IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
May 21, 2002 Session
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ROGER DALE QUILLEN
Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Sullivan County
No. S42,442 Phyllis H. Miller, Judge
No. E2001-01411-CCA-R3-CD
January 8, 2003
The appellant, Roger Dale Quillen, was convicted by a jury in the Criminal Court of Sullivan County
of aggravated burglary, felony murder, premeditated first degree murder, and simple assault. The
trial court merged the murder convictions and sentenced the appellant to an effective sentence of life
imprisonment. On appeal, the appellant asserts that he established the affirmative defense of insanity
by clear and convincing evidence and, therefore, he should have been found not guilty by reason of
insanity. After a careful review of the record and the parties’ briefs, we affirm the judgment of the
trial court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court is Affirmed.
NORMA MCGEE OGLE , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS T. WOODA LL and
JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, JJ., joined.
Kenneth F. Irvine, Jr., Knoxville, Tennessee (on appeal), and Larry Dillow and Richard Hopson,
Kingsport, Tennessee (at trial), for the appellant, Roger Dale Quillen.
Paul. G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Angele M. Gregory, Assistant Attorney General;
H. Greeley Wells, Jr., District Attorney General; and Barry Staubus and Gene Perrin, Assistant
District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
I. Factual Background
At approximately 7:00 a.m. on December 6, 1998, the appellant went to his father’s
house on Bloomingdale Pike in Kingsport, Tennessee, to discuss putting a mobile home on property
owned by his father in Scott County, Virginia. After his father rejected the idea, the appellant went
to his own house, retrieved an axe and two rifles, and returned to his father’s house. The appellant
then used the axe to break through the back door and gain access into the house. As the appellant
entered the house, his father approached him to ask what he wanted. However, before his father
could finish his sentence, the appellant loaded a round into the chamber of the rifle and shot his
father in the chest. His father fell to the floor.
Wayne Presley, Jr., who was living with the appellant’s father at the time, heard the
commotion in the kitchen and, upon entering the room, saw “fireworks” as the appellant’s father fell
to the floor. Wayne1 begged the appellant, “no, Roger, no,” but the appellant did not acknowledge
Wayne as he reloaded the gun and shot his father a second time. Wayne then pleaded, “Roger, Lord,
please don’t shoot me.” The appellant turned to Wayne and said, “I’m not going to hurt you, I love
you, I’m not going to shoot you. . . . I’m going to go over, and I’m going to shoot Lynn, and I’m
going to shoot myself, and tell Susan, she can have it all.” As the appellant left the house, he
retrieved the axe and told Wayne, “[Y]ou can call Lynn too if you want to try to save his life.”
Wayne called 911.
The appellant drove approximately thirteen miles to his brother Lynn’s mobile home
in Scott County, Virginia. When he arrived, he parked his truck behind an old barn so that the
vehicle could not be seen from his brother’s home. The appellant then walked up to the mobile
home and used the axe to break the window in the door. Lynn heard a “loud crash” and got out of
bed to investigate. After arming himself with a loaded shotgun, Lynn observed his brother coming
around the corner toward the master bedroom. Lynn pointed his shotgun at the appellant and told
him, “[S]urely to God, a little piece of property ain’t worth all of this.” The appellant, who had his
gun to his side, said, “[P]lease, brother, don’t kill me.” Lynn told the appellant to lay down his
weapon and the appellant complied.
The brothers sat down on the couch and the appellant informed Lynn that he had shot
and killed their father. The appellant then asked Lynn to take him outside and shoot him, but Lynn
refused. At that time, the phone rang. It was the Scott County Sheriff’s Department calling to warn
Lynn that his brother was on the way to his home to harm him. Lynn informed the authorities that
the appellant had already arrived and the dispatcher instructed Lynn to keep the appellant calm until
the officers arrived. The officers arrived fifteen minutes later. The appellant cooperated as the
officers took him into custody, telling them to “go ahead and treat me as the murderer I am.” The
officers took possession of the appellant’s rifle and the ammunition found in the pockets of the
appellant’s jacket. The officers also recovered a loaded .22 rifle from the appellant’s truck.
The appellant’s father died as a result of the gunshot wounds. On March 17, 1999,
the Sullivan County grand jury charged the appellant in a four-count presentment with aggravated
burglary, felony murder, premeditated first degree murder, and aggravated assault.
At trial, Lieutenant Damon C. Gordon of the Sullivan County Sheriff’s Department
testified that he was the first officer to arrive at the appellant’s father’s house on December 6, 1998.
Upon entering the house, Lieutenant Gordon observed damage to the door and saw the appellant’s
father laying in the floor with gunshot wounds to the neck and chest. The paramedics, who had
already arrived, alerted Lieutenant Gordon that the appellant’s father was dead. Except for the
1
Because the victim and two witnesses share the last name “Quillen” and two witnesses share the last name
“Presley,” we have elected to utilize first names for the purpose of brevity. We intend no disrespect by this procedure.
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damage to the door, Lieutenant Gordon observed no signs of struggle and recovered no weapons.
Lieutenant Gordon found a shell casing lying near the body.
Wayne Presley, Jr., testified that at the time of the shooting he was living with the
appellant’s father in order to care for him and his yard. Wayne was dating the appellant’s sister,
Susan, at that time and at the time of trial he and Susan were married. Wayne recalled that when he
first observed the appellant that morning, the appellant appeared “very angry, . . . eyes in the back
of his head.” However, after shooting his father, the appellant looked as though “a ton of bricks fell
off him.” Wayne acknowledged that the relationship between the appellant and his father was
strained. Wayne testified that the appellant did not say anything about hearing voices commanding
him to shoot his father.
On cross-examination, Wayne testified that the appellant’s father intimidated and
controlled Susan and would not allow her to marry Wayne. Moreover, the appellant’s father was not
kind to the appellant. Although Wayne described the appellant as nice and gentle, he testified that
he had observed changes in the appellant over the past eight years. Wayne explained that “you could
kind of tell that [the appellant] was in a different place.” Wayne recalled an incident where the
appellant, believing he was a prophet, invited Susan and Wayne to the appellant’s home to pray for
his father and brother. Wayne testified that on the day of the offenses, the appellant never pointed
the rifle at him.
