State of Tennessee v. Benjamin L. Bradford

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 3, 2024
DocketW2022-01632-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Benjamin L. Bradford (State of Tennessee v. Benjamin L. Bradford) 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. Benjamin L. Bradford, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

05/03/2024 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs March 5, 2024

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. BENJAMIN L. BRADFORD

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Gibson County No. 20038 Clayburn Peeples, Judge

No. W2022-01632-CCA-R3-CD

The Defendant, Benjamin L. Bradford, was convicted by a Gibson County Circuit Court jury of first degree premeditated murder, first degree murder in the perpetration of theft, and destroying, tampering, or fabricating evidence. See T.C.A. §§ 39-13-202(a)(1)-(2) (first degree murder) (2018) (subsequently amended), 39-16-503 (2018) (destroying, tampering with, or fabricating evidence). The jury imposed a sentence of life without parole for each of the first degree murder convictions and merged the judgments. The trial court imposed a fifteen-year sentence for destroying, tampering, or fabricating evidence, to be served consecutively to the life-without-parole sentence. On appeal, the Defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support his convictions. We affirm the judgments of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Circuit Court Affirmed

ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., and JILL BARTEE AYERS, JJ., joined.

Alexander D. Camp (on appeal), and J. Noble Grant, III (at trial), Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellant, Benjamin L. Bradford.

Jonathan Skrmetti, Attorney General and Reporter; G. Kirby May, Assistant Attorney General; Frederick H. Agee, District Attorney General; and Nina Seiler and Scott Kirk, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

The Defendant’s convictions relate to his July 20, 2018 bludgeoning of his sixty- seven-year-old mother, Gwendolyn Hall, in her home. The Defendant initially claimed at the scene that someone “did this and ran off,” but he later gave inculpatory statements in which he admitted he had argued with the victim and had physically assaulted her, but he denied that he had intended to kill her and suggested someone else had inflicted the gash on her head. He denied that their altercation had been about money and that he tried to clean up the scene after he assaulted her, but he admitted that he broke her car window with a baseball bat to search for money in her car.

At the trial, the State’s evidence showed that, in the early morning hours of July 20, 2018, Milan Police and emergency personnel responded to the victim’s home in response to a 9-1-1 call from the Defendant. The responding officers found the badly injured victim slouched on a couch. Her face was badly swollen, and she had a deep gash over one eye. She was breathing and moaning but was unable to speak. She was not wearing a shirt. The Defendant, who had blood on his hands and was shirtless with a bloody shirt rolled around his neck, was present. The Defendant stated, “Some coward n----- did this and ran off.” Officers detained the Defendant. One of the responding officers described the Defendant as “nonchalant” and as not exhibiting remorse. Another responding officer described the Defendant as neither upset nor crying but “talking out of his head.” This officer said the Defendant stated he would not talk to any West Tennessee law enforcement officers.

Responding officers testified that a large amount of blood was seen in the living room, hall, and a bedroom of the home. Blood was on the carpet and a bedroom closet door, and a large amount of blood was on the bedroom floor. Dentures were found on the floor and later identified by a family member as belonging to the victim. Other evidence showed that the bedroom was the Defendant’s bedroom. A bloody comforter was found in the laundry room. The victim was found shirtless, but her shirt was not found. Luminol examinations were conducted and showed evidence of blood on a recliner in the living room and on sink handles and a towel in the bathroom. No signs of forced entry into the home were found. The passenger-side window of a car parked in the carport was shattered, and a baseball bat lay nearby. The door and the bat both had a substance which appeared to be blood on them. Police body camera video recordings show the interior of the home, which included bloody areas in the living room and a bedroom. The bedding on the bed in the bedroom was in disarray, and no comforter was on the bed.

The victim was transported from the scene by ambulance and later taken by helicopter to a Memphis hospital, where she died the next day. The forensic pathologist who performed the victim’s autopsy testified that the victim’s cause of death was blunt force head injuries and that the manner of death was homicide. The pathologist stated that the victim had lacerations to the right eye, above the bridge of the nose, on the top of the head, and behind the right ear. The pathologist also observed bruising, lacerations, a contusion, a torn toenail, and bleeding. The pathologist acknowledged that he could not determine the number of blows sustained by the victim, said he found six areas of impact, and agreed it was “possible” the number of blows was as low as three. He said that of the victim’s injuries, the brain bleeding was the most lethal. He said that despite the victim’s preexisting renal failure, she would not have died in the absence of the blunt force injuries.

-2- The Defendant gave a written statement on the day he was taken into custody. In this statement, the Defendant said the following: He came home drunk and argued with the victim about the Defendant’s relationship with his ex-wife, with whom he had recently reunited. He said he had “snapped” and had hit the victim on both sides of her head. The Defendant left the home but returned and found the victim in the floor with a gash in her forehead. He told her to tell him where her car keys were in order for him to drive her to the emergency room, but she was unable to speak in a manner he could understand. He called 9-1-1. He had not meant to hurt the victim and had snapped.

The Defendant gave a recorded statement three days after the incident. He stated the following: He was at his mother’s home, where he stayed and had his own room, on the evening of July 19, 2018. He called his ex-wife and tried to get her to come to the home, and the victim said “crazy s---,” in response to which the Defendant “snapped” and hit the victim. The victim tried to grab the Defendant, who grabbed her shirt. The shirt tore and came off. The victim fell into a table in the living room. The Defendant picked her up and hit her again. He grabbed her foot and pulled her into his bedroom. The victim threatened to call the police, and he challenged her to call them. The Defendant left his bedroom and wiped blood from the floor near the refrigerator1 because he did not want anyone to slip. He placed a comforter in an unspecified location. He washed his hands, went outside, picked up a baseball bat, smashed a car window in an effort to locate money, put down the bat, and went to a store to buy “another drink.” He returned fifteen to twenty minutes later and found the victim lying on the floor of his room, the location where she had been when he left. He moved the victim to the living room couch and asked where she kept her keys because he was going to take her to the emergency room. The victim was “talking crazy,” and he called 9-1-1. The Defendant repeatedly insisted that he had snapped and had not meant to kill the victim. He acknowledged that he hit her too hard. He said the gash on the victim’s face had to have occurred when she fell into the living room table or have been inflicted by an unknown assailant while he was gone. He said that the victim had inserted herself into his business and that he had just wanted to see his ex-wife.

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State of Tennessee v. Benjamin L. Bradford, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-benjamin-l-bradford-tenncrimapp-2024.