Sandra D. Sewell v. State of Mississippi ( 1993 )


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  •                          IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 93-KA-01396-SCT
    SANDRA D. SEWELL
    v.
    STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                              08/02/93
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                   HON. RICHARD T. WATSON
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                     WILKINSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                        EVERETT T. SANDERS
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                         OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: EDWIN A. SNYDER
    DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                             RONNIE L. HARPER
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                            CRIMINAL - FELONY
    DISPOSITION:                                   CONVICTION AFFIRMED, SENTENCE
    REVERSED AND REMANDED - 10/15/98
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:                                12/16/98
    BEFORE PRATHER, C.J., SMITH AND WALLER, JJ.
    WALLER, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    SUMMARY
    ¶1. This case arises on appeal from the Circuit Court of Wilkinson County. On July 17, 1993, Sandra
    D. Sewell was found guilty of eight counts of voter fraud, having allegedly attested voter forgeries on
    absentee voter applications and ballot envelopes. Sandra Sewell's compiled sentence totaled eight
    years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections and $2,000 in fines.
    ¶2. After a careful review of the record and the briefs in this matter, we affirm the conviction of
    Sandra Sewell. However, finding that the trial judge imposed a sentence upon Sandra Sewell beyond
    what is authorized by the statute, we reverse her sentence and remand her cause to the lower court
    for re-sentencing in accordance with the statute.
    STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
    ¶3.The instant case has its genesis in the 1991 elections in Wilkinson County, in which a large number
    of absentee ballots were cast, resulting in a lengthy investigation by the attorney general's office.
    Indeed, the Circuit Clerk, a veteran of more than twenty-four (24) years in office, testified that he
    "never had as many absentee ballots in the first twenty years as I had the...last four years."
    ¶4. In order to vote an absentee ballot by mail, the voter must obtain an "Application for Absentee
    Elector's Ballot" (ballot application) from the circuit clerk and return the completed application to the
    circuit clerk's office. An "official authorized to administer oaths" must attest to the ballot application
    by the elector, the attestation being the issue in Counts III through VIII. The clerk mails the ballot
    and a ballot envelope to the address indicated on the ballot application, usually within twenty-four
    hours of receiving the completed ballot application. Sometimes the ballot and ballot envelope are
    mailed along with the application to an address provided to the clerk. An "Electors Certificate" is on
    the back of the ballot envelope which must be signed by the voter and attested to, this attestation
    being the issue of counts I and II. When the ballot is returned to the clerk in the ballot envelope, the
    sealed envelope containing the ballot is attached to the ballot application and both are held until such
    time as they are placed into the precinct box and sent to the polling place. Any decision as to the
    sufficiency of the ballot application is made by the poll workers, not the clerk. The ballot envelope is
    opened at the precinct and the absentee ballot mixed with the regular ballots. Therefore, the absentee
    ballot is no longer associated with any particular voter. After the votes are tabulated on election day,
    the precinct boxes containing the ballots are returned to the clerk, and the boxes are sealed and
    stored. These forms and procedures are specified in Mississippi Code Annotated sections 23-15-627,
    23-15-631, 3-25-715 and 23-15-635.
    ¶5. The primary election during this particular election cycle occurred on September 17, 1991,
    followed by the second primary (run-off) on October 8, 1991. The same ballot was used for both
    elections because there was insufficient time for new ballots to be printed. The specific race at issue
    in the instant case was the October 8, 1991, run-off contest between Calvin McFarland ("candidate
    McFarland") and Louis Gaulden, both candidates for supervisor of district one. Candidate
    McFarland, who was seeking re-election and was also convicted of voter fraud(1), lost the election by
    34 votes. According to testimony, candidate McFarland was actively engaged in the absentee
    balloting process, so much so that the deputy circuit clerk described the delivery of ballot applications
    by candidate McFarland as being "in bulk". Candidate McFarland was also the only person to deliver
    to the clerk's office ballot applications which had been attested by Sandra D. Sewell ("Sewell") as a
    notary public.(2)
    ¶6. During the special November, 1992, term of the Circuit Court of Wilkinson County, the grand
    jury returned an indictment against Sewell, charging eight counts of voter fraud in violation of
    Mississippi Code Annotated section 23-15-753, as amended, and the indictment was filed on
    December 4,1992.(3) Counts I and II of the indictment charged that Sewell aided and abetted
    candidate McFarland by attesting to forged signatures on ballot envelopes. Counts III-VIII charged
    that Sewell aided and abetted candidate McFarland by attesting to forged signatures on ballot
    applications. All of the names in question represent registered voters in Wilkinson County supervisor
    district one and all of the documents comprising these eight counts were attested to by Sewell as a
    notary public. The initial trial in March of 1993, ended in mistrial after witness Betty McGraw, also
    indicted for voter fraud, died on the stand. This matter was tried again on July 15 through 17, 1993.
    Counts I and II
    Ballot Envelopes
    Testimony Pertaining to Counts I and II. Gordon McFarland and Minnie McFarland.
    ¶7. The State presented at trial Gordon McFarland, who happens to be the uncle of candidate
    McFarland, who testified that: in September and October of 1991, he was living in New Orleans;
    Minnie McFarland, his wife, was living in Chicago; neither of them ever lived at 3805 Houma
    Boulevard, Metairie, Louisiana, which was listed as their address on the ballot application and
    envelope; he had never applied for an absentee ballot; the signatures purporting to be that of "Gordon
    McFarland" on the ballot application and ballot envelope marked Exhibit S-1 are not his; and, he
    voted at the polls, not by absentee ballot.
    ¶8. Pam Schwartz testified for the State that she was the accounts leasing manager of Camelot
    Apartments, the address of which is 3805 Houma Boulevard, Metairie, Louisiana; and, that she was
    the custodian of the lease and payment records of this apartment complex. According to Schwartz,
    during the period between July 17, 1989, and July 31, 1992, Patricia McFarland (candidate
    McFarland's sister), leased and was the only occupant of apartment A-215.
    ¶9. Frank Hicks(4) ("Hicks"), the State's handwriting expert, testified that he had strong reason to
    believe that Sewell was the writer of the "Sandra D. Sewell" attestation signatures in Exhibits S-1 and
    S-2(5).
