State of Tennessee v. Howard Thomas

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 30, 2005
DocketE2003-02090-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Howard Thomas (State of Tennessee v. Howard Thomas) 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. Howard Thomas, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE August 17, 2004 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. HOWARD WALTER THOMAS

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County No. 71670 Richard R. Baumgartner, Judge

No. E2003-02090-CCA-R3-CD - Filed March 30, 2005

The defendant, Howard Walter Thomas, was convicted of first degree premeditated murder; especially aggravated robbery, a Class A felony; especially aggravated kidnapping, a Class A felony; and attempted first degree murder, also a Class A felony. He was sentenced to life imprisonment for the first degree murder conviction and sentenced as a Range I, standard offender to twenty-two years for the especially aggravated robbery conviction, twenty-two years for the especially aggravated kidnapping conviction, and twenty-five years for the attempted first degree murder conviction, with the twenty-two-year sentences to be served concurrently and the twenty-five-year sentence to be served consecutively, for an effective sentence of life plus twenty-five years. On appeal, the defendant raises the following claims: (1) the circumstances surrounding his identification by one of the victims amounted to prejudicial error; (2) the trial court erred by allowing the State to exercise a peremptory challenge based on the juror’s learning disability, by utilizing the pattern jury instructions on the element of deliberation, by proceeding with a death-qualified jury after the State withdrew its intent to seek the death penalty post-trial, and by failing to provide any weight to the mitigating factor of childhood/family background in sentencing for the attempted first degree murder conviction; (3) the evidence was insufficient to support a verdict of guilt with respect to the element of deliberation; (4) the death penalty is unconstitutional under the Tennessee and United States Constitutions; and (5) that cumulative error denied the defendant a fair trial. Following our review, we affirm the convictions but, in light of the subsequent decision of the United States Supreme Court in Blakely v. Washington, 542 U.S. __, 123 S. Ct. 2531 (2004), reduce the sentences for attempted first degree murder, especially aggravated robbery, and especially aggravated kidnapping to twenty-one years, eighteen years, and eighteen years, respectively. We affirm the consecutive sentencing of the defendant.

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

ALAN E. GLENN , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JAMES CURWOOD WITT , JR., J., joined. DAVID G. HAYES, J., filed a dissenting opinion. W. Thomas Dillard and Stephen Ross Johnson, Knoxville, Tennessee (at trial and on appeal); Jeanne L. Wiggins and Russell T. Greene, Knoxville, Tennessee (at trial), for the appellant, Howard Walter Thomas.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; John H. Bledsoe, Assistant Attorney General; Randall E. Nichols, District Attorney General; and William H. Crabtree and Sally Jo Helm, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

Because of the complexity of this matter, we first will give an overview of the facts. While passing through Knoxville on the morning of March 23, 1991, on their way to vacation in North Carolina, John and Yvonne Cook of Wausau, Wisconsin, exited Interstate 275 to check their map for directions. While they were stopped on the entrance ramp, an assailant shot into their van, driven by Mr. Cook, who was struck twice. The shooter, later identified as the defendant, then got into the van with them and drove to a rural area of Knox County. After demanding money from Mrs. Cook, the defendant dumped Mr. Cook’s body on the side of the road and ordered Mrs. Cook out of the van. He forced her onto the ground and attempted to shoot her but had trouble reloading his weapon. A passing motorist startled the defendant, who fled the scene in the victims’ van. By that time, Mr. Cook had died. The defendant was arrested nine years later; and the trial, which is the basis for this appeal, followed.

Testifying as the State’s first witness at trial, Mrs. Cook said that she was asleep in a make- shift bedroll behind the front captain’s chairs in the van on the morning of March 23, 1991, and awoke when her husband pulled off the interstate in Knoxville and onto a ramp. It was raining heavily. As he turned the map light on and reached to get the atlas from the dashboard, he said, “Oh, my God.” She then heard an explosion, followed by another “pop,” as he slumped over in the seat toward her. She knew that he was injured “because there was a lot of blood . . . coming from mostly behind his left ear.” At this time, Mrs. Cook was “sitting pretty much between the two front captain seats” on the floor. The defendant began smashing out the driver’s side window, trying to get into the van, saying, “[H]ow the fuck do you get this power lock – this lock open?” He then opened the door and began pushing Mr. Cook out of the driver’s seat. Mrs. Cook unlatched her husband’s seatbelt, and the defendant pushed him into her arms. She got a “[f]ull facial view” of the defendant as he got into the driver’s seat because the map light was on and all of the dome lights in the van came on when he opened the door. She also noticed he was carrying a gun, which he laid across his lap with the barrel pointing at her head. Mrs. Cook testified that, at this point, the defendant was sitting “[j]ust inches” from her, and she could have touched him if she had wanted to.

The defendant then drove back onto the interstate, headed north, the direction from which the Cooks had just traveled. She applied pressure to her husband’s neck “in hopes that [she] could do something to save his life,” and begged the defendant to release them so she could get medical

-2- help for her husband. The defendant refused, saying, “Shut up, you fucking bitch. He’s already dead.” They continued on the interstate for approximately fifteen to twenty minutes at a “[v]ery high rate of speed.” Mrs. Cook said that after “maybe 10 minutes,” her husband’s heart stopped beating. When she again begged the defendant for medical help for Mr. Cook, the defendant said, “Shut the fuck up and don’t look at me. I’m going to kill you, too.” The defendant then exited the interstate and drove to a rural, two-lane road where he “would kind of speed up and then he would go real slow, and I thought, ‘Well, he’s looking for a place to stop and kill me and dump us out.’” By that time, Mrs. Cook had realized that her husband was dead. The defendant pulled over to the right side of the road and demanded money from her, stating, “[I]t better be more than a hundred dollars.” She reached into her purse, pulled out her husband’s wallet, and gave the defendant the cash from the wallet. The cash was in “many denominations of tens and twenties” and totaled somewhere between “five hundred, eight hundred, perhaps even a thousand dollars.” Mrs. Cook said that, as she handed the money to the defendant, she was “covered with blood” and her husband’s blood was all over her hands.

The defendant then told Mrs. Cook, “Get the fuck out of here and get him out of here.” She opened the passenger side sliding door and attempted to pull her husband’s body out of the van but was unable to do so. The defendant then exited the van, came around behind it, and “dumped” Mr. Cook’s body out onto the ground. Asked how close she was to the defendant, Mrs. Cook replied, “Oh, I stood up right next to him.” She said that the defendant was shorter than she. He ordered Mrs. Cook not to look at him and to get down on her hands and knees beside her husband. He then pointed the gun at Mrs. Cook’s head as he attempted to load it, but he had trouble doing so because he was wearing “black leather-type gloves.” Several of the bullets fell on the ground beside Mrs. Cook.

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State of Tennessee v. Howard Thomas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-howard-thomas-tenncrimapp-2005.