IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
January 27, 2004 Session
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. IRA ISHMAEL MUHAMMED,1 alias
IRA ISHAMEL MUHAMMED
Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Hamilton County
Nos. 239344, 239483 Stephen M. Bevil, Judge
No. E2003-01629-CCA-R3-CD
May 10, 2004
The defendant, Ira Ishmael Muhammed, was convicted of attempted second degree murder, a Class
B felony; two counts of aggravated assault, Class C felonies; attempted voluntary manslaughter, a
Class D felony; and felony reckless endangerment which the trial court, acting as thirteenth juror,
dismissed at the sentencing hearing. He was sentenced as a Range I, standard offender to twelve
years for the attempted second degree murder conviction, six years for each aggravated assault
conviction, and four years for the attempted voluntary manslaughter conviction, with the sentences
to be served consecutively, for an effective sentence of twenty-eight years. On appeal, the defendant
argues: (1) the trial court erred in admitting an audiotape of telephone conversations between him
and his ex-wife, one of the victims; (2) the trial court erred in not suppressing an audiotape of
statements he made shortly after being shot; (3) the trial court erred in imposing consecutive
sentencing; and (4) the application of consecutive sentencing is unconstitutional. Following our
review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Criminal Court Affirmed
ALAN E. GLENN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which GARY R. WADE, P.J., and ROBERT
W. WEDEMEYER , J., joined.
Clayton M. Whittaker, Chattanooga, Tennessee (on appeal); John Cavett and Barry Abbott,
Chattanooga, Tennessee (at trial), for the appellant, Ira Ishmael Muhammed.
Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Braden H. Boucek, Assistant Attorney General;
William H. Cox, III, District Attorney General; and Barry A. Steelman and Christopher D. Poole,
Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
1
W e note that the correct spelling of the defendant’s last name is “Muhammad.” However, we have used the
spelling that appea rs in the indictments.
OPINION
FACTS
The defendant’s convictions stemmed from a shooting incident that occurred on October 26,
2001, outside his then wife’s place of business, Kimberly’s Hair Salon and Boutique, in
Chattanooga. He shot his wife, Kimberly Muhammad, multiple times and endangered their infant
son before being apprehended by police officers near Thankful Baptist Church where he was shot
once.
Trial
At the defendant’s October 1-4, 2002, trial, Tony Schefano, owner of Alabama Furniture
Company, testified that his business was located at the corner of Glass Street and Dodson Avenue,
across the street from Ms. Muhammad’s business. While doing paperwork at his desk on the
morning of October 26, 2001, he heard gunshots, looked out a window, and saw a man knock down
Ms. Muhammad, straddle her, and then shoot her four or five times. Ms. Muhammad “was
screaming and hollering and her feet [were] flying up.” Schefano grabbed a shotgun and ran outside
to aid Ms. Muhammad. The pistol-wielding man jumped into a small red car and drove away in the
direction of Thankful Baptist Church. Schefano described the gunman as “about five-eleven, 165
pounds, black, no shirt . . . [with a] kind of wild . . . look in his eye.”
Katrina Baker testified that she was driving down Glass Street on the morning of the shooting
and, while stopped at a traffic light in front of Ms. Muhammad’s shop, saw a man chasing a woman
around a car. The woman then darted across the street in front of traffic, with the man running after
her and swinging at her with a closed fist. The woman, who was pleading for someone to help her,
then fell to the ground. The man straddled her and told her in a “bad” tone of voice that “it was his
child too” and that he was “tired of something, whatever was going on.” The man pulled a handgun
from the back of his pants, fired one shot in the air, and then shot the woman “about four” times.
After taking off his shirt and jacket and throwing them to the ground, the man drove off in a red,
two-door Mitsubishi Eclipse in the direction of Thankful Baptist Church. Baker described the man
as African-American and “about five-six, about 180, 185 pounds, he was bald, had on a navy, some
sort of work uniform, boots.”
Stephen Hines, a first responder with the Chattanooga Fire Department, testified that his fire
station was located about two blocks from Ms. Muhammad’s business. On the day of the shooting,
Ms. Muhammad, who was bleeding and “all shook up,” came to the station, screaming that her
husband had shot her. Hines tried to stop her bleeding and called for an ambulance.
Sergeant Craig Johnson of the Chattanooga Police Department testified that he responded
to the scene of the shooting and made a videotape and a diagram of the scene, which were admitted
into evidence. Johnson identified evidence recovered from the scene, including seven 9-millimeter
shell casings, two 9-millimeter live rounds, two 9-millimeter projectiles, a jacket, a ball cap, a pair
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of ladies’ shoes, a set of keys, and bloodstains. A subsequent search of the defendant’s red
Mitsubishi Eclipse revealed a 9-millimeter Luger cartridge box and thirty-one live rounds of
ammunition found on the front seat.
Sergeant Tim Carroll of the Chattanooga Police Department testified that he investigated the
police-involved shooting of the defendant. The defendant was apprehended near Thankful Baptist
Church where Carroll discovered a 9-millimeter pistol with its hammer “cocked back” in the vicinity
where the defendant was shot by officers. The two officers involved, George Forbes and Matt
Rogers, used .45-caliber weapons. Also recovered from the scene were bullets from the defendant’s
vehicle, a magazine containing live rounds near the defendant’s vehicle, and .45-caliber spent
casings. On cross-examination, Sergeant Carroll acknowledged that the 9-millimeter pistol did not
have a round in the chamber when he found it and would not have fired in that condition. He said
that the magazine was found “[p]robably 50, 60 yards” away from the gun. According to Carroll’s
investigation, Officer Forbes fired three shots and Officer Rogers fired one. The defendant was “shot
in the chest with an exit wound to the left shoulder area.” On redirect, Carroll said there was no way
of knowing from a distance whether the defendant’s gun had the ability to fire.
Officer George Forbes of the Chattanooga Police Department testified that he responded to
a call of “unknown trouble” in the 2200 block of Glass Street where Ms. Muhammad’s salon was
located. He saw the defendant, who matched the description he had been provided, driving a red
Mitsubishi Eclipse. Forbes, along with Officers Lockhart and Rogers, who were in separate patrol
cars, pursued the defendant. The defendant subsequently lost control of his vehicle and crashed into
the parking lot of Thankful Baptist Church. As the officers approached the church, Officer Rogers
radioed that the defendant was armed and was fleeing through the parking lot. Forbes drew his
weapon and ordered the defendant, whom he called by name, to drop his. However, the defendant
ignored Forbes’s commands, instead raising his gun toward the other officers. Believing that the
defendant’s gun was loaded, Forbes then fired three rounds at the defendant, striking him on the back
side of his shoulder. The defendant then turned toward Forbes and pointed his pistol at him before
dropping it and falling to the ground. The defendant told the officers, “You motherfuckers shot me.
