475 U.S. at 422. That is not so here. Hunt testified that she
    overheard one of the conversations between attorney Joey Langston and the dispatcher in which the
    dispatcher informed the attorney "Mr. Langston, I'm sorry, but they're not allowed to talk with
    anyone right now."
    ¶61. Also, in Burbine, neither the voluntariness of the suspect's confession nor the possibility of
    police misconduct was an issue. Thus, it logically follows that if Hunt was not in custody and free
    to leave, or do whatever it was she wanted, why was she not allowed to speak to an attorney?
    "The sheriff obviously had no reason to prevent [Hunt] from conferring with [her] lawyer except to
    isolate [Hunt] from anyone who might make the investigators's job harder." Yates v. State, 
    467 So. 2d
     884, 888 (Sullivan, J., dissenting).
    ¶62. At 5:06 p.m. they advised Hunt of her Miranda rights and she signed a rights waiver at 5:10
    p.m.. Lt. Dickerson then got the confession of Scott Hindman and did not talk to Hunt again or take
    a formal statement until 6:40 p.m.. Hunt stated that she asked Lt. Dickerson if she needed to call an
    attorney and was told no. This conversation occurred after she signed the rights waiver, at 5:10 p.m.,
    but before the time that Dickerson took her written confession at 6:40 p.m.. Within that same period
    Hunt testified that she overheard one of the conversations with attorney Joey Langston and the
    dispatcher in which the dispatcher informed Mr. Langston that "they're not allowed to talk with
    anyone right now."
    ¶63. After Hunt heard the dispatcher tell an attorney that she was not allowed to talk with anyone,
    after being told that she was not allowed to leave, after being read her Miranda warnings, Dickerson
    came out from interrogating other witnesses and she asked him if she could call an attorney.
    Dickerson told her no. In the trial court's ruling on the Motion to Suppress, the trial judge stated that
    he was not finding as a matter of fact that Tina Hunt did not request an attorney and certainly
    he could not. Instead, he based his finding on her signing of a Waiver of Rights at 5:10 p.m. on the
    date in question. (Trial Transcript 343-46).
    ¶64. The trial judge found that the statement was freely and voluntarily given after Miranda rights
    had been administered, thus the judge found that Hunt had been in custody for purposes of
    Miranda. The fact is that Tina Hunt gave her statement to police while she was in custody. In fact,
    the majority's opinion indirectly concedes this point by holding that the trial judge did not commit
    manifest error when he decided that Hunt "freely and voluntarily" gave her statement after she had
    been given Miranda warnings.
    ¶65. Lastly, Hunt asserted that she was told she could not leave; she was told to wait while Hindman
    was being interviewed. The record clearly shows that Hunt was told to stay while the officers
    conducted other interviews. Would a free person, one not in custody, be told that they could not
    leave?
    ¶66. The majority makes much of the fact that Hunt arrived at the police station voluntarily.
    Depending on the facts, such as the ones here, a voluntary custodial situation can be transformed into
    an involuntary one requiring Miranda warnings. State v. Victor, 
    457 N.W.2d 431
     (Neb. 1990), cert.
    denied 
    498 U.S. 1127
     (1991). Based on the totality of the circumstances, it is clear that Hunt was in
    custody.
    ¶67. In Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966), the United States Supreme Court clarified the
    scope of custodial interrogation and stated in that regard:
    Once warnings have been given, the subsequent procedure is clear. If the individual indicates in
    any manner, at any time prior to or during questioning, that he wishes to remain silent, the
    interrogation must cease. At this point, he has shown that he intends to exercise his Fifth
    Amendment privilege; any statement taken after the person invokes his privilege cannot be
    other than the product of compulsion, subtle or otherwise.
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 474-75 (footnote omitted).
    ¶68. Before police may initiate questioning, the accused must be informed of her constitutional rights,
    particularly her right to counsel and to remain silent, and the consequences of waiving those rights.
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 474. Custodial interrogation must cease upon even an equivocal indication of a
    desire to assert those constitutional rights. Id. The admissibility of statements made after the accused
    has asserted her right depends on whether the police have "scrupulously honored" those rights by
    ceasing interrogation. Michigan v. Mosley, 
    423 U.S. 96
    , 102-03 (1975). Where an accused asserts
    the right to counsel, all interrogation must cease until a lawyer has been provided. Such interrogation
    includes "any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest
    and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response
    from the suspect." Rhode Island v. Innis, 
    446 U.S. 291
    , 301 (1980).
    ¶69. A suspect undergoing custodial interrogation following her request for the assistance of counsel
    carries a subtle, yet powerful, compulsion to make a self-incriminating statement. See Arizona v.
