IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
April 13, 2004 Session
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. PATRICIA WHITE and CRAIG WHITE
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Gibson County
Nos. 16216 and 16216-1 L. T. Lafferty, Judge
No. W2003-00751-CCA-R3-CD - Filed October 15, 2004
A Gibson County jury convicted Patricia White of theft of property valued over $10,000, a Class C
felony; the trial court sentenced her to a term of four years, suspended, and fifteen years’ probation.
The same jury also convicted Patricia White’s husband, Craig White, of facilitation of theft of
property valued over $10,000; the trial court sentenced him to a term of two years suspended, and
two years’ probation. As a condition of probation, the trial court held the couple jointly liable for
$124,000 in restitution. On appeal the defendants contend that the trial evidence is insufficient to
support their convictions. They also contest the amount of restitution they have been ordered to pay.
After an exhaustive review of the record, the briefs of the parties, and applicable law, we conclude
that the evidence is sufficient to support Patricia White’s conviction, but we are unable to reach the
same conclusion for Craig White’s facilitation conviction. Accordingly, we affirm Patricia White’s
conviction; the conviction of Craig White is reversed, and the charge is dismissed. Finding that the
trial court made inadequate findings in assessing restitution, we further remand that issue for
determination based on the required statutory findings. Finally, we take notice that based on three
statutory enhancement factors (none of which involved prior criminal history), the trial court set the
length of Patricia White’s sentence at one year above the presumptive minimum sentence of three
years; pursuant to Blakely v. Washington, ___ U.S. ___, 124 S. Ct. 2531 (2004), we modify her
sentence to three years but leave undisturbed the length and terms of her probation.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgments of the Circuit Court are Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part,
and Modified and Remanded in Part.
JAMES CURWOOD WITT , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which NORMA MCGEE OGLE,
J., concurred in results. DAVID G. HAYES, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
Timothy Crocker, Milan, Tennessee (at trial); and Daniel J. Taylor, Jackson, Tennessee (on appeal),
for the Appellees, Patricia White and Craig White.
Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; J. Ross Dyer, Assistant Attorney General; and John
C. Zimmerman, District Attorney General, Pro Tem, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
In 1990, a group of West Tennessee hog producers conceived the idea of forming a
cooperative to pool resources, sell hogs directly to various stockyards, and save on feed and grain
costs. To that end, Cooperative Pork Services (“CPS”) was incorporated in June 1990, and its
membership grew to include hog producers in Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, and Kentucky.
CPS coordinated the pickup and delivery of hogs. Producers would telephone the
CPS office to “book” a certain number of hogs. As soon as a truck load -- approximately 175 to 180
hogs -- were booked in a particular area, CPS reserved slaughter and packing dates for that particular
load of hogs. CPS handled the transportation and was responsible for collecting the money and
distributing the proceeds to the producers.
The money collected from the sale of the hogs was deposited into a “custodial” bank
account maintained by CPS. The producers were paid by checks issued through the custodial
account, and transportation, slaughter, and packing expenses were also paid from that account. In
theory, the custodial account should have balanced out to zero after each shipment. To cover payroll
for office employees and other business expenses, CPS charged its members a small commission of
$0.70 for each hog that was handled and a 3.5 percent commission for purchases of supplies, such
as feed. These commission-type charges were deposited into a “general” operational bank account
maintained by CPS.
From virtually its inception, CPS was plagued by financial and managerial problems.
The directors on CPS’s board were occupied with the demands of their own livestock and other
farming activities, which left little time to monitor CPS’s activities. The original CPS manager, Phil
Hooker, had prior experience working for a hog packing company in Union City, and his background
ostensibly was an asset for the fledgling cooperative. In 1993, however, CPS board members
discovered that Hooker had been misappropriating CPS’s funds.
The defendant, Patricia White, and another woman, Valerie Baker, were CPS office
employees during Hooker’s tenure. Evidently, neither woman was suspected of complicity in
Hooker’s larceny. Beginning in 1994, in the aftermath of Hooker’s misappropriations, the defendant
Patricia White assumed more responsibilities for the day-to-day operations of CPS. CPS records and
office equipment were removed from Hooker’s residence, and a new base of operations was
ultimately established in the Milan residence of the defendants Patricia and Craig White.
In 1998, financial irregularities at CPS were suspected and investigated. Investigators
reviewed CPS documents, subpoenaed bank records, and applied for and executed a search warrant
on October 2, 2001, for the defendants’ Milan residence. The search uncovered, inter alia,
additional CPS records and the defendants’ 1996-1998 tax returns. Based on the investigation’s
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results, the Gibson County Grand Jury charged Patricia White and her husband, Craig White, with
theft over $60,000 and criminal forfeiture.1
The defendants pleaded not guilty. At the conclusion of a lengthy trial, the jury found
the defendant Patricia White guilty of the lesser-included offense of theft over $10,000 and found
the defendant Craig White guilty of facilitation of theft over $10,000. The trial court sentenced the
defendant Patricia White to a term of four years, suspended, and fifteen years’ probation. The
defendant Craig White received a sentence of two years, suspended, and two years’ probation. The
defendants were held jointly liable for $124,000 in restitution and ordered to pay $400 per month.
Aggrieved by their convictions and sentences, the defendants have appealed.
Inasmuch as the defendants vigorously assail the sufficiency of the convicting evidence, we begin
with a detailed summary of the testimony and proof at trial.
George Irvin Cooper, Jr. and Mark Smith, both hog producers, were instrumental in
forming CPS in 1990, and they served on the board of directors. Mr. Cooper testified as the state’s
lead witness. He explained the impetus for setting up CPS and its general operating features and
services. Cooper described himself as having the most active role in the day-to-day operations of
the business because of his proximity to the office. He had the board’s authorization to sign CPS
checks, as did Mr. Smith and the office employees. Each check required two signatures, but Cooper
regarded the precaution as “totally useless,” because neither he nor Smith had time to go to the office
every time a check had to be issued. As a result, when either man was at the office, he would sign
and leave multiple blank checks that the office staff would later fill out and use.
Cooper testified that he “basically ran the business with the help of the office over
the phone” after Hooker was discharged in 1993 for misappropriating funds. All available records
and equipment were removed from Hooker’s house, and for approximately one or two months the
office operated out of a farm house owned by one of the office employees, Valerie Baker. During
that time, CPS transferred its accounts to Union Planters Bank in Milan. Thereafter, the office for
CPS was relocated to a garage room at the defendants’ residence on Chapel Hill Road.
Cooper testified that after Hooker departed, the board authorized the defendant
Patricia White to be paid seven dollars an hour. By late 1998, her hourly rate of pay had been raised
to ten dollars. In addition, CPS paid $400 per month as rent for use of the defendants’ residence and
to defray part of the cost of the defendants’ homeowners’ insurance. Cooper believed that the
defendant Patricia White also received ten days of paid vacation each year.
1
After the jury returned its verdict in this case, the record reveals a brief exchange between the trial court and
the state with the court inquiring whether the state desired to nolle prosequi the criminal forfeiture count in the
indictment. The state replied that it did so intend. T he record before us, however, contains no judgment or order
disposing of that count. On remand, the trial court should enter an appropriate disposition so that the record is complete.
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Cooper said that he was physically in the office only once or twice a month and that
his primary contact was by telephone. The office did not have a time clock, and employees were
trusted to keep track of their time. Cooper would go by the office to get needed information for the
monthly board meetings. Most of the information, according to Cooper, was maintained on
computer, and the defendant Patricia White would retrieve for him figures relative to sales and
expenses. Cooper did not attempt to independently verify the information owing to his unfamiliarity
with computers. In terms of CPS’s bank statements, Cooper testified that they were mailed to the
defendants’ residence and that he never reviewed them. The defendant Patricia White was
responsible for reconciling the accounts.
Cooper identified August 17, 1998, as the first occasion when he learned of anything
wrong with CPS’s finances. He testified that the defendant Patricia White called and advised him
that the custodial account was overdrawn by about $26,000, that the general account was overdrawn
by about $20,000, and that the bank was preparing to return all the checks that had been issued.
Cooper said that he deposited $50,000 of his own money into the accounts as an interim solution
until the problem could be identified and resolved. Over the next several days, Cooper was in daily
contact with the office to find out if any bank errors had been discovered. When nothing
materialized, Cooper sent his father, who had experience with tax-related matters, to the office to
check for any bank errors. When Cooper’s father was unable to discern the source of the problem,
Cooper asked the defendant Patricia White for the bank statements and cancelled checks related to
the custodial account. Cooper testified that he planned to review the records over the Labor Day
weekend. He said that Smith was the only board member consulted about the problem at that time.
