State of Tennessee v. Kenneth Kyle Fletcher

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 26, 2016
DocketE2015-02256-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Kenneth Kyle Fletcher (State of Tennessee v. Kenneth Kyle Fletcher) 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. Kenneth Kyle Fletcher, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs September 20, 2016

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. KENNETH KYLE FLETCHER

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Carter County No. 20982A Robert E. Cupp, Judge

No. E2015-02256-CCA-R3-CD – Filed October 26, 2016

The defendant, Kenneth Kyle Fletcher, was convicted by a Carter County jury of facilitation of initiation of a process to manufacture methamphetamine, a Class C felony. Following a sentencing hearing, the trial court sentenced him to ten years on community corrections. In a separate case, the trial court sentenced the defendant to concurrent four- year sentences for five counts of promoting the manufacture of methamphetamine and ordered that the four-year sentence be served consecutively to the ten-year sentence in the instant case, for a total effective sentence of fourteen years on community corrections. In a timely appeal to this court, the defendant challenges the sufficiency of the convicting evidence and the trial court‟s order of consecutive sentencing. Following our review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

ALAN E. GLENN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS T. WOODALL, P.J., and ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., J., joined.

David L. Robbins, Johnson City, Tennessee, for the appellant, Kenneth Kyle Fletcher.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Nicholas W. Spangler, Assistant Attorney General; Anthony Wade Clark, District Attorney General; and Dennis D. Brooks, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

On February 20, 2011, the defendant‟s employer, John Cote, who allowed the defendant and his girlfriend to live in a camper on his rural Carter County property, called 911 to report that he had discovered a methamphetamine laboratory in the camper. Mr. Cote gave investigators permission to search the property, and they discovered evidence that led the Carter County Grand Jury to return a presentment charging the defendant and his girlfriend, Nancy Diane Harmon, with initiation of a process to manufacture methamphetamine, a Class B felony; promotion of the manufacture of methamphetamine, a Class D felony; and felony possession of drug paraphernalia, a Class E felony. The defendant‟s case was subsequently severed from Ms. Harmon‟s, and the promotion and possession counts of the presentment were dismissed, leaving the defendant to proceed to trial on the single count of initiation of a process to manufacture methamphetamine.

The State‟s first witness at the defendant‟s June 18, 2013 trial was Sergeant Harmon Duncan of the Carter County Sheriff‟s Department, a criminal investigator assigned to the drug task force and an expert in methamphetamine production, who described in great detail the methamphetamine manufacturing process and explained that pseudoephedrine was “the only required element” for the process. Sergeant Duncan testified that in October 2010 he received information about possible methamphetamine production activity on Mr. Cote‟s property. Once in October and again in November, he and Lieutenant Little went to the area to conduct surveillance. However, because the property was in a “pretty close community” with mostly dead-end roads, they were unable to find a place to park for any length of time.

Sergeant Duncan testified that all sales of pseudoephedrine in Tennessee and surrounding states are recorded and listed on a database called “NPLEx.” He said that individuals are restricted by law from purchasing more than 3.6 grams in a twenty-four- hour period or more than 9 grams in a thirty-day period. He identified printouts from the database that showed all of the defendant‟s and Ms. Harmon‟s pseudoephedrine purchases made in the months preceding the 911 call in the instant case, which were published to the jury and admitted as trial exhibits.

According to the database, the defendant made a total of eleven purchases of products containing pseudoephedrine from May 1, 2010 through January 29, 2011: 3.6 grams from a Boone, North Carolina CVS pharmacy on January 29, 2011; 2.88 grams from a Boone, North Carolina CVS pharmacy on December 16, 2010; 3.6 grams from a Boone, North Carolina CVS pharmacy on December 3, 2010; 3.6 grams from a Newland, North Carolina CVS pharmacy on November 4, 2010; 3.6 grams from an Elizabethton, Tennessee CVS pharmacy on October 2, 2010; 2.4 grams from a Boone, North Carolina CVS pharmacy on September 24, 2010; 3.6 grams form an Elizabethton, Tennessee CVS pharmacy on September 1, 2010; 3.6 grams from an Elizabethton, Tennessee CVS pharmacy on August 9, 2010; 3.6 grams from an Elizabethton, Tennessee CVS pharmacy

-2- on July 27, 2010; 2.88 grams from an Elizabethton, Tennessee CVS pharmacy on July 1, 2010; and 2.88 grams from an Elizabethton, Tennessee CVS pharmacy on May 1, 2010.

According to the database, Ms. Harmon made a total of nineteen purchases of products containing pseudoephedrine from January 2, 2010 through September 3, 2012, at various pharmacies located in East Tennessee and Western North Carolina. The database also showed that she was blocked from one attempted pseudoephedrine purchase on June 20, 2012, because she had already exceeded the 9 grams in thirty days allowed by law.

Sergeant Duncan testified that he responded to Mr. Cote‟s 911 call, received his permission to search the property, and found a number of items in and around the camper that are used in the methamphetamine manufacturing process. He identified photographs of these items, which were published to the jury and admitted as exhibits. Sergeant Duncan testified that a cooler located underneath the camper contained bottles, tubing, and a funnel, consistent with the “one pot” methamphetamine manufacturing process. Other items used in the methamphetamine manufacturing process, which were found in or around the camper, including in bags of trash in the back of Mr. Cote‟s pickup truck, included: coffee filters; lye; glass jars; aluminum foil; a Pyrex dish with white residue inside; several funnels; rubber gloves; cellophane bags with the corners cut off, which Sergeant Duncan testified were commonly used for packaging of the completed product; camp fuel; a strainer; and Walgreens “instant cold packs,” which, according to Sergeant Duncan, contain ammonium nitrate, “a catalyst chemical that‟s used in the first stage of meth manufacture.” He said that the ammonium nitrate contained in the cold packs was a purer product than the ammonium nitrate sold in fifty-pound bags of lawn fertilizer and, thus, preferred by methamphetamine manufacturers.

Sergeant Duncan testified that one of the Walgreens cold packs was opened, which indicated to him that a common household chemical had been altered to initiate the process of manufacturing methamphetamine:

What that tells me as a . . . law enforcement officer when I find a meth lab components and I find a bag of this that‟s been opened that [that is] initiation of process. That tells me that a chemical, that a common household chemical, or a commercial product that‟s sold to you and I on the street, or our families, has been altered to a point to where it . . . would be inconsistent to believe it was used for anything else except to get the ammonium nitrate out of there.

Based on his training and experience, he estimated that the products had been put together approximately three to five days before the officers discovered them.

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State of Tennessee v. Kenneth Kyle Fletcher, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-kenneth-kyle-fletcher-tenncrimapp-2016.