08/20/2018
IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
October 3, 2017 Session
STATE OF TENNESSEE v. DEVIN BUCKINGHAM
Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County
No. 14-03628 W. Mark Ward, Judge
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No. W2016-02350-CCA-R3-CD
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A Shelby County Criminal Court Jury convicted the Appellant, Devin Buckingham, of
first degree premeditated murder, and the trial court sentenced him to life. On appeal, the
Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction; that the
trial court erred by ruling that defense counsel’s notes, taken during counsel’s interview
of a defense witness, qualified as Jencks material; and that the trial court erred by
prohibiting defense counsel from questioning a defense witness about the victim’s prior
bad acts. Based upon the oral arguments, the record, and the parties’ briefs, we find no
reversible error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
NORMA MCGEE OGLE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT
WILLIAMS, P.J., and ALAN E. GLENN, J., joined.
Joseph A. McClusky (on appeal) and Greg Carman and Phil Harvey (at trial), Memphis,
Tennessee, for the appellant, Devin Buckingham.
Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; David H. Findley, Senior Counsel;
Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Greg Gilbert and Jose Leon, Assistant
District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
OPINION
In July 2014, the Shelby County Grand Jury indicted the Appellant for the first
degree premediated murder of Alex Winfield and the aggravated assault of Michael
Wheeler. The Appellant’s four-day trial began on July 25, 2016.
At trial, Officer Joshua Stanley of the Memphis Police Department (MPD)
testified that “right after lunch” but before 1:00 p.m. on January 9, 2014, he was
dispatched to The Meadows apartment complex. When he arrived at 2220 Meadow
Glade Lane, he saw Alex Winfield lying on the ground and a crowd of people. The
victim had a “massive” gunshot wound to the head, and coagulated blood, brain matter,
and bone fragments were on the ground. A plastic bag was beside the victim. Officer
Stanley called for emergency medical services and “set up a perimeter.” People in the
crowd said they saw the shooter get into the passenger side of a late-model, gray
Mustang, so Officer Stanley broadcast information about the car over the police radio.
The shooter was described as “a smaller frame black male armed with a handgun.”
Officer Stanley testified that he did not notice any rain when he arrived at The
Meadows but that it began raining “pretty hard” while he was on the scene. He spoke
with Michael Wheeler, who had been with the victim just prior to the shooting. Officer
Stanley said that he “wouldn’t characterize [Mr. Wheeler] as being cooperative with us
on the scene” and that Mr. Wheeler “didn’t act the way I would have acted if I was with
someone and they were murdered.” On cross-examination, Officer Stanley testified that
he did not think the police located the Mustang.
Carl Winfield, Sr., the victim’s father, testified that he last saw the victim alive on
January 8, 2014, when the victim worked for him at his clothing store in downtown
Memphis. The next day, he learned from his older son, Carl Winfield, Jr., that the victim
had been killed. The victim was twenty-one years old.
Jean Winfield Threat, the victim’s mother, testified that she last saw the victim
alive on January 8, 2014, when she picked him up from his apartment in The Meadows
where he lived with his older brother, Carl Jr.1 Ms. Threat drove the victim to her
parents’ home so her parents could take him to work at his father’s store the next day.
On January 9, Carl Jr. telephoned Ms. Threat and told her the victim had been shot and
was lying in the parking lot. Ms. Threat said that she received the call about “twelvish. . .
. Probably 12:30” and that she drove to The Meadows. The victim was in an ambulance,
and emergency personnel were “working on” him. At some point, the ambulance’s
emergency lights were turned off, and Sergeant Mark Berryman asked that Ms. Threat
come to his patrol car. He informed her that the victim was deceased.
Ms. Threat testified that Michael Wheeler lived next door to her brother and “was
like a family friend.” Mr. Wheeler and the victim were friends “off and on” about ten
years. Ms. Threat said that she did not see Mr. Wheeler at The Meadows on January 9
but that he had been there and “left from [her] understanding.” Ms. Threat stated that she
expected Mr. Wheeler to testify at the Appellant’s trial but that she had not seen him.
1
Because Carl Winfield, Jr., shares a name with his father, we will refer to him as “Carl
Jr.” for clarity. We mean no disrespect to the witness.
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Carl Winfield, Jr., testified that in January 2014, he and the victim were living at
2220 Meadow Glade Lane in The Meadows and that Michael Wheeler was staying with
them. On the morning of January 9, the victim had been to his grandmother’s house but
returned home about 10:00 a.m. The victim wanted to go to the store, so Carl Jr. gave
him some money.
Carl Jr. testified that the victim and Mr. Wheeler left for the store about 11:00 a.m.
and that the store was “at the corner of Raleigh Lagrange and Sycamore View.” About
fifteen to twenty minutes later, Carl Jr. heard three gunshots and went outside. The
victim was lying on the ground, and a man “was out there talking to him and telling him
he was going to be all right.” Carl Jr. did not know the man but later learned his name
was “Brian.” Carl Jr. said Mr. Wheeler “had ran to the back of the apartments because
the guy pointed the gun at him.” However, Mr. Wheeler returned to the scene and talked
with the police.
On cross-examination, Carl Jr. testified that the day after the shooting, he received
a telephone call from the victim’s girlfriend. She gave Carl Jr. the name of the person
who may have shot the victim. Carl Jr. acknowledged that he “pulled up” a photograph
of the person on his computer and that he showed the photograph to Mr. Wheeler. Carl
Jr. then contacted Sergeant Berryman.
Brian Ayers testified that on January 9, 2014, he was staying at his niece’s
apartment at 2210 Meadow Glade Lane in The Meadows. That morning, he walked to
the store. On his way back to his niece’s apartment, he passed the victim and Michael
Wheeler, who were walking to the store. Mr. Ayers did not know the two men at that
time.
Mr. Ayers testified that about “twelve, 12:10,” he looked out the blinds of the
apartment and saw the victim and Mr. Wheeler returning from the store. The two men
were walking on the sidewalk, and the victim was carrying a bag. Mr. Ayers saw a third
man walking around an “Herbal Life van” in the parking lot, and a gray Mustang was
parked next to the van. Mr. Ayers went outside to smoke and heard “something go pow.”
He thought the sound was a car’s backfire but went inside the apartment just to be safe.
