STATE OF TENNESSEE v. LAWRENCE EUGENE ALLEN

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 10, 2020
DocketM2019-00667-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of STATE OF TENNESSEE v. LAWRENCE EUGENE ALLEN (STATE OF TENNESSEE v. LAWRENCE EUGENE ALLEN) 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. LAWRENCE EUGENE ALLEN, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

12/10/2020 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE July 15, 2020 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. LAWRENCE EUGENE ALLEN

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Rutherford County No. F-76153 David M. Bragg, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2019-00667-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

The primary issue in this case involves the State’s delayed disclosure of obviously exculpatory evidence. On June 18, 2015, Lawrence Eugene Allen, Defendant, was arrested for aggravated rape and domestic assault of his wife, Kimberly Allen. The charges were based primarily on Ms. Allen’s statement to Detective Dustin Fait that Defendant struck her and penetrated her with his hand. On June 22, 2015, the day before the original setting of the preliminary hearing, Ms. Allen sent two emails to Detective Fait. In the first email, Ms. Allen stated that Defendant did not rape her. She claimed that she had a consensual sexual encounter with an unknown man in his vehicle outside a bar in Nashville during the early morning hours of June 18, 2015. After numerous continuances, a preliminary hearing was finally held on March 18, 2016. The State did not disclose the emails to Defendant before the preliminary hearing. Both Ms. Allen and Detective Fait testified at the preliminary hearing and were cross-examined by defense counsel. Neither witness mentioned Ms. Allen’s emails or her recantation of the rape allegation. A few days after the preliminary hearing, Ms. Allen was murdered. The murder was unrelated to this case or to Defendant. The emails were finally disclosed to Defendant when the State provided discovery on December 21, 2017. Prior to trial, Defendant moved to exclude Ms. Allen’s preliminary hearing testimony based on Tennessee Rule of Evidence 804 and the Confrontation Clause of the United States Constitution and the Tennessee Constitution. Following a hearing, the trial court declared Ms. Allen unavailable and denied Defendant’s motion, finding that Defendant had both an opportunity and a similar motive to develop Ms. Allen’s testimony at the preliminary hearing through cross-examination. At trial, the State played the audio recording of Ms. Allen’s preliminary hearing testimony for the jury and introduced the emails as substantive evidence. The jury convicted Defendant of one count of aggravated rape and one count of domestic assault, and the trial court imposed an effective sentence of twenty years to be served at one hundred percent. We hold that the State’s failure to disclose the obviously exculpatory first email before Ms. Allen testified at the preliminary hearing, coupled with her death before trial, deprived Defendant of the opportunity to cross-examine Ms. Allen about the veracity of the emails, violated Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and deprived Defendant of his constitutional right to due process of law. We reverse Defendant’s convictions and remand for a new trial.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Circuit Court Reversed and Remanded for a New Trial

ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS T. WOODALL and TIMOTHY L. EASTER, JJ., joined.

Charles G. Ward and Brandon M. Booten, Murfreesboro, Tennessee (on appeal), and Charles G. Ward and Brittani Flatt, Murfreesboro, Tennessee (at trial), for the appellant, Lawrence Eugene Allen.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Katherine C. Redding, Assistant Attorney General; Jennings H. Jones, District Attorney General; and Matthew W. Westmoreland and Sarah Davis, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

I. Procedural History and Trial

A. Pretrial Motions

The parties filed several pretrial motions, including the State’s Motion to Declare Ms. Allen Unavailable and Motion to Use Preliminary Hearing Testimony and Defendant’s Motion to Exclude Preliminary Hearing Testimony pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Evidence 804 and the Confrontation Clause of the United States and Tennessee Constitutions (“the Motion to Exclude”). The Motion to Exclude claimed that Defendant had no adequate opportunity or similar motive for cross-examination of Ms. Allen at the preliminary hearing because Defendant did not know that Ms. Allen had sent an email to Detective Fait stating that Defendant did not rape her and that another man “used his hand to vaginally and anally penetrate” her earlier in his car outside of TNTs bar. The Motion to Exclude stated that

had defense counsel been aware of these details at the preliminary hearing, Ms. Allen’s credibility and intentions for fabricating these allegations would have been the focus of the cross[-]examination, and a thorough

-2- investigation under cross-examination regarding this unknown individual who sexually penetrated her would have provided exculpatory information for Defendant.

B. Hearing on the Motion to Exclude

On January 3, 2018, the trial court heard several pretrial motions, including the State’s Motion to Use Preliminary Hearing Testimony and the Motion to Exclude. The State argued that it needed Ms. Allen’s preliminary hearing testimony at trial because Ms. Allen was “murdered subsequent to testifying at the preliminary hearing.” Both parties agreed that Ms. Allen was unavailable pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Evidence 804(a)(4).

Defendant argued that he was “completely unaware” that Ms. Allen sent emails to Detective Fait four days after the incident in which she recanted the allegation of rape against him and claimed that another man sexually penetrated her. Defense counsel argued that if the State had disclosed the emails:

the cross[-]examination in this matter would no longer be dealing with the facts of this case and the facts that arose that night and the allegations, but more so dealing with the basis as to why she made these allegations up. Why she sent this email. Why she has completely recanted. And why now she’s alleging that there was some other man who caused these alleged injuries or vaginal bleeding to her.

The State responded that Defendant had “an opportunity and a similar motive to develop the testimony at the preliminary hearing” and that case law did not require an “identity of issues at the preliminary hearing and at the trial” but only that the issues be “sufficiently similar.” The State then argued that “the inability for [Defendant] to ask questions regarding exculpatory issues does not get triggered at a preliminary hearing stage, because discovery does not apply” and that, “[a]s long as the State has provided the exculpatory information so it can be used in defense at trial, everything is okay.”

Although the Motion to Exclude sought relief pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Evidence 804 and the Confrontation Clause, as the following dialogue demonstrates, the trial court raised questions about a potential Brady violation and correctly noted that “obviously exculpatory” information triggered the State’s duty to disclose the information without a request from Defendant:

THE COURT: Well, . . . of concern to the [c]ourt is whether or not this was obviously exculpatory and should have been provided.

-3- [THE STATE]: It was provided though, Your Honor, in plenty of time for them –

THE COURT: At what time?

[THE STATE]: When discovery was filed by the State.

THE COURT: I understand. But it has to be provided when a request for discovery has been made, unless it is so obviously exculpatory. And this is, to my mind, obviously exculpatory, and should have been provided when the State became aware of it.

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STATE OF TENNESSEE v. LAWRENCE EUGENE ALLEN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-lawrence-eugene-allen-tenncrimapp-2020.