State of Tennessee v. Larry Darnnell Pinex

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 6, 2008
DocketM2007-01211-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Larry Darnnell Pinex (State of Tennessee v. Larry Darnnell Pinex) 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. Larry Darnnell Pinex, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs May 6, 2008

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. LARRY DARNNELL PINEX

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2005-C-2514 Mark J. Fishburn, Judge

No. M2007-01211-CCA-R3-CD - Filed November 6, 2008

The Defendant, Larry Darnnell Pinex, was convicted of attempted aggravated rape, a Class B felony, attempted aggravated sexual battery, and attempted especially aggravated burglary, Class C felonies. He was sentenced as a Range III, persistent offender to twenty-five years for attempted aggravated rape and to twelve years for each of the remaining offenses. The twenty-five-year sentence was ordered to be served concurrently with the sentence for attempted aggravated sexual battery but consecutively to the twelve-year sentence for attempted especially aggravated burglary, for an effective sentence of thirty-seven years in the Department of Correction. He presents five issues for our review: (1) whether the evidence is sufficient to support his convictions for attempted aggravated sexual battery and attempted especially aggravated burglary; (2) whether the rape and battery convictions violate constitutional proscriptions against double jeopardy; (3) whether the State should have been required to make an election of offenses; (4) whether his conviction for attempted especially aggravated burglary should be modified to attempted aggravated burglary based upon Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-14-404(d); and (5) whether he received an excessive sentence. Following our review of the record and the parties’ briefs, we conclude that the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Tennessee Constitution precluded convictions for both attempted aggravated rape and attempted aggravated sexual battery because the evidence showed that the Defendant made one continuous attempt to rape the victim. Consequently, we vacate the judgment of the trial court as to the Defendant’s conviction for attempted aggravated sexual battery, as that offense should have been merged with the Defendant’s conviction for attempted aggravated rape. We also modify the conviction for attempted especially aggravated burglary to attempted aggravated burglary and order a sentence of ten years for that offense.

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

DAVID H. WELLES, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JAMES CURWOOD WITT , JR., J., joined. DAVID G. HAYES, SR.J., filed a dissenting opinion.

Jeffrey Devasher, Assistant Public Defender, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Larry Darnnell Pinex. Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Preston Shipp, Assistant Attorney General; Victor S. Johnson, III, District Attorney General; and Kathy Morante, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Factual Background On June 1, 2005, Sharon Hockett (the victim) was attacked inside her Nashville apartment. As she fought with the intruder, a friend arrived at her apartment, and the attacker fled. A few days later, the police arrested the forty-nine-year-old Defendant, and a Davidson County grand jury indicted him for attempted aggravated rape, aggravated sexual battery, and especially aggravated burglary. A jury trial followed.

At trial, the victim testified that she lived in an eighth-floor apartment in the Vine Hill area of Nashville at the time of the incident. On the evening of the attack, she was on her way home from a week-long stay at her aunt’s house when she stopped at a store to speak with her friend, Reginald “Reggie” Gordon. Gordon promised to stop by her apartment with a pack of cigarettes after he got off work at the store, and she continued home.

After arriving home that evening, she talked with a neighbor in the breezeway outside her apartment for a few minutes. As she talked with the neighbor, she noticed a man she later identified as the Defendant at the opposite end of the breezeway; he was knocking on another neighbor’s door. She said that she had never seen him before. The victim testified that the following occurred after she and her neighbor finished their conversation, and she entered her apartment:

And as I was bending over turning my music down, my back was turned to my door and my door is shut and I raised up and I looked and [the Defendant was] at the door, I said, what the, he ran up to me and he grabbed—choked me by the neck and was telling me to “Bow down.”

The Defendant was fully clothed, but the victim stated that he was pulling her head “towards his penis” while he choked her and ordered her to “Bow down.” The victim told the Defendant that she would not let him rape her; specifically, she said, “You’re going to have to kill me if you want to rape me.” And, the Defendant responded, “I wish I had a knife, I’d kill you.” The victim described the rest of the altercation as follows:

I was just fighting back, just fighting, fighting beating and fighting, I was just trying to keep him from pulling my clothes off, and we ended up, I ran into the bathroom; he came in the bathroom and I was in the shower and he came in the shower and I grabbed the plunger and I started hitting him with the plunger, and he grabbed the—I was on my knees and I start hitting him in his area and trying to twist them and kick, you know, trying to just keep him off of me. And as I fell down, he

-2- was trying to pull my dress up and pull my panties down and I crawled out from under him with the plunger, still hitting him. He grabbed the plunger and he start[ed] beating me with it and I couldn’t do nothing else because I was bleeding real bad. And I ran to the closet, and I was running to the closet, he broke my glass table, and by the time I was holding the closet, there was a knock on the door. He was biting me and everything. And there was a knock on the door and it was Reggie, and I had just said to God, I said, “God, Lord, please send Reggie up here, please send him to this door.” And as I was holding the closet door, I was hollering—telling Reggie to call the police, that this man is trying to rape me, and he ran to the door with the plunger and opened the door and ran past Reggie.

She said he hit her so many times with the plunger handle that she almost passed out. She also explained that the Defendant tried to pull off her panties, “but he couldn’t get them because [she] was crawling . . . away from him.”

During the struggle, the Defendant bit her three times. She could not remember exactly when he inflicted each bite, but she said that they came at different points during their fight. One bite was to her left breast. The prosecutor and the victim had the following exchange regarding when the breast bite occurred:

[Prosecutor]: Okay. All right. Do you remember at what point he bit your breast?

[victim]: When I was trying to fight back.

[Prosecutor]: It was all a part of the big fight?

[victim]: (Nodded affirmative).

After the attacker fled, she did not call the police right away because she was scared and she “just wanted somebody to be there with [her].” Her friend, Gordon, slept on the floor in her apartment that night. When she woke up the next morning at 6:00 a.m., she “was hurting real bad,” so she called the police to report the attack. Police officers quickly arrived at her apartment, and she described her attacker as being an African-American man who had been wearing a green hat, a jersey-style shirt, shorts, and red flip flops. Police recovered a unique green hat and a purple cup from the victim’s apartment that she said the Defendant brought inside and left there when he fled.

A police officer took several photographs of the victim’s injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Larry Darnnell Pinex, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-larry-darnnell-pinex-tenncrimapp-2008.