State of Tennessee v. Robert Eugene Crawford, Jr.

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 19, 2013
DocketE2012-00001-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Robert Eugene Crawford, Jr. (State of Tennessee v. Robert Eugene Crawford, Jr.) 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 Eugene Crawford, Jr., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs September 18, 2012

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ROBERT EUGENE CRAWFORD, JR.

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Sullivan County No. S56314 Robert H. Montgomery, Jr., Judge

No. E2012-00001-CCA-R3-CD - Filed August 19, 2013

The Defendant, Robert Eugene Crawford, Jr., was convicted by a Sullivan County jury of aggravated child abuse and aggravated child neglect. The trial court imposed consecutive terms of twenty-five years for each of these convictions. In this direct appeal, the Defendant contends that (1) the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress his statements to the police; (2) he was entitled to disclosure of grand jury materials; (3) reenactment photographs of the abuse were improperly admitted into evidence; (4) he should have been permitted to conduct individual voir dire of the potential jurors; (5) the trial court improperly limited his cross-examination of two witnesses; (6) his investigator should have been permitted to testify as a lay witness about the Defendant’s susceptibility to suggestion and the investigation techniques used; (7) he should have been allowed to present evidence from his mental evaluation about his reading comprehension difficulties; and (8) the trial court made several erroneous sentencing determinations, including the denial of his right to allocution, the length of the sentences imposed, and the imposition of consecutive sentencing. Following our review of the record and the applicable authorities, the judgments of the trial court are affirmed.

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

D. K ELLY T HOMAS, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J OHN E VERETT W ILLIAMS and R OBERT W. W EDEMEYER, JJ., joined.

Ilya I. Berenshteyn, Bristol, Tennessee, for the appellant, Robert Eugene Crawford, Jr.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Lacy E. Wilber, Assistant Attorney General; Barry P. Staubus, District Attorney General; and Teresa A. Nelson, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION FACTUAL BACKGROUND

By presentment returned on February 26, 2009, a Sullivan County grand jury charged the Defendant with separate counts of aggravated child abuse and aggravated child neglect, both involving his newborn son. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-15-402. The offenses were alleged to have been committed on or about June 8, 2008, to June 9, 2008. The Defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the convicting evidence on appeal; therefore, we provide only a brief summary of the facts underlying the Defendant’s convictions and those which are necessary for a determination of the issues on appeal.

The evidence at trial revealed the following facts. The victim’s date of birth was May 29, 2008, and the Defendant signed the victim’s birth certificate. At the time the victim was born, the victim’s mother and the Defendant were not married. After returning home from the hospital, the Defendant began to question the paternity of the victim and started calling the victim a “monk-monk,” meaning that the child was of Mexican heritage. The Defendant stated in the victim’s mother’s presence, “I wonder what would happen if I threw him up against a wall.” She testified that she thought he was joking at the time.

Prior to Sunday, June 8, 2008, the victim acted “like a normal baby”; he had been to his “well baby check up” and everything was “fine.” According to the victim’s mother, June 8 began like a “regular day.” She was at home with her two children, the victim and her fifteen-month-old daughter, and Deanna Jennings (“Deanna”), who also lived with the family in the Kingsport apartment. The Defendant was home because he did not have to work that day. During the evening hours, the victim started crying, which the victim’s mother described as different than a “normal newborn baby cry[,]” a “screaming cry like he was really hurting.” She gave him “gastro drops” in an effort to ease his pain. According to the victim’s mother, the crying lasted for an hour or so and stopped only after both she and the Defendant held the victim and walked him around, “patting his butt.” She recalled that she did not go to bed until “late” that evening.

The victim’s mother testified that, around 4:00 or 5:00 a.m. the next morning, Monday, June 9, the victim woke up again. She said that the Defendant “got up with [the victim]. . . and was feeding him and trying to get him to go to sleep[.]” She awoke when she “heard a loud screaming cry” and went to help the Defendant get the victim back to sleep; the victim “finally” went back to sleep. When the victim awoke at 10:00 or 10:30 a.m. on June 9, 2008, he hardly ate and his skin “was yellow, like he had jaundice.” She asked the Defendant “to look and see what he thought” about the victim, and the Defendant said, “He looks like he’s half dead.” After that, the victim was “just fussy,” and he continued not to eat very much throughout the day and slept “off and on.”

-2- They left the apartment and went to the store and Deanna’s mom’s house; the victim fell asleep in his carseat. When they got home later that afternoon, she took the victim out of his carseat and noticed severe swelling and bruising on the left side of the victim’s head and that his eye was “slanted” to where he could barely open it. She then took the victim to the hospital, where she was unable to explain the victim’s injuries upon arrival. The victim’s mother asserted that she had never done anything to harm the victim and that she had never seen anyone else harm the victim.

Deanna, who was thirteen years old in June 2008, testified at trial about the events surrounding the victim’s injuries, including the victim’s cries and when she and the victim’s mother discovered the victim’s injuries. She also heard the Defendant make racial slurs against the victim; ask aloud, “What would happen if I threw him up against the wall”; and following the victim’s injuries, say that he was “probably half dead.” Deanna also testified that she had never done anything to harm the victim and that she had never seen anyone else harm the victim.

An investigation into the victim’s injuries ensued. Detective Todd Ide of the Kingsport Police Department went to the hospital on June 9, 2008, and interviewed the Defendant. In the statement the Defendant gave to Det. Ide, the Defendant stated that he had gone to visit his wife in Hawkins County on June 9, 2008, when his sister called him and said that the victim was in the hospital. He stated to Det. Ide that he then came to the hospital, where he was informed of the victim’s injuries.

The following day, June 10, 2008, Detective Melanie Adkins of the Kingsport Police Department went to the hospital, where she interviewed the Defendant, the victim’s mother, and the treating physician. Det. Adkins obtained written statements from both the Defendant and the victim’s mother at that time. In the days that followed, Det. Adkins spoke with the victim’s mother several more times, and she spoke with the Defendant again on June 11 and 12, taking additional statements from him on those days.

The June 10 statement was read for the jury. In that statement, the Defendant said that he noticed the victim was “yellow” the previous day and that he asked the victim’s mother if she wanted to take him to the emergency room, but she wanted to wait. The Defendant left, going to visit his wife, when he received a call from his sister that the victim’s mother was taking the child to the hospital because “his ear was going to fall off.”

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Robert Eugene Crawford, Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-robert-eugene-crawford-jr-tenncrimapp-2013.