Robert E. Pugh v. State of Tennessee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 16, 2003
DocketW2001-02349-CCA-R3-PC
StatusPublished

This text of Robert E. Pugh v. State of Tennessee (Robert E. Pugh 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
Robert E. Pugh v. State of Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs June 5, 2002

ROBERT E. PUGH v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

Post-Conviction Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. P-22240 J. C. McLin, Judge

No. W2001-02349-CCA-R3-PC - Filed April 16, 2003

A Shelby County grand jury indicted the petitioner on multiple offenses. At the conclusion of a trial on the indictment first prosecuted, a jury convicted the petitioner of aggravated robbery. See State v. Robert E. Pugh, No. W1999-01260-CCA-R3-CD, 2000 WL 298697, at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App. at Jackson, Mar. 17, 2000). For this offense he received a twelve-year sentence as a standard offender.1 Id. He subsequently pled guilty to ten additional charges. The trial court then sentenced him as a multiple offender for nine of these counts and as a violent offender for one count. His agreed upon sentences for these offenses in combination with the aforementioned twelve-year sentence resulted in an effective twenty-six-year sentence for all eleven convictions. However, the petitioner later filed a pro se post-conviction petition attacking his pleas by alleging that his counsel at that time provided him ineffective assistance. The trial court appointed counsel, who filed an amended petition also alleging ineffective assistance at trial. Following a hearing, the trial court found none of the petitioner’s allegations meritorious and denied him relief. Through this appeal the petitioner continues to assert that he received ineffective assistance of counsel regarding his guilty pleas and the trial at issue. However, after reviewing the record provided and appropriate authorities, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the post-conviction relief.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Trial Court is Affirmed.

JERRY L. SMITH, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOSEPH M. TIPTON and JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., joined.

Brett B. Stein, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Robert Pugh.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; Kim R. Helper, Assistant Attorney General; William L. Gibbons, District Attorney General; and Dan Woody, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

1 The petitioner unsuccessfully pursu ed a d irect ap peal of this conviction . See id. OPINION

Factual Background

While we will include more detail from the post-conviction hearing within our treatment of the individual issues, at the outset we note that the petitioner faced numerous charges including aggravated robbery counts, a rape count, a Class D felony evading arrest count, etc. Of these the petitioner first faced trial on one of the aggravated robbery counts. At the conclusion of this trial, the jurors convicted the petitioner of this offense. Id. In deciding the petitioner’s direct appeal of this conviction, our Court summarized the facts as follows:

On April 26, 1996, Joseph Oliver, a co-manager at a Wendy’s restaurant on 1593 Union Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee, was robbed at gunpoint. He testified that he left the restaurant for the First American Bank on Union Avenue at approximately 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. to get coins for the restaurant. When he left the bank, he noticed that a car was following him. The car followed him to the Wendy’s and pulled behind him. Oliver testified that the car could have been a Chevrolet Malibu and thought that the vehicle was maroon or a similar color. The vehicle approached him as he left his vehicle. An individual leapt from the car with a revolver and demanded money. He threw the money on the ground and the individual took it.

At trial, Oliver testified that on the day of the robbery he identified the defendant from a lineup. Further, he identified the defendant in court the day of the trial. He also identified a gun introduced in evidence as being similar, if not the same, gun used against him in the holdup. Finally, Oliver testified that, after the robbery, he entered the restaurant and activated the holdup alarm to which police vehicles responded.

Mark Rewalt, of the Memphis Police Department Crime Scene Unit, testified that he examined a Chrysler, the car the defendant abandoned after police pursuit, on April 26, 1996, for fingerprints. He testified that he obtained two latent prints, one from the driver's side door and one from the back driver’s side door, and preserved those prints on the appropriate card medium. He identified those latent prints for the jury.

Cham Payne, an officer of the Memphis Police Department Crime Scene Unit, testified that he located and preserved latent prints from the hood of the vehicle, a Chrysler LeBaron. He also obtained a latent print from an empty beer bottle found in the floorboard of that vehicle. Again, Officer Payne identified the cards containing those latent prints in court.

-2- Jerry Sims, a latent fingerprint examiner for the Memphis Police Department, identified these four prints as belonging to the defendant.

Lieutenant Hollis W. Hightower, an investigator on the robbery squad the day of the robbery, stated that he interviewed the defendant and, after advising him of his rights, took a statement from the defendant in which he admitted to committing the robbery. The defendant stated that the car used in the robbery was his brown 1981 Chrysler LeBaron. Further, the defendant explained, on the day of the robbery, he located Dwayne Jones on the streets of Memphis and at that point, the two agreed to commit a robbery. The defendant stated that he used a .32 caliber revolver, purchased on the street, to rob Oliver at the Wendy’s. He testified that approximately ten minutes after the robbery he and Dwayne Jones were pursued in the Chrysler by the police. When stopped, he leapt from the car and escaped. Later that same day, he was arrested and identified as the robber.

Id. (footnote omitted). As noted, the trial court sentenced the petitioner to twelve years as a standard offender for this conviction. Id. The next cases set for trial involved a series of five offenses allegedly committed by the petitioner on March 28, 1997. At the post-conviction hearing, former defense counsel indicated that the State had even stronger proof to present at this trial than it had in the above-outlined case, and the record reflects that at an early stage in the proceeding, the petitioner agreed to plead guilty to these and other pending indictments. More specifically, we note that the petitioner pled guilty to four counts of aggravated robbery, one count of robbery, one count of rape, one count of possession of a prohibited weapon, one count of possession of a handgun by a convicted felon, one count of possession with intent to sell one half ounce or more of a substance containing cocaine, and one Class D felony count of evading arrest. A number of these offenses were committed while on bond; thus, the trial court noted that the situation required consecutive sentencing. For all eleven convictions at issue in this appeal, the petitioner received, as noted earlier, an effective sentence of twenty-six years. The petitioner’s former attorney who was called to testify at the post-conviction hearing had assumed the representation of the petitioner from another individual in the public defender’s office and had represented the petitioner throughout the petitioner’s trial and at the relevant guilty plea proceeding. Only he and the petitioner provided testimony at the post-conviction hearing. At the close of the proof therein, the trial court denied the petitioner relief. Subsequently, the trial court more fully set out its rationale for this denial in an order. Regarding matters raised in this appeal, the court determined that the petitioner had failed to prove deficient performance by former counsel.

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Robert E. Pugh v. State of Tennessee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-e-pugh-v-state-of-tennessee-tenncrimapp-2003.