    Counts III - VIII
    Ballot Applications
    Testimony Pertaining to Count III. Lisa Brown
    ¶10. Leish "Lisa" Brown, a student residing in Jackson who had worked for candidate McFarland
    during the summer of 1991, testified that she did not sign the ballot application marked Exhibit S-3,
    nor did she authorize anyone else to do so. Further, she testified that she did not know Sewell and
    had never signed her name in the presence of Sewell. According to Brown, she received a ballot and
    signed the ballot envelope, which is part of Exhibit S-3, but she had never requested this ballot.
    ¶11. Hicks testified that he had made a positive identification that candidate McFarland was the
    writer of the"Lisa Brown" signature on the ballot application in Exhibit S-3. Further, he testified he
    had made a positive identification that Sewell was the writer of the "Sandra D. Sewell" attestation
    signature on this exhibit.
    Testimony Pertaining to Count IV: Cassie L. Neyland
    ¶12. Milton Neyland testified for the State that he was the husband of Cassie L. Neyland for some 52
    years and that she suffered from diabetes and poor circulation leading to the amputation of a leg. He
    stated that he was familiar with her handwriting. After examining the "Cassie L. Neyland" signature
    on the ballot application marked Exhibit S-4, he testified that it was not his wife's writing; it was not
    his handwriting; he did not know who wrote the signature; and, he did not know Sewell.
    ¶13. According to Hicks's testimony, he made a positive identification that candidate McFarland was
    the writer of the "Cassie L. Neyland" signature on Exhibit S-4. He also made a positive identification
    that Sewell was the writer of the "Sandra D. Sewell" attestation signature on Exhibit S-4.
    Testimony Pertaining to Counts V and VI. S. P. Turner and Louise Turner.
    ¶14. Willie Turner, the son of Louise and S.P. Turner, testified that his parents were in an "old folks
    home" in Hammond, Louisiana, on September 19, 1991, the day that Louise Turner purportedly
    signed the ballot application marked Exhibit S-5, and the day S.P. Turner purportedly signed the
    ballot application marked Exhibit S-6. According to Willie, Louise Turner did not sign Exhibit S-5
    because she could not write and used an "X" for her signature. Additionally, Willie also declared that
    S.P. Turner did not sign Exhibit S-6 because he could not write and likewise signed with an "X." On
    cross-examination, when Sewell's counsel insinuated that the mark with straight, crossed lines to the
    far left of the signature was S.J. Turner's "X," Willie maintained that "[t]hat's not my father's 'X' . .
    .[h]is hands tremble; he couldn't hardly make an 'X'." Willie testified that he recognized the voter's
    address on the application as his parents. However, he stated that the mailbox had been removed
    shortly after his parents had moved to the nursing home and that no mail was being sent to the
    Wilkinson County address.
    ¶15. Mike Wunnenberg, the administrator of Heritage Manor Nursing Home in Hammond, testified
    that S.P. and Louise Turner had been residents of the nursing home since May 23, 1991, as
    confirmed by Exhibits S-9 and S-10, which were nursing home records for the month of September,
    1991.
    ¶16. Hicks testified that he had made a positive identification that candidate McFarland was the
    writer of the "Louise Turner" signature on Exhibit S-5. Further, he stated that he had made a positive
    identification that Sewell was the writer of the "Sandra D. Sewell" attestation signature on Exhibit S-
    5. Additionally, Hicks maintained that he had strong reason to believe that candidate McFarland was
    the writer of the "S.P. Turner" signature on Exhibit S-6. Hicks also declared that he had made a
    positive identification that Sewell was the writer of the "Sandra D. Sewell" attestation signature on
    Exhibit S-6.
    Testimony Pertaining to Count VII. Eric R. Stewart.
    ¶17. Eric Reshon Stewart, who had once lived on the same street as candidate McFarland, testified,
    after examining the "Eric R. Stewart" signature on the ballot application marked Exhibit S-7, that he
    did not sign the ballot application; he did not authorize anyone else to sign it; he does not know
    Sewell; and, he has never signed any document in her presence nor asked her to attest to any such
    document. He testified that the address on the application was his address in September, 1991,
    except that "P.O. Box 364" was not part of his address.
    ¶18. Hicks testified that he had a strong reason to believe that candidate McFarland was the writer of
    the "Eric R. Stewart" signature on Exhibit S-7 and further stated that he had made a positive
    identification that Sewell was the writer of the "Sandra D. Sewell" attestation signature on Exhibit S-
    7.
    Testimony Pertaining to Count VIII. Lottie James.
    ¶19. Wevlyn James, the Wilkinson County Tax Assessor/Collector, and one of the persons indicted
    for vote fraud who pleaded guilty to the charges, testified that Lottie James was her grandmother.
    According to Wevlyn, her grandmother, who passed away before the trial, was living in New Orleans
    with her daughter during September and October of 1991. Wevlyn stated that she was familiar with
    Lottie's handwriting, and after examining Exhibit S-8, testified that the signature on the ballot
    application and the signature on the ballot envelope, not involved in this count, were not Lottie's
    signatures. Wevlyn testified that, shortly before the October 8th election, she received a telephone call
    from candidate McFarland, who asked if he could have a ballot sent out for Lottie. According to
    Wevlyn, a ballot application was then mailed to her parent's home, which is the address on the
    application. Thereafter, Wevlyn stated that she took the ballot and ballot envelope and put them,
    unmarked and unsigned, in candidate McFarland's car. She testified that she had not seen the ballot
    application at any time during these events and did not know who signed it.
    ¶20. Hicks testified that he had made a positive identification that Calvin McFarland was the writer of
    the "Lottie James" signatures on both the ballot application in Exhibit S-8 and the ballot envelope,
    and that he had made a positive identification that Sewell was the writer of the "Sandra D. Sewell"
    attestation signature on the ballot application in Exhibit S-8.
    ¶21. On July 17, 1993, the jury found Sewell guilty on all eight counts of vote fraud, deliberating less
    than one and one-half hours. On August 2, 1993, the court sentenced Sewell on Count I to five years
    and a $1,000 fine and on Count II to five years and $1,000 fine with two years suspended and Count
    II to run consecutively to Count I, with the total sentence under Counts I and II being eight years and
    $2,000 in fines. The sentences for Counts III through VIII were five years on each count, to run
    concurrently with Counts I and II.
