State of Tennessee v. Steve Carl King

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 9, 2010
DocketM2008-01251-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Steve Carl King (State of Tennessee v. Steve Carl King) 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. Steve Carl King, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 13, 2009 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. STEVE CARL KING

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Giles County No. 12504 Robert L. Jones, Judge

No. M2008-01251-CCA-R3-CD - Filed April 9, 2010

A Giles County jury convicted the Defendant, Steve Carl King, of attempted first degree murder, and the trial court sentenced him to twenty-two years in the Tennessee Department of Correction. On appeal the Defendant contends: (1) the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction; (2) the trial court erred when it admitted statements the Defendant gave to Illinois police; (3) the trial court erred when it allowed two witnesses to testify although the State had failed to disclose their existence in accordance with Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 16; and (4) the trial court erred when it denied the Defendant’s petition for a writ of error coram nobis based on the victim’s recanted testimony. After a thorough review of the record and the applicable law, we affirm the trial court’s judgments.

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

R OBERT W. W EDEMEYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D AVID H. W ELLES and A LAN E. G LENN, JJ., joined.

Manuel B. Russ, Nashville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Steve Carl King.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Michael E. Moore, Solicitor General; Renee W. Turner, Assistant Attorney General; Patrick Butler and Richard Dunavant, District Attorneys General; Jeff Burks, Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION I. Facts

This case arises from the Defendant stabbing his girlfriend, Gloria McCormick, and running over her while driving his tractor-trailer at a rest stop in Giles County, Tennessee. In February 2006, a Giles County grand jury indicted the Defendant for attempted first degree murder based on this event. In April 2006, before the Defendant’s trial on this charge, the Defendant engaged in a physical altercation with the victim’s brother, David Edwards, in a bar in Chicago, Illinois. Illinois police officers arrived to investigate the altercation, and, in the course of the investigation, the Defendant made several statements about his conduct in the events surrounding the November 2005 attempted first degree murder charge.

The Defendant’s trial was set for November 6, 2006. On September 19, 2006, the State provided the Defendant with its initial list of witnesses who would testify at the Defendant’s trial. On October 30, 2006, the State supplemented its original witness list to include one of the Illinois police officers who witnessed the Defendant’s April 2006 statements. The Defendant moved before trial to suppress these statements, and the trial court took the matter under advisement.

At trial, the following evidence was presented: Gloria McCormick (“the victim”), who lived in Chicago at the time of trial, testified the Defendant had been her boyfriend for eleven years at the time of this attack. He was a commercial truck driver, and the victim sometimes accompanied him on his “runs.” She was accompanying the Defendant on a run from Jacksonville, Florida, to Chicago when she received the injuries that were the basis of this prosecution. She recalled that on the day of the incident, November 4, 2005, she and the Defendant stopped in northern Alabama and gained permission to park the truck overnight in the parking lot of a Harley-Davidson shop.

After parking, they walked to a nearby Hooters where they shared three pitchers of beer. The victim estimated she consumed two mugs of beer from each pitcher. While at Hooters, the Defendant began to tell the victim she was a “whore,” and that she was “fat” and “uneducated.” The victim explained “[t]hat’s just the way [the Defendant] gets when he drinks: He just starts calling me a whore.” The name-calling escalated into an argument, and the pair left Hooters and returned to the truck. When she returned to the truck, the victim took their dog, a pit-bull, for a walk. When she returned to the truck, she and the Defendant resumed the arguing and “name-calling.” The pair decided to continue driving rather than sleep at the Harley-Davidson shop, and they continued arguing as they drove.

At some point while they drove toward Tennessee, the Defendant reached behind the victim and retrieved a black-handled knife from a cabinet behind the victim’s seat. She testified the Defendant had no set place he stored this knife, alternately carrying the knife in his jeans or storing it in various areas of the truck. The victim identified a knife police retrieved from the truck as the knife the Defendant retrieved. With the knife in hand, the Defendant then asked the victim if she “wanted to see how sharp his knife [was].” He then opened the knife and began to swing it at the victim, in the area between the passenger and

2 driver seats. The Defendant continued to swing the knife for several minutes while repeating his question, and the victim scooted as far away from the Defendant as she could, turning her back to the Defendant and clinging to the passenger door. The victim, at some point, raised her left hand to protect herself, and the knife sliced her ring and middle fingers. She began bleeding profusely and asked the Defendant to get her medical attention, but the Defendant initially refused, saying he knew she would have him arrested if she got medical attention. The victim got a cloth from the back of the cab and wrapped the cloth around her fingers. She then hung her hand out the passenger window to avoid bleeding in the truck because she did not want the Defendant “to get in trouble.” The Defendant eventually agreed to stop at a rest area in order for the victim to get help.

The Defendant exited the highway at the Ardmore Welcome Center in Giles County and pulled up beside the sidewalk in front of the Welcome Center. The back portion of the truck’s cab contained a top and bottom bunk, and the victim stored her clothes and medication beneath the bottom bunk’s mattress in a storage compartment. When the Defendant pulled up to the sidewalk, the victim went to the back of the truck’s cab to retrieve medication she needed for her multiple sclerosis. As she raised the mattress to access the storage compartment, the Defendant struck the victim in the back of the head, causing her to drop the mattress and fall onto the bed. The victim lost consciousness briefly and, consequently, could not clearly recall the details of what next occurred. She remembered seeing the Defendant standing over her, at which point she tried to rise from the bed, but the Defendant fought with her. She struck at the Defendant while he pulled her hair and screamed at her, continuing to call her a “whore,” and tell her she was “fat” and “uneducated.”

The Defendant eventually sat back down in the driver’s seat. When the victim was finally able to rise from the bed, she retrieved the plastic bags that contained her medication. Carrying the bags, she returned to the front of the cab, opened the passenger door, and stepped down to the sidewalk. As she exited the vehicle, she saw the Defendant’s knife on the dashboard. The pit-bull exited the truck with the victim.

On the sidewalk, the victim realized her legs and shorts were covered in blood. The victim could tell that blood was flowing “down [her] legs” and into her socks and shoes, but she did not realize she had been cut and could not identify from where she was bleeding. At trial, the victim identified a pair of jean shorts with several slashes in the back and crotch as the shorts she wore the night she was run over. The victim said the shorts were brand new and had no cuts or tears when she put them on before these events.

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State of Tennessee v. Steve Carl King, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-steve-carl-king-tenncrimapp-2010.