I hope all you sons of bitches motherfuckers die of anthrax. You’ve suppressed my people.” The
defendant was wearing a pair of blue “work type” pants with no shirt. Officer Forbes said that he
did not learn until the incident was over that the defendant’s gun did not have a magazine in it or that
Officer Rogers had fired his gun at the defendant.
Officer Matthew Rogers testified that while en route to a “shots-fired” call at Kimberly’s Hair
Salon, he encountered the defendant driving a red Mitsubishi Eclipse. He and Officers Lockhart and
Forbes pursued the defendant until the defendant lost control of his vehicle near Thankful Baptist
Church. As the defendant exited his vehicle, Rogers saw a gun in his hand and radioed the
dispatcher that the defendant was armed. The defendant then disappeared around a corner of the
church. As Rogers cautiously approached the corner, he saw the defendant on the other side of a
ditch line and ordered him to drop his weapon. Instead, the defendant pointed his gun at Rogers,
looked back at Officer Forbes, and raised his gun. Rogers fired once at the defendant when he
pointed his gun at Officer Forbes. After Officer Forbes shot the defendant, the defendant began
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screaming, “I told that bitch I was going to get her. . . . Hope all y’all burn in hell, hope y’all die
from anthrax.”
Officer Ernest Craw testified that he also responded to the scene at Thankful Baptist Church.
After the defendant had been shot and fell to the ground, Craw secured the area because the
defendant “breeched up and tried to make a go for the weapon again.” The defendant began making
“outburst statements,” saying, “There is no other person going to raise . . . my MF child.” Craw then
turned on his tape recorder and began recording the defendant’s statements. This audiotape and a
transcript of it were entered into evidence, and the tape was played for the jury.
Kimberly Muhammad testified that she married the defendant in November 1998 when she
was thirty-seven years old and the defendant was nineteen. They separated on January 17, 2001,
when the defendant ordered her to leave their home. At the time of their separation, she was five and
one-half months pregnant with their child. A month later, in February 2001, the defendant began
threatening her by telephone and in person at her salon. The defendant told her to “plan [her] death”
and that she “need[ed] to be burned up.” He also threatened their unborn child, saying, “Why are
you having it, . . . you know that we both need to die, why do you want that baby[?]” She gave birth
to their son, Jabril Muhammad, in March 2001 and filed for divorce in May 2001. She said the
defendant’s threats continued until she was shot in October 2001. Ms. Muhammad tape-recorded
various telephone threats made by the defendant in August and September 2001, and this tape was
admitted into evidence and played for the jury. Referencing one of the taped conversations, Ms.
Muhammad said that DNA paternity testing was performed during the course of the divorce
proceeding which established the defendant as the father of her son. During another conversation,
the defendant asked her, “Did you not see what happened in California?” Ms. Muhammad said the
defendant was referring to an incident in California “where the guy went on a rampage and . . . killed
his wife, and I think she was pregnant and with children, and the in-laws too.”
As to the events of October 26, 2001, Ms. Muhammad said that she had taken seven-month-
old Jabril to work with her and had stepped outside to put a note on her door when she heard a loud
noise. She turned around and saw the defendant jump out of his red Mitsubishi with a gun. The
defendant “snatched” Jabril from her, opened the door to her shop, and let Jabril slide down his leg.
The defendant then shot at Jabril, and Ms. Muhammad saw Jabril’s legs “extend[] forward and g[e]t
real stiff and straight” and believed he had been killed. The defendant then said, “I told you it was
going to be like this, now get in here, it’s your turn.” She refused to go inside, and she and the
defendant ended up on the far side of Glass Street across from her business. The defendant told her,
“You’re not going to divorce me” and started shooting “like a crazy person.” After one bullet struck
her breast, Ms. Muhammad fell to the ground. The defendant stood over her and continued shooting,
and she crisscrossed her legs in an effort to protect herself. After the defendant stopped shooting and
she realized no one was coming to her aid, Ms. Muhammad got up and ran toward the traffic light
at the four-way intersection. Bleeding and hysterical, she beat on a motorist’s car and pleaded with
the motorist to take her to a nearby fire station. There, a fireman whom she knew rendered first-aid
to her and summoned medical personnel. One of the medics informed her that they had checked on
Jabril and that he was alive. Ms. Muhammad said she was struck by five bullets, her primary injuries
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were to her wrist, arm, and breast, and she was hospitalized for three or four days as a result. She
acknowledged that Jabril had not been injured during the incident.
On cross-examination, Ms. Muhammad said that the defendant’s father died in July 2000 and
that the defendant had missed his father. She said she had complied with the divorce court’s orders
regarding the defendant’s visitation with Jabril and acknowledged that there had been problems with
three or four of the visitations and that the police had been involved in one of those visits. At one
point, the defendant told her to stop the visitation because he was not going to pay child support.
The defendant later changed his mind and telephoned her, saying, “I want to see my G.D. son.”
Under her divorce attorney’s advice and because of the defendant’s threats, she then refused to let
the defendant see Jabril even though there was a court order in effect at the time.
The twenty-three-year-old defendant testified that he and Ms. Muhammad married on
November 5, 1998. He said they were having marital problems in January 2001 which caused him
a great deal of stress, and his father, with whom he was “real close,” had passed away which added
to his stress. After a counseling session with their minister in January, the defendant became “irate”
and told Ms. Muhammad to leave their home. He acknowledged that she was pregnant at that time
and that their son, Jabril, was born on March 21, 2001. He said that initially another man’s name
was listed as the father on his son’s birth certificate; therefore, he had a DNA test performed to prove
paternity.
Asked about an incident that occurred in February 2001 at the C.B. Robinson Bridge, the
defendant said that Ms. Muhammad had come by his house that day and asked him to take her to
work. Instead of taking her to work, he drove to the bridge because he “was so distraught about
everything that [they] had been through and . . . was ready to commit suicide and . . . wanted her to
watch it.” The defendant acknowledged that he kept a gun and a box of bullets on him at all times
because he feared for his life.
The defendant said that Ms. Muhammad had filed for divorce in May 2001 and had obtained
a temporary restraining order against him. Asked if he followed the court’s order, the defendant
replied, “I tried to do things the right way . . . the legal way, but it wasn’t seeming like I was getting
results and . . . I had to be the judge and the jury.” He said that Ms. Muhammad had threatened to
kill him in the past and had tried to shoot him. The defendant acknowledged that he had told Ms.