He went back outside and saw the victim fall to the curb. A fourth man, who was
wearing a gray hoodie and holding a pistol, came out from behind the bushes, and the
man and the victim “had words.” Mr. Ayers called 911.
Mr. Ayers testified that while he was on the telephone with 911, the man with the
gun said something to the victim and pointed the gun at the victim. The man shot the
victim twice in the temple and ran toward the Mustang. When the shooter got to the car,
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“the hoodie flew off his head,” and he and Mr. Ayers made “eye to eye contact.” The
shooter got into the Mustang, and the Mustang drove away. Mr. Ayers gave a description
of the Mustang to 911.
Mr. Ayers testified that he went to the victim and told the victim that the victim
was going to be okay. The victim was trying to talk, and Mr. Ayers noticed two holes in
the victim’s head. The victim “reached his hand up,” and Mr. Ayers saw that his hand
was “halfway shot off.” Mr. Ayers grabbed the victim’s other hand and started praying
for him. He described the gun used to shoot the victim as “a long pistol. . . . Like a John
Wayne gun.”
Mr. Ayers testified that he did not see Mr. Wheeler at the time of the shooting.
However, police on the scene later talked with Mr. Ayers and Mr. Wheeler in separate
police cars. Mr. Ayers also gave a formal statement at the police department. Two days
after the shooting, he viewed a six-photograph array. He selected the Appellant’s
photograph and wrote on the photo, “I saw him [shoot] the guy standing right up on him
and he fired.”
Mr. Ayers identified the Appellant at trial as the shooter but said the Appellant had
gained weight since the shooting and had a different hairstyle. The Appellant also was
wearing glasses at trial but not on the day of the shooting. Regarding Mr. Ayers’s ability
to see the Appellant when he and the Appellant made eye contact after the shooting, Mr.
Ayers said, “[There] wasn’t anything in my way. It was just as clear as I’m sitting here
looking at everybody in this room. It was just that clear.”
The State played Mr. Ayers’s 911 call for the jury. During the call, Mr. Ayers
described the shooter as “a short guy, standing about five two, five three”; with a “light
mustache”; and wearing a gray hoodie. He described the driver of the Mustang as “a tall
dark-skinned guy.” Mr. Ayers told the 911 dispatcher that he heard the victim say before
the shooting, “‘Naw, man, naw, don’t shoot me, man.’” Mr. Ayers also told the
dispatcher that the victim was still breathing but gasping for air.
On cross-examination, Mr. Ayers testified that he was talking on the telephone
when he first saw the victim and Mr. Wheeler walking on the sidewalk. He said that
when the Appellant came out of the bushes, the Appellant was holding the gun with both
hands. The Appellant walked up to the victim, who was lying on the ground and begging
for his life. The victim had his hand over his head as if he could stop a bullet from hitting
him, and the Appellant shot the victim twice. Mr. Ayers acknowledged that the shooting
did not occur directly in front of his niece’s apartment and said that it occurred “further
down” from the apartment. After the shooting, the Appellant ran to the Mustang. The
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Mustang had a black convertible top, was backed into a parking space, and “just pull[ed]
on out.”
Mr. Ayers acknowledged that the shooting was shocking and stressful, that it
occurred within a matter of seconds, and that he was upset during his call to 911. He said
he called 911 between 12:10 and 12:15 p.m. He acknowledged, though, that he could
have been mistaken about the time because his 911 call was recorded at 12:43 p.m. He
stated, “I just know it was around twelve.” Mr. Ayers did not know the victim or the
victim’s family prior to the shooting but met the victim’s family members after the
shooting and stayed in contact with them. He said that after he grabbed the victim’s
hand, he told the victim, “I know how [the shooter] looked and I promise you if I got
anything to do with it he will not get away with it.”
Mr. Ayers acknowledged that in his statement to the police, he said the man
standing beside the Herbal Life van was talking on the telephone. However, he said at
trial that he did not remember making that statement. He also acknowledged saying in
his statement that he saw Mr. Wheeler run away after the shooting and heard Mr.
Wheeler say, “[H]e’s shooting. He’s shooting.” Mr. Ayers said that his statement was
“twisted” and that he “didn’t say that.” Mr. Ayers said in his statement that he heard four
gunshots and that the victim was probably five feet, four inches tall. He acknowledged
initialing every page of his statement, signing his statement, and reviewing it before he
signed it.
On redirect examination, Mr. Ayers testified that although the incident occurred
two years before trial, his attention was focused on the shooter and the shooter’s face
would never leave his mind. He stated that the shooter got a good look at him and that he
had nightmares for more than two weeks after the shooting because he was afraid the
shooter would come for him. He stated that after he heard the first gunshot, he saw the
man by the Herbal Life van get into the Mustang.
Thomas Morris testified that on January 9, 2014, he was living in The Meadows.
Sometime late that morning, Mr. Morris heard someone running through the breezeway
by his apartment and “some kind of verbal exchange” between two people right outside
his apartment. Mr. Morris then heard gunshots. He lifted the window blinds in time to
see the victim “drop to the pavement dead.” Mr. Morris also saw an African-American
male “run down the sidewalk in between two cars.” The male got into a “waiting”
Mustang, and the Mustang left the parking lot at a high rate of speed. Mr. Morris said he
did not get a good look at the shooter’s face but that the shooter was wearing a “puffy”
jacket. The jacket’s hood was over the shooter’s head, but the hood came off as the
shooter ran. Mr. Morris estimated that the shooter was five feet, ten inches tall.
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Mr. Morris testified that he went outside to the victim and that the victim appeared
to have a wound to his chest and a wound to the side of his forehead. The back of the
victim’s head was gone. Mr. Morris stated that the victim was dead but that people kept
“running up to him trying to shake him and see if he was okay.” Mr. Morris did not see
any shell casings on the ground, which made him think the gun was a revolver.
Charlotte Brown testified that on January 9, 2014, she was living in The Meadows.
About 12:25 p.m., Brown saw a man “running across the parking lot in his boxers and
nothing else.” About twenty minutes later, she heard two people arguing. She stated, “I
heard someone say that they heard that it was his brother’s crowbar used or something to
that effect. It was your brother’s crowbar. And I heard the victim say that I didn’t do it.
