State of Tennessee v. Michael Deon Mills and Kenneth Allen Spencer

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 21, 2011
DocketE2009-01708-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Michael Deon Mills and Kenneth Allen Spencer (State of Tennessee v. Michael Deon Mills and Kenneth Allen Spencer) 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. Michael Deon Mills and Kenneth Allen Spencer, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE June 29, 2010 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. MICHAEL DEON MILLS AND KENNETH ALLEN SPENCER

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County Nos. 88268A, 88268B Bobby Ray McGee, Judge

No. E2009-01708-CCA-R3-CD - FILED APRIL 21, 2011

A Knox County Criminal Court jury convicted the appellants, Michael Deon Mills and Kenneth Allen Spencer, of two counts of especially aggravated kidnapping, one count of especially aggravated robbery, and one count of aggravated burglary. After a sentencing hearing, the trial court sentenced the appellants to effective sentences of twenty-five years in confinement to be served at one hundred percent. On appeal, Mills argues that the prosecutor committed plain error during closing arguments by referring to his failure to testify. Spencer contends that (1) the trial court erred by admitting into evidence a document not provided to him during discovery; (2) the trial court erred by allowing evidence about weapons that were not used to commit the crimes; (3) an accomplice’s testimony did not provide sufficient corroboration to support the convictions; and (4) the convictions for especially aggravated kidnapping and especially aggravated robbery violate due process. Based upon the oral arguments, the record, and the parties’ briefs, Mills’ convictions are affirmed. However, Spencer’s convictions are reversed and the charges are dismissed because there is insufficient corroboration to sustain the convictions.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Criminal Court are Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part.

N ORMA M CG EE O GLE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J OSEPH M. T IPTON, P.J., and D. K ELLY T HOMAS, J R., J., joined.

Douglas A. Trant, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Michael Deon Mills, and Joshua D. Hedrick, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Kenneth Allen Spencer. Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Rachel West Harmon, Assistant Attorney General; Randall E. Nichols, District Attorney General; and Phillip Morton, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

I. Factual Background

Twenty-two-year-old Brandon Tarver testified that the appellants were his friends. At the time of trial, he had known Michael Mills and Kenneth Spencer three and ten years, respectively. About 6:00 p.m. on August 8, 2007, Tarver and Spencer went to Tarver’s father’s house on Apex Drive off Sutherland Avenue in Knoxville. Mills also went to the house. At some point, Spencer went back to his home off Magnolia Avenue. Mills also left Tarver’s father’s home on Apex Drive. Tarver said that he and a girl named Tiffany later met up with Spencer at Spencer’s house. At that point, Tarver refused to testify further, saying, “I have nothing else to say. I got my time. I wanna do my time.”

Philip Lim testified that in August 2007, he lived in a two-story home on Bradshaw Garden Drive. On the night of August 8, he was at home with his then nineteen-year-old son, Shawn, and thirteen-year-old daughter, Heidi. Shortly before midnight, Philip 1 was standing in his living room while watching television and drinking soup. Someone knocked open the front door, and three or four people wearing bandanas over their faces came into the house. Philip said a black male pointed a “long” gun at his face and told him, “I will kill you. I will kill you.” A white male with an aluminum baseball bat hit Philip a few times on his back. Philip ran into the kitchen, and the man with the bat followed him. Philip said that the men wanted to know if he had any drugs and that he told them, “No. I don’t have drugs. I don’t even smoke.” Philip said he was “running scared”; screamed, “Call 911. Call 911”; picked up a barstool; and threw it at the man with the gun. He said that a second living room and his children’s bedrooms were in the basement and that he headed downstairs.

Philip testified that he stumbled on the steps to the basement and that the man with the bat began beating him. Philip ran into Heidi’s bedroom and tried to hold the door closed, but the man overpowered him, came into the room, and hit him on the head and back with the bat. Philip fought with the man for about five minutes and ran out of the room. The man followed and continued to beat him, and Philip fell next to a couch in the basement living room. The man told him to take off a gold bracelet he was wearing, but Philip could not get the bracelet off because his thumb was swollen. The man beat Philip with the bat, yanked

1 Because the victims share the same last name, we will use their first names for clarity. W e mean no disrespect to these individuals.

-2- the bracelet off his wrist, and told him to take out his wallet. Philip did as instructed, and the man took about sixty dollars out of the wallet. The man also pulled a telephone cord out of the wall. Philip took a cellular telephone out of his pocket in order to dial 9-1-1, but the man broke it into two pieces.

Philip testified that the man “cornered” him under a piano and that he told the man, “Please don’t kill me. I’ve got beautiful children.” The man forced him to stay under the piano and did not leave him until the police arrived. At that point, the man broke through the basement’s sliding glass door and ran outside. The police came into the house and took Philip upstairs, where he saw his son. He said his head and his son’s head were bleeding. The police captured a black intruder and a white intruder still in the house. Philip’s son asked to see the two men but did not recognize them. Paramedics took Philip to the University of Tennessee Hospital. His thumb was broken, he could not raise his hand, and he had injuries to his neck and back. He said that the man with the bat had hit him twenty or thirty times, that his head was split open, and that he received staples in his head. He was in extreme pain after the attack and went to physical therapy for months. At the time of trial, he was still seeing his doctor for treatment and was in counseling. He said that he did not own a gun or baseball bat and that neither of those items had been in his home before the robbery.

On cross-examination, Philip testified that a briefcase containing jewelry had been in his bedroom closet and that one of the men found the briefcase and opened it. Philip’s arms were bruised during the attack when he held them up to protect his neck. He said that the intruders damaged a couch and mattress, that they broke doors and windows, and that blood was “everywhere.” The intruders caused eighteen to twenty thousand dollars worth of damage to his house.

Shawn Lim testified that on the night of August 8, 2007, he was downstairs and getting ready for bed. Suddenly, he heard his father upstairs yelling, “[C]all 911, help.” Shawn was scared and did not know what was going on. He ran upstairs and saw a tall black male with a bandana over his face and holding a gun. Shawn grabbed the gun and struggled with the man. He said he could not see his father but heard “other commotion” in the kitchen area. Suddenly, someone hit Shawn on the back of his head with a baseball bat. He said he blacked out for a moment, fell over the couch, and was beaten with the bat and the butt of the gun. He said two men told him, “Don’t try and be brave or anything, sit down, stay right here.” While the men were with him, Shawn could hear his father screaming downstairs. The man with the bat left, and the man with the gun moved Shawn to a bathroom. Shawn grabbed a towel and held it to his head. The man with the gun told Shawn to sit in the bathroom and stayed with him until the police arrived. Shawn said that while he was in the

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State of Tennessee v. Michael Deon Mills and Kenneth Allen Spencer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-michael-deon-mills-and-kennet-tenncrimapp-2011.