Lynn Quillen testified that the appellant did not mention command hallucinations,
religion, or numbers when he told Lynn he had shot and killed their father. Lynn testified that the
appellant appeared calm and did not tell Lynn that he had “snapped.” Lynn recalled that the
appellant cooperated with the officers when they arrived and told them to be careful because the gun
still had two live rounds in it. The appellant also told Lynn to take the seven hundred dollars ($700)
from the appellant’s coat, have his door repaired, and then give the remainder of the money to the
appellant’s wife.
When asked to describe his relationship with the appellant, Lynn stated that he and
the appellant “seemed to get along . . . [and] were not hostile toward one another.” Lynn testified
that the appellant had visited him approximately three weeks before the offenses and announced that
he had been diagnosed as homicidal and suicidal; however, the appellant had assured Lynn that he
was not suicidal. Lynn testified that his father had provided in his will for Lynn, the appellant and
Susan to inherit property located in Scott County, Virginia. Lynn added that the appellant wanted
to place a mobile home on that property. Lynn described the appellant’s relationship with his father
as one of “indifference” and stated that the appellant was jealous of his father’s relationship with
Lynn. Lynn testified that his father was good to his family and “one of the best people I have ever
known in my life.”
On cross-examination, Lynn conceded that he told Lieutenant David Klepper that “[i]t
seemed like there was a wedge between [the appellant] and Dad” and that the appellant constantly
begged for his father’s love. Lynn testified that, although his father had initially told the appellant
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that he could not place the mobile home on the property, his father had changed his mind but had
not informed the appellant. Lynn conceded that on the day of the offenses, “a calm” came over the
appellant when Lynn spoke his name; however, Lynn attributed the calm to the fact that the appellant
“was on the wrong end of a gun.” Lynn denied telling his sister that the appellant was deranged.
Finally, Lynn acknowledged that he would inherit the appellant’s share of the property if the
appellant were convicted.
Deputy Martha Whitt of the Scott County Sheriff’s Department testified that on
December 6, 1998, the department received a call that “there was someone in route (sic) from
Sullivan County to a Quillen residence.” Deputy Whitt responded to the call. When she arrived at
Lynn Quillen’s mobile home, Deputy Whitt observed two men sitting on a couch. As she
handcuffed the appellant, he told her to “go ahead and treat me as the murderer I am. . . . [D]o
whatever you need to, I know I am probably going to hell, I will probably die of lethal injection.”
Deputy Whitt secured the appellant’s rifle and the appellant warned her to be careful because it was
still loaded. Deputy Whitt then recovered ammunition from the appellant’s jacket and a .22 rifle
from the appellant’s truck.
Scott County detective, J.P. Bledsoe, questioned the appellant at the jail. Detective
Bledsoe testified that throughout questioning the appellant was polite and cooperative and did not
appear to be confused or in an altered state. Moreover, the appellant did not speak of command
hallucinations or religion. After Detective Bledsoe obtained the appellant’s personal information,
the appellant inquired about his father’s condition and Detective Bledsoe responded that the
appellant’s father had died.
Detective Bledsoe recorded the appellant’s statement in writing and had the appellant
review the statement to ensure that it was accurate. In his statement, the appellant acknowledged that
his father had decided to allow him to put the mobile home on the Scott County property. However,
when he went to visit his father on the morning of December 6, the appellant told Detective Bledsoe
that his father
had done a 180° turn . . . [and] said I could not put the trailer there, he
did not want me over there bothering my brother, and did not want
me controlling anything over there, and to stay away from him and
my brother. . . . I went home and got my rifles and went down the
road to where he lived. I loaded the high powered rifle with four
cartridges. I took the sledge hammer and knocked in the door. He
came toward me and asked what was going on. I shot him twice with
the high powered rifle, a 7.67 Russian.
According to his statement, the appellant advised Wayne Presley that he was “going to my brother’s,
I’m going to kill him and then kill myself. I want it all to be over with.” The appellant then left,
taking the rifles and hammer with him. The appellant drove to Lynn’s mobile home, broke a
window with the sledge hammer, and went inside. Upon being confronted by Lynn, the appellant
informed Lynn,
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I came over here to kill you but I can’t do it. I want you to kill me
[but] . . . I don’t want to bleed on your carpet. I’ll go to the door or
outside and you can shoot me anyway you want because I’ve killed
Dad. . . . I’d been abused too long and . . . I snapped.
Detective Bledsoe testified that the appellant requested to speak with him on December 15, but he
advised the appellant to contact his lawyer.
On cross-examination, Detective Bledsoe conceded that he did not record his
interview with the appellant on audio tape. Detective Bledsoe recalled that the appellant was
“different” when he came into contact with him on December 15, but stated that the appellant did
not appear to be a person who had “snapped.” When asked about the motive for the shooting,
Detective Bledsoe responded that he “felt like there was a problem over some real estate.”
After the State completed its case in chief, the appellant presented the following
witnesses in support of the affirmative defense of insanity: Lisa Quillen, the appellant’s wife; Dr.
Eric Moffet, the appellant’s treating psychiatrist; Dr. Thomas Schacht, a forensic psychologist; J.M.
Baker, a long-time friend of the appellant; Dr. Tony Gonzales, the pastor of Stateline Missionary
Baptist Church; and Susan Quillen Presley, the appellant’s sister.
Lisa Quillen testified that she and the appellant had been married for twenty years.
She testified that when they were first married, the appellant had been able to work “a regular job”
and had obtained his real estate license. However, the appellant never “earned a living” as a real
estate agent. Lisa also testified that since closing his own real estate business, the appellant had not
been able to maintain full-time employment. Instead, the appellant worked as a landlord, taking care
of the couple’s rental properties.
