State of Tennessee v. Gerald L. "Pete" Shirley

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 7, 2004
DocketE2002-03096-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Gerald L. "Pete" Shirley (State of Tennessee v. Gerald L. "Pete" Shirley) 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. Gerald L. "Pete" Shirley, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs November 18, 2003

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. GERALD L. “PETE” SHIRLEY

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Scott County No. 7583 E. Shayne Sexton, Judge

No. E2002-03096-CCA-R3-CD January 7, 2004

A Scott County jury convicted the Defendant, Gerald L. “Pete” Shirley, of especially aggravated kidnapping, one count of aggravated sexual battery, five counts of aggravated rape, one count of aggravated assault as a lesser-included offense of attempted second degree murder, and another count of aggravated assault. The trial court imposed an aggregate sentence of sixty years in prison. On appeal, the Defendant contends the following: (1) the trial court erred in permitting the jury to take the “bill of particulars” into the jury room during deliberations; (2) the Defendant’s convictions for aggravated rape by digital penetration and aggravated rape by oral sex violate the principles of double jeopardy and duplicity of offenses; (3) the trial court erred in failing to dismiss or merge the especially aggravated kidnapping conviction into one of the aggravated rape convictions; (4) the trial court erred in refusing to permit the jury to review a copy of the statement that the victim gave to a police officer; (5) the trial court erred in failing to instruct on the lesser-included offense of false imprisonment; (6) insufficient evidence exists to support the convictions; and (7) the trial court erred in sentencing the Defendant to an effective sixty-year sentence. After thoroughly reviewing the record, we conclude that the trial court committed plain error by instructing the jury that aggravated assault was a lesser included-offense of attempted second degree murder. Accordingly, we reverse the Defendant’s conviction of aggravated assault in count eleven of the indictment and modify his sentence to an aggregate fifty years in prison. We affirm the Defendant’s remaining convictions.

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

ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOSEPH M. TIPTON and JERRY L. SMITH , JJ., joined.

Julie A. Rice, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Gerald L. Shirley.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Michael Moore, Solicitor General; David H. Findley, Assistant Attorney General; William Paul Phillips, District Attorney General; John W. Galloway, Jr., and Lori Ann Phillips-Jones, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION I. Facts

This case arises from the kidnapping, rape and shooting of C.B.1 (“victim”) on August 17, 1999, near a strip mine off Kingtown Road near the town of Winfield in Scott County. The Scott County Grand Jury indicted the Defendant, Gerald L. “Pete” Shirley, on one count of especially aggravated kidnapping, one count of aggravated sexual battery, eight counts of aggravated rape, one count of attempted second degree murder, and one count of aggravated assault. Following a trial on July 26, 2000, in the Scott County Criminal Court, a jury convicted the Defendant of especially aggravated kidnapping, five counts of aggravated rape, one count of aggravated sexual battery, one count of aggravated assault as a lesser-included offense of attempted second-degree murder, and another count of aggravated assault. The trial court subsequently imposed an aggregate sentence of sixty years in prison. The Defendant now appeals.

The following evidence was presented at the Defendant’s trial. The victim testified that she lived in McCreary County, Kentucky, all her life and that, on August 16, 1999, at 5:00 p.m., she went to her cousin Sandy Brown’s house in McCreary County to watch Brown’s children while Brown and her husband went out to celebrate their anniversary. The victim reported that she watched the children until about 10:00 p.m., and then her boyfriend Doug Wagers picked her up in his new Jeep. The victim explained that she and Wagers planned to “go four-wheeling” at a strip mine near Winfield, Tennessee, in Wagers’s new Jeep. She stated that Wagers had been drinking while she was babysitting and that he had about a case of beer in the Jeep when he arrived at Brown’s house. The victim testified that, before going to Winfield, the couple drove to Wagers’s grandmother’s house. She stated that the Defendant, who was Wagers’s uncle, lived with Wagers’s grandmother. She explained that the Defendant was a tattoo artist and often gave tattoos to members of Wagers’s family. The victim stated that the Defendant came out of the house just as she and Wagers were about to drive away. The victim then identified the Defendant in the courtroom and explained that the Defendant had a mustache when they picked him up in the Jeep on August 16, 1999. She stated that, when the Defendant approached the Jeep, Wagers asked the Defendant to give him a tattoo, so the Defendant retrieved a bag from the house and then got inside the Jeep. The victim testified that they drove to her house, and then the Defendant gave Wagers a tattoo after the two “drank a little bit.” She explained that Wagers and the Defendant drank an entire case of beer at her house. The victim stated that she did not get a tattoo or drink any beer that night.

The victim explained that, after the Defendant and Wagers finished the case of beer, all three got back into the Jeep and drove to Wagers’s father’s house to get more beer. She stated that they found three beers and then drove to a gas station to fill up the Jeep. The victim explained that they then drove to “the strip pits” near Winfield so they could “[g]o four-wheeling.” She stated that she was in the front passenger’s seat and the Defendant was in the back seat behind Wagers. The victim testified that, once they got to the strip mine, Wagers drove the Jeep around the mine. She explained

1 It is the policy of this Court to use initials of a rape victim rather than the victim’s name.

-2- that “[Wagers] . . . hadn’t been through any mud holes until we got to this one and he decided he’d try to go through it. . . . [H]e dropped down in it and then we tried to get back out and couldn’t.” The victim testified that the Jeep got stuck in the mud hole at approximately 4:00 a.m. on August 17, 1999. She explained that:

We tried to get it out and we couldn’t, so we got out [of the Jeep] and it was late so [Wagers] didn’t want to go get anybody because he said that nobody would probably help us because it being so late, that we’d just wait till in the morning and then get it out then. So then [Wagers] laid down and went to sleep after that.

The victim stated that Wagers was “[p]retty drunk” when he fell asleep at the strip mine. She testified that she thought that Wagers and the Defendant had “smoked a [marijuana] joint” that evening. The victim stated that she laid down beside Wagers and fell asleep after a few minutes. She reported that the Defendant was walking around when she and Wagers laid down.

The victim testified that a gunshot woke her up and that, when she looked to her left, she saw that the Defendant was holding a gun. She stated that she had seen the gun earlier in the evening when the Defendant placed it on the counter while he did Wagers’s tattoo. The victim described the gun as an “old looking” revolver with a long barrel. She stated that, after the Defendant woke her up with the gunshot, “I didn’t want him to know I was awake so I just laid back down and dozed back off.” The victim stated that she awoke a second time because the Defendant was rubbing the inside of her thigh. She explained that the Defendant was located to her left and was holding the gun as he rubbed her thigh.

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State of Tennessee v. Gerald L. "Pete" Shirley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-gerald-l-pete-shirley-tenncrimapp-2004.