I didn’t do it.” Ms. Brown looked out her bedroom window and saw the victim and the
front of a car. The car was silver and appeared to be a sports car. She said the car “was
in front of mine. Like he just pulled up[.]” The victim was standing, and the second
person was in the silver car. Ms. Brown stated, “They were going back and forth about it
wasn’t me. I didn’t do it. And then I heard someone say I beat, I don’t remember the
name that they called out, but they said I beat someone’s ass until they told me you did
it.” The State asked if she thought the speaker was referring to beating the man in the
boxer shorts, and she answered, “I believe so.” She continued as follows: “I heard the
victim say I didn’t do it. I wasn’t there. I thought we were better than that. And then I
heard him say I can pay for it. I can pay for it, but I didn’t do it.”
Ms. Brown testified that she heard the victim say that “you don’t have to shoot me
over this” and that she moved to the side of the window. She heard another voice say,
“[G]o ahead and pop that n***a.” The victim again stated that “you don’t have to shoot
me over this.” Ms. Brown crouched down. She heard a gunshot and tires screeching.
She looked out the window and saw the victim slumped over the trunk of her car. He
pulled himself up like he was going to run, and Ms. Brown heard someone say that “he’s
not gone. He’s not gone. Get him. Get him. He’s not gone.” Ms. Brown moved away
from the window. She heard tires screech again and one or two more gunshots followed
by laughter. She then heard someone say that “he’s definitely gone now,” a car door
slam, and tires screech. She never saw the shooter.
Ms. Brown testified that she called 911. She looked out the window, saw the
victim lying next to her car, and went outside. The victim was twitching and unable to
speak. Ms. Brown could not see his face because he was lying face-down. When she did
see his face, “half of [it] looked like it was gone.”
On cross-examination, Ms. Brown testified that she never saw anyone with the
victim and that she heard a total of three voices. One of the voices was that of the victim,
and a second voice sounded like it was coming from the silver car. She acknowledged
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that the victim continued to protest that he “didn’t do whatever it was.” The shooter then
shot the victim.
Ms. Brown testified that when she saw the man in the boxer shorts before the
shooting, he was calling for help. He ran across the parking lot toward Ms. Brown’s
apartment building, past Ms. Brown’s door, and through the breezeway of the building.
Carl Jr.’s apartment door also was in the breezeway. After the shooting, Ms. Brown saw
the man near the victim. He was wearing a bathrobe, was talking to the police, and
appeared to have been injured. He had a large cut across his nose, he had a “busted” lip,
and “[h]is jaw appeared to be swelling up.” She acknowledged that she heard him say
“contradictory things” to the police. On redirect examination, Ms. Brown testified that
she later came to know Michael Wheeler and that he was the man wearing the boxer
shorts and bathrobe.
Katirria Coburn testified that she was the victim’s girlfriend in January 2014 and
that they dated two and one-half years. Ms. Coburn did not know the Appellant
personally at the time of the shooting, but the Appellant’s mother and Ms. Coburn’s
mother lived across the street from each other. Their mothers used to be friends, and Ms.
Coburn would see the Appellant “out in the yard.” Ms. Coburn said that she was five
feet, four inches tall and that the Appellant was “definitely” shorter than she. The State
asked if she knew whether the Appellant was in the courtroom, and she answered no.
Ms. Coburn testified that about two weeks before the victim was killed, the victim
told her that he went into the Appellant’s residence and “took some objects.” The victim
showed the Appellant’s social security card to Ms. Coburn and tried to sell her sister a
television. The victim indicated to Ms. Coburn that he thought he was in danger of being
harmed by the Appellant.
Ms. Coburn testified that on the morning of January 9, she telephoned the victim
about eight times, but the victim did not answer. She went to The Meadows and knocked
on Carl Jr.’s door. The victim’s cousin, Steve, answered the door and told Ms. Coburn
the victim had been shot. Ms. Coburn said the Appellant came to mind as “the only
person . . . that could have done it.” She told Steve about the Appellant, but she never
spoke to the police or gave them the Appellant’s social security card. Ms. Coburn
learned a Mustang was involved in the shooting. She stated, “It . . . triggered something
because [there] used to be a Mustang parked across the street in [the Appellant’s] mom’s
driveway. And it was a guy that was tall with dreads that used to be over there that drove
the Mustang.” She said that the Mustang was black or gray and that she thought it had a
black convertible top.
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On cross-examination, Ms. Coburn acknowledged that she never heard the
Appellant threaten the victim. She also acknowledged that she saw the victim with items
he took during a burglary but that she never told prosecutors or defense counsel’s
investigator about seeing stolen property. The victim told Ms. Coburn that he obtained
the items from the Appellant’s residence. Ms. Coburn said she had never seen the victim
with stolen property previously.
Ms. Coburn denied being at the Ridge Crest apartment complex before the
Appellant’s trial and telling a group of girls there that her mother made her lie to the
prosecutors about the Appellant. She also denied telling the girls that she was “going to
come clean since [her] mom had put her out of her house.” On redirect examination, Ms.
Coburn testified that she had never been to Ridge Crest. She said she had her own place
to live and denied that her mother “ever put [her] out.”
Detective Fausto Frias of the MPD testified that Sergeant Berryman developed the
Appellant as a suspect. Detective Frias created a six-photograph array containing the
Appellant’s photograph and showed the array to Brian Ayers. Detective Frias said that as
soon as Mr. Ayers looked at the array, Mr. Ayers “went to [the Appellant’s] picture and
said that’s the one.” After the positive identification, Detective Frias arrested the
Appellant. The State asked that Detective Frias “point out” the Appellant in the
courtroom, and Detective Frias said, “He’s wearing glasses. A lot different than when I
took him into custody. He didn’t have on glasses and his hair was much different than
how he has it now.” Detective Frias said the Appellant also had “gained a little weight”
since his arrest.
On cross-examination, Detective Frias denied that Mr. Ayers asked if he had
selected the right person from the array. Detective Frias acknowledged that the police
also developed Devin Carroll as a suspect and that he never showed a photograph array
containing Mr. Carroll’s photograph to Mr. Ayers.
Sergeant Mark Berryman of the MPD testified that he investigated the shooting
and went to The Meadows on January 9, 2014. The victim was lying in the parking lot.
