                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                         NO. 2015-CT-00016-SCT

TREVIOUN LAMONT CORNELIUS BRIGGS a/k/a
T.L. BRIGGS a/k/a T.L. CORNELIUS BRIGGS a/k/a
TREVIOUS LAMONT CORNELI BRIGGS a/k/a
TREVIOUN LAMOUNT CORNELIUS BRIGGS
a/k/a TREVIOUS BRIGGS a/k/a TREVIOUN L.C.
BRIGGS a/k/a TREVIOUN BRIGGS

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

                       ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI


DATE OF JUDGMENT:                 09/29/2014
TRIAL JUDGE:                      HON. JOHN HUEY EMFINGER
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS:            ABRAHAM ROWE
                                  MICHAEL GUEST
                                  BRYAN BUCKLEY
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:        MADISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:          OFFICE OF THE STATE PUBLIC
                                  DEFENDER
                                  BY: JUSTIN TAYLOR COOK
                                      GEORGE T. HOLMES
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:            OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
                                  BY: JEFFREY A. KLINGFUSS
DISTRICT ATTORNEY:                MICHAEL GUEST
NATURE OF THE CASE:               CRIMINAL - FELONY
DISPOSITION:                      AFFIRMED - 07/27/2017
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:



     EN BANC.

     BEAM, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1.    Trevioun Briggs was convicted in the Circuit Court of Madison County of robbery and

witness-tampering. The Court of Appeals affirmed both convictions in Briggs v. State, 2016

WL 2981728, at *1 (Miss. Ct. App. May 24, 2016). Briggs petitioned this Court for

certiorari, which was granted to consider whether his indictment for the witness-tampering

count was defective. Finding that the indictment fairly tracked the language of Mississippi

Code Section 97-9-115, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.

                                            FACTS

¶2.    Briggs was convicted of robbing a woman in the Northpark Mall parking lot in

Ridgeland, Mississippi, on the evening of December 14, 2013. The woman was holding her

three-year-old son and loading shopping bags into her car when Briggs approached from

behind and struck her in the back of the head, causing her to drop the child. Briggs snatched

the shopping bags and ran away. The woman identified her attacker as a black male wearing

a red sweatshirt. A few hours later, Briggs was arrested outside the mall after attempting to

return stolen items in exchange for a cash refund. After his arrest, an orange sweatshirt and

other stolen items were found inside his vehicle. Just before Briggs’s arrest, he successfully

had returned other stolen items to various mall retailers, and the retailers’ employees

identified him at trial.

¶3.    Briggs was arrested for false pretense and incarcerated at the Madison County Jail.

Four days after his arrest, while in jail, Briggs placed several recorded phone calls to various

acquaintances. In the recordings, Briggs requested that the person to whom he was speaking

either provide an alibi for the time of the robbery, or ask a third person to do so on his behalf.



                                                2
On March 28, 2014, Briggs was indicted for robbery and witness tampering. At trial, the

State placed the recorded conversations in evidence. The jury found Briggs guilty of robbery

and witness-tampering.

                                 LAW AND ANALYSIS

¶4.    Section 97-9-115 provides:

       (1)    A person commits the crime of tampering with a witness if he
       intentionally or knowingly attempts to induce a witness or a person he believes
       will be called as a witness in any official proceeding to:

              (a) Testify falsely or unlawfully withhold testimony; or

              (b) Absent himself from any official proceeding to which he has
              been legally summoned.

Miss. Code Ann. § 97–9–115 (Rev. 2014) (emphasis added).

¶5.    Briggs’s indictment used the word “may” instead of the word “will,” providing in

pertinent part:

       [Briggs] did willfully, feloniously, intentionally[,] and knowingly attempt to
       induce a witness or a person he believed may be called as a witness against
       him, to-wit: [Briggs], while incarcerated, made contact via telephone with a
       person whom he then requested she attempt to coerce another person into
       deceitfully providing [Briggs] with . . . an alibi, in violation of Miss. Code
       Ann. § 97-9-115 . . . .

(Emphasis added.)

¶6.    Briggs’s jury was instructed as follows:

       If you find from the evidence in this case beyond a reasonable doubt that:

       ...

