IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
March 20, 2001 Session
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. TAKEITA M. LOCKE
Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County
No. 67739B Richard R. Baumgartner, Judge
No. E2000-00923-CCA-R3-CD
June 25, 2001
The defendant was convicted in the Knox County Criminal Court of especially aggravated robbery
and felony murder. She timely appealed, arguing that the State had failed to show that statements
she gave while a juvenile were admissible, that the trial court erred in not instructing as to lesser-
included offenses or that the jury must find whether felony murder was a “natural and probable
consequence” of especially aggravated robbery, and that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the
convictions. Based upon our review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
ALAN E. GLENN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JERRY L. SMITH and JOE G. RILEY,
JJ., joined.
Wade V. Davies (on appeal) and Gerald Lee Gulley, Jr. (at trial), Knoxville, Tennessee, for the
appellant, Takeita M. Locke.
Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Elizabeth B. Marney, Assistant Attorney General;
Randall E. Nichols, District Attorney General; and G. Scott Green, Assistant District Attorney
General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
The defendant, Takeita M. Locke, was convicted in the Knox County Criminal Court of
felony murder and especially aggravated robbery. She appealed her convictions, presenting the
following issues:
I. The State failed to carry its burden to show that statements
taken from the defendant as a juvenile after a warrantless arrest
and in the absence of counsel or parental permission were
constitutionally valid;
II. The trial court erred by not instructing the jury on the lesser-
included offenses of reckless homicide, criminally negligent
homicide, facilitation of especially aggravated robbery, and
aggravated robbery and by not giving a “probable and natural
consequences” instruction as part of the criminal responsibility
charge; and
III. The evidence was insufficient to convict the defendant of first
degree murder and especially aggravated robbery.
Based upon our review, we affirm the defendant’s convictions for especially aggravated
robbery and felony murder.
FACTS
The State’s first witness, Dr. Sandra K. Elkins, the Knox County Medical Examiner, testified
that the victim, Chuck Newman, died as the result of a stab wound to the heart. Her examination
showed that he had bruises on his arms, curved lacerations on the top and backside of his head, and
bruising and swelling around his left eye. The victim tested positive for cocaine.
Karen Verklas testified that she lived at the Montgomery Village Apartments housing project
in Knox County. She said that she was at home on October 17, 1998, with her fiancé, Robert
Richards, when the victim knocked on her door between 4:30 and 5:00 a.m. As she opened the door
to let the victim in, Jerry Graves, whom she knew as “Bam,” pushed his way into the apartment and
said that he needed to talk with the victim. He then cornered the victim in the kitchen and said,
“Give me the money, Bitch.” Verklas saw Graves produce a pistol, and he and the victim began
struggling, going into the living room and onto the couch. She saw the defendant, whom she knew
as “Cherry,” coming in the apartment as she was leaving to summon help. Verklas testified that the
defendant then went to the couch, where Graves and the victim were struggling:
Q. All right. When she came in, do you recall where she went?
A. Yeah, she went to the – uh – the head part of Chuck, and bent
over, and she was trying to pries [sic] his hand open. While
Bam was on him, she was trying to pries [sic] his hand open,
and both of them would say, “Give me the money.”
She then left the apartment, leaving the victim with Graves and the defendant.
Verklas had to go to a neighbor’s to call 911 because her phone was not working. She then
went back to her apartment and saw Graves and the defendant coming out. She said that the
defendant was “wiping her hands off.” Verklas testified that in the statement she gave to the police,
following the incident, she had also said that she heard the defendant, as she was trying to pry open
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the victim’s hand, say, “You are going to get it. You will get the damn money[.]” She saw the
victim leaning on the doorway with blood all over him. She described his appearance:
A. You couldn’t really see his face, he was beat so bad bloody. I
was scared. I went to get a towel to wipe his face off, but you
couldn’t get the blood to come off his face, he was so full of it.
His jaws and stuff right through here was bruised already. You
couldn’t tell.
Q. Could you see him at that point in time bleeding from anyplace
else?
A. I couldn’t tell where the blood was coming from, to be honest
with you, he was bleeding so bad.
The victim told her, “Oh, God, Karen, they have done me good this time.” Verklas testified that, by
this point, the victim was doing “[n]othing. His eyes was [sic] rolling back in his head; blood was
just a gushing.”
Officer Mark Waggoner of the Knoxville Police Department came to the apartment as the
result of the 911 call. He retrieved a knife at the scene, but was not able to process the handle for
fingerprints because the texture of the handle was too rough.
Samuel Brown, an investigator with the Knoxville Police Department, testified that as he
arrived at the crime scene that morning, other officers were already present, as were Verklas and
Richards. Later, he questioned both of them at the Knoxville Police Department and learned that
the defendant had the nickname “Cherry.” He then contacted the defendant’s mother who told him
that when she found the defendant, she would bring her to the police department. However, the
defendant was arrested by other officers and taken to the juvenile facility.1 Brown went to the
juvenile facility where the defendant was being held and interviewed her at approximately 3 p.m. on
October 18, 1998. He returned the following day and again interviewed her. After the first
interview, Brown interviewed Adam Faw, who later pled guilty to especially aggravated robbery.
Because of inconsistencies in the defendant’s first statement and that given by Faw, Brown made the
second trip to interview the defendant.
Robert Richards testified that he was the fiancé of Karen Verklas and that they lived together.