The police did not find a gun at the scene and did not locate any shell casings on the
ground, meaning that the shooter likely used a revolver. Michael Wheeler was present,
and Sergeant Berryman considered him a “potential” victim. Mr. Wheeler went to the
police department and gave a statement.
Sergeant Berryman testified that initially, he did not have any suspects. However,
Carl Jr. learned from the victim’s girlfriend that the Appellant could have been involved.
Detective Frias created a photograph array containing the Appellant’s photograph and
showed the array to Brian Ayers. Mr. Ayers positively identified the Appellant.
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Sergeant Berryman learned the Appellant lived in the Deerfield apartment complex,
which was two complexes behind The Meadows. He acknowledged that in order to walk
from the victim’s apartment to the store at the corner of Raleigh Lagrange and Sycamore
View, the victim had to pass by or through Deerfield.
Sergeant Berryman testified that Detective Frias arrested the Appellant and
brought him to the police department. Sergeant Berryman advised the Appellant of his
rights, and the Appellant agreed to speak with the officer. The Appellant told Sergeant
Berryman that he thought the victim broke into his home but that he was not present
when the victim was shot. The Appellant claimed he was “walking around with his
girlfriend that day” and denied having any connection to a Mustang. When Sergeant
Berryman began asking the Appellant specific questions, the Appellant became
belligerent and ended the interview. Sergeant Berryman never located the Mustang
involved in the shooting.
On cross-examination, Sergeant Berryman acknowledged that witnesses claimed
to have heard screeching tires on January 9 but that he did not find any tire marks in The
Meadows parking lot. He also acknowledged that the Appellant agreed to speak with
him without a lawyer present and that the Appellant was under no obligation to do so.
The Appellant told Sergeant Berryman that he and the victim used to be friends but that
he stopped having contact with the victim after someone broke into his apartment. The
Appellant told the officer that he did not kill the victim and that he was with his girlfriend
on the day of the shooting. Sergeant Berryman acknowledged that he kept accusing the
Appellant of being the shooter and that the Appellant said he was “done talking.”
Sergeant Berryman never spoke with the Appellant’s girlfriend and never investigated the
Appellant’s alibi claim. He acknowledged that Devin Carroll also was a suspect and that
he never showed Mr. Carroll’s photograph to Mr. Ayers.
On redirect examination, Sergeant Berryman testified that Mr. Carroll was present
at the Appellant’s apartment when the police arrested the Appellant. Sergeant Berryman
said that Mr. Carroll and the Appellant looked different from one another and that Mr.
Carroll was about six feet tall. Sergeant Berryman showed a photograph array containing
Mr. Carroll’s photograph to Mr. Wheeler, and Mr. Carroll agreed to speak with Sergeant
Berryman. Sergeant Berryman ultimately decided not to charge Mr. Carroll with a crime
because he determined that Mr. Carroll was not involved in the shooting.
Officer Stacy Milligan of the MPD testified that she went to The Meadows on
January 9, 2014, to investigate the crime scene and take photographs. It had been raining
“pretty heavy” that day, and the rain had washed away some of the victim’s blood. A
towel and a bag of potato chips were in the parking lot. Officer Milligan tried to obtain
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fingerprints from the scene but did not find any prints of value. She also did not find any
tire marks or footprints.
Marco Ross, the Chief Medical Examiner for Shelby County, testified as an expert
in forensic pathology that he conducted the victim’s autopsy. The victim received three
gunshot wounds that could have been caused by two to four bullets. The victim had one
entrance wound on the right side of his forehead, and the bullet exited his left cheek. Dr.
Ross did not see any powder burns around the wound, meaning the gun was probably
more than three feet from the victim when it was fired. The front part of the victim’s
brain was “pulpified,” and he probably would have been immobile and unable to speak
after he received the injury. Dr. Ross said the odds of surviving the injury were very low.
Another bullet entered the victim’s pelvis, perforated his bladder and pelvic bone, and
exited his left buttock. The victim was clothed, so Dr. Ross did not find any powder
burns around the entrance wound. The pelvic wound was more survivable than the head
wound.
Dr. Ross testified that the victim had a third gunshot wound to the thumb and
index fingers of the victim’s right hand, and he described the wound as “tangential,”
meaning it was a “deep grazed wound.” Dr. Ross acknowledged that the victim could
have received the wound if he was holding his hand over his head when he was shot in
the head. Dr. Ross could not determine the order of the gunshots from the victim’s
autopsy. However, based on information from witnesses, he opined that the victim was
shot first in the pelvis and then the head. He also opined that the gun was a thirty-eight
caliber, forty caliber, or nine millimeter and said that the gun had to be above and to the
right of the victim’s head when it was fired. Toxicology tests showed marijuana in the
victim’s system. Dr. Ross concluded that the victim’s cause of death was gunshot
wounds to the head and pelvis.
Edward Hall testified that he worked for the district attorney general’s office,
assisting prosecutors “in locating witnesses, anything they need help to present a case.”
Mr. Hall tried to find Michael Wheeler in order to serve Mr. Wheeler with a subpoena.
Specifically, Mr. Hall used computer “search engines” and tried to find relatives and a
current address or telephone number for Mr. Wheeler. A material witness warrant also
was issued for Mr. Wheeler, but Mr. Hall was unable to find him. At the conclusion of
Mr. Hall’s testimony, the State rested its case-in-chief, and the trial court granted the
Appellant’s motion for judgment of acquittal with regard to the aggravated assault of Mr.
Wheeler.
Lenwood Jones testified that he knew Katirria Coburn, the Appellant, and the
victim and that he came into contact with Ms. Coburn at the Ridge Crest apartment
complex “last week on Saturday.” Mr. Jones stated that he was standing in the
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breezeway on the second floor, waiting for his “ride,” and that Ms. Coburn was on the
first floor with a group of girls. Mr. Jones heard Ms. Coburn mention the names of the
victim, the Appellant, and the Appellant’s mother. He then heard Ms. Coburn say that
“she lied and wished that all of this was behind her” and that “she was lying because she
was staying with her mother at the time and her mother did not like [the Appellant’s
mother].” Mr. Jones said Ms. Coburn also stated that she “shouldn’t [have] just lied with
her mother because she’s not with her mother no more. She got put out.”
