State of Tennessee v. Robin Elizabeth Willis

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 26, 2012
DocketE2011-01323-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Robin Elizabeth Willis (State of Tennessee v. Robin Elizabeth Willis) 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. Robin Elizabeth Willis, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs March 28, 2012

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ROBIN ELIZABETH WILLIS

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Hawkins County No. 10-CR-445 John F. Dugger, Jr., Judge

No. E2011-01323-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 26, 2012

The Defendant-Appellant, Robin Elizabeth Willis, was convicted by a Hawkins County jury of theft of property valued at $1000 or more but less than $10,000, a Class D felony. The trial court sentenced her as a Range I, standard offender and ordered her to serve three years in the Tennessee Department of Correction. On appeal, Willis argues: (1) the evidence was insufficient to support her conviction; and (2) her sentence was excessive. Upon review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

C AMILLE R. M CM ULLEN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which, T HOMAS T. W OODALL, J., joined. J OSEPH M. T IPTON, P.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.

Douglas T. Jenkins, Rogersville, Tennessee, for the Defendant-Appellant, Robin Elizabeth Willis.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Cameron L. Hyder, Assistant Attorney General; C. Berkeley Bell, Jr., District Attorney General; and Kevin D. Keeton, Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Trial. Cliff Evans, a detective with the Hawkins County Sheriff’s Office, testified that in May 2010, he investigated a possible theft from Amanda Duncan, the seventy-six- year-old victim in this case. He said Edith Williams, the victim’s daughter, initially contacted the sheriff’s department because she was concerned that her mother was “being conned out of some money.” Detective Evans spoke with the victim, confirmed the theft, and filed an offense report. He also investigated the victim’s bank records, including nine checks totaling $1620 that the victim wrote to her niece, Robin Willis. The victim wrote these checks between the dates of May 14, 2010, and May 21, 2010. Detective Evans was able to contact Willis on July 13, 2010, and he asked her to talk to him at the sheriff’s department. He said that after she waived her Miranda rights, Willis provided a written statement to him in which she confessed to lying to her aunt, the victim, about being diagnosed with Leukemia and needing $180 per day to cover the costs of her cancer treatments. Willis further confessed in the written statement that she used the money she obtained from the victim to pay for her treatments at a pain clinic and for her Oxycodone prescriptions. After obtaining this confession, Detective Evans placed Willis under arrest.

Detective Evans said Willis admitted using some of the money she obtained from the victim to buy a new set of tires and to repair her car. He also said that although Willis told him she would repay the victim, this debt was never repaid.

Edith Williams, the victim’s daughter, testified that the victim’s bank informed her that several checks had been written by the victim to Willis because Williams’s name was on the account. She explained that she was listed on the account in case her mother became ill again and was unable to pay her bills for herself. She also said she helped take her mother to appointments with the doctor and to get groceries. Williams asked that the bank not cash any of the checks written by her mother to Willis because she did not think that her mother had been writing that many checks. Williams then spoke to her mother, the victim, who confirmed that she had written several checks to Willis, her niece. When Williams approached Willis about the checks, Willis told her that she had been diagnosed with cancer and that the victim had helped her pay for her cancer treatments. Willis promised to repay the money from $2500 that she was to receive from a cousin in Pennsylvania. Willis also promised to pick up the victim at 10:00 a.m. the next day and to take her to get the money to repay her. At the time, Williams said she did not believe that Willis was telling the truth about her cancer diagnosis and treatments because she knew that Willis had health insurance coverage. Williams said that Willis was able to convince the victim that she had cancer because three of Willis’s sisters had been diagnosed with cancer, two of them had recently died from cancer, and the third sister was dying of cancer at the time that Willis lied to the victim about her own cancer diagnosis. When Willis failed to appear and failed to repay the money, the victim and Williams tried unsuccessfully to contact Willis. Willis eventually contacted Williams and confessed that she did not have the money to repay the victim and that she did not have cancer but did have a drug problem. Williams then contacted the sheriff’s department.

On cross-examination, Williams acknowledged that Willis had borrowed small amounts of money from the victim in the past and had either repaid this money or had done work for the victim in exchange for the money. She also acknowledged that the victim had loaned money to other family members, although these family members usually repaid the victim within a week or two.

-2- The victim testified that in May 2010, Willis told her that she had breast cancer and that her insurance company would not pay for her cancer treatments. When Willis talked to the victim about her cancer diagnosis, she cried and told her that she did not want to die. As a result of this conversation, the victim wrote Willis a check on May 14, 2010, for $180. When she received this first check, Willis told the victim that she was going to repay her out of $2500 that she was to receive from a cousin in Pennsylvania. The victim said she wrote nine checks, totaling $1620, to Willis. She also said she never would have written Willis the checks if she had known that Willis did not have cancer. The victim stated that Willis never repaid her for these nine checks.

On cross-examination, the victim acknowledged that Willis had borrowed money from her on prior occasions but asserted that Willis had always repaid her or worked for her in exchange for the money. The victim also said that Willis had offered to make payments on the amount owed in this case and that Williams had agreed to help Willis get treatment for her drug problem. However, the victim said that after this offer to settle the debt was made, Willis asked her for an additional $160, ostensibly for her nephew because his mother had just passed away. The victim admitted that she had allowed other family members to borrow money but that they had always repaid her.

On re-direct examination, the victim reiterated that she would not have loaned Willis the money if she had known Willis had not been diagnosed with cancer. She also said she felt as if Willis had tricked her into giving Willis the money.

Willis, the Defendant-Appellant, testified and admitted she lied to the victim about having cancer. Willis said she had borrowed money from the victim in the past and had always repaid her. She also stated that at the time the victim gave her the checks involved in this case, she told the victim that she would repay her when she had the money.

On cross-examination, Willis admitted that she lied to the victim about having cancer and about needing money for her cancer treatments. She also admitted that she told the victim she did not want to die and asked for money for her fabricated cancer treatments as often as twice in the same day. Willis acknowledged that at the time she lied to the victim about her cancer diagnosis, two of her sisters had died from cancer and a third sister had been diagnosed with cancer. Willis further admitted that she lied to the victim about repaying her from money she claimed she was to receive from a cousin in Pennsylvania.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Robin Elizabeth Willis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-robin-elizabeth-willis-tenncrimapp-2012.