    ¶22. Sewell, on August 13, 1993, filed a Motion for New Trial and/or Judgment Notwithstanding the
    Verdict. A hearing on the motion was held on October 25, 1993. The judge denied the motion. At
    that time, Sewell made an Ore Tenus Motion to reduce her sentence and the judge, likewise, denied
    that motion.
    ¶23. On December 9, 1993, Sewell filed her Notice of Appeal and a Designation of Record.
    DISCUSSION OF THE LAW
    ¶24. Sewell has advanced numerous assignments of error, only four of which warrant our discussion
    here.
    I. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT DEPRIVED DEFENDANT OF HER
    CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO DUE PROCESS IN VIOLATION OF THE
    FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT OF THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION AND
    ARTICLE 3, SECTION 14 OF THE MISSISSIPPI CONSTITUTION BY THE
    ARBITRARY JURY SELECTION PROCESS.
    ¶25. In this assignment of error, Sewell alleges that jury selection procedure was arbitrary and that
    the trial court misapplied the law regarding jury selection, resulting in the violation of her due process
    rights as guaranteed by the constitutions of the United States and the State of Mississippi. The crux
    of this assignment of error is that the trial court arbitrarily granted and denied both challenges for
    cause and peremptory challenges to Sewell's detriment.
    ¶26. By way of background for the discussion of jury selection, infra, only one of the fourteen
    persons originally indicted on charges stemming from vote fraud was white, that being Betty
    McGraw, who died on the witness stand in Sewell's earlier trial; the remainder were black.
    Additionally, 37 of the 53 potential jurors (almost 70%) on the venire were black. The ultimate racial
    makeup of the jury was 11 blacks and 1 white, with a black alternate and a white alternate.
    A. WHETHER THE COURT WAS ARBITRARY IN PERMITTING AND DENYING
    CHALLENGES FOR CAUSE.
    ¶27. Sewell asserts that the trial court was arbitrary in the jury selection process by denying her for
    cause challenges of jurors Phyllis Jeter and Phyllis Green, who were white, while granting the State's
    for cause challenges of juror Cherry Dunbar, a black, for the same or similar reasons. Sewell's
    argument is entirely fact-driven, as she has cited no supporting authority.
    ¶28. The method of selecting a jury is within the sound discretion of the trial judge, except in
    circumstances where the method is set by statute. Peters v. State, 
    314 So. 2d 724
    , 728-29 (Miss.)
    cert. denied, 423 U.S. 1019(1975). Also, the two jurors in question were ultimately removed by
    peremptory strikes exercised by Sewell. This Court has held that no reversible error results when the
    trial court fails to sustain a challenge for cause, and the juror(s) at issue is ultimately excused with a
    peremptory challenge. Lester v. State, 
    692 So. 2d 755
    , 790-93 (Miss.1997); see also Holland v.
    State, 
    705 So. 2d 307
    , 338 (Miss.1997).
    ¶29. For these reasons, we find that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in his grant or denial
    of challenges for cause; and, therefore, did not abridge Sewell's due process rights under the United
    States and Mississippi Constitutions.
    B. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT WAS ARBITRARY IN ITS APPLICATION OF
    THE LAW ON PEREMPTORY CHALLENGES.
    ¶30. Sewell contends that the trial court improperly applied our law regarding peremptory challenges
    by applying disparate standards to the Batson inquiry requested by both parties. She argues that the
    judge required her to justify her peremptory challenges while not requiring the State to justify its
    peremptory challenges under what she perceives to be similar uses of the challenges. The inquiry with
    regard to this assignment of error requires a review of the trial court's application of our Batson law.
    ¶31. The availability of peremptory challenges is not a matter of constitutional right, but the use of
    such challenges, when available, must be constitutional. The genesis of current jurisprudence
    regarding peremptory challenges is Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    (1986). In Batson, the United
    States Supreme Court held that a prospective juror may not be struck by the prosecution in a criminal
    case simply because that juror is black. Batson protection has been extended to strikes exercised by
    the defense, as in the instant case. Georgia v. McCollum, 
    505 U.S. 42
    (1992); Griffin v. State, 
    610 So. 2d 354
    , 356 (Miss. 1992).
    ¶32. The Supreme Court recently outlined the Batson analysis in Hernandez v. New York:
    First, the [opponent of the strike] must make a prima facie showing that the [proponent] has
    exercised peremptory challenges on the basis of race. Second, if the requisite showing has been
    made, the burden shifts to the [opponent] to articulate a race-neutral explanation for striking the
    jurors in question. Finally the trial court must determine whether the [proponent] has carried his
    burden of proving purposeful discrimination.
    Hernandez v. New York, 
    500 U.S. 352
    , 358-59 (1991)(citations omitted).
    ¶33. In the case sub judice, the State's first tender to Sewell was twelve jurors, three whites and nine
    blacks. The State exercised peremptory challenges on two of this panel, both black males. Sewell
    used five strikes on this panel, striking two blacks and three whites. Based upon Sewell's attempt to
    strike, for cause, 11 of the 14 whites on the venire, and the exercise of 3 of her peremptory strikes to
    remove every white potential juror on the tendered panel, the State raised a Batson challenge,
    requesting that Sewell justify the use of her peremptory challenges. Sewell raised her own Batson
    challenge, which the State characterized as a "retaliation-Batson" claim, and which the State
    contended was raised too late, as Sewell did not raise the claim at the time the panel was tendered.
    The trial judge, at that time, found that Sewell had not demonstrated that the State had engaged in a
    pattern of discrimination because the two blacks that the State had struck were replaced on the panel
    by two blacks. The court then required Sewell to go forward with her race-neutral reasons for her
    peremptory challenges and found her reasons to be acceptable.
