State of Tennessee v. Sunni Adkins

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 3, 2008
DocketM2007-01355-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Sunni Adkins (State of Tennessee v. Sunni Adkins) 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. Sunni Adkins, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs February 5, 2008

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. SUNNI ADKINS

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Lewis County Nos. 6708 & 6730 Jeffrey S. Bivins, Judge

No. M2007-01355-CCA-R3-CD - Filed July 3, 2008

The Defendant, Sunni Adkins, pled guilty to three counts of child abuse, Class A misdemeanors, and one count of aggravated assault, a Class C felony. She was sentenced to eleven months and twenty- nine days for each misdemeanor and to four years for the felony to be served as a Range I standard offender. The misdemeanor sentences were ordered to be served concurrently with one another but consecutively to the felony sentence. Additionally, six months of each misdemeanor sentence was ordered to be served in confinement. On appeal, the Defendant argues that the trial court erred in sentencing her by improperly applying certain statutory enhancement factors and by denying full probation or another alternative sentence. Following our review of the record and the parties’ briefs, we uphold the sentences ordered by the trial court.

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

DAVID H. WELLES, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JERRY L. SMITH , J., joined. JOSEPH M. TIPTON , P.J., filed a separate concurring opinion.

Larry Joe Hinson, Hohenwald, Tennessee, for the appellant, Sunni Adkins.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Cameron L. Hyder, Assistant Attorney General; Ronald L. Davis, District Attorney General; and Stacey Edmonson, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Factual Background In October 2006, the Lewis County Grand jury indicted the twenty-year-old Defendant in case number 6708 for seven counts of child abuse and three counts of domestic assault. In January 2007, the grand jury indicted the Defendant in case number 6730 for three additional offenses she allegedly committed while released on bond: aggravated child abuse, aggravated child neglect, and domestic assault. In March 2007, the Defendant pled guilty in case number 6708 to three counts of child abuse. At the same time, she pled guilty in case number 6730 to aggravated assault, a lesser-included offense.1 Pursuant to the Defendant’s plea agreement, the remaining charges in both cases were dismissed, and her sentences were to be determined by the trial court following a sentencing hearing. In April 2007, a joint sentencing hearing was held for the Defendant and her co-defendant, Tommy Crews.

At the sentencing hearing, Officer Robert Taylor of the Hohenwald Police Department testified that he was involved in an investigation of suspected abuse to Tommy Crews’s three young children in March 2006. The Defendant began living with Crews in November 2005, and she had assumed primary responsibility for his children. According to the Defendant, she and Crews were “friends.” Victim 12 was a nine-year-old boy; Victim 2 was a thirteen-year-old girl; and Victim 3 was an eight-year-old boy.

According to Officer Taylor, one of Victim 1’s teachers noticed he had a suspicious “mark” on his arm. The teacher asked Victim 1 if he had other marks, and he responded that he did. Several other bruises that appeared to have been inflicted with a “switch” were discovered on his body, and the Department of Children’s Services and the police were notified. Asked how he received the injuries, Victim 1 described the following method of punishment employed by the Defendant and Crews: the children were made to stand upright on their toes with their arms outstretched, palms up, holding a telephone book on each hand. If a book was dropped or their heels touched the floor, they were “switched.”3 Victim 1 further explained to Officer Taylor that they were punished through this method when they “got in trouble” for “not listening” or not doing what they were told. Officer Taylor identified photographs of Victim 1 depicting extensive “switch marks” on his lower body.

Officer Taylor also spoke with Victim 2 (the thirteen-year-old girl), and she described the same method of punishment, saying they received these “whippings” three to five times a week. According to Victim 2, sometimes the Defendant and Crews would use a belt or their hands, “but typically the punishment was with the telephone books.” Several photographs of Victim 2 were also introduced through Officer Taylor. When the photographs were taken, she had severe bruising from dozens of “switch marks” on each leg.

1 There is no transcript of the Defendant’s guilty plea submission hearing in the record before this Court. Accordingly, we rely primarily on the evidence adduced at her the sentencing hearing and the information contained in her presentence report in setting out a factual background as relevant to this appeal.

2 In order to protect the identity of minor victims of abuse, it is the policy of this court not to refer to them by name. W e use numbers here because the victims all have the same initials.

3 Later testimony revealed that the children were initially required to stand on their toes, holding the telephone books out to their sides for five to ten minutes, but if they dropped a book or their heels, an additional fifteen to twenty minutes would be added. W hen a child failed to hold up the books or stay on their toes, he or she would be hit once or twice with the switch. The switch was described as being “about the size of the small end of an umbrella, half-inch in diameter, but not as long as an umbrella.”

-2- Victim 3 (the eight-year-old boy) related essentially the same account of the beatings to Officer Taylor. He had been beaten by hand, with a belt, and was subjected to the telephone book punishment. Several photographs of extensive and widespread bruising on his lower body were also introduced in evidence.

Officer Taylor interviewed Crews and the Defendant in March 2006. Crews told him that the telephone book punishment was the Defendant’s idea, and they began using it when he noticed that he had “left” bruises on one of the boy’s buttocks with a belt. At the time of the interview, they had been using the telephone book method of punishment for approximately one and one-half months. The Defendant told Officer Taylor that Victim 2 was subjected to the telephone book punishment on one occasion because she told a lie “about making some tea.”

After these interviews, Officer Taylor secured arrest warrants for the Defendant and Crews on March 31, 2006, and the grand jury indictments in case number 6708 followed.

Subsequently, in July 2006, Officer Taylor was alerted to an additional incident involving Victim 3, who had arrived at a hospital4 with “marks all over him”:

He had a gash in his forehead, his eye was black, he had a mark across his face that appeared to be a hand print, there was a mark on his other eye that—what appeared to be—it looked to be a belt buckle of some sort, some mark like that, he had bruising on his back, his legs, and marks all on his face and on his cheek.

Several photographs of Victim 3’s injuries were entered as a collective exhibit. The photographs, included in the record on appeal, reflect substantial swelling and bruising to Victim 3’s face (including two black eyes and a substantial cut on his forehead), multiple, dark-purple bruises covering his lower back, as well as “switch marks” and other abrasions covering much of the rest of his body.

At that time, Victim 3 reported that he received the injuries from falling off a bunk bed and fighting with his brother. In a later interview, Victim 3 recanted this story and stated that the injuries occurred as follows:

[I]t started from him telling a story about getting into a pie in the refrigerator and then lying about it.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Sunni Adkins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-sunni-adkins-tenncrimapp-2008.