Lisa testified that the appellant had always been nervous, prone to panic attacks, and
had strange sleeping patterns. However, she never discussed psychiatric treatment with the appellant
because she attributed his behavior to his “dysfunctional upbringing.” Then, in 1993, while working
as a real estate agent, the appellant was the victim of an armed robbery which caused his behavior
to worsen. According to Lisa, the appellant became very paranoid and unable to work. She testified
that the appellant would not sleep at night and would wake her, talking to her in a rapid speech
pattern and jumping from topic to topic. Lisa testified that the appellant sought psychiatric treatment
following the robbery. Despite his bizarre behavior, Lisa described the appellant as sweet and
affectionate, not aggressive or violent.
Lisa testified that one night in 1994 the appellant woke her to tell her about a
conversation he had with God and to ask her to get down on the floor and pray with him. The
appellant told Lisa that the devil told him that “things will get worse.” Lisa testified that after this
incident, the appellant began speaking in “a really strange voice” and using words such as “thee” and
“thou.” That same weekend, the appellant told Lisa to “[t]hrow away your birth control pills. . . .
It is an abomination to try and prevent something as beautiful as the birth of a child. God has told
me that we can have a baby.” The appellant then put on a trench coat which had belonged to Lisa’s
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grandfather “because he was a saint and I now feel that I can wear it.” The appellant left the house,
saying,
Do not worry about me my wife, I am going to my cousin’s house.
I must take the Bible and I must tell my cousin that the end of the
world is near and do not worry about me, I will return, nothing will
happen to me, do not fear.
When the appellant returned, he informed Lisa that he and his cousin, Randall, were the last two
prophets and that they “must go house to house and . . . tell people that the end of the world is near.”
The appellant then called his sister, Susan, and had her come to his house to “pray for our father and
brother.”
Lisa testified that the appellant did not sleep that night and, when she woke up Sunday
morning, the appellant was dressed and ready for church. When the couple arrived at Stateline
Baptist Church, the appellant hurried inside. Lisa recalled that
[t]he preacher was up teaching Sunday school and [the appellant]
walked straight down the hall and [was] very intrusive, just babbling,
talking about David the King and all this psycho-babble or whatever
you want to call it, and I kept saying, “Roger please come here, come
here,” because I was totally embarrassed. I wanted to crawl under the
pew. But . . . he said “no.” He was talking loud . . . and it was like
he was in another world and he walked straight down to where the
preacher was and he had his Bible down and he started . . . preaching
to the preacher.
Lisa testified that she did not discuss this episode with the appellant or his psychiatrist because she
did not want the appellant to think that she was embarrassed by him.
Lisa described the appellant’s relationship with his father as one-sided. She stated
that the appellant loved his father and desired to have a relationship with him, but “[h]is dad would
not allow that.” Lisa testified that all the appellant’s father ever did was “cuss” and “rag” the
appellant and, despite this behavior, the appellant never argued with his father. Lisa testified that
the appellant never “expressed himself” to his father, except in letters.
Lisa testified that the first time the appellant was suicidal was after his mother died
of cancer in 1987. Lisa recalled that the appellant was upset and shouting, “Why does my dad do
this to me, why can’t he love me?” The appellant then picked up a gun and said, “You know, my
mama’s gone, he just wants me to be gone too.” Lisa screamed and grabbed the gun. Lisa testified
that the appellant’s most recent suicidal episode was approximately two years before the instant
offenses, but that he had experienced fifteen to eighteen of these episodes over the past twelve years.
Lisa’s testimony then focused on the period of time just prior to the shooting. At that
time, the appellant was taking only Xanax even though his treating physician, Dr. Moffet, had also
prescribed Depakote. Lisa explained that the appellant had not informed her that he had been
diagnosed as having bipolar disorder. Lisa believed that the Depakote was simply an antidepressant
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and she asked the appellant to refrain from taking the Depakote because she was trying to get
pregnant. The appellant stopped taking the Depakote approximately two weeks before the offenses.
Lisa testified that she observed a great change in the appellant during the two weeks
prior to the offenses. According to Lisa, the appellant was on an emotional roller coaster.
His mood swings . . . were more apparent and they happened faster.
One day he would be up and the next day he would be down. His
appearance, he wouldn’t even bathe. . . . I’d come home and the first
thing I’d notice is, “Well, he’s not even taken a bath today. I can’t
believe it.” He could go a week with out bathing. . . . [G]et out of bed
and go to Lowes or some place, just same clothes, would not comb
his hair, wore the same clothes for a week.
Lisa testified that on the Friday before the shooting, the appellant was “extremely
energetic, and just euphorically happy.” She recalled that the appellant woke her at 1:30 a.m.
Saturday morning to pray for his father and brother. He woke her again at 5:30 a.m., advising her
to drink her milk and orange juice. Lisa testified that his mood on Saturday was very different,
describing the appellant as “psychotic.” Lisa stated that she “fussed” at the appellant because she
did not want him to use a credit card to order an item from the internet. The appellant became upset
and “all of a sudden he got real loud in the kitchen and he said, ‘I don’t understand, I don’t
understand . . . why are you fussing at me about it.’” The appellant then began opening and shutting
drawers and cabinet doors, shouting, “Don’t fuss at me, I can’t handle it, I can’t handle it.”
Lisa testified that the appellant was completely exhausted that evening and went to
sleep early. He woke Lisa at 11:00 p.m. and told her, “I’m rested and I’ve got a lot of energy and
I’m going to go down to the studio and work for a while.” He left and Lisa did not see the appellant
again before the shooting. Lisa learned about the shooting when a friend called Sunday morning and
asked her what had happened at her father-in-law’s house. On the way to church, Lisa stopped at
her father-in-law’s house where she was informed that the appellant had been arrested and was in
the Scott County jail.
Lisa testified that she immediately went to the jail to visit the appellant. She stated
that the appellant was calm that first day, but he did not remain calm in the days following his arrest.
She stated that the appellant “was absolutely driving everybody crazy,” calling Lisa and her parents
several times a day. Lisa testified that to her knowledge the appellant was receiving his medication
while in jail and that she “would have never dreamed” that the appellant would kill his father.