       [Briggs] did willfully, feloniously, intentionally[,] and knowingly attempt to
       induce a witness or a person he believed would or could be called as a witness

                                             3
       at the trial of this cause to testify falsely at this trial, an official proceeding, by
       providing at said trial an alibi for the Defendant by testifying that the
       Defendant was at a place other than the location of the crime charged . . . at the
       time the crime was committed, said testimony being false and known by the
       Defendant to be false, as well as being material to the subject matter of the
       official proceeding, namely this trial; then you shall find [Briggs] guilty of
       Tampering with A Witness . . . .

(Emphasis added.)

¶7.    Briggs claimed on appeal that both the indictment and the jury instruction failed to

track the statute’s language. Briggs submitted that while “it may seem somewhat trivial, the

difference between the words ‘will,’ ‘may’ and ‘would or could’ are significant” because all

contain “different knowledge requirements.” Without explanation as to how or why, Briggs

asserted that by use of the word “may” in the indictment, the State broadened the activity for

which Briggs could be found guilty under Section 97-9-115. Briggs then contended that by

use of the words “would or could” in the jury instruction, the State lessened its burdened

from that in the indictment’s language.

¶8.    The Court of Appeals found no merit in Briggs’s claims. In reaching its conclusion,

the Court of Appeals found that “Briggs contacted a woman and asked her to fabricate an

alibi for him during the times in which he was not seen on the mall video.” Briggs, 2016 WL

2981728, at *3. On these facts, the court reasoned that “it makes no difference whether the

indictment read ‘will’ or ‘may’ or the jury instruction read ‘will’ or ‘would’ since the factual

basis surrounding the charge, and described in the indictment, dictated that Briggs thought,

and in fact hoped, that the woman he contacted would be called as a witness to provide

Briggs with the alibi he sought.” Id.



                                                 4
¶9.    We agree.

¶10.   Again, Briggs asserts that use of the word “may” in the indictment broadens the

activity for which Briggs could be found guilty under Section 97-9-115. But Briggs does not

speak to what activity the statute circumscribes, or how use of the word “will” limits it, or

how the word “may” expands it. He merely suggests, given his assertions, that Section 97-9-

115 is limited to those persons designated as a witness by some sort of process.

¶11.   That may be a proper interpretation for subsection (b) of the statute based on the

language: “Absent himself from any official proceeding to which he has been legally

summoned.” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-9-115(1)(b) (emphasis added). But subsection (b),

which simply sets forth another way a person may commit the crime of witness-tampering,

is not applicable in this case. Based on the essential facts alleged in the indictment

constituting the offense charged, subsection (a) and the language contained in paragraph (1)

that precedes it is what applies here.

¶12.   First, this language uses both the terms “witness” and “person” to describe who an

offender may not induce or attempt to induce to testify falsely in any official proceeding.

This signifies that the statute is not limited to those designated as witnesses by process, as

Briggs suggests, but applies also to those so regarded by fact or circumstance. See, e.g.,

State v. Crider, 21 Ohio App. 3d 268, 487 N.E.2d 911, 912 (1984) (holding same for

purposes of Ohio’s witness-tampering statute, based on the dictionary definition of the term

“witness,” which refers to “one that is cognizant of something by direct experience” or “one

who beholds or otherwise has personal knowledge of something”).



                                              5
¶13.   Second, the word “attempt” is contained in the statute. This means the offender need

not succeed or actually induce the witness or person to testify falsely for purposes of

subsection (a); he or she need only attempt to induce the witness or person to do so. Thus,

whether that person is ever called to testify in any official proceeding is irrelevant for

purposes of subsection (a).

¶14.   Third, the phrase “any official proceeding” used in paragraph (1) is broadly inclusive,

unlike its usage in subsection (b), which by the phrase “to which he has been legally

summoned,” limits its application to circumstances in which an official proceeding is

pending. For purposes of subsection (a), however, there is no express limitation. Thus, we

read “any official proceeding” used in paragraph (1) to mean potential future proceedings.

¶15.   The Oregon Supreme Court reached the same conclusion when construing that state’s

witnessing-tampering statute, which is very similar to ours but uses the word “may” instead

of the word “will.” See Oregon v. Bailey, 213 P.3d 1240 (Or. 2009) (interpreting ORS

162.285(1)).1 The Bailey court concluded that its statute does not require that an official

       1
           Oregon’s witness-tampering statute states:

       A person commits the crime of tampering with a witness if:

                (a) The person knowingly induces or attempts to induce a
                witness or a person the person believes may be called as a
                witness in any official proceeding to offer false testimony or
                unlawfully withhold any testimony; or

                (b) The person knowingly induces or attempts to induce a
                witness to be absent from any official proceeding to which the
                person has been legally summoned.

