State of Tennessee v. John Mark Burns

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 21, 2004
DocketW2003-01464-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. John Mark Burns (State of Tennessee v. John Mark Burns) 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. John Mark Burns, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON August 3, 2004 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JOHN MARK BURNS

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Carroll County No. 02CR-1868 C. Creed McGinley, Judge

No. W2003-01464-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 21, 2004

While initially indicted on three counts of attempted first degree murder, the defendant, John Mark Burns, was convicted on three counts of attempted second degree murder. The trial court imposed sentences of eleven years for each offense, all of which are to be served concurrently. In this appeal of right, the defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, he argues that the trial court erred in several of its instructions to the jury, and he contends that the sentence is excessive. Because the trial court erred in its application of certain enhancement factors, the defendant’s sentences are modified to three concurrent nine-year terms. Otherwise, the judgments of the trial court are affirmed.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgments of the Trial Court Affirmed as Modified

GARY R. WADE, P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS T. WOODALL and NORMA MCGEE OGLE, JJ., joined.

Benjamin S. Dempsey, Huntingdon, Tennessee, for the appellant, John Mark Burns.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; Michael Markham, Assistant Attorney General; and Eleanor Cahill, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

On January 5, 2002, Deandre Walker, who had been acquainted with the defendant for approximately nine years and who had purchased marijuana from him regularly during that time, telephoned the defendant to arrange a meeting to purchase marijuana. According to Walker, he was accompanying two friends, Melvin Bosley and Belton Luter, who were unaware of the planned drug sale, to see a tattoo artist. When they approached Clarke’s Grocery, the pre-arranged meeting site, he asked Luter, who was driving, to stop so that he could purchase a soft drink. Walker was seated in the front passenger seat of the vehicle and Bosley was in the back. A dark colored Chevrolet pickup truck emerged from the side of the store and stopped next to the Luter vehicle, passenger side to passenger side. According to Walker, he rolled down his window as the defendant, armed with “a long gun,” stepped out of his vehicle and fired at least three gunshots. Walker was shot in the right wrist, left middle finger, and shoulder. Luter, who was able to drive away despite being followed by the truck, stopped for help at a nearby residence.

Walker, hospitalized for more than a month, had six surgeries but, at the time of trial, was still unable to use his wrist. While conceding that he may have originally told police that he did not know the identity of his assailant, Walker nevertheless made a positive identification of the defendant at trial. During cross-examination, he denied having used cocaine or heroin on the day of the offense and further denied that there was a crock pot containing methamphetamine in the back of the Luter vehicle.

While in his residence on the night of the shooting, Timothy Gene Pillow heard a gunshot followed by “some vehicles racing up the road.” Later, a black man knocked at his front door and informed him that his “buddy ha[d] been shot. The victim was lying on the porch. After telephoning 911, Pillow wrapped Walker’s shoulder in a towel. He recalled that the victim repeated over and over, “‘I can’t believe he shot me.’”

Pillow’s neighbor, Kenneth Wayne Bartholomew, heard three gunshots on the night of the shooting followed by a pause and then three more gunshots. When he looked outside, he observed Luter’s sport-utility vehicle in front of the Pillow residence and then saw a dark colored, full-sized Chevrolet pickup truck turn next to his residence, back up, and then drive by his residence. Bartholomew heard someone in the truck yell, “‘I don’t give a [g.d.] I want to go back.’” Based on the timing of the gunshots, Bartholomew believed that the shots had been fired by a semi-automatic weapon.

Carroll County Sheriff’s Deputy Timothy Meggs, who assisted in the investigation, did not question Walker, explaining that the victim was in too much pain; however, the deputy did recall that when he asked the victim whether he knew who fired the shots, he replied, “‘No.’” According to Deputy Meggs, no illegal drugs or weapons were found in the Luter Explorer, which was damaged by bullet holes, and none of the three occupants were in the possession of illegal drugs. While acknowledging that there was a crock pot in the vehicle, the deputy recalled that it was empty. He also remembered finding part of the victim’s middle finger in the floorboard. During cross- examination, he acknowledged that neither the victim nor his two companions had identified the defendant as their assailant on the evening of the crime. Deputy Meggs also acknowledged that Bosley had initially provided him with an incorrect name and address.

Deputy David Lee Bunn testified that Walker and his companions provided a physical description of the shooter. He confirmed that none of the three men identified their assailant by name.

Belton Luter, a captain in the Milan Fire Department, testified that on the night of the offense, Walker and Bosley joined him in his Ford Explorer with the intention of getting tattoos in Cedar Grove. Luter recalled that after missing a turn and entering the parking lot of Clarke’s

-2- Grocery to turn around, he saw a dark colored pickup truck with a skull-and-bones license plate being driven to the front of the store. He testified that a white man stepped out of the passenger side of the truck and that he saw a “white cloud of smoke” but heard no gunshots. Luter, who sped away at Bosley’s urging and then saw the truck was in pursuit, stopped at the Pillow residence. Bosley went to the door to ask for help. At trial, Luter, who was struck in his shoulder by a small piece of metal during the shooting, could not identify the assailant. The bullets had done $4,000 in damage to his vehicle. Luter denied that there were drugs or guns in his vehicle and testified that the crock pot, which belonged to his mother, had been used for sausage balls at a fire department party.

Anita Marie Nutt, who lived approximately one-fourth of a mile from the defendant’s residence, testified that later in the evening after the shooting, the defendant telephoned asking her to contact the victim. When she called the Luter residence, she discovered that the victim had been in an “accident.” According to Ms. Nutt, when she telephoned the defendant, informing him of the “accident,” he responded, “‘Accident. He ain’t been in no accident. He’s dead, and I killed him.’”

Charles Eddy Young, who had a residence across the street from the Pillow house, was awakened by the defendant at approximately 4:00 a.m. on the morning after the shooting. He described the defendant as “a little excited, beside hi[m]self.” According to Young, the defendant admitted that he had “been in conflict with some people and he shot and thought he had killed one.”

Nancy Potts, a paramedic who transported the victim from the Pillow residence to the hospital, testified on behalf of the defense. She recalled that the victim smelled of alcohol and admitted having recently smoked marijuana.

James Prentiss Bullington, Jr., testified that he had purchased crack cocaine from Ms. Nutt on several occasions. He claimed that she eventually taught him how to “cook” crack so that he only needed to purchase the cocaine base. Bullington contended that several years earlier, he had observed the victim Walker sell Ms. Nutt a paper bag containing crack cocaine. There was also testimony that Walker had previously sold marijuana.

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State of Tennessee v. John Mark Burns, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-john-mark-burns-tenncrimapp-2004.