    ¶34. The second panel tendered by the prosecution included the next five jurors on the list, with no
    State strike having been made. The first of these, prospective juror Janet Whitaker, was white and the
    remaining four were black. Sewell then struck the only white juror on the tendered panel, that being
    Whitaker. The State asked for, and the court required, Sewell to state a race-neutral reason for the
    challenge. Sewell stated that "we adopt the reasons that were articulated in our challenge for cause,"
    adding that she was one of the jurors who would not "look me in the eye when I was interrogating
    them." The reasons put forth by Sewell during the for cause phase of jury selection were that "[h]er
    husband is in law enforcement; he's a game warden, and I might also add that she's employed by
    Wilkinson Christian Academy.... It's a segregated institution." With respect to Sewell's for cause
    challenge related to Whitaker's employment by a "segregated institution", the court had earlier
    responded, "No, Sir, it's not; I happen to know. I'll dispute you on the record on that; they publish in
    the paper; that's not cause; I'm not going to grant that challenge." As to the peremptory objection, the
    trial judge found "no reason in the world for excusing this juror", and that Sewell's attempted
    removal of all whites constituted a pattern of racial discrimination. He then reinstated Whitaker and
    allowed Sewell to use her sixth strike on another juror.
    ¶35. In the instant case, the State satisfied the first prong of the three step analysis by showing that
    Sewell used her peremptory strikes to strike every white on the panels tendered, which gives rise to a
    reasonable inference of purposeful discrimination. 
    Batson, 476 U.S. at 94
    ("the totality of the
    relevant facts gives rise to an inference of discriminatory purpose"). Furthermore, it is also clear that
    Sewell offered appropriately facially race neutral reasons for exercising the strike, thus satisfying step
    two of Batson. The disposition of this issue, therefore, turns on whether the trial judge abused his
    discretion in his finding that Sewell's race-neutral reasons as to juror Whitaker were pre-textual, the
    so named third prong of Batson.
    ¶36. This step in the analysis requires the trial court to determine if the opponent of the strike has
    carried his overall burden of proving purposeful discrimination. 
    Hernandez, 500 U.S. at 359
    .
    Determination of pretext at prong three turns on several specific findings similar to those at step one.
    Stewart v. State, 
    662 So. 2d 522
    , 559 (Miss. 1995). Additionally, this Court has stated that the
    relative strength of the prima facie case of purposeful discrimination will often influence this inquiry.
    Mack v. State, 
    650 So. 2d 1289
    , 1298 (Miss. 1994), cert denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 214
    (1995).
    ¶37. Furthermore, this Court accords great deference to the trial court in determining whether the
    offered explanation under the unique circumstances of the case is truly a race-neutral reason. Stewart
    v. State, 
    662 So. 2d 552
    , 558 (Miss. 1995). This Court will not reverse a trial judge's factual findings
    regarding this issue "unless they appear clearly erroneous or against the overwhelming weight of the
    evidence." 
    Id. (quoting Lockett v.
    State, 517 So. 2d 1346,1350 (Miss. 1987)).
    ¶38. In the instant case, Sewell exercised peremptory strikes against every white on the panels
    tendered by the State. The trial judge had ample evidence to determine that the reasons for objecting
    to Whitaker were pre-textual and we find that this determination is supported by the record.
    ¶39. As to Sewell's retaliation Batson claim regarding the State's use of its peremptory challenges,
    the trial judge found that there was no pattern of purposeful discrimination. The court noted that the
    two jurors challenged by the State were replaced on the panel by two blacks, thereby mitigating
    against a pattern of racial discrimination. Beyond that, Sewell tardily raised her Batson challenge. We
    cannot say that the trial judge abused his discretion finding that no pattern of racial discrimination
    was evident in the State's exercise of its peremptory challenges.
    ¶40. As the 
    discussion, supra
    , demonstrates, the trial judge applied our Batson law properly to both
    Sewell and the State, and did not abuse his discretion. Therefore, Sewell's assertion that the trial
    judge arbitrarily applied our Batson law is not supported by the record.
    ¶41. Sewell further asserts that her due process rights were abridged by the refusal to allow her the
    opportunity to establish that juror Whitaker, who had been the subject of an unsuccessful peremptory
    challenge as 
    discussed, supra
    , had not been truthful during the questioning of the venire. During voir
    dire, the court and later Sewell, asked if any of the potential jurors or anyone related by blood or
    marriage to the potential jurors had written letters to the Attorney General or other officials
    expressing an opinion concerning voter fraud in Wilkinson County, and Whitaker did not indicate
    that she did.
    ¶42. Sewell discovered from a review of the letters produced by the State, apparently after the trial, a
    letter Whitaker's husband had written to the Attorney General regarding the issue of vote fraud "in
    the recent Wilkinson County Sheriff's race/election and subsequent trial." On Sewell's motion for a
    new trial, Whitaker's husband, Eli, testified that his wife was unaware that he had written that letter.
    The trial judge refused to allow juror Whitaker to testify regarding her knowledge of the letter,
    relying on the results of the rather exhaustive examination during voir dire on that issue to form his
    decision as to Sewell's motion for a new trial.
    ¶43. In Odom v. State, this Court expounded the test for determining whether a new trial should be
    granted upon a showing that a juror wrongfully withheld information during voir dire to the prejudice
    of the defendant:
    Therefore, we hold that where, as here, a prospective juror in a criminal case fails to respond to
    a relevant, direct, and unambiguous question presented by defense counsel on voir dire,
    although having knowledge of the information sought to be elicited, the trial court should, upon
    motion for a new trial, determine whether the question propounded to the juror was (1) relevant
    to the voir dire examination; (2) whether it was unambiguous; and (3) whether the juror had
    substantial knowledge of the information sought to be elicited. If the trial court's determination
    of these inquiries is in the affirmative, the court should then determine if prejudice to the
    defendant in selecting the jury reasonably could be inferred from the juror's failure to respond. If
    prejudice reasonably could be inferred, then a new trial should be ordered.
    Odom v. State, 
    355 So. 2d 1381
    , 1383 (Miss. 1978).
    ¶44. This Court has also made clear that no precise formula exists for answering these three
    questions, but rather the trial court must make an ad hoc determination based on the facts before it.
    Odom v. 
    State, 355 So. 2d at 1383
    .
    It is, of course, a judicial question as to whether a jury is fair and impartial and the court's
    judgment will not be disturbed unless it appears clearly that it is wrong....[N]o firm, unbending
    rule can be laid down that would control every situation that might arise on the voir dire of
    prospective jurors. Therefore, each case must be decided on an ad hoc basis considering the
    facts then before the court.
    
    Id. Accord Brown v.
