State of Tennessee v. Joseph Davison

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 5, 2012
DocketW2011-01963-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Joseph Davison (State of Tennessee v. Joseph Davison) 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. Joseph Davison, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs July 10, 2012

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JOSEPH DAVISON

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Madison County No. 11-17 Donald H. Allen, Judge

No. W2011-01963-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 5, 2012

Following a jury trial, the defendant, Joseph Davison, was convicted of two counts of rape and sentenced to twelve years for each count, to be served consecutively in the Department of Correction. On appeal, the defendant argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the indictment based upon the fact that the original charges filed against him only identified his DNA profile, and he was not identified by name until after the statute of limitations had expired. He also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence and imposition of consecutive sentencing. Following our review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

A LAN E. G LENN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J OHN E VERETT W ILLIAMS and C AMILLE R. M CM ULLEN, JJ., joined.

Gregory D. Gookin, Assistant Public Defender, for the appellant, Joseph Davison.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; David H. Findley, Senior Counsel; James G. (Jerry) Woodall, District Attorney General; and Shaun A. Brown, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

In this matter, the victim was raped by an unknown male on June 27, 1997. Testing of the vaginal swabs taken from the victim produced a DNA profile of the perpetrator. On June 9, 2005, the City Court of Jackson, Tennessee, issued a “John Doe” state warrant for the defendant, identifying him only by his DNA profile. Subsequently, in October 2010, the defendant was developed as a suspect and a DNA comparison was ordered. The warrant was amended in November 2010 to reflect the defendant’s name after confirming that the defendant’s DNA matched the DNA profile extracted from the victim’s vaginal swabs, and the defendant was subsequently arrested.

At trial, the victim testified that, at the time of the offenses, she was forty-two years old and teaching at Lane College. She was leaving for Vanderbilt a week later to finish her doctorate degree in University Administration. She said that she awoke around 4:45 a.m. on June 27, 1997 to see a young man with a towel around his head, standing at the end of her bed. After telling the victim to be quiet, the man put some pillows over her face and performed oral sex on her, inserting his tongue into her vagina. The man then inserted his fingers and his penis inside her vagina while she mumbled into the pillow, “I’m scared” and “[P]lease stop.” The victim waited until she thought the man had left the house before she woke her husband, who was asleep in another bedroom, at about 5:15 a.m. to tell him that she had been raped. Her husband called the police, and she subsequently went to the hospital where she underwent a sexual assault examination.

The victim further testified that she was unable to identify her attacker because she only saw him from “the eyes up.” She stated that she did not consent to any sexual contact and that she did not fight back because she “was frozen like that.”

The victim’s husband1 testified that his wife woke him on the morning of June 27, 1997, and told him that she had been raped. He walked around the entire house to ensure the assailant was gone. He discovered that the back door, located between the kitchen and the bedroom where the rape occurred, was unlocked and only partially closed. He surmised that someone had exited the house through that door. As he checked outside, he found one of the neighbor’s plastic chairs underneath the victim’s office window and saw that the screen had been cut.

Chad D. Johnson, a Special Agent assigned to the forensic services division at the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (“TBI”), testified as a DNA expert witness for the State. He confirmed that he was able to develop a DNA profile in March 2000 from the vaginal swabs taken from the victim and received buccal swabs taken from the defendant in October 2010. He developed a DNA profile from those buccal swabs, compared it to the DNA profile extracted from the vaginal swabs, and determined that they matched. According to his statistical analysis, Special Agent Johnson “found that the probability of an unrelated individual having the same DNA profile [as the defendant] would exceed the world’s population which means that [the lab] would not expect to find that profile anywhere else in

1 Although married at the time of the rape, they were divorced at the time of the trial.

-2- the world.”

Captain Mike Holt of the Jackson Police Department testified that he became involved with the victim’s case in 1998. He developed the defendant, who was living in Illinois at the time, as a new suspect in 2010. Through the assistance of the Chicago Police Department, Captain Holt obtained buccal swabs from the defendant for purposes of making a DNA comparison against the victim’s vaginal swabs. He received a report from the TBI in November 2010 confirming that the DNA on the two swabs was a match. After receiving these results, Captain Holt worked with the district attorney’s office and police department in Chicago and had the defendant arrested and transported to Tennessee. He asked the defendant during the initial interview if he knew “what the arrest warrant was about.” The defendant made an oral statement, which was reduced to writing by Captain Holt, adopted by the defendant, and read by Captain Holt at trial:

I know where Arlington Street is. I had a woman who worked for me who stayed on Arlington in a white house with blue trim or a blue house with white trim. She would bring me like 200 or 300 a day. She lived alone as far as I know. She didn’t want her family to know me so I would come in through the living room window. She didn’t want anybody to know because I was black. I knew her as Stiletto. . . . Stiletto was white, about 26/28, about 6’ or 6’1”, slim build, blonde straight hair that came past her shoulder. . . . In June or July, I borrowed $300 that was a loan. . . . I told her I would pay her back, but I moved to Chicago so I never got to pay her back. If she was the one who complained, me owing her money is the only reason I can think of for her saying I raped her.

Captain Holt testified that, since the defendant’s statement referenced a woman in her twenties with blonde hair, he asked the defendant if he remembered or was involved with a woman in her forties with dark hair. The defendant answered in the negative.

The State called Christina Lott McKnight who testified that, in 1997, she was living with a friend in a blue house on Arlington Street and was acquainted with the defendant. She admitted that she had sex with the defendant in exchange for drugs, and the defendant came to the house approximately twice. He entered through the back of the house because her friend’s father was “against different races mixing.” McKnight said that the defendant called her “Stiletto.” When McKnight was shown a photograph of the victim’s house, she testified that it was across the street and to the right, “kind of at an angle,” from the house where she lived.

-3- The defendant testified that he met the victim in the summer of 1997 when she walked past him in his father’s neighborhood. He asked the victim if she was interested in being a prostitute, and she answered in the affirmative. When shown photographs of the victim’s brick home, the defendant stated that he was at the victim’s house more than once, that he and the victim had sex “[n]o more than ten times,” and that the sexual encounters occurred for almost two months.

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
State v. Hooper
29 S.W.3d 1 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2000)
State v. Lane
3 S.W.3d 456 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1999)
State v. Pettus
986 S.W.2d 540 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1999)
State v. Poole
945 S.W.2d 93 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1997)
State v. Evans
838 S.W.2d 185 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1992)
State v. Pappas
754 S.W.2d 620 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1987)
State v. Davis
940 S.W.2d 558 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1997)
State v. Grace
493 S.W.2d 474 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Joseph Davison, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-joseph-davison-tenncrimapp-2012.