State of Tennessee v. Darrell Ray Beene

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 12, 2016
DocketM2015-00231-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Darrell Ray Beene (State of Tennessee v. Darrell Ray Beene) 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. Darrell Ray Beene, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs October 27, 2015

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. DARRELL RAY BEENE

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2012-B-1008 Cheryl A. Blackburn, Judge

No. M2015-00231-CCA-R3-CD – Filed January 12, 2016 _____________________________

A Davidson County jury convicted the Defendant, Darrell Ray Beene, of aggravated robbery, and the trial court sentenced him to twenty years in the Tennessee Department of Correction. The trial court ordered that the Defendant‟s sentence be served consecutively to the Defendant‟s forty-two year sentence in another case. On appeal, the Defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction and that his sentence is excessive. After a thorough review of the record and applicable authorities, we affirm the Defendant‟s conviction and sentence.

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

ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS and D. KELLY THOMAS, JR., JJ., joined.

David Harris, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Darrell Ray Beene.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; M. Todd Ridley, Assistant Attorney General; Glenn R. Funk, District Attorney General; and Jeff Burks, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION I. Facts

This case arises from a robbery that occurred in an apartment complex on December 20, 2011. A Davidson County grand jury indicted the Defendant for one count of aggravated robbery. At his trial on this charge, the parties presented the following evidence: Audrey Myers testified that she was thirty at the time of trial. On December 20, 2011, she visited her boyfriend, Jude Mena, who lived in the Green Leaf Apartments in Hermitage. She arrived at around 8:30 or 9:00 p.m., parked her car, and started walking toward his apartment. Ms. Myers said she heard someone call to her. She looked back and saw two black men near a white truck. The man near the driver‟s side door came towards her. She thought little of it because she knew most of the people that lived in the apartments near Mr. Mena.

Ms. Myers testified that, as the man approached her, he was speaking but she could not understand what he was saying to her. When he got near to her, she understood him to say “give me your wallet.” Ms. Myers told the man that she would not give him her wallet. He then brandished a gun and told her again to give him her wallet. She again refused. The man said, “what is wrong with y‟all mother f***ing people, y‟all ain‟t scared anymore,” and he pointed the gun to her chest and told her to give him her wallet. Ms. Myers said that she told the man that she did not have a wallet, but she handed him some money she had in her pocket, her phone, and her car keys. He took those from her, told her he would leave her keys nearby, and then told her to run and pointed the direction he wanted her to run. She told him that she did not want to run that direction and indicated that she wanted to go in the other direction. The man was unyielding and told her to run in the direction that he had indicated. Ms. Myers said that she complied and ran through a different breezeway and then back behind the apartment complex to get to the backdoor of Mr. Mena‟s apartment. She said that she banged on the door, Mr. Mena and his friend opened the door, and she entered the apartment, told them what had happened, and they called 911. She said that, at one point, she spoke with the 911 operator, but that either Mr. Mena or his friend placed the call.

Ms. Myers said that she, her boyfriend, and his friend went back to the parking lot but the white truck was gone. They found her keys in the parking lot. The police came a few minutes later. Ms. Myers said that she described to police officers as best she could her assailant and the man with him. She recalled telling them that her assailant‟s eyes were “baggy and droopy” and that he had a “scraggly” beard. She recalled that her assailant had some moles and/or pock marks on his cheeks that stood out.

Ms. Myers testified that she had used her cell phone to call her boyfriend on multiple occasions and that his number would have been listed in her phone. Ms. Myers recalled that while she and Mr. Mena were speaking with police his phone rang. It was her phone calling, but the call must have been placed inadvertently because there were only mumbled noises on the line. Ms. Myers said that she wanted her phone returned because it contained pictures special to her such as those of her daughter‟s first day of kindergarten, so Mr. Mena repeatedly called and texted her phone with her request during that night and into the next day. Ms. Myers said that she heard Mr. Mena speak with someone on several occasions. Ms. Myers reported this to the police.

2 Ms. Myers said that on December 22, two days after the robbery, Mr. Mena returned her phone to her. She explained that he arranged to meet the person with whom he spoke on the phone. Mr. Mena then contacted police and informed them of the plan. The police were present but concealed during the transaction. Ms. Myers said that when she received her phone she saw that someone had erased her pictures.

Ms. Myers testified that two weeks after the robbery a detective called her and asked her to come and view a photographic lineup. Accompanied by Mr. Mena, Ms. Myers went to the Hermitage precinct where she met Detective Vallee for the first time. He showed her an array of six pictures, and she identified a photograph of the Defendant as the man who had robbed her. She said she had no doubt about her identification.

During cross-examination, Ms. Myers testified that she could not offer more details about the white truck she saw the Defendant and the other man standing near. She said that she knew it was not a Dodge and that it was not a new model but that she could not be more specific. She said that the Defendant brandished the gun by pulling it up from his right hip area. She estimated that the assailant was in his fifties. She agreed that she described her assailant to the police as tall and skinny.

Ms. Myers testified that the police did not show her a photographic lineup until almost three weeks after this event. She said that, during that time, it concerned her that the man who had robbed her was still free. She said that, after she identified the Defendant, she still felt very anxious and scared.

On redirect-examination, Ms. Myers testified that she in part identified the Defendant because he had baggy eyes and marks on his face. She said that she was in close proximity to the Defendant when he robbed her. Ms. Myers testified that her boyfriend at the time of these events, Mr. Mena, was very sick at the time of trial. He contracted MRSA as a result of a back surgery, and it rendered him unable to be at trial.

Russell Freeman, an officer with the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department, testified that he responded to the 911 call about this robbery. Officer Freeman recalled that police received the call about a robbery at 8:45 p.m. and that he arrived at the scene at 9:00 p.m. Officer Freeman recalled that he was the third officer to respond. He said that he took Ms. Myers‟s statement, which included a description of the person who had robbed her and a general description of the car she saw him near, a white full-sized pickup truck. Ms. Myers did not recall any specific details about the pickup truck.

Jeff Ball, a retired detective with the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department, testified that, before he retired, he assisted the lead investigator, Greg Jennings, in the investigation of this case. Detective Ball testified that, as part of his investigation, he met 3 with Mr.

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