State of Tennessee v. Kelly Brooke Frye

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 17, 2021
DocketE2019-00686-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Kelly Brooke Frye (State of Tennessee v. Kelly Brooke Frye) 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. Kelly Brooke Frye, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

05/17/2021 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE February 17, 2021 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. KELLY BROOKE FRYE

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Sullivan County No. S66035 William K. Rogers, Judge1

No. E2019-00686-CCA-R3-CD

Aggrieved of her Sullivan County Criminal Court jury conviction of making a false report, see T.C.A. § 39-16-502, the defendant, Kelly Brooke Frye, appeals. The defendant challenges the sufficiency of the convicting evidence and the propriety of the sentence originally imposed as well as the trial court’s denial of her motion, filed pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 35, to reduce her sentence. She also alleges that she was deprived of her constitutional rights to a public trial, to trial by an impartial jury, and to the effective assistance of counsel at trial. Discerning no error, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

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

Melissa G. Owens, Kingsport, Tennessee (on appeal), Samuel E. White, Kingsport, Tennessee (at sentencing), and Joseph A. Fanduzz, Knoxville, Tennessee (at trial), for the appellant, Kelly Brooke Frye.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Garrett D. Ward, Assistant Attorney General; Barry P. Staubus, District Attorney General; and Julie R. Canter, J. Lewis Combs, and Andrea Black, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

1 The Honorable R. Jerry Beck presided over this case until his retirement. The Sullivan County Grand Jury charged the defendant, her mother, Rebecca Arrington, and her husband, Andy Frye, via presentment with one count of making a false report.

The defendant and her husband were tried jointly on February 21 and 22, 2 2018. At trial, Kingsport Police Department (“KPD”) Officer George Horne testified that on August 13, 2015, he was called “off the road” at approximately 5:00 p.m. to “take a walk-in report” from the defendant and her husband. Officer Horne explained that a walk- in report is, as the name suggests, when “[s]omebody comes into our justice center or the police department and asks to speak to an officer.” On this occasion, the defendant and her husband complained that a Sullivan County Sheriff’s Office (“SCSO”) deputy had assaulted the defendant. The defendant “alleged that the deputy had tried to serve some kind of papers on her and had grabbed her and threw her down the stairs.” She told Officer Horne that she had sustained bruises to her arm and her neck. Officer Horne testified that Mr. Frye provided the “[s]ame story.” Officer Horne said that the defendant appeared “disheveled” but that he did not see any visible marks or bruises as she had claimed. Because he saw no visible injuries, Officer Horne did not take any photographs.

During cross-examination, Officer Horne said that he was the only KPD officer present during the taking of the report, which occurred “[o]utside our records department” but that an officer of the SCSO was in the area working as “security.” That officer played no role in the taking of the defendant’s report. Officer Horne said that he did not record the taking of the report and did not take contemporaneous notes. He testified that the entire interaction took between five and 10 minutes. Officer Horne agreed that the defendant told him that the deputy had placed his hands on her in the stairwell of the Kingsport Justice Center and that he pushed her down the stairs and then forced her back up the stairs.

During redirect-examination, Officer Horne recalled that the defendant claimed that the deputy grabbed her by the arm, pushed her down, grabbed her neck, and then held her on the ground.

SCSO Deputy Alan Hill testified that on August 13, 2015, he was working security at the Kingsport Justice Center when he heard a commotion “in the clerk’s office.” He said that he “had stepped in the front lobby once to see if everything was okay, but at the time the [KPD] was dealing with the situation in the clerk’s office.” Deputy Hill “returned to my security post” at the “tail end” of the metal detector. He recalled that the defendant and Mr. Frye “were being very loud on the inside” and that “[t]hey were

2 Ms. Arrington was not arrested until the first day of the joint trial when the prosecutor recognized her in the gallery. -2- videotaping the interaction, whatever was going on inside.” When the defendant and Mr. Frye “exited the lobby outside to . . . where the security post is, they . . . set up station or staged their self out front. They were videotaping the front security, making comments.” He said that Mr. Frye “had made a comment towards me about giving me literature and it would change my mind towards my job.” Both Fryes “were making comments to the people coming through the front lobby, that they were the news; ‘We’re the news now.’” Deputy Hill said that he had “never encountered that before.” He described the Fryes as “obnoxious, like they were trying to control the situation or to basically conform the situation to what they needed.” Deputy Hill said that he “tried to tune it out.” He recalled that Mr. Frye approached him on “one or two occasions” and that Mr. Frye complied when Deputy Hill “asked him politely to please step back, do not interfere with my duties at the post.”

Deputy Hill testified that the Fryes eventually left the building but returned “later in the evening” with Ms. Arrington, “entered the front lobby, went through the metal detectors and everything.” The Fryes “went to the second floor, and Ms. Arrington stayed down videotaping the front lobby once again . . . . She made some statements, but I have no clue what she said.” A short time later, another “couple came in,” went “through the metal detector, looked at Ms. Arrington, and said, ‘You’re next.’” Deputy Hill found out later that the couple “was family members” of the Fryes. At that point, Deputy Hill became concerned that “something was about to happen upstairs,” so he went upstairs to make sure that a fight did not break out between the couple and the Fryes.

When Deputy Hill got to the second floor, he heard “what seemed to be arguing in the background” and assumed that “it was between the Fryes and the other couple that was there.” When he entered the clerk’s office, he saw the Fryes “towards the front” and the other couple “towards the back of the clerk’s office.” He then heard Mr. Frye ask “a question in a very loud manner towards” an employee of the clerk’s office. He said that, at that point, his primary concern became “trying to keep them from meeting in the middle, basically to keep the two groups separated.” Deputy Hill testified that he “had no clue still yet what was going on” but was concerned that “it was possibly a domestic situation.” He said that he was primarily concerned that “the other couple was going to do something with” the Fryes. At that point, “[o]ne of the clerks had approached, said something about paperwork,” so Deputy Hill tried to calm the Fryes and “talk them back out of the building.”

Deputy Hill testified that the Fryes eventually calmed down and “were asking questions that, because I did not know what occurred, I had no answers to.” He recalled that the Fryes “were talking about family members, family members getting upset, something [like] that, which everyone goes through that.” One of the Fryes pushed the button to call the elevator and “were, in my interpretation, leaving.” At that point, “the -3- other couple had come out” and “had made a derogatory comment towards the Fryes. I don’t know which one.

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State of Tennessee v. Kelly Brooke Frye, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-kelly-brooke-frye-tenncrimapp-2021.