    State, 
    529 So. 2d 537
    , 539 (Miss. 1988); Logan v. State, 
    465 So. 2d 339
    , 340
    (Miss. 1985); Tolbert v. State, 
    511 So. 2d 1368
    , 1377 (Miss. 1987). Understandably, such a fact
    intensive inquiry results in a very deferential standard of review, at least with respect to the question
    of whether each discrete part of Odom is satisfied, thus giving rise to presumptive prejudice. See
    Lewis v. State, 
    580 So. 2d 1279
    , 1283 (Miss. 1991). Here, the question of whether Whitaker or her
    husband had written a letter was obviously relevant and unambiguous, and the critical inquiry was
    whether Whitaker had "substantial knowledge" that her husband wrote the letter.
    ¶45. Juror Whitaker was under oath when she was interrogated during voir dire. Her husband, Eli,
    was under oath when he testified. As the trial judge stated:
    The Court clearly recalls the voir dire of each and every juror as to their knowledge of this case.
    The Court recalls that there were four white jurors on the potential panel; the Court allowed the
    attorney for the defendant to challenge three out of the four; the Court found no validity
    whatsoever to the challenge by counsel for the defendant, Mr. Sanders, in regard to Mrs.
    Whitaker. The Court recalls that Mrs. Whitaker either did not answer or did answer in the
    negative when I asked whether or not she or any members of her family had written letters.
    Now, we have before us a statement that Mr. Whitaker who took the witness stand and testified
    under oath, that he did in fact write a letter to the Attorney General of the State of Mississippi,
    but that his wife had no knowledge whatsoever of his having done so to the best of his
    knowledge.
    ¶46. As the foregoing clearly shows, the judge had ample evidence from which to conclude that
    Whitaker had no knowledge of the letter her husband wrote. Based upon the abuse of discretion
    standard of review 
    articulated, supra
    , we find that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion by not
    allowing juror Whitaker to testify in Sewell's motion for a new trial and that the judge was within his
    discretion to determine that the results of the extensive voir dire confirms Whitaker's lack of
    "substantial knowledge" that her husband had written the letter.
    ¶47. This assignment of error is without merit.
    II. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR IN
    FAILING AND/OR REFUSING TO FULLY INSTRUCT THE JURY ON THE LAW.
    ¶48. Sewell argues that the trial court's instructions to the jurors, specifically instructions S-1 through
    S-8, were improperly granted in that they were unsupported by credible evidence. The crux of her
    argument revolves around the trial judge's admission of Exhibit S-18 into evidence, which were
    various orders taken from the minutes of the Chancery Clerk's office that were apparently signed and
    presented by Sewell as attorney for the Department of Human Services. Sewell contends that the
    exemplars in Exhibit S-18 were indispensable to Frank Hicks in forming opinions as to the writer of
    the attesting witness' signatures on the ballot applications and the ballot envelopes. Sewell claims that
    the signatures in S-18 were not authenticated since no one saw her sign them. Therefore they were
    improperly admitted into evidence, thereby resulting in insufficient evidence upon which to base
    instructions S-1 through S-8.
    ¶49. Although this issue is framed by Sewell as an improper jury instruction, we will treat this
    assignment of error as an evidentiary question. If Exhibit S-18 was properly admitted into evidence,
    then the trial judge's jury instructions S-1 through S-8 were supported by an abundance of credible
    evidence. If Exhibit S-18 was not properly admitted into evidence, the jury instructions were still
    proper because there remained sufficient testimony and evidence to allow the jury to find that Sewell
    did indeed make the attesting signatures to the ballot applications and ballot envelopes.
    ¶50. As such, this Court reviews admission of evidence for an abuse of discretion. Butler v. State,
    
    592 So. 2d 983
    , 986 (Miss. 1991); Stromas v. State, 
    618 So. 2d 116
    , 119 (Miss. 1993). "Unless the
    trial judge's discretion is so abused as to be prejudicial to the accused, this Court will not reverse his
    ruling." Parker v. State, 
    606 So. 2d 1132
    , 1136 (Miss. 1992); Shearer v. State, 
    423 So. 2d 824
    , 826
    (Miss.1982) (citing Page v. State, 
    295 So. 2d 279
    (Miss.1974)). The discretion of the trial judge must
    be exercised within the boundaries of the Mississippi Rules of Evidence. Johnston v. State, 
    567 So. 2d 237
    , 238 (Miss. 1990). Evidentiary rulings are affirmed unless they affect a substantial right of
    the complaining party. Ivy v. State, 
    641 So. 2d 15
    , 18 (Miss. 1994); Miss.R.Evid. 103(a).
    ¶51. The signature "Sandra D. Sewell" appears on the attesting witness line on the ballot envelopes
    marked Exhibits S-1 and S-2, the heart of Counts I and II. The signature "Sandra D. Sewell" appears
    on the attesting witness line on the ballot applications marked exhibits S-3 through S-8, the focus of
    Counts III-VIII. The exhibit numbers correspond to the count numbers -- S-1 the core of Count I, S-
    2 the focus of Count two, etc.
    ¶52. Frank Hicks, the State's handwriting expert, testified as to the opinions a handwriting expert can
    give when examining a known exemplar and a questioned writing:
    There are two conclusive opinions that can be given. One is that the writing has been identified
    as having been prepared by the subject who prepared the known writing. And the other is an
    elimination where the examiner says that the subject did not prepare the questioned writing. In
    between these two extremes are a number of opinions we refer to as inconclusive opinions. If
    you consider the opinions that can be given to be a straight line, on one end you've an
    identification; on the other end you've got an elimination. Right in the middle you've got the no
    opinion where there's for some reason not enough evidence to warrant the formation of any
    opinion at all. Proceeding from this point toward identification, there are three inconclusive
    opinions. The weakest is that there is some reason to believe that this subject prepared the
    questioned writing. The stronger opinion is that there is reason to believe that the subject
    prepared the questioned writing. And then just shy of an identification is the opinion that there
    is strong reason to believe that the subject prepared the questioned writing. Then there are
    similar opinions going the other direction from the middle of the line toward elimination; and
    those opinions are some reason to doubt, reason to doubt, strong reason to doubt, and then the
    elimination.
