State of Tennessee v. David Cloar

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 27, 2016
DocketE2015-01069-CCA-R3-CO
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. David Cloar (State of Tennessee v. David Cloar) 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 Cloar, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 26, 2016 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. DAVID CLOAR

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Hamblen County No. 90CR284 Thomas Wright, Judge

No. E2015-01069-CCA-R3-CO – Filed July 27, 2016

Following a jury trial in 1992, the Defendant, David Cloar, was found not guilty by reason of insanity on two counts of first degree murder. The Defendant was then involuntarily committed to the Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 33-7-303(c). The Defendant now appeals from the trial court’s order denying his discharge, following a ninety-day furlough to a residential group home, from involuntary commitment. The Defendant contends that it was not established by clear, unequivocal, and convincing evidence that he was ineligible for discharge under the applicable statute. Following our review, we reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand this case for the entry of an order discharging the Defendant pursuant to the discharge plan submitted by the Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute.

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

D. KELLY THOMAS, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., and ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., JJ., joined.

John E. Eldridge, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, David Cloar.

Nathan Henry Mauer, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; John H. Bledsoe, Senior Counsel; Dan E. Armstrong, District Attorney General; and Connie Trobaugh, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION FACTUAL BACKGROUND

I. Procedural Background

On December 11, 2014, the chief executive officer of the Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute (“the Institute”) filed a notice in the trial court pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 33-6-708 stating the Institute’s intent to discharge the Defendant from his involuntary commitment. The notice stated the chief executive officer’s conclusion that the Defendant was eligible for discharge. Attached to the notice was a “furlough/discharge plan” for the Defendant which stated that the Institute intended to furlough the Defendant to a residential group home for ninety days before discharging him. On December 18, 2014, the trial court, on its own motion, ordered an evidentiary hearing on this matter. On April 15, 2015, the Institute filed an amended “furlough/discharge plan” for the Defendant, changing only the residential group home that he would be furloughed to. The evidentiary hearing was held on April 23, 2015.

II. The Underlying Offenses

Edward R. Sempkowski, who assisted in the Defendant’s prosecution, testified at the hearing about the murders. Mr. Sempkowski testified that he had not looked at the Defendant’s file in over twenty years and that he had only briefly reviewed the Defendant’s statements and the autopsy reports prior to the hearing. Mr. Sempkowski recalled that in July 1990, the Defendant “heard the voice of Jesus [Christ] telling him that he [had] work for him to do.” The Defendant then drove from his home in Knoxville to the home of his father and stepmother in Morristown. When his father answered the door, the Defendant told him, “Jesus loves you,” and “proceeded to stab his father multiple times.” After stabbing his father and getting a second knife from the kitchen, the Defendant chased down his stepmother as “she was running across the yard to a neighbor’s house to get some assistance” and “cut her throat.”

Mr. Sempkowski recalled that the wound to the Defendant’s stepmother’s throat was so severe it “almost decapitated her.” Mr. Sempkowski also recalled that the Defendant inflicted a wound to his father’s chest so severe that it exposed his heart. The Defendant stated to the police that after he cut his stepmother’s throat, Jesus Christ spoke to him again and told him that he needed “to make sure the job [was] finished.” The Defendant rolled his stepmother’s body over and stabbed her “multiple times in the anterior chest area.” The Defendant left the knife inside his stepmother’s body “sunk to the hilt.” The Defendant then took off his shoes and sat down underneath a tree to wait for the police. The Defendant “almost immediately” told the responding officers “that he had been told by Jesus [Christ] to kill” the victims. Mr. Sempkowski further recalled that the Defendant was not deemed competent to stand trial until almost two years after the murders. -2- III. Mental Health Professionals

A. Attending Psychiatrist

Doctor David Scott Crawford, an attending psychiatrist at the Institute, was determined by the trial court to be an expert in general and forensic psychiatry. Dr. Crawford testified that he treated the Defendant for approximately nine months prior to being transferred to a different unit of the Institute. During his treatment of the Defendant, Dr. Crawford recommended that the Defendant be discharged from the Institute. Dr. Crawford related to the trial court his understanding of the Defendant’s crimes. Dr. Crawford testified that it was his understanding that, at the time of the offenses, the Defendant was “having delusions that his father was Satan and [that] something bad would happen if he didn’t put a stop to it, [and] that his stepmother might [have been] possessed.” The Defendant was also “having some hallucinations . . . [that] he was getting messages or instructions from God.”

1. The Defendant’s Treatment History

Dr. Crawford testified that the Defendant was initially diagnosed with “schizophrenia, paranoid and chronic,” and was treated with five milligrams per day of Stelazine. Dr. Crawford further testified that it was his understanding that the Defendant’s symptoms remitted “shortly” after he was placed on Stelazine. Approximately a year after the Defendant was diagnosed with schizophrenia, a different psychiatrist diagnosed the Defendant with “brief reactive psychosis, alcohol dependent, and persistent personality disorder[,] non-specific.” Dr. Crawford testified that at some point, the Defendant was taken off of Stelazine. After being taken off the Stelazine, the Defendant “described . . . [that] he was becoming a little bit more religiously preoccupied” and “brought that to the attention of the staff.” Dr. Crawford testified that “people were concerned that [the Defendant] might [have been] in the early stages of decomposing,” so he was placed back on Stelazine and had not been taken off medication since then. Dr. Crawford further testified that there was “no documentation of [the Defendant’s suffering] any clear hallucinations or delusions . . . during that time off medications.”

Dr. Crawford acknowledged that in 1995, a third psychiatrist opined that “without medication and certainly with resumption of drinking,” the Defendant “would be at considerable risk for the prompt and perhaps even explosive return to psychosis” and that the Defendant’s discharge “should be approached slowly and carefully and in deliberate stages or steps.” Dr. Crawford testified that he was aware that this was not the first attempt to discharge the Defendant, that the Institute had attempted to discharge the Defendant in 1995, 1997, and 2001, that all of these other attempts were ultimately withdrawn, and that some of the other attempts might have included mandatory -3- outpatient treatment for the Defendant. Dr. Crawford also testified that in 2003, the Defendant scored as a medium risk to violently reoffend using the “Violence Risk Appraisal Guide.” However, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. David Cloar, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-david-cloar-tenncrimapp-2016.