State of Tennessee v. Terry Bradford Whitaker

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 9, 2020
DocketW2019-00583-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Terry Bradford Whitaker (State of Tennessee v. Terry Bradford Whitaker) 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. Terry Bradford Whitaker, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

06/09/2020 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs January 8, 2020

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. TERRY BRADFORD WHITAKER

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hardin County No. 16-CR-119 Charles C. McGinley, Judge ___________________________________

No. W2019-00583-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

The Defendant, Terry Bradford Whitaker, was convicted by a Hardin County Circuit Court jury of premeditated first-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. On appeal, he argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress DNA evidence and that the evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction. After review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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

ALAN E. GLENN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS T. WOODALL and NORMA MCGEE OGLE, JJ., joined.

George D. Norton, Jr., Selmer, Tennessee, for the appellant, Terry Bradford Whitaker.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Clark B. Thornton, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Matthew F. Stowe, District Attorney General; and Vance Dennis and Shelly Morris Deloach, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

FACTS

The Defendant was charged with the premeditated first-degree murder of the victim, Sidney Layne Burks, who was found dead by his mother on May 5, 2016, having been stabbed more than forty times.

Motion to Suppress Before trial, the Defendant filed a motion to suppress blood evidence found in his truck that was uncovered during the execution of an “invalid” search warrant.

At the suppression hearing, Agent Brent Booth of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (“TBI”) testified that during the course of his investigation, he interviewed witnesses who gave him information that the Defendant had bragged about stabbing the victim. He went to the Defendant’s mother’s house, and she informed him that the Defendant’s truck was “parked, hidden in the yard behind the house . . . for some reason unknown to her.” This raised Agent Booth’s suspicions, so he asked for and received permission to go look at the truck. Through the closed driver’s window, he could see what appeared to be drops of dried blood on the steering wheel, steering column, and the floorboard. Based on his observations, he had other officers stay with the truck while he went to apply for a search warrant.

Agent Booth obtained a search warrant for the Defendant’s Ford truck1 from a McNairy County general sessions judge on May 9, 2016. He had the truck towed to a secure storage facility in Hardin County due to concerns that an impending thunderstorm could remove possible evidence from the truck. The next day, May 10th, Agent Booth realized that there was a typographical error on the last page of the affidavit for the search warrant; specifically, two people in an unrelated case “[t]hat had come off of an old warrant” were mentioned. He went back to the judge to obtain a “replacement warrant.” The judge marked “void” on the original warrant and kept it. The truck was in Hardin County at the time the replacement warrant was issued. The warrant was not executed, i.e., the truck was not searched, until it was transported to the crime lab in Shelby County.

Trial

Billie Bryan, the victim’s mother, testified that the victim lived in a recreational vehicle (“RV”) next to her house. She said that she last saw him alive on May 4, 2016, when he came over to her house around 4:00 p.m. to take a bath and eat supper. Mrs. Bryan and her husband left to go to a birthday party around 6:30 p.m. and returned about two hours later. When they returned, she saw a light on inside the RV, but there were no signs of anybody else being there. The next morning, the victim did not come over to eat breakfast at her house like he usually did before going to work. She called him several times on his cell phone, but he did not answer. She went to check on him and found him dead. Mrs. Bryan said that she knew the Defendant because she was friends with his mother and grandmother, but she had never seen him visit her son.

1 Agent Booth also obtained a search warrant for a travel trailer belonging to the Defendant, but the search of the trailer is not discussed in this appeal. -2- Agent Booth testified concerning his investigation of the victim’s homicide. He described the crime scene as “quite bloody.” He noted that the victim “had apparently succumbed to numerous stab wounds, and the body was laying inside the motor home with the knees on the floor and the upper torso of the body up on the sofa just as you walk inside the door.” Agent Booth did not find a weapon in the home consistent with the wounds he observed.

Agent Booth continued his investigation by interviewing anyone who had been in contact with the victim in the days leading up to his death. On May 9th, he received information that “word had got out in the community that [the Defendant] was the one responsible for this death.” Agent Booth was aware that there were active warrants on the Defendant and that “[t]he deputies had picked him up the night before[.]” He went to the Defendant’s mother’s residence and learned from her that the Defendant lived with his girlfriend, Tina Michelle Ledgewood, in a travel trailer parked in the driveway of her home.

The Defendant’s mother directed Agent Booth to a Ford F-150 parked in the backyard that belonged to the Defendant. He looked through the windows of the truck and saw “what looked like blood drops, blood smears, all over the steering column, [and] on the floorboard area[.]” He had the vehicle towed to a secure area at the Hardin County Sheriff’s Office due to an impending storm. He obtained a search warrant and had the truck sent to the TBI lab in Memphis.

Agent Booth testified that he located Ms. Ledgewood later the afternoon of the 9th and brought her to the sheriff’s office where she gave a sworn statement about the events that took place at the victim’s house. Based on what he learned from Ms. Ledgewood, Agent Booth obtained a search warrant for the Defendant’s travel trailer. He also learned in his investigation that the Defendant frequented a piece of property adjacent to his mother’s property where he grew marijuana and, during a search of the area, Agent Booth found a knife with a deer antler handle in a leather scabbard. It appeared as if the knife had been buried and was only visible because it was next to a large pine tree that had been uprooted by a recent violent thunderstorm. Ms. Ledgewood identified the knife as the one the Defendant carried and that had been used to stab the victim. Agent Booth learned in his investigation that the Defendant “carried a knife most of the time.”

Agent Booth testified that he learned that the Defendant and Ms. Ledgewood were at Angela Morgan’s residence using methamphetamine prior to going to the victim’s house. At Ms. Morgan’s, the Defendant “expressed his clenched jaw anger” toward the victim when Ms. Morgan told him that her sister had sustained a severe head injury in a

-3- car accident and that the family blamed the victim for her condition because he delayed taking her to the hospital.

Agent Booth testified that the victim’s blood was found on the steering wheel of the Defendant’s truck2 and that the victim “had never been in his truck. They were not friends. They were not associates.” A considerable amount of the Defendant’s blood was found in various locations inside the truck. The Defendant had injuries on both of his hands when he was arrested.

Medical Examiner Paul Benson conducted the autopsy on the victim. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Terry Bradford Whitaker, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-terry-bradford-whitaker-tenncrimapp-2020.