On cross-examination, Lisa conceded that she never consulted Dr. Moffet about the
appellant’s bizarre behavior. She testified that she went to Dr. Moffet’s office on three occasions,
but never went inside because she knew the appellant “was paranoid and terrified of the power that
[Dr. Moffet] had to put him away.” Lisa also admitted that even prior to the robbery incident in
1993, the appellant had a sporadic work history and the couple had depended on Lisa’s salary
throughout most of their marriage. Lisa testified that despite numerous attempts to take his own life,
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the appellant had never succeeded in even hurting himself. Lisa denied that the appellant was
obsessed about putting a mobile home on his father’s property; however, she conceded that she had
no personal knowledge of any discussions the appellant had with his father or Lynn regarding the
mobile home. Lisa recalled that on the day of the shooting, she did not see the appellant retrieve or
load the rifles and she did not have any personal knowledge of the appellant’s state of mind at that
time. Finally, Lisa testified that although the appellant told her that he had “snapped,” he did not
mention hearing voices or command hallucinations when she visited him on the day of his arrest.
The next witness to testify for the defense was Dr. Eric Moffet. Dr. Moffet began
treating the appellant in 1994 and at the time of trial, was still his treating psychiatrist. Dr. Moffet
testified that the appellant made an appointment at his office after being unable to contact the AFG-
EAP, an employee assistance program offered by Lisa’s employer. The appellant had initially sought
treatment through the AFG-EAP following the 1993 robbery incident. The psychiatrist at the AFG-
EAP placed the appellant on Xanax; however, the appellant stopped taking the medication, fearing
that he would become addicted to the drug.
Dr. Moffet testified that he first treated the appellant on August 17, 1994,
approximately one year after the robbery. Based upon the appellant’s recollection of the robbery,
his fearful behavior since the robbery, concerns regarding profuse sweating, complaints of
anxiousness and irritability, a family history of anxiety, and his social history, Dr. Moffet diagnosed
the appellant as suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and panic disorder. Initially,
he prescribed Xanax for the appellant. Dr. Moffet related that, although the appellant had bouts of
increased anxiety when facing stressful situations, overall the appellant’s condition improved over
the next few years. Although Dr. Moffet experimented with other anti-anxiety drugs, he concluded
that Xanax was the most effective treatment for the appellant.
Dr. Moffet testified that at his May 26, 1998 appointment, the appellant’s condition
had worsened. The appellant reported that
he was getting now three hours of sleep; he was going to sleep at five
a.m.; he was up at eight a.m.; he could not fall asleep; his thoughts
were racing; he stated to me “I’m thinking, thinking, thinking”; . . .
he noticed more irritability and way too much energy; he was hyper-
verbal [and] talking to others to the point where he annoys them with
his talking.
Dr. Moffet decided to place the appellant on Depakote, which he explained was a mood stabilizer
used to treat bipolar disorder. Dr. Moffet testified that he diagnosed the appellant as having
hypomania, bipolar II disorder.
On June 2, 1998, the appellant called Dr. Moffet and informed him that the Depakote
was causing severe diarrhea and light-headedness. Dr. Moffet allowed the appellant to cease taking
the medication until his next appointment. At his next appointment on June 10, 1998, the appellant
reported that he continued to have difficulty sleeping, irritability, high amounts of energy, and
“racing thoughts.” At that time, Dr. Moffet decided to try the drug Klonopin. When the appellant
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did not improve, Dr. Moffet discontinued the Klonopin and again placed the appellant on Xanax and
Depakote. The appellant claimed to be taking the Depakote; however, Dr. Moffet testified that “in
hindsight I do not think he did.” Dr. Moffet stated that the appellant “was afraid . . . that I would
have him somehow locked up in an asylum for the rest of his life, so he kept things from me.” The
appellant’s final appointment before committing the offenses was October 15, 1998. Dr. Moffet
opined that the appellant was making progress on that date.
The next time Dr. Moffet saw the appellant was on television after the commission
of the offenses. Dr. Moffet described the appellant as appearing “[disheveled], unkept, he just didn’t
look like himself.” Following the appellant’s arrest, Dr. Moffet received telephone calls and
correspondence from the appellant and his wife, but he did not meet face-to-face with the appellant
until April 28, 1999. Dr. Moffet continued the Depakote and prescribed other mood stabilizing
medications, including Lithium. He also prescribed anti-psychotic medications when the appellant
“would get out of touch with reality.” Dr. Moffet explained that one is out of touch with reality if
he is hallucinating, delusional, or paranoid.
After evaluating the appellant following his arrest, Dr. Moffet opined that the
appellant was no longer hypomanic, but had become “manic with psychosis,” a more severe phase
of bipolar disorder. Moreover, Dr. Moffet testified that it was evident the appellant was having
delusions of a religious nature and command hallucinations, which are “hallucinations that tell you
to do certain things.” Dr. Moffet reviewed the reports prepared by Frontier Health and Dr. Thomas
Schacht, interviewed family members, and read letters written by the appellant, which Dr. Moffet
described as “manic type letters.” Notably, the appellant wrote one letter to Dr. Moffet in which the
appellant indicated that he had been possessed by a demon that commanded him to kill his father and
brother. Dr. Moffet testified that a person can be suffering from hallucinations and psychosis and,
at times, appear normal. He opined that, because the appellant appeared calm upon being arrested,
the appellant “was maybe still psychotic at the time but people weren’t realizing it.” Dr. Moffet did
not find the appellant to be malingering. When asked about the appellant’s mental state on
December 6, 1998, Dr. Moffet opined that the appellant was suffering from bipolar disorder, manic
phase with psychosis, and that the appellant was unable to appreciate the wrongfulness of his actions
or form the culpable mental state required for the offenses for which he was charged.
On cross-examination, Dr. Moffet conceded that until October 15, 1998, he believed
the appellant was improving. When asked if his diagnosis of hypomania at that time was inaccurate,
Dr. Moffet responded that it was not. He explained that “you may have somebody who has a Bi-
polar [II] illness, meaning hypo-mania and they may be in that state for years and then suddenly they
will become manic or suddenly they will become psychotic and at that point their diagnosis will
change.” Dr. Moffet conceded, however, that the appellant never reported having any hallucinations,
command or otherwise, until he was charged with the death of his father. Moreover, prior to that
time, Dr. Moffet did not learn that the appellant was keeping things from him because he was afraid
Dr. Moffet would institutionalize him. Finally, Dr. Moffet conceded that the only evidence of
command hallucinations were reports by the appellant and his wife.