The victim had come to Verklas’s apartment the evening of October 16, 1998, and left at
approximately 11 p.m. Early the next morning, between 4:30 and 5:00 a.m., as Richards and Verklas
were still awake, they heard a knock at the door, and Richards recognized the victim’s voice.
Verklas opened the door and the victim came in. A man whom Richards knew from the
1
Because the defendant was seventeen years old at the time of the incident, she was taken to a juvenile detention
center.
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neighborhood as “Bam” also came in as Verklas was closing the door, pushing the victim into the
kitchen and saying, “Just give me the money.” Richards heard a noise that sounded “like a shell
being chambered in a gun” and saw the victim and “Bam” come out of the kitchen wrestling, ending
up on the couch. The victim was on his back with “Bam” on top of him. “Bam” was hitting the
victim in the head. Richards was getting ready to leave the apartment to find a pay phone to call for
help as “Bam’s” girlfriend, “Cherry,” came in the apartment. She started trying to pry open the
victim’s hands as “Bam” was swinging at him and asked “Bam,” “How much [money] has he got
on him?” Richards did not see whether the victim had been stabbed as he left the apartment. He
went to his truck and saw “Bam” and “Cherry” come out of the apartment. He saw the victim, who
was covered in blood, stagger to the door of the apartment.
Defense Proof
Melvina Terry, a resident of the Montgomery Village Apartments, testified that she knew the
victim because he had been there before to buy drugs. She saw the victim go up to Verklas’s
apartment and then saw the defendant drive up with Jerry Graves and a white male. Graves and the
other man followed the victim into the apartment, the defendant remaining outside and talking with
Ms. Terry. Approximately fifteen minutes later, she heard someone screaming, “Please, stop, stop,”
and the defendant then ran to the apartment. About five minutes later, the defendant came out of the
apartment, followed by a white female, and one of them said, “They are killing him.” About three
or four minutes after that, Graves emerged from the apartment carrying a gun. Graves said, “If
anybody tell anything, I will kill you-all, too.” Graves, the defendant, and the white male then got
into a car and “screeched off.” The victim came out of the apartment “bleeding all over the place.”
The defendant’s mother, Mary Ann Bell, testified that she had seen the defendant the day
before the victim was killed, and the defendant was with her boyfriend, Jerry Graves, Adam Faw,
and Faw’s girlfriend. Graves had been drinking. She said that after police officers had come to her
house, she called Investigator Sam Brown and told him that she was turning the defendant in.
Officers then came to her house and took the defendant. She asked if she could go with the
defendant but was told that she could not. She told officers not to question the defendant unless she
or a lawyer was present because the defendant could not read or write or understand what was
happening.
Ms. Bell further testified that the defendant and Graves had been dating since the defendant
was thirteen years old but Graves was “already a fully grown man then.” The defendant used to
come home with bruises after Graves had beaten her. She had seen Graves hit the defendant in the
head with a gun and stab her in the back with scissors. He once shot at Ms. Bell after she had tried
to stop him from hurting the defendant.
The defendant testified that Graves had come to her apartment on the evening of October 16,
1998, at about 7:00 p.m. and stayed until 10:00 p.m. He left to visit Adam Faw and when he did not
return, the defendant went to Faw’s apartment, which was nearby. Faw’s girlfriend, Christina
Martin, was there when the defendant arrived, as were Faw and Graves.
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Earlier that same day, Graves had gone to the Montgomery Village Apartments and sold
crack cocaine to Robert Richards for $15. To finish selling their cocaine, Graves and Faw again
went to the parking lot of Montgomery Village at about 3 a.m., accompanied by the defendant and
Martin. When they arrived, everyone except Martin, who was intoxicated, got out of the car. The
defendant sat on nearby steps with Melvina Terry. Faw and Graves went to a different part of the
parking lot and the victim drove up. The defendant saw Graves and Faw follow the victim, but she
continued to talk with Terry.
The defendant testified that she heard talking and screaming coming from the direction of
Karen Verklas’s apartment. Verklas came running out and yelling. The defendant asked her what
was happening. The defendant then went to the apartment, looked in the door, and heard Graves and
Faw talking about the “gun piece” they had dropped. She saw the victim, who was bleeding, come
from the apartment. She then returned to the area where she had been talking with Terry, and Graves
and Faw came to the parking lot. Graves took her by the shirt, pulled her into the car, and they then
left.
The defendant was taken to the Juvenile Detention Center where Investigator Sam Brown
came to interview her. She wrote out her first statement to him on October 18, 1998. He returned
the following day, telling her that the victim had died, and that she was going to prison. She testified
that he wrote out the second statement and had her sign it.
The defendant also testified that Graves had given Robert Richards some cocaine a week or
so prior to the victim’s murder, and Richards had not paid for it. The defendant said that when she
confronted Richards about the money he owed, she hit him in the face and broke his glasses. She
also had a problem with Karen Verklas, who was supposed to be selling cocaine for one of the
defendant’s friends, but had been smoking the cocaine instead. The defendant admitted that she was
in the drug-selling business with Graves.
The audiotape of Verklas’s 911 telephone call was played for the jury as part of the defense
proof. The following was said during this call:2
DISPATCHER: KNOX COUNTY 911.
VERKLAS: Yes, I need an ambulance and the police, please,
and hurry.
DISPATCHER: What is your address?