The records revealed that money had been transferred into and out of the custodial
account. The state asked Cooper about transfers out of the custodial account that he may have
authorized. He testified about an occasion when the defendant Patricia White was out of town and
another office employee, Amy Stoots, called him to report that the general account had become
overdrawn. Cooper instructed Stoots to transfer money from the custodial account to cover the
shortfall. Initially, Cooper denied authorizing any other transfers out of the custodial account. On
cross-examination, however, he acknowledged directing that a check be issued from the custodial
account in 1996 for $5,000 payable to the First Assembly of God. Cooper explained that the money
was owed to him for hogs that had been sold; he wanted to make a donation to the church, so he had
the money transferred directly.
Ultimately, the missing-funds problem was disclosed to CPS’s board, and the board
decided that the only way to “get to the bottom” of what was going on was to close down CPS and
cover the outstanding checks in the custodial account. Cooper testified that when that happened, a
shortfall of approximately $120,000 to $125,000 emerged. Cooper said that he and Smith funded
the shortfall and then turned to impounding the CPS records kept at the defendants’ residence. The
defendants turned over some, but not all, of the records. Cooper took the retrieved records to a
certified public accountant in Jackson. Cooper admitted that the board members were “poor business
managers” and were “negligent” in failing to have CPS audited annually. He explained that money
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was also a consideration, inasmuch as a professional audit performed in the aftermath of Hooker’s
misappropriations had cost CPS $26,000.
Based on the accountant’s findings, Cooper attempted to set up a meeting with the
defendants. Cooper said that the defendants declined to meet, even after Cooper retained an attorney
to communicate with the defendants’ counsel. When nothing could be done, the local district
attorney general’s office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation were contacted. The FBI referred
the matter to the state authorities, and after a lengthy investigation, the Gibson County Grand Jury
presented criminal theft charges against the defendants.
In terms of what CPS had authorized the defendant Patricia White to do, Cooper
testified that the “board had told her that if she needed to work overtime that she could.” Cooper
denied having any private arrangement with the defendant to pay her “under the table” for CPS-
related work in addition to her regular wages. Cooper was specific that neither he nor the board
authorized her to receive anything other than her hourly wages and the monthly office rental and
insurance. Cooper was equally specific that he never authorized her to pay her personal credit card
bills out of CPS funds.
The defense cross-examination of Cooper aimed to discredit his motives for giving
testimony against the defendant Patricia White. The defense inquired whether Cooper had ever made
romantic advances toward her and if he had made inquiries about her sexual involvement with
someone other than her husband. Cooper denied any inappropriate behavior on his part but admitted
asking a male acquaintance about “making a pass” at the defendant. He also denied that his wife
urged him to fire the defendant. The defense elicited from Cooper that he did not contest the
defendant’s receipt of unemployment compensation after her job termination.
The defense also cross-examined Cooper about the overall careless management of
CPS. Cooper acknowledged that CPS never filed a tax return during its eight-year existence from
1990 to 1998. Cooper tried to assign blame to the defendant Patricia White for not providing the
information necessary to prepare a return; the problem, however, predated the defendant’s
management of the office. Additionally, Cooper tried to claim that the board was not aware of any
problem with the custodial account in 1995. Minutes in Cooper’s own handwriting, from an April
3, 1995 board meeting, contradicted that claim. The minutes reported a $1,800 to $2,000 shortage
of funds in the custodial account.
The defense secured Cooper’s concession that he had asked the defendant to perform
a lot of back work for CPS to straighten out the problems that Hooker had created. Moreover,
Cooper testified that he did not place any restrictions on or limit the amount of time that the
defendant worked. Even so, Cooper explained that the board should have been notified of the
magnitude of the extra work that the defendant claimed to have performed. Most of the
compensation for the “extra work” was not reflected in the defendant’s W-2s, and although the
defendant did not prepare the W-2s, she did provide the information upon which the W-2s were
based.
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Cooper was shown numerous CPS checks bearing his signature and payable to the
defendant Patricia White. He did not deny signing the checks but stated that he always signed CPS
checks in blank. Cooper testified that once he began reviewing the records and bank statements in
1998, it became apparent that the defendant had written approximately 400 checks payable to herself
from 1995 through 1997. Cooper admitting knowing that the defendant was advancing CPS money
to one hog producer who was in a cash-flow crunch. He also knew that the defendant was advancing
money for overnight mail so that producers could get their checks more quickly. The defense asked
Cooper to identify a specific check from the custodial account that constituted a theft by the
defendant. Cooper responded, “There are none.”
State witness Mark Smith offered additional insights into the operations of CPS. He
testified that when the problem arose with Hooker in 1993, the defendant was one of the people in
the office who was being trained. The defendant was in charge of handling the accounts payable and
receivable. Smith said that, before the office was transferred to the defendants’ residence, he would
stop by the office once or twice a week to sign checks or see if he could help with anything. After
the move, Smith seldom checked on the office because the money and the accounts had been audited
and changed to correct the problems that Hooker had created.
Smith explained that although CPS’s board tried to meet once a month, often the
meetings were several months apart because of the farmers’ hectic work schedules. Smith described
the meetings as casual. Usually the board would receive an oral report about the cooperative’s
financial situation. Smith recalled seldom seeing any written report; either the defendant Patricia
White would write down figures and bring them to the meeting, or she would provide figures for
Cooper to present at the meeting. The information provided to the board included the payroll
expenses of the office employees. Smith testified that the defendant Patricia White was present for
some of the board meetings when payroll expenses were disclosed.
According to Smith, some board members believed the office salaries were too high.
Smith kept a folder with notes of the meetings to monitor what was being reported for wages paid.
In terms of overtime compensation, Smith believed the board may have discussed it to some limited
degree. He said that the board always understood that the office personnel may need to work
overtime to take care of a hog producer. Smith gave as an example that paperwork for a particular
shipment of hogs might be delivered late in the afternoon, requiring the office staff to work past 5:00
p.m. Even so, Smith was under the impression that relatively little overtime was required.
Smith did not recall any occasion when the defendant asked his permission to spend
extra money. Smith did remember that the defendant advised him that she could secure shipment
of certain products for the hog producers by using a credit card. Because CPS did not have a
business credit card, Smith authorized the defendant to use her personal credit card as long as she
documented what was purchased and the reimbursement. Smith said that he was never shown any
such documentation. Smith also authorized the defendant to use CPS’s business license to purchase
gift items from a company known as ABC, provided that the defendant document the transactions.
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As did Cooper, Smith testified that the first inkling of trouble came Labor Day
weekend in 1998 when Cooper called him upset that money was missing and that the bank was
poised to decline payment on checks from the custodial account. Smith recalled going to the
defendants’ residence on two or three occasions to investigate the problem. When he and Cooper
first made basic inquiries about expenses, the defendant looked up information on the computer.
The next time, the men returned looking for specific checks. Smith said that the defendant could not
produce the checks. “Things just weren’t balancing out,” Smith testified. As far as Smith and
Cooper could discern, money had been transferred on an ongoing basis from the custodial account
into the general account. Smith denied authorizing the transfers even though his signature appeared
on some of the checks. Smith explained that he could “never remember ever writing a signature on
a check that was already filled out. I was usually the first name on the check.”
Finally, Cooper and Smith asked for all the records. Smith drove his truck to the
defendants’ residence and loaded up boxes, desks, chairs, and computer equipment, which the
defendants had set out in their carport. Smith said that he thought he had gotten everything;
however, additional CPS records were found at the house when the search warrant was executed in
October 2001.
Smith and Cooper sorted through the records and took many of them to the
accountant who had previously audited CPS after Hooker’s departure. Cancelled checks were
missing from some of the bank statements, and copies had to be ordered from the bank. Smith said
that in going through the bank statements, it “immediately hit him” that as many as ten to twelve
checks per month had been written payable to the order of the defendant and drawn on CPS’s general
account. The same information showed up on the office computer, when Smith accessed the files.
Smith estimated that at most six checks per month should have written to the defendant: four or five
checks for weekly payroll and one check for the office rent/insurance. Smith had believed that the
defendant was earning between $18,000 to $20,000 per year. Instead, what he discovered was that
the defendant was being paid “almost twice that much.” Equally troubling, payroll taxes had not
been taken out of most of the checks.
Smith testified, “So, to make a long story short, I put up $62,000 of my money, and
I think Mr. Cooper put about the same amount of his.” That money covered the shortages created
by the transfer of funds from the custodial account to the general account and the subsequent
withdrawal of monies from the general account. Smith had not been reimbursed for his contribution.
Smith was adamant that the board never authorized compensation for the defendant
in the amounts they discovered. Indeed, the board minutes from a meeting in January 1996 reflected
a current hourly rate of compensation of $8.50 for the defendant and $7.50 and $5.00, respectively,
for the two other office employees. At the January meeting, as shown in the minutes, the board
approved increasing the defendant’s compensation to $10.00 per hour and another employee’s
compensation to $8.00 per hour.