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Also testifying for the defense was Dr. Thomas Schacht, a forensic psychologist and
professor in the Department of Psychiatry at East Tennessee State University’s College of Medicine.
The defense hired Dr. Schacht to conduct a forensic evaluation of the appellant. In conducting his
evaluation, Dr. Schacht interviewed the appellant on four separate occasions between November
1999 and January 2000. He also interviewed the appellant’s wife, the appellant’s sister, Wayne
Presley, and Dr. Moffet. Dr. Schacht attempted to interview the appellant’s brother, Lynn; however,
Lynn did not return Dr. Schacht’s phone calls. In addition to these interviews, Dr. Schacht reviewed
numerous records, including the appellant’s statements to Scott County and Sullivan County police
officers, the appellant’s school records, his medical records, a number of letters and writings by the
appellant, a letter from the appellant’s sister regarding their family history, and a 1974 audio tape
recording of an argument between the appellant’s parents. Finally, Dr. Schacht administered two
psychological tests, the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) and the Structured
Interview of Record Symptoms (SIRS), to determine whether the appellant was malingering.
At trial, Dr. Schacht concluded that the appellant’s history of mental illness “extends
back before the time of the alleged offense[s]. Looking at [the appellant’s] life as a whole it is likely
that there were forms of emotional disturbance that began in his childhood in association with
domestic violence, family violence in a very dis-functional (sic) family.” The appellant told Dr.
Schacht that he was verbally abused by his father and witnessed his father physically abuse his
mother. In order to cope, the appellant told Dr. Schacht that he would escape from his family by
going to his friends’ homes. The appellant further related to Dr. Schacht that he had a persistent
problem with extreme sweating in high school, which Dr. Schacht opined could be “the product of
living in an extremely stressful environment.” Dr. Schacht testified that there were also events in
the appellant’s adult life which contributed to the appellant’s mental disturbance, including
performing poorly in college, abandoning his career in the Coast Guard after surviving a hurricane
while at sea, a serious motorcycle wreck, and the 1993 armed robbery. Dr. Schacht explained that
the appellant became overwhelmed with anxiety and sought treatment from Dr. Moffet. Dr. Schacht
testified that although Dr. Moffet eventually diagnosed the appellant as bipolar, the appellant’s
treatment was not continued in the proper manner and the appellant was in a state of
“decompensation” at the time he shot his father.
Dr. Schacht testified that when he questioned the appellant about the shooting, the
appellant reported that when he stopped by his father’s house that morning, his father came out and
“blasted” him, ordering him not to visit him, Susan, Lynn, or the Scott County property. The
appellant recalled that his father told him, “I’ve got something in there for you and for her, you know
what it is.” The appellant stated that his father was referring to a revolver and that after his father’s
comment, the appellant had a vision “of a scene from the past in which his mother had been dragged
by the hair by his father with this same revolver pointed at her head and he described that . . . his
mother’s face interchanged and became his wife’s face and his sister’s face.” The appellant told Dr.
Schacht that he then had an out-of-body experience in which a voice commanded him to “go . . . get
your guns, get a sledge hammer.” When the appellant returned to his father’s house, the voice
ordered him to break down the door and kill his father. The voice then commanded him to go to his
brother’s home, kill his brother, and then kill himself. However, when his brother confronted him
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and called his name, the voice vanished. The appellant compared this experience to a camera
recording an event, but having no will to stop it. Dr. Schacht testified that he asked the appellant if,
at the time, he was aware of whether his acts were right or wrong. The appellant responded that
“[f]rom the observer’s point of view, from the part of me that was back there like a camera, right or
wrong didn’t exist, it was just watching and documenting.”
Dr. Schacht diagnosed the appellant as bipolar with “mood-congering psychotic
features” and opined that the appellant was suffering from this severe mental disease or defect at the
time of these offenses. Dr. Schacht further opined that the appellant was unable to appreciate the
wrongfulness of his actions at that time. Dr. Schacht testified that the MMPI and SIRS testing
indicated that the appellant was not malingering.
On cross-examination, Dr. Schacht testified that he did not meet with the appellant
until November 30, 1999, nearly one year after the shooting. Dr. Schacht conceded that over the
period of a year, one’s mental status could change or one could form a defense strategy. Dr. Schacht
acknowledged that, when interviewing the appellant, Dr. Schacht and the appellant did not discuss
the period following the appellant’s arrest, but rather focused upon the appellant’s state of mind at
the time of the offenses. Dr. Schacht conceded that the appellant admitted he lied to the Naval
psychiatrist in order to be discharged from the Coast Guard. Moreover, in spite of all the appellant’s
alleged suicidal episodes, Dr. Schacht could point to no evidence that the appellant ever succeeded
in injuring himself.
Dr. Schacht conceded that he never spoke with the police officers or jailers who came
into contact with the appellant, nor did he speak with Stacy Cox who interviewed the appellant
within days of his arrest. However, Dr. Schacht testified that he did review Cox’s evaluation of the
appellant. Dr. Schacht stated that although he could not recall the contents of the appellant’s letters
to his father, he did remember the appellant writing about his father’s property and a mobile home.
Dr. Schacht testified that he did not ask the appellant whether the voice commanded him to tell
Wayne Presley on the day of the shooting that “Susan can have it all.” Although Dr. Schacht had
previously testified that the appellant “snapped out of it” when he heard his brother’s voice, Dr.
Schacht agreed that the appellant may have snapped out of it because he was “looking down the
wrong end of a gun.” Finally, Dr. Schacht conceded that one could interpret the appellant’s request
for his brother to kill him and his statement to officers to “treat me as the murderer I am” as evidence
that the appellant was able to appreciate the wrongfulness of his acts.