VERKLAS: 4712 Joe Lewis, Apartment 229.
2
W e have set out this call in its entirety because the defendant argues on appeal that Verklas did not tell the
dispatcher of certain ma tters to which she testified at trial.
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DISPATCHER: What is your problem there?
VERKLAS: I had a friend come over and visit me and this dude
come in behind him, pulled a gun on him, trying to
rob him, and then he stabbed him. He’s bleeding
bad. Please, y’all get here quick.
DISPATCHER: Okay. Is the person still there?
VERKLAS: Yeah, he’s out here. He can’t go nowhere--
(indiscernible)
DISPATCHER: What’s the apartment number again?
VERKLAS: 229.
DISPATCHER: Okay. What is your name, ma’am?
VERKLAS: Karen Verklas.
DISPATCHER: Is the person that stabbed him still there?
VERKLAS: No, but I know who it was. Y’all just hurry up and
get here.
DISPATCHER: All right, ma’am, stay on the phone with me.
VERKLAS: Look, I’m going to put my neighbor here on the
phone with you. I’ve got to get out here with him,
okay?
DISPATCHER: Is this your boyfriend?
(Indiscernible)
DISPATCHER: Okay. Can you give me a description of the person
who stabbed him?
NEIGHBOR: Oh, I have no idea. They just woke me up. You
know, I’m not in on all of this.
DISPATCHER: What part of the body is he stabbed in?
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NEIGHBOR: I have no idea.
DISPATCHER: But you know his name, but you don’t know what
he looks like?
NEIGHBOR: I have no idea of what’s going on. You know,
they’re all over there doing crack, you know, that’s
the bottom line.
DISPATCHER: You don’t know who did it?
NEIGHBOR: Nope.
DISPATCHER: Are you the lady that I was just talking to?
NEIGHBOR: No.
DISPATCHER: Okay. What is her name?
NEIGHBOR: Her first name is Karen is all I know.
DISPATCHER: Okay. She was just calling from your apartment?
NEIGHBOR: Yeah.
DISPATCHER: And he was robbed also?
NEIGHBOR: That’s what she said.
DISPATCHER: Is there any way that you can find out what the
other guy looks like? Do you know how long ago
this happened?
NEIGHBOR: No, I have no idea. Like I said, they just woke me
up banging on my door.
DISPATCHER: Are they outside or are they–
NEIGHBOR: There’s a bunch of people outside.
DISPATCHER: What’s the name of the apartment complex?
NEIGHBOR: It’s Montgomery Village. Parking Lot Q.
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DISPATCHER: Okay. Just stay on the line with me. (long pause)
Just a minute, ma’am. (long pause) So, you don’t
know if he was robbed or what?
NEIGHBOR: Well, she just said that that was, you know, what
was going on. I don’t know if they actually did it.
DISPATCHER: Who?
NEIGHBOR: I don’t know if they actually robbed him. She said
that was what they were trying to do.
DISPATCHER: Okay. I’ve got people on the way. (Long pause)
What is your phone number there, ma’am?
NEIGHBOR: 609-1679. I mean, you know this did not happen
at my house.
DISPATCHER: Right.
NEIGHBOR: Okay.
DISPATCHER: Is there still a bunch of people out there?
NEIGHBOR: Yeah. You know, somebody knows who did it.
DISPATCHER: Um-hum.
NEIGHBOR: But whether they’ll tell you or not is a whole other
story.
DISPATCHER: Yeah.
NEIGHBOR: I hear ‘em. I think the police is here.
DISPATCHER: Okay. I’ll let you go then.
NEIGHBOR: Okay.
DISPATCHER: Okay. Thank you.
Adam Faw testified as a rebuttal witness. He was seventeen years old at the time of the
instant offenses. He said that he had been with the defendant, Graves, and Christina Martin, his
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former girlfriend, during the early morning of October 17, 1998. Faw was driving the four of them
in his mother’s car. He and Graves discussed committing a robbery. They went to the Montgomery
Village Apartments and Graves asked for Faw’s pistol, a .380 semi-automatic, which Faw then gave
to him. Graves went into Verklas’s apartment by himself, and Faw believed that he recalled seeing
the defendant by herself at the apartment dumpster. He saw the defendant run into Verklas’s
apartment after he had heard the commotion coming from it. Faw said that he did not go into
Verklas’s apartment. When Graves and the defendant returned to Faw’s car, Graves had blood on
his coat.
Lawrence Libscombe, an officer with the Knoxville Police Department Organized Crime
Unit, testified as the last rebuttal witness. He said that the defendant had come to his office
voluntarily on the Monday before the trial began. When he learned that she was on her way, he
checked her record and found that she had a pending murder charge. When he asked her about the
charge, she said that she had nothing to do with it, that she had been at the scene with her boyfriend
and heard someone yell, “Stop! Don’t do this,” as she was sitting in the car. She then went to see
what was happening and saw her boyfriend beating another person with a handgun and trying to get
money out of his hand.
ANALYSIS
I. Admissibility of Defendant’s Statements
The defendant contends that her statements were not admissible, both because she was
arrested without probable cause and because her statements were not voluntary. The State contends
that this issue is waived because the only challenge to the statements at the trial court level was that
they were taken without the permission of the defendant’s mother. According to the State, the
defendant cannot present on appeal new challenges to the statements.