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Smith was asked on cross-examination if he knew that the defendant had on occasion
paid other employees out of her personal funds. Smith was unaware but agreed that if it happened,
the defendant was entitled to reimbursement. Regarding overtime, Smith reaffirmed his knowledge
that overtime was required on occasion. He certainly, however, did not know about any sort of
“unrestricted” ability on the defendant’s part to work overtime. Smith insisted that the board was
not notified that the defendant was working unrestricted overtime, and he bluntly retorted, “[I]f it
was reported to us that she was making twice her salary, we would have stopped it.” Moreover,
regardless of the overtime Cooper may have authorized, Smith said that the board expected its
employees to be honest. The defendant, however, misrepresented how much CPS was paying out
in wages, and she hid the information from the board knowing that the board was relying on her to
provide an accurate accounting of income and expenses.
Smith did not dispute that in some respects CPS was “run sloppily.” For instance,
Smith knew that CPS had never filed a tax return. He testified that the board erroneously believed
that Hooker had been filing the returns. After Hooker left, the board enlisted the help of Cooper’s
father for preparing tax returns. Cooper’s father was unsure how to proceed, because he could not
determine if CPS had been registered as a non-profit corporation and because he had never filed a
return before for a cooperative. As a result, no progress was ever made in straightening out CPS’s
tax status and potential tax liability. Cooper’s father did, however, prepare the W-2s for the office
employees. The defendant provided the information that Cooper’s father used to prepare the W-2s.
The criminal investigation of the defendants’ activities spanned several years. Smith
related that initially the local district attorney general advised them to enlist the FBI’s assistance.
Approximately two years later, in the wake of the Columbine shootings, the FBI assigned the
investigation to the “back burner,” at which time the investigation was turned over to the local
authorities. The defendant Patricia White then was indicted for theft in July 2000; her husband was
not charged until January 2002.
The state presented brief testimony from the former President of Union Planters Bank
in Milan, Wayne Minton, and from Elizabeth Ownby, a records custodian with the bank. Mr.
Minton met with Cooper and Smith in September 1998 to discuss the CPS checks that were being
presented with insufficient funds to cover them. Mr. Minton recalled that the CPS accounts
occasionally had been on the bank’s insufficient funds report, and he knew that Cooper and Smith
advanced their personal funds to cover the checks being presented in September. Ms. Owenby
introduced, without defense objection, the Union Planters checking account records of the defendants
from November 1995 through 1998.
The state presented the meat of its case, in terms of specific financial transactions,
through the testimony of Investigator Virginia Draper, who over a period of many months, had
subpoenaed, reviewed, and analyzed the defendants’ personal bank account records. Investigator
Draper also reviewed records that Smith and Cooper had obtained and records that later were seized
by search warrant from the defendants’ residence. With the available records, Investigator Draper
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created a computerized spreadsheet showing the various CPS checks payable to the defendant
Patricia White or payable to third parties for her benefit.
The spreadsheet covered the time period of November 1995 through September 1998.
The beginning month and year were chosen based on the earliest records that Union Planters Bank
could supply. Investigator Draper explained that in reviewing the records, she first determined the
total amount of CPS checks deposited monthly into the defendants’ joint bank account, then
subtracted the defendant Patricia White’s monthly wages and office rent/insurance payment, and
finally added any CPS payments made directly to the defendants’ credit card companies and
telephone carrier. Investigator Draper summarized her findings for the jury and reported the
following amounts of money over and above the allowed wages and office rent/insurance:
1995 1996 1997 1998
Nov.: $2,214.36 Jan.: $4,628.26 Jan.: $3,154.84 Jan.: $4,239.05
Dec.: $5,603.00 Feb.: $3,592.79 Feb.: $1,849.33 Feb.: $685.97
Mar.: $4,293.89 Mar.: $4,504.20 Mar.: $1,128.50
Apr.: $5,247.09 Apr.: $3,486.15 Apr.: $3,173.73
May: $4,958.08 May: $1,992.15 May: $3,292.91
Jun.: $2,908.27 Jun.: $5,112.28 Jun.: $6,012.87
Jul.: $3,832.71 Jul.: $4,218.04 Jul.: $2,527.41
Aug.: $3,551.15 Aug.: $2,308.49 Aug.: $3,252.54
Sep.: $4,558.96 Sep.: $4,729.68 Sep.: $3,736.65
Oct.: $5,731.33 Oct.: $3,785.42
Nov.: $2,083.37 Nov.: $3,356.04
Dec.: $4,011.38 Dec.: $4,777.63
The total for the months covered was $128,939.29.
Investigator Draper also testified about executing a search warrant for the defendants’
residence on October 2, 2001, to search for CPS records and evidence of how the money
misappropriated from CPS had been spent. Investigator Draper introduced multiple photographs
taken inside and outside the residence. Investigator Draper testified that a Honda ATV, a riding lawn
mower, and two tractors were parked outside and that a great deal of power tools were in the garage.
Inside the residence she found, inter alia, racks and piles of clothing, some of which had price tags
affixed; “boxes and boxes” of shoes, many of which appeared unworn; a significant amount of
jewelry with the price tags still affixed; bags and stacks of unopened VCR tapes; and well-appointed
kitchen cabinets. Most notably, Investigator Draper also discovered more CPS records and the
defendants’ tax returns for the years 1996 through 1998. For 1996, the defendants reported a
combined net income of $41,548.07; for 1997, $47,465; and for 1998, $49,378.
On cross-examination, the defense extracted numerous concessions from Investigator
Draper, such as that the jewelry found in the residence was inexpensive, that she did not check the
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sizes on the shoe boxes, that the defendant reported that the clothing in the garage was left over from
a recent garage sale, that another office employee’s salary had been advanced once by the defendant,
and that the defendant had advanced her personal funds to cover items for CPS. Also, Investigator
Draper agreed that she was unable to determine how all of the missing CPS money had been spent
by defendants; she had been told, moreover, that the defendant Craig White had inherited a
substantial amount of money in 1994.
Regarding expenses for food sundries, Investigator Draper did not credit the snacks
and soft drinks that the defendant had purchased. Investigator Draper said that both Cooper and
Smith told her that those purchases were not legitimate business purchases. As for the defendant’s
telephone bills, Investigator Draper said that Cooper explained that he had given the defendant
authority to repay herself for long-distance business calls made on her home telephone, but he did
not authorize payment for cellular telephone calls.
The state’s two final case-in-chief witnesses were Gibson County Sheriff’s Deputies,
who were present when the search warrant for the defendants’ residence was executed. Deputy Jeff
Maitland testified that the bulk of the clothing that he saw appeared to be new with tags still
attached. Before his law enforcement career, Deputy Maitland had sold vacuum cleaners. From that
experience, he knew that the vacuum cleaner in the defendants’ residence was very expensive,
selling new for over $1,000. Deputy Steve Grooms testified that the defendants did not complain
in his presence about how the search was conducted.
The defense opened its case by calling Irvin Cooper’s wife, Carol Cooper. Ms.
Cooper, a school teacher, was not involved in the operation or management of CPS. Occasionally,
she would pick up blank CPS checks from the defendant, which her husband then signed and which
she returned to the defendant. Otherwise, her involvement consisted primarily in assisting her
husband in reviewing CPS’s financial records after the overdraft problems surfaced in 1998. Ms.
Cooper testified that the overdraft bank charges totaled approximately $12,000.
On cross-examination by the state, Ms. Cooper discussed in greater detail her
involvement with reviewing CPS records. Through Ms. Cooper, the state then introduced as exhibits
the payroll records for the defendant and the other office employees and a Tennessee Department
of Employment Security report concerning wages submitted for the defendant and another office
employee. For the last quarter of 1997, the defendant reported that she had earned $4,144. The
report bore the signature of the defendant.
The defendant Patricia White testified in her own defense. She began by relating her
personal and employment history. At the time of trial, the defendant was 43 years old, had been
married for sixteen years, and had two children. Since being laid off at CPS, she earned money by
performing commercial and residential cleaning.
The defendant said that before being hired by Hooker, she knew nothing about hog
production or managing a livestock cooperative. She was a high school graduate with a cosmetology
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license. She traced her knowledge of business finance to an earlier job she had working for Ronnie
Boswell at Boswell Oil Company. During that time, the defendant learned to handle business checks
and accounts payable and receivable. The defendant explained that she had authority to write checks
for Mr. Boswell, and she paid his bills.
The defendant testified that she worked for Boswell Oil Company for fourteen years.
During that time, no accusation of theft had ever arisen regarding her work. When the oil company
closed down, the defendant continued to work for Mr. Boswell. Mr. Boswell and his brother owned
Milan Raceway, and the defendant took over the financial end of the business and routinely handled
large amounts of cash. Again, the defendant was never accused of stealing in connection with that
job. The defendant worked at the racetrack for approximately two and one-half years, at which time
Mr. Boswell sold the business. Mr. Boswell laid her off so that she could draw unemployment
benefits. Her next employment was with CPS.