Muhammad in September, before learning that Jabril was his son, that he did not want visitation with
Jabril.
Regarding the tape-recorded telephone conversations with Ms. Muhammad, the defendant
said that he was irate at the time because she had refused to let him see their son and that she
“kn[e]w how to push [his] buttons.” Referencing one conversation, the defendant admitted saying
“[i]t’s not going to be arranged through no fucking court and I piss on the court system” but said he
made the comment out of anger. Referencing another conversation, the defendant explained that
when he had said, “If that was not my son, I will smoke you and him too,” he was “not saying that
[he] wanted to actually kill [his] son.” He said that he had “dealings,” including sexual relations,
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with Ms. Muhammad after the phone conversations occurred. According to the defendant, Ms.
Muhammad manipulated him “with sex.” The defendant said that he only had three visitations with
his son and that Ms. Muhammad stopped bringing Jabril for visitations after the third visit even
though he had court-ordered visitation.
As to the incident on October 26, 2001, the defendant testified that he had gotten the DNA
test results two days earlier and learned that Jabril was in fact his son. While en route to his
grandmother’s house that morning, he passed by Ms. Muhammad’s shop and saw her outside holding
Jabril. He pulled his car over to the curb, jumped out, and told Ms. Muhammad, “We’re not getting
a divorce. . . . You can forget that, we’re not getting a divorce.” He then took Jabril out of her arms
and said, “How can you keep me from my son?” Because Ms. Muhammad began to run away, the
defendant pulled his gun from his waist, fired it into a flowerbed, and ordered Ms. Muhammad to
“get over here.” The defendant related what happened next:
I had my coat on but I had took it off and I was bareback, bare chest,
back. And my gun was right here, I had it inside my waist right here,
and when I opened the door, I had tripped, stumbled, so to speak.
And I was looking at [Ms. Muhammad] and I was talking to Jabril
and he was fighting. A seven-month-old, you know how your
children scratch in your face?
And I don’t know if you all ever seen the Carpets of Dalton
commercial, but the father is holding his son and he is crying and he
sits him on the floor. That’s exactly what I did. And to keep from
dropping him, because I didn’t have a good grip on him, I let him
slide down my leg, and to keep from dropping him, I set [sic] him on
his stomach.
Now, remember, I had the gun in my waist. The gun fell over
Jabril and when I picked it up, I was looking at [Ms. Muhammad],
and . . . boom, the gun went off, just like that. It didn’t go off, I
pulled the trigger, by accident, because it’s just like a harry [sic]
trigger, it didn’t take much to pull the trigger. When I picked it up
and, boom, it went off, I looked down at Jabril, and like I said, if any
of y’all have ever seen the Carpets of Dalton commercial where the
child was breeched . . . that’s what happened.
And then [Ms. Muhammad] said, “Oh my God.” She stood
in the middle of the parking lot by my car and she said, “Oh my God,
my baby, my baby, my baby’s dead.” She fainted.
And I said – because I had told her, I said, “Get in here.” I
was standing in the doorway and I said, “Get in,” and she fainted. So
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I walked out and I grabbed her from the arm and I told her, “No, he’s
not dead.” I said, “Now get up and come in here.”
So when I grabbed her up under her armpits to tell her to
come on, I turned my back to her and I got ready to walk up the steps,
and when I turned around, she was on the other side of my car[.]
And I said, “What are you doing? What are you doing? Get
in here.” Because all I wanted to do was play with my son. That’s all
I wanted to do, was to talk to her and try to convince her to try to
reconcile our marriage, because I didn’t want to kill her and I didn’t
intend to kill my child. It was reckless, I admit it, I placed him in
harm’s way[.]
....
I walked around the vehicle, on the passenger side, and I put my arm
around her, around her neck, and I started walking with her and I said,
“Come on inside[.]” I said, “[W]e’re not getting a divorce, you can
forget it, we’re not getting a divorce.”
And she said something about “they changed their mind.”
And she wasn’t really talking a full sentence, she just kept saying,
“They changed their mind, they changed their mind.”
And I said, “Who changed their mind, who changed their
mind?” Now, at that time, now, she was walking away from the
business, away from the parking lot . . . . We were walking away
from the parking lot and I turned and I took the gun out and then I
fired it at the ground and I said, “Dammit,” excuse my rhetoric. I
said, “Get in here now,” I said, “Get in here.” And she said no and
then I turned and fired the weapon again and I fired it at the ground.
At that time we had got into a tussle because my arm was
around her and she had pulled out some kind of way and she had her
hand on the gun like this and I told her, I said, “Take your hands off,
take your hands off the gun,” and she didn’t, so I shot her in the wrist.
I didn’t shoot her to kill her, I shot her in the wrist.
And then next thing I know, she came down like this and I
grabbed her up under her arm to pull her to come inside and she fell
to the ground intentionally. She tripped up over her shoes and tried
to make it seem like her shoes flew off . . . .
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So she fell to the ground intentionally and I turned around and
I put my hand on my head and I said, “Will you quit stalling?” I said,
“Get up.” I said, “Get in here now.” And then I said, “Well you’re
going to tell me who you been sleeping with[.]”
....
She would always – she told me that, “When I get my new
husband, this is how I’m going to perform sexually for him.” And
she would always tell me how she’s going to perform in graphic
detail. And she said I’m so gross, on the phone, because she was
baiting me to say things that I really didn’t want to say.
And all I could think about was she was telling me how she
was going to have oral sex with her new husband and that’s when I
leaned down and I said, “You going to tell me who you’re sleeping
with.” And I leaned down and I put it on her arm, because I wasn’t
trying to kill her, I was trying to make her answer who she was
sleeping with, and I shot her in the arm. And then I said, “You’re
going to tell me who you’re sleeping with.” And I just said, “This
ain’t worth it.”
And then I turned around to walk away and go in there and get
Jabril, but I leaned over her and that’s when I got ready to shoot her
in the other arm, because I [have] been taught that the best place to
shoot a person when you’re not trying to kill them is in the arm. You
don’t want to shoot them in the leg because they have main arteries
in the leg. I did security, so I know pressure points. I mean I’m not
trying to sound like I’m a hardcore criminal, but I was taught this in
security where you can injure a person but not to kill them.