    Roberson, 
    486 U.S. 675
     (1988); Edwards v. Arizona, 
    451 U.S. 477
     (1981); Miranda v. Arizona,
    
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966). "Surely there is nothing ambiguous about the requirement that after a person in
    custody has expressed his desire to deal with the police only through counsel, he 'is not subject to
    further interrogation by the authorities until counsel has been made available to him, unless the
    accused himself initiates further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police.'"
    Roberson, 486 U.S. at 681 (citing Edwards, 451 U.S. at 484-85).
    ¶70. The purpose of the required warnings is to counteract the coercive atmosphere underling a
    custodial interrogation by the police, to afford added protection to the liberty against compulsory
    self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment and to reduce the risk of involuntary statements. This
    postulate, that the danger of coercion results from the interaction between official interrogation and
    police custody, defines the need for the Miranda warnings.
    ¶71. Based upon this determination, Hunt's statements to authorities were obtained in violation of her
    Fifth Amendment right to counsel. Hunt had the right to have an attorney at custodial interrogations,
    and if she requested the assistance of counsel, subsequent questioning could occur only upon Hunt's
    initiation. Roberson, 486 U.S. at 681; Edwards, 451 U.S. at 484.
    ¶72. The record shows that they read Hunt her rights and then she signed a Waiver of Rights form.
    After she understood her rights she then asked if it were time to call her attorney. I think there could
    be no clearer indication of an individual asserting her right to counsel then the case here.
    ¶73. Why did the Officer deny Hunt the right to counsel? And what right does a free individual, not
    in custody, have to an attorney? No one has the right to have an attorney present unless they are in
    custody the majority holds today. The majority's holding will allow an officer the opportunity to get
    around the Fifth Amendment's right against self-incrimination by merely questioning someone until
    they get what they need, while continuing to deny all requests for an attorney, thus rendering the
    safeguards of Miranda ineffective.
    ¶74. At the end of the day everyone connected with this case found that Hunt was in custody, except
    the majority. The officer thought Hunt was in custody, he read Hu nt her Miranda rights; the trial
    judge thought Hunt was in custody, he found that she had waived her right to counsel; lastly, Hunt
    thought she was in custody, she invoked her Miranda rights. I am at a complete loss, in the presence
    of these facts, how the majority finds Hunt was not in custody. I side with the people who were
    there, accordingly I dissent.
    WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY DENYING TINA HUNT DISCOVERY, DUE
    UNDER RULE 4.06 OF THE UNIFORM CRIMINAL RULES OF CIRCUIT COURT
    PRACTICE, AND BY DENYING A DELAY IN THE TRIAL SETTING?
    ¶75. Hunt correctly asserts the State failed to supply her with the names of the witnesses it intended
    to call at trial, over an unsuccessful objection. Hunt requested discovery pursuant to Rule 4.06 of the
    Uniform Criminal Rules of Circuit Court Practice (now Uniform Circuit and County Court Rule
    9.04) and later she expanded that request. She filed two motions to compel discovery, the second of
    which included a request that the court require the prosecutor to distinguish between the persons it
    intended to call as witnesses during the trial of the case and persons who may have some knowledge
    about the case. The court denied this motion. The State produced a list of "witnesses" to the defense
    fewer then two weeks before the trial began. Because of misspelled names and the fact that addresses
    were not included with most of the witnesses listed by the State, it was and still is difficult to decide
    the exact number of potential witnesses disclosed by the State. The defense states that the number
    was between sixty-seven and seventy-two, taking into consideration duplications. The list included
    people who wrote letters for Thomas Hunt's family interested only in the custody of the child of Tina
    and Thomas Hunt. The list also included the persons who conducted the funeral services for Thomas
    Hunt. The State called nine witnesses.
    ¶76. Hunt asked the trial court for assistance. She asked that the State, pursuant to Rule 4.06(a)(1),
    separate from among the witnesses disclosed those who would actually be used during the trial in
    chief. The lower court refused this. Hunt's attorney then requested the funds for an investigator who
    could dedicate his time and energy to locating and interviewing the witnesses listed. This was
    refused. Then Hunt's attorney sought a continuance so that witnesses could be interviewed and other
    preparations made for trial. Again this was refused.
    ¶77. "[E]ven the most meticulous discovery is useless if not timely. Discovery, to be sufficient, must
    be made at a time far enough in advance of trial to give the defense a 'meaningful opportunity' to
    make use of it." Stewart v. Mississippi, 
    512 So. 2d 889
    , 892 (Miss. 1987) (citing Turner v. State,
    
    501 So. 2d 350
    , 352 (Miss. 1987); Page v. State, 
    495 So. 2d 436
    , 443 (Miss. 1986)(Dan Lee, J.,
    dissenting)).
