State of Tennessee v. Randy David Miles

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 30, 2004
DocketM2003-01492-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Randy David Miles (State of Tennessee v. Randy David Miles) 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. Randy David Miles, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE June 8, 2004 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. RANDY DAVID MILES

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Franklin County No. 13679 J. Curtis Smith, Judge

No. M2003-01492-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 30, 2004

The defendant, Randy David Miles, was convicted by a Franklin County Circuit Court jury of two counts of aggravated rape, a Class A felony, and aggravated kidnapping, a Class B felony, for his participation with a codefendant, Gary Allen Phillips, Jr., in grabbing a woman from the street in Northern Alabama and transporting her by car to the defendant’s grandmother’s abandoned farmhouse in Huntland, Tennessee, where the defendant raped her while his codefendant watched. The defendant was sentenced by the trial court as a Range I, standard offender to concurrent terms of eleven years, nine months for the aggravated kidnapping conviction and twenty-four years, six months for each of the aggravated rape convictions, for an effective sentence of twenty-four years, six months. His Tennessee sentences were ordered to be served concurrently to his Alabama sentence for kidnapping. On appeal, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, the State’s failure to make a proper election of offenses, and the sentences imposed by the trial court. Following our review, we conclude that one of the aggravated rape convictions is invalid because the facts upon which the State relied to support the separate convictions constitute only one offense. Accordingly, we reverse one of the defendant’s convictions for aggravated rape. We affirm the judgments as to the other aggravated rape conviction and the aggravated kidnapping conviction but modify the sentences to twenty-two years and nine years, respectively.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Circuit Court Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, Sentences Modified

ALAN E. GLENN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JERRY L. SMITH and JOE G. RILEY, JJ., joined.

Philip A. Condra, District Public Defender, and Francis W. Pryor, Jr., Assistant Public Defender, for the appellant, Randy David Miles.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Elizabeth B. Marney, Assistant Attorney General; James Michael Taylor, District Attorney General; and Steven M. Blount, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION

FACTS

Trial

The victim testified that she and her boyfriend, Tommy Hickerson, were returning from his softball game to his sister’s house in Hazel Green, Alabama, shortly after midnight on May 4, 2000, when their car became stuck in the mud a short distance from the sister’s house. After unsuccessfully attempting to extricate the car by hand, Hickerson left for the house on foot to retrieve a “come-a-long” from his sister’s garage. The victim waited in the car for about ten minutes and then began walking to the house to help Hickerson search for the tool. Before she reached her destination, however, a car pulled up beside her and a “huge” man she had never seen before, but whom she later identified as Gary Allen Phillips, Jr., got out of the car, grabbed her, and placed her on his lap in the passenger seat of the vehicle. The victim identified the defendant as the driver of the vehicle, but testified she had never seen him before that night either.

The victim, who was very frightened, attempted to get the men to let her go by pointing to a house they were passing and telling them it was her home and they could drop her off there. However, the defendant kept going, speeding down the street, turning onto various roads that the victim did not know, and flying through stop signs and traffic lights. The victim kept looking at the door handle, considering whether she could jump out of the car despite the speed at which they were traveling, until Phillips noticed, opened the car door, and said, “[W]hat you want out, you want out,” which scared her. Phillips shut the car door, and the defendant told the victim, “I want to fuck you tonight,” to which she angrily responded, “[T]he hell you are.” The defendant then told Phillips that he was driving to his grandmother’s abandoned house.

After approximately forty-five minutes to an hour, the defendant pulled up to his grandmother’s abandoned farmhouse in Huntland, Tennessee, and abruptly got out of the car. At the time, however, the victim did not know where the house was located, as she was unfamiliar with the area and the defendant said only that they were at his grandmother’s house. Phillips got out of the car at the same time, pulled her out, and forced her to walk with him and the defendant into the house. Once inside, the victim’s clothes were rapidly removed and one of the men said, “[D]o you want her? I’ll get her, I’ll take her.” The victim next found herself pushed down onto a mattress in a dark room with the defendant on top of her attempting to penetrate her and Phillips sitting beside her on the bed. During this time, she repeatedly told the defendant she had to use the bathroom, but he ignored her until she announced she was going to have to go to the bathroom in the bed. At that point, he jerked her up and took her into a bathroom where the toilet collapsed when she sat on it, so that she ultimately had to urinate down her legs onto the floor while the defendant stood beside her holding her arm. She was then “slammed back on the bed” and raped by the defendant for what seemed to her like hours. The victim described the ordeal as follows: “ I kept fighting ‘em, and fighting ‘em and he raped me over and over and over and for so long.” The victim was positive it was the defendant who raped her.

-2- The victim testified she fought the defendant throughout and managed to scratch his face. She said she was able to push him off at one point, causing him to withdraw from her. The defendant told her she was making him mad and penetrated her again. The victim testified that the defendant penetrated her vagina with his penis. Phillips was “mumbling back and forth” during this time, and the defendant told her she was making him mad as well, and that she did not want to do that. Phillips, whom the victim described as “huge” and “real creepy looking,” then took off his shirt, “scoot[ed] in beside [her]” and began pinching her arms, legs, and stomach while watching the defendant rape her. Phillips also took out a pager, turned on its light, and moved it over her body, saying that he wanted to see what she looked like. At some point while the defendant was raping her, the victim deliberately dropped her hair clip onto the floor beside the bed in the hopes that it would later help the police locate and identify the perpetrators.

The victim testified that when the defendant had finished raping her, he held her in his arms in the bed and told her they were going to lie there until the sun came up, and he would leave when she fell asleep. Phillips was “right beside” her during most of this time. At daylight, the defendant got up and quickly dressed and the victim dressed as well. The defendant then pulled her outside to the car and forced her to sit on his lap in the passenger seat. Before getting into the car, the victim dropped her cigarette pack onto the ground without the defendant noticing, hoping that it would provide additional evidence for the police. Phillips got in the driver’s side of the vehicle and they began “flying out” of the area, once again driving down roads that were unfamiliar to the victim. She was frightened and crying, and the defendant kept calling her “a whiny little bitch.” At one point, Phillips stopped the car on a gravel road and the defendant took her out of the car and held her by the arm while Phillips went to get gas. When Phillips returned, she and the defendant got back in the car and Phillips continued driving.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Randy David Miles, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-randy-david-miles-tenncrimapp-2004.