The defendant related that she had known Hooker through church activities. He
offered her a job, and she started working at CPS in June or July of 1993. At first, the defendant was
handling CPS’s books and Hooker’s personal books. Hooker paid her separately for the personal
work she did for him. The defendant was hired at CPS at $8.00 or $8.50 per hour. She initially
worked part time, but after Hooker’s misappropriations were uncovered, she began working full time
for CPS.
The defendant testified that she began to get suspicious of Hooker’s activities when
she could not locate records showing that payroll taxes for CPS had been paid. Then, when she
compared CPS’s computerized records and deposit books with Hooker’s deposit books, she could
detect how Hooker had been diverting CPS’s funds to his personal accounts. The defendant alerted
Cooper, who then informed the board of Hooker’s misappropriations. The defendant characterized
the financial condition of CPS at that time as “absolutely horrible” with the business books in a
“mess.”
Concerning the various locations for CPS’s office, the defendant explained that when
she first came to work, the office was in a space attached to Hooker’s house. From Hooker’s home,
the office moved first to a farmhouse provided by Cooper. After a couple of months, the office was
relocated to rental space on College Street in Trenton. Finally, in September of 1994, the
defendants’ residence became the base of operations for CPS.
The defendant said that she performed a lot of back work and record retrieval that was
provided to the accountant who audited CPS after Hooker’s termination. The defendant believed
that Hooker retained an attorney and that the matter was ultimately settled with Hooker repaying
some of the money. According to the defendant, Cooper told her that they would have to review a
lot of old CPS records, that the work had to be done, and that he would pay her whatever it took to
sort out the records. The defendant maintained that Cooper placed no restrictions on the amount of
back work she was to perform. As far as payment for the back work, the defendant said that she kept
up with her time, as Cooper had instructed her to do, but that payment for the back work was delayed
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because CPS did not have the money to pay her at the time and because the true financial condition
of CPS was not known.
The defendant testified that CPS’s operation account had frequent overdraft charges.
To the defendant’s knowledge, the board was advised about the overdrafts, and she recalled
occasionally attending board meetings when she reported the overdrafts. Overdraft charges also
occurred in the custodial account, but those overdrafts were more sporadic. Regarding withdrawals
from the custodial account, the defendant said that Cooper and, to a lesser extent, Smith authorized
transfers on a regular basis to cover expenses in the operation account. At some point, Cooper
authorized her to purchase drinks and snacks for the office; the defendant paid for the items out of
her personal account and later reimbursed herself. As for receipts for personal money that she
expended on CPS’s behalf, the defendant admitted not doing a good job of record keeping. Also,
she never reimbursed herself for work-related mileage and never charged CPS for any portion of her
utility bills.
The defendant explained how CPS came to pay her telephone bill. In the beginning,
CPS had two phone lines and a fax line. The producers began complaining that they were unable
to get through on the existing lines to place their hog and feed orders. As a result, Cooper told the
defendant that if she would also use her home telephone, he would ensure reimbursement by CPS.
Sometimes, however, CPS did not have sufficient funds to reimburse her for telephone charges.
Later, Cooper authorized the defendant to use her cellular telephone for business and to be
reimbursed by CPS.
Also, the defendant testified Cooper was aware of the routine for handling office
expenses. The defendant said that many times when CPS needed basic office supplies, CPS did not
have sufficient funds to pay the vendor’s previous bill. Rather than place an order when the last
order remained unpaid, the defendant would pay for the new purchases from her personal funds and
later reimburse herself.
In terms of her working schedule, the defendant stated that her regular hours were
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. During that time she performed current work, although producers might call
her late at night needing assistance. The back work involved the problems that Hooker had created,
and she tried to resolve sales tax issues. Evidently, CPS had never charged or collected sales tax.
The defendant testified that Cooper instructed her to go back through the records since 1990 in
preparation for re-billing each hog producer for items that were taxable. The defendant believed that
Smith knew about this work.
The defendant Patricia White admitted that she created two separate sets of payroll
records. She explained that Cooper instructed her to keep her back work hours separately; he did
not want to disclose those hours to the board because they would not accurately reflect what CPS’s
operational costs would be once the back work was completed. The defendant added that Cooper
never told her to hide her back work from the board, but Cooper did express concern that if the board
knew what the back work was costing, the board would close down CPS.
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The defendant was unable to explain why the hours for the back work were not
reported on her W-2, but she admitted that she had not reported all of her income on her tax returns.
She claimed that she and the other office employees kept up with their time, and the defendant gave
the time sheets to Cooper to take to his father, who prepared the W-2 forms. The defendant
mentioned a conversation with Cooper’s father, at some unspecific time, wherein he assured the
defendant that he would take care of all the paperwork and amending her tax returns.
The defendant testified that she had tried to reconstruct the receipts she had kept for
items personally purchased for CPS for which she was entitled to reimbursement. Many of the
receipts, she said, had been seized at the time the search warrant was executed, but there were also
additional records in her automobile that were not confiscated. Many of the receipts were old and
illegible. The defendant claimed that from the records she had to work with, the receipts totaled
$23,784.17. The defendant admitted that she did a “cruddy job” of keeping up with the receipts.
Additional matters for which the defendant received reimbursement involved personal checks she
had written to cover the salary of other employees. For example, the defendant paid one employee,
Tracy Rinks, $4,335. The defendant wrote six personal checks to another employee that totaled
$191.
Patricia White next testified about her home and what the officers found when the
search warrant was executed. She said that a boat on the property was titled to and belonged to Mr.
Boswell’s brother. The clothing inside the garage and other bagged items were left over from a
garage sale the week before the search. The clothing inside the residence belonged to her, her
husband, her sons, her deceased mother-in-law, and her sister-in-law, who was in the process of
divorcing and living with the defendant. The jewelry, the defendant explained, was costume and
relatively inexpensive. Many of the boxes inside her bedroom closet contained donated items that
she planned to take on mission trips. For the last twelve to fifteen years, the defendant had been
going on mission trips to Mexico.
Many of the shoes found were tennis shoes purchased from a store going out of
business, which the defendant intended to send to an orphanage home. The lawn mower came from
a neighbor whose yard the defendant Craig White was tending. The defendant testified that one of
the tractors in her yard belonged to a friend who owned a construction company and who at one point
put the tractor in her yard and advertised it for sale. The other tractor, she said, was jointly owned
by her husband and another friend. As for personal transportation, the defendant testified that she
drove a 1995 Oldsmobile with 185,000 miles on it and that her husband had a 1994 Ford Ranger
with approximately 100,000 miles on it. Her residence was mortgaged at $147,000.
Regarding payment for back work, the defendant said that she reconstructed her time
from what records were available to her. Cooper offered to pay her time and a half for her services.
CPS did not have a time clock for the employees to punch, and the defendant never recalled either
Cooper or Smith requesting to see her time records for back work. The defendant claimed that she
noted her back work time on calendars kept in front of her desk. The defendant produced some of
those calendars, which she said had been in her automobile and not seized by law enforcement.
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According to the defendant, from 1994 to 1998, she received $113,408.06 in compensation for back
work. In addition, the defendant testified that her son had been compensated $573 for entering
information into the CPS computer; Cooper never objected to that arrangement, and he had been in
the office when her son was working on the computer.
The defendant concluded her direct examination by denying guilt of the charged
offense and emphasizing her crime-free prior history.
The state aggressively cross-examined the defendant. The state challenged the
defendant’s explanation of the calendars being in her automobile, the notations on the calendars of
hours worked, and the sparse documentation of when she was out of the office on vacation or on a
mission trip. The state also pointed out that the calendars appeared to have hours written down for
practically every day. The state showed the defendant her calendar for October of 1997. The word
“vacation” is written on the date of October 3, and the defendant claimed that she took a mission trip
to Africa at that time. Another entry for October 3, however, purports to show that the defendant
worked fourteen and one-half hours that day. Those hours did not appear on CPS’s regular payroll
sheets.
Forty-five additional hours appeared to be recorded on the calendar for the week of
October 5, when the defendant was supposed to be in Africa. The defendant asserted that she carried
business papers to work on during the trip. The CPS payroll sheets for the week ending October 10,
however, showed no payroll check issued to the defendant.
The state questioned other calendar entries. The calendar for January 1995 purported
to show that she worked ten regular hours and three hours of back time. The rate of $10 is written
above the numbers. The state pointed out that the board had not increased her hourly wage to $10
until 1996, to which the defendant claimed that Cooper had given her and another employee “raises
that the board knew nothing about.” She added that Cooper had also given the employees days off
and extra vacation days. When the state noted that according to her calendars, she worked all the
time, the defendant then responded that she performed CPS back work on her off days.
