
Judge grants defense access to city records in murder prosecution of Marquette
Feb. 19—The murder case against former Decatur police officer Mac Marquette moved one step closer to trial Tuesday as Circuit Judge Charles Elliott granted the defense permission to subpoena city records related to the case.
Marquette entered the courtroom in a blue suit, flanked by his Birmingham-based attorneys, Brett Bloomston and Elizabeth Young. Assistant District Attorney Garrick Vickery represented the state.
Marquette sat silently as Bloomston and Young spoke with Elliott.
The defense moved to subpoena city records and records from potential witnesses, seeking materials to challenge the prosecution's case.
"Anything exculpatory, obviously the state should turn over," Elliott said. "Beyond that, you can subpoena any records that you want, from the city or whichever organization that you wish."
Marquette was indicted for murder in the September 2023 shooting death of Steve Perkins.
Several supporters of the Perkins family attended the hearing. Perkins' brother Nick Perkins, sat by himself while two rows ahead of him, Steve Perkins' widow, Catrela Perkins, sat with others.
Marquette and his lawyers entered the courtroom through an alternate entrance and exited via a private elevator, bypassing the public elevator. Catrela Perkins suggested this was an instance of him receiving special treatment.
"The only comment I have for today is I don't see how they can protect a murderer," she said. "Why is all this special treatment for a murderer? Where's my safety and my security? I didn't murder anybody, he did."
Terrance Adkins, also in attendance at the hearing, said he hopes the rest of the proceedings, including the Stand Your Ground immunity hearing in March and the jury trial beginning in April, are "fair and impartial."
"As long as they keep the law first, we'll be happy with the decisions and the outcome," Adkins said. "We want to get this over with and we want justice to be served."
The defense has subpoenaed 46 witnesses for the April 7 trial of Marquette, including several Decatur police officers. Among them are Police Chief Todd Pinion, Lt. Michael Burleson, Lt. Jonathan Lindley, Sgt. Brent Best, Sgt. Kimberley Evans, Sgt. Michael Kitchens, Investigator William Halbrooks, Trang Ozbun with the Crime Scene Unit and Officer Patrick Wiley with the Priceville Police Department.
Former officers Christopher Mukaddam, Vance Summers, and Joey Williams have also been subpoenaed as witnesses. They were among the officers who responded to a call at Perkins' residence, where Perkins, 39, allegedly brandished a firearm at a towing company attempting to repossess his truck. The three officers have also been subpoenaed to testify at Marquette's Stand Your Ground hearing along with five other individuals.
If Marquette prevails in the Stand Your Ground hearing, scheduled for March 25, the case would be dismissed without a jury trial.
According to police, on Sep. 29, 2023, they received a call from Caleb Combs, a driver with Allstar Recovery in Decatur, about a confrontation with Steve Perkins at his residence on 3931 Ryan Drive S.W. Combs attempted to repossess Perkins' truck at about 1:30 a.m. and said Perkins brandished a firearm. After calling police, Combs returned with four officers to Perkins' residence.
Based on doorbell camera footage and partial bodycam footage that was leaked, Combs attempted to repossess Perkins' truck a second time and Perkins walked back outside of his house as Combs began hooking Perkins' vehicle up to his tow truck.
"Hey, put the truck down," Perkins said.
Approximately two seconds later, Marquette appeared from behind Perkins' truck to Perkins' right and yelled to Perkins, "Hey, hey! Police! Get on the ground!" and immediately began shooting him, continuing to shoot, even after he collapsed, until his magazine was empty.
Decatur police say Perkins aimed a firearm equipped with a flashlight at Marquette.
As Perkins lay wounded in his front yard, Marquette and the other officers placed handcuffs on him and an ambulance was called. Perkins later died at Huntsville Hospital, according to Decatur police.
On Jan. 5, Morgan County District Attorney Scott Anderson announced that a grand jury unanimously returned a murder indictment against Marquette, who is appealing his termination by Mayor Tab Bowling.
Judge Charles Elliott on May 24 issued a gag order in the case, preventing police, witnesses and lawyers involved in the case from speaking publicly about it until after Marquette's trial concludes.
— wesley.tomlinson@decaturdaily.com or 256-340-2442.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Tennessee man arrested for trafficking fentanyl after vehicle pursuit with Priceville police
Jun. 7—A Tennessee man was arrested Thursday night after fleeing officers in a traffic stop on Interstate 65, crashing his vehicle, and attempting to escape on foot before officers apprehended him and found fentanyl in his possession, according to the Priceville Police Department. Lebanon resident Richard Conrad Rothe, 34, is charged with drug trafficking, unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia, resisting arrest, using false identity to avoid arrest and hinder prosecution, reckless endangerment, driving under the influence, tampering with physical evidence, reckless driving, and felony attempting to elude a police officer. Police said a Morgan County Circuit Judge has set Rothe's total bond at $420,300 with additional holds for authorities in Tennessee and Kentucky. At approximately 11:50 p.m., police said they initiated a traffic stop in the 3200 block of Point Mallard Parkway and made contact with a male driver, Rothe, and a female passenger. An affidavit said police stopped the blue Nissan Altima for seat belt and failure to signal violations. As soon as officers approached the vehicle, it began to elude them in the southbound lane on I-65 and continued toward Falkville, according to police. "The suspect's vehicle exited I-65 and entered the town of Falkville, nearly colliding with two patrol vehicles belonging to the Morgan County Sheriff's Office," police said. "The suspect then altered course and continued fleeing toward the Eva area." Rothe eventually crashed his vehicle and veered off the road as he rounded a curve on Adams Road in Eva and attempted to escape on foot until deputies apprehended him in a pond where he was trying to conceal himself, according to the affidavit. Police said they found fentanyl and drug paraphernalia on Routhe and he told paramedics at the scene he had also consumed illegal narcotics. After being checked out at Decatur Morgan Hospital, he was transported to Morgan County Jail. An affidavit said there was a total of 12.3 grams of fentanyl found on Routhe and that he initially declined to identify himself. Police said the female passenger was captured in Eva on Friday and charged with unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia. She was held in lieu of $500 bail at Morgan County Jail. — or 256-340-2442.
