Cletus Robbins, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 17, 2020
Docket2019 CA 000281
StatusUnknown

This text of Cletus Robbins, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (Cletus Robbins, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cletus Robbins, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 18, 2020; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2019-CA-0281-MR

CLETUS ROBBINS, JR. APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM HARLAN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE KENT HENDRICKSON, JUDGE ACTION NO. 14-CR-00083

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: LAMBERT, MAZE, AND L. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

MAZE, JUDGE: Cletus Robbins, Jr. appeals from a judgment of the Harlan

Circuit Court denying his request, pursuant to Kentucky Rules of Criminal

Procedure (RCr) 11.42, for post-conviction relief. For the following reasons, we

affirm. Following a jury trial, Robbins was convicted of first-degree

kidnapping with serious physical injury; first-degree robbery; two counts of

second-degree assault (against victim Benji Stout); first-degree unlawful

imprisonment (of victim Gabrielle Cochran); two counts of wanton endangerment

(of Stout and Cochran); two counts of intimidating a participant in the legal

process (of Stout and Cochran); and being a persistent first-degree felony offender.

The jury recommended a total sentence of twenty-five years in prison and the trial

court imposed that sentence.

On direct appeal, the Kentucky Supreme Court affirmed Robbins’

convictions. Robbins v. Commonwealth, No. 2015-SC-000478-MR, 2017 WL

5494103 (Ky. Mar. 23, 2017). We adopt the facts set forth in that Opinion here:

During the evening of May 2, 2014, Cletus Robbins Jr. and Erica Bryant visited the home of Arbin Shepherd. Later that evening, Benji Stout and Gabrielle Wright Cochran arrived at the residence. Subsequently, Robbins and Stout began to argue and the argument became physical, resulting in Stout being badly beaten and shot with a handgun. Beyond these facts, witness testimony differed as to what transpired that evening and what triggered the dispute and assault.

The Commonwealth’s first witness was Bryant, who was dating Robbins’s step-son at the time of this incident. Bryant was with Robbins when he received a phone call about visiting Shepherd’s house that evening. In her interview with the police, Bryant explained that Shepherd called Robbins to inform him that he had “got the lady,” who had sold them counterfeit Xanax pills and that she would be at his house that evening. As a

-2- consequence of this call, Bryant and Robbins went to Shepherd’s home.

According to Bryant the mood in the house was tense. Asked specifically about Robbins’s mood, Bryant recalled that he was angry. Once Stout and Cochran arrived at the residence, Stout was summoned by Robbins to come to the kitchen. Due to her vantage point in the living room, which was immediately next to the kitchen, Bryant was able to observe how the conflict began. Initially, Bryant heard Robbins shout at Stout that he “had got him for $600 the day before.” Robbins then began to beat Stout and as the beating continued Stout fell to the ground, with Robbins kicking him in the head. The beating continued despite Stout’s pleas for Robbins to stop.

Afterwards, Robbins and Carl Edward Collins, tied Stout up with a nylon rope. Robbins then placed a gun to Stout’s head, stating he was going to get his $600 back from Stout. While Stout was tied up, Collins took money and illicit narcotics from his person. That money was subsequently divided among Robbins, Collins, and Shepherd.

During this period, Bryant approached Robbins asking him to calm down. In response, Robbins pointed his gun in her face and informed her that he intended to shoot Stout. Bryant put her hands up and retreated to defuse the situation. Afterwards, Robbins returned his focus to Stout, untying his restraints. However, Robbins continued to yell at Stout about the money. During this exchange Bryant heard a gunshot and realized that Stout had been shot in the chest.

Bryant was ordered by Collins to clean up Stout’s blood in the kitchen. While Bryant did so, she overheard Robbins boasting that he had “got [Stout]”. Later, Cochran, Stout’s companion, entered the kitchen and Robbins struck her in the face. After a short

-3- discussion, Robbins and Collins gave Stout some of his money back so he could pay for gas to return to Lexington. Prior to letting Stout and Cochran leave, Robbins told the pair not to stop on the way to Lexington or inform anyone about what had happened or he would kill Cochran’s family.

The Commonwealth’s second witness was Shepherd, the homeowner. Shepherd admitted to having taken Xanax the day of the assault and that as a result he was in and out of consciousness throughout the evening. Shepherd testified that Robbins had come to his house to rendezvous with Stout and Cochran. Prior to the start of the altercation in the kitchen, Shepherd overhead Stout and Robbins discussing a prior drug deal for Xanax. While in and out of consciousness, Shepherd heard “scuffling” in the kitchen. The sound of the gunshot in the kitchen, lifted Shepherd from his stupor, and he went to his room to get his gun.

Shepherd went on to explain that his concern was to calm down Robbins and get everyone out of his home. In a tense moment, Robbins and Shepherd pointed their weapons at each other, but the moment passed without violence. Later, Shepherd watched Stout leave his residence, while Bryant worked to clean up his blood. During cross-examination, Shepherd claimed to not understand the reason for the dispute between Robbins and Stout, explaining that he had purchased genuine Xanax which he used that evening. Shepherd explained that this was the second occasion in which Stout and Cochran came to his house to sell Xanax. Also, Shepherd denied that anyone had been tied up.

The Commonwealth’s third witness was Collins. Collins, a convicted felon, testified that he was home in bed when he received a call from Shepherd’s landline telephone, requesting that he come to the house. When Collins arrived at the residence, he discovered that Shepherd was unconscious and that Robbins had called

-4- him from Shepherd’s phone. Collins explained that had he known that it was Robbins who had called him that he would not have gone to the house, as the two men did not get along.

Robbins told Collins that the drugs that he had previously purchased from Stout were counterfeit. Further, he told Collins that Stout and Cochran were on the way to the house to sell narcotics, as they had previously done once before. Collins observed that Robbins was angry and intended to harm Stout. To avoid a fight and a possible disruption in Stout and Cochran bringing drugs from Lexington, Collins offered to buy the counterfeit drugs from Robbins. While Robbins accepted Collins’s money, he remained at Shepherd’s house waiting for Stout and Cochran to arrive. When Stout and Cochran failed to arrive on time, Robbins used Shepherd’s home phone and his cell phone to call and threaten Cochran’s family.

A short while later, Cochran arrived at Shepherd’s home and questioned Robbins about why he contacted her family, as they did not know that she and Stout sold narcotics. Robbins told her that everything was fine and questioned her about Stout’s whereabouts, who was still in the car. Collins testified that when Stout entered the living room, Robbins immediately got up, put his arm around Stout, and shot him in the chest. Robbins then began to beat Stout in the kitchen. During the beating, Stout screamed Collins’s name in a desperate plea for help. After beating Stout for approximately ten minutes, Robbins took a taser from Stout’s pocket and shocked him with it. Collins also testified about Robbins’s crazed state, which was demonstrated by his subsequent use of the taser on himself.

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Cletus Robbins, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cletus-robbins-jr-v-commonwealth-of-kentucky-kyctapp-2020.