State of Tennessee v. Phalanda D. Falls

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 8, 2014
DocketE2014-00350-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Phalanda D. Falls (State of Tennessee v. Phalanda D. Falls) 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. Phalanda D. Falls, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs September 16, 2014

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. PHALANDA D. FALLS

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sullivan County No. S61014 R. Jerry Beck, Judge

No. E2014-00350-CCA-R3-CD - Filed October 8, 2014

Appellant, Phalanda D. Falls, entered a guilty plea to evading arrest, a Class D felony, and driving with a suspended license, a Class B misdemeanor, and received an effective sentence of four years. Following a hearing to determine her request for alternative sentencing, the trial court denied the motion and ordered appellant to serve her sentence in the Tennessee Department of Correction. This appeal follows. Upon our review of the record, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

R OGER A. P AGE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which N ORMA M CG EE O GLE and R OBERT H. M ONTGOMERY, J R., JJ., joined.

Stephen M. Wallace, District Public Defender; and Joseph F. Harrison, Assistant District Public Defender, Blountville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Phalanda D. Falls.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Lacy Wilber, Senior Counsel; Barry P. Staubus, District Attorney General; and Joshua D. Parsons, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

I. Facts

Appellant entered a guilty plea to evading arrest, a Class D felony, and driving with a suspended license, a Class B misdemeanor. She received the agreed-upon concurrent sentences of four years as a Range II, multiple offender with a thirty-five percent release eligibility and six months with a seventy-five percent release eligibility, respectively. As a factual basis for the pleas, the State offered the following recitation: On March 28th, 2012, Sgt. Greg Brown of the Bristol[,] Tennessee Police Department received a call that an individual by the name of Juan Henderson, who was wanted on an active warrant, had been seen at a location on Volunteer Parkway in Bristol, Sullivan County, Tennessee.

En route to that area[,] he was alerted to a particular silver Honda with a temporary tag that Mr. Henderson was to be in. The vehicle pulled in front of his car and then turned onto Volunteer Parkway.

He followed the car for some distance, and at some point turned on – observed the car, the Honda recklessly pass another vehicle in the emergency lane and then continue on the Volunteer Parkway.

At that point Sgt. Brown initiated his traffic lights and sirens in an attempt to stop the vehicle from driving recklessly, but it continued north on Volunteer Parkway, failed to stop at red lights, passed cars in the emergency lane.

At some point[,] they were able to get the vehicle stopped with the aid of Bristol[,] Virginia Police Department, the driver being the Defendant, Ms. Phalanda Falls.

The evading arrest is a felony evading arrest . . . because she was in a motor vehicle. They found her status to drive to be suspended at the time . . ..

Upon the stipulated facts, appellant pleaded guilty. The trial court held a hearing on appellant’s request for alternative sentencing at which the State offered the presentence report into evidence. The report indicated that appellant had two convictions for misdemeanor theft, one conviction for driving with a suspended license, two convictions for failure to appear, one conviction for driving under the influence of an intoxicant, one count of public intoxication, one count of domestic violence, three felony convictions for possession of cocaine, and one conviction for assault.

Appellant testified on her own behalf and stated that at the time of the offense, she lived with her uncle. She received Social Security disability benefits due to diagnoses of bipolar disorder and manic-depressive disorder with schizophrenic traits. Appellant stated that prior to becoming disabled, she received vocational training and maintained regular employment.

-2- With regard to her prior record, appellant indicated that the driving under the influence conviction she garnered in Cobb County, Georgia, involved “Air Duster” rather than alcohol. She stated that she began using marijuana at age seventeen but that she ceased using it in 2010. However, she explained that she smoked marijuana ten days prior to the hearing but that she had not used cocaine since 2005. Appellant testified that her addiction involved “Air Duster,” which is a computer cleaner. She used it by “huffing,” which she accomplished by spraying it directly into her mouth and lungs. At one point in her substance abuse, she used fourteen cans per day. Appellant also garnered some misdemeanor theft convictions when she attempted to shoplift the substance. She maintained that she had not “huffed” in almost a year. She acknowledged that the substance had done serious damage to her body and that in 2006, she had been treated in an intensive outpatient program for “huffing.”

Appellant testified that she was currently participating in counseling once a month for her manic-depressive disorder with schizophrenic traits. She had also been admitted to a mental health facility on two prior occasions in 2010 and 2011 for mental breakdowns. She explained that both of the breakdowns were related to her “huffing” problem.

Appellant explained that she had previously failed to appear in court on two different occasions because her grandmother was sick. Her three felony convictions were on different days but were very close in time and occurred when she was twenty years old. She successfully completed probation on those cases. At the time of the hearing, appellant had a pending felony charge of distribution of hydrocodone, a controlled substance, which she garnered while out on bond for the instant offense. Appellant, through counsel, also introduced a letter of support from a family friend, L. Travis Campbell.

On cross-examination, the State established that after appellant’s failures to appear in court on two dates in 2005, she relocated to Georgia until late 2007 or 2008 and that she did not seek to resolve her pending charges until 2009. Appellant also confirmed that she garnered a drug conviction involving cocaine in 1999 and received a fifteen-year sentence that was suspended to five years of supervised probation.

In delivering its ruling, the trial court stated:

The Court has many balancing factors the Court must consider. The prior record is highly negative. The prior failure[s] to appear[] is highly – highly negative, in that she didn’t appear back in court, was gone for some time, was eventually convicted of misdemeanor failure to appear. She has various prior felonies which I’ve read into the record, I won’t repeat.

-3- Now, the Court’s also required to consider prison overcrowding. And the Court’s required to consider in the nature of Community Corrections the potentiality of someone being reformed in regards to drug use. And I have to look at those items, too.

Now, and you have to figure out what’s the best interest of the State, what’s the best interest of . . . the Defendant.

What concerns the Court in many ways here, in addition to all those things I found when I was going through the presentence report, is the fact that while she was on bond on this case, she’s picked up a new charge that has not been tried in Bristol, Virginia, and she also indicated she had reformed somewhat, at least in regard to huffing; but nevertheless she now has a – an admission that she used marijuana while waiting, just as early as ten days ago.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Phalanda D. Falls, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-phalanda-d-falls-tenncrimapp-2014.