Russell Lee Maze and Kaye M. Maze v. State of Tennessee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 31, 2025
DocketM2024-00666-CCA-R3-PC
StatusPublished

This text of Russell Lee Maze and Kaye M. Maze v. State of Tennessee (Russell Lee Maze and Kaye M. Maze 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
Russell Lee Maze and Kaye M. Maze v. State of Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

10/31/2025 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 13, 2025 Session

RUSSELL LEE MAZE AND KAYE M. MAZE v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2002-D-2361, 99-B-1308 Steve R. Dozier, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2024-00666-CCA-R3-PC ___________________________________

TOM GREENHOLTZ, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.

I join the court in affirming the post-conviction court’s rulings based on the record that was properly before it at the time. Its analysis is both well-reasoned and persuasively stated. But I respectfully dissent from the decision to deny the motion for a limited remand—and thereby deny the post-conviction court the opportunity to consider how Dr. Bruce Levy’s affidavit bears on the findings it previously made.

Finality is a fundamental value in our system—but it is not the only one. When the State’s own chief medical examiner recants the very testimony that established the cause and manner of death, the effect is not just to raise new questions. If credited, it calls into doubt the foundation of the trial and the reliability of the post-conviction court’s findings, which relied on that same testimony.

If a foundation is in question, it usually calls for an inspection of the ground. In my view, a limited remand answers that call.

A. B ACKGROUND AND P ROCEDURAL P OSTURE

To understand why a limited remand is appropriate, context is necessary. In April 2004, a Davidson County jury convicted the Petitioner, Russell Maze, of first-degree felony murder and aggravated child abuse in connection with the death of his son, B.M. The State’s theory was that B.M.’s death in October 2000 resulted from injuries he sustained nearly eighteen months earlier, on May 3, 1999. Establishing this causal connection— between the prior injuries and the child’s eventual death more than a year later—was essential to the prosecution’s case.

At trial, the State relied heavily on the testimony of Dr. Bruce Levy, then serving as both the Chief Medical Examiner for the State of Tennessee and the Medical Examiner for Davidson County. Dr. Levy had performed the autopsy on B.M. and testified as the State’s lead forensic witness. He concluded that the cause of death was “anoxic encephalopathy due to a seizure disorder due to shaken-baby syndrome,” and he classified the manner of death as homicide. See State v. Maze, No. M2004-02091-CCA-R3-CD, 2006 WL 1132083, at *9 (Tenn. Crim. App. Apr. 28, 2006), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Aug. 28, 2006).

Dr. Levy’s testimony was not merely corroborative of other evidence; it was the only evidence supporting the cause and manner of B.M.’s death. According to Dr. Levy, B.M.’s autopsy revealed a healed clavicle fracture and signs of prior retinal hemorrhaging. He found no evidence of liver disease or any other natural condition that could account for the child’s death. From these findings, he concluded that B.M. died as a result of abuse related to the May 1999 event. Without Dr. Levy’s expert opinion linking B.M.’s death to an intentional act of violence, the State could not have proven the essential elements of felony murder.

The post-conviction proceedings in March 2024 featured testimony from seven medical experts who challenged the original diagnosis of Shaken Baby Syndrome. These experts offered various theories about alternative causes of the child’s injuries and death, including strokes, clotting disorders, and other natural disease processes. However, the post-conviction court was not persuaded that this testimony constituted proof of actual innocence by clear and convincing evidence. In its order, the court characterized the proof as “new ammunition in a ‘battle of the experts’” presenting “different opinions on extant proof,” rather than truly new scientific evidence.

Significantly, during the post-conviction hearing, the post-conviction court itself recognized the potential significance of Dr. Levy’s testimony. When one of the Petitioners’ experts—the Knox County Medical Examiner, Dr. Mileusnic-Polchan—suggested that Dr. Levy would likely change his views if presented with the current evidence, the following exchange occurred:

DR. MILEUSNIC-POLCHAN: And I am almost certain if I were to bring Dr. Levy here and just kind of slow him down maybe just a minute --

2 THE COURT: There is no way you can say that. Really? What you’re about to say.

DR. MILEUSNIC-POLCHAN: I -- I think that any pathologist looking at the brain slides.

THE COURT: You are going to be able to say that I can bring in the doctor who testified and did the autopsy and he’s going to admit he was wrong?

DR. MILEUSNIC-POLCHAN: Well. It happened, not with Dr. Levy, but with other pathologists.

THE COURT: And you know that? That Dr. Levy would --

DR. MILEUSNIC-POLCHAN: No. Well, I don’t know with certainty. No, I don’t know with certainty.

This exchange is significant because it reveals that the post-conviction court assumed Dr. Levy’s recantation was highly unlikely—and, by implication, was highly consequential to its analysis. The court expressed substantial skepticism that “the doctor who testified and did the autopsy” would “admit he was wrong.”

On April 25, 2024, the post-conviction court denied relief. In its final order, the post-conviction court referenced Dr. Levy’s autopsy specifically as setting forth the settled facts of the case:

Objectively, the facts remain the same as in 1999 when [B.M.] was hospitalized and evidence was initially collected. More facts were appended upon [B.M.]’s death and autopsy. Subjectively, opinions have been offered for more than two decades on the same facts.

This appeal followed.

3 B. D R . L EVY ’ S R ECANTING OF H IS T RIAL T ESTIMONY

While this case has been pending on appeal, the District Attorney furnished to the Petitioners a sworn affidavit from Dr. Levy dated September 9, 2024. In that affidavit, Dr. Levy recants the core of his trial testimony that the post-conviction court found vital to its analysis.

More specifically, Dr. Levy attests in his affidavit that in July and August 2024, he reviewed his original findings regarding the victim’s death. He examined the medical examiner’s case file, including his autopsy report, autopsy photographs, and histologic slides. He also reviewed the victim’s medical records from birth until death, his mother’s obstetric records, and “more recent reports from medical experts who have re-examined this case” since his last review over two decades ago. Significantly, Dr. Levy indicates that he did not believe many of these medical records were previously provided for his review.

Based upon his review, Dr. Levy now attests to the following:

• “If called to testify now, I would assert [B.M.]’s brain, at the time of his death, showed no indication, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, of prior trauma or abuse. Instead, the residual brain lesions viewed at autopsy more likely than not resulted from a natural disease process.”

• “I would not testify with a reasonable degree of medical certainty that [B.M.] had a healed clavicle fracture.”

• “I recant my trial testimony that [B.M.] suffered from Shaken Baby Syndrome.”

• “I recant my trial testimony that [B.M.] was a victim of child abuse.”

• “I recant my trial testimony that [B.M.] died as a result of ‘injuries’ sustained from the May 3, 1999 event.”

• “I would now classify [B.M.]’s cause of death as ‘Undetermined’ and his manner of death as ‘Natural.’”

Dr. Levy explains that this reclassification is based both on his review of materials not previously available to him and on “changes in medical opinions regarding ‘Shaken

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Russell Lee Maze and Kaye M. Maze v. State of Tennessee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-lee-maze-and-kaye-m-maze-v-state-of-tennessee-tenncrimapp-2025.