The defendant did agree with the state that the information that Cooper reported to
the board about the employees was false. The defendant blamed Cooper, stating that he did not want
the board to know that he had authorized raises and days off for the employees. For the meetings
that the defendant personally attended, she characterized Cooper’s reports as “not accurate” and
maintained that he intentionally misled the board.
The state continued to highlight the inconsistencies between the defendant’s calendars
and CPS’s records. For example, the payroll records for October 1997 showed very few paid hours
that the defendant worked, although her calendar noted significantly greater hours. When the
defendant offered the explanation that CPS did not have sufficient funds to pay for all her time
actually worked, the state confronted the defendant with checks she had written in October to herself,
drawn on CPS’s general account in the amounts of $425, $625, $400, $200, $337, $425, $425, $400,
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$87.90, and $450. The $200 check was written to the defendant’s credit card carrier, MBNA, and
the $87.90 check was to pay the defendant’s cellular telephone bill. The defendant then claimed that
the checks represented payment for hours worked in previous months for which CPS did not have
available funds.
As for the defendant advancing her personal funds to cover payroll for other
employees, the state showed her CPS payroll records for Tracy Rinks for the period October through
December 1996. For October, Rinks received a CPS payroll check every pay period with appropriate
deductions. Rinks also received, however, a check on October 29 from the defendant’s personal
account. When asked what the personal check represented, the defendant responded it was for “back
work” that Rinks had performed. Other similar checks were shown to the defendant for which she,
likewise, claimed to be compensating Rinks for back work. None of the existing records showed
that Rinks had worked back hours. The state elicited from the defendant that she and Rinks were
related by marriage.
As for the defendant advancing personal funds to pay for items such as postage,
Federal Express shipments, and office supplies, she said that she reimbursed herself “when funds
were available.” The state countered by producing and showing the defendant a multitude of checks
written from CPS’s account to pay vendors directly, indicating that expenses were routinely being
covered by the business.
The defendant’s testimony was interrupted at trial to accommodate the schedules of
three other defense witnesses. United States Bankruptcy Judge Harvey Boswell testified that he had
known the Whites for a considerable number of years and that their reputation in the community for
truthfulness and dependability was good. He corroborated that the defendant Patricia White had
worked for him at the racetrack and had handled tens of thousands of dollars of cash every Friday
night. No suspicion of any wrongdoing by defendant Patricia White ever arose. Judge Boswell also
explained that at one time he and the defendant Craig White jointly owned a boat. Ultimately, the
defendant bought out Judge Boswell’s interest in the boat. The state did not cross-examine Judge
Boswell.
Milan General Sessions Court Judge Collins Bond testified that, when in private
practice, he had previously represented the Whites. Judge Bonds related that he attempted to set up
a meeting with the attorney representing CPS to discuss the theft allegations. The meeting never
occurred, because after the defendants and CPS board members collected the information needed
to sit down and meet, the other attorney called and advised Judge Bonds that he no longer was
involved in the matter. The state did not cross-examine Judge Bonds.
The third defense witness taken out of order was Melissa McMinn, the co-owner of
a pharmaceutical research business and a lifelong Milan resident. Ms. McMinn had known the
defendant Patricia White for 27 years. Ms. McMinn testified about conducting joint yard sales with
the defendant and about Ms. McMinn’s husband habit of storing shop tools at the defendants’
residence.
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Ms. McMinn had taken vacations with the defendants and had accompanied the
defendant Patricia White on several mission trips. Ms. McMinn testified that for the mission
excursions, they would solicit clothes from anyone willing to donate and would distribute the
clothing to adults and children. Ms. McMinn knew that the defendant had herself purchased items
at the Dollar Store to take on the mission trips. Ms. McMinn credited the defendant with a good
reputation for truthfulness.
On cross-examination of Ms. McMinn, the state focused on the mission trips. The
state elicited that a mission trip was “definitely not a vacation.” Ms. McMinn testified that they
worked the entire time they were gone. When she and the defendant went together on mission trips,
they roomed together. The state asked Ms. McMinn if the defendant did work for CPS while on
these mission trips. The witness replied in the negative, “not at all.”
When the defendant’s testimony resumed, the state asked her about Ms. McMinn’s
statement that the defendant did not perform company work on the mission trips. The defendant
blamed the state for not asking the witness for specific information about which mission trips they
had jointly taken and not asking about the length of the airplane trip to Africa, which would have
allowed for work to be done.
Joe McMinn, the defendants’ next door neighbor, testified that he had stored
numerous things at the defendants’ residence, such as clothing, tools, and a motorcycle. Mr.
McMinn and the defendant Craig White jointly owned a tractor, and both men had four wheelers.
Mr. McMinn regarded the defendants as honest people. The defense elicited from him two
conversations that he had with Cooper. On one occasion, Cooper came to his home and wanted him
to unlock the defendants’ house to leave a book and pick up records. Although Mr. McMinn had
a key to the residence, he declined Cooper’s request. Mr. McMinn said that ultimately Cooper left
the book at McMinn’s house but told him not to look at it. Mr. McMinn then left the defendants a
message that he had something for them. The second conversation occurred after the discovery in
1998 that money was missing. Mr. McMinn testified that Cooper admitted, “There’s nothing against
Craig[, and] . . . he’s hasn’t done anything wrong. It’s strictly between Patricia and us.”
The defendant Craig White was the final defense witness. He related being born in
Paris, Tennessee, moving to Milan, graduating from high school in 1968, attending business college
at Jackson State, working at ITT in Milan, and having various other jobs. At the time of trial, Craig
White worked at Graves Metal Service in Jackson. He had never been arrested.
The defendant described his wife’s work schedule and habits after CPS’s office was
relocated in his house. The defendant testified that his wife worked very long hours. He personally
knew that she had worked fourteen to sixteen hours a day at times to take care of the hog loads for
the farmers. In addition, he said that his wife frequently worked on Saturdays and Sundays for CPS.
To the defendant’s knowledge, his wife had never inflated her working hours. Moreover, he knew
nothing about his wife stealing from CPS. Rather, he stated, “I know she’s given a lot to CPS.”
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Although he had never accompanied his wife on mission trips, the defendant knew that she would
carry business paperwork with her.
The state’s cross-examination of the defendant focused primarily on the couple’s joint
checking account. The defendant admitted that the bank statements came to the residence and that
he signed the tax returns that were filed. He explained, however, that his wife took care of the
checking account and that he seldom wrote checks on the account. His responsibility was to keep
track of how much was spent on the construction of their residence.
The defendant testified that he trusted his wife’s judgment. At times, she told him
that she was putting money into CPS to get feed delivered to the producers. He knew that a lot of
the money spent seemed to be on credit card bills, but he also stated that neither he nor his wife were
claiming that everything charged to the credit cards were for CPS.
In rebuttal to the defense case, the state recalled Mark Smith and Investigator Draper
and offered the testimony of a former courthouse clerk, Josephine Jackson. With Smith, the state
simply clarified that he made two trips to the defendants’ residence to pick up records and other
office items. Ms. Jackson’s contribution was having known Cooper’s father for approximately 50
years, knowing that he had prepared tax returns for farms, and knowing that he was a highly
respected individual.
Investigator Draper testified that she knew nothing about the defendants before
becoming involved in the case. Regarding Patricia White’s calendars, Investigator Draper informed
the jury that while the search was ongoing, the defendants never mentioned any other calendars in
an automobile. She also conceded, however, that the automobiles could have been, but were not,
searched.
The jury deliberated on this evidence and returned verdicts finding the defendant
Patricia White guilty of Class C theft and the defendant Craig White guilty of facilitation of a felony.
This appeal ensued.
I. EVIDENCE SUFFICIENCY
Both defendants contest the legal sufficiency of the evidence underlying their
convictions. This court considers such a challenge in a jury trial strictly, viewing all of the evidence
in the light most favorable to the verdict and overturning a conviction only if no reasonable jury
could have concluded that the defendant was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt on each essential
element of the charge. See State v. Tracy Lorenzo Goodwin, __ S.W.3d __, No. E2001-01978-SC-
R11-CD, slip op. at 3 (Tenn. 2004); State v. Reid, 91 S.W.3d 247, 276 (Tenn. 2002). The state is
afforded the strongest legitimate view of the evidence and all reasonable and legitimate inferences
that flow from the evidence. See State v. Smith, 24 S.W.3d 274, 279 (Tenn. 2000). Moreover, this
court does not re-weigh or re-evaluate the evidence, nor does it substitute its inferences drawn from
circumstantial evidence for those drawn by the trier of fact. Reid, 91 S.W.3d at 277. A jury verdict
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approved by the trial judge accredits the state’s witnesses and resolves all conflicts in favor of the
verdict. See State v. Bigbee, 885 S.W.2d 797, 803 (Tenn. 1994). Simply stated, the defendant, once
convicted, is presumed guilty and bears the burden of proving that the evidence was insufficient.