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rubio imposes sanctions on four ICC judges for ‘targeting' US and Israel
The United States is placing sanctions on four judges from the international criminal court (ICC) for what it has called its 'illegitimate actions' targeting the United States and Israel. The secretary of state, Marco Rubio, announced the sanctions in a statement on Thursday. They target Solomy Balungi Bossa of Uganda, Luz del Carmen Ibáñez Carranza of Peru, Reine Adelaide Sophie Alapini-Gansou of Benin and Beti Hohler of Slovenia. Donald Trump ordered cabinet officials to draw up sanctions against the ICC after the court issued arrest warrants for the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and former defense minister Yoav Gallant. They were accused of overseeing an Israeli offensive during the Gaza conflict that caused famine and included the commission of war crimes. Two of the sanctioned judges authorised the arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant, and two authorised an ICC investigation into abuses by US personnel in Afghanistan. 'As ICC judges, these four individuals have actively engaged in the ICC's illegitimate and baseless actions targeting America or our close ally, Israel,' Rubio said. 'The ICC is politicized and falsely claims unfettered discretion to investigate, charge, and prosecute nationals of the United States and our allies. This dangerous assertion and abuse of power infringes upon the sovereignty and national security of the United States and our allies, including Israel.' The decision to move forward with the sanctions will escalate Trump's feud with the court and other international organisations, which he has broadly dismissed as politicised. The US has already sanctioned the ICC's chief prosecutor, Karim Khan, because of his role in pursuing the arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant. Those sanctions have led Khan to lose access to his email and his bank accounts have been frozen, the Associated Press reported earlier this month. Americans who work for The Hague-based court have been warned that they could be arrested if they set foot on American soil. In a statement, the ICC said it 'deplores' the new designations for sanctions. 'These measures are a clear attempt to undermine the independence of an international judicial institution which operates under the mandate from 125 states parties from all corners of the globe,' the ICC said. 'Targeting those working for accountability does nothing to help civilians trapped in conflict,' the statement continued. 'It only emboldens those who believe they can act with impunity. These sanctions are not only directed at designated individuals, they also target all those who support the court, including nationals and corporate entities of states parties. They are aimed against innocent victims in all situations before the court, as well as the rule of law, peace, security and the prevention of the gravest crimes that shock the conscience of humanity.' Danya Chaikel, the International Federation for Human Rights's representative to the ICC, said the types of sanctions imposed by the Trump administration were originally designed to 'disrupt terrorist networks like ISIS, weapons traffickers, and human rights abusers, not international justice institutions.' 'Using them against ICC officials represents a dangerous misuse of executive power and distorts their purpose … It sends the chilling message that enforcing accountability for mass atrocities can get you punished, while allegedly committing international crimes may get you protected. James Goldston, executive director of the Open Society's justice initiative and a former ICC prosecutor, said: 'As a court of last resort, the ICC is the one place victims of the most serious crimes can turn to when other avenues have failed them in their search for truth and justice. These new designations of ICC judges threaten their hopes and embolden the perpetrators. Sanctions against ICC officials are a betrayal of America's proud commitment to the rule of law and international justice.'
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
St. Louis advocates warn of ICE texts urging ‘case reviews'
ST. LOUIS – As U.S. President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown efforts continue, some immigrants are receiving text messages from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) asking them to report to local offices for a 'case review'—messages' some attorneys say may be misleading or deceptive. The Migrant and Immigration Community Action Project, a St. Louis-based immigrant advocacy group known as MICA, addressed the issue during a news conference on Wednesday. MICA says these messages are not just limited to St. Louis or Missouri. The group says similar texts have been reported in at least 14 other U.S. cities. Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now One alleged text message, which MICA sent to FOX 2 as a screenshot, reads, 'Your ICE officer has requested that you report to the office for a case review this week… Please arrive either on Tuesday, June 3rd, or Wednesday, June 4th.' According to MICA, some individuals who received the texts were allowed to check in like normal and leave, while others are being detained by ICE officers inside courtrooms. When asked if this kind of courtroom presence is standard, St. Louis immigration attorney David Cox said, Not typically. 'They wouldn't be there as a witness,' said St. Louis immigration attorney David Cox. 'They're just members of the public, because the courts are open to the public. They're just showing up, they're standing in corners, some of them in plain clothes, some of them are wearing their official uniforms, so it's across the spectrum what we're seeing.' Attorneys are urging everyone who receives ICE 'case review' text messages, regardless of their current home state, to bring legal representation with them. According to NBC News, ICE made the most immigrant arrests in a single day in the agency's history on Tuesday, reportedly detaining more than 2,200 individuals. Attorneys told NBC News that at least some of those arrests appear to be tied to the mass text messages. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.