    ¶78. This Court has noted that "Rule 4.06 and the Box guidelines are designed to avoid 'ambush' or
    unfair surprise to either party at trial." Holland v. State, 
    587 So. 2d 848
    , 866-67 (Miss. 1991). As
    articulated in Davis v. State, 
    530 So. 2d 694
     (Miss. 1988), the guidelines for discovery set out in
    Box v. State, 
    437 So. 2d 19
     (Miss. 1983), provide as follows:
    (1) Upon the defense's objection, the trial court should give the defendant a reasonable
    opportunity to become familiar with the undisclosed evidence by interviewing the witness,
    inspecting the physical evidence, etc.
    (2) If after this opportunity for familiarization, the defendant believes he may be prejudiced by
    lack of opportunity to prepare to meet the evidence, he must request a continuance. Failure to
    do so constitutes a waiver of the issue.
    (3) If the defendant does request a continuance the State may choose to proceed with trial and
    forego using the undisclosed evidence. If the State is not willing to proceed without the
    evidence the trial court must grant the requested continuance.
    Davis, 530 So. 2d at 698 (citing Box, 437 So. 2d at 23-26).
    ¶79. A continuance, as contemplated by Box, simply postpones or adjourns the action to a later date.
    Mississippi case law provides that the failure to request a continuance constitutes a waiver. Davis,
    530 So. 2d at 698.
    ¶80. "Where the state is tardy in furnishing discovery which it was obligated to disclose, the
    defendant is entitled upon request to a continuance or postponement of the proceedings [sic]
    reasonable under the circumstances." Stewart, 512 So. 2d at 892-93. Under our caselaw, a trial court
    should consider a grant of continuance when confronted with a discovery violation. Duplantis v.
    State, 
    644 So. 2d 1235
    , 1249-50 (Miss. 1994), cert. denied 
    115 S. Ct. 1990
     (1995).
    ¶81. Where the state is tardy in furnishing discovery which it was obligated to disclose, the defendant
    is entitled upon request to a continuance postponement of the proceedings reasonable under the
    circumstances. Foster v. State, 
    484 So. 2d 1009
    , 1011 (Miss. 1986) (citing Henry v. State, 
    484 So. 2d
     1012, 1014 (Miss. 1986); McKinney v. State, 
    482 So. 2d 1129
    , 1131 (Miss. 1986); Cabello v.
    State, 
    471 So. 2d 332
    , 343 (Miss. 1985), cert. denied 
    476 U.S. 1164
     (1986); Box, 437 So. 2d at 26
    (Robertson, J., concurring)).
    Without question one accused of a crime is entitled to disclosure from the prosecution of
    "names and addresses of all witnesses in chief proposed to be offered by the prosecution at
    trial." A written request made by the defense is all that is necessary to impose upon the
    prosecution the obligation to make discovery--and to make discovery seasonably.
    Foster, 
    484 So. 2d
     at 1011 (emphasis added) (citing Unif. R. Cir. Ct. Prac. 4.06(1); Morris v. State,
    
    436 So. 2d 1381
    , 1387 (Miss. 1983)).
    ¶82. "We also reiterate to prosecuting attorneys and defense attorneys alike our commitment to the
    proposition that 'justice is more nearly achieved when, well in advance of trial, each side has
    reasonable access to the evidence of the other.'" Moore v. State, 
    536 So. 2d 909
    , 911 (Miss. 1988)
    (quoting Box, 437 So. 2d at 21).
    ¶83. "Discovery, to be sufficient, must be made at a time far enough in advance of trial to give the
    defense a 'meaningful opportunity' to make use of it." Stewart, 512 So. 2d at 892. See also, Turner
    v. State, 
    501 So. 2d 350
     (Miss. 1987); Gray v. State, 
    487 So. 2d 1304
     (Miss. 1986); Henry v. State,
    
    484 So. 2d
     1012 (Miss. 1986); McKinney v. State, 
    482 So. 2d 1129
     (Miss. 1986). "A request is all
    that is necessary." Stewart, 512 So. 2d at 891. "Having received the untimely discovery furnished by
    the State, the defense was entitled to a reasonable opportunity to make use of it. This includes a
    reasonable opportunity to locate and interview newly discovered witnesses, if a continuance was
    necessary to accomplish this, then the defense was entitled to a continuance." Inman v. State, 
    515 So. 2d 1150
    , 1154 (Miss. 1987). A "request to make discovery is sufficient to oblige the prosecution
    to do so." Thomas v. State, 
    488 So. 2d 1343
    , 1344 (Miss. 1986) (citing Foster, 
    484 So. 2d
     at 1011).
    ¶84. Since Hunt was in the dark about any of the prosecution witnesses, presumably until the State
    called them, Hunt's prejudice is great. However, the majority now adds a new requirement to parties
    alleging discovery violations. Now, the majority holds, that the party asserting the violation must
    state that the lack of discovery worked to their detriment. It is not enough for the majority that the
    defense was given a list of seventy-two potential witnesses (not the witnesses the State intended to
    call at trial), fewer then two weeks before the trial, and at trial the defense had no idea whom the
    State intended to call as witnesses until they called them. So now the majority adds the requirement
    that the defense show prejudice when witnesses are called by surprise during trial. The law
    promulgated by the majority would allow for anyone to circumvent Rule 4.06 and not disclose the
    witnesses they intend to call at trial and then claim that since the other party cannot show prejudice
    the violation is well within their right.