On cross-examination, Mr. Jones testified that he met Ms. Coburn only one time in
November or December 2013 but that he was able to recognize her face and voice two
weeks before trial “cause I’m good with faces.” Mr. Jones acknowledged that when he
heard Ms. Coburn talking, she and the girls were in the breezeway beneath him. He saw
them because he had to walk past them to go upstairs.
Jasmine Taper testified that she was the Appellant’s girlfriend at the time of the
shooting. About 12:15 p.m. on January 9, 2014, Ms. Taper telephoned the Appellant
from Anthem Career College and told him to take her to get something to eat. Three to
five minutes later, the Appellant texted Ms. Taper that he was “about to pull up.”
Another two to three minutes later, the Appellant texted Ms. Taper that he was outside.
Ms. Taper walked outside and saw the Appellant, who did not have a car, in the
passenger seat of a black Jeep Cherokee. A man named “Wiz” was driving the Jeep.
Wiz drove the Appellant and Ms. Taper to the McDonalds on Sycamore View, the
Appellant and Ms. Taper went inside, and Ms. Taper ordered food. When she received
her order three to five minutes later, her order was incorrect. The restaurant remade the
order, which took another five minutes. Ms. Taper received her food, she and the
Appellant returned to the Jeep, and Wiz drove them back to Anthem Career College. Ms.
Taper and the Appellant went inside the college, they talked for five to eight minutes, and
the Appellant left. Ms. Taper said that the Appellant was with her for a total of about
thirty minutes and that she remembered that day because it was the last day she saw the
Appellant before he went to jail.
On cross-examination, Ms. Taper denied being in love with the Appellant. She
said that she had visited the Appellant less than five times in jail and that they missed
each other but “that’s about it.”
Ms. Taper testified that she spoke with defense counsel before trial but that she did
not remember telling counsel she received a text from the Appellant at 12:35 p.m. on
January 9. She maintained that she telephoned the Appellant at 12:15 p.m., that he
picked her up at 12:20 p.m., that they ordered food at McDonalds, and that they returned
to the college about 12:45 p.m. Ms. Taper acknowledged that she did not tell the police
or the State’s investigator that she was with the Appellant on January 9. On redirect
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examination, Ms. Taper testified that Sergeant Berryman never contacted her and that
defense counsel told her to testify truthfully.
Demorris Delbridge testified that his nickname was “Wiz.” On January 9, 2014,
Mr. Delbridge received a telephone call from the Appellant, asking if Mr. Delbridge
could drive Jasmine Taper to McDonalds. Mr. Delbridge, who was driving a black Jeep
Grand Cherokee, picked up the Appellant at the Appellant’s apartment and drove the
Appellant to Ms. Taper’s school. The Appellant went inside, Ms. Taper came outside
with the Appellant, and Mr. Delbridge drove them “across the street to the McDonalds.”
The Appellant and Ms. Taper went inside the restaurant while Mr. Delbridge waited in
the Jeep, and the Appellant and Ms. Taper were inside about fifteen minutes. Mr.
Delbridge then drove the Appellant and Ms. Taper back to the school. The Appellant
walked Ms. Taper inside, and he was inside with her “[a] good ten minutes.” The
Appellant returned to the Jeep, and Mr. Delbridge drove the Appellant home. He said the
entire trip took thirty to forty minutes.
On cross-examination, Mr. Delbridge testified that on January 9, 2014, he lived in
the apartment complex next to the Appellant’s complex. He estimated that driving Ms.
Taper and the Appellant from the school to McDonalds took about two minutes, and he
did not know why Ms. Taper did not walk to McDonalds. He said that it was not raining
and acknowledged that the day was sunny. After Mr. Delbridge dropped off the
Appellant at the Appellant’s apartment, Mr. Delbridge returned to his own apartment. He
got home about 12:30 or 12:40 p.m.
Mr. Delbridge testified that at some point, he learned the district attorney’s office
was trying to contact him. He telephoned the office but did not talk to an investigator.
He acknowledged that he did not want to speak with an investigator but said that he was
not trying to hide anything and was telling the truth. He stated that he still drove the Jeep
but that it had never been registered to him. Therefore, he could not prove he owned the
Jeep in 2014.
Cathy Byrd, an investigator for the public defender’s office, testified that she went
to the crime scene and used crime scene photographs to locate where the victim was shot.
She measured the distance from the doorway of Brian Ayers’s apartment to the point on
the sidewalk where the victim collapsed, and the distance was 81.1 feet. Next, Ms. Byrd
stood at the doorway of Mr. Ayers’s apartment to determine if she could see where the
shooter stepped out of the bushes. Ms. Byrd said that in order to get a clear view of that
area, she had to travel 129 feet. On cross-examination, Ms. Byrd acknowledged that she
did not know where Mr. Ayers was standing when he witnessed the shooting.
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Dr. Jeffrey Neuschatz testified as an expert in witness identification that he was a
cognitive psychologist, focusing his research on eyewitness memory and the effect of
certain factors on identifications. He said that in his opinion, there were four
requirements for a fair and accurate lineup. First, the witness viewing the lineup should
be told that the suspect may or may not be in the lineup. Second, the person conducting
the lineup should not know the identity of the suspect and should tell the witness that he
or she does not know the identity of the suspect. Third, the lineup should include five to
twelve “fillers,” people known to be innocent, and the suspect should not “unduly stick
out” from the fillers. Finally, if the witness viewing the lineup identified someone, the
person conducting the lineup should take a “confidence statement” from the witness,
asking how confident the witness was on a scale of one to ten that the witness picked out
the right person. When Detective Frias showed Brian Ayers the lineup in this case, the
first and third requirements were met, but the second and fourth requirements were not
met.
Dr. Neuschatz testified that a witness would have difficulty remembering an event
accurately when the exposure time to the event was of very short duration, the witness
could not study or rehearse the event, the witness was under stress at the time of the
event, or the witness’s view of the event was obstructed. Dr. Neusatchz acknowledged
that those factors existed in this case, making it more difficult for Brian Ayers to encode
the event in his memory accurately. He stated that a witness could see more details of an
event if the witness was in close proximity to the event and that a witness’s accuracy in
identifying a suspect “suffered” beyond forty-five feet. Defense counsel noted that Mr.