J.M. Baker, a long-time friend of the appellant, testified that he had known the
appellant for eighteen to twenty years and that they were the “best of friends.” Baker described the
appellant as a “great, fun loving, wonderful person” and stated that he had never witnessed the
appellant behaving strangely prior to the shooting. However, Baker testified that when he went to
visit the appellant at the Scott County jail several days after the shooting, the appellant looked like
“a totally different person.” According to Baker, the appellant appeared depressed and confused and
his speech was “disconnected with reality.” Baker testified that he visited the appellant on several
occasions at the Scott County jail and later at the Sullivan County jail. Baker indicated that the
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appellant improved with each visit, describing the appellant as “coming back to reality.” On cross-
examination, Baker admitted that the appellant had never told him that he had experienced
hallucinations. Baker also conceded that, while visiting the appellant in jail, the appellant made a
point of telling Baker that he had lost touch with reality.
Also testifying for the defense was Dr. Tony Gonzales, pastor of Stateline Missionary
Baptist Church in Kingsport, Tennessee. Dr. Gonzales testified that he had been the pastor at
Stateline for forty years. Dr. Gonzales stated that the appellant’s wife had attended his church “most
of her life” and that he had known the appellant for twenty years. Dr. Gonzales described the
appellant as a “quiet gentleman” with a “meek spirit.” When asked if he had ever witnessed the
appellant behaving strangely, Dr. Gonzales responded that in the fall of 1998 he was teaching a
Sunday school class when the appellant and Lisa walked in and sat down. According to Dr.
Gonzales, the appellant was talking loudly and disrupting the class, which behavior was totally out
of character for the appellant. Dr. Gonzales told the appellant to be quiet and the appellant
responded, “Yes sir.” The appellant then hung his head for the remainder of the class and at all
subsequent church services. Dr. Gonzales testified, “That’s the only time that I’ve ever witnessed
anything like that out of [the appellant].”
On December 6, 1998, Dr. Gonzales went to the Scott County jail to visit the
appellant. Dr. Gonzales recalled that the appellant “had a very wild look [in] his eyes.” The
appellant told him that “the demons of hell were talking to him and . . . he only obeyed the voice of
Satan.” According to Dr. Gonzales, the appellant did not show any remorse at that time, “except that
he cried and was concerned about God’s forgiveness.” Dr. Gonzales also testified that when he
placed his hand on the appellant’s hand, he noticed that the appellant’s palm was sweating profusely.
Approximately two weeks later, Dr. Gonzales visited the appellant a second time at the Scott County
jail. Dr. Gonzales recalled that the appellant appeared calmer and asked, “Pastor would you believe
me if I told you that God has commissioned me and commanded me like he did Moses and I have
a mission to accomplish here on earth and I must get the word of God out.” Dr. Gonzales visited the
appellant once more after the appellant was transported to the Sullivan County jail. Dr. Gonzales
testified that the appellant was “a much calmer person” and was starting to look “more like the Roger
I knew from church.”
On cross-examination, Dr. Gonzales conceded that his contact with the appellant
during the past twenty years had been limited to Sunday church services. Dr. Gonzales testified that
he had never visited the appellant outside of church prior to visiting him in jail, nor had he ever
counseled the appellant. Dr. Gonzales agreed that when he visited the appellant immediately
following his arrest, he believed that the appellant “was a man professing his sins and asking for
forgiveness.”
The final witness for the defense was the appellant’s sister, Susan Quillen Presley.
Susan described the appellant as “kind of peculiar . . . [with] an odd sense of humor.” She explained
that the appellant was a gentle person, neither aggressive nor violent. When asked to describe the
appellant’s relationship with his father, Susan testified that, although she could not recall any
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arguments between the two, the appellant “got on dad’s nerves.” Susan testified that her father was
nice to her and Lynn, but he was not kind to the appellant, often referring to the appellant as a “long-
neck” or a “G– d— Anderson.”2 According to Susan, the appellant desired to have a relationship
with his father, but his father did not return those feelings.
Susan testified that her father often fought with her mother, describing her father as
a “shover and a pusher and a hair dragger when he was mad.” Susan testified that after her brothers
moved out of the house, she told her mother that she could no longer tolerate the arguing, and in
1986 she and her mother moved to the house on Bloomingdale Pike. However, a short time later,
her mother was diagnosed with cancer and her father moved in to take care of her. Susan testified
that her father was “real good” to her mother until her death three months later. After her mother’s
death, her father continued to live in the house on Bloomingdale Pike.
Susan next described instances in which she observed the appellant exhibit strange
behavior. She stated that the first incident occurred approximately two years before the offenses.
Susan testified that the appellant called her and in a deep voice said, “My sister I need you to come,
come, come to my house, we must pray. We must pray for Lynn and dad’s salvation.” Susan related
that she and Wayne reluctantly went to the appellant’s house where the appellant was waiting outside
in the cold to welcome them. Susan testified that the appellant “led me by my hand and he was
shaking and he was holding it tight and he said, ‘Come, come and sit at mother’s table.’ . . . And we
sat down and there was candles and he started praying out loud and crying and acting strange and
weird.” Susan also testified that after that incident, the appellant began to preach Bible numerology.
One such experience occurred when Susan visited the appellant at the Scott County jail. Susan
testified that the appellant’s “eyes were dancing” and he was demanding that Susan “take heed.”
Susan testified that her brother was not acting like himself and she was “scared for him.”
On cross-examination, Susan conceded that, prior to his father’s death, the appellant
wanted to place a mobile home on his father’s property in Scott County. Susan testified that the
property was to be divided among the children upon their father’s death. Susan conceded that her
father would not allow the appellant to place the mobile home on the property and the appellant did
not want to wait until his father’s death. Susan testified that the appellant would anger their father
by asking about the property. Indeed, Susan stated that she was “the mediator” between the two men
because her father did not want to discuss the property with the appellant. Susan testified that over
the years, the appellant never told her that he had experienced hallucinations.
