STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. FRANKIE LEE BROWN

438 S.W.3d 500, 2014 WL 4052668, 2014 Mo. App. LEXIS 857
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 15, 2014
DocketSD32598
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 438 S.W.3d 500 (STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. FRANKIE LEE BROWN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. FRANKIE LEE BROWN, 438 S.W.3d 500, 2014 WL 4052668, 2014 Mo. App. LEXIS 857 (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

DON E. BURRELL, J.

A jury found Appellant Frankie Lee Brown (“Defendant”) guilty of six of ten alleged crimes, and the trial court thereafter sentenced him, as a persistent offender, to life imprisonment for attempted forcible rape, 20 years for first-degree burglary, 15 years for felonious restraint, 15 years for tampering with a motor vehicle, one year for misdemeanor attempted knowingly burning, and 15 days for misdemeanor first-degree trespass. 1 All sentences were concurrent, except for the life sentence, which was ordered to run consecutively to the others.

In this direct appeal of his convictions and sentences, Defendant first contends, “The trial court plainly erred in accepting the jury’s verdicts and sentencing [him] ... because this violated [his] right to due process and effective assistance of counsel[.]” This claim is based on Defendant’s assertions that: 1) he was misinformed that the charges against him “could either run concurrently or consecutively, when, in reality, any conviction on [Count II for attempted forcible rape] would have had to run consecutively to any convictions on” *503 any other counts arising from the same incident; and 2) he would have accepted the State’s plea offer of 17 years on Count II and the dismissal of “five of the ten charges” instead of going to trial “had he been correctly informed[.]”

Defendant’s second point claims the trial court erred in overruling his motion to suppress statements he made to officers about the alleged crimes and later allowing evidence of the statements to be introduced at trial. The point maintains that these unspecified “statements” were “presumptively coerced” as an officer “elicited them during a custodial interrogation without first advising [Defendant] of his constitutional rights to assistance of counsel and protection against compelled self-incrimination.” It also claims “[t]he statements were prejudicial because they confirmed that [Defendant] was at M.M.’s [“Victim”] house on other occasions, and that he knew how to get into the house.”

Finding no merit in Defendant’s claims, we affirm.

Facts and Procedural Background

Defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his convictions, and we accordingly direct our attention to those facts necessary to address his specific complaints on appeal. 2 In doing so, we review “the evidence presented at trial in the light most favorable to the verdict[s].” State v. Strong, 142 S.W.3d 702, 710 (Mo. banc 2004).

Sometime around March 2011, Defendant and Victim began an intimate, romantic relationship that lasted about two months. Toward the end of that relationship, they “ended up” staying in the home of Victim’s mother, where they “started having problems and split up.” Victim told Defendant, “you’ve got to go,” but Defendant told her that “he wasn’t going to go.” Victim obtained an ex parte order of protection against Defendant, who left “about a week and a half or so later[.]”

The June 26th Incident

On June 26, 2011, at around 1:30 a.m., Victim awoke and heard something downstairs. Her mother and sister were gone, and her children were asleep. Victim “said, ‘Who’s there?”’ Someone replied, “‘It’s me[,]’” and Defendant “came from the living room-up the stairs ... into [Victim’s] bedroom.” Victim told Defendant that he was “not supposed to be here.” Victim “kept telling him he needed to leave, and eventually he got angry with [her].” Victim tried to “get to [her] phone[,]” but Defendant grabbed it and put it in his pocket. Defendant did not allow Victim to leave the room.

Victim was trying to get away from Defendant, and they were “all over the room just, you know, fighting.” Victim eventually wound up on the floor, and Defendant removed her shorts and underwear. Defendant slapped Victim and bent her hands back. Defendant called Victim “a slut” and “a whore[.]” Defendant touched his penis to the outside of Victim’s vagina, but he did not have an erection, and he did not penetrate Victim’s vagina. Eventually, Defendant, who Victim believed to be “very intoxicated,” “fell to the floor and just did not get back up[.]” At that point (about 4:30 a.m.), Victim “was able to get out of the room and call the police.”

Springfield Police Officer Brandon Bowling was dispatched to Victim’s address at around 4:40 a.m., where he found Victim standing on the front porch. “She seemed shaken, [and she] appeared as if *504 she’d been crying.” Officer Bowling found Defendant lying asleep on Victim’s bedroom floor. The officer awakened Defendant and placed him under arrest. As the officer was removing Defendant from the residence, Defendant said that “he was going to kill [Victim].” On the way to the jail, Defendant volunteered a statement to Officer Bowling “along the lines of he’s not going down for burglary, even if he’s got to kill someone.”

After deliberating upon this evidence, the jury found Defendant guilty of attempted forcible rape (Count II), felonious restraint (Count III), and burglary (Count IV). The jury found Defendant not guilty of attempted forcible sodomy (Count I) and third-degree domestic assault (Count V). 3

The July 22nd Incident

On July 22, 2011, Victim was asleep on a couch in her living room in “the early-morning hours” when she awoke to see Defendant “coming through the window on the other side of the room[.]” Defendant was wearing clear “plastic gloves[.]” Victim talked Defendant into going outside, and she called the police when she saw him walk up the street. Based upon this evidence, the jury found Defendant guilty of first-degree trespass (Count VII).

The July 27th Incident

Five days later, Defendant knocked on Victim’s door, but Victim refused to open it. Victim’s sister, A.M., drove up, and she was yelling at Defendant something like, “You need to leave, you’re not supposed to be here, just get away.” A.M. got inside the house, and the sisters were able to shut the door before Defendant could also get inside. Defendant beat on the door and kicked it; he also banged on the windows. Victim called the police.

A.M. saw Defendant move away from the house, and she saw him kick and beat on the vehicle she had arrived in, a Cadillac Escalade owned by her mother. A.M. also heard Defendant say that he was “going to set [her] truck on fire.” Defendant put something in the gas tank, and A.M. saw “a flame.” Defendant then ran and “disappeared[J” After the police arrived, A.M. looked at the vehicle’s gas tank and saw “like soot, like ashes, and that the tank was still open.”

At trial, A.M. identified photographs that depicted dents in the vehicle that had not been there prior to her arrival. Springfield Police Officer Bradley Shryer testified that he noticed “a wad of notebook paper shoved in the gas port [of the vehicle]. It appeared as if a portion of it had been burned.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
438 S.W.3d 500, 2014 WL 4052668, 2014 Mo. App. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-plaintiff-respondent-v-frankie-lee-brown-moctapp-2014.