During the transfer hearing in the Knox County Juvenile Court, proof had been presented as
to the defendant’s statements to investigating officers. Sam Brown, a major crimes investigator with
the Knoxville Police Department, testified as to the statements he took from the defendant. Brown
first met with the defendant on October 18, 1998, while she was confined at the Knox County
Juvenile Court facility, and read her rights to her. He next spoke with the defendant the following
day. This time, he read the defendant’s rights to her, and she initialed and signed a waiver of rights.
Prior to the picking of the jury, defense counsel made an oral motion in the Knox County
Criminal Court, where the matters against the defendant were to be tried, to suppress the defendant’s
statements to investigating officers. The precise issue, as stated by the trial court and agreed to by
defense counsel, was “not that they failed to Mirandize or obtain a voluntary statement, but rather
you claim that parental consent was not given.” Citing Colyer v. State, 577 S.W.2d 460 (Tenn.
1979), the trial court denied the motion to suppress. In the defendant’s motion for new trial, she both
challenged the sufficiency of the evidence and claimed that the trial court had erred in concluding
that her statements were admissible: “The trial court erred by admitting certain statements of the
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Defendant, given while the Defendant was a minor in custody and taken without permission of the
Defendant’s mother, when said statements were taken in violation of the Defendant’s constitutional
rights against self-incrimination.”
Thus, prior to the appeal of this matter, the defendant’s complaint was that her statements
were inadmissible because they were taken without the permission of her mother. However, on
appeal, the defendant has made additional objections to the statements, claiming, in addition to her
original grounds, that the statements were inadmissible because she was arrested without probable
cause and because she had not voluntarily waived her Miranda rights. As relief, the defendant seeks
a new trial or, in the alternative, a remand to the trial court for a hearing on these claims.
In support of her argument that this matter should be remanded to the trial court for a hearing
as to whether her statements were lawfully obtained, the defendant has cited instances in which this
court has made such a remand. In State v. Robert Blocker, No. E1999-01624-CCA-R3-CD, 2000
WL 726447, at *3 (Tenn. Crim. App. June 5, 2000), perm. to appeal denied (Tenn. Jan. 8, 2001), the
defense counsel had raised as issues at the suppression hearing “whether the officers advised the
defendant of his Miranda warnings prior to his pretrial statement, and whether he was coerced and
intimidated into making the statement.” In view of the fact that the trial court had not had the
opportunity to address the suppression issue previously raised before it and whether the ruling was
affected or changed by the trial testimony, the matter was remanded to the trial court for a hearing
on that issue.
In State v. Keith Slater, No. 01C01-9709-CC-00435, 1999 WL 32912 (Tenn. Crim. App. Jan.
27, 1999), aff’d after remand, No. M2000-00486-CCA-R3-CD, 2001 WL 487692 (Tenn. Crim. App.
May 8, 2001), we remanded for another suppression hearing because no finding had been made as
to the conflicting claims during the first hearing regarding whether the defendant had asked that an
attorney be contacted before giving a statement. Similarly, we remanded the suppression issue to
the trial court in State v. William Chouinard, No. 03C01-9311-CR-00357, 1995 WL 50752 (Tenn.
Crim. App. Feb. 9, 1995), because the court had not allowed the defendant to offer evidence at the
motion to suppress as to his standing to make such a claim. Finally, in State v. Donald Johnson, Jr.,
No. W2000-00875-CCA-R3-CD, 2001 WL 298638 (Tenn. Crim. App. Mar. 28, 2001), we remanded
to the trial court for further findings on the motion to suppress, the trial court’s original findings
being unclear on several important matters.
The arguments made by this defendant are unlike those made in cases in which there has been
a remand to the trial court either for an additional hearing on a motion to suppress or for additional
findings of fact and conclusions of law. Here, the sole legal issue presented by the oral motion to
suppress the defendant’s statements was whether they were inadmissible because her mother had not
been present when the statements were taken. Although the defendant now takes an expansive view
of this issue, arguing that the present claims were implicit within the issue presented by trial counsel,
the fact is that the trial court heard no testimony before ruling on this matter because none was
required, the matter being presented as an issue of law. The defendant asserts that it is “plain error”
for the statements not to be suppressed. However, there is no proof to show that the defendant’s
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statements were taken in violation of her constitutional rights. The plain error doctrine does not
allow a defendant to change theories and present an argument different from that made at the trial
to obtain a remand and a hearing to determine if that second argument is valid. The cases cited by
the defendant do not authorize a remand and an evidentiary hearing when there is no proof as to a
constitutional violation of the defendant’s rights. The sole basis presented by this defendant in the
trial court was whether her rights could have been validly waived since her mother allegedly had
instructed the investigating officers that the defendant was not to be questioned unless the mother
was present. Unless the challenges made on appeal as to the statements are first raised before the
trial court, they are waived for purposes of appeal. State v. Strickland, 885 S.W.2d 85, 88 (Tenn.
Crim. App. 1993); State v. Burtis, 664 S.W.2d 305, 310 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1983). “An appellant
cannot change theories from the trial court to the appellate court.” State v. Brewer, 932 S.W.2d 1,
9 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996) (quoting State v. Banes, 874 S.W.2d 73, 82 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1993)).
As to the statement made to Officer Libscombe, to which he testified as a rebuttal witness,
the defendant on appeal argues that her right to counsel was violated by the taking of this statement.
