State of Tennessee v. Courtney Bishop

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 14, 2012
DocketW2010-01207-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Courtney Bishop (State of Tennessee v. Courtney Bishop) 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. Courtney Bishop, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs October 4, 2011

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. COURTNEY BISHOP

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 08-07886 James M. Lammey, Jr., Judge

No. W2010-01207-CCA-R3-CD - Filed March 14, 2012

The defendant, Courtney Bishop, appeals his Shelby County Criminal Court jury convictions for felony murder and attempted aggravated robbery, challenging the sufficiency of the convicting evidence and the trial court’s refusal to suppress his pretrial statement to police. Because the trial court erred by failing to suppress the defendant’s statement, the defendant is entitled to a new trial. Because the evidence was insufficient to support the defendant’s convictions for attempted aggravated robbery and first degree murder in the perpetration of attempted aggravated robbery, those convictions are reversed. The conviction for attempted aggravated robbery is dismissed. The conviction for first degree murder is modified to one for second degree murder. Accordingly, the case is remanded for a new trial on the modified charge of second degree murder.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgments of the Criminal Court Reversed and Dismissed in Part; Reversed and Modified in Part; Remanded

J AMES C URWOOD W ITT, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which N ORMA M CG EE O GLE and A LAN E. G LENN, JJ., joined.

R. Todd Mosley (on appeal); and Robert Parris (at trial), Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Courtney Bishop.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Jeffrey D. Zentner, Assistant Attorney General; William L. Gibbons, District Attorney General; and Kevin Rardin and Stacy McEndree, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

The defendant’s convictions relate to the shooting death of the victim, Maurice Taylor, Jr., on August 19, 2008. At trial, the victim’s brother, Mareo Taylor, testified that at the time of the victim’s death, the two men lived at 1548 Cella Street. Mr. Taylor was working as an automotive manager at Walmart, and the victim had recently been discharged from the military. The victim worked part-time in the family’s concession business but was unable to make ends meet. As a result of his financial difficulties, the victim turned to selling marijuana.

At approximately 9:30 p.m. on August 19, 2008, Marlon McKay, a childhood friend whom Mr. Taylor had not seen in several years, came to the residence to speak with the victim. Mr. Taylor said that Mr. McKay tried to sell some marijuana to the victim, but the victim refused to buy it because of the low quality of the marijuana. Following the victim’s refusal, Mr. McKay left. Sometime later, the victim got a telephone call. Without saying anything to Mr. Taylor, the victim walked out the side door of the residence. Mr. Taylor heard the victim say “Mareo” followed by a gunshot. Mr. Taylor said that he grabbed his bat and walked to the side door. Outside, he saw the victim “staggering.” By the time Mr. Taylor dropped the bat and walked outside, the victim had fallen to the ground. Mr. Taylor said that he couldn’t see any blood, but the victim “was just gargling like bubbles.” At that point, Mr. Taylor began administering CPR and asked his girlfriend to call 9-1-1. Police arrived six or seven minutes later.

Several neighbors testified that they observed a light-colored, two-door Mercury Cougar circling the block near the victim’s house just before the shooting. Others reported seeing two black males flee the scene in the same car minutes later. None positively identified either man.

Memphis Police Department (“MPD”) Officer Lesley Jones testified that he and four other officers were the first officers to arrive on the scene, and he took over CPR from Mr. Taylor’s girlfriend. They continued to perform CPR until the fire department arrived even though, in his opinion, the victim was already dead. Officers performed a basic search but discovered no weapons or money in the area near the victim.

Susan Acerra, a death investigator with the Shelby County Medical Examiner’s Office, responded to the scene after being paged by MPD. She photographed the scene and conducted a brief examination of the victim’s body, observing a single gunshot wound to his chest. Ms. Acerra inventoried the victim’s personal belongings, which included a cellular telephone, a tube of chap stick, a lighter, and $1,163.75 in cash.

Shelby County Medical Examiner Marco Ross testified that the victim suffered a single gunshot wound that entered “the left side of the front of the chest,” “perforated the left sixth costal sternal junction,” and then traveled through the heart, the diaphragm, the

-2- liver, and the right lung before coming to rest inside his lower right flank. Toxicology testing revealed the presence of marijuana and codeine in the victim’s blood.

Tracy Taylor testified that at the time of the murder, she was living with Mr. McKay, who supported himself by dealing drugs and, as a result, often carried a gun. On August 19, 2008, Mr. McKay left in her 1997 Mercury Cougar at 8:30 p.m. She knew the defendant as an associate of Mr. McKay but did not know whether he accompanied Mr. McKay on August 19, 2008.

After initially denying any involvement in the victim’s murder, the defendant eventually admitted his role to MPD Lieutenant Eddie Bass on August 23, 2008, telling Lieutenant Bass that “he didn’t mean to do what he had done.” The defendant then described “in[] detail” the scheme that Mr. McKay devised “to go and rob the victim.” Mr. McKay drove them in Mr. McKay’s girlfriend’s Mercury Cougar to the victim’s residence “to rob him for his money.” The defendant told officers that Mr. McKay provided him with “[a] chrome forty-four revolver” and lured the victim out of his house by telling him that they wanted to buy marijuana from him. The defendant described the encounter that followed: “I was standing on the side of his car, I pulled a gun out, and he seen to me - he seen to me pull it out, and he tusslin’ with me. He made my finger slip and pull the trigger making the gun go off, and we ran to the car, and I gave the gun back to Marlon.” The defendant said that they did not take anything from the victim.

MPD Lieutenant Bart Ragland testified that on August 27, 2008, officers searched the area where they believed the defendant discarded the gun but found nothing. They later discovered the weapon outside an Applebee’s restaurant “stuck down in the bushes in a purple Crown Royal bag.” He described the weapon as a “Taurus forty-four magnum, five-shot revolver.”

Tennessee Bureau of Investigation Forensic Scientist Cervinia Braswell testified that the bullet taken from the victim’s body was fired from the weapon recovered by Lieutenant Ragland. Agent Braswell noted that the weapon contained an internal safety mechanism to prevent accidental firing. She explained:

The transfer bar is that piece of metal that sits in between the hammer and the firing pin. When the gun is at rest, there is a gap between the hammer . . . and the firing pin. . . . I can hit it back here all day, and it’s not going to go off. That piece of metal has to move up in between the hammer and the firing pin for the gun to fire.

-3- The way that does that is when the hammer is cocked back, that piece of metal moves upwards. . . . And a feature of this safety is if I were to hit that trigger - not pull it, just knock it, the hammer would fall, but that transfer bar would fall out of the way and would keep the gun from firing. So, if I accidentally hit the trigger, the gun is not going to fire.

She said that the safety features were working on the gun at the time of her testing.

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State of Tennessee v. Courtney Bishop, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-courtney-bishop-tenncrimapp-2012.