Ayers was more than eighty feet from the shooting. Dr. Neuschatz stated that a suspect’s
head or face being covered also affected the accuracy of a witness’s identification, and he
acknowledged that even a partial covering could affect facial recognition. Moreover,
every time a witness thought about the memory, the memory could change. Finally, the
witness’s version of the event would be more accurate if given close in time to the event.
On cross-examination, Dr. Neuschatz said he had testified for defendants in about
one hundred trials. He acknowledged that he usually testified for defendants to question
the identification of witnesses and that the defense was paying him in this case. He said
that Detective Frias used an appropriate number of fillers in the Appellant’s lineup and
that the filler photographs did not “stick out” from the Appellant’s photograph.
Moreover, Detective Frias advised Mr. Ayers that the suspect may or may not be in the
lineup. Dr. Neuschatz acknowledged that he never visited the crime scene or talked with
Mr. Ayers. He also acknowledged that in some cases, witnesses made accurate
identifications even though they were under stress or had short exposure times to events.
He said he had “no idea” whether Mr. Ayers’s identification of the Appellant was
accurate or inaccurate.
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Alisa Styles testified on rebuttal for the State that she was employed in the Shelby
County Sheriff’s Office Jail Division and responsible for inmate records. At the State’s
request, Ms. Styles obtained the visitation records for the Appellant. Specifically, the
State asked for information regarding the Appellant’s being visited by Demorris
Delbridge and Jasmine Taper. According to the records, Mr. Delbridge visited the
Appellant twice: one time on April 14, 2016, and again on June 2, 2016. Ms. Taper
visited the Appellant thirteen times between February 4, 2014, and March 11, 2015.
Katirria Coburn was recalled by the State and testified that she did not know
Lenwood Jones. She stated that she saw Mr. Jones in the courtroom the previous day but
that she had never seen him prior to that day. Ms. Coburn said that Mr. Jones was not
telling the truth about hearing her say she lied about the Appellant. She said she had
lived in her own townhome since 2013, and she identified her 2013 lease and her most
recent lease for the State.
Edward Hall, the State’s investigator, was recalled by the State and acknowledged
that after the State received notice of the Appellant’s alibi, he attempted to contact
Demorris Delbridge. Mr. Hall spoke with Mr. Delbridge’s mother on the telephone, and
she said she would have Mr. Delbridge call Mr. Hall. However, Mr. Hall never heard
from Mr. Delbridge. Mr. Hall also tried to talk with Jasmine Taper, but Ms. Taper told
him that she had already given a statement to the public defender’s office and that she did
not want to give another statement. In preparation for trial, Mr. Hall went to the
McDonalds near Anthem Career College and tried to obtain the January 2014 video from
the restaurant. No video was available. He stated that the Deerfield apartment complex
was 1.3 miles from Anthem and that the driving time from the college to the apartment
complex was about five minutes. On cross-examination, Mr. Hall acknowledged that the
driving time depended on traffic lights and the driver’s speed.
At the conclusion of the proof, the jury convicted the Appellant as charged of the
first degree premediated murder of the victim. The trial court immediately sentenced him
to life.
II. Analysis
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
The Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction
because his motive to shoot the victim was “at best tenuous,” his identification as the
shooter was “questionable,” and the police ignored other possible suspects. The State
argues that the evidence is sufficient. We agree with the State.
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When an appellant challenges the sufficiency of the convicting evidence, the
standard for review by an appellate 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 crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 443
U.S. 307, 319 (1979); Tenn. R. App. P. 13(e). The State is entitled to the strongest
legitimate view of the evidence and all reasonable or legitimate inferences which may be
drawn therefrom. State v. Cabbage, 571 S.W.2d 832, 835 (Tenn. 1978). Questions
concerning the credibility of witnesses and the weight and value to be afforded the
evidence, as well as all factual issues raised by the evidence, are resolved by the trier of
fact. State v. Bland, 958 S.W.2d 651, 659 (Tenn. 1997). This court will not reweigh or
reevaluate the evidence, nor will this court substitute its inferences drawn from the
circumstantial evidence for those inferences drawn by the jury. Id. Because a jury
conviction removes the presumption of innocence with which a defendant is initially
cloaked at trial and replaces it on appeal with one of guilt, a convicted defendant has the
burden of demonstrating to this court that the evidence is insufficient. State v. Tuggle,
639 S.W.2d 913, 914 (Tenn. 1982).
A guilty verdict can be based upon direct evidence, circumstantial evidence, or a
combination of direct and circumstantial evidence. State v. Hall, 976 S.W.2d 121, 140
(Tenn. 1998). “The jury decides the weight to be given to circumstantial evidence, and
‘[t]he inferences to be drawn from such evidence, and the extent to which the
circumstances are consistent with guilt and inconsistent with innocence, are questions
primarily for the jury.’” State v. Rice, 184 S.W.3d 646, 662 (Tenn. 2006) (quoting
Marable v. State, 313 S.W.2d 451, 457 (Tenn. 1958)). “The standard of review ‘is the
same whether the conviction is based upon direct or circumstantial evidence.’” State v.
Dorantes, 331 S.W.3d 370, 379 (Tenn. 2011) (quoting State v. Hanson, 279 S.W.3d 265,
275 (Tenn. 2009)).
Taken in the light most favorable to the State, the evidence shows that on January
9, 2014, a man shot the victim in the pelvis, head, and thumb. Katirria Coburn, the
victim’s girlfriend, testified that when she learned about the shooting, she immediately
thought of the Appellant because the victim had broken into the Appellant’s home and
because the victim feared the Appellant was going to harm him. Just prior to the
shooting, Charlotte Brown heard the shooter tell the victim that “I beat someone’s ass
until they told me you did it” and heard the victim offer to “pay for it” but maintain that
he “didn’t do it.” Brian Ayers, who witnessed the shooting, saw the shooter’s face when
the hood blew off his head and identified him as the Appellant in a photograph array two
days after the shooting and again at trial. Sergeant Berryman questioned the Appellant,
and the Appellant told the officer that he thought the victim burglarized his home.
Sergeant Berryman acknowledged that he developed another suspect in the case but
ultimately ruled out that suspect as being involved. In short, the State produced strong
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evidence of the Appellant’s having a motive to harm the victim and his being the person
who shot the victim. Thus, the evidence is sufficient to support the Appellant’s
conviction.
