Hargett v. Mississippi
Annotate this CaseA grand jury indicted Defendant Harold Hargett for selling marijuana and hydrocodone. A jury found Defendant guilty, and he was sentenced as a habitual offender to six years for the marijuana charge, and sixty years for the hydrocodone charge. The appellate court affirmed Defendant's sentence. Defendant appealed to the Supreme Court by arguing that the trial court erred by admitting testimony that referenced certain "prior bad acts" that should have been excluded. Before trial began, defense counsel argued in a motion to exclude evidence that Defendant's prior convictions would be too prejudicial. The trial court granted the motion. Despite the ruling, the State continually elicited inadmissible testimony that referenced the prior convictions. The Supreme Court reversed the decisions of the trial and appellate courts and remanded the case for a new trial. The Court found that the testimony that referenced Defendant's prior bad acts should have been excluded.
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