State of Tennessee v. Ashley Wheeler

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 11, 2015
DocketW2013-02765-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Ashley Wheeler (State of Tennessee v. Ashley Wheeler) 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. Ashley Wheeler, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs November 4, 2014

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ASHLEY WHEELER

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 1200990 James M. Lammey, Judge

No. W2013-02765-CCA-R3-CD - Filed March 11, 2015

Defendant, Ashley Wheeler, was indicted by the Shelby County Grand Jury for two counts of forgery valued at $1,000 or more, but less than $10,000, in Counts 1 and 2. In Count 3, Defendant was indicted for attempted theft of property valued at $1,000 or more, but less than $10,000. Following a jury trial, Defendant was convicted as charged. Following a sentencing hearing, the trial court merged Count 1 with Count 2 and sentenced Defendant to two years for her forgery conviction and one year for her attempted theft conviction. The trial court ordered Defendant’s sentences to be served concurrently and suspended on probation. In this appeal as of right, Defendant asserts that: 1) the prosecutor committed prosecutorial misconduct by making improper comments during closing argument; 2) the evidence was insufficient to support her convictions; and 3) the trial court abused its discretion by denying her requests to be granted judicial diversion and to be sentenced as an especially mitigated offender. Having carefully reviewed the record before us, we conclude that the comments of the prosecutor during closing argument constitute prosecutorial misconduct rising to the level of plain error. We therefore reverse the judgments of the trial court and remand this case for a new trial.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Reversed and Remanded for New Trial

T HOMAS T. W OODALL, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. G LENN and R OBERT L. H OLLOWAY, J R., JJ., joined.

Stephen Bush, District Public Defender; Jennifer Mitchell, and Phyllis Aluko, Assistant Public Defenders, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Ashley Wheeler. Herbert H. Slatery, III, Attorney General and Reporter; Tracy L. Alcock, Assistant Attorney General; Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Bryce Phillips, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Trial

On July 13, 2011, Memphis Police Officer Lenayan Holmes responded to a “forgery theft call” at Speedy’s Check Cashing in Memphis. When Officer Holmes arrived, the owner of the business, James Briggs, informed him that a person, whom Mr. Briggs later identified as Defendant, had attempted to cash a stolen check. Defendant had already left when Officer Holmes arrived.

James Briggs, the owner of Speedy’s Check Cashing, testified that on July 13, 2011, Defendant presented a check in the amount of $2,800 to be cashed. Mr. Briggs looked at the back of the check, and it was not endorsed. Defendant endorsed the check and presented her driver’s license for identification. Mr. Briggs had never seen Defendant in the store before, and he believed the amount of the check was a “red flag.” He called the purported maker of the check, Endocrinology and Diabetes Association in Nashville, in order to verify the check. Mr. Briggs spoke to the office manager and discovered that the check was forged. The office manager contacted the police, and Mr. Briggs remained on the phone to “keep the rouse” hoping that the police would arrive while Defendant was still there. Mr. Briggs testified that he stood across from Defendant for 15 to 20 minutes. A bullet-proof glass window separated Mr. Briggs from Defendant. He got a “good look” at Defendant and he was sure that the photo on the driver’s license matched the person trying to cash the check. Mr. Briggs subsequently identified Defendant in a photographic lineup and at trial. Defendant left before police arrived, and she left the check and her driver’s license at Speedy’s Check Cashing.

Myriam Bagwell testified that she was the Practice Administrator at Endocrinology Diabetes Association in Nashville. Her duties included payroll, and she testified that she was the only person with authority to prepare checks. She testified that Mr. Briggs called her to ask about the subject check, and she recognized the check number as one in a sequence of 70 checks that had been stolen from the business over the July 4, 2011 weekend. Mr. Briggs told her the name of the person to whom the check was made out, and she had “never heard of that person.” Ms. Bagwell testified that she did not sign the check. She testified that the font used on the check was “not our font that we use.” She also testified that when she issues a check, the check number is printed in a different location on the check than the location where it is printed by the bank printer, and this check did not have such printing.

-2- Sergeant Fred Farah, of the Memphis Police Department, compiled a six-person photographic lineup for Mr. Briggs to view. Sergeant Farah testified that he included in the photo lineup a different photograph of Defendant than the photograph on the driver’s license that Defendant left at the scene. Sergeant Farah testified that Mr. Briggs positively identified Defendant in the photo lineup. Sergeant Farah testified that he had been investigating economic crimes for four years, and it was not uncommon for a suspect to use his or her own identification when attempting to cash a forged or stolen check, nor was it uncommon for a suspect to claim that his or her license had been stolen prior to the offense for which the suspect was charged.

Defendant testified that she was 20 years old in July, 2011. In April, 2011, she and her friend Shanice Shepard left the James Lounge Club and discovered that Ms. Shepard’s car window had been “busted,” and Defendant’s purse, which contained her driver’s license, social security card, and $20 cash, had been stolen from the trunk. Defendant testified that she had been allowed entry into the club without her identification. She testified, “[t]hey pretty much let anybody in there.” Defendant testified that she and Ms. Shepard did not report the burglary to the police because they were intoxicated, but they reported it to someone inside the club. Defendant testified that she “thought if [she] reported it to the DMV and the Social Security Office that [she] was going to be okay.” She applied for a replacement driver’s license and social security card. Defendant acknowledged that she had applied for and received several replacement driver’s licenses since receiving her first driver’s license in 2009 at the age of 18. She testified that she was “always misplacing [her] I.D. and [her] Social Security card.” She testified that she received a replacement license in January, 2010, after losing her original license. She misplaced this replacement license and received another replacement license in June, 2010. Defendant could not remember the circumstances under which she lost either of those two licenses. She testified that she was “irresponsible” and that she “laid around information that [she] wasn’t supposed to lay around.” Defendant received another replacement license in May, 2011, after her purse and license were stolen from Ms. Shepard’s vehicle. She received another license in February, 2013, after her driving privileges were reinstated after having been suspended due to unpaid citations.

Defendant testified that she was “shocked [and] distraught” when she was arrested at her residence in August, 2011. Defendant testified that she had never before heard of Speedy’s Check Cashing or Endocrinology Diabetes Association. She denied that she forged a check from Endocrinology Diabetes Association and that she attempted to cash a check at Speedy Cash. On cross-examination, Defendant also testified that she was at home with her mother all day on July 13, 2011.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Ashley Wheeler, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-ashley-wheeler-tenncrimapp-2015.