State of Tennessee v. Lee Harold Cromwell

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 3, 2018
DocketE2017-01320-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Lee Harold Cromwell (State of Tennessee v. Lee Harold Cromwell) 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. Lee Harold Cromwell, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

07/03/2018

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE March 28, 2018 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. LEE HAROLD CROMWELL

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Anderson County No. B6C00016 Paul G. Summers, Senior Judge ___________________________________

No. E2017-01320-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

The defendant, Lee Harold Cromwell, was convicted of one count of reckless vehicular homicide and eight counts of reckless aggravated assault against nine different victims. The trial court sentenced the defendant as a Range I, standard offender and imposed an effective twelve-year sentence. On appeal, the defendant argues the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions for reckless aggravated assault and challenges various aspects of the jury instructions. The defendant also argues the trial court erred in not merging his eight aggravated assault convictions into his vehicular homicide conviction. Finally, the defendant generally challenges the trial court’s sentencing determinations and asserts the cumulative effect of the errors alleged rendered his trial unfair. After our review, we affirm the evidence was sufficient to support the defendant’s convictions and the trial court properly sentenced the defendant, but conclude the trial court committed reversible error in instructing the jury as to reckless aggravated assault. Therefore, we vacate the defendant’s eight convictions for reckless aggravated assault and remand this case to the trial court for a new trial.

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

J. ROSS DYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS and ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., JJ., joined.

Tom Marshall (on appeal), Clinton, Tennessee, and James K. Scott and John DuPree (at trial), Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Lee Harold Cromwell. Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Zachary T. Hinkle, Assistant Attorney General; Dave S. Clark, District Attorney General; and Anthony Craighead, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS I. Trial

After a fireworks show on July 4, 2015, in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, the defendant reversed his truck through a crowded parking lot, killing one victim and injuring eight others. An Anderson County Grand Jury indicted the defendant for seventeen crimes, including one count each of vehicular homicide, criminally negligent homicide, reckless homicide, reckless endangerment with a deadly weapon, and driving on a suspended or revoked license, and twelve counts of reckless aggravated assault. Prior to trial, the State dismissed the criminally negligent homicide, reckless homicide, reckless endangerment with a deadly weapon and reckless aggravated assault in which James Robinson was the victim, and three additional counts of reckless aggravated assault. The trial court severed the driving on a suspended or revoked license charge. As a result, the State proceeded to trial against the defendant for one count of reckless vehicular homicide for the death of James Robinson (Count 1), and eight counts of reckless aggravated assault for injuries to victims Julia Robinson (Count 2), Jade Robinson (Count 3), Jacklyn Robinson (Count 4), Elizabeth Eldridge (Count 5), Michael Eldridge (Count 6), Curtis Booker (Count 7), Ja’Taalia Henderson (Count 8), and La’Ruis Henderson (Count 9). At trial, the State presented the following facts for the jury’s review.

Melody Cody watched the fireworks show in her white Ford Thunderbird from the parking lot of the Midtown Community Center in Oak Ridge on July 4, 2015. At the end of the show, Ms. Cody saw a red pick-up truck reversing “very slow[ly]” towards her vehicle. She realized the truck was going to hit her vehicle because as the truck reversed, it “[was] still angling toward [her] car instead of straightening up.” Upon impact, the truck knocked the “rear view mirror off the side door,” stopped “for a few seconds,” and then “accelerated back continuing in reverse all the way down the side of [her] car.” Ms. Cody believed she “was just in the wrong place at the wrong time,” but “heard crashes of [the truck] obviously impacting other cars.”

Michael and Elizabeth Eldridge sat on the tailgate of their Ford F-150 and watched the Oak Ridge fireworks show on July 4, 2015. At the end of the show, the parking lot was “[h]eavily congested,” and Mr. Eldridge noticed “everybody was sitting still except for one vehicle,” a “cranberry colored pickup truck.” The truck, driven by the defendant, -2- “had pulled in blocking a lot of folks from exiting.” Mr. Eldridge soon saw the defendant’s truck “slowly easing backwards in reverse.” The defendant “sideswiped” a Ford Thunderbird and then stopped for “[a] few seconds.” The defendant then continued reversing and sideswiped a van, stopping again “for a few seconds.”

After hitting the Thunderbird and the van, the defendant then “floored it.” Mr. Eldridge saw the defendant “accelerate[] extremely heavy. As hard as you could accelerate.” He “saw [the defendant] cut his wheel and come right toward [them].” Mr. Eldridge tried to raise his legs from the tailgate to avoid being hit, but the rear of the defendant’s truck “hit [his] left knee and put a seven-inch gash in [his] knee and sent [him] flying through the air. [Mr. Eldridge] struck the back of [his] cab and fell into [his] truck.” Mrs. Eldridge was knocked towards the cab of the truck, injuring her ankle and leaving her “a little bit sore.” The defendant “continued on,” hitting multiple vehicles before finally stopping. When the defendant finally stopped, Mr. Eldridge saw the body of James Robinson underneath the defendant’s truck with “blood coming out of his mouth.”

Mr. Eldridge described the scene left in the defendant’s wake as “a horror movie.” After receiving medical attention for his left knee, he heard the motor revving from the defendant’s truck. Mr. Eldridge walked towards the truck, saw the defendant sitting in the driver’s seat, and asked “why did you do this?” The defendant “stuck his head out the window and he said ‘my accelerator stuck.’” Mr. Eldridge asked the defendant if he was “going to stick with that story,” and then walked away. Regarding his comment to the defendant, Mr. Eldridge explained on cross-examination,

When I heard him revving his motor, and he made the statement to me that the accelerator stuck that just told me it didn’t stick because he was revving his motor. So, that’s how I drew the conclusion and made the statement “and you are going to stick with that story?”

Julia Robinson attended the fireworks show with her husband, James Robinson, her daughters, Jade and Jacklyn Robinson, and her cousin, Morticia Corey. Her family watched the fireworks from the back of their vehicle with the back hatch open and the third row of seats folded down. After the show, Mr. and Mrs. Robinson were at the back of their vehicle near the hatch when the “whole car got knocked.” Mrs. Robinson “hit the rails and the doors of [her] car,” hit another car, and “then bounced back into [her] car.” She suffered a “[s]evere concussion” and numbness in her legs. She obtained a scar near her left eye, and her “whole face swelled and bruised.” Jacklyn complained that her neck and shoulder hurt, while Jade was “laying on her back on the ground . . . with her hands in fists,” crying. -3- Before EMTs arrived, Mrs. Robinson found her husband “laying . . . on his side in like a fetal position underneath the car.” EMTs removed Mr. Robinson’s body from the scene. Mrs. Robinson, Jacklyn, and Jade were later transported to the hospital where both girls were checked for concussions. Neither child obtained any permanent injuries.

Jade and Jacklyn Robinson both testified at trial.

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State of Tennessee v. Lee Harold Cromwell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-lee-harold-cromwell-tenncrimapp-2018.