State of Tennessee v. Henry Lee Berry

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 3, 2000
DocketE1999-00704-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Henry Lee Berry (State of Tennessee v. Henry Lee Berry) 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. Henry Lee Berry, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE June 2000 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. HENRY LEE BERRY

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County No. 66841, Richard Baumgartner, Trial Judge

No. E1999-00704-CCA-R3-CD August 3, 2000

Henry Lee Berry appeals his Knox County conviction for second degree murder. Berry contends that (1) the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction; (2) the trial court erroneously admitted into evidence two recorded 911 telephone calls and an order of protection entered against the appellant by the victim; and (3) the trial court erred by failing to grant a mistrial when evidence of a pending rape charge in Nashville was introduced before the jury. Additionally, the appellant urges adoption of DNA testing on decomposed bodies to positively establish the identity of the victim. Although we conclude that admission of the 911 telephone calls and the order of protection was error, the error was harmless. Moreover, finding no other reversible error of law, we affirm the judgment of conviction entered by the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Criminal Court is affirmed.

DAVID G. HAYES, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., J. and NORMA MCGEE OGLE , J., joined.

Keith E. Haas, Sevierville, Tennessee, attorney for appellant, Henry Lee Berry.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter, Michael Moore, Solicitor General, Mark A. Fulks, Assistant Attorney General, Randall E. Nichols, District Attorney General, and Scott Green, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

The appellant, Henry Lee Berry, was found guilty by a Knox County jury of the second degree murder of Mary Leslie Kingree. The trial court sentenced the appellant, as a range II offender, to thirty-five years in the Department of Correction. In this appeal as of right, the appellant raises the following issues for our review: I. Whether the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict of second degree murder; II. Whether the State should be required to positively identify the body of the homicide victim by DNA analysis;

III. Whether the trial court properly admitted the “911" tape recordings and testimony regrading an order of protection against the appellant; and

IV. Whether the trial court should have granted a mistrial after admitting the “911" tape recordings.

Finding no reversible error of law, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Background On May 14, 1998, Detective Dwight Loop with the Knoxville Police Department was dispatched to a location near the Fifth Avenue viaduct. At the scene he was met by two uniformed police officers who directed him to a wooded area on the east side of Second Creek. The “area . . .was frequented by homeless people. It was like – they had been using different areas of that part of the creek as a camp.” Entering the area, Detective Loop observed “what appeared to be a human body - - under some fifty-five gallon steel drums between the fence and an access road that runs . . . parallel to the creek.” The body was located about one hundred yards from one of the individual encampments. “The body was badly decomposed. It had a heavy infestation of maggots. The hair had slipped off the scalp. It was pretty well gone.” A pair of pants and “either a shirt or blouse” were on the body. The remains were then taken to the University of Tennessee morgue.

Dr. Sandra Elkins, Knox County Medical Examiner, received the body of the victim on May 15, 1998. Her post-mortem examination revealed: . . .[W]hat I had there was that it was the body of a Caucasian female [approximately forty years of age], and the first thing that caught my attention was that her [dark colored] jeans had been removed from her basically inside out with the left leg still caught around the shoe that was on the left foot. ... Well, I called Dr. Murray Marks in the Department of Anthropology[ 1] when I saw what I had because the decomposition was so advanced that I knew that there would not be any organs remaining to be able to tell the cause of death. And if we were able to establish a cause of death, it would only be through the skeletal structures. ... The internal organs had undergone decomposition, and the maggots feed on those also. ... The skin that was left on the body was dried, brown, leather. . .like.

1 She explained that Dr. M urray Ma rks is a forensic a nthropolo gist; whereas, she is a forensic path ologist. “I’m an MD; he’s a PhD . My spec ialty is in the soft tissue structur es of the bod y more so, like the organs; wh ereas, his specialty is solely the bone or th e skeletal structur es.”

-2- ... Dr. Marks and I estimated the [victim had been dead] three to four weeks at that time of year. ... There were two fractures, one on either side of the mandible or the jaw. . . The fractures were fairly symmetrical, and they were behind the impacted wisdom tooth on the lower jaw. ... The cricoid cartilage or the lowest cartilage in the neck or larynx was fractured. . . The hyoid bone was fractured on the right side. . . These are the typical fractures that we see in strangulation deaths. ... The body did not have a right hand. There was just – basically where the hand would connect to the wrist there was just a stump there.

Dr. Elkins confirmed that the body was delivered as a “Jane Doe” and presumptively identified as Mary Leslie Kingree. In attempting to identify the deceased, Dr. Elkins, in conjunction with law enforcement, attempted to obtain the dental records of Ms. Kingree. The dental records were unavailable as they had been “ destroyed in a flood.”

Dr. Murray Marks testified that he examined the skeletal remains of the body. He explained that “[b]y looking at the breaks we can tell things about force, where it was applied. We can look at the breaks and tell if that happened before death, around the time of death, or after death.” In examining the body in this case, Dr. Marks discovered that the jaw bone was fractured “on both sides back in the corners.” Bilateral fractures of this nature indicate that “there’s been some type of a blow to the front part of the jaw. . . .” He opined that “[i]t would take a pretty extreme force . . . substantial force” to create such an injury, e.g., being struck with “a rock, club, tire, iron, pipe,” “a rock or a brick.”

On the date the body was discovered, Reverend Alan Reynolds was present at the scene. He was known on the streets as Brother Blue and, for the past twelve years, has been a “street preacher” providing a ministry to the chronic homeless. He holds “church services outdoors for the street people every Sunday” and “then we have a church at 618 Broadway. . . .” Reverend Reynolds testified that he was acquainted with Mary Leslie Kingree, whom he knew as “Katy.” He described “Katy” as “five foot, five foot two, . . . a hundred and ten, a hundred and fifteen, sixteen pounds.” “She was born with one arm that wasn’t fully developed. . . . [her arm went to about] four to six inches above where the wrist would be.” He recalled that he had not seen “Katy” for the “three or four weeks prior to the day that this body was found.” “[S]he had been pretty regular in attendance at my church, and was, . . . trying to get her life together. . . .” “[W]e took her some food and some clothes, and [she] said, “I will see you-all at church.” “[T]hat is the last time we saw her.” He explained that she had been “staying on the concrete slab, which was approximately . . . fifty feet from where her body was found.” He stated that the appellant and Ms. Kingree “camped together” and “traveled together.” However, he never saw the appellant and Ms. Kingree “fight or having

-3- verbal or physical altercations. . . .” He also stated that Ms.

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State of Tennessee v. Henry Lee Berry, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-henry-lee-berry-tenncrimapp-2000.