    ¶85. Hunt's counsel should have been allowed a reasonable period in which to interview the potential
    witnesses. I cannot say that the attorney was not ambushed or prejudiced by not interviewing the
    witnesses.
    WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION WHEN IT DENIED TINA
    HUNT FUNDS TO EMPLOY AN INVESTIGATOR, DENYING HUNT HER
    CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS?
    ¶86. Hunt made a motion for funds to hire an investigator to interview persons on the State's witness
    list, since the State provided only partial information on thirty anticipated witnesses of the sixty-seven
    to seventy-two witnesses listed by the State. The State acknowledged that several witnesses they
    listed lacked addresses or phone numbers.
    ¶87. On November 21, 1991, when Hunt's counsel motioned for an investigator to interview the
    State's witnesses, he noted he had forty-five to fifty witnesses left to interview, and that he could not
    complete those interviews before the trial began. The trial court denied Hunt's motion and ruled that
    it could not find a sufficient need to justify an investigator.
    ¶88. The standard of review in Mississippi on this issue is as follows: to reverse, the trial court's
    denial of expert assistance must be an abuse of discretion "so egregious as to deny him due process
    and where his trial was thereby rendered fundamentally unfair." Fisher v. City of Eupora, 
    587 So. 2d 878
    , 883 (Miss. 1991). See Johnston v. State, 
    529 So. 2d 577
    , 590 (Miss. 1988).
    ¶89. Hunt did more than present a mere request; her counsel placed in the record the fact that the
    State had sixty-seven to seventy-two witnesses on its potential witness list, and that he had only
    interviewed between sixteen and eighteen witnesses by November 21, 1991, only nine days before
    trial.
    ¶90. The issue dealing with funds for an investigator is troubling since a continuance or an order
    compelling the State to separate from among the witnesses revealed, those who would actually be
    used, would have been all that was necessary. Since the State only called nine witnesses, Hunt could
    have interviewed these witnesses in the nine days it had left before the trial. I understand that the
    State may not have had a firm commitment on the exact witnesses it planned to call for the trial, but
    narrowing down the potential witness list would have resolved the problems that have occurred in
    this case, and Hunt's counsel would not have needed to move for an investigator. Saying that funds
    for an investigator should have been required is vexatious, when the much more expeditious manner
    would have been a continuance or a more accurate witness list. Considering my opinion on the above
    issue, I find that the appropriate action for the trial judge to have taken would have been to grant a
    continuance or order the State to narrow its witness list.
    ¶91. Based on the foregoing, the lower court should have suppressed Hunt's written statement
    because it was the product of an illegal custodial interrogation; one that occurred without the
    presence of counsel after the right to counsel had been invoked. Also, because the trial judge refused
    to grant Hunt a reasonable continuance under the circumstances, this conviction must be reversed
    and the case remanded for a new trial.
    PITTMAN, BANKS AND McRAE, JJ., JOIN THIS OPINION.
    1. Langston's testimony was that he telephoned Tina at the request of her aunt "to check on Tina."
    He called in a legal capacity, but he represented Scott Hindman, one of the co-defendants in this
    crime. (Tr. 153)
    2. . . . police officers are not required to administer Miranda warnings to everyone whom they
    question. Nor is the requirement of warnings to be imposed simply because the questioning takes
    place in the station house, or because the questioned person is one whom the police suspect.
    Miranda warnings are required only where there has been such a restriction of a person's freedom as
    to render him "in custody."
    Moore v. State, 
    344 So. 2d 731
    , 734 (Miss. 1977) (quoting Oregon v. Mathiason, 
    429 U.S. 495
    (1977)).
    3. The fact that an attorney was trying to contact Tina is of no consequence. See Moran v. Burbine,
    
    475 U.S. 412
     (1986).
    4. There is an additional argument which is not specifically addressed as an assignment of error, but is
    nevertheless presented as a paragraph in Tina's brief. Tina states that she was found guilty of
    accessory before the fact to murder, even though the principals to the crime were guilty of
    manslaughter, as part of a plea agreement. Tina objects on these grounds at trial, stating there must
    be a murder in order to have an accomplice to a murder.
    This argument is without merit. See State v. McAllister, 
    366 So. 2d 1340
    , 1343 (La. 1978); see, e.g.,
    Oaks v. People, 
    424 P.2d 115
    , 117 (Colo. 1967); Oates v. State, 
    627 A.2d 555
    , 560 (Md. Ct. Spec.
    App. 1986).