State of Tennessee v. Reginald Bernard Coffee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 31, 2017
DocketM2016-01834-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Reginald Bernard Coffee (State of Tennessee v. Reginald Bernard Coffee) 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. Reginald Bernard Coffee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

08/31/2017 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs May 10, 2017

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. REGINALD BERNARD COFFEE

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2012-D-3081 Seth W. Norman, Judge

No. M2016-01834-CCA-R3-CD

The Defendant, Reginald Bernard Coffee, was convicted by a Davidson County Criminal Court jury of especially aggravated robbery, a Class A felony, and sentenced to fifteen years. See T.C.A. § 39-13-403 (2014). On appeal, he contends that (1) the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction and (2) the fingerprint evidence was admitted without a sufficient foundation. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which NORMA MCGEE OGLE and ALAN E. GLENN, JJ., joined.

Kevin Kelly (on appeal and at motion for new trial), Michael Freeman (at trial), Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Reginald Bernard Coffee.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; M. Todd Ridley, Assistant Attorney General; Glenn Funk, District Attorney General; and Renee Erb, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

This case relates to a June 5, 2012 robbery, during which David Johnson was shot in the abdomen. At the trial, Paresh Patel testified that on June 5, 2012, a shooting occurred at the hotel he owned. He said three surveillance cameras were located at the front of the building, and he identified photographs of the hotel and marked the location of one of the cameras. Mr. Patel stated that he lived at the hotel, that the police responded to the shooting, and that he gave them a copy of the surveillance recording. Mr. Patel said that he was told to stay away from the location of the shooting, and he denied that he or an employee picked up money from the parking lot and placed it on an air conditioning unit. He stated that he did not witness the robbery, that he did not know the victim, and that he did not remember if the victim’s truck was in the parking lot when the police arrived.

The surveillance recordings were received as an exhibit and depicted three angles of the incident. The first recording depicted the length of the hotel and the corresponding parking lot. In the recording, which was time stamped June 5, 2012, at 6:02 a.m., a black sedan parked to the right of a pickup truck. The sedan’s passenger side faced the camera. A man exited the rear passenger-side door of the sedan and walked to the pickup truck, momentarily reached into the truck bed, and returned to the sedan. The man paused and looked toward the front passenger window before reentering the passenger-side backseat, and the door remained slightly open. The man ran from the sedan and toward the hotel, and a small cloud of dust rose in the parking lot halfway between the sedan and the hotel. The sedan drove in reverse toward the entrance to the parking lot and the direction in which the man ran, and the sedan’s rear driver’s side door opened.

The second recording depicted the hotel and parking lot from the opposite end of the parking lot. It showed the black sedan’s driving backward and the man’s running. The rear driver’s side door was open and a person’s leg was hanging out. The third recording depicted the parking lot as visible from the hotel, and it showed the sedan’s driving backward with the rear driver’s side door open.

On cross-examination, Mr. Patel testified that on June 5, he heard a gunshot at about 6:00 a.m., walked outside, and saw “that guy . . . on the front of my door.” Mr. Patel said that he made a recording on his cell phone of the surveillance recording and later transferred the cell phone recording to a disc. He stated that the police did not have the original surveillance recording and that it had been destroyed.

The forty-six-year-old victim testified that he was shot at the hotel owned by Mr. Patel. He said that he had stayed at the hotel previously and that he was only there for one night. He stated that he was a tattoo artist and trained others, that he “bounced around” and did not have a home, and that before the shooting, he did not have medical problems. He said that a few days before the shooting, he met a woman named Meagan Pursell, that they “hooked up,” and that she asked him to come to Nashville to give her a tattoo. He stated that they met at a hotel, that he went to Clarksville the following day, and that he returned to Nashville that night. He said that Ms. Pursell visited him at a second hotel but that she did not stay the night. He stated that their third meeting occurred at Mr. Patel’s hotel, that he arrived between 6:00 and 7:00 p.m., and that Ms. Pursell joined him two hours later. He said that they smoked cocaine and marijuana, that he did not generally use cocaine, and that he had been “clean” for years after a previous prison sentence resulting from a drug conviction. He stated that after his release from

-2- prison, he married and had a child, discovered his marriage was invalid, obtained custody of his daughter, and “stayed off of everything but pot.”

The victim testified that when Ms. Pursell arrived, she had a “little bit” of cocaine and wanted him to give her money to purchase more. He said that he refused to give her the money, that he wanted to accompany her to buy the cocaine, that he helped her get the cocaine she wanted, and that he used some of the cocaine. He stated that she drove a black, late 1990s Ford Focus with a broken window or passenger’s side mirror. He said that he drove a Ford F-150 truck. He stated that they left the hotel in her car, that they returned to wait for someone who never arrived, and that they drove around looking for someone to sell them cocaine. He said that they were unsuccessful and that he left the car at about 1:30 or 2:00 a.m., three or four hours after Ms. Pursell came to the hotel. He stated that he got out of the car because Ms. Pursell wanted to go to a neighborhood in East Nashville and that “I’m a white man and I don’t put my life in jeopardy like that at 2:00 . . . in the morning in the projects.” He stated that Ms. Pursell insisted on going to the neighborhood and that she tried to “forcibly” take him with her. He said that he “jerked” the steering wheel to get Ms. Pursell to pull over, that he got out of the car on the interstate, and that she drove away. He said that he walked to a market and called a taxi, that a taxi would have taken too long to arrive, and that he decided to walk to a nearby truck stop and get something to eat. He said that he went to the truck stop, got something to drink, and Ms. Pursell called and asked where he was. He noted that Ms. Pursell had called him several times and that he initially ignored her calls.

The victim testified that Ms. Pursell offered to pick him up, that he walked to a nearby gas station, and that when she arrived between 4:30 and 5:00 a.m., she was accompanied by two male passengers whom he did not know. The victim estimated that the gas station was fifteen to twenty minutes from the hotel. He said that he paid for gas, entered the backseat, and sat behind the passenger. The victim stated that he tried to talk to the man in the backseat about his tattoos and the victim’s being a tattoo artist but that the man did not talk much. The victim described the man as a “big older man” around age thirty-two or thirty-three who was African-American and had short hair. The victim said that when they arrived at the hotel, Ms. Pursell was supposed to return because she wanted the victim to give her thirty dollars for drugs.

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State of Tennessee v. Reginald Bernard Coffee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-reginald-bernard-coffee-tenncrimapp-2017.