State of Tennessee v. Donnie Hensley

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 7, 2006
DocketE2005-01444-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Donnie Hensley (State of Tennessee v. Donnie Hensley) 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. Donnie Hensley, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 25, 2006 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. DONNIE JOE HENSLEY

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Greene County No. 04CR208 James E. Beckner, Judge

No. E2005-01444-CCA-R3-CD - Filed August 7, 2006

The defendant, Donnie Joe Hensley, appeals from his Greene County Criminal Court jury conviction of first degree murder. He claims on appeal that the trial court erred (1) in failing to dismiss the indictment because the juvenile court had transferred his case to criminal court without appointing a guardian ad litem, (2) in refusing to remand to juvenile court because a prosecution witness had lied in the juvenile court transfer hearing, and (3) in refusing to extend the plea cut-off date until the defendant attained his 18th birthday. The defendant also claims that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the conviction of premeditated first degree murder. We find no reversible error and affirm the judgment of the criminal court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Criminal Court is Affirmed.

JAMES CURWOOD WITT , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JERRY L. SMITH and THOMAS T. WOODALL, JJ., joined.

William Louis Ricker and Kim C. Miller, Greeneville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Donnie Joe Henlsey.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; John H. Bledsoe, Assistant Attorney General; C. Berkeley Bell, Jr., District Attorney General; and Cecil Mills, Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

The evidence at trial described the grisly murder of the victim, 18-year-old Billie Jo Hensley, on May 2, 2004. Hugh Alexander Williams, age 18, testified that he had been charged along with the defendant for the homicide; he had pleaded guilty to second degree murder in exchange for his truthful testimony in the defendant’s trial. Mr. Williams testified that, about a month before the murder, he, the defendant, and two other associates, Michael Sellers and Latonya Crockett, discussed killing the defendant’s mother, his mother’s boyfriend, and the victim, who was the defendant’s sister. The defendant believed that by killing the other members of his household, he could obtain marijuana and $15,000 in cash that he believed his mother’s boyfriend, who sold marijuana, kept in the locked basement of the residence.

Mr. Williams testified that, on May 2, 2004, the defendant called him and said “today is the day” to kill the defendant’s family. The timing was prompted when the defendant’s mother and her boyfriend took a trip to Kentucky, thus allowing him to kill his sister without interference. Mr. Williams testified that the defendant had agreed to pay Sellers and Crockett $1,000 each from the proceeds of the crimes if they would serve as look-outs. Mr. Williams testified, “I inserted myself.” He asked the defendant for $3,000 from the proceeds. The defendant agreed and stated that he was going to kill his sister with a knife.

Mr. Williams testified that he, Sellers, Crockett, and the defendant rode around in a car, ingested some Valium pills and marijuana, and bought some “rubber” gloves and a telephone card. Mr. Williams and the defendant entered the residence where the defendant and the victim lived. The defendant told Mr. Williams to call the victim out of her bedroom, and when she emerged into the hall, the defendant attacked her from behind with a sword. The defendant initially stabbed the victim through the neck and then used a hunting knife to stab the victim several times. The defendant told Mr. Williams to help him, and Mr. Williams used his pocket knife to stab the victim. He estimated that the victim was stabbed 50 to 60 times.

Through a means devised by Mr. Williams to use the telephone card to call his aunt and to have her call Sellers’ cellular telephone, Mr. Sellers was alerted to come to the defendant’s house. Mr. Sellers and Ms. Crockett arrived within ten minutes of Williams’ initial call. The young men broke into the basement but found neither money nor marijuana. When Mr. Sellers became distressed and cried, he and Ms. Crockett drove away, leaving Mr. Williams and the defendant without transportation. The pair tried to clean the murder weapons in the bathroom and left the house by foot. As they crossed a bridge at nearby Lick Creek, they threw the knives, Mr. Williams’ jacket, and the gloves into the creek. They walked to the home of an acquaintance, Gail Reynolds, who drove the pair to Mr. Williams’ house. There, Mr. Williams used gasoline to burn their clothing.

Mr. Williams testified that the defendant began to talk of suicide. Within a few hours, the police came to the Williams’ residence and arrested both young men. Mr. Williams took the officers to the creek and showed them where the implements of the crime had been thrown.

The investigating police officers found the victim’s body lying in the living room floor. They found the odor of bleach and a bloody towel in the bathroom and latex gloves in the bathtub. The basement door had been “busted open,” and in the basement, they found drug paraphernalia, including plastic bags, scales, and hemostats. Inside a stove in the basement, they found marijuana and rolls of quarters.

The officer who transported the defendant to the jail introduced into evidence a compact disk on which he had recorded part of his en route conversation with the defendant. At one

-2- point, the defendant said, “[M]ental health’s told me that if I didn’t learn to control my emotions that I would wind up in jail. . . . And it looks like that’s happened.”

Other prosecution witnesses established that the murder weapons were recovered from Lick Creek, about one-fourth of a mile from the homicide scene. Forensic examination revealed no fingerprints on the recovered items but established that the burned refuse found at Mr. Williams’ house had been clothing. DNA testing revealed that blood stains found on Mr. Williams’ hand contained his blood as well as blood from the victim and the defendant. A yellow bracelet worn by the defendant bore a sample of the victim’s blood. Ms. Reynolds testified that she furnished the defendant and Mr. Williams a ride to the latter’s house on the afternoon of May 2, 2004. Medical evidence showed that the victim sustained 151 stab wounds, 37 of which penetrated her torso. Several punctured her lungs, heart, and liver. She sustained a head puncture that entered her brain and a stab that traveled completely through her neck. Several of the wounds were consistent with wounds that could be inflicted with the hunting knife that had been found in the creek.

The defendant offered no evidence. The jury found the defendant guilty of premeditated first degree murder, and the trial court imposed a life sentence without the possibility of parole. Following the court’s overruling of the motion for new trial, the defendant perfected a timely appeal.

I. Procedure in Juvenile Court

The defendant, who was a juvenile at the time of the homicide, is aggrieved that the juvenile court transferred his case to criminal court without appointing a guardian ad litem. He acknowledges that the juvenile court did appoint an attorney to represent him at the transfer hearing, but he posits that his mother, his only living parent, was not only the victim’s mother but was also targeted to be killed. For these reasons, the defendant argues, his mother could not have discharged the role of a parent to him during the juvenile court process, necessitating the appointment of a guardian ad litem, as required by rule and as a function of due process of law.

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State of Tennessee v. Donnie Hensley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-donnie-hensley-tenncrimapp-2006.