State of Tennessee v. Jonathan Darrell Hardin, Alias

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 15, 2024
DocketE2022-01753-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Jonathan Darrell Hardin, Alias (State of Tennessee v. Jonathan Darrell Hardin, Alias) 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. Jonathan Darrell Hardin, Alias, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

05/15/2024 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEAL S OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE March 26, 2024 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JONATHAN DARRELL HARDIN, ALIAS

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County No. 114883 Steven W. Sword, Judge ___________________________________

No. E2022-01753-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

The Knox County Grand Jury charged Defendant, Jonathan Darrell Hardin,1 with one count of especially aggravated kidnapping and one count of aggravated assault. Following a jury trial, Defendant was found guilty of the lesser offenses of aggravated kidnapping and assault. The trial court imposed an effective sentence of ten years in the Tennessee Department of Correction (TDOC), to be served consecutively to a ten-year sentence for a prior conviction. On appeal, Defendant argues: (1) the State committed discovery violations by not disclosing certain evidence; (2) Defendant’s fair trial rights were violated by the State’s failure to preserve and withhold material evidence; (3) the State improperly commented on Defendant’s right to silence; (4) the State improperly commented on Defendant’s post-arrest silence during Defendant’s cross-examination; (5) Defendant’s trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not calling an eyewitness witness to testify; and (6) Defendant is entitled to relief based on cumulative error. After review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

MATTHEW J. WILSON, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER and JOHN W. CAMPBELL, SR., JJ., joined.

Randall E. Reagan (at motion for new trial and on appeal) and Andrew Pate (at trial and sentencing), Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jonathan Darrell Hardin.

1 Charging instruments returned by the Knox County Grand Jury routinely list the defendant’s name followed by “Alias.” The record contains no order from the trial court striking “Alias,” so we will keep that reference in the style of the case. However, all other references to Defendant in this opinion will not include “Alias.” Jonathan Skrmetti, Attorney General and Reporter; Garrett D. Ward, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Charme P. Allen, District Attorney General; and Hector Sanchez and Sean Roberts, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

I. Background

Defendant was convicted of one count of aggravated kidnapping and one count of assault for an incident involving his then-girlfriend, Megan Fugate (the “victim”). The assault began at the Knoxville apartment of Darrell Bryant, where Defendant and the victim lived at the time, but Defendant then forced the victim into his car. Officers with the Knoxville Police Department (KPD) found Defendant and the victim inside Defendant’s car at an East Knoxville gas station. They found Defendant asleep behind the steering wheel and the injured victim in the rear passenger seat.

A. Trial

At trial, the victim testified that she and Defendant had been “having many problems before” these offenses, which occurred in the early morning hours of December 16, 2018. The evening of December 15, 2018, the victim and Defendant got into an argument because Defendant wanted her to go out with him, but the victim wanted to stay at Mr. Bryant’s apartment with her five-year-old son. While Defendant went out without the victim, Mr. Bryant remained at the apartment, which was located on the upstairs floor of a house on Magnolia Avenue in East Knoxville next to a Pilot gas station. The apartment had one bedroom where the victim and Defendant stayed, while Mr. Bryant stayed in the living room.

While Defendant was out, the victim texted him, telling him they “were done.” The victim asked Defendant to stay away from her and her son and to let Mr. Bryant know when Defendant would be returning to collect his things so she and her son would not be present at that time. After this text, the victim and Defendant engaged in three video chats and continued to argue. This prompted the victim to “cut off” Defendant’s cellular phone, for which she had been paying. The victim’s son was already asleep, and she soon fell asleep herself.

The victim testified that she awoke in the bedroom to find Defendant punching her in the face and saying, “B****, you think you’re funny. Did you think that was funny cutting my phone off?” The victim responded she was sorry and promised to restore his cellular phone service. According to the victim, Defendant responded by pushing her -2- against the wall and asking for her cellular phone. When Defendant could not find her phone, he continued to punch her.

The victim testified that sometime during the attack, Defendant pulled out a box cutter and threatened to kill her and her son. Defendant told the victim’s son to wake up and “look what I’m doing to your momma.” Shortly thereafter, Mr. Bryant entered the room and attempted to get the victim and her son out of the house. The victim did not want to take her son outside, but she placed her son in the living room and “pushed him in[to] a corner” and “put a blanket over him.” The victim said Mr. Bryant then attempted to “push [Defendant] back” while she attempted to give Defendant his cellular phone, but Defendant kept punching the victim in the face “repeatedly.” Mr. Bryant then told her to run for the door; she did so, but Defendant grabbed the victim by the hair, “yank[ed]” her backward, shoved her into the wall, and slammed the door, saying she “wasn’t going anywhere.” Defendant kept shoving her into the wall while asking for her cellular phone, ignoring both the victim’s and Mr. Bryant’s pleas to stop.

After a while, Mr. Bryant left the apartment to go to his car and the victim gave Defendant her cellular phone. The victim asked Defendant to leave her alone, but Defendant told her, “You’re coming with me” and, pulling the victim by her hair, forced her outside the door. Defendant “dragged” the victim down the stairs toward his car; the victim said Mr. Bryant passed them on the stairs but said and did nothing. Once the victim and Defendant reached street level, she tried to escape but Defendant slammed her into a wall, told her she was “coming with” him, pulled out the box cutter again, and hit her twice in the side and once in the neck. The victim said the box cutter either lacked a blade or “didn’t lock because nothing cut me.” Defendant then continued dragging the victim toward his car. As Defendant did so, a bystander told Defendant, “You need to stop. Let her go.” Defendant responded by threatening to kill the bystander just like he was “about to kill” the victim.

According to the victim, when she and Defendant reached his car, Defendant hit her twice in the face and once in the stomach before pushing her into the car and driving away. A female passenger was in the car, but the victim did not know the other passenger.2 Defendant eventually stopped to let the other passenger out. When the passenger opened her door, the victim tried to escape but Defendant grabbed the victim by her hair. The passenger slammed the door shut and left, and Defendant sped away with the victim still in the car.

2 At the hearing on Defendant’s motion for new trial, the passenger was identified as Toya Reeves. However, Ms. Reeves’ identity was not disclosed at trial, including in Defendant’s trial testimony as discussed later in this opinion. -3- After a while, Defendant and the victim parked in the driveway of Defendant’s mother’s house. The victim asked to be taken to a hospital, but Defendant told her that she would first have to reconnect his cellular phone service. After she did so, Defendant drove to a Weigel’s gas station on Cherry Street in East Knoxville.

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State of Tennessee v. Jonathan Darrell Hardin, Alias, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-jonathan-darrell-hardin-alias-tenncrimapp-2024.