B. Jencks Material
Next, the Appellant claims that that the trial court erred by ruling that defense
counsel’s notes, taken during counsel’s interview of Jasmine Taper, qualified as Jencks
material and, therefore, had to be turned over to the State. The State argues that the trial
court did not err. We conclude that the trial court erred but that the error was harmless.
On cross-examination, the State asked Ms. Taper if she talked with the public
defender’s office, and she said yes. The State then asked, “Did you give them a
statement?” Ms. Taper answered, “Yes, I did.” At that point, the State requested “any
Jencks material if there is.” Defense counsel responded, “Judge, there is no Jencks
material. There’s work product of me talking to this witness. There’s no recording of her
statement.” The State advised the trial court, “If there’s any notes we would request
those, Judge.” Defense counsel argued that his notes did not qualify as Jencks material
because they were not Ms. Taper’s “statement.” The trial court sent the jury out of the
courtroom and examined the notes. The notes, which were handwritten in all capital
letters, stated as follows:
W CALLED [DEFENDANT]
12:35 TEXTED W “ABOUT TO PULL UP”
ABOUT 3 MINUTES LATER [DEFENDANT] TEXT I’M HERE
W COMES OUT ABOUT 2 MINUTES LATER
JEEP CHEROKEE
IN PARKIING LOT
JUMPED IN CAR
MADE LF S VIEW
TURN RT PARKING LOT
WIZ IN CAR
[DEFENDANT] & W WENT IN ORDERED FOOD
3 MINT. FOOD COMES OUT & IS COLD
McD RE-DOES FOOD
5 MIN FOOD IS READY
TALKING ABOUT, [indecipherable]
GOT IN WIZS CAR
LF THE SAME WAY
WENT BACK COLL.
D WALKED W IN SCHOOL
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TALKED 5-8 MINUTES
SAW [DEFENDANT] GET IN WIZ CAR
The court ruled that the notes qualified as Jencks material and gave the State “a
few moments” to read the notes. When the State’s cross-examination of Ms. Taper
resumed, the following colloquy occurred:
Q. Do you remember telling [defense counsel] that you got [the
Appellant’s] text at 12:35?
A. No, I don’t remember telling him --
Q. You don’t remember that?
A. No.
Q. Would it surprise you if he had written over here on it says
12:35 in his handwriting?
A. No, he might have --
Q. You think [defense counsel] is mistaken?
A. Yeah, he might have got it mistaken cause that’s not what I
said.
Q. Oh, he just wrote that number wrong?
A. I guess so.
Q. Because you said 12:15?
A. Yes, I did.
Q. So at 12:15 you’re at the college; right?
A. Yes, I was.
Q. You get hungry?
A. Yes.
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....
Q. So at 12:15 you texted Devin I’m hungry?
A. No, 12:15 I called Devin.
Q. And you called Devin and he comes and he gets you five
minutes later.
A. I don’t know how many minutes later.
Q. That’s what you said 10 minutes ago.
A. No, I did not.
Q. Do you have your phone record?
A. I have a whole new phone.
Q. So what time did Devin pick you up?
A. About around -- I’m not going to say about because I don’t
know the exact time. I’m going to say about 12:20. Somewhere around
that time.
Q. And you [go] to McDonalds and he drops you off and what
time is it now?
A. No, he did not drop me off at McDonalds.
Q. Oh, no. You go to McDonalds with Whoos -- Wiz?
A. Yes.
Q. And you eat?
A. No.
Q. And then you come back to [the] college?
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A. No. No, that’s not what happened. I didn’t eat at the
McDonalds. I ate when I got back to the college while we was having a
conversation.
Q. And what time was that?
A. Around maybe 12:45 somewhere. I don’t know. Around that
time. 12:45, 12:50, somewhere around that time. I don’t know. I’m not
sure.
Q. So based on this new information or the new time line you’ve
given us, it appears that this whole process took 25 minutes. Does that
sound right?
A. About 30 minutes the whole process.
Q. The whole process?
A. Uh-huh.
Q. That’s not what you told [defense counsel], is it?
A. That’s is what I told him.
Q. That’s not what he’s written --
A. I said about 30 minutes. I don’t know what he [has] written
there.
At that point, defense counsel asked for a jury-out conference. After the jury left
the courtroom, counsel objected to the State’s “improper characterization” of his notes
and argued as follows:
There’s nothing in my notes here that indicate that she said
any time less than about 30 minutes for the whole event. . . .
[W]hat’s written in this, again, is not a verbatim statement of
this witness. That’s my whole point. This isn’t exactly
everything that she said. [They] are just notes from that
conversation.
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The trial court ruled that it was going to “resolve” the issue by allowing the State “to ask
her exactly how [defense counsel] has written it. . . . So in other words, not [the State’s]
interpretation of [the notes] but exactly what it is. . . . You can ask about each item of the
time line just as [defense counsel] has written it but that’s it.” The State advised the court
that it would “move on” and not question Ms. Taper further from the notes.
At the motion for new trial hearing, the trial court stated that it “regretted” giving
defense counsel’s notes to the State and that it was “95 percent convinced” the notes were
not a “statement” under Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 26.2. The trial court
noted, though, that the State did not mention anything about the notes during its closing
arguments and ruled that the notes did not affect the outcome of trial.
Rule 26.2, Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure, is Tennessee’s version of the
“Jencks Act,” which was created as a result of the United States Supreme Court’s
decision in Jencks v. United States, 353 U.S. 657 (1957). The Rule provides:
After a witness other than the defendant has testified on direct
examination, the court, on motion of a party who did not call
the witness, shall order the attorney for the state or the
defendant and the defendant’s attorney to produce, for the
examination and use of the moving party, any statement of
the witness that is in their possession and that relates to the
subject matter of the witness’s testimony.
Tenn. R. Crim. P. 26.2(a). A “statement” is defined as “[a] written statement that the
witness makes and signs, or otherwise adopts or approves” or “[a] substantially verbatim,
contemporaneously recorded recital of the witness’s oral statement that is contained in a
stenographic, mechanical, electrical, or other recording or a transcription of such a
statement.” Tenn. R. Crim. P. 26.2(f)(1), (2). “The determination of what constitutes a
producible statement is a matter that rests purely within the discretion of the trial judge
and can be set aside by the appellate courts only if his decision is clearly erroneous.”