ORS 162.285(1).

                                              6
proceeding be pending at the time “tampering” conduct occurs. This is because, for purposes

of subsection (a), contained in ORS 162.285, there is no express time limitation in reference

to “any official proceeding.” Id. at 1243. This, according to Bailey, must mean that any

“potential future proceedings [are included] within its sweep.” Id. The Bailey court further

concluded that, not only need an official proceeding not be pending for purposes of ORS

162.285(1)(a); an investigation that might be conducted in the case need not yet be underway

either. Id. at 1246-47.

¶16.   We also point out that Alabama has a similar obstruction-of-justice chapter in its

criminal code with provisions almost identical to ours. Its witness-tampering statute reads:

       (a) A person commits the crime of tampering with a witness if he attempts to
       induce a witness or a person he believes will be called as a witness in any
       official proceeding to:

              (1) Testify falsely or unlawfully withhold testimony; or

              (2) Absent himself from any official proceeding to which he has
              legally been summoned.

Ala. Code Ann. § 13A-10-124.

¶17.   In Ivey v. State, 821 So. 2d 937, 950 (Ala. 2001), overruled on other grounds, the

Alabama Supreme Court concluded that “Section 13A-10-124 does not require that the false

testimony or the withholding of testimony be carried out in order for the charge of witness

tampering to be complete.”

¶18.   In Barnette v. Alabama, 855 So. 2d 1129 (Ala. Crim. App. 2003), the Court of

Criminal Appeals of Alabama addressed its witness-bribery statute, which, similar to

Mississippi’s witness-bribery statute, reads in pertinent part: “A person commits the crime

                                             7
of bribing a witness if he offers, confers or agrees to confer anything of value upon a witness

or a person he believes will be called as a witness in any official proceeding to . . .

[c]orruptly influence the testimony of that person . . . .” See Ala. Code Ann. § 13A-10-121.2

¶19.   In Barnette, a few days following an incident involving a sexual assault of a fourteen-

year-old, which had been reported to the police, an acquaintance of the alleged perpetrator

called the victim’s stepfather and offered him money to persuade the victim to “tell the police

that the [incident] didn’t happen.” Barnette, 855 So. 2d at 1130. The acquaintance later was

charged and convicted of bribing a witness. On appeal, the defendant claimed there was

insufficient evidence to support his conviction because the State did not prove the victim or

the stepfather was a witness in an official proceeding, or that an official proceeding had

commenced at the time the bribery took place. Id. at 1134.

¶20.   In affirming the conviction, the Alabama Court of Appeals found the fact that an

official proceeding had not yet begun to be of no moment. Id.

       Based on the evidence . . . presented, the jury could have reasonably concluded
       that, even though there was not any official proceeding pending at the time of
       the appellant’s actions, the appellant believed an official proceeding would be
       initiated and believed [the victim and/or her step-father] would be called as a
       witness in that proceeding.

Id. at 1134-35.



       2
           Compare with Miss. Code Section 97-9-109 (Rev. 2014), which states:

       A person commits the crime of bribing a witness if he intentionally or
       knowingly offers, confers or agrees to confer any benefit upon a witness or a
       person he believes will be called as a witness in any official proceeding with
       intent to . . . [i]nfluence the testimony of that person . . . .


                                              8
¶21.   The dissent agrees that an official proceeding need not be commenced or pending

when the inducement of false testimony is attempted, but contends, however, that the State

nonetheless expanded upon the statutory definition of the crime by substituting the word

“will” for the word “may.” And by this substitution, according to the dissent, the State made

the charge easier to prove. But other than pointing out that the two words can have different

meanings, the dissent–like Briggs–fails to explain how use of the word “may” instead of

“will” expands upon the conduct Section 97-9-115(1)(a) prohibits, or how its use prejudiced

Briggs in any defense he may have had against the charge.

¶22.   Again, there is no requirement that an offender succeed in his or her attempt to induce

another to testify falsely in any potential official proceeding. Nor is there an “inevitability”

requirement as the dissent contends the statute contains. Were there such, the offense would

not be consummated until the putative witness appeared at the official proceeding and gave

false testimony. But that is not the intent of the statute. Its clear purpose is to protect not

only those designated as witnesses by process, but those who may become witnesses due to

circumstances such as those alleged in Briggs’s indictment.