And when I leaned over to shoot her in the other arm, she
turned. And if you look at the trajectory, or the moving object, or the
bullet, and the angle that she was in, that’s why I went – she said it
went across her breast, into her breast and into her arm, because when
they said I had shot her in the breast, I said, “No, I didn’t shoot her in
the breast[.]” I said, “I shot her in the arm.”
So it went through her breast. I didn’t intend to shoot her in
the breast[.] I knowingly, willingly and intentionally shot her in her
wrist and in her arm. And I intended to shoot her in the other arm,
but it went across her breast or whatever. But I wasn’t trying to shoot
her in the breast, I was trying to shoot her in the other arm.
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....
And I told her, after I shot her, I said, “You’re going to have
to explain to Jabril why his father killed hisself [sic],” because I was
going to kill myself at that point. I was tired of living, I wanted to
die. And I got ready to go in there to get Jabril and then I turned
around and she got up and I looked at her, . . ., and she got up and she
ran towards Dodson [Street]. And she was knocking on a car and she
got in this like truck like, suburban truck or whatever, SUV truck,
and I just got tired of telling her to come on in.
The defendant said he shot Ms. Muhammad three times, although she testified that she had “seven
holes” in her body. He explained that these were entrance and exit wounds, saying “it wasn’t that
crucial.”
After shooting Ms. Muhammad, the defendant returned to the shop to check on Jabril and
contemplated committing suicide but was unable to do so. He “took off” in his car down Glass
Street and saw three police officers as he rounded a curve. The defendant then wrecked his car, put
more bullets in the clip of his gun which he planned to use to kill himself, jumped out of his car, with
the gun firing at that time, and ran across the parking lot of Thankful Baptist Church. He fell down
in a ditch where he dropped his gun and “saw that [he] didn’t have a clip in it.” As he was looking
for the clip, he noticed a police officer standing behind the church, grabbed his gun, and started to
leave when he heard someone say, “Drop your weapon.” The defendant said he “zoned out” and
thought, “This is it. . . . They’ll kill me, and I just rather for them to go ahead and kill me than . . .
trying to kill my own self.” The next thing he remembered was being shot. The defendant admitted
that he had rounds in the chamber of his gun, saying he “had clipped the gun several times” while
he was in the ditch. However, on cross-examination, he denied firing his gun at Officer Forbes,
saying he “didn’t have a bullet in the chamber and . . . didn’t have a clip in the gun.” He
acknowledged that his gun was in the “ready position” but denied pointing it at an officer, saying that
he was wiping the sweat from his head. He said he was shot in the back and that the bullet exited
through his chest.
Regarding the audiotape recorded by Officer Craw, the defendant acknowledged that he had
said he was going to kill Ms. Muhammad if he saw her that day, explaining that he made that
comment “out of irony because [he] was being interrogated by a detective” and “out of sarcasm.”
The defendant said that his comment about Jabril – “I shot that motherfucker, too” – was also made
in sarcasm and that the gun had discharged accidentally.
Explaining why he shot Ms. Muhammad, the defendant said, “I was so distraught by her
leaving me and being with another man, and all I could think in my head was everything she was
saying she was going to do sexually that I wasn’t getting, and I was thinking about that and I was not
in my right frame of mind. If you knew me, from the past, if you knew me, you would know that
that was not Ira Muhammad.” He said Ms. Muhammad had caused him too much stress, the
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shooting was “partially her fault,” and if Ms. Muhammad had come inside the salon when he ordered
her to do so, “none of this would have ever happened.” The defendant denied he had intended to kill
her, saying that he could have killed her had he wanted to do so because “[y]ou don’t shoot someone
in the arm and kill them, you shoot someone in the head, you shoot someone in the neck, you shoot
someone in the chest. You collapse their lungs, you collapse their kidneys. That’s what you do
when you’re trying to kill someone.” The defendant said he shot Ms. Muhammad because he
“wanted her to feel the same pain and hurt that [he] felt for everything she put [him] through and
make her remember everything that she put [him] through and she will have to explain to [their] son
why he doesn’t have a father.” According to the defendant, the only reason Ms. Muhammad was
still alive was because he was “merciful.” As to Jabril, the defendant admitted that he had placed
Jabril “in harm of serious bodily injury, it was reckless endangerment. I recklessly put him in
danger. I mean I wasn’t trying to shoot him, I mean the gun fell out of my waist, I picked it up and
it fired. I wouldn’t try to kill my own son.”
Sentencing Hearing
At the defendant’s January 13, 2003, sentencing hearing, Jim Osterhout of the Tennessee
Board of Probation and Parole, who prepared the defendant’s presentence report, testified that the
defendant was convicted of assault on May 7, 2001, and received a suspended sentence of eleven
months and twenty-nine days for which he was still on probation at the time he committed the instant
offenses.2
Marva Walker, Kimberly Muhammad’s sister, testified about an encounter she had with the
defendant on April 11, 2001, while driving down Dodson Avenue. The defendant, who was
traveling down the wrong side of the road, pointed a “blue towel or something like that” at her and
said, “B, I’ll F you up if you F with me again.” Ms. Walker could not see if the defendant had an
object concealed under the towel but assumed that he did. Ms. Walker reported the incident to the
police and said that the defendant’s assault conviction for which he was on probation at the time of
the instant offenses was related to this incident.
Jean Wolfford, a customer of Kimberly Muhammad’s hair salon for three years, testified that
she had witnessed the defendant threatening to kill Ms. Muhammad at the salon. Ms. Wolfford said
that when the defendant came into the shop, Ms. Muhammad “would get so nervous that she
couldn’t do hair. Her customers would be so nervous, he ran all of them off so that she couldn’t do
work.” Ms. Wolfford said that customers were afraid of the defendant because he “acted like a
madman . . . like he was crazy.”
Explaining Ms. Muhammad’s absence from the sentencing hearing, her mother, Joanne
Favors, testified that Ms. Muhammad was “very distraught” and “real disturbed.” According to Ms.
2
The defendant’s presentence report reflects another conviction for assault on M arch 3, 1999, for which he
received a six-mo nth susp ended sentence , and a 199 6 juvenile conviction for assault for which he received six months
probation.
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Favors, the sentencing hearing would have been “too psychologically traumatic” for Ms.
Muhammad. Ms. Favors testified regarding encounters she had with the defendant prior to October
26, 2001, saying he had frequently threatened to kill her and her family. Ms. Favors said that Ms.
