State of Tennessee v. Frank Gaitor

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 23, 2002
DocketE2001-02531-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Frank Gaitor (State of Tennessee v. Frank Gaitor) 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. Frank Gaitor, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs August 20, 2002

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. FRANK GAITOR

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Washington County No. 25133B Robert E. Cupp, Judge

No. E2001-02531-CCA-R3-CD December 23, 2002

Frank Gaitor appeals from his Washington County Criminal Court convictions of Class B felony possession of 0.5 grams or more of cocaine with intent to sell and misdemeanor simple possession of marijuana. He is presently serving an effective 22-year sentence as a Persistent Offender for these crimes. In this direct appeal, he raises numerous challenges to the firmity of the conviction proceedings. Upon examination, however, none of these claims warrant relief. Thus, we affirm.

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 GARY R. WADE, P.J., and ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER , J., joined.

Clifton R. Corker, Johnson City, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Frank Gaitor.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; Angele M. Gregory, Assistant Attorney General; Joe C. Crumley, Jr., District Attorney General; and Steve Finney, Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Viewed in the light most favorable to the state, the evidence at trial demonstrated that on November 30, 1998, members of the First Judicial District Drug Task Force went to the Fairfield Inn in Johnson City, where they were informed the defendant and Lynn Benson were guests, for the purpose of arresting them on outstanding warrants. At approximately seven o’clock that evening, agents observed the defendant and Ms. Benson drive into the hotel parking lot in a dark red, small, four-door vehicle. The defendant was driving. The two got out of the car and went to an upstairs room in the hotel.

In order to get the two to come out of the room without damaging hotel property, Steve Wheat, the Assistant Director of the Drug Task Force, called the defendant and Ms. Benson’s hotel room and claimed to be an employee of the hotel. He told Ms. Benson, who answered the phone, that the vehicle in which she and the defendant had arrived had been involved in an accident and requested that they come downstairs. The defendant and Ms. Benson began to leave the room, and as they did so, agents of the Drug Task Force who had stationed themselves outside the room, took the two into custody.

Inside the hotel room, officers found a small amount of marijuana in a plastic bag and a cigar “blunt” on the nightstand. The defendant claimed that the marijuana was his, not Ms. Benson’s. Upon subsequent testing, the marijuana was determined to weigh less than one-tenth of an ounce.

As the defendant was taken through the parking lot, he was asked whose car he had been driving, and he responded that it belonged to some girl named Shawna. He was asked whether there was anything in the car, meaning drugs, and he responded that there was nothing in it, and the officers could search it. With the assistance of a police dog, they proceeded to do so and discovered a plastic bag in the ash tray which contained several smaller bags, each containing a single rock of what appeared to be crack cocaine. An expert from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation later identified the substance in the bag as six rocks of cocaine base weighing a cumulative total of 5.8 grams. Members of the drug task force estimated the street value of the cocaine to be in the range of $1400 to $1600.

According to members of the Drug Task Force, they had seen the defendant driving the vehicle from which the crack cocaine was recovered in the days and weeks prior to November 30.

Shawna Lee Warren Whitaker testified that in November 1998, she owned a burgundy vehicle which she identified alternately as a Plymouth Horizon and a Dodge Shadow. She was living in Ohio at this time, and she left the car in the custody of her father. Ms. Whitaker testified that her father told her that he had rented her car to the defendant, who was a family friend. She received $200 while she was in Ohio for rental of the car. When Ms. Whitaker returned to Tennessee sometime prior to Christmas 1998, her car was in the hotel parking lot with underinflated tires. Her husband had to have the car retrieved by a tow truck. When Ms. Whitaker saw the defendant sometime later, he told her not to worry because she was not in any trouble.

Jaquetta Lynn Benson testified as a witness for the state. In exchange for her testimony, charges against her in this case had been nolle prosequied. Further, upon truthful testimony in the defendant’s case, she was to receive a recommendation for a two-year probated sentence in a separate case for her guilty plea to the offense of facilitation of sale of cocaine. With some reluctance, Ms. Benson recounted the events of the date of the offense. She had been with the defendant that day in a maroon, four-door car. They went to his mother’s house. The defendant got out of the car, and when he returned, he had a sandwich bag in his hand. Ms. Benson first testified that she did not know what was in the bag, but she later acknowledged that although she did not see the contents, she “knew” it was crack cocaine. Ms. Benson claimed she did not know whether the defendant had the bag in his hand when he first got out of the car, but she acknowledged a prior

-2- statement in which she said the defendant had the bag when he got out of the car at his mother’s house. Ms. Benson testified that when they went to the hotel, they took their belongings upstairs. She thought the defendant took the sandwich bag inside with him. During a vigorous cross- examination, Ms. Benson acknowledged that she had a cellular telephone in her possession, even though she had no income. She also admitted having previously signed an affidavit of indigency in which she claimed she had no income in the year 1997, even though she filed a tax return for 1997 on which she listed income of $113.

The defendant’s trial strategy centered on attempts to discredit the state’s witnesses, particularly Ms. Benson and Larry Robbins.1 Mr. Robbins was a former member of the Drug Task Force whose employment with the City of Johnson City was terminated following an internal department dispute unrelated to the defendant’s case or any other criminal case.2 The defendant’s only witness was a forensic scientist from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation who testified that he had been unable to recover any fingerprints on the seven plastic bags recovered with the crack cocaine.

The jury found the defendant guilty of possession of 0.5 grams or more of cocaine with intent to sell and simple possession of marijuana. At the sentencing hearing, the trial court found the defendant to qualify as a Range III Persistent Offender and imposed concurrent sentences of 22 years for the felony cocaine conviction and eleven months, 29 days for the misdemeanor marijuana conviction.

Following unsuccessful rulings on the motion for new trial and amended motion for new trial, the defendant initiated this appeal.

The issues before us are numerous and are as follows:

(1) Whether the trial court properly denied the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence obtained as a result of the warrantless search of the car the defendant was driving on the date of his arrest. (2) Whether the trial court should have granted the defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal. (3) Whether the trial court made proper evidentiary rulings in (a) Excluding evidence regarding Larry Robbins’ termination from the Drug Task Force;

1 T he defendant’s closing argument has not been included in the appellate record.

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State of Tennessee v. Frank Gaitor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-frank-gaitor-tenncrimapp-2002.