State v. Daniel, 663 S.W.2d 809, 812 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1983).
The State argues that the trial court did not err because counsel’s notes “are not
summaries but constitute very detailed notes which track, point by point, Ms. Taper’s
testimony.” However, we have reviewed the notes and conclude that they do not meet
the definition of a “statement.” First, the notes were not signed, approved, or adopted by
Ms. Taper. Moreover, they clearly were not a “substantially verbatim” recital of Ms.
Taper’s interview. In fact, the notes alone tell the reader almost nothing about her
interview. For example, the notes mention a “JEEP CHEROKEE” but do not say that the
Appellant was in the Jeep or that Wiz was driving it and offer no explanation as to what
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role the vehicle played in the Appellant’s alibi. The notes say “JUMPED IN CAR” and
“TALKED 5-8 MIN” but do not say who jumped in the car or who talked. In fact,
without Ms. Taper’s direct testimony, the notes are so cryptic that they do not make
sense. Therefore, we have no hesitation in concluding that the trial court erred by
requiring that the Appellant disclose the notes to the State.
Next, we must determine the effect of the error, specifically whether it “‘more
probably than not affected the judgment or would result in prejudice to the judicial
process.’” State v. Rodriguez, 254 S.W.3d 361, 371 (Tenn. 2008) (quoting Tenn. R. App.
P. 36(b)). The State’s establishing a motive for the Appellant to retaliate against the
victim, Charlotte Brown’s hearing the shooter confront the victim just prior to the
shooting, and Brian Ayers’s eyewitness identification of the Appellant as the shooter was
strong evidence of his guilt. Moreover, the Appellant never told Sergeant Berryman that
he took Ms. Taper to McDonalds. Instead, he claimed that he was “walking around with
his girlfriend that day.” While the trial court’s error negatively impacted Ms. Taper’s
credibility, her lying about the number of times she visited the Appellant in jail and her
failure to tell the police or the State’s investigator that she was with the Appellant at the
time of the shooting also hurt her credibility. Accordingly, we cannot say that the trial
court’s error more probably than not affected the judgment and agree with the trial court
that the error was harmless.
C. Rule 404(b)
Finally, the Appellant claims that the trial court erred by prohibiting defense
counsel from questioning Lenwood Jones about the victim’s being known as a burglar.
He contends that because the State’s theory was that he killed the victim in retaliation for
burglarizing his home, he should have been allowed to present evidence that other people
may have wanted to retaliate against the victim for breaking into their homes. The State
argues that the trial court properly prohibited defense counsel’s questioning the witness.
We agree with the State.
Prior to Mr. Jones’s testimony, defense counsel requested a jury-out hearing
pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Evidence 404(b). During the hearing, Mr. Jones testified
that he used to be a member of the Bloods gang. The victim also was a member.
However, the gang “stripped [the victim of] his status” in November or December 2013,
and the victim was not a member at the time of the shooting. Mr. Jones explained that
one of the reasons the victim was removed from the gang was that he was breaking into
homes. Mr. Jones said that the victim was “doing too much” and was “too hot,” that he
saw the victim with stolen property, and that the victim tried to sell him some of the
property.
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On cross-examination, Mr. Jones testified that he saw the victim with “[a] flat
screen, selfie stick and a laptop” and that the victim “came to the hood and [was] telling
everybody he was trying to [sell] them. Like everybody know that what he do.” Mr.
Jones acknowledged that he was not with the victim when the victim stole the property
and that he was told the victim was committing burglaries. The State asked, “By
whom?” Mr. Jones answered, “By like it’s the person over us, Big Homey.”
The trial court said it did not find by clear and convincing evidence that the victim
was a burglar. The trial court also ruled that the probative value of the evidence was
outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice because the defense failed to present any
proof that a specific person other than the Appellant wanted to kill the victim in
retaliation for a burglary. The Appellant claims that the trial court erred because “Mr.
Jones’ testimony establishes that [the victim] had a reputation for being a thief” and
because “the State had already presented evidence that [the victim] was a thief.”
Tennessee Rule of Evidence 404(b) generally provides that evidence of other bad
acts is irrelevant and, therefore, inadmissible. See Tenn. R. Evid. 404(b). The Rule also
provides that evidence of other bad acts may be admissible for other purposes, such as
“‘to show identity, guilty knowledge, intent, motive, to rebut a defense of mistake or
accident, or to establish some other relevant issue.’” State v. Moore, 6 S.W.3d 235, 239
n.5 (quoting State v. Hallock, 875 S.W.2d 285, 292 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1993)).
Previously, our supreme court had determined that Rule 404(b) applied only to the
accused. See State v. Stevens, 78 S.W.3d 817, 837 (Tenn. 2002). However, it now
applies to “any individual, including a deceased victim.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 24-7-125
(Supp. 2014).
Before a trial court may permit evidence of a prior crime, wrong, or act, the
following procedures must be met:
(1) The court upon request must hold a hearing outside the jury’s
presence;
(2) The court must determine that a material issue exists other than
conduct conforming with a character trait and must upon request state on
the record the material issue, the ruling and the reasons for admitting the
evidence;
(3) The court must find proof of the other crime, wrong, or act to be
clear and convincing; and
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(4) The court must exclude the evidence if its probative value is
outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
Tenn. R. Evid. 404(b). If the trial court has complied with these procedures, this court
will not overturn the trial court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence under Rule
404(b) absent an abuse of discretion. State v. DuBose, 953 S.W.2d 649, 652 (Tenn.
1997).
The trial court did not find the proof of the victim’s committing other burglaries to
be clear and convincing. That alone justified that court’s excluding the evidence under
Rule 404(b). We note that although Katirria Coburn testified for the State that the victim
claimed to have broken into the Appellant’s apartment and taken the Appellant’s
property, Ms. Coburn never testified that the victim was known to be a thief or a burglar.
The court complied with the procedures of Rule 404(b), and we find no abuse of
discretion in the court’s ruling that the evidence was inadmissible.
III. Conclusion
Based upon the oral arguments, the record, and the parties’ briefs, we find no
reversible error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
_________________________________
NORMA MCGEE OGLE, JUDGE
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