    ¶53. Hicks testified that the "strong reason to believe" opinion was "as close as you can get to an
    identification without actually being able to make an identification." Even when the expert's opinion
    does not serve to identify or eliminate a particular writer as the source of questioned writing, that
    opinion is helpful to the trier of fact because "[a]n expert opinion regarding handwriting need not be
    based upon absolute certainty in order to be admissible." United States v. Herrera, 
    832 F.2d 833
    ,
    837 (4th Cir. 1987).
    ¶54. In order for "Sandra D. Sewell" signatures to be authenticated by comparison, as allowed by
    Miss.R.Evid. 901(b)(3), state investigator Jim Gilliland ("Gilliland") obtained handwriting samples, or
    exemplars, from Sewell on June 30, 1992, pursuant to court authorization. Sewell's exemplars were
    entered into evidence as composite Exhibit S-16.
    ¶55. After examination of the requested exemplars collected by Gilliland of Sewell in Exhibit S-16,
    Hicks then asked for additional collected exemplars, since it might then be possible to form a more
    conclusive opinion. Warren Emfinger went to the Wilkinson County Chancery Clerk's office and
    made copies of court documents from the Chancery Court minutes bearing the signature "Sandra D.
    Sewell," compared the copies with the original, and produced these compared copies(6) at trial where
    they were admitted into evidence as Exhibit S-18.
    ¶56. Hicks conducted additional examinations of the "Sandra D. Sewell" signatures in Exhibits S-1
    through S-8 using both the requested samples in Exhibit S-16 and the collected exemplars in Exhibit
    S-18. He upgraded his opinion by positively identifying the writer of the standards in Exhibits S-16
    and S-18 (Sewell) as the writer of the questioned attestation signatures in Exhibits S-3 through S-8
    (Sewell). Hicks's original opinion that there was a strong reason to believe that the writer of the S-16
    exemplars was the writer of the questioned "Sandra D. Sewell" signatures in Exhibits S-1 and S-2
    was unchanged after his additional comparison of the collected exemplars in Exhibit S-18.
    ¶57. Miss.R.Evid. 901 governs the authentication requirements for evidence. "The requirement for
    authentication is . . . satisfied by evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is
    what its proponent claims." Miss.R.Evid. 901(a). Additionally, "[c]omparison by the trier of fact or
    by expert witnesses with specimens which have been authenticated" is permitted for authentication.
    Miss.R.Evid. 901(b)(3). "A person's handwriting may be authenticated by a handwriting expert or by
    a lay witness with a prior familiarity with that person's handwriting." Hentz v. State, 
    542 So. 2d 914
    ,
    917 (Miss. 1989).
    ¶58. In the instant case, the trial judge was well within his discretion in admitting Exhibit S-18 into
    evidence. First, the collected writings comprising Exhibit S-18 were compared with other writings
    properly authenticated, i.e.,the requested samples in Exhibit S-16 obtained by Gilliland pursuant to
    court order. He testified that he was present when she signed her name to the cards which were
    admitted as Exhibit S-16. Hicks compared the two writings and concluded that they were written by
    the same person. This satisfies the requirement of authentication set forth by Miss.R.Evid. 901(b)(3)
    and Hentz.
    ¶59. Second, the Miss.R.Evid. permits the trier of fact, in this case, the jury, to compare specimens
    with authenticated specimens for determination of their authenticity. See United States v. Fields, 
    923 F.2d 358
    (5th Cir. 1991), overruled on other grounds by United States v. Lambert, 
    984 F.2d 658
    (5th Cir. 1993).. Here, the writings in Exhibits S-16 and S-18 were admitted for the jury to compare
    with the questioned signatures. Beyond those writings, Sewell's signature appears on her
    "Application for Notary Public Commission," and this document was available for the jurors'
    comparison as Exhibit S-17.
    ¶60. Third, the State cites a liberal preference for admission of evidence as the approach for
    authentication and identification under Rule 901(a) on the federal level, after which our rule is
    patterned. "[T]here need be only a prima facie showing, to the court, of authenticity, not a full
    argument on admissibility. Once a prima facie case is made, the evidence goes to the jury and it is the
    jury who will ultimately determine the authenticity of the evidence, not the court. The only
    requirement is that there has been substantial evidence from which they could infer that the document
    was authentic." United States v. McGlory, 
    968 F.2d 309
    , 328-29 (3rd Cir. 1992)(quoting Link v.
    Mercedes Benz of North America, 
    788 F.2d 918
    , 928 (3rd Cir. 1986)).
    ¶61. In the instant case, the documents with Sewell's signature which comprise Exhibit S-18 were
    taken from the minutes of the Chancery Court. Each of the documents were signed "Sandra D.
    Sewell" as the attorney for the Department of Human Services. An attorney signature line appears on
    each order and judgment, preceded by either "Presented to the Court:", or "Prepared for the Court
    By:", or "Approved as to Form." Kenny Middleton, a self employed attorney who also serves as
    Mayor of Fayette, testified that these sections are customarily used by the attorney who presents the
    document to the court. Jimmy Reese, a life-long resident of Wilkinson County, testified that Sewell
    served as attorney for the Department of Human Services during the period when these orders and
    judgments were signed. We find that the judge was well within his discretion in the admission into
    evidence of Exhibit S-18.
    ¶62. Based on the foregoing discussion, we find that there was indeed sufficient evidence in the
    record to support the granting of jury instructions S-1 through S-8. This assignment of error is
    without merit.
    III. WHETHER THE STATE VIOLATED THE CRIMINAL RULES OF DISCOVERY.
    ¶63. Sewell argues that the State violated the criminal rules of discovery because letters written to
    various state officials by citizens of Wilkinson County concerning the alleged voter fraud in the
    county were not produced before trial. She contends that as a result she was denied an impartial and
    fair trial.
    ¶64. Rule 4.06(a)(5) and (i) of the Uniform Criminal Rules of Circuit Court Practice ("UCRCCP")
    states, in relevant part:
    (a) Upon written request by the defendant, the prosecution shall disclose to each defendant or
    to his or her attorney, and permit him or her to inspect, copy, test, and photograph, without the
    necessity of court order, the following which is in the possession, custody, or control of the
    State, or the existence of which is known, or by the exercise of due diligence may become
    known, to the prosecution:
    (5) Exhibit any physical evidence and photographs relevant to the case or which may be offered
    into evidence; and
    ***
    (i) If at any time prior to trial it is brought to the attention of the court that a party has failed to
    comply with an applicable discovery rule, request, or an order issued pursuant thereto, the court
    may order such party to permit the discovery of material and information not previously
    disclosed, grant a continuance, or enter such order as it deems just under the circumstances.
