State of Tennessee v. Dustin Shawn Price

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 26, 2013
DocketM2012-00117-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Dustin Shawn Price (State of Tennessee v. Dustin Shawn Price) 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. Dustin Shawn Price, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE June 18, 2013 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. DUSTIN SHAWN PRICE

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2009-C-2681 Seth Norman, Judge

No. M2012-00117-CCA-R3-CD - Filed August 26, 2013

The defendant, Dustin Price, was convicted by a Davidson County Criminal Court jury of first degree felony murder, first degree premeditated murder, two counts of reckless endangerment, and three counts of attempted first degree murder. The two first degree murder convictions were merged, and the defendant received an effective sentence of life plus 40 years in the Department of Correction. On appeal, he argues that the trial court erred by: (1) denying his motion to sever offenses; (2) admitting jail house recordings of his telephone conversations with a Davidson County Jail inmate; (3) allowing the prior testimony of a witness under Tennessee Rule of Evidence 803(26); and (4) ordering consecutive sentencing. Following our review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

A LAN E. G LENN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which N ORMA M CG EE O GLE and D. K ELLY T HOMAS, J R., JJ., joined.

Rob McKinney, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Dustin Shawn Price.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Benjamin A. Ball, Assistant Attorney General; Victor S. Johnson, III, District Attorney General; and Renee R. Erb and Sarah N. Davis, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

This case arises out of two shootings that occurred in Hermitage on March 26 and March 29, 2008. On March 26, Todd Tinnin and Patrick Fielder were inside a home on South Graycroft Avenue when someone wearing a Halloween mask and traveling in a gold- colored car fired multiple 9-millimeter gunshots at the house. On March 29, Heather Silas, her boyfriend, Aaron Dixon, two other women, Megan Ryman and Kimberly Martin, and Silas’ young daughter were inside a home on Linden Green when someone in a gold Nissan Altima fired multiple 9-millimeter gunshots into the home, which killed the pregnant Silas and injured Dixon. The defendant was developed as a suspect in both cases, as well as in a third shooting that occurred on November 11, 2008, in which two men, Mario Brooks and Robert Earle, Jr., were shot and injured by a .45-caliber pistol while traveling in a vehicle at New Hope Road and Central Pike.

Based on all those incidents, the Davidson County Grand Jury returned a sixteen- count indictment in which it charged the defendant for offenses arising out of the March 26 shooting, the defendant and a co-defendant, Christopher Alexander, for offenses arising out of the March 29 shooting and a March 30 traffic stop in which the defendant was the driver and Alexander his passenger, and the defendant for offenses arising out of the November 11 shooting. Specifically, the defendant was charged with the March 26, 2008 attempted first degree premeditated murders of Samuel Todd Tinnin and William Patrick Fielder (Counts 1 and 2), the November 11, 2008 attempted first degree premeditated murders of Robert Wilson Earle, Jr. and Mario Dwayne Brooks, Jr. (Counts 11 and 12), the November 11, 2008 possession of drug paraphernalia (Count 13), being a felon in possession of a firearm on November 11, 2008 (Count 14), the November 11, 2008 possession of a firearm with the intent to employ it during a criminal offense (Count 15), and the November 11, 2008 employment of a firearm during the commission of or attempt to commit a dangerous felony (Count 16). The defendant and his co-defendant1 were charged with the March 29, 2008 first degree premeditated and felony murders of Heather Silas (Counts 3 and 4), the March 29, 2008 attempted first degree premeditated murders of Aaron Dixon, Megan Ryman, and Kimberly Martin (Counts 5, 6, and 7), the March 30, 2008 possession of .5 grams or more of a Schedule II controlled substance with the intent to sell or deliver (Count 8), the March 30, 2008 possession of a firearm with the intent to go armed during the commission of a dangerous felony (Count 9), and being a felon in possession of a handgun on March 30, 2008 (Count 10).

On May 26, 2010, the defendant filed a motion to sever the three sets of offenses, arguing that they were unrelated, that evidence of each would be inadmissible at the trial of the others, and that trying them together would result in unfair prejudice to his defense. At the September 10, 2010 hearing on the motion to sever, retired Hermitage Police Department Homicide Detective Clinton Vogel testified that he first became involved in the case when

1 The record in this case contains a motion by the defendant’s co-defendant, Christopher Alexander, to sever his case from the defendant’s. There is no order on that motion in the record, but it was apparently granted.

-2- he was called to respond to the March 29, 2008, 10:30 p.m. shooting on Linden Green. In that case, a pregnant woman, Heather Silas, was killed and her boyfriend, Aaron Dixon, was injured when individuals pulled up in front of the house in a gold-colored Nissan or Honda and sprayed the house with 9-millimeter bullets. Two other women, Megan Ryman and Kimberly Martin, were in the residence at the time of the shooting but were not injured. The house was “absolutely riddled” with bullets, and officers recovered twenty spent shell casings and seven projectiles from the scene.

Detective Vogel testified that Dixon and one of the two female victims gave him the name of the defendant as a suspect, with both of them informing him that the defendant had accused Dixon of having committed a home invasion/armed robbery at the defendant’s home three or four days earlier, in which he had duct-taped the defendant’s sister and her friends. Dixon also told him that the defendant drove a gold Nissan Altima, and Detective Vogel subsequently learned that the defendant had access to a gold Nissan Altima that was registered to his seventeen-year-old sister, Amy Price. Detective Vogel stated that the defendant was stopped in that vehicle on March 30. Inside the vehicle, officers found a live 9-millimeter round, a baseball bat, a hammer, plant material that appeared to be marijuana, a white powder substance, a loaded pistol, a “large grotesque Halloween mask,” blue rubber gloves, a blue whiskey bottle bag, and a second loaded firearm that was “secreted underneath a panel.”

Detective Vogel testified that he first learned about the March 26 shooting from a fellow detective to whom the case had been assigned. In that case, an individual wearing a “really ugly scary Halloween-type mask,” similar to the one recovered from the defendant’s vehicle, was seen walking with a TEC-9 machine pistol toward the rear of a house on South Graycroft and firing numerous shots at the house. A witness reported that a gold-colored automobile was parked near his house at the time of the shooting, and the witness identified the defendant from a photographic lineup as one of the perpetrators. On the night of the Linden Green shooting, the house on Graycroft was set on fire.

Detective Vogel testified that during the course of his investigation, a man named Mario Brooks came forward to inform the detectives that Christopher Alexander had sold a TEC-9 pistol to one of Brooks’s acquaintances, telling the purchaser that there were “two bodies on it,” which was street terminology meaning that the weapon had been used in two murders. Brooks told the detectives that his acquaintance had been stopped by the police, who had recovered the gun.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Dustin Shawn Price, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-dustin-shawn-price-tenncrimapp-2013.