See State v. Evans, 838 S.W.2d 185, 191 (Tenn. 1992).
With these ground rules in mind, we turn to both defendants’ conviction offenses.
A. Defendant Patricia White
The jury found the defendant Patricia White guilty of Class C theft of property valued
over $10,000 but less than $60,000. She argues that her conviction should be overturned essentially
because Cooper and Smith, who were her supervisors and CPS board members, authorized her to
advance expenses for CPS and to work unlimited overtime, thereby effectively consenting to the
reimbursement that she received for her overtime work and business expenses.
When the Tennessee General Assembly enacted the Criminal Code in 1989, the
various larceny-related criminal offenses were consolidated into a single offense of theft of property
to eliminate “the antiquated and confusing distinctions among various larceny-related crimes.” State
v. Byrd, 968 S.W.2d 290, 291-92 (Tenn. 1998); see Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-14-101 (2003) (theft
statute embraces “embezzlement, false pretense, fraudulent conversion, larceny, receiving/concealing
stolen property, and other similar offenses”).
Pursuant to the statute enacted in 1989, “[a] person commits theft of property if, with
intent to deprive the owner of property, the person knowingly obtains or exercises control over the
property without the owner’s effective consent.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-14-103 (2003). Therefore,
to obtain a theft conviction, the state must establish “(1) the defendant knowingly obtained or
exercised control over property; (2) the defendant did not have the owner’s effective consent; and
(3) the defendant intended to deprive the owner of the property.” State v. Amanns, 2 S.W.3d 241,
244-45 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1999). Consent is not effective if it is induced by deception. Tenn. Code
Ann. § 39-11-106(a)(9)(A) (2003). Furthermore, a person “deprives” an owner of property when
he or she disposes of the property, uses it, or transfers an interest in the property in such a manner
as to make restoration unlikely. Id. § 39-11-106(a)(8)(C) (2003).
As we understand the defendant’s arguments, she does not dispute that she knowingly
obtained CPS’s property in the form of money. Likewise, she does not controvert that she intended
to deprive CPS of its property. The pivotal issue, according to the defendant, is whether she had
effective consent to take CPS’s property. “[T]he jurors [in this case] were in the best position to
make determinations as to whether the defendant had effective consent.” State v. Mila Shaw, No.
W2001-02430-CCA-R3-CD, slip op. at 10 (Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, Jan. 16, 2003), perm. app.
denied (Tenn. 2003).
Viewed in a light most favorable to the state, the evidence at trial clearly was
sufficient for a rational jury to conclude that the defendant Patricia White did not have the effective
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consent of CPS to convert its property in the form of money withdrawn from CPS’s bank accounts.
At the outset, we observe that although success may have crowned the defendant’s efforts to expose
the overall careless management of CPS and to portray the CPS board members as “poor business
managers,” those efforts were largely irrelevant to the question of effective consent. That CPS board
members may have been lax in ferreting out the true financial condition of the business did not,
thereby, confer tacit authority or effective consent for the defendant to manage the business finances
however she desired.
As far as what Cooper may or may not have led the defendant to believe and his
involvement as the defendant’s supervisor, the parties were at odds throughout the trial. It is,
however, undisputed from the proof that virtually all of CPS’s board members were misled about
the “wages” that the defendant was receiving. The defendant, moreover, was present at some of the
board meetings when payroll expenses were disclosed and discussed; she knew that the board
members were receiving erroneous information and that Cooper was intentionally misleading the
board. Smith testified unequivocally that the board never authorized compensation for the defendant
in the amounts later discovered. In addition, according even to the defendant’s account of events,
Cooper expressed his concern that if the board knew what the back work was costing, the board
would close down CPS.
That “effective consent” requires “lawful consent” ought to be self-evident. Cooper
was not authorized by the board of CPS to set the defendant’s compensation at whatever rate he so
desired or without consideration of the other operating expenses of the business. Smith testified that
office salaries were a specific board concern, and he kept a folder of notes from board meetings to
monitor what was being reported for wages paid. Inasmuch as a rational jury was entitled to find that
the defendant knew that Cooper was not authorized by the board to unilaterally determine employee
compensation, the jury was justified in concluding that Cooper’s “consent” was not “effective” to
exonerate the defendant from criminal culpability. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-106(a)(9)(B)
(2003) (“Consent is not effective when . . . [g]iven by a person the defendant knows is not authorized
to act as an agent.”).
Regarding the defendant “reimbursing” herself for business expenses, the jury was
entitled to credit Cooper’s testimony that he did not authorize the defendant to pay her personal
credit card bills out of CPS funds. The jury was, likewise, entitled to accept Investigator Draper’s
testimony that when she interviewed Cooper and Smith, the men informed her that purchases of
snacks and drinks were not legitimate business expenses and that although the defendant was
authorized to repay herself for business-related long distance calls made on her home telephone, she
was not authorized to pay her cellular telephone charges. Furthermore, even though Smith
acknowledged giving his permission for the defendant to use her personal credit card to facilitate
shipment of certain products for the hog producers and to use CPS’s business license to purchase gift
items from a company known as ABC, Smith testified that he conditioned his permission on the
defendant documenting the transactions. Smith said that he never saw any such documentation, and
the defendant attempted to excuse her actions on the basis that she did a “cruddy job” of keeping up
with receipts.
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Other telling bits of inculpatory evidence included the sheer number of CPS checks --
approximately 400 -- that the defendant wrote to herself from 1995 to 1997. In addition, the
defendant’s income tax returns for 1996, 1997, and 1998, seized from her residence, failed to report
thousands of dollars withdrawn from CPS, and she had no ready explanation why her W-2 forms did
not accurately reflect the “wages” paid by CPS.
A reasonable jury, moreover, easily could have concluded that the defendant
exaggerated the amount of back work that she performed in an ad hoc attempt to justify the sums
of money diverted each month from CPS. The state discredited the defendant’s never-before-seen
calendars, on which she claimed to have kept track of her hours devoted to back work. The
calendars had entries for nearly every day, including holidays and days that the defendant was off
work or on vacation, and an hourly rate of $10 was noted on the calendar for January 1995, even
though CPS’s board had not approved that rate until 1996. The defendant’s explanations that she
did back work on her days off, that she carried and worked on business papers during out-of-town
mission trips, and that Cooper had given “raises that the board knew nothing about” were hardly
compelling or persuasive. In particular, the testimony of defense witness Melissa McMinn, who
roomed with the defendant on mission trips, was devastating to the defendant’s claim of multiple
hours spent on CPS paperwork while on mission trips. Finally, toward the end of the defendant’s
testimony, the inconsistencies between her calendars and CPS’s records became even more evident,
and the defendant’s efforts to reconcile the inconsistencies became increasingly implausible.
From its verdict, the jury accepted much, but not all, of the state’s theory of the case.
Finding the defendant guilty of a lesser grade of theft, the jury obviously concluded that the
defendant had performed many legitimate services for CPS and was entitled to reimbursement for
certain legitimate business expenses. The verdict was eminently reasonable and rational from the
proof presented, and the conviction, accordingly is affirmed.
B. Defendant Craig White
The jury found the defendant Craig White guilty of Class D facilitation of theft of
property valued over $10,000 but less than $60,000. He argues that his conviction is infirm because
the state introduced no evidence that he furnished substantial assistance that facilitated any theft that
his wife may have committed. The sole proof, he contends, that he was married to his wife, had a
joint bank account with her, and signed their joint tax returns is legally insufficient to support his
conviction. As we shall explain, we agree, reverse his conviction, and dismiss the charge against
him.
Before an accused can be convicted of facilitating a felony, the state must demonstrate
the commission of a specified felony and the assistance that the accused provided to the person
committing the felony. See State v. Parker, 932 S.W.2d 945, 950-51 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996). To
be precise, Code section 39-11-403, denoted “Criminal responsibility for facilitation of felony,”
provides: “A person is criminally responsible for the facilitation of a felony if, knowing that another
intends to commit a specific felony, but without the intent required for criminal responsibility under
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§ 39-11-402(2), the person knowingly furnishes substantial assistance in the commission of the
felony.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-403(a) (2003). Facilitation is punishable in an offense class next
below the facilitated felony. Id. § 39-11-403(b) (2003). “As such, facilitation is a lesser-included
offense when the accused is not the active malefactor involved in the crime.” State v. Clifford Leon
Farra, No. E2001-02235-CCA-R3-CD, slip op. at 11 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Dec. 10, 2003),
perm. app. denied (Tenn. 2004).
Here, the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the state established only,
as the defendant claims, that he shared a bank account with his wife and signed their joint tax
returns. The defendant Craig White, furthermore, testified without contradiction that his wife took
responsibility for their checking account and that he seldom wrote checks from the account. The
evidence is undisputed that he had no employment connection to CPS. The photographs of the
defendants’ residence and personal property added little to the state’s case, because the state
established no concrete connection between any particular item and money taken from CPS; indeed,
in some instances, the proof showed that photographed items were not even owned by the
defendants.