Muhammad had moved in with her after she and the defendant separated, and she had an order of
protection against the defendant at the time he shot her. She said that Ms. Muhammad was shot four
times, hospitalized for three days, and unable to work for months “because she had prosthetic
devices on.” As a result of the shooting, Ms. Muhammad was “very withdrawn . . . very nervous and
apprehensive” and was going to close her business within the next few days. Ms. Favors believed
the defendant posed a future threat to her and her family and said she would be “very, very fearful”
if he were released from prison. Ms. Favors said that the defendant had not supported Ms.
Muhammad or Jabril because “he was not able to maintain a job because of his inappropriate
behavior.”
Eddie R. Jacks, pastor of Galilee Baptist Church, testified that he had known the defendant
all of his life and that the defendant was a member of his church. He described the defendant as “a
nice kid” and said he had always obeyed him and the youth workers at the church. Even after the
defendant changed religions and became a Muslim, he continued to visit Jacks at the church. To
Jacks’s knowledge, the defendant had never been in any trouble.
The defendant testified that his divorce from Ms. Muhammad became final in March 2002
and that he had not contacted her in the past fourteen months. He said that his incarceration had
given him time to “deal with [his] emotions and [his] anger” and that he had attended anger
management and alcohol and drug classes. He said that his fiancée was present at the sentencing
hearing and, if he were granted probation or split confinement, they planned to marry. Regarding
the incident with Marva Walker, the defendant denied pulling a gun on her and said he only pled
guilty in that matter because he did not want a felony on his record. Saying that he was now “a
changed man,” the defendant asked the court to give him “a second chance.” He said he did not want
to have any contact with Ms. Muhammad when released but planned to have his visitation rights
with Jabril reinstated.
ANALYSIS
I. Admission of Audiotape of Telephone Conversations
The defendant argues that the audiotape of telephone conversations between him and Ms.
Muhammad “should have been excluded pursuant to Rule 401, 402 and 403 of the Tennessee Rules
of Evidence as being the type of evidence which has probative value but it is ‘substantially
outweighed’ by the prejudicial effect.”
“Relevant evidence” is defined as “evidence having any tendency to make the existence of
any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than
it would be without the evidence.” Tenn. R. Evid. 401. Rule 403 provides that “[a]lthough relevant,
evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair
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prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste
of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” Tenn. R. Evid. 403.
Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion to exclude the audiotape of the telephone calls,
arguing that it was irrelevant and unfairly prejudicial. In overruling the motion, the trial court stated:
[E]ven though I think some of this is repetitious, I think to take it out
would be taking it out of context, because I do think some of the
repetition shows the obsessiveness, shows the obsession that he has
with her, shows the control that he has: “I don’t care about the police,
I don’t care about anything, I’m in control here. The courts aren’t in
control, the lawyers aren’t in control, I’m in control here and I’ll do
what I want to do,” and I think those statements are probative to the
effect that it shows that it doesn’t matter. The police aren’t going to
stop him, the courts aren’t going to stop him. If he makes up his
mind to smoke her or to do whatever he’s going to do, there’s nobody
that’s going to stop him. And I think that’s probative, again going
toward that state of mind, that intent, that motive that he displays
throughout this tape.
And I do think, after reviewing this tape, other than those
exceptions that I’ve talked about when she brings up things that may
have happened in the past, I think the probative value and the
relevance, so definitely relevant, but I think the probative value of
these statements, showing his state of mind, his intent, his
premeditation, and then actually carrying these acts out, I think far
outweighs any prejudicial effect that these tapes would have, so I’m
going to overrule that motion.
During the victim’s testimony, an audiotape was played for the jury, which was a recording
made by the victim of prior telephone conversations she had with the defendant. The defendant had
placed the calls to her mother’s house. Among his many profanity-laced comments were that she
“ought to pay” for all she had put him through; that he was “liable to take the MF [his son] and be
gone;” that he was “dealing with this shit myself;” that he was “waiting to come across [the victim’s]
sister;” that he was the “MF3 judge and jury of [his] MF life;” and if anything happened to his mother
because of stress, he would “take this shit out on [the victim’s] MF mother.” Asked by the victim
not to hurt their child, the defendant replied, “I guarantee I shoot that MF in his GD face. That ain’t
my MF kid.” He said, “I guarantee you I smoke your MF ass. . . . They ain’t taking my fucking life.
I will take yours. And that MF bastard. That ain’t my MF kid.” Toward the end of one
conversation, he spoke of an incident in California, saying “MF California, he killed his MF wife
3
In his conversations, the defendant did not utilize the shortened version of this word, as we have done.
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(unintelligible) fucking screaming and then shoot his other MF son and killed his MF
(unintelligible).”
Following a hearing, the trial court ruled that these statements by the defendant were
admissible pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Evidence 803, as admissions by a party-opponent and as
showing his “state of mind . . . intent, plan, motive, design.” Additionally, the parties argued as to
the application of, and the court considered, Tennessee Rule of Evidence 404(b) which sets out the
circumstances under which proof of other acts is admissible in a criminal prosecution:
Other Crimes, Wrongs, or Acts. Evidence of other crimes, wrongs,
or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to
show action in conformity with the character trait. It may, however,
be admissible for other purposes. The conditions which must be
satisfied before allowing such evidence are:
(1) The court upon request must hold a hearing outside the
jury's presence;
(2) The court must determine that a material issue exists other
than conduct conforming with a character trait and must upon request
state on the record the material issue, the ruling, and the reasons for
admitting the evidence;
(3) The court must find proof of the other crime, wrong, or
act to be clear and convincing; and
(4) The court must exclude the evidence if its probative value
is outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
Generally, this rule is one of exclusion, and evidence is not admissible that an accused has
committed some other crime or bad act independent of that for which he is charged, even though it
may be a crime or act of the same character as that for which the accused is on trial. See State v.
Howell, 868 S.W.2d 238, 254 (Tenn. 1993). If, however, evidence that a defendant has committed
a crime separate from the one for which he is being tried is relevant to some matter actually in issue
in the case on trial and if its probative value is not outweighed by the danger of its prejudicial effect,
the evidence may be admitted. See id. "Only in an exceptional case will another crime, wrong, or
bad act be relevant to an issue other than the accused's character. Such exceptional cases include
identity, intent, motive, opportunity, or rebuttal of mistake or accident." State v. Drinkard, 909
S.W.2d 13, 16 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995).
Although the trial court determined that the audiotape of the conversations was admissible
pursuant to Rule 803, the hearing conducted on the matter substantially complied with the
requirements of Rule 404(b), meaning that this court reviews its decision to admit or exclude
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evidence under an abuse of discretion standard. See State v. Dubose, 953 S.W.2d 649, 652 (Tenn.
