State of Tennessee v. Ngoc Dien Nguyen

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 26, 2012
DocketM2012-00549-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Ngoc Dien Nguyen (State of Tennessee v. Ngoc Dien Nguyen) 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. Ngoc Dien Nguyen, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs September 11, 2012

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. NGOC DIEN NGUYEN

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Sumner County No. CR399-2011 Dee David Gay, Judge

No. M2012-00549-CCA-R3-CD - Filed October 26, 2012

The defendant, Ngoc Dien Nguyen, pled guilty to theft over $1,000 and attempted theft over $1,000 and was sentenced as a Range I offender to an effective term of six years in the Department of Correction. The court ordered that the six-year sentence be served consecutively to a Robertson County sentence and a California sentence and that the defendant pay $9,462 in restitution to the victim. On appeal, the defendant challenges the award of restitution. After review, we affirm the defendant’s convictions but remand for a new hearing as to restitution.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Criminal Court Affirmed and Remanded

A LAN E. G LENN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J ERRY L. S MITH and J AMES C URWOOD W ITT, J R., JJ., joined.

David A. Doyle, District Public Defender (on appeal); and Terry Frizzell, Hendersonville, Tennessee (at trial), for the appellant, Ngoc Dien Nguyen.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Meredith Devault, Senior Counsel; Lawrence R. Whitley, District Attorney General; and Tara Wyllie and Thomas B. Dean, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

At the November 30, 2011 guilty plea hearing, the State recited the facts it would have presented had the case gone to trial:

[T]he State’s proof would show that on the Attempted Theft over $1,000 there was a check passed at Sumner Bank & Trust of Hendersonville for the amount of $4,722 by the defendant, Ngoc Nguyen. That check was written, . . ., on or about . . . February 14, 2011. He did not have the owner’s consent and he did deprive them of that amount of money – or attempted to on that case.

On Count Two, . . ., the State’s proof would show that on February 15, 2011, the defendant cashed a countercheck in the amount of $4,700 at the American Security Bank & Trust on Springhouse Court in Hendersonville, Tennessee. That he did that and took the value of $4,700 without the bank’s . . . effective consent and to deprive them of that amount[.]

At the February 6, 2012 sentencing hearing, Christy Caudill, the chief information officer for American Security Bank in Hendersonville, testified that the defendant came into the bank on February 14, 2011, and deposited Check No. 1037 in the amount of $4,722 drawn from his account at Sumner Bank & Trust. That same day, he wrote Check No. 1194 in the amount of $4,722 from his account at American Security Bank and deposited it at another bank. The next day, the defendant returned to American Security Bank and cashed an over-the-counter check in the amount of $4,700, which the bank paid because there appeared to be sufficient funds in his account. However, Check No. 1037 was subsequently returned to American Security Bank for insufficient funds. The defendant also wrote two additional checks, each in the amount of $4,722, from his account at American Security Bank. Caudill said that Check No. 1194 “was paid, but it was not a good check” and that the other two checks were returned for insufficient funds to the bank of first deposit. She said that American Security Bank’s loss totaled $9,462. Caudill said that the defendant’s activity was known as “check-kiting,” meaning that he used “the float time between the time a check is deposited and it comes back as insufficient to the bank. He[] us[ed] that little bit of time in between to try to withdraw those funds.”

Connie Newby, an employee of Sumner Bank & Trust, testified that she had worked in banking for forty years and was familiar with check-kiting. She said the defendant opened an account at Sumner Bank & Trust on February 24, 2010, but did not use it again until February 14, 2011, when he deposited a check in the amount of $4,722 drawn on American Security Bank. Prior to that deposit, the defendant’s account had had a balance of $125 for “a long period of time.” The check the defendant wrote to American Security Bank on February 14, 2011, as well as another check he wrote to Old Hickory Credit Union, were returned, the first one for insufficient funds and the second one as “closed.” Newby explained that there was one check coming in and two checks going out from the defendant’s account and that between the three banks, “there was a float of $14,166,” meaning that the checks had been deposited but had not had time to clear the bank.

-2- Kimberly Gulden of the Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole testified that she prepared the defendant’s presentence report, which was made an exhibit. She said the defendant had two felony convictions from Robertson County and was on probation when he committed the present offenses. Her investigation revealed that the defendant had an outstanding warrant in Washington for unlawful issuance of bank checks and second degree theft. He also had a parole violation in California stemming from his convictions for grand theft over $400 and a fraudulent claim for loss. The defendant reported that his wife lived in California and that he visited there often. The defendant further reported that he had a gambling addiction and alcohol problem and that he spent all of the $4,700 in one day in Tunica, Mississippi.

According to Gulden’s presentence report, the defendant disputed the amount of restitution he owed, which was to be resolved at the sentencing hearing. The United States Department of Immigration had placed a hold on the defendant because he was not a legal citizen and was in this country with a “green card.”

The forty-year-old defendant testified that he was born in Vietnam and came to the United States when he was thirteen years old and lived with his uncle in California until he was eighteen. He began gambling in high school and, in college, started going to casinos three to four times a week. He gambled with the money he earned from his electronic manufacturing job, as well as the financial aid money he had received to attend college. He moved to Washington state after attending two years of college in California and graduated from the University of Washington with a degree in engineering. He worked at Seaman’s Medical System in Washington from 1994 to 1996 when he was laid off “because of [his] gambling.” He then worked for various temporary agencies but continued to gamble. In 1998, he sponsored his parents to come from Vietnam to America and moved back to California. At the time, he was living “under US Green Card Legal Alien” but never applied for citizenship because he “caught the DUI [i]n ‘93 and then from that day, . . . [he had] to go and expunge that . . . . I feel like I don’t really need it until ‘98 I caught that felony.” He admitted that he had been arrested for a felony bad check charge in California in 1998.

The defendant said he married in 1998 or 1999 and that his gambling caused his separation from his wife and children, as well as problems with his employment. He admitted that he was addicted to gambling and that it controlled his life, but he had never sought treatment for it. In 2009, he moved from California to Tennessee to work in his cousin’s nail salon in Nashville. He also worked as a handyman for Lien Vo at Platinum Realty. While living in Tennessee, he gambled online and frequented casinos in Mississippi, Illinois, and Indiana.

Asked if he had the money to pay the restitution, the defendant said he had talked to his mother and his family did not “have the money that $9,000 to pay the restitution. . . . I

-3- asked [the trial judge] last November 30 I come up with that $5,000 . . .

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Bottoms
87 S.W.3d 95 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 2001)
State v. Johnson
968 S.W.2d 883 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1997)
State v. Smith
898 S.W.2d 742 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1994)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Ngoc Dien Nguyen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-ngoc-dien-nguyen-tenncrimapp-2012.