Our research discloses no case wherein criminal responsibility for facilitation was
predicated on this kind of innocuous evidence. For its part, the state simply argues that the defendant
provided substantial assistance to his wife by signing tax returns to conceal her crimes and by not
stopping or reporting his wife to the authorities. At the conclusion of the state’s case, the trial court
expressed grave reservations about the sufficiency of the state’s evidence concerning the defendant
Craig White. “Now, poor Mr. White, I haven’t heard a word about him in this trial. Now, where
does he fit in?” From its later comments, the trial court evidently decided against dismissing the
charges because it might signal to the jury that his wife was guilty. The court said, “And I don’t
know how a jury would interpret that, at this stage of the proceedings, if they don’t see him sitting
there tomorrow morning.” Then at the conclusion of the proof, the trial judge reiterated, “I don’t like
to separate defendants because of the inference juries might find.”
When the evidence sufficiency was raised a final time in connection with the new trial
motion, the trial court declined to disturb the jury’s verdict. At that time, it commented that the
evidence was sufficient for the jury to find “there was substantial aid[,] and he received benefits from
the theft by his wife.” We mention these remarks because the receipt of benefits does not thereby
establish guilt by facilitation of a felony. The key feature of facilitation is knowingly furnishing
substantial assistance to the perpetrator of a felony, not benefitting in the proceeds. Compare Tenn.
Code Ann. § 39-11-403(a) (2003) (facilitation of felony), with id. § 39-11-402(2) (2003) (criminal
responsibility for conduct of another by acting with intent to benefit in proceeds of offense).
Regardless of benefit, the key component of facilitation -- knowingly furnishing substantial
assistance -- was never shown in this case, for which the defendant Craig White’s conviction must
be vacated.
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II. SENTENCING
A. Restitution
The defendants2 contest the trial court’s order of restitution in the amount of
$124,000. Their argument is two-fold. Indicted for the offense of theft of property in an amount
over $60,000, the jury acquitted both defendants of that charge and, instead, convicted the defendant
Patricia White of the lesser-included offense and amount of theft over $10,000 but not exceeding
$60,000 and convicted the defendant Craig White of facilitation of theft in a like amount.
Accordingly, the defendants insist that the trial court was not authorized to order restitution in excess
of the jury’s verdict. Alternatively, the defendants contend that the amount of restitution ordered was
excessive as not taking into consideration their financial resources and their future ability to pay.
As authority that restitution in excess of the jury’s verdict is improper, the defendants
rely on Code section 40-20-116. The state counters that Code section 40-35-304 is applicable
because the trial court ordered restitution as a condition of probation. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-
304(a) (2003) (“A sentencing court may direct a defendant to make restitution to the victim of the
offense as a condition of probation.”). Our analysis reveals that both parties are partly correct.
Code section 40-20-116 provides, in relevant part as follows:
40-20-116. Order of restitution. -- (a) Whenever a felon is
convicted of stealing or feloniously taking or receiving property, or
defrauding another thereof, the jury shall ascertain the value of such
property, if not previously restored to the owner, and the court shall,
thereupon, order the restitution of the property, and, in case this
cannot be done, that the party aggrieved recover the value assessed
against the prisoner, for which execution may issue as in other cases.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-20-116(a) (2003). By its clear terms, this statute imposes a mandatory
obligation that restitution be ordered whenever a defendant is convicted of a theft-related offense.
See State v. Charles Chesteen, E1999-00910-CCA-R3-CD, slip op. at 13 (Tenn. Crim. App.,
Knoxville, Jun. 8, 2000) (“[R]estitution in theft cases is mandated and controlled by a specific
provision found in Code section 40-20-116(a).”).
The state suggests that the requirements of Code section 40-20-116 are irrelevant
because the trial court ordered restitution as a condition of the defendants’ probation, pursuant to
Code section 40-35-304. As we view the matter, there are several interrelated issues to be
considered. The first issue is whether restitution in theft cases is exclusively controlled by section
2
Even though the defendant Craig W hite’s conviction is reversed and dismissed, we will still address his
remaining issue to facilitate possible Supreme Court review. See State v. Patterson, 966 S.W .2d 435, 442 (Tenn. Crim.
App. 1997); State v. Woodcock, 922 S.W .2d 904, 912 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995).
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40-20-116. The second issue involves the effect of the jury’s verdict regarding the range of theft
committed on the amount of restitution that the sentencing court may order. The last issue, noticed
by this court, is whether the United States Supreme Court’s recent opinion in Blakely v. Washington,
___ U.S. ___, 124 S. Ct. 2531 (2004), acts as a constitutional limitation on the amount of restitution
that may be imposed.
“The mandatory language of [40-20-116] distinguishes the particular functions of the
judge and the jury; it implicitly authorizes the trial court to ‘order the restitution of the property’ or
allow to the victim a recovery of its value only when the jury has first ascertained its value.” State
v. Bryant, 775 S.W.2d 1, 4-5 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988), perm. app. denied (Tenn. 1989). Our review
of the record in this case reveals that the jury was instructed that if it found either defendant guilty
of theft it must “fix the value of the property or services obtained along with its verdict by indicating
which of the following ranges the value falls within.” (Emphasis added.) Consistent with that
instruction, the jury reported its guilty verdict in terms of more than $10,000 but less than $60,000.
The jury was never asked to refine further the value of the property.
In State v. Kai Nielsen, No. 03C01-9807-CR-00233 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville,
Dec. 28, 1999), aff’d on other grounds in State v. Nielsen, 44 S.W.3d 496 (Tenn. 2001), the
defendants were found guilty of Class C felony theft involving the sale of stock. As in the instant
case, the jury was instructed that it could fix the value of the property within one of four ranges. Id.,
slip op. at 4. At sentencing, the court set restitution in the amount of $25,000, id., slip op. at 5,
which fell within the Class C theft grading of more than $10,000 but less than $60,000.
Relying on Code section 40-20-116, the defendants in Kai Nielsen argued that they
should not be required to pay restitution because the jury did not set the value or amount of property
stolen. The court responded,
The jury returned a verdict of guilt as to count one, which was
the C felony of theft. The court heard ample proof to make a
determination that the amount initially paid for the stock was twenty
five thousand dollars. The court ordered that amount of restitution,
and did not include additional interest or damages. A trial judge may
direct the payment of restitution to the victim as a condition of
probation, pursuant to T.C.A. 40-35-304. This court has held that
when restitution is ordered as a condition of probation, the authority
to determine the appropriateness and the amount of restitution lies
solely with the trial court. . . . The defendants were placed on
probation in this cause, and restitution was ordered as a condition of
probation. The jury was not required to fix the amount of restitution.
Id., slip op. at 5-6.
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In Charles Chesteen, the defendant pleaded guilty to Class C theft and official
misconduct. The court imposed an effective six-year incarcerative sentence, along with restitution
in the amount of $101,821.73. On appeal, the court modified the manner of service of the sentences
and reversed and remanded the restitution determination. Charles Chesteen, slip op. at 1, 15. The
sentencing court had ordered no restitution for the theft conviction, but it assessed the full amount
of $101,821.73 for the official misconduct conviction. “At the outset,” the Charles Chesteen court
noted in its opinion, “we discern errors of law in the trial court’s judgment as they relate to the matter
of restitution.” Id., slip op. at 12. The court continued,
In the official misconduct conviction, restitution was not available to
the trial court in conjunction with a sentence of total confinement. .
. . [B]ased on the sentencing law as it existed for crimes committed
prior to July 1, 1996, restitution could not be ordered when total
confinement was imposed. . . .
In the theft case, the trial court’s error is the failure to order
restitution. The court was not hampered . . . in ordering both total
confinement and restitution. . . . [R]estitution in theft cases is
mandated and controlled by a specific provision found in Code
section 40-20-116(a).
Id., slip op. at 12-13.
Because the Charles Chesteen court modified the defendant’s sentence to include
probation, restitution then was appropriate for both convictions, and the court remanded with
instructions for the sentencing court to establish appropriate amounts of restitution. Concerning
restitution in the theft case, the court added the following remarks:
In determining restitution in the theft case, the trial court
should be aware of a distinction between the sanction of levy upon
execution provided in Code section 40-20-116(a) and restitution as a
condition of probation pursuant to section 40-35-304. . . . [W]e
believe that to the extent that the trial court wishes to impose
restitution as a condition of probation, whether the restitution itself
is authorized by the sentencing act or mandated by section 40-20-
116(a), the court must comply with the provisions of the sentencing
act . . . relative to the amount being reasonable and based upon the
defendant’s financial ability. . . . Nevertheless, if this determination
leads the court to establish an amount of restitution that is less than
the theft victim’s pecuniary loss, section 40-20-116(a) contemplates
the court establishing the deficiency amount -- that is, the difference
between the amount that is ordered as a condition to probation and
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the total amount of the loss. This deficiency amount is subject to
collection by execution as in the case of a judgment.
