State of Tennessee v. Robert Beham

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 18, 2019
DocketW2018-01974-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Robert Beham (State of Tennessee v. Robert Beham) 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 Beham, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

12/18/2019 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs November 5, 2019

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ROBERT BEHAM

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 16-00648 Carolyn Wade Blackett, Judge ___________________________________

No. W2018-01974-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

A Shelby County jury convicted the Defendant, Robert Beham, as charged of rape of a child and aggravated sexual battery, and the trial court imposed an effective sentence of forty years at one hundred percent. On appeal, the Defendant argues (1) the trial court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal and the evidence is insufficient to sustain his convictions, and (2) the trial court abused its discretion in applying the enhancement factor regarding his history of criminal behavior. We affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, P.J., and ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., J., joined.

Rosalind E. Brown (on appeal) and Sam Perkins and James Jones (at trial), Memphis, Tennessee, for the Defendant-Appellant, Robert Beham.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Samantha L. Simpson, Assistant Attorney General; Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Stacy McEndree and Gavin Smith, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Trial. The proof established that G.B. was the mother of the victim, A.W.,1 and the sister of the Defendant. At the time of the offenses against the victim, G.B. had been dating DeAngelo Westley, who was the father of their two young boys but was not A.W.’s father. In September 2015, G.B., Westley, and the children were living with

1 It is the policy of this court to identify minor victims by their initials only. We will also identify the minor victims’ family members by their initials in order to protect the identity of these victims. G.B.’s mother, S.B., and the Defendant in an apartment. At the time, A.W. was five years old.

G.B. said that when a person entered S.B.’s apartment, the dining room was on the left, a staircase to the second floor of the unit was directly in front of the door, and the living room was to the right. A person had to walk through the dining room to reach the kitchen, and the kitchen also opened onto the living room. The living room had a small couch with an ottoman, which was usually placed in front of the couch.

The morning of September 7, 2018, G.B. awoke and realized that they had no food for breakfast, so she and Westley left the apartment to purchase milk and cereal at a nearby store. When they left, the three children and the Defendant were playing video games in the living room, and S.B. was asleep in her bedroom upstairs. It took G.B. and Westley approximately five minutes to buy food at the store and return home. They entered the apartment and walked through the dining room to the kitchen so they could prepare breakfast for the family but did not see the children in the living room. G.B. called her children to eat breakfast, and the two youngest children walked into the kitchen from the dining room, but A.W. never came to eat. G.B. began trying to find A.W. She looked in the living room and saw the Defendant “getting up off the floor.” She noticed that the Defendant had a surprised look on his face and that his pants were “kind of twisted” like he had just pulled them up. Then she noticed A.W., who did not have her pants on, getting up from the floor with a shocked look on her face “like she was in trouble or something.” G.B. observed the Defendant hurrying to get A.W. pants on. She also noticed that the ottoman had been moved from its normal position so that it blocked the view into the living room from the front door.

G.B. asked A.W. why she had not come into the kitchen to eat breakfast and asked the Defendant why A.W.’s pants had been on the floor. The Defendant replied that A.W. had urinated on herself and that he had helped her change her clothes. G.B. took A.W.’s hand and saw that her daughter’s underwear was at her ankle even though her pants had been pulled up. G.B. asked the Defendant where A.W.’s wet clothing was, and the Defendant did not answer. G.B. later discovered that A.W.’s underwear had a “streak of discharge” on it, but the underwear did not feel damp as if A.W. had urinated on it, and it did not smell of urine. G.B. said there were no other signs that A.W. had urinated on herself. She noted that A.W. was fully “potty-trained” and did not have a history of urinary problems.

G.B. said she fixed A.W.’s underwear and pants, put A.W. on her hip, and walked out the front door of the apartment with her. When they got outside, G.B. asked A.W. what happened, and A.W. got a “scared look on her face” and “put her head down” before replying that the Defendant had “touched” her. G.B. said that after A.W. told her -2- what happened, the Defendant, who was standing on the porch, kept yelling, “What did she say?”

G.B. took A.W. with her inside the apartment and told Westley that the Defendant had touched A.W.. She noticed that the Defendant followed them back inside the apartment, where he began “cleaning up and doing things.” G.B. went upstairs to awaken S.B., so S.B. could ask the Defendant what he had done to A.W.. She explained to S.B. what A.W. had said to her and informed S.B. that she was calling the police. S.B. undressed A.W. in order to examine her, and G.B. and S.B. observed that A.W.’s genitals were wet and that there was a discharge on A.W.’s underwear. G.B. dressed A.W. without her underwear, which they left on the floor of S.B.’s bedroom, and S.B. went downstairs to talk to the Defendant about what had happened while G.B. called the police.

G.B. said that when S.B. asked the Defendant if he had touched A.W., the Defendant replied, “Man,” and “got real[ly] sad” but never denied touching A.W. S.B. seemed “really stunned” and “shocked” and asked the Defendant why he would do that to his niece, and the Defendant got angry and ran up the stairs in order to attack G.B.. G.B. picked up a remote and threw it at the Defendant, hitting him on the top of his nose, which caused him to bleed, and Westley blocked the Defendant from coming up the stairs for G.B.. As the Defendant continued to try to attack G.B., Westley fought him, and they ended up breaking a window as the police arrived. Then the Defendant “picked up a 2 x 4” board, and the police told him they would shoot him if he did not drop it. The Defendant eventually put the board down, and the police arrested him. G.B. told the police what had happened to A.W., and the police questioned everyone in the home, although the Defendant did not say much to the officers.

G.B. briefly talked to the police before riding with A.W. in an ambulance to the hospital. Then G.B. and her family took A.W. to the Rape Crisis Center, where the staff examined A.W. and asked her questions about the incident. G.B. said she was not present during A.W.’s examination or while the staff of the Rape Crisis Center asked A.W. questions. A day or two later, G.B. took A.W. to the Child Advocacy Center, where a forensic interviewer talked to A.W. about what happened. G.B. was not present during A.W.’s forensic interview. She said that she did not talk to A.W. about the details of what the Defendant had done to her before taking her to the Rape Crisis Center or the Child Advocacy Center. G.B. said that following this incident, A.W. had problems “learning and being around people,” so she had her go to therapy for a while.

A.W., who was seven years old at the time of the Defendant’s trial, testified that the Defendant was her uncle. A.W.

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State of Tennessee v. Robert Beham, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-robert-beham-tenncrimapp-2019.