However, since no motion to suppress this statement was made at the trial court level, the issue is
waived for purposes of appeal. Tenn. R. Crim. P. 12(b)(3); Strickland, 885 S.W.2d at 88; Burtis,
664 S.W.2d at 310.
This issue is without merit.
II. Jury Instructions
The defendant was charged in a two-count indictment, the first count charging felony murder
and the second charging especially aggravated robbery, and was convicted on both counts. As to the
jury instructions given by the trial court, the defendant has made two claims of error.
A. Instructions as to Lesser-Included Offenses
The defendant was charged with felony murder and especially aggravated robbery. The trial
court instructed the jury as to felony murder, facilitation of felony murder, and especially aggravated
robbery. Instructions were not given as to any other offenses. The defendant has presented as an
issue on appeal that instructions should have been given as to criminally negligent homicide and
reckless homicide on the murder charge and aggravated robbery and facilitation of especially
aggravated robbery or aggravated robbery on the especially aggravated robbery charge.
In State v. Burns, 6 S.W.3d 453, 466-67 (Tenn. 1999), our supreme court adopted the
following test for determining what constitutes a lesser-included offense:
An offense is a lesser-included offense if:
(a) all of its statutory elements are included within the statutory
elements of the offense charged; or
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(b) it fails to meet the definition in part (a) only in the respect that
it contains a statutory element or elements establishing
(1) a different mental state indicating a lesser kind of
culpability; and/or
(2) a less serious harm or risk of harm to the same person,
property or public interest; or
(c) it consists of
(1) facilitation of the offense charged or of an offense that
otherwise meets the definition of lesser-included offense
in part (a) or (b); or
(2) an attempt to commit the offense charged or an offense
that otherwise meets the definition of lesser-included
offense in part (a) or (b); or
(3) solicitation to commit the offense charged or an offense
that otherwise meets the definition of lesser-included
offense in part (a) or (b).
The defendant was convicted of first degree felony murder, which is defined as follows:
First Degree Murder. - (a) First degree murder is:
(1) . . .
(2) A killing of another committed in the perpetration of or attempt
to perpetrate any first degree murder, arson, rape, robbery,
burglary, theft, kidnapping, aggravated child abuse, aggravated
child neglect or aircraft piracy[.]
Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-202(a)(2) (1997).
The Code defines criminally negligent homicide as “[c]riminally negligent conduct which
results in death.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-212(a) (1997). “Reckless homicide” is defined as “a
reckless killing of another.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-215(a) (1997). Subsequent to the oral
arguments in this case, our supreme court resolved the question of whether there were lesser-
included offenses to felony murder, concluding, as the defendant argued herein, that reckless
homicide and criminally negligent homicide are lesser offenses, under part (b) of the Burns test.
State v. Ely, ___ S.W.3d ___, slip op. at 11-12 (Tenn. 2001).
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However, applying the Ely holding, the issue is not resolved for we must then apply a two-
step process to determine whether, under the facts, the trial court should have instructed as to
criminally negligent homicide and reckless homicide:
First, the trial court must determine whether any evidence exists that
reasonable minds could accept as to the lesser included offense. In
making this determination, the trial court must view the evidence
liberally in the light most favorable to the existence of the lesser-
included offense without making any judgments on the credibility of
such evidence. Second, the trial court must determine if the evidence,
viewed in this light, is legally sufficient to support a conviction for
the lesser-included offense.
Burns, 6 S.W.3d at 469.
Karen Verklas testified that she saw Jerry Graves, armed with a pistol, and the victim
struggling on the couch in her apartment. The defendant came into the apartment and was trying to
pry open the victim’s hand as Verklas ran out to summon help. She saw Graves and the defendant
leave her apartment and saw the victim leaning in the doorway with blood all over him. He said to
her, “Oh, God, Karen, they have done me good this time.” Robert Richards, Verklas’s fiancé,
echoed her testimony, but added that he heard the defendant ask Graves as she was trying to open
the victim’s hand, “How much [money] has he got on him?” According to defense witness Melvina
Terry, the defendant never entered the apartment where the victim was attacked, but stayed outside
with her. The defendant’s testimony was that she was with Terry in the parking lot and approached
the apartment only to look in the door, when she saw Jerry Graves and Adam Faw emerging and
talking about the “gun piece.” Adam Faw’s testimony as a rebuttal witness was that he and Graves
talked, in the presence of the defendant and Faw’s former girlfriend, about committing a robbery,
and that Graves had gone into the apartment alone. The defendant ran into the apartment after Faw
heard a commotion coming from it. Officer Libscombe, the second rebuttal witness, said the
defendant told him that she had been at the murder scene with Graves and had seen Graves beating
another person with a handgun and trying to get money out of his hand, but she had had nothing to
do with the crimes.
Dr. Sandra Elkins, the Knox County Medical Examiner, testified that, during the autopsy,
she observed three wounds to the victim’s head. The most anterior wound was described as “on the
front of his scalp and had gone down to the skull and actually fractured the outer part of the skull.”
This wound would not have been fatal but would have dazed the victim or made him unconscious.
The other wounds to his head were consistent with having been made with a blunt object, such as
the butt of a pistol. She observed bruising of the victim’s left eye, two bruises above the left elbow,
one below the left elbow, and one below the right elbow. The victim had a 3.55-inch stab wound
to his chest, which penetrated his heart and caused “severe bleeding.”
