State of Tennessee v. Robert Allen Crawford

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 9, 2004
DocketE2003-00627-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Robert Allen Crawford (State of Tennessee v. Robert Allen Crawford) 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. Robert Allen Crawford, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs January 27, 2004

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ROBERT ALLEN CRAWFORD

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Washington County No. 25661 Robert E. Cupp, Judge

No. E2003-00627-CCA-R3-CD March 9, 2004

The defendant was convicted by a Washington County Criminal Court jury of first degree felony murder in the perpetration of an aggravated burglary; criminally negligent homicide, a Class E felony; aggravated burglary, a Class C felony; aggravated assault, a Class C felony; and reckless endangerment, a Class E felony. The trial court merged the conviction for criminally negligent homicide with the conviction for first degree murder, and the defendant received concurrent sentences of life for the first degree murder conviction, four years for the aggravated burglary conviction, three years for the aggravated assault conviction, and one year for the reckless endangerment conviction. He raises two interrelated issues on appeal: whether the evidence was sufficient to support his felony murder conviction and whether the aggravated burglary count of the indictment was fatally defective for failing to name a victim for the underlying intended assault, thereby invalidating his convictions for aggravated burglary and first degree murder. Following our review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

ALAN E. GLENN , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which GARY R. WADE, P.J., and ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER , J., joined.

A. Scott Pratt, Johnson City, Tennessee, for the appellant, Robert A. Crawford.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Helena Walton Yarbrough, Assistant Attorney General; Joe C. Crumley, Jr., District Attorney General; and Steven R. Finney, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

The record in this case establishes the following facts. On the afternoon of June 22, 1999, the defendant, Robert Allen Crawford, whose estranged girlfriend, Diana Hatley, had appeared in court earlier that day on a domestic abuse charge against him, fired two shotgun blasts through the door of the trailer home that Hatley’s father, Billy Ricker, shared with his longtime companion, Linda Leopold, and their disabled daughter, Georgia Ricker. At the time of the incident, Hatley, who was Ricker’s daughter from a previous marriage, was also in the home. The defendant’s first shot went through the doorknob. The second shot went through the door and into Ricker’s abdomen, causing his death.

Unable to gain entry through the front door, the defendant broke a window, entered the house with his shotgun in hand, smashed furniture in the front room, and began beating Hatley and threatening to kill her, Leopold, and Georgia Ricker. Hatley fought back, struggling with the defendant over the gun and eventually managing to wrest it from his grasp and run out the front door. Upon seeing sheriff’s deputies outside, the defendant fled through the back door and into a nearby field, where he was captured. He was subsequently indicted by the Washington County Grand Jury on one count of first degree premeditated murder, one count of first degree felony murder, one count of aggravated burglary, two counts of aggravated assault, and one count of felony reckless endangerment.

At the defendant’s July 8-11, 2002, trial, Linda Leopold testified as follows. She lived at 143 L.C. McKee Road in Jonesborough, Tennessee, the location of the shooting. She and Billy Ricker had never married, but had lived together for thirty years and had a daughter, Georgia Ann Ricker, who was mentally and physically handicapped and confined to a wheelchair. Early on the morning of the shooting, the defendant came to Ricker’s home and pushed his way into Hatley’s bedroom. Ricker ordered him to leave, raising his voice, and the defendant complied. Ricker and Hatley then left to go to court on a domestic abuse charge that Hatley had filed against the defendant. The defendant returned to the house at approximately 1:15 p.m., at a time when he was supposed to have been in court and while Ricker and Hatley were still gone. The front door was locked, and Leopold was in the bathroom when she heard footsteps on the front porch. When she came out of the bathroom, she saw the defendant walking around the house. She then heard the sound of his footsteps on the back steps, followed by the sound of the unlocked back door sliding open. By the time she reached the kitchen, the defendant was already inside the home.

The defendant wanted to see Hatley and asked Leopold where she was. She told him Hatley had gone to court with her father to have papers drawn up to have the defendant leave her alone, because she was afraid of him. The defendant asked repeatedly if he could come in to return Hatley’s clothes and became angry when Leopold told him to leave the clothes on the front porch. She asked the defendant to leave, and he backed onto the porch. Before leaving, however, he pulled a red shotgun shell out of his pocket and said, “Well, I got this for her. If I can’t have her, nobody else can.” Leopold testified she locked the back door after the defendant left, but did not call the police because she did not want to upset Georgia. She said she did not smell any alcohol on the defendant.

Approximately fifteen minutes after the defendant’s departure, Ricker and Hatley returned to the house and Ricker immediately asked why Leopold had not answered the telephone during their

-2- absence. She told him it had not rung, which led to their discovery that the phone lines had been cut at the box outside the house. In response to Ricker’s telephone call from a neighbor’s residence, a police officer came to the house and stayed approximately twenty minutes talking to them about the incident and inspecting the cut phone lines. Immediately after his departure, the entire family went back inside the house and, shortly thereafter, Hatley called out to her father that the defendant was coming on the porch with a shotgun. Leopold turned Georgia’s wheelchair over to Hatley and begged her not to let the defendant hurt Georgia. Hatley took Georgia into a bedroom, and Leopold joined Ricker on the front porch of the trailer.

Leopold testified that when she and Ricker stepped outside, the defendant pointed his gun at them and told them he was going to shoot. She said Ricker yelled at the defendant to put his gun down, but the defendant kept coming. She and Ricker retreated inside, and she shut and locked the front door. However, she then heard banging at the bottom of the door, caused, she believed, by the defendant’s kicking the door, and the door kept “popping” open despite her efforts to hold it shut. She yelled to Ricker that she was unable to hold the door, and he came behind her and reached to help hold it. The first shot went through the doorknob and burned her hand. Ricker pushed her aside, and the second shot struck him. He turned to her, said, “Linda, he shot me,” and fell into her arms. Leopold said that, before he was shot, Ricker screamed at the defendant to put the gun down and that she yelled at the same time for him not to shoot. Because the door was thin, she was confident the defendant heard them yelling and knew that Ricker was behind the door.

Leopold testified she laid Ricker down in the hallway and went into the bathroom. She said Ricker’s body blocked the front door and prevented the defendant from entering. Next, the defendant broke a window, reamed out the broken glass with his gun, stepped through the window, and “started busting up everything in the front room.” However, as soon as he spotted Hatley in the kitchen, he raised his gun and went toward her.

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Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
State v. Hammonds
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State v. Tuggle
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Carroll v. State
370 S.W.2d 523 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1963)
State v. Anderson
835 S.W.2d 600 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1992)
State v. Evans
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754 S.W.2d 620 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1987)
Bolin v. State
405 S.W.2d 768 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1966)
State v. Grace
493 S.W.2d 474 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1973)

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State of Tennessee v. Robert Allen Crawford, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-robert-allen-crawford-tenncrimapp-2004.