State of Tennessee v. Tanya Nicole Slimick

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 17, 2015
DocketM2014-00747-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Tanya Nicole Slimick (State of Tennessee v. Tanya Nicole Slimick) 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. Tanya Nicole Slimick, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE June 09, 2015 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. TANYA NICOLE SLIMICK

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Williamson County No. ICR055631 Michael Binkley, Judge

No. M2014-00747-CCA-R3-CD – Filed December 17, 2015 _____________________________

A jury convicted the defendant, Tanya Nicole Slimick, of first degree (premeditated) murder for shooting her boyfriend. The defendant received a life sentence. On appeal, the defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, asserting that the State failed to show premeditation or to negate self-defense. She also raises numerous challenges to the jury instructions, including that the trial court instructed the jury that the defendant had the burden of raising the issue of self-defense; that the self-defense instruction was confusing to the jury; that the jury instructions improperly failed to list the negation of self-defense in the litany of items which the State is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt; and that the instructions failed to list lesser included offenses whenever the ―charged offense‖ was referenced. The defendant also asserts that there was reversible error in the use of a demonstrative aid in the prosecution‘s closing argument. After a thorough review of the law and the facts, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which THOMAS T. WOODALL, P.J., and CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, J., joined.

David L. Raybin, Nashville, Tennessee (at trial and on appeal), and Sandra L. Wells, Franklin, Tennessee (at trial), for the Appellant, Tanya Nicole Slimick.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Andrew C. Coulam, Assistant Attorney General; Kim Helper, District Attorney General; and Mary Katherine White and Jennifer Mason, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION

At the time of the shooting on September 21, 2010, the defendant and the victim, Bryan Bell, had been in a romantic relationship for approximately seven years. The two began dating when they both worked at a T.G.I. Fridays near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where the victim was also attending culinary school. The relationship had not been without turmoil, however. Edward Lenkiewicz, the victim‘s friend who worked with both the victim and the defendant in Pittsburgh, testified that the relationship was frequently rocky and tense, with the two ―whisper fighting‖ in front of acquaintances.

Around 2006 or 2007, Selena Sancreek, a close childhood friend of the victim‘s, convinced the victim to move to the Nashville area. Ms. Sancreek had been renting a room in the Brentwood home of Billy Pirtle, and she arranged for the victim to take her room as she was vacating it. The victim moved to Brentwood and began to work as a cook at a nearby T.G.I. Fridays, while the defendant remained near Pittsburgh. At the time of the shooting, the defendant was living with her parents.

In Brentwood, the victim prospered socially and professionally. Shortly before his death, he was promoted to kitchen manager. He socialized with his roommates, Billy Pirtle and Justin Sowders, and with acquaintances from work. Around the end of July or early August 2010, the victim began a romantic relationship with Jennifer Earl, a server at the restaurant where he worked. The victim hid this relationship from Ms. Sancreek and others because managers were not permitted to date servers. At trial, Ms. Sancreek acknowledged having told detectives that she believed the victim would be loyal to one girlfriend.

The victim‘s father, Ms. Sancreek, Mr. Lenkiewicz, Ms. Earl, and the victim‘s roommates testified that he was friendly, easy-going, generous, and likeable. They testified that they had never seen him behave in a violent or aggressive manner. Mr. Lenkiewicz and Steven Slattery, who was the victim‘s supervisor prior to the victim‘s promotion, both testified that the victim did not act angry or aggressive even under stress at work. Witnesses testified that he always had a smile on his face. The victim‘s friends and family all testified that he always wore glasses except when sleeping, showering, or swimming and that he could not see without his glasses.

Although the victim and the defendant had been romantically involved for seven years at the time of the shooting, the victim apparently hid the duration and seriousness of his relationship with the defendant from his family, who lived in Ohio, and from his close

2 friends. The victim‘s father recalled seeing the defendant once, prior to the victim‘s move, when they both attended a musical performance the victim was giving in a tavern in Ohio; the victim‘s father was not introduced to the defendant. Ms. Sancreek likewise only met the defendant once, in a group setting.

From the time of his move to the Nashville area, the victim‘s family and friends all believed that the victim was no longer dating the defendant. Mr. Lenkiewicz testified that the victim visited the Pittsburgh area once after his move but went to great lengths to keep his visit a secret from the defendant, going so far as to sit for forty-five minutes in his car in order to avoid a mutual acquaintance he feared might reveal his visit. Another time, the victim asked Mr. Lenkiewicz not to tell the defendant that he was visiting the victim in Brentwood to attend a music festival, but the defendant found out and came uninvited. Ms. Sancreek and the victim‘s father both testified that they believed the victim and defendant had broken up prior to the move. The victim‘s new roommates and local acquaintances also all believed that the defendant was nothing more than a distant ex-girlfriend. None of the victim‘s friends or family were aware that he and the defendant had taken numerous trips together, that he had taken a road trip in August 2010 to visit the defendant in Pittsburgh, that he was sexually involved with the defendant, or that he was constantly in contact with her by telephone and text messaging. At trial, defense counsel gave the victim‘s father a ring which had been in the defendant‘s possession. The victim‘s father testified that the ring was cherished and valued by the victim and that the family had not known what had happened to it. Shortly after the shooting, Ms. Sancreek, unaware of the nature of the victim and defendant‘s relationship, told detectives that she would have known if the victim had been in a long-term relationship with the defendant.

Despite the victim‘s representations to his family and friends, the evidence at trial showed that the victim and the defendant were in a serious and intimate relationship, both before and after the victim‘s move to Nashville. Rachel Seifert, the defendant‘s supervisor at the T.G.I. Fridays in Pittsburgh, testified that the defendant quit her job in August 2009. Prior to that, the defendant had several times given notice that she was quitting to move to Tennessee. These planned moves always fell through. Telephone records, extending back into May 2010, show that the two were in daily contact, sending numerous text messages back and forth throughout this time and making numerous daily telephone calls. Although the defendant contacted the victim more often than the victim contacted the defendant, the calls and messages came from both parties. For example, on the first day that records were available, May 1, 2010, the defendant called the victim eleven times and sent him twenty-six text messages; the victim called her five times and sent her twenty-four text messages.

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State of Tennessee v. Tanya Nicole Slimick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-tanya-nicole-slimick-tenncrimapp-2015.