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Based upon this evidence, we cannot conclude that there was any proof that the death of the
victim was a criminally negligent homicide resulting in death or that it was a reckless killing. The
proof was that he died as he was being robbed. Thus, regardless of the fact that the defendant’s
responsibility for this offense was established through the doctrine of criminal responsibility, it
remains that the varying descriptions of the homicide do not justify jury instructions as to criminally
negligent homicide or reckless homicide.
Our supreme court has concluded “that an erroneous failure to instruct on lesser-included
offenses is a constitutional error for which the State bears the burden of proving its harmlessness
beyond a reasonable doubt.” Ely, ___ S.W.3d at ___, slip op. at 17. The court in Ely then explained
how this constitutional standard had been applied in State v. Williams, 977 S.W.2d 101 (Tenn.
1998):
The jury in Williams was instructed not only on the charged offense
of premeditated first degree murder, but also on the lesser-included
offenses of second degree murder and reckless homicide. The error
in failing to charge voluntary manslaughter was deemed harmless
beyond a reasonable doubt because by rejecting the lesser offense of
second degree murder, the jury clearly demonstrated its disinclination
to convict on any lesser offenses, including voluntary manslaughter.
Williams, 977 S.W.2d at 106.
Ely, ___ S.W.3d at ___, slip op. at 17-18.
In this matter, the jury was instructed both as to felony murder and facilitation of felony
murder, a Class A felony, Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 39-11-117 and 39-11-403, and convicted the
defendant of felony murder, rather than facilitation of felony murder, as they had the opportunity to
do. Thus, in accord with Ely, we conclude that any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt,
because it more probably than not did not affect the judgment to the prejudice of the defendant.
This claim is without merit.
The petitioner has also argued that, as to the charge of especially aggravated robbery, the trial
court should have instructed as to the lesser offenses of aggravated robbery and facilitation of
especially aggravated robbery and aggravated robbery. We agree that these are lesser-included
offenses of especially aggravated robbery. In deciding not to charge these offenses, the trial court
concluded:
Let me make a couple of comments for the record with regard to the
jury instructions, since I changed my mind after the discussion we had
in the courtroom about them. I determined that – indeed, I did charge
facilitation of first-degree murder, as you heard. I decided that there
was no lesser – there was no proof to justify a charge of lesser
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included offenses on especially aggravated robbery. There was
absolutely no testimony to controvert the extent of injuries sustained
by Mr. Newman or the fact that he was robbed. The only proof was
to the effect that happened. If the jury believes that this defendant
committed that offense or is criminally responsible for that offense,
the only thing she could possibly be guilty of is especially aggravated
robbery. Therefore, that is what I charged.
We agree with the trial court’s analysis. Under the proof, the defendant was either guilty of
especially aggravated robbery, or she was not. There were no facts in the evidence which, applying
the second step of the Burns analysis, would justify the jury’s being instructed on lesser robbery
offenses. This assignment is without merit.
B. Instructions as to Criminal Responsibility
After the briefs had been filed in this matter, but before the oral argument, counsel for the
defendant advised this court that he wished to raise the additional issue that the jury instructions for
criminal responsibility were deficient in that they did not include the charge that the jury must
determine whether the homicide was the “natural and probable consequence” of the planned robbery
of the victim. According to the defendant’s argument, such an instruction was mandated by the
holding of our supreme court in State v. Howard, 30 S.W.3d 271, 276-77 (Tenn. 2000). This claim
was subsequently raised in oral argument. We will examine the defendant’s contention that the jury
charge for criminal responsibility was defective.
As for felony murder, charged in the first count of the indictment, the trial court instructed
the jury:
For you to find the defendant guilty of this offense in the first count,
the State must have proven beyond a reasonable doubt the existence
of the following essential elements:
(1) That the defendant unlawfully killed the alleged victim, Chuck
Newman; and,
(2) That the killing was committed in the perpetration of or the
attempt to perpetrate the alleged robbery; that is, that the killing
was closely connected to the alleged robbery and was not a
separate, distinct and independent event; and,
(3) That the defendant intended to commit the alleged robbery.
The essential elements that constitute especially aggravated robbery
are as follows:
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(1) That the defendant knowingly obtained or exercised control over
property owned by Chuck Newman; and,
(2) That the defendant did not have the owner’s effective consent;
and,
(3) That the defendant intended to deprive the owner of the property;
and,
(4) That the defendant took such property from the person of another
by the use of violence or by putting the person in fear; and,
(5) That the defendant took such property intentionally or
knowingly; and,
(6) That the defendant accomplished this act with a deadly weapon
or by display of an article fashioned or used to lead the alleged victim
to reasonably believe it to be a deadly weapon; and,
(7) That the alleged victim suffered serious bodily injury.
“Intentionally” means a person acts intentionally with respect to the
nature of the conduct or to a result of the conduct when it is the
person’s conscious objective or desire to engage in the conduct or
cause the result.
As to the issue of criminal responsibility, the trial court instructed as follows:
The defendant is criminally responsible as a party to the offense of
felony murder if the offense was committed by the defendant’s own
conduct, by the conduct of another for which the defendant is
criminally responsible, or by both. Each party to the offense may be
charged with the commission of the offense.