    This rule has been brought forward in the Uniform Circuit and County Court Rules ("URCCC") as
    rule 9.04(A).
    ¶65. In the instant case Sewell served a Motion for Production on June 28, 1993, prior to the trial set
    for July 15, 1993. The motion requested
    Any and all letters, correspondence and other documents or things, oral or written, which are in
    the custody and control of the Attorney General or his staff and employees, the Secretary of
    State, his staff or employees, the Commissioner of Public Safety, his staff or employees, the
    Governor, his staff or employees, the Speaker of the House, his staff or employees relating to
    complaints or comments on the September, 1992 [sic 1991] First Democratic Primary Election
    and the October, 1992 [sic 1991] Second Democratic Primary Election in Wilkinson County,
    Mississippi.
    On the first day of trial, prior to voir dire, in the midst of a number of Sewell initiated pre-trial
    motions, Sewell moved for a continuance based upon her contention that the State had not responded
    to her motion for production.
    ¶66. The State asserted that Sewell was told that the letters she requested were available for
    inspection stating "when I was here the last time, I told you I had those for you and they were
    available to you; and I've got them this morning, and they're available to you," and further maintained
    that the State did not receive the motion in a timely fashion. The State, in its brief, contended that
    these letters were available to Sewell in the first trial, which ended in a mistrial, and some were
    placed into evidence at that trial. Sewell claimed that the letters were never produced to her and that
    she was only provided with this information on the morning of the trial. Additionally, the State
    claimed that the documents requested are not covered by UCRCCP 4.06 (brought forward in
    URCCC 9.04(A)), arguing that the items requested by Sewell are not discoverable for purposes of
    conducting voir dire. The trial judge ordered that Sewell have access to copies of those 119 letters.
    The trial judge then overruled Sewell's motion for a continuance and proceeded with voir dire.
    ¶67. Sewell argues that the lack of access to those letters deprived her of needed information for voir
    dire and additional ammunition in the exercise of her for cause and peremptory challenges. Sewell
    claims that she would have been better equipped to challenge Juror Janet Whitaker, 
    discussed supra
    in Issue I-B. As a result of the State's late production of the letters, Sewell asserts that she did not
    have a "meaningful opportunity" to review the material.
    ¶68. Even if Sewell's account of the events 
    transpiring, supra
    , is accepted, her argument fails. If the
    letters requested by Sewell are, indeed, covered by UCRCCP 4.06, and the existence of, as well as
    the opportunity to inspect, said letters, then Sewell failed to follow the procedure outlined in the
    UCRCCP by failing to bring to the attention of the court the State's failure to respond to her motion
    to produce the letters UCRCCP 4.06 (i), as Sewell brought this to the court's attention only on the
    day of the trial. The State argues that, under Lambert v. State, 
    518 So. 2d 621
    , 623 (Miss. 1987),
    Sewell was under a duty to bring the motion to the attention of the court and obtain a ruling upon it.
    Otherwise, under Billot v. State, 
    445 So. 2d 455
    , 456 (Miss. 1984), such would be waived.
    Therefore, Sewell was remiss in her duty in not bringing this matter to the court's attention until the
    day of the trial.
    ¶69. Sewell argues that under Jenkins v. State, 
    607 So. 2d 1171
    (Miss. 1992) she should have been
    given an opportunity to review the letters; and therefore, reversal is required due to the State's failure
    to produce the letters and her lack of opportunity to review the letters prior to voir dire. However,
    the trial judge cured any disadvantage to Sewell's voir dire interrogation by allowing her to question
    the jurors as to whether any of them had written, or was related to anyone who had written, letters
    regarding the said elections. As discussed in Issue 
    I-B, supra
    , Juror Janet Whitaker, according to her
    answers in voir dire and her husband's testimony in the hearing regarding Sewell's motion for a new
    trial, was not aware of the letter her husband had written to the Attorney General. Absent proof of
    misrepresentation, the trial judge observed voir dire and Eli Whitaker's testimony and judged their
    responses to be credible, as is his province.
    ¶70. The responsibility for Sewell's failure to have timely access to the letters is laid squarely at her
    feet. First, the State met its obligation under UCRCCP 4.06 by disclosing and making available to
    Sewell the letters she requested and apparently would have done so earlier had the request been
    made. Second, Sewell filed her discovery motion with reference to such letters two weeks before
    trial. She was aware that such letters existed at the first trial held in the previous March. To delay a
    motion for the discovery of such letters until June is risky and borders on dangerous. Third, she did
    not press the discovery motion by making the trial court aware of this matter until the day of trial.
    Fourth, Sewell did not bring Whitaker's letter to the judge's attention until her motion for a new trial.
    She received the approximately 119 letters on the first day of trial. Had she brought the letter to the
    attention of the judge during the trial, he would have had the opportunity to replace Whitaker with an
    alternate juror, as he did in Sewell's earlier trial. We cannot hold a trial judge in error when he was
    not given the opportunity to correct such during the trial. See Foster v. State, 
    687 So. 2d 1124
    , 1136
    (Miss. 1996); Touart v. Johnston, 
    656 So. 2d 318
    , 321 (Miss.1995). We cannot say that a trial judge
    abused his discretion in not continuing the trial under the circumstances. This assignment of error is
    without merit.
    IV. WHETHER THE COURT ERRED IN IMPOSING AN ILLEGAL SENTENCE
    UPON APPELLANT.
    ¶71. Sewell contends that a person convicted and sentenced pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated
    section 23-15-753 shall be sentenced for either a misdemeanor or a felony, depending upon the
    sentence actually imposed. That section provides maximum sentences of not more than one year in
    the county jail and a $5,000 fine, or not more than five years in the penitentiary. Miss. Code. Ann. §
    23-15-753 (1990). On August 2, 1993, the court sentenced Sewell on Count I to five years and a $1,
    000 fine and on Count II to five years and $1,000 fine with two years suspended and Count II to run
    consecutively with Count I, with the total sentence under Counts I and II being eight years and $2,
    000 in fines. The sentences for Counts III through VIII were five years on each count, to run
    concurrently with Counts I and II.
