Gary June Caughron v. State of Tennessee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 5, 1999
Docket03C01-9707-CC-00301
StatusPublished

This text of Gary June Caughron v. State of Tennessee (Gary June Caughron v. State of Tennessee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gary June Caughron v. State of Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT KNOXVILLE FILED JULY 1998 SESSION February 5, 1999

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk GARY JUNE CAUGHRON, ) ) Appellant, ) No. 03C01-9707-CC-00301 ) ) Sevier County v. ) ) Honorable John K. Byers, Judge ) (By designation) STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) ) (Post-Conviction -- Death Penalty) Appellee. )

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

Randall E. Reagan John Knox Walkup 2643 Kingston Pike Attorney General of Tennessee Knoxville, TN 37919 and Kenneth W. Rucker Assistant Attorney General of Tennessee Gerald L. Gulley, Jr. 425 Fifth Avenue North 607 Market Street Nashville, TN 37243-0493 P.O Box 1708 Knoxville, TN 3790 Alfred C. Schumtzer District Attorney General and Steve Hawkins Assistant District Attorney General 125 Court Avenue Sevierville, TN 37862

OPINION FILED:____________________

AFFIRMED

Joseph M. Tipton Judge OPINION

The petitioner, Gary June Caughron, appeals as of right from the Sevier

County Circuit Court’s denial of post-conviction relief as to the guilt phase of his trial.

He was convicted in 1990 for the first degree murder of Ann Robertson Jones and

received the death penalty. He was also convicted of first degree burglary and assault

with the intent to commit rape for which he received consecutive ten-year sentences.

The convictions and sentences were affirmed on direct appeal to the Tennessee

Supreme Court. State v. Caughron, 855 S.W.2d 526 (Tenn. 1993), cert. denied, 510

U.S. 979, 114 S. Ct. 475 (1993).

The petitioner filed his post-conviction petition on May 18, 1994.

Evidentiary hearings were held on November 13, 1996, February 10, 1997, and March

14, 1997, and the trial court subsequently entered its findings and conclusions that

granted the petitioner relief as to the ineffective assistance of counsel claim at the

penalty phase of the trial but denied the petition in all other respects. The petitioner

contends that the trial court erred in denying him full relief, generally claiming the

following:

(1) the petitioner received the ineffective assistance of counsel as guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution at the guilt phase of his trial;

(2) the trial court erred in failing to grant the petitioner funds to retain certain expert/investigative services;

(3) the trial court erred in ruling that the original convicting trial was not defective due to the systematic underrepresentation of women on Sevier County Circuit Court juries.

In response, the state contends that the petitioner received the effective assistance of

counsel at the guilt phase of the trial, that the petitioner did not demonstrate a

particularized need for an investigator or an expert to examine the jury selection

process and jury compositions in Sevier County, and that the petitioner failed to

2 establish that any underrepresentation of women in the venire was a result of the

systematic exclusion of women on Sevier County Circuit Court juries.

The supreme court’s direct appeal opinion provides the following synopsis

of the evidence presented at the petitioner’s trial:

In the early afternoon of July 11, 1987, Christy Jones Scott, the daughter of the victim, 42-year-old Ann Robertson Jones, discovered her mother’s partially clothed body lying facedown on a bed in her home in Pigeon Forge. Jones’s legs and arms had been bound and tied to the bed with strips of blue terry cloth and pieces of sheer, off-white material like that used for table cloths and curtains. There was a gag tied across her mouth, and strips of the blue terry cloth had been wrapped tightly around her neck.

According to the state’s forensic pathologist, Dr. Cleland Blake, Jones had suffered several "blunt traumatic contusions" to her head. These injuries were consistent with those caused by a blunt or rounded object and would have rendered Jones unconscious at some point. Her skull had been fractured and the cartilage in her nose displaced by the beating. She had bled extensively from her mouth and nose. There was a "patch" of "scraping type of injuries caused by some kind of slender linear object . . . like whipping marks" on the left back side of her chest beneath her shoulder blades. On the right buttock were "three linear imprints, . . . superficial bruises that fit perfectly with four fingers of a hand." Dr. Blake stated that these represented a "hard slap injury to the buttock" inflicted while the victim was still alive. The terry cloth strips around the victim’s neck had been pulled so tightly that they had cut off the flow of blood to the victim’s brain. The gag, bound so tightly that it cut a deep groove into the corners of the victim’s mouth, combined with the hemorrhaging in the nasal passages, had caused her to suffocate. Dr. Blake concluded that Jones had died as a result of asphyxiation while unconscious.

Examination of the crime scene revealed that the door to the bedroom where the body was found had been forced open. A purse and its contents lay strewn in the hall. The phone lines to the house had been cut. Sometime within the following two or three weeks, Christy Jones Scott discovered a silver, turquoise and coral ring with a thunderbird design lying on the ground beside her mother’s truck, which was still parked at her mother’s house.

The key witness in this case was April Marie Ward, who was 14 years old at the time of the killing. Almost everything that the jury learned about Ann Jones’s death, other than the description of the crime scene given by investigators, came from April’s testimony. That testimony is summarized below.

3 In early summer 1987, according to April, she and the 27-year-old Defendant met and became romantically involved. April Ward’s mother, Lettie Marie Cruze, worked at the Turquoise Jewelry Shop in Settler’s Village, a group of shops in Pigeon Forge. Ann Jones ran the Wild Hare Tee Shirt Shop in the same shopping center. April and the Defendant, who was working on a nearby construction project, met on the covered portico (commonly referred to as "the porch") of Settler’s Village almost every day.

One night, two or three weeks before the murder, Ann Jones made the Defendant Caughron, who had been drinking, leave her shop because he was acting in a disorderly manner. Jones instructed him to stay away. This upset Caughron, who told April Ward that he would like to catch Ann Jones "out one night" and "slice her throat." The Defendant suggested that April accompany Jones to her house after work and give him directions on how to get there. He also asked April to watch Jones as she closed her shop and see where she put her money, and to find out if Jones was married and had a telephone or pets.

Because she knew that her mother would have disapproved of her relationship with the Defendant if she had known his true age, April had told her mother that the Defendant was 18. April then became upset with Ann Jones because of a conversation Jones had had with her mother that led to her mother’s disapproval of the relationship. April testified that she hated Jones because she had tried to separate her and the Defendant by going to her mother. April also said that she had told the Defendant what Jones had done.

The week before the murder, according to April, she and the Defendant began talking about going to the victim’s house. She said that the Defendant instructed her to bring a towel and a knife "to gut" Ann Jones. On the afternoon of Friday, July 10, around 3:00 or 4:00 p.m., the Defendant came by April’s house in an older model green and white 442 Oldsmobile Cutlass that he had just purchased.

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Gary June Caughron v. State of Tennessee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-june-caughron-v-state-of-tennessee-tenncrimapp-1999.