State of Tennessee v. David Anthony Avery and Frederick Alexander Avery, (a/k/a Alex Avery)

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 10, 2009
DocketM2008-01809-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. David Anthony Avery and Frederick Alexander Avery, (a/k/a Alex Avery) (State of Tennessee v. David Anthony Avery and Frederick Alexander Avery, (a/k/a Alex Avery)) 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. David Anthony Avery and Frederick Alexander Avery, (a/k/a Alex Avery), (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs July 21, 2009

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. DAVID ANTHONY AVERY and FREDERICK ALEXANDER AVERY (a/k/a ALEX AVERY)

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2006-C-2451 Cheryl Blackburn, Judge

No. M2008-01809-CCA-R3-CD - December 10, 2009

A Davidson County jury convicted the Defendants, David Anthony Avery and Frederick Alexander (“Alex”) Avery , of aggravated robbery, especially aggravated robbery, reckless endangerment, and attempted second degree murder. The trial court sentenced David Avery to a forty-nine year effective sentence and Frederick Avery, a violent offender, to life without the possibility of parole. On appeal, David Avery contends: (1) the evidence is insufficient to sustain his convictions; (2) the trial court erred when it enhanced his sentences; and (3) the trial court erred when it ordered his sentences run consecutively. On appeal, Frederick Avery contends: (1) the evidence is insufficient to sustain his convictions; and (2) the trial court erred when it sentenced him as a violent offender. After thoroughly reviewing the record and applicable authorities, we affirm the trial court’s judgments.

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

ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JERRY L. SMITH and THOMAS T. WOODALL, JJ., joined.

David M. Hopkins, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, David Anthony Avery.

Dumaka Shabazz, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Appellant Frederick Alexander Avery.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Michael E. Moore, Solicitor General; Melissa Roberge, Assistant Attorney General; Victor S. Johnson, III, District Attorney General; Rob McGuire, Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION I. Facts A. Trial This case arises from the June 23, 2006, robbery of a couple, whose throats were slit during the commission of the robbery. For these events, a Davidson County grand jury indicted the Defendants for two counts of especially aggravated robbery and two counts of attempted first degree murder. At their joint trial on these charges, the following evidence was presented: Stephanie Regen testified that in June 2006 she lived with her then boyfriend, Samuel Gift, in the Hunters Pointe Apartment Complex. She said she and her boyfriend sold mostly cocaine but also some marijuana as their sole source of income.

Regen testified David Avery, whom she had known for five or six months, called her the morning of June 23, 2006, and said that he was coming to purchase drugs. She and Gift were alone in their apartment when David Avery and his sister Iris Avery came to purchase narcotics that morning. David Avery gave Regen ten dollars, and she went to a safe, to which only she and Gift had keys, in which they kept the drugs and drug proceeds, and retrieved the drugs. Regen then weighed the drugs, and gave the drugs to Avery. Regen recalled she and Gift kept scales and drugs proceeds in the safe along with the narcotics that they distributed. She estimated that the amount of proceeds contained in the safe at that time was approximately $2700.

Regen said David Avery called her later that day and asked if she was home. He then “hung up” on her. David Avery returned to her apartment at around 4:00 p.m. with his brother Alex Avery, whom she had never met. Gift looked through the peephole, and then Regen allowed the two men into the apartment. The two men talked for a few minutes with Gift and Regen while in their living room. David Avery then followed Regen into the kitchen where the safe was located, while Alex Avery and Gift stayed in the living room. Regen said she opened the safe and started weighing out the drugs. As she did this, David Avery grabbed her hair and slit her throat with a box cutter in one long cut. At the same time, he grabbed the contents of the safe. Regen heard David Avery yell something to the effect of “it’s on” to Alex Avery in the livingroom.

Regen said her memory of the events that followed her throat being cut were a little “sketchy.” She recalled, however, David Avery leading her by Gift and Alex Avery and then to the bedroom of the apartment. Upon entering the room, David Avery immediately asked where they kept their gun. She showed him, and he attempted to cut her again. She said she grabbed the box cutter, which badly sliced her finger. David Avery then told her to get onto the bed. Alex Avery brought Gift into the bedroom, holding the gun Regen had given to Alex Avery to Gift’s side. Alex Avery told Gift to get onto the bed, and David Avery cut Gift with the box cutter from behind one ear to halfway across his throat. Regen said that Gift lost a large amount of blood and that blood clots were coming from the wound in his neck.

Regen recalled she then heard Alex and David Avery discussing whether they should shoot Gift and Regen. The two Defendants discussed how many bullets were in the gun, and the Defendants asked Gift and Regen how many bullets the weapon contained. David Avery then said, “[J]ust shoot them.” Regen said she and Gift started begging for their lives. Gift said to the Defendants, “[L]ook at all this blood, I am going to die anyway.” The Defendants responded that Gift and Regen knew too much about them. Regen told the Defendants she would tell the police that

2 she and Gift had left the screen door open, and they did not know who had attacked them.

The two Defendants left without shooting Gift and Regen, and Regen called 911. When emergency personnel failed to immediately arrive, she began to knock on her neighbors’ doors and eventually found a couple who helped them. Regen said that, although she did not initially identify the attackers, she eventually gave their names to the first officer responding to the scene. She did not, however, give him the details of the attack, including that drugs were involved. Both Regen and Gift were transported to Vanderbilt. She received numerous stitches on her neck, which left a scar. Gift was hospitalized for several days.

Regen said she spoke to police after she was released from the hospital. Shortly after the attack she was afraid to identify her attackers because she was worried they would return since she survived the attack. Regen told the first detective who arrived at the hospital that she did not know who attacked her because she was scared she was going to be in trouble for selling drugs. Detective Newburn then arrived to the hospital and reassured her he was not with the narcotics unit and would not arrest her. Regen said she Abroke down@ and started crying. She told the detective the details of the attack, including that drugs were involved. Regen identified the Defendants as the men who attacked her.

On cross-examination, Regen discussed the procedure she used to sell drugs. She conceded that she had never been charged with selling drugs in connection with this case. She testified she was not sure which of David Avery’s hands held the box cutter. She agreed that, although they had electronic equipment in the house, the Defendants took only money, drugs, and the gun.

Regen testified that neither David or Alex Avery appeared angry until after she weighed out the drugs. She agreed that she did not see Alex Avery in possession of a weapon when he came to the house. She recalled Alex Avery looking though her bedroom drawers for money, but she was unsure whether this was before or after Gift’s throat was cut. She agreed that Alex Avery could have shot her but did not.

Samuel Nathaniel Gift testified that he lived with Regen at the time of the attack. At the time, he had been convicted of possession of marijuana for resale and facilitation of possession of cocaine for resale.

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State of Tennessee v. David Anthony Avery and Frederick Alexander Avery, (a/k/a Alex Avery), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-david-anthony-avery-and-frederick-alexander-avery-tenncrimapp-2009.