State of Tennessee v. Lymus Levar Brown III

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 26, 2013
DocketW2012-02298-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Lymus Levar Brown III (State of Tennessee v. Lymus Levar Brown III) 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. Lymus Levar Brown III, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs November 13, 2013

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. LYMUS LEVAR BROWN, III

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Haywood County No. 6710 Clayburn L. Peeples, Judge

No. W2012-02298-CCA-R3-CD - Filed November 26, 2013

A Haywood County jury convicted appellant, Lymus Levar Brown, III, of aggravated robbery. The trial court sentenced him as a Range III offender to serve thirty years in the Tennessee Department of Correction, with a release eligibility of eighty-five percent. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-501(k)(1) (release eligibility for aggravated robbery conviction). On appeal, he argues that: (1) the evidence supporting his conviction was insufficient; (2) the trial court erred by allowing a witness to testify despite a violation of the rule of sequestration; (3) the trial court erred by not granting him a mistrial or some other remedy for the State’s failure to provide previously requested discovery; (4) his right to a speedy trial was violated; (5) the trial court erred by allowing the jury to hear that appellant was a convicted criminal; (6) the State failed to provide a sufficient chain of custody for the cellular telephone found at the crime scene; and (7) the trial court erred by considering his prior convictions during the sentencing hearing despite not having certified copies of said convictions. Following our review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

R OGER A. P AGE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which A LAN E. G LENN and R OBERT W. W EDEMEYER, JJ., joined.

Bob C. Hooper, Brownsville, Tennessee, for appellant, Lymus Levar Brown, III.

Robert E. Cooper, Attorney General and Reporter; Deshea Dulany Faughn, Assistant Attorney General; Garry G. Brown, District Attorney General; and Jerald Campbell and Larry Hardister, Assistant District Attorneys General, for appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION

I. Facts

This case concerns the January 18, 2011 aggravated robbery of Terica Gause, an employee of Cash Express in Brownsville, Tennessee. The Haywood County Grand Jury indicted appellant for the aggravated robbery, and the matter proceeded to trial in December 2011. A mistrial was declared, and the trial was reset for June 2012.

At trial, Terica Gause testified that she was working at Cash Express on January 18, 2011. Tamika Anderson was also working that day, but Ms. Anderson left the store to purchase supplies prior to the robbery. Ms. Gause said that the store normally opened at 9:30 a.m., but that day, a tall, black man entered the store between 9:00 and 9:30 a.m. He was wearing a black or blue jacket with white stripes and a black or blue ball cap. When shown a picture of appellant wearing a jacket, she testified that the jacket appellant was wearing “kind of look[ed] like” the one worn by the robber. Ms. Gause testified that the man asked whether the store cashed checks. When she responded affirmatively, the man pulled a gun and a black bag from his jacket, laid the gun on the counter, and told her to give him all of the money. Ms. Gause recalled that she was crying and terrified, but the man told her that he would not hurt her. She said that she pulled the cash drawer out to give him the money. Ms. Gause stated that she believed there was $525 in the drawer, plus change. She hit the store’s panic button at some point during the robbery, and after the man left, she locked the door. At that point, she answered the store’s telephone. The store’s main office had accessed the store’s security footage when Ms. Gause had pressed the panic button, and they were calling to verify her safety. The main office had also contacted the police. Ms. Gause testified that the man had left a cellular telephone on the floor of the store. She said that she and Ms. Anderson had closed the store the previous night, and they had vacuumed the floors at that time. There was not a cellular telephone on the floor the night before, and no one else had entered the store besides her, Ms. Anderson, and the robber.

On cross-examination, she agreed that she had previously said that the robber was taller than she was. She agreed that she was five feet, four inches tall and that the robber was between five feet, six inches and five feet, eight inches tall. She further agreed that she never identified appellant in a lineup.

Tamika Anderson, the store manager of the Cash Express, testified that she was not at the store during the January 18, 2011 robbery. She explained that she left the store to purchase supplies, and she took $25 from the cash drawer with her. Ms. Anderson testified that there would have been $515 in the drawer at that point. She recalled seeing a man standing outside the Cash Express, whom she described as a black male wearing a blue or

-2- black jacket with white lettering that was trimmed in royal blue and a dark navy or black baseball cap. When shown a photograph of appellant wearing a jacket and cap, she said that the jacket and cap looked similar to those worn by the man outside of the store on the day of the robbery. Ms. Anderson said that there was not a telephone on the store’s floor the night before or the morning of the robbery.

Brownsville Police Investigator Patrick Black testified that he investigated the robbery at the Cash Express store. He arrived at the store within two minutes of receiving the call about the robbery. Ms. Gause informed him that the robber had left a cellular telephone on the floor, and he took the telephone into evidence. Investigator Black testified that he obtained a search warrant for the telephone and had the telephone sent to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (“TBI”) laboratory for “serology and fingerprint identification.” Pursuant to the search warrant, Investigator Black downloaded photographs from the telephone, which were entered into evidence. He distributed the photographs to various agencies in West Tennessee and throughout the patrol division in an attempt to identify the person in the photographs, and this attempt was successful. Investigator Black also obtained the number associated with the telephone: 731-879-0475. Investigator Black testified that information he received from the TBI laboratory led him to obtain a search warrant for appellant’s DNA. The search warrant was executed, and DNA swabs from appellant were sent to the TBI for testing.

Investigator Black testified that he arrested appellant at the Bureau of Probation and Parole in Jackson, Tennessee. Appellant told Investigator Black that he had never been to Brownsville and did not have anything to do with the robbery. Appellant said that he had sold his telephone several weeks earlier for forty-five to fifty dollars to a person named James. When asked whether appellant identified James to him, Investigator Black responded that appellant had James’s driver’s license.1 Appellant did not indicate why he had James’s driver’s license. Investigator Black testified that Marquisha Lloyd was with appellant when he was arrested. He further testified that photographs of Ms. Lloyd were found on the cellular telephone associated with the robbery. Investigator Black testified that appellant said that “he had seen himself on the news and was waiting to come in to see his parole officer about it.” Investigator Black said that the news footage was shown within a few days of the robbery and that appellant was arrested thirteen days after the robbery. Investigator Black testified that appellant indicated that he knew he was wanted by the police but did not turn himself in because he was scared.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Lymus Levar Brown III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-lymus-levar-brown-iii-tenncrimapp-2013.