¶23.   In any such case, there always exists the possibility (or contingency) that the person

the offender attempted to induce to give false testimony might not be called as a witness to

testify in an official proceeding. That is factually what occurred here.

¶24.   For all intents and purposes, use of the word “may” in this instance was merely

grammatical. Its use was inconsequential, and it did not alter the substantive meaning of the




                                               9
statute or disadvantage Briggs in any defense(s) he may have had in the case. We also find

the same with regard to the complained-of jury instruction.

                                     CONCLUSION

¶25.   Briggs’s convictions for witness-tampering and for robbery are affirmed.

¶26.   AFFIRMED.

    WALLER, C.J., AND RANDOLPH, P.J., CONCUR. MAXWELL AND
CHAMBERLIN, JJ., CONCUR IN PART AND IN RESULT WITHOUT SEPARATE
WRITTEN OPINION. KITCHENS, J., CONCURS IN PART AND DISSENTS IN
PART WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY DICKINSON, P.J.,
KING AND COLEMAN, JJ.

    KITCHENS, JUSTICE, CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN
PART:

¶27.   I respectfully concur in part and dissent in part. Because the witness tampering count

in Briggs’s indictment misstated an essential element of the crime by substituting the word

may, for the statutory word will, it was fatally defective. The purported witness tampering

count did not charge Briggs with any crime. Therefore, I would find that reversal of Briggs’s

conviction of witness tampering is required under the Sixth Amendment to the United States

Constitution and Article 3, Section 26, of the Mississippi Constitution. I agree that Briggs’s

robbery conviction must be affirmed.

       A. Constitutional Requirements

¶28.   Words do matter in indictments, perhaps more so than in most other legal pleadings.

The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that “the accused shall

enjoy the right . . . to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation.” U.S. Const.

amend. VI. Under the Mississippi Constitution, “the accused shall have a right . . . to demand

                                             10
the nature and cause of the accusation.” Miss. Const. art. 3, § 26. “An indictment must

contain (1) the essential elements of the offense charged, (2) sufficient facts to fairly inform

the defendant of the charge against which he must defend, and (3) sufficient facts to enable

him to plead double jeopardy in the event of a future prosecution for the same offense.”

Gilmer v. State, 955 So. 2d 829, 836-37 (Miss. 2007). “An indictment which fails to allege

all essential elements of a crime runs afoul of our constitutions and is void.” Thomas v.

State, 126 So. 3d 877, 879 (Miss. 2013). Because such an indictment is void and legally

inoperative, there is no need for a showing of prejudice to the defense. If an indictment

misstates the essential elements of the crime, an appellate challenge to the indictment is never

procedurally barred, but is subject to de novo review under our longstanding precedent.

Gilmer, 955 So. 2d at 836.

¶29.   Article 1, Section 1, of the Mississippi Constitution provides for the separate

magistracies of the three governmental departments: legislative, judicial, and executive.

Miss. Const. art. 1, § 1. The legislative powers are vested in the legislature. Miss. Const. art.

4 § 33. The legislative power includes the authority to declare and define those acts that

constitute crimes. State ex. rel. Dist. Attorney v. Winslow, 208 Miss. 753, 761, 45 So. 2d

574, 576 (1950). When the prosecutor – a member of the executive branch – initiates a

criminal prosecution via a grand jury, the language of the indictment must include the

language of the statute that defines the crime being charged. Warren v. State, 187 So. 3d

616, 622 (Miss. 2016). If an indictment does not track the statutory language and instead

omits or misstates one or more of the crime’s essential elements, it effectively charges no



                                               11
crime, and the indictment must be dismissed. Thomas, 126 So. 3d at 879-80. Thus, the

drafter of an indictment may not constitutionally attempt to broaden the reach of a criminal

statute by substituting language that lightens the evidentiary burden of the prosecution.

“[T]he rule is . . . that whatever sense of detestation the court may entertain towards a party

upon the facts, courts nevertheless may not impose punishment upon one not within the strict

letter of the law.” Winslow, 208 Miss. at 760, 45 So. 2d at 575.