The defendant is criminally responsible for an offense committed by
the conduct of another, if acting with the intent to promote or assist
in the commission of the offense or to benefit in the proceeds or
results of the offense, the defendant solicits, directs, aids, or attempts
to aid another person to commit the offense.
Before you find the defendant guilty of being criminally responsible
for said offense committed by the conduct of another, you must find
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that all the essential elements of said offense have been proved by the
State beyond a reasonable doubt.
These instructions were taken verbatim from the Tennessee Pattern Jury Instructions then in
effect. However, that does not end our inquiry, for pattern jury instructions are sanctioned by neither
our supreme court nor the Tennessee Legislature. State v. Phipps, 883 S.W.2d 138, 152 (Tenn.
Crim. App. 1994). On occasion, our supreme court has determined that the pattern jury instruction
is defective, resulting in the court, itself, promulgating an appropriate instruction. State v. Dyle, 899
S.W.2d 607, 612 (Tenn. 1995) (instruction as to “identity”).
In State v. Howard, 30 S.W.3d 271 (Tenn. 2000), our supreme court considered a similar
claim to that made in the instant appeal regarding jury instructions for criminal responsibility given
by the trial court. In Howard, the defendant and three others, all wearing ski masks, approached the
rear entrance of a restaurant, a faithless former employee having given them information about the
restaurant’s closing procedures. Each brandishing a pistol, the four men encountered an employee
at the rear door of the restaurant and ordered him back inside. The restaurant manager was shot and
killed, while another employee was seriously injured by multiple gunshots. Howard gave a statement
to police officers admitting that he had accompanied the three other men to the restaurant knowing
it was their intention to rob it and that all three of them had guns. He did not say whether he also
had a gun. He said that he stayed in the back of the restaurant and, upon hearing gunshots, ran back
to the car. The others followed him and one of them said, “I shot him, man, I shot him.” Id. at 274.
No evidence was presented that Howard had shot either of the victims. The trial court gave an
instruction as to criminal responsibility which was nearly identical to that given in the instant case.
Following Howard’s conviction for premeditated first degree murder, especially aggravated robbery,
and conspiracy to commit aggravated robbery, he appealed, arguing, inter alia, the trial court had
erred in not instructing the jury as to the natural and probable consequences rule. In accepting the
appeal from this court, our supreme court stated the sole issue for its consideration:
“whether the natural and probable consequences rule can be used to sustain a defendant’s conviction
for first degree premeditated murder based upon criminal responsibility for the conduct of a co-
defendant during an especially aggravated robbery.” Id. at 275.
Noting that the natural and probable consequences rule had survived the codification of the
common law into the Tennessee criminal responsibility statutes, the court set out what the State must
prove to establish criminal liability:
Thus, to impose criminal liability based on the natural and probable
consequences rule, the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt
and the jury must find the following: (1) the elements of the crime or
crimes that accompanied the target crime; (2) that the defendant was
criminally responsible pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section
39-11-402; and (3) that the other crimes that were committed were
natural and probable consequences of the target crime. Id. at 276.
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Since the jury in Howard was not instructed as to the natural and probable consequences rule,
and, thus, “did not have the opportunity to determine whether this element was proved,” Howard’s
conviction for premeditated murder was reversed and remanded for a new trial. Id. at 277. Although
a harmless error analysis was utilized, the court could not determine beyond a reasonable doubt that,
absent the error, the jury verdict would have been the same.
In an earlier ruling on the same issue, our supreme court determined in State v. Carson, 950
S.W.2d 951 (Tenn. 1997), that the Tennessee Legislature, in enacting the Criminal Sentencing
Reform Act of 1989 of which Tennessee Code Annotated Section 39-11-402(2) (1989) was a part,
codified the common law principle that if a person agrees to commit a crime with another, that
person “is also guilty of any other crime committed by the other in pursuance of the common
purpose, or as a natural or probable consequence thereof.” Id. at 954 (quoting Key v. State, 563
S.W.2d 184, 186 (Tenn. 1978)). Accordingly, in Carson, the court affirmed the convictions of the
defendant Carson for aggravated robbery, this being the crime which he had helped his co-defendants
to plan, as well as for aggravated assault and felony reckless endangerment, which were committed
by the co-defendants while Carson waited outside in the vehicle. There was sufficient evidence
presented to the jury to conclude that the latter two offenses were the natural and probable
consequence of the robbery which the three had planned.
We will now consider the effect of Howard and Carson upon the instant appeal. First, we
note that under none of the varying versions testified to by the different witnesses did the defendant
do other than assist in the crime, thus, justifying the trial court’s giving the criminal responsibility
instruction to the jury.
In this case, the defendant was convicted of felony murder, not first degree premeditated
murder as in Howard. In Commonwealth v. Allen, 717 N.E.2d 657 (Mass. 1999), the Massachusetts
Supreme Court considered a similar situation, the defendant, who had been convicted of armed
robbery and felony murder in the first degree, claiming error because the trial court had not instructed
that the jury must find that the death of the victim of a homicide was a natural and probable
consequence of armed robbery:
We reject the defendant’s argument that there must be a new trial
because the jury instructions did not include an instruction that
required a finding that Bester’s death was a “natural and probable
consequence” of the armed robbery. Such an instruction is necessary
where the evidence raises a legitimate question that a victim’s death
was proximately caused by the felony underlying the felony-murder
charge. But no such question exists when, as here, the victim of an
armed robbery, an inherently dangerous common-law felony, is killed
during the commission of the robbery. In this situation, instructing
the jury on proximate cause would be superfluous and might confuse
them as they deliberated the elements of felony-murder.
