State of Tennessee v. Douglas McArthur Wilson

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 7, 2018
DocketM2017-00432-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Douglas McArthur Wilson (State of Tennessee v. Douglas McArthur Wilson) 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. Douglas McArthur Wilson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

lN THE COURT OF CRIl\/IINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE January 17,2018 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. D()UGLAS MCARTHUR WILSON

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Smith County F § L No. 2012-CR-250 Brody N. Kane, Judge E D MAY 0 7 2018 NO. M2017-00432-CCA-R3-CD §;ec’.§ ;’y‘"e Appe"a‘@ C<>urfs _`___.__"'_~"'_‘_~_

Defendant, Douglas l\/chrthur Wilson, Was indicted for attempted first degree murder in 2012. After a jury trial, Defendant was convicted of the lesser included offense of attempted second degree murder. The trial court sentenced Defendant to ten years in incarceration After the denial of a motion for new trial, Defendant presents a multitude of issues on appeal. After a thorough review of the record and applicable authorities, We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Aff`lrmed

TIMOTHY L. EASTER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in Which THOMAS T. WoooAl_,L, P.J., and RoBERT L. HoLLoWAY, Jr., J., joined.

Jacky O. Bellar, Jamie D. Winkler, and Samantha L. Key, Carthage, Tennessee, for the appellant, Douglas l\/chrthur Wilson.

Herbert H. Slatery lll, Attorney General and Reporter; Clark B. Thornton, Assistant Attorney General; Tom P. Thompson, District Attorney General; and Jacl< Bare and Javin Cripps, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

F actual and Proceduml Background

On the evening of September 23, 2012, emergency medical personnel Were summoned to a home in rural Smith County based on a report of a stabbing or cutting.

Upon their arrival, they found Timothy Bennett, the victim, at the home of Judith Brown. He was bleeding profusely from a large gash in his neck that extended nearly from one side of his neck to the other. The victim was transported via helicopter to Vanderbilt Hospital in Nashville for treatment He survived. Defendant was arrested and transported to the police station that night. The next morning, Defendant was read his Mz`ranclcz rights and questioned by police. The interview room was equipped with video recording equipment, which recorded the interaction between Defendant and the police. As a result, Defendant was eventually indicted by the Smith County Grand Jury for one count of attempted first degree murder.

I. Hearing on Moi‘z`on to Suppress

ln l\/larch of 2013, Defendant filed a motion to suppress the statement given to police the day after the incident The trial court held a hearing on the motion on April 8, 20l3.l At the hearing, the trial court heard testimony from Shannon Hunt, a Lieutenant with the Detective division of the Smith County Sheriff’ s Department. Lieutenant Hunt was on call the night of the incident and responded to the scene from his residence. When Lieutenant Hunt arrived on the scene, the victim was already being transported by helicopter to Nashville and Defendant was in custody in the back of a patrol car.

Lieutenant Hunt attempted to talk to Defendant when he arrived on the scene but Defendant was “heavily intoxicated on alcohol or pills” and “could barely stand”. Defendant’s family informed the officer that Defendant was on medication, but the officer was not certain how many pills Defendant had taken or what kind of pills Defendant had taken. Lieutenant Hunt “didn’t think it would be fair . . . to talk to him at that time,” so he made the decision to postpone the interview of Defendant to a later time. Defendant was transported to and held at the Smith County Sheriff` s Department.

At approximately 9:12 a.m. the next morning, Lieutenant Hunt assessed Defendant’s condition and believed that Defendant “didn’t appear intoxicated.” In fact, Lieutenant Hunt explained that “[i]f [Defendant] had something left over in his system at the time [he] talked to [Defendant] that morning, it didn’t appear.” Lieutenant Hunt believed that Defendant “understood” his rights and what was going on that morning During questioning by Lieutenant Hunt, Defendant “explained the prior night in detail.”

Defendant testified at the suppression hearing. He explained that at the time of his arrest, he was taking allergy medicine, antibiotics, an anti-inflammatory, and Xanax. Defendant insisted that “three or four days” prior to the incident, he had refilled a

~l At the hearing in April of 2013, the trial judge was the honorable David E. Durham. Judge

Durham retired prior to the trial in this matter. _ 2 _

prescription for “niiiety of the Xanax.” Defendant explained on the night of September 23, he drank eight beers and took “all” of the Xanax, which would have amounted to approximately eighty pills. Defendant claimed that he was taken to the jail and placed “in a cell with not even a bathroom.” Defendant claimed that he was not taken to the hospital, and that he did not “reinember [the interview] at all.”

The trial court reviewed the videotaped interview and issued an oral ruling denying the motion to suppress2 In the ruling, the trial court noted that Defendant was clearly “in custody” at the time of the interview The officers present during the interview “fully advised” Defendant of his Mz'mnda rights. The trial court noted that Defendant “clearly did not sign a waiver” but that Defendant was “very cooperative, never refused to answer [any] questions, [gave] no indication at all that he didn’t want to talk or tell his side of the story, and at no time did he ever ask for a lawyer even though he was advised of that particular right.” The trial court noted Defendant’s “cooperative,” “spontarieous” answers to questions, and determined that Defendant knowingly and voluntarily waived his rights. The trial court observed that Defendant never requested a lawyer and that the statements were voluntary.

ln September of 2014, for reasons unclear to this Court, Defendant filed a second motion to suppress the statement The second motion to suppress raised basically the same issues as the first motion to suppress The record contains neither a transcript from a hearing on this motion nor an order disposing of this motion. However, at trial, defense counsel renewed the motion during the testimony of Lieutenant Hunt when the State attempted to introduce the videotape of the interview. At that time, the trial court upheld “the ruling [the original trial judge] previously made [on the motion to suppress].”

II. Trz`al Testz`mony

The victim was twenty-two years old at the time of the incident He explained that there were three houses on a “family compound” down the gravel road where the incident occurred. The first house belonged to Ruth Bedgood, Defendant’s mother-in-law. Defendant’s house was in the center. Defendant lived at the house with his stepson, Kate Cortez, Jr.; l\/lr. Cortez’s girlfriend; and Deborah Wilson, Defendant’s wife. l\/lrs. Wilson was the sister of Judith Brown, whose house was the last house on the road. The victim was unemployed and lived with Judith Brown. Several other people lived at the Brown residence, including Stetson Brown, Erica Brown, Larry Stump, and Trisha Brown. The victim had been living there a few months and was “acquainted” with Defendant; he explained that they did not have “much of a relationship” but had not had any conflicts.

2 There is no order disposing of the motion to suppress in the technical record on appeal _ 3 _

The victim helped Defendant split wood on several occasions The victim had a blue “mohawk” at the time of the incident

ln the early evening of the incident, the victim was “getting wood” for a bonfire for Erica Brown’s birthday. The victim had a “couple of beers” around 7:00 p.m. Stetson Brown helped the victim get the fire started.

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