       B. The witness tampering count of Briggs’s indictment did not charge him with
       a crime.

¶30.   Count II of Briggs’s indictment purported to charge him with witness tampering under

Mississippi Code Section 97-9-115. That statute defines the crime of witness tampering as

follows:

       (1) A person commits the crime of tampering with a witness if he intentionally
       or knowingly attempts to induce a witness or a person he believes will be
       called as a witness in any official proceeding to:
              (a) Testify falsely or unlawfully withhold testimony; or
              (b) Absent himself from any official proceeding to which he has
              been legally summoned.

Miss. Code Ann. § 97-9-115 (Rev. 2014) (emphasis added). Official proceeding is defined

as “any proceeding heard before any legislative, judicial, administrative, or other government

agency or official authorized to hear evidence under oath.”

¶31.   The charging language of Count II of Briggs’s indictment is as follows:

              And, based upon a series of acts connected together and constituting
       parts of a common scheme and plan, Trevioun Lamount Cornelius Briggs, on
       or about the 18th day of December, 2013, in the county aforesaid and within
       the jurisdiction of the Court, did willfully, feloniously, intentionally and
       knowingly attempt to induce a witness or a person he believed may be called
       as a witness against him, to-wit: Defendant, while incarcerated, made contact

                                              12
       via telephone with a person whom he then requested she attempt to coerce
       another person into deceitfully providing Defendant with with [sic] an alibi,
       in violation of Miss. Code Ann. § 97-9-115 (1972, as amended).

(Emphasis added.)3

¶32.   Briggs contends that the witness tampering statute criminalizes the attempted

inducement of false testimony from someone the defendant believes will be called as a

witness, not someone the defendant believes may be called as a witness. Briggs argues that

the language of his indictment did not track the language of the statute because it substituted

the word may for the word will. Briggs also argues that, because the words may and will have

different meanings, the substitution was improper and rendered his indictment fatally

defective. While Justice Beam’s majority provides much general discussion about the

language of Section 97-9-115, it offers scant analysis of the issue raised by Briggs: whether

there is any meaningful difference between using the word may in place of the word will in

an indictment for witness tampering. With respect, that issue is of paramount importance to

our resolution of this case and it is dispositive. Accordingly, I address it as follows.

¶33.   An indictment properly sets forth the essential elements of the crime sought to be

charged when the indictment’s language tracks (follows) the language of the statute. Warren,

187 So. 3d at 622. An indictment need not employ the exact descriptive language of the

statute. Gilmer, 955 So. 2d at 837 (quoting Price v. State, 898 So. 2d 641, 654 (Miss. 2005)).

But for an indictment sufficiently to set forth the essential elements of the crime, it must use



       3
        Though not raised, I note that, for double jeopardy purposes, Briggs’s indictment
should have identified the person or persons whose false testimony Briggs was charged with
having attempted to induce. See Goforth v. State, 70 So. 3d 174, 189-90 (Miss. 2011).

                                              13
“equivalent words of substantially the same meaning” as the words in the statute. Id. (quoting

Price, 898 So. 2d at 654); see also Harrington v. State, 54 Miss. 490, 493 (1877) (providing

that “it is essential that either the same words, or words of equivalent meaning, and

substantially synonymous, should be used”). This Court has held that “[w]here the language

used in the indictment is sufficiently specific to give notice of the act made unlawful, and

exclusive enough to prevent[] its application to other acts, it is sufficient.” Gilmer, 955 So.

2d at 837 (quoting Price, 898 So. 2d at 654).4

¶34.   Briggs’s indictment charged him with attempting to induce a witness or a person he

believed may be called as a witness to provide him a false alibi by means of coercion and

deceit. The witness tampering statute proscribes intentionally or knowingly attempting to

induce false testimony from a witness or a person the defendant believes will be called as a

witness. Only if it could be said that the words may and will have equivalent meaning and

are substantially synonymous terms could we find that the witness tampering charge was

adequately worded. But, as this Court has recognized, the two words have vastly different

meanings. A bedrock principle of this Court’s law of statutory interpretation is that the word

may is a permissive term, and the word shall is mandatory. Tunica Cty. v. Hampton Co.

Nat’l Surety LLC, 27 So. 3d 1128, 1134 (Miss. 2009). May is “used to indicate possibility

or probability.” May, Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary (9th ed. 1983). It means “may

or may not.” Kipp Flores Architects, L.L.C. v. Mid-Continent Cas. Co., 852 F.3d 405, 410



       4
         For example, here the charging language would have been compliant with the
statute had it used the word “would” instead of “will.” “Would,” in the context of the
statutory language, has substantially the same meaning as “will.”

