State of Tennessee v. Alfred Turner

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 22, 2010
DocketW2007-00891-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Alfred Turner (State of Tennessee v. Alfred Turner) 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. Alfred Turner, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON April 14, 2009 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ALFRED TURNER

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 04-02872 W. Otis Higgs, Judge

No. W2007-00891-CCA-R3-CD - Filed June 22, 2010

The defendant, Alfred Turner, was found guilty by a jury of the lesser included offenses of facilitation of felony murder, a Class A felony, and facilitation of second degree murder. After merging the convictions, the trial court sentenced the defendant to twenty-five years of incarceration as a Range I, standard offender. On appeal, he argues that: insufficient evidence exists to support his conviction; a proper chain of custody for the introduction of DNA evidence was not established; the trial court erred in allowing into evidence that two other individuals had been acquitted of this murder; and the trial court erred in both jury instructions and sentencing. After careful review, we conclude that even though sufficient evidence existed to support the defendant’s convictions, the defendant’s sentence ran afoul of Blakely and the prior acquittals of two other individuals deprived the defendant of a fair trial. Therefore, the error requires a remand for a new trial.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Remanded

J OHN E VERETT W ILLIAMS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J.C. M CL IN, J., joined. C AMILLE R. M CM ULLEN, J., filled a dissenting opinion.

Lance Chism (on appeal), and Gerald Skahan and Juni Ganguli (at trial), Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Alfred Turner.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Rachel E. Willis, Assistant Attorney General; William L. Gibbons, District Attorney General; and Thomas D. Henderson and Reginald Henderson, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION

At trial, Memphis police officer John Ingram testified that he responded to a dispatch call of a disturbance at 1649 Central Avenue. When he entered the home, the officer observed signs of a disturbance, including a broken dishwasher door, an overturned stool, a cut phone cord, and blood on the floor. He saw the victim, Emily Klyce Fisher, who had several gashes, stab wounds, and cuts in her back and the back of her head. He decided there was nothing he could do for the victim and continued walking through the house. He found the master bedroom “ransacked.”

The medical examiner for Shelby County at the time of the victim’s murder testified that he performed an autopsy of the victim. He testified that the victim suffered “multiple dozens of stab wounds, including a concentration to the right side of the head, multiple to the back, some to the chest, some to the arms, and some to the hands and other extremities.”

Paulette Sutton, the supervisor of the Forensic Serology Lab at the University of Tennessee, was asked by the Memphis Police Department to conduct testing on samples of evidence taken from the crime scene. Her prior testimony was entered by stipulation of the parties. In her review of the crime scene, she observed a single blood stain on the threshold of the back door and “many, many blood stains” on the kitchen floor and in the breakfast room. Her testimony revealed that the blood stains and large pool of blood, along with brain tissue, in the dining room were consistent with that of a victim being stabbed on the floor. There was a bloody shoe print in the master bedroom and two distinct drops of blood on the floor near the bed. She collected cuttings from the bedroom carpet and the screen on the back door, as well as blood samples from the front stairway wall, the kitchen door, and the metal scroll work on the back door. She was later asked to examine a jacket in connection with this case and discovered a stain that tested positive for blood. All the samples were sent to the FBI laboratory for analysis.

Memphis Police Sergeant Richard Roleson testified that he was the case coordinator in the investigation of the victim’s murder. He picked up the blood samples prepared by Sutton and delivered them to the FBI. He received information from a confidential informant that Rodney Blades was involved in the murder. He obtained Blades’ fingerprints and submitted them for comparison to prints that had been lifted from the victim’s car. He received a report that one fingerprint from the car matched Blades’ print. He also developed George Tate as a suspect. The jacket examined by Sutton belonged to Tate. Both men were arrested.

Rodney Blades testified that he was a drug user living in Memphis in 1995. In February of that year, he was approached by two men who asked him to get marijuana for

-2- them. He noticed that the men were in a car that did not belong in the neighborhood. When he asked if the car was stolen, he was told that it was. He got in the car and took several items from it. Two days later, he was arrested and charged with the murder of the victim. He was later acquitted.

George Tate also testified that he was arrested for the victim’s murder. He knew the victim’s son but told police he had never been to the victim’s home. At a preliminary hearing, the victim’s family maid identified that Tate was one of the men who attacked both her and the victim. After a trial, he was also acquitted.

Charles Shettlesworth, an investigator in the District Attorney’s office, testified that he was asked to review the victim’s file following the trials of Blades and Tate. He testified that there was an unidentified DNA profile left at the crime scene and that he sought to match that DNA. He investigated the case for the next six years until he received an anonymous tip following a story about the unsolved crime on a local television station. The informant, Sandra Cochran, provided the names of the defendant and Aaron Williams. Shettlesworth said that the police had an outstanding warrant for Williams for an armed robbery. As a result, he was arrested and brought in for questioning. Williams gave a lengthy statement implicating himself and the defendant in the murder. Based on this information, Shettlesworth obtained a warrant to draw blood from the defendant for a DNA comparison with blood found at the crime scene.

Cochran testified that she knew Aaron Williams and the defendant and that she had seen the victim’s son in their apartment complex. Aaron Williams was her next-door neighbor, and she identified the defendant as the person who lived above her in 1995. She acknowledged that she provided information to law enforcement about the victim’s murder and that she was paid approximately twenty-six thousand dollars for the information.

A special agent forensic scientist for the TBI testified that she performed the DNA analysis on the defendant’s blood. She generated a DNA profile from the blood stains in the carpet and the back door screen cuttings taken at the crime scene by Paulette Sutton. When compared, the two DNA profiles showed a match to the defendant.

Aaron Williams testified that he was a close friend of the victim’s son and that he was a neighbor to the defendant and Sandra Cochran. He testified that on the day of the murder, three men came to his apartment looking for the victim’s son. The men told him that the victim’s son owed them money. One of the men pulled up his sweater to show him that he had a pistol, and Williams told the men that he did not know where the son was. He then decided to go to the victim’s house to warn them about the men. Because he did not have

-3- a car, he went to the defendant’s apartment to get a ride. Someone picked them up and then dropped them off near the victim’s home.

Williams testified that he did not know the defendant was going to accompany him to the victim’s house.

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State of Tennessee v. Alfred Turner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-alfred-turner-tenncrimapp-2010.