State of Tennessee v. James Durand Favors, III

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 17, 2021
DocketE2020-01166-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. James Durand Favors, III (State of Tennessee v. James Durand Favors, III) 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. James Durand Favors, III, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

08/17/2021 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs June 29, 2021

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JAMES DURAND FAVORS, III

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Hamilton County No. 308042 Thomas C. Greenholtz, Judge ___________________________________

No. E2020-01166-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

The Defendant-Appellant, James Durand Favors, was charged by information with four counts of aggravated domestic assault. He entered open guilty to pleas to all four counts. Following a sentencing hearing, the trial court sentenced the Defendant as a Range I, standard offender to a total effect sentence of fifteen years’ incarceration to run consecutively to his sentence in two prior cases. The sole issue raised on appeal is whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying the Defendant alternative sentencing. Upon review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., and ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., JJ., joined.

Fisher Wise, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the Defendant-Appellant, James Durand Favors, III.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Katharine K. Decker, Assistant Attorney General; Neal Pinkston, District Attorney General; and Andrew Coyle, Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

The Defendant and the victim, Jamiia Robinson, were “domestic partners” and “at one point cohabitated together.” Between February 28 and March 3, 2017, the Defendant assaulted the victim multiple times at his mother’s house. At the Defendant’s July 2, 2019 guilty plea submission hearing, the State summarized the evidence it would have presented had the Defendant gone to trial. With respect to Count 1, the Defendant and the victim got into an argument that turned violent, with the Defendant “punching her[] and choking her to the point of becoming almost unconscious.” With respect to Count 2, following the strangulation incident, the victim and the Defendant went back to his residence, where he lived with his mother and father, and the Defendant “took a hot metal insert off the top of a stovetop that was hot” and pressed it against the victim’s arm, resulting in “serious scarring and burning[.]” With respect to Count 3, while still at the Defendant’s residence, the Defendant “heated up a butter knife” and applied the heated knife to the victim’s buttocks, resulting in “permanent . . . significant scarring” to her buttocks. With respect to Count 4, while still at the Defendant’s residence, the Defendant “heated up a butter knife” and applied the heated knife to the victim’s labia, resulting in “[third]-degree burns to her genitals.” The Defendant stipulated that there was a factual basis for his guilty pleas, and he entered open guilty pleas to all four counts.

On September 3, 2019, the trial court began the Defendant’s sentencing hearing to determine his sentence length and manner of service. The Defendant’s presentence report was received as an exhibit, and it reflected that the Defendant had previously pleaded guilty in two other Hamilton County Criminal Court cases. The Defendant pleaded guilty to two counts of assault against police officers committed on October 11, 2014, and to one count of domestic assault and one count of false imprisonment of his previous girlfriend, Erica Thornton, committed on December 24, 2014. The Defendant was on bail for those charges when he committed the offenses in the instant case.

At the sentencing hearing, Probation and Parole Officer Kendra Versetto testified that she had prepared the Defendant’s presentence report. Both the presentence report and her interview guide with her interview notes were received as exhibits. The Defendant told her that he was “not thinking logically” during the offenses. He also told her that he was “under the influence of methamphetamine” and was in a “meth-induced psychosis” at the time of the offenses but later told her that he had not used methamphetamine in three years. The Defendant reported that he had worked 50 jobs, and Officer Versetto learned from three of those employers that the Defendant was employed there for a shorter time than he reported. The Defendant also told Officer Versetto that he had a good relationship with his family and reported that he had previously had “one stay inpatient treatment at Moccasin Bend[,]” a psychiatric hospital. Officer Versetto stated that the Defendant scored a moderate risk of re-offending on the Static Risk Offender Needs Guide, Revised (“STRONG-R”) assessment.

On cross-examination, Officer Versetto testified that the Defendant received a sentence to be served in the workhouse for his four previous convictions. She agreed that the Defendant had been originally charged with aggravated kidnapping, aggravated rape, domestic aggravated assault, and interference with emergency calls. Those charges were dismissed on July 2, 2019, and the Defendant pleaded guilty to the instant four counts of -2- aggravated domestic assault the same day. On redirect examination, Officer Versetto affirmed that the Defendant told her he took “responsibility for the aggravated domestic assault, but the burns were consensual[.]” On recross-examination, Officer Versetto stated that the Defendant reported smoking “crystal meth” for a year and subsequently “would only smoke when a girl could get it after th[at] time[.]”

Chattanooga Police Investigator Damarise Goehring testified that she was one of the two police officers that the Defendant had assaulted with respect to his previous convictions. She explained that on October 11, 2014, she responded to a “disorder with a weapon” call regarding the Defendant. When she and another officer attempted a traffic stop of the Defendant, he “immediately jumped out of the car and started approaching” her and the other officer who was accompanying her. He appeared “very angry” and refused to stop or show the officers his hands. When Investigator Goehring and the other officer attempted to put the Defendant in handcuffs, he threw her onto the ground. She then “pulled out her taser [and] tased him[,]” but the Defendant just “looked down at the taser prongs, pulled them out of his chest, threw them on the ground, and kept coming” towards the officers. The other officer also attempted to tase the Defendant and also sprayed him in the face with pepper spray, but “nothing phased him[.]” The Defendant then began striking Investigator Goehring with “[c]losed[-]fist punches[.]” The other officer jumped on the Defendant’s back, and Investigator Goehring attempted to “dry stun” the Defendant with her taster. The Defendant then grabbed the taser from Investigator Goehring and went to her patrol car, where her rifle was hanging from the roof, but was unable to make entry into the car. The Defendant tried to tase Officer Goehring “multiple times[.]” Investigator Goehring and the other officer were eventually able to get the taser away from the Defendant, and other officers subsequently arrived on the scene.

Investigator Goehring agreed that she also responded to a 911 hang up call at the Defendant’s residence on March 1, 2017. Dispatch informed her that the call “came in as a woman screaming that she’d be[en] sexually assaulted” and then a male caller stated that “his girlfriend was suicidal and that he was going to take her to Moccasin Bend so he d[id]n’t need police” at his residence when the dispatcher called back. She explained that upon arriving at the Defendant’s residence, she knocked on the front door, but there was no response. There was no vehicle at the residence, and all of the windows had cardboard covering them.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. James Durand Favors, III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-james-durand-favors-iii-tenncrimapp-2021.