Id., slip op. at 13.
A restitution fact pattern, strikingly similar to the one in this case, arose in State v.
Stacy Jones Reed, No. 02C01-9602-CC-00060 (Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, Jan. 2, 1997), perm. app.
denied (Tenn. 1997). The defendant Reed was indicted for theft over $1,000 but less than $10,000.
Reed, however, was convicted on a jury verdict of theft of property over $500 but less than $1,000,
with the jury reporting to the trial court that it set value at $550. As part of Reed’s alternative
sentence, she was required to pay $5,354 in restitution to the victim. Id., slip op. at 2.
On appeal, Reed argued error in the amount of the restitution ordered. The state
conceded error. Id., slip op. at 11. The court ruled,
The jury found the defendant guilty of theft of $550.00. Tenn. Code
Ann. § 40-20-116(a) provides that when a felon is convicted of
stealing property, a jury must ascertain the value of the stolen
property. See State v. Brenda Bryant, 775 S.W.2d 1, 4-5 (Tenn.
Crim. App. 1988). We therefore modify the sentence imposed to
provide that defendant must pay $550.00 in restitution.
Stacy Jones Reed, slip op. at 11-12. Restitution, imposed as a condition of probation, we note, was
never discussed in Stacy Jones Reed. See also State v. Joe King, No. M2003-01869-CCA-R3-CD,
slip op. at 3 (Tenn. Crim. App., Nashville, Jun. 17, 2004) (defendant questioned trial court’s
authority to require $1,000 for restitution when jury convicted on lesser-included theft offense in an
amount of $500 or less; issue waived as not supported by argument, authorities, or references to the
record).
From these cases, we distill that (1) the jury’s failure to determine a specific value
or amount of property stolen does not foreclose the imposition of restitution as a condition of
probation, pursuant to Code section 40-35-304; (2) in theft convictions, the sentencing court may
order restitution pursuant to Code section 40-20-116(a) and as a condition of probation; and (3) in
theft cases not involving restitution as a condition of probation, section 40-20-116(a) restitution may
not exceed either the value assessed by the jury or the theft-value range reflected in the jury’s verdict.
Because, in this case, restitution was imposed solely as a condition of probation, the section 40-35-
304(d) considerations about financial resources and future ability to pay determine the amount and
method of payment of appropriate restitution. The record in this case, however, contains inadequate
findings in this regard for which a remand is required for the trial court to consider and make the
required statutory findings.
Our final inquiry is whether any order of restitution in this case is subject to the
dictates of the recent United States Supreme Court’s decision in Blakely v. Washington, ___ U.S.
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___, 124 S. Ct. 2531 (2004). Pursuant to Blakely, any fact that increases a sentence beyond the
“relevant statutory maximum” -- defined by the Court’s majority as the maximum sentence that a
judge may impose without making any additional findings of fact -- must be submitted and proved
to the jury beyond a reasonable doubt or admitted by the defendant. Id. at ___, 124 S. Ct. at 2536-
37. The Blakely Court did not speak in narrow terms that targeted merely the length of an accused’s
sentence; rather, the Court spoke in broader terms of the power to punish: “When a judge inflicts
punishment that the jury’s verdict alone does not allow, the jury has not found all the facts ‘which
the law makes essential to the punishment,’ . . . and the judge exceeds his proper authority.” Id. at
___, 124 S. Ct. at 2537 (emphasis added).
Existing Tennessee case law expressly recognizes, “The purpose of restitution is not
only to compensate the victim but also to punish and rehabilitate the guilty.” State v. Johnson, 968
S.W.2d 883, 884 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997) (emphasis added). Restitution has also been described
as “an important tool in the punishment of criminals.” State v. William T. Cowart, No. 01C01-9508-
CC-00251, slip op. at 9 n.5 (Tenn. Crim. App., Nashville, Nov. 22, 1996). More particularly,
restitution has been regarded as “a part of the sentencing scheme and in the nature of a penalty for
crime,” which is not affected by the victim releasing the offender from civil liability. State v. Jason
C. Deyton, Jr., No. 234, slip op. at 4 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Feb. 2, 1989).
Tennessee’s view of restitution ostensibly conflicts with the prevailing view in two
federal circuits, United States v. Behrman, 235 F.3d 1049 (7th Cir. 2000) (restitution for harm done
is a classic civil remedy, not a penalty for a crime; Apprendi, therefore, does not affect the
calculation of restitution); United States v. Nichols, 169 F.3d 1255 (10th Cir. 1999) (purpose of
restitution not to punish but to ensure victims are made whole for losses), but it is consistent with
the approach taken in two other federal circuits, United States v. Syme, 276 F.3d 131 (3d Cir. 2002)
(restitution orders made pursuant to criminal convictions are criminal penalties within the meaning
of Apprendi); United States v. Bearden, 274 F.3d 1031 (6th Cir. 2001). The United States Supreme
Court, in Kelly v. Robinson, 479 U.S. 36, 107 S. Ct. 353 (1986), held that a restitution obligation,
imposed as a condition of probation in a state criminal proceeding, was not dischargeable under
Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code because, inter alia, restitution orders in criminal proceedings
focus on the state’s interest in rehabilitation and punishment rather than the victim’s desire for
compensation.
Regardless whether restitution qualifies as punishment, however, we believe that a
judicial finding of an amount of restitution does not run afoul of the Due Process or Sixth
Amendment guarantees as interpreted in Blakely. Blakely and its progenitor, Apprendi v. New
Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 120 S. Ct. 2348 (2000), specifically targeted increased penalties for crimes
beyond the prescribed statutory maximum without submission to a jury or admission by a defendant.
Neither Code section 40-20-116 nor section 40-35-304 embraces a “statutory maximum” that could
be increased by a given finding; that is to say, neither statute specifies a maximum amount of
restitution that may be ordered. Accordingly, nothing in Blakely appears to reach our restitution
scheme or the particular restitution order entered in this case.
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For the reasons discussed above, we vacate the order of restitution and remand the
matter of restitution to the trial court for the appropriate determinations required under Code section
40-35-304.
B. Length of Sentence and Manner of Service
The trial court sentenced the defendant Patricia White to a term of four years, which
it then suspended in favor of probation. As a Range I offender convicted of a Class C offense, the
defendant’s sentencing range was three to six years. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-112(a)(3) (2003).
The trial court enhanced her sentence based on her leadership role in the commission of the offense,
see id., § 40-35-114(3) (2003), the involvement of more than one victim, see id., § 40-35-114(4)
(2003), and her abuse of a position of private trust, see id., § 40-35-114(16) (2003).
In our estimation, the decision in Blakely requires a presumptive minimum sentence
of three years absent any enhancement factors. Each of the enhancement factors found by the trial
court fall within the ambit of Blakely’s prohibition of sentence enhancement greater than the
statutory maximum without jury intervention and determination. See State v. Steven M. Stinson, No.
E2003-01720-CCA-R3-CD, slip op. at 8 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Jul. 29, 2004)
(misapplication of enhancement factors pursuant to Blakely). Although the trial court suspended the
defendant’s sentence and placed her on probation, the length of her original sentence is, nonetheless,
momentous because in the event probation is revoked, the original sentence imposed can be
effectuated. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-310 (2003). Accordingly, a sentence-length modification
to a presumptive minimum three-year sentence is appropriate.3
As for the duration of probation imposed in this case, fifteen years, there is no
requirement that the duration of the probationary period be identical to the length of the sentence
imposed. See id. § 40-35-303(c) (2003). The duration of the probation must be at least the length
of the statutory minimum sentence, but it can run “up to and including the statutory maximum time
for the class of the conviction offense,” id. § 40-35-303(c) (2003), which is what was ordered in this
case. No findings outside of or in addition to the jury’s verdict are required before the trial court can
set the duration of the probationary period greater than the length of the statutory minimum sentence.
We are, therefore, persuaded that Blakely does not affect the probationary sentencing in this case.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the conviction of defendant Craig White is reversed, and
the charge is dismissed. The defendant Patricia White’s conviction for Class C felony theft is
3
The trial court did impose a presumptive minimum two-year sentence for the defendant Craig W hite’s
facilitation conviction. See Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 39-11-403(b) (2003) (facilitation of commission of a felony is an
offense of the class next below the felony facilitated), 40-35-112(a)(4) (2003) (Range I sentence for Class D felony is
not less than two nor more than four years).
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affirmed, but the length of her sentence is modified to a presumptive minimum of three years.
Finally, the issue of restitution is remanded to the trial court for appropriate findings.
___________________________________
JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE
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