State of Tennessee v. Timothy Lindsey

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 14, 2020
DocketW2018-01987-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Timothy Lindsey (State of Tennessee v. Timothy Lindsey) 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. Timothy Lindsey, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

02/14/2020 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs October 29, 2019, at Knoxville

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. TIMOTHY LINDSEY

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 16-00466 Chris Craft, Judge ___________________________________

No. W2018-01987-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

A Shelby County jury convicted the Defendant, Timothy Lindsey, of aggravated rape for a crime committed in 2005, and he was sentenced to serve thirty years in confinement. On appeal, the Defendant challenges the sufficiency of the convicting evidence and asserts that the ten-year delay in indicting him violated his right to due process. We conclude that the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict and that the Defendant has waived the issue of pre-indictment delay. Accordingly, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed and the case remanded for correction of the judgment form.

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

JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. KELLY THOMAS, JR., and J. ROSS DYER, JJ., joined.

Stephen Bush, District Public Defender, and Barry W. Kuhn, Assistant District Public Defender (on appeal), and Charles Waldman and Jake Brown (at trial), Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Timothy Lindsey.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Jonathan H. Wardle, Assistant Attorney General; Amy P. Weirich, District Attorney General; and Abby Wallace, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee. OPINION

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The victim in this case was raped at gunpoint on March 31, 2005, after an intruder kicked down the door to her apartment. Law enforcement collected DNA evidence shortly after the offense, but the evidence was not subjected to testing until 2015, when a preliminary analysis implicated the Defendant. After further DNA testing, the Defendant was indicted for aggravated rape on January 28, 2016, and the case proceeded to trial.

At trial, the victim testified that in March 2005, she was living in an apartment attached to a bar where she was employed. She described the apartment as having a front room, which at the time contained a mattress and television, another room which she used as her bedroom, and a kitchen. She testified that her son and his girlfriend had recently moved out of the apartment.

Around 6:45 a.m. on March 31, 2005, a man kicked down her door as she slept in the front room. By the time she sat up, the man was holding a gun to her head. The victim stated that the apartment had no windows and that it was dark because the man did not turn on the lights. However, she was able to see well enough by the light creeping in through the open door to give a description of him. She described her attacker as an African American man, “clean cut,” young, approximately five feet, seven inches tall, and weighing 130 to 140 pounds. She elaborated that the man’s hair was short, but she did not recall if he had facial hair. She testified that she is five feet, four inches tall, and that he was taller and thinner than she was. The gun had a “long clip” in it, was not a handgun, and was eight to nine inches long. She testified that the gun may have been black, but she did not recall its color.

The man demanded to know “where the money was” and if anyone else was in the home. He forced her to take him around the apartment to demonstrate they were alone. He also ransacked the home in an effort to find money, looking through pillow cases and under the bed covers, lifting the mattress, and emptying a box of graham crackers.

The man took her back to the front room and demanded that she pull down her pants. Hoping to avoid rape, she lied to him and said she had AIDS. The man then demanded fellatio, and told her he would “blow [her] head off” if she bit him. The victim performed fellatio, and the man ejaculated in her mouth, causing her to gag. She testified that the semen went onto her t-shirt and the floor.

The man told her he would kill her if he saw police arriving, and he left. The victim waited a few minutes, then went into the café and called police. She gave a -2- statement to police at the scene, and they collected her t-shirt and a piece of the carpet. She was also taken to the Rape Crisis Center, where medical personnel swabbed her mouth. The victim identified photographs of the scene, including a photograph of two shoeprints on the front door. She testified the shoe prints had not been there the night before the attack. The victim gave another statement at the police station. She left the apartment that day and never stayed there again.

The victim was not contacted by police regarding the crime for the following ten years. At that time, Detective Howard Carter showed her a photographic lineup. She testified that Detective Carter said she should be one hundred percent sure before making an identification. On the photographic lineup, she put a red circle around the photograph of a subject who was not the Defendant. The victim testified she circled the photograph “[b]ecause I thought that was him, but it had happened so long ago, that I wasn’t for sure. So I told [Detective Carter] that I couldn’t say for sure that that was the person.” The victim testified that she then wrote at the bottom of the form, “I can’t pick out the person because it was dark.”

The victim acknowledged that she had told police the assailant had no facial hair but that all the subjects in the lineup had facial hair. She acknowledged she described the intruder alternately as five feet, seven inches tall; five feet, nine inches tall; and five feet, ten inches tall. She agreed she had described him as having a medium complexion and weighing 135, 140, and 150 pounds. She explained that she estimated the height and weight of the intruder based on the physique her boyfriend at the time. The victim also testified she believed the gun was black with one handle, but after consulting her statement, she agreed she had told police that the gun was silver and had two handles. The victim agreed that the assailant stated several times that his mother had died that morning. The parties stipulated at trial that the Defendant’s mother was still alive.

Ms. Elizabeth Thomas, a retired nurse, testified that she examined the victim at the Rape Crisis Center. The victim was tense and emotional and recounted the events consistently with her trial testimony. Ms. Thomas found no injuries, which she testified would not be uncommon. She took oral swabs from the victim, and she identified at trial the sealed packaging of the oral swabs she had collected in a “rape kit” and given to law enforcement. She noted that the outside of the kit indicated all the areas where swabs were collected and that in this case, she collected evidence only from the victim’s mouth.

Officer Jeremy Quinn, who was retired from the Memphis Police Department at the time of trial, testified that he responded to the victim’s call and that she stated she had been orally raped. She described her attacker as an African American man who was 140 to 150 pounds, eighteen to twenty-five years old, and five feet, nine or ten inches tall, with a medium complexion. The victim described a “mach-ten” type of weapon. -3- Officer Stacy Milligan, who was likewise retired from the Memphis Police Department at the time of trial, documented the crime scene. He stated that the door had been kicked twice with a left shoe. He measured the footprint and stated that the approximate shoe size was size eleven and a half. He clarified that the measurement was approximate and that the shoe could have been a size eleven or twelve. The doorjamb of the victim’s apartment was broken where the door had been kicked in.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Timothy Lindsey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-timothy-lindsey-tenncrimapp-2020.