State of Tennessee v. Ronald Duckett

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 30, 2012
DocketW2010-02158-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Ronald Duckett (State of Tennessee v. Ronald Duckett) 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. Ronald Duckett, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs September 7, 2011

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. RONALD DUCKETT

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 09-04577 John T. Fowlkes, Jr., Judge

No. W2010-02158-CCA-R3-CD - Filed April 30, 2012

Defendant, Ronald Duckett, was indicted by the Shelby County Grand Jury for two counts of first degree premeditated murder. Following a jury trial, Defendant was convicted as charged and sentenced by the trial court to serve two concurrent life sentences. In this direct appeal, Defendant asserts that: 1) the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury as to voluntary intoxication; 2) the evidence at trial was insufficient to support his convictions; and 3) the trial court erred by reconvening the jury to alter its verdict after the jury had been discharged. Finding no error, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

T HOMAS T. W OODALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. G LENN and J EFFREY S. B IVINS, JJ., joined.

Robert Wilson Jones, District Public Defender; Harry E. Sayle, III, Assistant Public Defender; and Timothy J. Albers, Assistant Public Defender, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Ronald Duckett.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Sophia S. Lee, Assistant Attorney General; William L. Gibbons, District Attorney General; Theresa McCusker, Assistant District Attorney General; and Kirby May, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, the State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Facts On June 6, 2009, Willie Hooper was living in a “rooming house” at 309 North Manassas with his son, Willie Hooper, Jr., and Darlene Anderson. Mr. Hooper testified that “[his] cousin [Mr. Sample] and a friend [Tommy Pryor] of [his] got killed there that night.” He testified that he, “T.C.” (Mr. Sample), a female named Jackie, and Tammara Wright were “back there, you know, having fun or drinking, smoking weed and some of them were snorting powder.” Ms. Anderson told Mr. Hooper “to come and get this guy out of her room, he was tearing it up.” When Mr. Hooper entered Darlene’s room, he saw Defendant sitting on her bed “with a straight shooter.” Mr. Hooper asked him to leave, but Defendant did not respond. Mr. Hooper testified that Defendant was looking at [him] biting on his bottom lip” and he “looked like he was out of it.” Mr. Hooper went to get his cousin to help him. When they entered Darlene’s room again, Defendant backed away towards the door, and Mr. Hooper pushed him out of the door. Mr. Hooper testified that he then “got drunk and went to [his] room and went to sleep.” He woke up to the sound of two gunshots. He then heard Melissa “beating on [his] door.” He walked around the house and saw Tommy Pryor lying on the floor “looking up at the ceiling with his eyes open [and] a puddle of blood [on] his chest.” He went outside and saw Jackie and Tammara Wright outside crying. He walked around to the side of the house and saw Thomas Sample “up against the wall.” He then called 911.

Mr. Hooper testified that he never saw Defendant with a gun, and he did not see him inside the house again after he told him to leave. After the incident, Mr. Hooper recognized Defendant in a photographic lineup as the person he told to leave the house. Mr. Hooper testified that there was another exit out of the house in the kitchen but that it had a deadbolt lock on it, and he was the only person who had the key to that door.

Trevis Sprawling was visiting Mr. Hooper at the rooming house on June 6, 2009. He testified that he, Tammara Wright, Willie Hooper, Jackie Pryor, Thomas Sample, and Tommy Pryor were “indulging in a little drug activity, just drinking, smoking [marijuana], stuff like that.” Mr. Hooper asked him to assist him in “escort[ing] a guy out of the room” who Mr. Hooper said was “tearing up the property.” Mr. Sprawling testified that when he went to the room where Defendant was, Defendant was loud and cursing and “having a disagreement” with Mr. Hooper. Defendant was “standing in the doorway[,] acting like he didn’t want to leave.” Mr. Sprawling stepped between Defendant and Mr. Hooper, and Defendant backed out of the door onto the porch. Mr. Sprawling knew Defendant from having seen him “[i]n another neighborhood.” Mr. Sprawling testified that he turned to walk back inside the house and he heard Defendant say, “if those females didn’t give him what they owed him[,] he will be back to blow up the house.” Mr. Sprawling did not see any weapons in Defendant’s possession. He went inside and “went back to doing what we was doing, partying.”

-2- Mr. Sprawling testified that an hour later, he heard shooting. The door to the room they were in “flew open,” and he saw an arm holding a gun. Mr. Sprawling testified that he “rushed the [Defendant]” and was “wrestling with him for [his] life.” Mr. Sprawling “ran and grabbed his arm and tussled with him.” Mr. Sprawling pushed Defendant down and ran outside. As Mr. Sprawling was “exiting the porch” he heard two more gunshots. He saw his cousin “Thomas [Sample] hanging out the window.” He ran over to help him. Mr. Sprawling was helping him walk towards the front of the house, and Mr. Sample fell on the ground. Mr. Sprawling went inside the house to find his girlfriend Jackie, and he saw Tommy Pryor lying on the floor. He passed Mr. Hooper, who was leaving the house, “looking for our cousin.” On the day after the shooting, Mr. Sprawling identified Defendant as the shooter in a photographic lineup. On cross-examination, Mr. Sprawling testified that in a statement to police, he said that “[Defendant] couldn’t see [him] and [he] couldn’t see [Defendant].”

Jacqueline Pryor testified that she arrived at the rooming house at approximately 10:00 p.m. She testified that she was married to Tommy Pryor at the time of the incident. They had been married for “about twenty-one, twenty-two” years, but they were separated and she was there with Trevis Sprawling, her then boyfriend. She testified that they were “drinking and playing cards and smoking marijuana” in the back room. She heard noise coming from the front of the house, and Mr. Pryor and Mr. Sprawling went with Mr. Hooper to the front room. Ms. Pryor stayed in the back room. An hour later, Ms. Pryor heard “something sound like some firecrackers.” She “got out the chair and [she] hit the floor.” She heard everyone screaming. Ms. Pryor testified that she heard four or five gunshots total. She testified that she saw the gunman and identified him as Defendant. She heard “three at first,” and she got down on the floor. Defendant put the gun to her head and said, “move, baby, move,” and she “jumped in the closet” and heard more gunshots. When she got out of the closet, she saw Mr. Pryor “on the floor dead.”

Alan Pendleton, of the Memphis Police Department, was on patrol on the night of the incident. He and Officer Garner responded to a shooting call at 309 North Manassas. When they arrived, they found one victim, who appeared to have been shot in the stomach, outside of the house. They found another victim in the back bedroom of the house. Officer Pendleton and other officers isolated potential witnesses in squad cars until homicide detectives arrived. The officers did not locate a suspect at that time.

Demar Wells, a crime scene investigator with the Memphis Police Department, took photographs at the scene and collected evidence. He collected cigarette butts on a tray in the front room of the house that investigators believed may have been left by the suspect. Jessica Marques, of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, compared Defendant’s DNA samples

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Ronald Duckett, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-ronald-duckett-tenncrimapp-2012.