State of Tennessee v. Adam Wayne Robinson

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 23, 2015
DocketM2013-02703-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Adam Wayne Robinson (State of Tennessee v. Adam Wayne Robinson) 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
State of Tennessee v. Adam Wayne Robinson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE January 13, 2015 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ADAM WAYNE ROBINSON

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2012-B-1876 Monte Watkins, Judge

No. M2013-02703-CCA-R3-CD - Filed June 23, 2015

The Defendant, Adam Wayne Robinson, was convicted by a jury of three counts of aggravated sexual battery. The Defendant raises three issues on appeal: prosecutorial misconduct during closing argument, sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the convictions, and cumulative error. During closing argument, the prosecutor improperly commented upon the Defendant’s right not to testify and engaged in a persistent pattern of other improper prosecutorial argument. Following a thorough review, we conclude that the prosecutor’s comments on the Defendant’s right not to testify constitute reversible non-structural constitutional error. Moreover, the record establishes that the prosecutor engaged in a persistent pattern of other improper prosecutorial argument, the cumulative effect of which constitutes plain error. We, therefore, reverse the judgments of the trial court and remand the case for a new trial.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Criminal Court Reversed

R OBERT L. H OLLOWAY, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which R OBERT W. W EDEMEYER, and T IMOTHY L. E ASTER, JJ., joined.

Patrick T. McNally (on appeal) and Bernard F. McEvoy (at trial), Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Adam Wayne Robinson.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Sophia S. Lee, Senior Counsel; Victor S. Johnson, III, District Attorney General; and Kristen E. Menke and Robert E. McGuire, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION

The Defendant was convicted of three counts of aggravated sexual battery1 by a Davidson County jury following a two-day trial. The trial court sentenced the Defendant to three concurrent terms of nine years and six months. The date and year of the first incident was not known. Based on the testimony, the second and third incidents were alleged to have occurred on February 5, 2012.2 All three incidents were alleged to have occurred on the grounds of Beechwood Terrace Apartments where the Defendant had worked as a groundskeeper for seven years and where the alleged victim’s mother lived.

I. Facts

The State called two witnesses during the trial, B.C.3 and B.C.’s mother. B.C. testified that she was in the second grade. She was asked, “Can you tell these people listening to you what happened to you?” B.C. answered, “About sexual abuse.” She said it happened at her mom’s old apartments, “Cedar Ridge Apartments.” She said she did not remember how old she was. She said someone touched her in places no one is supposed to touch. Thereafter, the following exchange took place:

Q. Who did that?

A. Adam.
Q. Do you see Adam in here, in this courtroom, this morning?
A. (Respite)
Q. You can stand and look around.
A. (Witness stands, then nods in the negative.)
Q. You don’t see Adam?

1 The indictments allege the offenses took place on a date between August 1, 2011, and February 10, 2012. 2 The State filed an Election of Offenses at the conclusion of its proof. As to Count Two, the State elected conduct that involved the Defendant rubbing B.C.’s genital area. As to Count Three, the State elected conduct that involved the Defendant rubbing B.C.’s buttocks. 3 As is the practice of this Court, the child will be referred to by her initials.

-2- A. (Nods in the negative.)

Q. Who was Adam to you?
A. My friend.

In regards to the first incident, B.C. testified that she was riding her bicycle at the tennis courts, which she said she did “all the time,” and saw Adam picking up trash. She asked him if he wanted to be her friend, and he said “yes.” He instructed her to follow him. She could not remember where they went or when the incident happened. She said, “[The Defendant] told me to pull my pants down and he picked me up and touched me in spots he wasn’t supposed to.” She said she calls those spots “my private part and my butt.” When B.C. was asked about the location of the initial incident, B.C. said it happened at the apartments. In the following exchange, the State pressed B.C. for a more precise location:

Q. Do you know where in the apartments, like, in the complex? Do you remember, were you by the tennis courts? Were you in the grass? Were you riding your bike? Do you remember where that first time happened?

A. No.

B.C. said Adam told her not to tell anyone and gave her a dollar, but she lost it. She said his hands felt cold. Using a stuffed bunny, she described how the Defendant picked her up and put her face on his shoulder. When asked how her legs were positioned, she said, “I think they were dangling down or wrapped around his body.” She said she did not remember how his hands got to the skin of her private part or butt.

B.C. was almost seven years of age on February 5, 2012, when the second and third incidents were alleged to have occurred. B.C.’s mother was going to walk their dog, and B.C. was supposed to ride her bicycle on the tennis courts in front of their apartment. She exited their apartment through the rear sliding door. B.C. rode around the side of the apartment building heading to the tennis courts while her mother stayed in the back yard. B.C. rode her bike to where Adam was picking up trash instead of going to the tennis courts. She said Adam told her to follow him, and she followed him on her bike behind an apartment building near a wooded area. She said they were behind an apartment near the patio and sliding glass door. She testified she pulled her pants down to her feet. Again using the stuffed bunny, she showed how Adam picked her up and touched her private parts and butt. She said Adam told her not to tell anyone and gave her a dollar, then she heard her mother yelling so she pulled her pants back up. She said she lost that dollar too.

-3- B.C. rode her bike to the base of the hill, got off, and Adam pushed the bike up the hill for her. B.C.’s mother was on the patio behind their apartment, and according to B.C., when B.C.’s mother saw her, she said, “Does [the Defendant] do anything that he’s not supposed to?” B.C. testified that she then told her mother “the story.” She said the only other person she told was someone named Gayla, but that Gayla had moved to Texas. When asked about going to the doctor, B.C. said, “No, I didn’t even have to go to the doctor.” When asked twice if she talked to someone about what happened and drew pictures for that person, she answered “no” both times. B.C. said she watched a video before testifying. She identified two line drawings of a girl with no clothes on, one from the front and the other from the back. When asked if she saw her private parts on the line drawings, she drew a circle and wrote “private part” on the front view and drew a circle and wrote “butt” on the rear view. When asked what Adam did to the two areas circled, she said, “He just rubbed.” She said his hands felt cold, but she could not remember if it was cold that day or what she was wearing.

B.C. was shown several pictures of Beechwood Apartments. The first picture showed a portion of the tennis courts in the foreground and, in the background, the apartment building where her mom lived, a trash dumpster, and the apartment building behind which she said the second and third incidents occurred.

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State of Tennessee v. Adam Wayne Robinson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-adam-wayne-robinson-tenncrimapp-2015.