State of Tennessee v. Ricco R. Williams

468 S.W.3d 510, 2015 Tenn. LEXIS 556
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 2015
DocketW2013-01897-SC-R11-CD
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 468 S.W.3d 510 (State of Tennessee v. Ricco R. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court 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. Ricco R. Williams, 468 S.W.3d 510, 2015 Tenn. LEXIS 556 (Tenn. 2015).

Opinions

OPINION

SHARON G. LEE, C.J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

in which CORNELIA A. CLARK and HOLLY KIRBY, JJ., joined. GARY R. WADE, J., filed a separate dissenting opinion. JEFFREY S. BIVINS, J., not participating.

This appeal presents the issue of whether a trial judge is required to give a jury instruction based on our decision in State v. White, 362 S.W.3d 559 (Tenn.2012), when a defendant is tried on charges of kidnapping and robbery of different victims. The defendant, along with two accomplices, broke into a family’s home while they were sleeping. Brandishing weapons, the intruders forced the family members to remain in the living room while, they ransacked the home. The intruders later fled with money and jewelry. At trial, a White jury instruction was neither requested nor given. The jury convicted the defendant of numerous charges, including five counts of especially aggravated kidnapping of the husband, wife, and three children; aggravated burglary of the husband’s residence; and two counts of aggravated robbery of the husband and wife. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the convictions for especially aggravated kidnapping, aggravated burglary, and one count of aggravated robbery as to the husband and modified the conviction of aggravated robbery of the wife to aggravated assault. On review, we remanded [512]*512the case for consideration in light of White. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the convictions of especially aggravated kidnapping as to the three children, but, in light of White and State v. Cecil, 409 S.W.3d 599 (Tenn.2013), reversed the convictions of especially aggravated kidnapping as to the husband and wife and remanded those charges for a new trial. In this appeal, the defendant asserts that the trial court’s failure to give a White jury instruction as to the remaining three convictions for the especially aggravated kidnapping of the children constituted reversible error. In accordance with our opinion in State v. Teats, 468 S.W.3d 495, No. M2012-01232-SC-R11-CD, 2015 WL 4237689 (Tenn.2015) released contemporaneously with this opinion, we hold that the White jury instruction was not required as to the offenses of especially aggravated kidnapping of the three children.

I. Facts and Procedural History

In the early morning hours of June 1, 2009, Ricco R. Williams (“the Defendant”) and two accomplices broke into the home that Sherita and Timothy Currie1 shared with Mrs. Currie’s three children in Ripley, Tennessee. They held the family at gunpoint in the living room and ransacked the home. When the police arrived, the intruders fled with money and jewelry. A grand jury returned a multi-count indictment against the Defendant, charging him with the following crimes: Counts 1-5— five counts of especially aggravated kidnapping, one for each member of the family; Count 6 — aggravated burglary of Mr. Currie’s residence; Count 7 — employing a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony; Counts 8 and 9 — two counts of aggravated robbery against Mr. and Mrs. Currie; Count 10 — employing a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony, having been previously convicted of drug possession, aggravated assault, and voluntary manslaughter; and Count 11 — possession of a firearm, having been previously convicted of a felony.

The Defendant was tried before a jury in June 2011. Evidence at trial consisted primarily of testimony from members of the Currie family and law enforcement officers. The Defendant presented no proof.

Mrs. Currie testified that, at the time of the crimes, she and her husband lived with Mrs. Currie’s three children, M.R., age 19, K.R., age 17, and A.R., age 13.2 At 1:15 a.m. on June 1, 2009, Mrs. Currie and her husband awoke to the sound of breaking glass. Mr. Currie left the bedroom to investigate the cause of the noise while Mrs. Currie went to check on K.R. and A.R. in their bedroom. While in the chil-dren’s bedroom, Mrs. Currie heard her husband exclaim from the living room, “Man, what the F~ /all doing?” She then gathered K.R. and A.R., and all three made their way to the living room. Mrs. Currie heard a scuffle and,' when she reached the living room, saw Mr. Currie on his knees, bleeding from two gashes in his head. M.R: remained asleep in her bedroom with the door locked.

Mr. Currie testified when he got to the living room, an assailant placed a gun to his head and told him to “drop it off,” an apparent demand to give the assailant something. They began to struggle, and the assailant struck Mr. Currie twice in the head with the butt of the gun.

[513]*513According to Mrs. Currie, the assailants yelled, cursed, and forced the family to sit on the couch. The assailants then repeated their demands that the family “drop it off,” which Mrs. Currie took to mean that the men wanted the family to surrender drugs and/or money. She testified that the men stated, “[Y]’all mother F’s are holding us up. This is our job. This what [sic] we do. We got another door we got to go kick in.” The assailants then threatened to tie up Mr. Currie, put him in the trunk of a car, and “drop him off in the Mississippi River.” They further threatened to tie up the family with the duct tape they had brought with them and burn the house with the family inside. Two of the assailants searched the entire house, leaving each room in disarray as they went. As the men searched the house, Mrs. Currie could hear items falling and breaking. One assailant stayed in the living room with his gun pointed at the family.

M.R. testified that she had been asleep during the incident until one of the assailants kicked in her bedroom door. The man held a gun to her head and demanded money. When she was not forthcoming with money, he began to search her room, going through her purse, and taking money and rings that he found. He then cursed at her to get up and to get her “punk a— up there with the rest of [the family].” When she walked into the living room, M.R. saw the rest of the family sitting on the couch.

One of the unidentified assailants then took K.R. to the back of the house and told her to collect any cell phones. K.R. testified that while she was searching her mother and stepfather’s bedroom for their cell phones, she noticed the landline telephone beside her. She was able to surreptitiously call 911 from the landline telephone while the assailant was temporarily distracted. The assailant eventually told KR. to forget about the phones and go back to the living room. She stated that the assailants “got frustrated because they didn’t get what they wanted, the money or anything, so they just told us forget it, and told all of us to line up in front of the window.... [T]hey [then] threw the duct tape down on the floor” in front of the family.

At that moment, about forty minutes into the ordeal, the family heard a knock on the front door. Mrs. Currie screamed for help, and the individual at the door identified himself as an officer with the Ripley Police Department (“RPD”). Upon hearing this exchange, the intruders panicked and appeared to be confused about which way to run.

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State of Tennessee v. Stephano Lee Weilacker
Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 2017
Ricco Williams v. State of Tennessee
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State of Tennessee v. Melvin King
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State of Tennessee v. Lajuan Harbison
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State of Tennessee v. Travei Pryor
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State of Tennessee v. Jerome Maurice Teats
468 S.W.3d 495 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2015)

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Bluebook (online)
468 S.W.3d 510, 2015 Tenn. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-ricco-r-williams-tenn-2015.