1997). The trial court in this case conducted the appropriate jury-out hearing and stated that the
probative value of the statements outweighed their prejudicial effect.
The court explained that the audiotape of the defendant’s statements was admissible to show
the required intent for the offense of attempt to commit first degree murder. As explained by Neil
P. Cohen et al., Tennessee Law of Evidence § 4.04[10] (4th ed. 2000), “[w]here it must be shown
that a criminal defendant had a specific criminal intent, Rule 404(b) permits the court to admit
evidence of other crimes or acts of the defendant to show the requisite intent for the crime charged.”
This court explained the principle in State v. Coulter, 67 S.W.3d 3, 48 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2001):
Because the appellant in this case did not dispute that he had
killed his wife, the principal issue at trial was whether the appellant
possessed the requisite mental state, particularly premeditation. Our
supreme court has noted that "a determination of culpable mental
states, such as premeditation . . ., must [often] be inferentially made
from the circumstances surrounding the killing." State v. Hall, 958
S.W.2d 679, 704 (Tenn. 1997). Among the relevant circumstances
are facts about the defendant's prior relationship and conduct with the
victim from which the jury may infer a motive. Id.; see also State v.
Jones, 15 S.W.3d 880, 889 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1999); State v. Schafer,
973 S.W.2d 269, 273 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997); State v. Bordis, 905
S.W.2d 214, 222 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995); [State v.] Gentry, 881
S.W.2d [1,] 5 [(Tenn. Crim. App. 1993)].
Applying that principle, this court determined that the trial court had not abused its discretion
in allowing into evidence certain letters which the defendant had written to his wife before killing
her:
[A]lthough the State introduced other evidence concerning the
Coulters' relationship prior to this offense, the challenged notes and
letters uniquely imparted the appellant's perspective on his marriage
and on his ongoing dispute with his wife as the appellant wrote the
notes and letters contemporaneously with the dispute. Thus, by virtue
of these documents, the jury was able to more accurately assess the
bitterness of the dispute, which persisted for at least one year prior to
this offense. Again, several of the documents reflect the appellant's
anger at his wife's withdrawal from any intimacy with him and
possible infidelity despite her continued cohabitation with him. More
importantly, several documents also reflect the appellant's fervent
desire to reconcile with his wife and his opposition to ending their
marriage. In assessing whether this evidence could reasonably affect
the probability of premeditation in the context of other evidence
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introduced at trial, the trial court was entitled to "draw upon common
sense, general knowledge, and its understanding of human conduct
and motivation." [State v.] Hayes, 899 S.W.2d [175,] 183 [(Tenn.
Crim. App. 1995)].
Id. at 49.
In the present appeal, the defendant was charged with the attempted first degree murder of
his wife and son, the indictments charging that he “unlawfully, intentionally and with premeditation
attempt[ed] to kill” each. The trial court determined that the audiotape of the defendant’s telephone
calls to his wife was relevant to show his state of mind and anger toward his wife. The evidence
supports this determination.
II. Failure to Suppress Audiotape of Statements
The defendant argues that the audiotape of his statements recorded by Officer Craw after he
was shot should have been suppressed. He claims that the tape was an “electronic surveillance,”
requiring either a warrant or the consent of one of the participants, and that he was in custodial
interrogation at the time he made the statements.
In ruling that this audiotape was admissible, the trial court concluded, following the hearing
on the motion to suppress, that the defendant’s answering questions from medical personnel did not
constitute an “interrogation,” even though a law enforcement officer was listening and recording:
In this particular case, I don’t think there is any question about
the fact [the defendant] was in custody. I don’t think there’s any
question about the fact that the focus of suspicion had centered on
[the defendant]. The only question is whether or not this was an in-
custodial interrogation.
I find nothing in the proof before me that shows that in any
way this was an interrogation. The only proof of that is by [the
defendant], who says that there was a person in a dark suit asking him
questions. Of course, going to the reliability and credibility of [the
defendant’s] testimony is the fact that he himself said he was going
in and out of consciousness. And I think it’s clear from the statement
that was introduced, at that point in time [the defendant] didn’t care
who was there or who was asking questions, he was going to say what
he was going to say and he was going to do it.
It is obvious from the statement that this was nothing more
than a spontaneous utterance on his behalf, without benefit of being
interrogated. I don’t find that it’s an in-custodial interrogation.
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As to the admissibility of the statement, I do find it’s
admissible. As to the weight of those statements, that’s a question for
the jury to make a determination: whether in fact he was confused at
the time, whether in fact he was in and out of consciousness, and
whether in fact these were nothing more than ironic statements and
whether he meant what he said. Those are all questions for the jury
to make the determination. But the court finds no problem with the
admissibility of this spontaneous utterance on behalf of [the
defendant]; therefore, the court overrules the motion to suppress.
The question, as correctly viewed by the trial court, was whether the defendant was “in
custody” at the time of his statements to medical personnel. Authorities considering similar
situations concluded that such interrogations were not custodial, and, thus, statements by defendants
were admissible although they had not been advised of their Miranda rights. In People v. Mosley,
87 Cal. Rptr. 2d 325, 328 (Cal. Ct. App. 1999), an officer, investigating a shooting in a residential
area and to determine what had happened, went to the defendant who was being treated at the scene
in an ambulance. In response to the officer’s question as to the facts of the incident, the defendant
said that he had been a pedestrian and shots had been fired from a vehicle, striking him. However,
the officer noticed the defendant’s belt buckle identified him as a member of a certain street gang.
The officer brought to the ambulance a witness to the shooting, who said that the defendant had
jumped out of a vehicle which had traded shots with another vehicle. Noting that the few questions
asked of the defendant were in the presence of medical personnel, the questions were not accusatory,
and the defendant was to be transported to a hospital rather than jail, the court concluded that the
defendant’s statement was admissible even though he had not been advised of his Miranda rights:
Our review of the facts of the instant case leads us to the
conclusion that defendant was not in custody within the meaning of
Miranda when he was being treated by paramedics in the ambulance
prior to being transported to the hospital. Any restraint of defendant's
freedom of action was caused by the need to treat his gunshot wound,
which was still bleeding and was actively being treated during the
interview. He had not been placed under arrest because the police did
not know what had happened that caused him to be shot. If he was a
victim of a shooting they needed information to put out a broadcast
on his assailants. They knew that two shootings had occurred, but
they did not know at the time of the interview what started the
shooting, who was involved, or even if the two shootings were related
to each other.
Id. at 331-32.