The State presented the following witnesses in rebuttal: James Lawson and William
“Bud” Flanery, jailers at the Scott County jail in December 1998; Dr. James Turnbull, a forensic
psychiatrist; and Stacy Cox, a licensed professional counselor. James Lawson testified that in
December 1998, he was employed as a jailer for the Scott County Sheriff’s Department. One of his
duties as a jailer was to make “rounds” to check on the inmates. Lawson testified that on December
2
The appellant’s mother’s maiden name was Anderson. Because of the ap pellant’s physical resemblanc e to
his mother, his father often called him by that name.
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16, the appellant was in the holding cell when he lifted a noose made of shoestrings and told Lawson,
“You need to remember this.” Lawson confiscated the shoestrings and recorded the event in the
incident book. On another occasion, the appellant asked Lawson to call Scott County Mental Health.
Lawson described the appellant as “calm” and “a normal inmate.” Lawson testified that the
appellant never made any statement regarding hallucinations, the Bible, or numbers. On cross-
examination, Lawson conceded that his encounters with the appellant were brief.
Also testifying for the State was William “Bud” Flanery, a retired jailer for the Scott
County Sheriff’s Department. Flanery was employed by the Department for twenty-three years and
was chief jailer in December 1998. Flanery testified to an incident on December 11, 1998, in which
the appellant feigned losing consciousness. Flanery was dispensing medication to the inmates when
he came to the appellant’s cell. The appellant refused his medication and told Flanery that he needed
to go to the emergency room because he could not sleep. Flanery agreed to call “mental health” and
returned to the office to record that the appellant had refused his medication. At that time, a trustee
knocked on the office door and Flanery and the trustee returned to the appellant’s cell. Flanery
observed the appellant “laying on his left side piled up in the floor.” Flanery ordered the other jailer
to call the “life saving crew” and two paramedics arrived five minutes later. One of the paramedics
placed an ammonia capsule under the appellant’s nose and the appellant “jerked his head up and he
shook it a little bit and he laid it back down.” The paramedic placed the capsule under the
appellant’s nose a second time, but the capsule had “run out.” The paramedic took another ammonia
capsule and, without breaking it open, placed the capsule under the appellant’s nose. The appellant
again “jerked his head up and shook his head and laid his head back down.” The paramedic showed
Flanery the unopened capsule. Other than this incident, Flanery testified that the appellant appeared
to be normal and never mentioned any hallucinations or religious numbers.
Dr. James Turnbull, a forensic psychiatrist and medical director at Frontier Health,
testified next for the State. On January 27, 1999, Dr. Turnbull evaluated the appellant at the request
of the court to determine whether there was support for the insanity defense. Dr. Turnbull first
obtained a social history from the appellant in which the appellant related to Dr. Turnbull that
his father had a bad temper and that he drank some when he was
younger. [The appellant] related that his parents however got along
fine and stated that he was closer to his mother than his father. [The
appellant] related that he got along well with his siblings and denied
any significant difficulties. . . . [The appellant] earned his real estate
license [] in the 1980's and apparently by his report did well enough
to retire at the age of thirty-seven (37) from real estate. [The
appellant] described himself as an entrepreneur who has generally
done well in business. . . . [The appellant] related that he had been
seeing a psychiatrist since he was robbed in his real estate office and
described himself as nervous. . . . [The appellant stated] that he sees
Dr. Gary Bush and is also seeing Dr. Eric Moffet who has diagnosed
him by his report as having bipolar disorder. [The appellant] was also
diagnosed in the past . . . as having a panic disorder.
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Based on this social history, the appellant’s mental status evaluation, and the appellant’s statement
to police the day he was arrested, Dr. Turnbull initially diagnosed the appellant as having “an
adjustment disorder with depressed mood . . . [where] you get depressed as a result of your
situation.” Dr. Turnbull determined that the appellant was not suffering from a severe mental disease
or defect at the time of the offenses and was able to appreciate the wrongfulness of his actions.
On October 9, 2000, at the request of the court, Dr. Turnbull performed a second
evaluation to determine whether the appellant suffered from a diminished capacity at the time of the
offenses. In addition to the data obtained at the previous evaluation, Dr. Turnbull also considered
the reports of Dr. Schacht and Dr. Moffet, the results of evaluations performed by counselor Stacy
Cox, writings of the appellant, notes of the jailers, the 1974 audio tape, and a second interview with
the appellant. Based upon this additional information, Dr. Turnbull changed his diagnosis of the
appellant to bipolar disorder. However, Dr. Turnbull testified that his new diagnosis did not affect
his prior findings regarding the appellant’s ability to appreciate the wrongfulness of his acts. Dr.
Turnbull testified that, although he now concluded that the appellant was suffering from a severe
mental disease or defect and diminished capacity at the time of the offenses, in his opinion the
appellant was able to appreciate the wrongfulness of his actions and to form the requisite culpable
mental state to commit the offenses. Dr. Turnbull further opined that it was unusual for an
individual to experience a command hallucination on only one occasion.
On cross-examination, Dr. Turnbull conceded that at the second interview, the
appellant retracted the statement that he had a happy childhood. Dr. Turnbull opined that he did not
find the appellant to be malingering and had no reason to doubt that the appellant had experienced
hallucinations and delusions. Dr. Turnbull then testified that in over twenty years of practice, he had
never had a patient who was experiencing command hallucinations carry out an order to kill another.
However, he agreed that “it’s certainly happened.” When asked if patients often hide information
from their psychiatrists, Dr. Turnbull responded that although it was possible, “[i]t’s relatively rare
because most of the people who come to see me are coming for help.” Dr. Turnbull testified that
individuals may, as a result of severe stress, go into a dissociative state in which they experience an
out-of-body experience, but otherwise appear normal.
The State’s final rebuttal witness was Stacy Cox, a licensed professional counselor
with the Scott County Mental Health Center whose duties included treating the inmates at the Scott
County jail. Cox testified that he first counseled the appellant at the Scott County jail on December
11, 1998. The appellant’s chief complaint was that he was anxious and having difficulty sleeping.
