State of Tennessee v. Glenn Lemual Stepp

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 17, 2014
DocketE2013-01291-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Glenn Lemual Stepp (State of Tennessee v. Glenn Lemual Stepp) 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. Glenn Lemual Stepp, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs January 29, 2014

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. GLENN LEMUAL STEPP

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Jefferson County No. 11442 O. Duane Slone, Judge

No. E2013-01291-CCA-R3-CD-FILED-MARCH 17, 2014

A Jefferson County Circuit Court Jury found the appellant, Glenn Lemual Stepp, guilty of attempted first degree murder, a Class A felony, and in violation of an order of protection, a Class A misdemeanor. The trial court imposed a total effective sentence of twenty-five years, eleven months, and twenty-nine days. On appeal, the appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence sustaining his attempted first degree murder conviction, contending that the State failed to prove premeditation. The appellant also complains about the twenty-five-year sentence imposed by the trial court. Upon review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

N ORMA M CG EE O GLE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J AMES C URWOOD W ITT, J R., and J EFFREY S. B IVINS, JJ., joined.

P. Richard Talley, Dandridge, Tennessee, for the appellant, Glenn Lemual Stepp.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; David H. Findley, Senior Counsel; James B. Dunn, District Attorney General; and Jeremy Ball, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

I. Factual Background

A Jefferson County Grand Jury returned a multi-count indictment against the appellant, charging him with attempted first degree murder, three counts of aggravated assault, and violating an order of protection. All of the offenses related to the appellant’s stabbing of his wife, Pamela Stepp.

At trial, the victim testified that in May 2011, she was married to the appellant, and they had three children together. They had separated and reconciled on multiple occasions. The victim obtained an order of protection against the appellant in December 2010, which was still in effect in May 2011. The victim said that she and the appellant separated in August 2010. Thereafter, she met a man online and went with him to another state for a week around Thanksgiving. While she was gone, the appellant learned of the trip and changed the locks on her house. When she returned, he told her that she was “stupid” for having a liaison with another man, and the victim agreed.

The victim said that in April 2011, although their marriage had been troubled for “years,” she allowed the appellant to briefly stay at her residence while he was working a temporary job. She and the appellant did not share a bedroom and were not intimate during his stay. The victim said that she and the appellant had agreed to divorce and that she “was trying to be cordial so we could get the paperwork done.” The victim did not have any interactions with another man during the time the appellant was living with her.

The victim said that on May 12, 2011, she told the appellant to leave because his job was finished. During their conversation, the appellant asked if she planned to sell the waterbed. When she responded affirmatively, the appellant asked her to name a price. The victim described the conversation as “sharp” but not “heated.” She ultimately decided to allow the appellant to have the bed for free. To encourage the appellant’s departure, she emptied the contents of the chest of drawers, the dresser, and the nightstand that went with the bed. She told the appellant that she had removed her belongings from the furniture, that he could take those four pieces, and that he needed to leave. Nevertheless, she knew the appellant would not take the bed that night as it would take hours to drain, and he would need a truck to haul the furniture. The victim described their attitudes toward each other as “cool” but “cordial.” The victim said that she and the appellant did not talk about her relationship with another man.

Afterward, the victim went into the living room, sat on the couch, and began crocheting a baby blanket. The appellant went outside on the porch because the victim did not allow him to drink or smoke in the house. Five to ten minutes later, at around 9:00 or 9:30 p.m., the appellant walked up behind the victim and whispered in her ear, “‘Remember when I told you you weren’t going to kick me around like a soccer ball anymore?’” The victim turned to respond, and the appellant began stabbing her.

The victim recalled that the first stab “hit like the wire in my bra” and that it “went all the way in.” When the appellant pulled the knife from her body, blood poured from the

-2- wound. The second stab pierced the victim’s abdomen, puncturing her kidney. The victim felt the appellant pull the knife upward, and she grabbed his wrist with both of her hands. She pushed his hands back, and he cut her upper right arm. The appellant stabbed each of her breasts then her wrist. She said that when he cut her wrist, the tendons were “hanging out like two pieces of spaghetti.” The victim did not remember whether the appellant spoke to her during the attack. She repeatedly told the appellant “‘no,’ ‘stop,’ and ‘don’t.’” She said that the appellant appeared “very angry.”

The victim said that after the appellant cut her wrist, he stopped stabbing her and started to walk around the couch. The victim grabbed her cellular telephone with her uninjured hand, ran toward the front door, and tried to unlock the door with her wounded hand. The appellant approached from behind her and slapped the cellular telephone from her hand. The victim opened the door and ran across the street to the apartment of her neighbor, Mike Potts. By the time she reached the apartment, she was “soaked” with blood. Potts called 911 to report the stabbing, and he told the 911 operator that the appellant was standing beside a tree across the road. The appellant never came to Potts’s residence to check on the victim.

The victim said that medical personnel arrived and began treating her. She was flown by LifeStar helicopter to the University of Tennessee Medical Center, where she was hospitalized for twelve days. Among her wounds were cuts and punctures to her diaphragm, lung, liver, little finger, thumb, and left wrist. The victim said that “both breasts had to be sewn up.” Additionally, a surgeon had to reconstruct the tendons in her left hand. As a result of “massive scar tissue” in her hand, she was no longer able to bend her wrist.

On cross-examination, the victim said that she was married to the appellant for thirty years but that they were divorced. She had not spoken to the appellant since the stabbing. That day, the victim got home from work around 4:00 or 4:30 p.m. The appellant was on the porch, smoking and drinking alcohol. They did not speak much. She sat on the couch, watching television and crocheting; the appellant stayed on the porch, occasionally coming inside for another drink. The victim did not know what the appellant was drinking but believed it was vodka and orange juice. She said the appellant drank “[q]uite a bit.”

The victim said that she and the appellant “did not have heated arguments” about her relationship with another man and that it “was a dead subject at that time. . . . We were not arguing about a man or men.”

The victim acknowledged that after she was stabbed, she learned that the appellant had told their son Austin that he “was going to kill [the victim] and any boyfriend [she] brought to the house.” The threat occurred a week or two before she was stabbed, but Austin

-3- did not tell the victim earlier “[b]ecause he didn’t think that [the appellant] would do anything.”

The victim said that the man she met online was named Greg.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Glenn Lemual Stepp, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-glenn-lemual-stepp-tenncrimapp-2014.