Other courts considering similar facts determined, as well, that the statement of a defendant
during medical treatment was admissible as noncustodial, although he had not been advised of his
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Miranda rights. See Wilson v. Coon, 808 F.2d 688, 689-90 (8th Cir. 1987) (at scene of automobile
accident, officers asked defendant if he had been driving one of the vehicles as he was receiving
medical treatment, and statement was admissible although he had not been advised of his rights);
United States v. Martin 781 F.2d 671, 673 (9th Cir. 1985) (defendant’s statement to officers at
hospital where he was being treated that he had been making bombs in an apartment, the destruction
of which officers were investigating, was admissible although he had not first been advised of his
rights).
Applying these principles to the present appeal, it is clear the trial court correctly concluded
that the audiotape of the defendant’s statements recorded by Officer Craw was admissible. At the
time, the defendant was being treated by medical personnel for a gunshot wound. All questioning
was by medical personnel and Officer Craw, opportunistically, turned on his personal tape recorder.
There is no proof that he in any way initiated the questioning or asked that the defendant be
questioned about the incident which just had occurred. Given all of this, we concur in the trial
court’s ruling that the statement was noncustodial and, thus, admissible against the defendant.
As for the claim that the questioning constituted illegal surveillance, that argument is
presented for the first time on appeal. Accordingly, it is waived.
III. Consecutive Sentencing
The defendant argues that the trial court erred in ordering that his sentences be served
consecutively, saying there was no “factual basis showing that [he] was necessarily sentenced to
consecutive sentencing to protect the public.”
As a general rule, consecutive sentences are imposed at the discretion of the trial court upon
its consideration of one or more of the following statutory criteria:
(1) The defendant is a professional criminal who has knowingly
devoted such defendant's life to criminal acts as a major source of
livelihood;
(2) The defendant is an offender whose record of criminal activity is
extensive;
(3) The defendant is a dangerous mentally abnormal person as
declared by a competent psychiatrist who concludes as a result of an
investigation prior to sentencing that the defendant's criminal conduct
has been characterized by a pattern of repetitive or compulsive
behavior with heedless indifference to consequences;
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(4) The defendant is a dangerous offender whose behavior indicates
little or no regard for human life, and no hesitation about committing
a crime in which the risk to human life is high;
(5) The defendant is convicted of two (2) or more statutory offenses
involving sexual abuse of a minor with consideration of the
aggravating circumstances arising from the relationship between the
defendant and victim or victims, the time span of defendant's
undetected sexual activity, the nature and scope of the sexual acts and
the extent of the residual, physical and mental damage to the victim
or victims;
(6) The defendant is sentenced for an offense committed while on
probation; or
(7) The defendant is sentenced for criminal contempt.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-115(b). These criteria are stated in the alternative; therefore, only one
need exist to support the appropriateness of consecutive sentencing. In ordering that the defendant’s
sentences be served consecutively, the trial court applied criteria (4) and (6), finding that the
defendant was a dangerous offender and that he was on probation when he committed the instant
offenses:
Now the question as to whether or not these sentences should
run consecutively or concurrently. The court, in considering TCA 40-
35-11[5], (6), the court finds that there were multiple convictions that
did occur while he was on probation.
The court does find, under 40-35-11[5], Subsection 4, that
[the defendant] is a dangerous offender. Anyone who would call his
soon-to-be ex-wife and go out and say, “I’m going to kill you, I’m
going to kill that child,” and then take steps to do it, and callously,
cold-heartedly, unmercifully, catch her in the early morning hours,
chase her across the street after he’s already fired the gun at the baby
and get her down on the ground while she’s screaming for help and
fire a gun at her and try to kill her, then leave, when the police come,
and then attempt to kill the police officers, I think that’s a dangerous
offender. This court finds that’s a dangerous offender.
And I find it’s one who has little or no regard for human life.
It didn’t matter if anybody else was in the street, driving down the
road, or if anybody else was around, he had a mission and he was on
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that mission and he was not to be deterred by anybody; not the police,
not the courts, not the judge, not anyone.
I find that the risk to human life is high because of his actions.
He is one who does not – that those actions indicated a risk to human
life is high.
I find that the consecutive sentence is necessary due to the
severity of offenses. As I said, Mrs. Muhammad, by the grace [of]
God, is here alive, not here, but alive in this world today through no
fault of [the defendant], because he did everything he could to keep
that from happening, to snuff out her life like you’d blow out a
candle.
And I find that consecutive sentences are necessary to protect
the public from further action, because, as I said, based on what I’ve
heard here today, this is not over. It may be a temporary lull, he may
try to pull the wool – he pulled the wool over the jury’s eyes, but he
is not going to pull the wool over this court’s eyes. He is not the
court, he is not the judge, contrary to what he said. It’s my duty to
follow the law and see that justice is done, and to do anything less in
this case would not be justice, because it’s not over.
This record reflects that the trial court, in imposing consecutive sentences, followed the
statutory sentencing procedures, made appropriate findings of fact, and gave proper consideration
to the sentencing principles. Therefore, our review of the imposition of consecutive sentencing by
the trial court is de novo with a presumption of correctness. Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-401(d); State
v. Adams, 45 S.W.3d at 46, 62 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000).
Applying the foregoing, we conclude that the record supports the trial court's imposition of
consecutive sentences. The trial court found that the defendant was on probation for a prior assault
conviction at the time he committed the instant offenses, and he does not contest this fact. Only one
ground need exist for imposition of consecutive sentencing. Thus, even if the defendant’s arguments
were correct as to the finding he is a dangerous offender, the fact remains that he was on probation
when he committed the present offenses. Accordingly, this assignment is without merit.
IV. Constitutionality of Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-35-115
The defendant argues that this code section violates the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments
to the United States Constitution and Article I, Sections 6, 8, 9, 14, and 16 of the Tennessee
Constitution.
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The State responds to these arguments by saying that the defendant is raising claims on
appeal which were not presented to the trial court. Accordingly, we first will review how this issue
was presented to the trial court. In his motion for new trial, the defendant argued that the Tennessee
procedures for determining whether consecutive sentencing is appropriate violated his Fifth and
Sixth Amendment right to counsel as well as his right to trial by jury:
Tennessee sentencing guidelines are unconstitutional and that
they failed to place defendant on notice of the enhanced punishment
resulting from consecutive terms of sentencing upon conviction prior
to trial. Such sentencing guidelines violate the right to representation
by counsel under the Fifth and Sixth Amendments, the right to
indictment[.]