Cox testified that the appellant appeared to be “oriented” and the appellant did not report any
delusions or religious ideations. Cox determined that the appellant did not require hospitalization
at that time.
Cox returned to the jail on December 15, 1998. At this session, the appellant
immediately began discussing “religious ideation and the numbers stating that . . . 3 and 7 were the
numbers of God and 6 was the number of the devil.” The appellant also stated that he “must have
been under demonic possession when he killed his father” and that Cox “must think that he is
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delusional or psychotic.” Cox testified, however, that he found these comments to be unusual
because individuals generally do not admit to being delusional or psychotic. Cox also testified that
the appellant admitted that he was attempting to manipulate Cox. On cross-examination, Cox
conceded that in assessing the appellant, he did not contact Dr. Moffet or Dr. Turnbull. Cox opined
that the appellant was not malingering.
The jury convicted the appellant of aggravated burglary, felony murder, premeditated
first degree murder, and simple assault, thereby rejecting the defense of insanity. The trial court
merged the convictions for premeditated first degree murder and felony murder. The appellant
received a life sentence for the first degree murder and the trial court sentenced the appellant to four
years incarceration for the aggravated burglary and eleven months and twenty-nine days in the county
jail for the assault. The trial court ordered that the sentences be served concurrently for an effective
life sentence. Again, the sole issue on appeal is whether the appellant proved by clear and
convincing evidence that he was legally insane at the time of the commission of the offenses.
II. Analysis
The defense of insanity became an affirmative defense effective July 1,1995. The
current insanity statute provides:
It is an affirmative defense to prosecution that, at the time of the
commission of the acts constituting the offense, the defendant, as a
result of a severe mental disease or defect, was unable to appreciate
the nature or wrongfulness of such defendant’s acts. Mental disease
or defect does not otherwise constitute a defense. The defendant has
the burden of proving the defense of insanity by clear and convincing
evidence.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-501(a) (1997). Evidence is clear and convincing when “there is no serious
or substantial doubt about the correctness of the conclusions to be drawn from the evidence.” State
v. Holder, 15 S.W.3d 905, 912 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1999).
In determining the issue of insanity, the jury may consider both lay and expert
testimony and may discount expert testimony which it finds to be in conflict with the facts of the
case. State v. Sparks, 891 S.W.2d 607, 616 (Tenn. 1995). Moreover, where expert testimony
conflicts with testimony as to the facts, the jury is not required to resolve the conflict in favor of the
expert testimony, but must determine the weight and credibility of each in light of all the facts and
circumstances of the case. Holder, 15 S.W.3d at 912. In determining a defendant’s mental state at
the time of the alleged offense, the jury may consider “evidence of his actions and words before, at,
and immediately after the commission of the offense.” Id.
Our supreme court recently set forth the parameters of appellate review of issues
involving an insanity defense. State v. Christopher M. Flake, No. W2000-01131-SC-R11-CD, 2002
Tenn. LEXIS 375, (Jackson, Aug. 29, 2002) (publication pending). The court unanimously
concluded that “appellate courts in Tennessee should apply the reasonableness standard when
reviewing a jury’s rejection of the insanity defense.” Id. at *38-39. In other words, an appellate
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court should reverse a jury verdict rejecting the insanity defense “only if, considering the evidence
in the light most favorable to the [State], no reasonable trier of fact could have failed to find that the
defendant’s insanity at the time of the offense was established by clear and convincing evidence.”
Id. at *39. The court found this standard to be properly deferential to the jury’s finding, without
completely insulating such finding from appellate review. Id. The court noted that this standard
“enhances appellate review by virtue of its similarity to the familiar sufficiency standard which
appellate courts are accustomed to applying.” Id.
Considering the evidence in this record in the light most favorable to the State, we
conclude that a reasonable trier of fact could have found that the appellant failed to establish by clear
and convincing evidence that, as a result of a severe mental disease or defect, he was unable to
appreciate the nature and wrongfulness of his acts. Although the parties agreed that the appellant
was suffering from bipolar disorder at the time of the offenses, mental disease or disorder alone is
not sufficient. To establish the affirmative defense of insanity, the appellant must show that as a
result of mental disease or disorder, he was unable to appreciate the nature or wrongfulness of his
acts. The appellant argues that the overwhelming weight of the evidence showed that the appellant
was not able to appreciate the wrongfulness of his acts on December 6, 1998. We disagree.
The record contains ample evidence from which the jury could have concluded that
the appellant appreciated the wrongfulness of his acts on the day of the offenses. First, Deputy Whitt
testified that as she was placing handcuffs on the appellant, the appellant told her to “go ahead and
treat me as the murderer I am . . . do whatever you need to, I know I am probably going to hell, I will
probably die of lethal injection.” This statement demonstrated that the appellant was aware that he
had committed a crime and that there would be consequences for his actions. Second, the record
reflects that, after Lynn confronted the appellant on the morning of the offenses, the appellant begged
Lynn to “take him outside and shoot him.” Defense expert Dr. Schacht conceded on cross-
examination that the appellant’s request for Lynn to kill him, as well as his statement to Deputy
Whitt, could be interpreted as evidence that the appellant appreciated the wrongfulness of his acts.
Next, Dr. Gonzales testified that when he visited the appellant in jail on the day he was arrested, Dr.
Gonzales believed that the appellant “was a man professing his sins and asking for forgiveness.”
There was also evidence that the appellant never reported experiencing hallucinations prior to, or on
the day of, his arrest. Moreover, because his father would not allow him to place a mobile home on
the Scott County property, the appellant had a motive to shoot his father. Finally, the State offered
the expert testimony of Dr. Turnbull, who opined that the appellant was able to appreciate the
wrongfulness of his act at the time of the offenses. Dr. Turnbull further testified that the appellant
had the ability to act intentionally and with premeditation. Applying the reasonableness standard of
review, a standard deferential to the trier of fact, we are unable to conclude that no reasonable trier
of fact could have failed to find that the appellant’s insanity at the time of the offenses was
established by clear and convincing evidence.
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III. Conclusion
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
___________________________________
NORMA McGEE OGLE, JUDGE
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