                                              14
(5th Cir. 2017). On the other hand, will is “used to express inevitability.” Will, Webster’s

New Collegiate Dictionary (9th ed. 1983). The words may and will are not substantially

synonymous words of equivalent meaning, and they cannot be used interchangeably. Like

shall, will is mandatory. Thus, a defendant is guilty of witness tampering if the defendant

intentionally or knowingly attempts to induce false testimony from a witness or a person the

defendant believes, inevitably, regardless of whether such belief is well founded or even

realistic, will be called as a witness by the State or by the defendant.5 A person cannot be

guilty of witness tampering for attempting to induce false testimony from someone he

believes may or may not be called as a witness. Therefore, Briggs’s indictment was rendered

defective when its drafter chose to employ a word that does not appear in the statute and has

a meaning that is different from the operative word that does appear in the statute.

¶35.   In short, Briggs is accused of trying to dispatch a second person to talk a third person

into providing Briggs a false alibi. For that to be a crime under Section 97-9-115, the statute

the State selected as the legal vehicle for its prosecution of Briggs, it was necessary that

Briggs be proven to have believed that the third person will or would be called as a witness,

not that she may or might be called as a witness. Had the indictment tracked the statutory

language, the State could have undertaken to adduce circumstantial evidence that Briggs

himself intended to call the third person as a witness, thus believing the person will or would

       5
         I note that Briggs’s indictment charged that he intentionally or knowingly attempted
to “induce a witness or a person he believed may be called as a witness against him.” Thus,
the State imposed upon itself the obligation of proving something not included in the statute:
that Briggs believed the person would be called to testify against him by the State, not by the
defense. Lee v. State, 944 So. 2d 35, 38-39 (Miss. 2006) (citing Richmond v. State, 751 So.
2d 1038, 1046 (Miss. 1999)).

                                              15
be called as a witness. The statute does not specify or require any particular basis or means

for the unlawful inducement. But Section 97-9-115 does require the State to prove that, for

whatever reason, the accused believed, subjectively, that the target of his attempted

inducement will be called as a witness. Although the defendant’s belief may be ill founded,

altogether misplaced, or completely wrong, nevertheless, the statute demands that the

accused, to be guilty of witness tampering, believe that the person he attempts to induce

ultimately will be called as a witness, either by the defendant or by the defendant’s adversary

– the State.6

¶36.   The Court of Appeals held that, because Briggs requested that those he contacted

provide an alibi to the investigating authorities, he essentially was asking them to be

witnesses at his trial and to provide false testimony. The Court of Appeals opined that, under

those circumstances, Briggs necessarily believed that these persons would have been called

as witnesses at his trial. In essence, the Court of Appeals found that Briggs was attempting

to “create” a false trial witness. Therefore, the Court of Appeals held, it made no difference

that the indictment erroneously substituted may for will. With respect to my colleagues in



       6
         Justice Beam’s majority interprets my position to be that “the offense would not be
consummated until the putative witness appeared at the official proceeding and gave false
testimony.” Maj. Op. at ¶22. With respect for Justice Beam’s majority, the distinction
between may and will is critical not because it matters whether the person from whom the
defendant attempted to induce false testimony eventually is called as a witness, but because
there is a meaningful distinction between the defendant’s harboring a belief that someone
will be called as a witness and his harboring a belief that someone may be called as a
witness. I wholeheartedly agree with the conclusion of Justice Beam’s majority that the
statute can be violated even if the defendant’s belief that the person will be called as a
witness is wrong or misplaced.


                                              16
Justice Beam’s majority, who approve this analysis, the Court of Appeals’ reasoning

mistakenly ignores the constitutional requirement that an indictment must set forth the

essential elements of the crime. The Court of Appeals’ apparent belief that Briggs’s conduct

could be construed as being within the actual statutory language is not determinative of the

adequacy of the indictment. Because the witness tampering count of Briggs’s indictment

erroneously substituted the word may for the word will – a word that has a different meaning

– the indictment failed to afford Briggs the constitutionally required notice of the crime

charged. As Count II is written, Briggs was given notice of nothing more than an accusation

that does not amount to a crime. The question of whether the State could have adduced

sufficient evidence to secure a conviction had the witness tampering count properly set forth

the essential elements of the crime is irrelevant to our resolution of the dilemma created by

poor draftsmanship.