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Id. at 662 (citations omitted).
We agree with this reasoning. The proof raised no question as to whether the victim died as
the result of injuries he received during the course of the especially aggravated robbery. Defense
counsel did not request such an instruction. Further, we note that the trial court specifically
instructed the jury that to find the defendant guilty of felony murder, it must find “that the killing was
closely connected to the alleged robbery and was not a separate, distinct and independent event.”
That felony murder occupies a special status was also recognized in Wayne R. LaFave and Austin
W. Scott, Jr., Substantive Criminal Law, § 6.8(b), at 159 (1987) (footnotes omitted):
Two striking exceptions to the general rules [of the “natural and
probable” consequence rule of accomplice liability] discussed above
are felony-murder and misdemeanor-manslaughter, for they do permit
conviction for a homicide occurring in the execution of a felony or
dangerous misdemeanor without any showing that the defendant
intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or even negligently caused the
death.
We conclude, as did our supreme court in Carson, 950 S.W.2d at 956, that the evidence was
sufficient to show that the subsequent offense, here the felony murder, was the natural and probable
consequence of the robbery.
Accordingly, we conclude that if the trial court erred in not instructing the jury that to convict
the defendant of felony murder, they must determine that the death of the victim was a “natural and
probable consequence” of especially aggravated robbery, such error was harmless, particularly in
light of the facts of this case.
The defendant argues also that we should reverse her conviction for especially aggravated
robbery because the criminal responsibility instruction for this charge, like that of the instruction for
felony murder, also omitted the “natural and probable consequences” element. Although the
defendant is correct that neither charge included this language, she overlooks the rationale for this
instruction, which is that when a defendant is charged with both a target crime as well as others for
which co-defendants were the actual perpetrators, the “natural and probable” instruction is an
element only of the other crimes, not of the target crime, for which the pattern jury instruction for
criminal responsibility is adequate.
This assignment is without merit.
III. Sufficiency of the Evidence
The final issue presented by the defendant is that the evidence is insufficient to sustain her
convictions for felony murder and especially aggravated robbery.
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In considering this issue, we apply the familiar rule that where sufficiency of the convicting
evidence is challenged, the relevant question of the reviewing court is “whether, after viewing the
evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found
the essential elements of the offense charged beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 443
U.S. 307, 319, 99 S. Ct. 2781, 2789, 61 L. Ed. 2d 560 (1979). See also State v. Evans, 838 S.W.2d
185, 190-92 (Tenn. 1992); State v. Anderson, 835 S.W.2d 600, 604 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992); Tenn.
R. App. P. 13(e) (“Findings of guilt in criminal actions whether by the trial court or jury shall be set
aside if the evidence is insufficient to support the findings by the trier of fact of guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt.”). All questions involving the credibility of witnesses, the weight and value to be
given the evidence, and all factual issues are resolved by the trier of fact. See State v. Pappas, 754
S.W.2d 620, 623 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1987). “A guilty verdict by the jury, approved by the trial judge,
accredits the testimony of the witnesses for the State and resolves all conflicts in favor of the theory
of the State.” State v. Grace, 493 S.W.2d 474, 476 (Tenn. 1973). Our supreme court stated the
rationale for this rule:
This well-settled rule rests on a sound foundation. The trial judge and
the jury see the witnesses face to face, hear their testimony and
observe their demeanor on the stand. Thus the trial judge and jury are
the primary instrumentality of justice to determine the weight and
credibility to be given to the testimony of witnesses. In the trial
forum alone is there human atmosphere and the totality of the
evidence cannot be reproduced with a written record in this Court.
Bolin v. State, 219 Tenn. 4, 11, 405 S.W.2d 768, 771 (1966) (citing Carroll v. State, 212 Tenn. 464,
370 S.W.2d 523 (1963)). A jury conviction removes the presumption of innocence with which a
defendant is initially cloaked and replaces it with one of guilt, so that on appeal, a convicted
defendant has the burden of demonstrating that the evidence is insufficient. See State v. Tuggle, 639
S.W.2d 913, 914 (Tenn. 1982).
Previously, we have discussed in detail the proof presented during the trial of this matter.
Karen Verklas testified that she saw the defendant trying to pry open the victim’s hand as he
struggled with Jerry Graves, who had a pistol, on the sofa. She saw Graves and the defendant leave
the apartment, and the victim, who was bloody, come out, leaning on the doorway. Robert Richards
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also testified that the defendant appeared in the apartment after Jerry Graves wrestled with the victim
on the sofa, hitting the victim in the head. Richards said that the defendant was trying to pry open
the victim’s hand and said to Graves, “How much [money] has he got on him?” Soon afterwards,
Graves and the defendant left the apartment, and Richards saw the victim, covered in blood, stagger
to the apartment door. This testimony, combined with the other evidence set out in this opinion, is
sufficient for a reasonable jury to have concluded that the defendant was guilty of felony murder and
especially aggravated robbery.
CONCLUSION
Based upon the reasoning and authorities set out herein, we affirm the defendant’s
convictions for especially aggravated robbery and felony murder.
___________________________________
ALAN E. GLENN, JUDGE
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