State of Tennessee v. Takeita M. Locke

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 25, 2001
DocketE2000-00923-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Takeita M. Locke (State of Tennessee v. Takeita M. Locke) 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. Takeita M. Locke, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE March 20, 2001 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. TAKEITA M. LOCKE

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County No. 67739B Richard R. Baumgartner, Judge

No. E2000-00923-CCA-R3-CD June 25, 2001

The defendant was convicted in the Knox County Criminal Court of especially aggravated robbery and felony murder. She timely appealed, arguing that the State had failed to show that statements she gave while a juvenile were admissible, that the trial court erred in not instructing as to lesser- included offenses or that the jury must find whether felony murder was a “natural and probable consequence” of especially aggravated robbery, and that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the convictions. Based upon our review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

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

ALAN E. GLENN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JERRY L. SMITH and JOE G. RILEY, JJ., joined.

Wade V. Davies (on appeal) and Gerald Lee Gulley, Jr. (at trial), Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Takeita M. Locke.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Elizabeth B. Marney, Assistant Attorney General; Randall E. Nichols, District Attorney General; and G. Scott Green, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

The defendant, Takeita M. Locke, was convicted in the Knox County Criminal Court of felony murder and especially aggravated robbery. She appealed her convictions, presenting the following issues:

I. The State failed to carry its burden to show that statements taken from the defendant as a juvenile after a warrantless arrest and in the absence of counsel or parental permission were constitutionally valid; II. The trial court erred by not instructing the jury on the lesser- included offenses of reckless homicide, criminally negligent homicide, facilitation of especially aggravated robbery, and aggravated robbery and by not giving a “probable and natural consequences” instruction as part of the criminal responsibility charge; and

III. The evidence was insufficient to convict the defendant of first degree murder and especially aggravated robbery.

Based upon our review, we affirm the defendant’s convictions for especially aggravated robbery and felony murder.

FACTS

The State’s first witness, Dr. Sandra K. Elkins, the Knox County Medical Examiner, testified that the victim, Chuck Newman, died as the result of a stab wound to the heart. Her examination showed that he had bruises on his arms, curved lacerations on the top and backside of his head, and bruising and swelling around his left eye. The victim tested positive for cocaine.

Karen Verklas testified that she lived at the Montgomery Village Apartments housing project in Knox County. She said that she was at home on October 17, 1998, with her fiancé, Robert Richards, when the victim knocked on her door between 4:30 and 5:00 a.m. As she opened the door to let the victim in, Jerry Graves, whom she knew as “Bam,” pushed his way into the apartment and said that he needed to talk with the victim. He then cornered the victim in the kitchen and said, “Give me the money, Bitch.” Verklas saw Graves produce a pistol, and he and the victim began struggling, going into the living room and onto the couch. She saw the defendant, whom she knew as “Cherry,” coming in the apartment as she was leaving to summon help. Verklas testified that the defendant then went to the couch, where Graves and the victim were struggling:

Q. All right. When she came in, do you recall where she went?

A. Yeah, she went to the – uh – the head part of Chuck, and bent over, and she was trying to pries [sic] his hand open. While Bam was on him, she was trying to pries [sic] his hand open, and both of them would say, “Give me the money.”

She then left the apartment, leaving the victim with Graves and the defendant.

Verklas had to go to a neighbor’s to call 911 because her phone was not working. She then went back to her apartment and saw Graves and the defendant coming out. She said that the defendant was “wiping her hands off.” Verklas testified that in the statement she gave to the police, following the incident, she had also said that she heard the defendant, as she was trying to pry open

-2- the victim’s hand, say, “You are going to get it. You will get the damn money[.]” She saw the victim leaning on the doorway with blood all over him. She described his appearance:

A. You couldn’t really see his face, he was beat so bad bloody. I was scared. I went to get a towel to wipe his face off, but you couldn’t get the blood to come off his face, he was so full of it. His jaws and stuff right through here was bruised already. You couldn’t tell.

Q. Could you see him at that point in time bleeding from anyplace else?

A. I couldn’t tell where the blood was coming from, to be honest with you, he was bleeding so bad.

The victim told her, “Oh, God, Karen, they have done me good this time.” Verklas testified that, by this point, the victim was doing “[n]othing. His eyes was [sic] rolling back in his head; blood was just a gushing.”

Officer Mark Waggoner of the Knoxville Police Department came to the apartment as the result of the 911 call. He retrieved a knife at the scene, but was not able to process the handle for fingerprints because the texture of the handle was too rough.

Samuel Brown, an investigator with the Knoxville Police Department, testified that as he arrived at the crime scene that morning, other officers were already present, as were Verklas and Richards. Later, he questioned both of them at the Knoxville Police Department and learned that the defendant had the nickname “Cherry.” He then contacted the defendant’s mother who told him that when she found the defendant, she would bring her to the police department. However, the defendant was arrested by other officers and taken to the juvenile facility.1 Brown went to the juvenile facility where the defendant was being held and interviewed her at approximately 3 p.m. on October 18, 1998. He returned the following day and again interviewed her. After the first interview, Brown interviewed Adam Faw, who later pled guilty to especially aggravated robbery. Because of inconsistencies in the defendant’s first statement and that given by Faw, Brown made the second trip to interview the defendant.

Robert Richards testified that he was the fiancé of Karen Verklas and that they lived together. The victim had come to Verklas’s apartment the evening of October 16, 1998, and left at approximately 11 p.m. Early the next morning, between 4:30 and 5:00 a.m., as Richards and Verklas were still awake, they heard a knock at the door, and Richards recognized the victim’s voice. Verklas opened the door and the victim came in. A man whom Richards knew from the

1 Because the defendant was seventeen years old at the time of the incident, she was taken to a juvenile detention center.

-3- neighborhood as “Bam” also came in as Verklas was closing the door, pushing the victim into the kitchen and saying, “Just give me the money.” Richards heard a noise that sounded “like a shell being chambered in a gun” and saw the victim and “Bam” come out of the kitchen wrestling, ending up on the couch. The victim was on his back with “Bam” on top of him. “Bam” was hitting the victim in the head. Richards was getting ready to leave the apartment to find a pay phone to call for help as “Bam’s” girlfriend, “Cherry,” came in the apartment.

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State of Tennessee v. Takeita M. Locke, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-takeita-m-locke-tenncrimapp-2001.