    ¶72. The core of Sewell's argument is that the statute does not allow for the imposition of a fine and
    a term of years in the penitentiary on Counts I and II and contends that such is an illegal sentence
    requiring reversal. Sewell's argument is well taken. The judge did not have the statutory authority to
    both sentence her to a term of years in the penitentiary and to fine her on Counts I and II. This Court
    has no way to discern which sentence the trial judge intended. Sewell then is entitled to relief, as no
    court may adjudge and sentence a defendant beyond its statutory authority to do so. See Luckett v.
    State, 
    582 So. 2d 428
    , 430 (Miss.1991) (stating that a sentence beyond the statutory prescription is a
    fundamental violation of due process); Lanier v. State, 
    635 So. 2d 813
    , 816 (Miss.1994) (noting that
    a sentence beyond the statutory prescription is unenforceable). Therefore, we reverse Sewell's
    sentence and remand her cause to the lower court for re-sentencing.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶73. The crime of which Sandra Sewell has been convicted is serious and goes to the heart of our
    election process. Moreover, the voter fraud was conducted through the commission of a notary
    public and by a licensed attorney, an officer of the court. The actions of which Sewell is convicted
    shatter the public's faith and trust in our electoral system and cannot go unpunished. In response to
    her conviction and sentencing, Sewell has raised a host of issues which, taken as a whole, express her
    belief that she did not receive a fair trial. The errors she cites are without merit, save her assignment
    of error as to sentencing. As such, we affirm Sewell's conviction. However, because the trial judge
    sentenced Sewell beyond what is statutorily authorized, we reverse and remand for the sole purpose
    of re-sentencing of the convictions under Counts I and II within the statutory framework.
    ¶74. CONVICTION OF EIGHT COUNTS OF VOTER FRAUD AFFIRMED. REVERSED
    AND REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING OF THE CONVICTIONS UNDER COUNTS I
    AND II.
    PRATHER, C.J., SULLIVAN AND PITTMAN, P.JJ., ROBERTS, SMITH AND MILLS, JJ.,
    CONCUR. BANKS, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY
    McRAE, J.
    BANKS, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
    ¶75. Because I disagree with the majority concerning the handling of Batson and juror Whitaker, I
    dissent.
    ¶76. Having a husband in law enforcement has been referred to as a per se race neutral reason for
    exclusion in a criminal case. See Lockett v. State, 
    517 So. 2d 1346
    , 1352 (Miss. 1987). As far as I can
    tell, that fact is unrebutted and I have not seen in the record where it was argued that others similarly
    situated were not stricken. The trial court jumped on the "by the way" assertion that she was
    employed by a segregated institution and, relying on a newspaper ad, suggested that this was not so.
    He never addressed the other reasons proffered, including law enforcement relative and eye contact.
    ¶77. The State asserts that association with a "segregated" institution is a race-based criteria. I
    disagree. The analogy to Alcorn is not an apt one. Alcorn is a state institution open to all by court
    decree. While there was no extended discussion of the matter, I think that it is clear -- as a matter of
    our history -- that private elementary and secondary academies were formed in the 1960's and 1970's
    to avoid the effect of public school desegregation. In recent years, some have admitted blacks and
    more have expressed an open door policy. The expressed open door policy, however, is or may be in
    response to the fact that the failure to do so deprives the institution of tax-exempt status. Such
    institution may remain, as a matter of fact, segregated by affirmative choice. We do not have enough
    facts to determine whether the academy in question was ever or is now a "segregated" institution.
    Our history suggests that it may in fact be, and to my mind's eye, the judge's notice of a newspaper ad
    was not sufficient to conclusively establish that it is not or make any other finding of fact of
    consequence to the bona fides of the proffered reason.
    ¶78. Moreover, and more importantly, that issue is not central to the defendant's challenge. Contrary
    to the state's suggestion in its brief that the segregated academy issue was the primary thrust of the
    defendant's proffered reasons for removal, the record reflects that this issue came under the category
    of "I might note" after the primary suggestion that Whitaker should be stricken because her husband
    was in law enforcement.
    ¶79. It is at least ironic that there should be another dispute involving this same juror and whether she
    knew or did not know that her husband had written a letter to the attorney general urging
    prosecution in these cases. I cannot understand how the court can be excused for not allowing her to
    be asked that specific question. Whatever her responses during voir dire to the general questions,
    given the fact that there is conclusive proof that her husband did write such a letter we cannot justify
    the court's reliance on one person's testimony as to what someone else knew "to the best of his
    knowledge." I see no room for discretion here.
    ¶80. Mrs. Whitaker should have been asked whether she knew of the letter and, if so, her explanation
    for having failed to disclose that information during voir dire. Because the majority concludes
    otherwise, I respectfully dissent.
    McRAE, J., JOINS THIS OPINION.
    1. McFarland v. State, No. 94-KA-00191-SCT, 
    1997 WL 719171
    (Miss. Nov. 20, 1997), reh'g
    denied, February 26, 1998.
    2. Sewell's signed application for a notary public commission, dated July 1, 1988, was approved on
    July 11, 1988. Mississippi Code Annotated section 25-33-3 (1991) directs that each notary public
    have a seal with her name in the margin thereof, and that this seal be used to attest to the "official
    acts" of the notary. According to Gwen Bell, who examined the ballot applications in evidence, an
    embossed seal with the name "Sandra Sewell" appeared on each of these applications.
    3. The Sewell-notarized ballot applications and ballots formed the basis for a March 19, 1992,
    indictment returned against Sewell, alleging voter fraud. Sewell filed a motion to quash the
    indictment, alleging that African Americans had been systematically excluded from serving as grand
    jury foreperson, in that 76 of the last 77 grand jury forepersons had been white. An Agreed Order
    Allowing Nolle Prosequi was entered in September, 1992.
    4. The opinions of Frank Hicks are discussed in greater depth in Issue II, infra.
    5. State Exhibits S-1 through S-8 are numbered so as to correlate with the corresponding count
    number.
    6. Compared copies of public document are admissible pursuant to Miss.R.Evid. 1005.