Saunders v. State

10 So. 3d 53, 2007 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 236, 2007 WL 4533441
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 21, 2007
DocketCR-05-0281
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 10 So. 3d 53 (Saunders v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saunders v. State, 10 So. 3d 53, 2007 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 236, 2007 WL 4533441 (Ala. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

SHAW, Judge.

Timothy W. Saunders was convicted of two counts of capital murder in connection with the murder of 77-year-old Melvin Clemons, and one count of attempted murder with respect to 74-year-old Agnes Clemons, 1 Mr. Clemons’s wife. 2 The murder of Mr. Clemons was made capital because it was committed during the course of a robbery in the first degree, see § 13A-5-40(a)(2), Ala.Code 1975, and because it was committed during the course of a burglary in the first degree, see § 13A-5-40(a)(4), Ala.Code 1975. The jury unanimously recommended that Saunders be sentenced to death for his capital-murder convictions. The trial court accepted the jury’s recommendation and sentenced Saunders to death. In addition, the trial court sentenced Saunders to life imprisonment for the attempted-murder conviction.

The evidence adduced at trial indicated the following. In 1974, the Clemonses had purchased a 20-acre parcel of land in Foley and had built a house on the property. They operated a business known as Curly’s Pecans 3 on Underwood Road. Mrs. Clemons testified that on July 9, 2004, she and her husband spent part of their day working on a house-remodeling project and then worked in the yard together. When they stopped working outside, it was not yet dark. After he came inside, Mr. *62 Clemons took off his shirt and cooked a frozen pizza for them to eat. While he was eating, Mr. Clemons was unusually quiet, and he kept looking outside. Mrs. Clemons testified that her husband told her that a man had borrowed a crowbar from him earlier that day to “pry his motorcycle from around a tree” in the area behind the Clemons’s property. (R. 391.) According to Mrs. Clemons, her husband said that the man had told him that someone had stolen his truck and had left it in the woods behind the Clemonses’ house, and that the thieves had “wrapped his motorcycle around a tree,” so the man asked to borrow Mr. Clemons’s crowbar to pry his motorcycle loose. (R. 391.) Mr. Clemons was watching for the man because he expected the man to return the crowbar. Mrs. Clemons testified that it was dark by that time because the porch light by the back porch had been turned on. However, Mrs. Clemons said, beyond the back porch it was “pitch dark” because they had so many trees in the back part of their property. (R. 392.)

Mrs. Clemons testified that she looked out the window toward the back of the property because her husband was standing at the window looking out. She saw what appeared to be two flashlight beams on the road she and her husband used to travel to the back of the property. Mrs. Clemons told her husband that she could see the flashlight beams and that the man was bringing the crowbar back. Mrs. Clemons said that Mr. Clemons opened the back door and looked out; however, the man never arrived with the crowbar, and her husband continued to stand at the door looking out. Mrs. Clemons testified that she begged her husband not to go outside, but to wait for the man to bring the crowbar back to him, and that if the man did not bring the crowbar back, they could buy another crowbar. However, Mrs. Clemons said that her husband was “funny about his tools” and that when she turned around after putting some items into the dishwasher, Mr. Clemons had gone outside. (R. 393.)

Mrs. Clemons testified that, after her husband went outside, she looked out the back door several times but saw nothing. The last time she looked out the door, however, Mrs. Clemons saw a man, who she later positively identified both in a photographic lineup and at trial as Saunders, sitting on the back porch. Saunders was sweating profusely, and Mrs. Clemons thought that he was having some kind of attack, so she opened the door and asked him if he was all right. Saunders told her that he was having an asthma attack. Mrs. Clemons took a glass of water and a wet washcloth to Saunders, and Saunders asked Mrs. Clemons if he could use her bathroom; although she was frightened, Mrs. Clemons permitted Saunders to come into the house.

Saunders went into the bathroom, and when he came out he asked Mrs. Clemons if she would telephone his mother. Mrs. Clemons said that she picked up the wall-mounted telephone to dial the number Saunders had given her and that she had dialed all but the last digit when Saunders attacked her. Mrs. Clemons testified:

“So he had come up behind me and he put his arm around my neck like this and jerked my head back and told me, ‘Drop the phone.’ And I dropped the phone. And I won’t ever forget it as long as I live. I just thought I’m going to die. And I won’t get to see my family anymore. I won’t ever forget that feeling.”

(R. 395.)

According to Mrs. Clemons, Saunders told her that he had handcuffed Mr. Clemons to the steering wheel of the car, and that Mr. Clemons had said to tell Mrs. *63 Clemons to give Saunders all the money in the house. Saunders told Mrs. Clemons that if she gave him all the money in the house, he would not hurt her or her husband. Mrs. Clemons then opened the kitchen drawer where her husband kept his wallet and she took out the three $1 bills inside and gave them to Saunders. Saunders then told her that he wanted the keys to their automobiles. Mrs. Clemons refused to give him the keys to their daughter’s Ford Mustang, but she gave him the keys to Mr. Clemons’s 1989 Lincoln. Saunders then picked up a steak knife and walked toward her. Mrs. Clemons told Saunders to put the steak knife down, to throw it behind the table, and he did so. Saunders then picked up a screwdriver and walked toward her; again, Mrs. Clemons told him to put it down, and he did so. Mrs. Clemons testified that Saunders next picked up an electrical cord and wrapped it around his hands, but that when she told him to put the cord down, he again followed her instructions. Mrs. Clemons then asked Saunders why he was doing this and told him that they had nothing. Saunders responded that he wanted money to buy crack cocaine.

At this point, Mrs. Clemons realized that she knew Saunders, and she told him that she recognized him and that she knew that he lived in a nearby mobile home park. Saunders initially denied living in the area, but when Mrs. Clemons said that she knew that he lived with his mother and brother in a mobile home because she had once seen him on the back of their property with a dog, Saunders admitted that he lived in the mobile home park. Mrs. Clemons testified that Saunders then told her that before he left her house, he was going to give her his name so that she could call the police and report him because he knew that what he was doing was wrong and that he needed to be punished. Mrs. Clemons said that she then asked Saunders why he would not let her and her husband go, and why he was doing this to them. Saunders told Mrs. Clemons that he wanted to be like them, and that he had been watching the Clemonses for more than two months.

Mrs. Clemons testified that Saunders then put his arm around her neck and she “started making a noise.” (R. 400.) Saunders put his hand over her nose and mouth, jerked her head back, and repeatedly told her to shut up. Saunders then struck Mrs. Clemons in the face with his fist and knocked her onto the hardwood floor. Mrs. Clemons testified that she remembered her “head bouncing off the floor” when she landed. (R. 400.) Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 So. 3d 53, 2007 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 236, 2007 WL 4533441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-state-alacrimapp-2007.