¶37.   Further, I respectfully note that Justice Beam’s majority, citing out-of-state case law,

mistakenly bases much of its analysis on attempting to resolve the irrelevant question of

whether Section 97-9-115 requires an official proceeding to have commenced prior to the

defendant’s attempt to induce false testimony. The statutory language proscribes the

attempted inducement of false testimony from a person whom the defendant believes will be

called as a witness in an official proceeding. Miss. Code Ann. § 97-9-115(a) (Rev. 2014).

Whether the statute is violated or not depends on what the defendant believed at the time of

the attempted inducement of false testimony,7 not on whether an official proceeding actually

       7
      The statute is violated when a person intentionally or knowingly attempts to induce
someone he believes will be called as a witness in any official proceeding to testify falsely.

                                             17
had commenced. With respect for those comprising Justice Beam’s majority, its analysis

obscures the real issue in this case by focusing on whether Section 97-9-115 requires an

official proceeding to have commenced at the time of the attempted inducement of false

testimony.

¶38.   Because my analysis rests upon a simple comparison of the language of the indictment

to the language of the statute; and, since they are patently at odds with each other, I find no

need to comb the annals of American law for other judicial interpretations of similar statutes.

I would not hold that the witness tampering statute requires that an official proceeding must

have begun at the time of the attempted inducement of false testimony. Rather, my analysis

of the case before us is based upon the inescapable fact that the words may and will have

different meanings; thus, Briggs’s indictment failed to place him on notice of an essential

element of the crime.

¶39.   I also observe that the State’s prosecutorial endeavor would have been far better

served if, in drafting the indictment, it simply had utilized the statutory language, instead of

attempting to improve on it. The alternative verb selected by the State – may – materially

deviated from the meaning of the statute. May suggests a contingency. Will, on the other

hand, bespeaks a thing certain – in this case, a particular belief on the part of the accused,

even if mistaken. The legislature, the sole entity in our state government possessed of the

authority to select statutory language, did not choose the word may when it drafted this



Miss. Code Ann. § 97-9-115(a). Logically, one person may believe, subjectively, that
another will be called as a witness in an official proceeding even if no such proceeding has
been commenced or scheduled.

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statute.8 Even though the prosecutor – a functionary in the executive branch of state

government – did choose the word may, reasoning, perhaps, that this substitution would

make the charge easier to prove – the charging language of the indictment fell short of

charging Briggs with a crime known to Mississippi law. The prosecutor’s innovation upon

the statute’s plain language renders the witness tampering count of Briggs’s indictment

wholly impotent as a criminal charge.

¶40.   Finally, I am compelled to underscore that this Court’s disposition of this case

strongly implicates separation of powers. Section 97-9-115 appears, in all respects, to be a

valid statute. This Court cannot expand a statute’s meaning beyond its plain, unambiguous

language. Green v. State, 183 So. 3d 28, 33 (Miss. 2016). Even if Section 97-9-115 were

ambiguous, because it is a penal statute, we would be constrained to construe it strictly

against the State. Id. at 34. A prosecutor, as a member of the executive branch, has no

authority to expand the statutory definition of a crime by substituting words he or she thinks

would be more expedient to securing a conviction. The grand jurors who voted to indict

Briggs for witness tampering were not well served by such creativity. Only the legislature is

empowered to amend a statute; neither the executive nor the judicial branch of our

government may do so. To approve the executive branch’s attempted statutory amendment,

as Justice Beam’s majority does, is a reckless plunge into judicial activism in which I

respectfully decline to participate.



       8
         Interestingly, in the recent amendment of the witness tampering statute, the
legislature did not alter its use of the operative word will. Neither should we, as it is not
within this Court’s authority so to do.

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¶41.   Because Briggs’s indictment misstated an essential element of the crime of witness

tampering by substituting the word may for the word will, his indictment for the witness

tampering count was fatally defective. Therefore, Briggs was deprived of his federal and

state constitutional rights to notice of the charge against him. I would affirm his conviction

of robbery, reverse and render his conviction for witness tampering, and dismiss the witness

tampering count of his indictment.

       DICKINSON, P.J., KING AND COLEMAN, JJ., JOIN THIS OPINION.




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