State of Tennessee v. Thomas D. Taylor

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 21, 2012
DocketE2011-00500-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Thomas D. Taylor (State of Tennessee v. Thomas D. Taylor) 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. Thomas D. Taylor, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 25, 2012 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. THOMAS D. TAYLOR (a/k/a JAMES RAY MCCLINTON)

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Bradley County No. 09-274, No. 11-CR-230 Amy A. Reedy

No. E2011-00500-CCA-R3-CD - Filed December 21, 2012 No. E2011-02114-CCA-R3-PC

This case is the consolidation of appeals by the Defendant, Thomas D. Taylor (a/k/a James Ray McClinton), of two cases, a direct appeal and the appeal from a the denial of a petition for a writ of error coram nobis. A Bradley County jury convicted the Defendant of especially aggravated kidnapping, a Class A felony, and aggravated assault, a Class C felony. The trial court imposed a sentence of sixty years, at 100%, for the especially aggravated kidnapping conviction and ten years, at 35%, for the aggravated assault conviction. The trial court ordered these sentences to run consecutively for a total effective sentence of seventy years. In his direct appeal, the Defendant contends the following: (1) for numerous reasons, he was denied his right to the effective assistance of counsel; (2) the trial court erred when it limited cross-examination of the victim; (3) prosecutors engaged in misconduct; and (4) the trial court erred in failing to consider new evidence presented during the motion for new trial. In the appeal from the trial court’s denial of his petition for writ of error coram nobis, the Defendant contends that the trial court erred when it denied his petition because the victim’s medical records contained newly discovered evidence. After consolidating the appeals and thoroughly reviewing the record and applicable authorities, in the Defendant’s direct appeal, we affirm the judgments of the trial court. In the Defendant’s appeal from his petition for a writ of error coram nobis, we affirm the judgment of the coram nobis court.

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

R OBERT W. W EDEMEYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J OSEPH M. T IPTON, P.J., and D. K ELLY T HOMAS, JR., J., joined.

Brent Horst, Nashville, Tennessee for the appellant, Thomas D. Taylor (a/k/a “James Ray McClinton”). Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Cameron L. Hyder, Assistant Attorney General; Steven Bebb, District Attorney General; Cynthia A. LeCroy-Schemel and Joseph Y. McCoin, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

I. Facts and Procedural History

A. Jury Trial

This case arises from the Defendant’s involvement in the kidnapping and assault of the victim, Tami Lynn Pierce. A Bradley County grand jury indicted the Defendant for especially aggravated kidnapping, aggravated assault, and for being a felon in the possession of a firearm. The parties presented the following evidence at trial: The victim testified that, on Easter 2009, she sat on a bench between a Family Dollar Store and a Rent-A-Center, and she needed a ride home because she has “a disability with [her] legs and [] can’t walk.” She said that she saw the Defendant “pull[] up on his motorcycle” and go into a Burger King across the street from Family Dollar. She stated that the Defendant then “pulled up beside” her and asked if anything was wrong. She replied that she was “just looking for a ride to get to [her] house.” The Defendant offered the victim a ride home, and she accepted.

As the Defendant drove down the road, he took a ramp to enter the interstate. The victim, however, leaned up to him and told him that she “did not want to go on the freeway” because she was “not familiar with this town” and only knew one way to her house. She testified that the Defendant then reached into a black leather case attached to the outside of his belt and removed a knife. He then turned around, put the knife to the victim’s throat, and told her to be quiet. The victim stated that she could not get off the motorcycle because they were going too fast.

The victim stated that the Defendant took her to his trailer home, where she assumed the Defendant lived by himself. She said that the Defendant forced her into the back bedroom, made her lie face down on the bed, and put her hands behind her back. The Defendant then handcuffed her, held a gun to her head, and told her that he would kill her if she screamed. She said that the Defendant placed shackles around her legs, “stripped” off her clothes, and connected the handcuffs to the shackles so as to place the victim in a fetal position. The victim testified that she saw the Defendant take a gun out of a “white Styrofoam box” that was on the bed. The Defendant then said, “the next morning he was going to give [the victim] a shower and that he was going to rape [the victim] anally and vaginal[ly].”

2 The victim testified that, at one point, the Defendant took her into a room that had a computer. He handcuffed her to a chair, and he began to masturbate, but he “couldn’t get it up.” The Defendant became upset and said that he was a “foolish man” because “a man is foolish without a woman.” The victim stated that, throughout their interactions, the Defendant kept calling her “Debbie.” The victim testified that the Defendant then took photographs of her, in several different positions, while she had on the handcuffs and shackles. The victim stated that she spent the rest of the night with the Defendant in bed, handcuffed and shackled.

In the morning, the Defendant removed the shackles from the victim’s feet. When the Defendant went into the kitchen to make something to eat, the victim got off the bed, looked down the hallway, and tried to open a back door. The door would not open, so she ran back to the bedroom and sat down. She looked down the hallway again to make sure the Defendant was still in the kitchen, ran back to the door, that time opened it, and ran outside to a neighbor’s house. The victim testified that she ran through some woods, naked and handcuffed, until she found a house. She realized that the Defendant was chasing after her, so she banged on the door, screaming for the homeowner to open the door. The homeowner let her inside, and the victim called 911. The Defendant pounded on the door, but he left after he saw the victim on the phone.

On cross-examination, the victim acknowledged that she lived with her boyfriend, who had been violent with her in the past. She agreed that, after the kidnapping by the Defendant, she sought two charges against her boyfriend for domestic assault. She admitted that her boyfriend was convicted on both of those charges. She also stated that, while she sat on a bench across from the Burger King, her boyfriend was across “the parking lot,” talking to a friend. She also acknowledged that her boyfriend saw her leaving with the Defendant. The victim also stated that, when the Defendant threatened her with the knife, he held it against her neck with his left hand and drove the motorcycle with his right hand. The victim did not know the exact time that she ran down the road naked from the Defendant’s trailer home. The only thing that she knew was that “it was light out.”

Maggie Dale testified that, on Easter Sunday 2009, the victim knocked on the door of her trailer home, crying and screaming. Dale said that she opened the door and the victim entered, immediately looked for a phone, and called the police. The victim was naked and she had on handcuffs. Dale testified that, right after she let the victim into her trailer home, a man knocked on the door. Dale said that she “didn’t go to the door or see who it was or nothing,” but she “took it to be a man.” Dale stated that the man did not attempt to enter the house and that she did not have the door locked. Dale testified that the incident occurred in the middle of the day.

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State of Tennessee v. Thomas D. Taylor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-thomas-d-taylor-tenncrimapp-2012.