Tennessee sentencing guidelines fail to protect the defendant’s
right to a trial by jury upon conviction of substantive offense and
consecutive sentencing terms deny defendant the right to trial by jury
and enhancement of sentence is not supported by finding of fact by a
trial by jury[.]
At the hearing on the motion for new trial, the defendant argued that the Tennessee
procedures for consecutive sentencing denied him “constitutional protections:”
Your Honor, the next issue we’d like to address involved
sentencing. We had filed several different issues, but they all, I think,
can be tied into one.
Essentially, Your Honor, the defendant did not receive notice,
he did not receive the guarantees of the Constitution of the United
States and of the State of Tennessee by way of indictment for an
enhancement outside the sentencing guideline range for the
consecutive sentencing which was applied to [the defendant].
There are, in Tennessee’s law and Tennessee’s guideline
range and Tennessee sentencing guidelines, the application of
consecutive sentencing in certain circumstances that was applied to
[the defendant]. We believe that it’s unconstitutional way, [sic] the
Tennessee guidelines are currently set forth and that the denial of
notice, the denial of an indictment, the denial of a trial by jury on that
enhancing factor resulted in a sentence which was outside the
guideline in which he was denied the constitutional protections for
those, for the unconstitutional construct of Tennessee’s sentencing
guidelines. We’re going to raise that on appeal as well if it is denied
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by Your Honor and so we would like to bring those issues before the
court.
As we understand the defendant’s claim as to this issue, he argues that the bases for the
consecutive sentences, the court’s findings that he was a dangerous offender and was on probation
when he committed the offenses which resulted in the present appeal, “are in fact elements of a
separate offense which should be charged in indictments as required by the United States and
Tennessee Constitutions and tried by a jury of peers as required by the Tennessee and United States
Constitutions as opposed to the unconstitutional practice of allowing the Court to make a
determination based upon the finding of a preponderance of the evidence.” He claims that he “did
not have appropriate notice to prepare for this additional ‘sentencing guideline’ which enhanced [his]
sentence.”
We will review the holding in Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 120 S. Ct. 2348
(2000), upon which the defendant relies for this assignment. Apprendi was convicted, on a plea of
guilty, of using a firearm for an unlawful purpose, a second degree offense under New Jersey law
that carried a sentence range of five to ten years in prison. There was evidence, although disputed
by Apprendi, that his offense, shooting into the home of an African-American family, was racially
motivated. New Jersey had a separate "hate crime" statute that increased the punishment for a
second degree offense to a prison term of ten to twenty years if the court found, by a preponderance
of the evidence, that the defendant committed the underlying offense with a purpose to intimidate
an individual or group because of race, color, gender, handicap, religion, sexual orientation, or
ethnicity. Id., 530 U.S. at 468-69, 120 S. Ct. at 2351. Apprendi was not charged under the hate
crime law, and, though pleading guilty to the underlying offense, he objected to the sentence
enhancement under that law. The judge rejected the challenge, applied the sentence enhancement,
and sentenced Apprendi to twelve years.
On appeal, the Supreme Court concluded that the fact that the underlying offense was
committed with a purpose to intimidate an individual or group because of race, color, gender,
handicap, religion, sexual orientation, or ethnicity was a necessary element for increasing the
punishment. Id., 530 U.S. at 501, 120 S. Ct. at 2369. Specifically, the Supreme Court held:
Other than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the
penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must
be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt. With
that exception, we endorse the statement of the rule set forth in the
concurring opinions in [Jones v. United States, 526 U.S. 227, 119 S.
Ct. 1215 (1999) ]: "It is unconstitutional for a legislature to remove
from the jury the assessment of facts that increase the prescribed
range of penalties to which a criminal defendant is exposed. It is
equally clear that such facts must be established by proof beyond a
reasonable doubt." 526 U.S. at 252-53 (opinion of Stevens, J.); see
also 526 U.S. at 253 (opinion of Scalia, J.).
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Id., 530 U.S. at 490, 120 S. Ct. at 2362-63 (emphasis added) (footnote omitted).
The specific argument made by this defendant, that only a jury may make the determination
to impose enhanced punishment even within the range for the convicted offense, was rejected in
Apprendi, which explained the “sentencing factors” the trial court may apply and the difference
between these and elements of a greater offense:
The term appropriately describes a circumstance, which may be either
aggravating or mitigating in character, that supports a specific
sentence within the range authorized by the jury's finding that the
defendant is guilty of a particular offense. On the other hand, when
the term "sentence enhancement" is used to describe an increase
beyond the maximum authorized statutory sentence, it is the
functional equivalent of an element of a greater offense than the one
covered by the jury's guilty verdict. Indeed, it fits squarely within the
usual definition of an "element" of the offense.
Id., 530 U.S. at 494, 120 S. Ct. at 2365 n.19.
Courts have interpreted the holding in Apprendi to allow the trial court to determine whether
sentences should be served consecutively. United States v. Samuel, 296 F.3d 1169, 1175 (D.C. Cir.
2002) (“[T]he district court did not commit Apprendi error when it enhanced [the defendant’s]
sentence because he committed the second of his narcotics offenses while he was on release for the
first.”), cert. denied, 537 U.S. 1078, 123 S. Ct. 680 (2002); People v. Williamson 747 N.E.2d 26, 34
(Ill. App. Ct. 2001) (trial court may consider “the nature and circumstances of the offense and the
history and character of the defendant” in determining whether consecutive sentencing “is required
to protect the public from further criminal conduct by the defendant, the basis for which the court
shall set forth in the record”). Accordingly, we conclude that the defendant’s arguments based upon
the Apprendi holding are without merit.
The defendant also argues on appeal that his consecutive sentences amounted to “cruel and
unusual” punishment, as well as his rights to equal protection and due process of law, and that
Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-35-115(b)(4) is void for vagueness by not sufficiently defining
“dangerous offender.” These arguments were not raised in the motion for new trial, argued at the
hearing on that motion, or supported by authorities in the defendant’s brief. Accordingly, they are
waived. Tenn. R. App. P. 27(a)(7); Tenn. Ct. Crim. App. R. 10(b); State v. Aucoin, 756 S.W.2d 705,
715 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988) (“[A] defendant may not object to the introduction of evidence on one
ground, abandon this ground, and assert a new basis or ground for the objection” on appeal.).
The defendant’s arguments as to his sentencing are without merit.
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CONCLUSION
Based upon the foregoing authorities and reasoning, we affirm the judgments of the trial
court.
___________________________________
ALAN E. GLENN, JUDGE
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