State of Tennessee v. Vincent Parker Lee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 29, 2021
DocketM2020-00572-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Vincent Parker Lee (State of Tennessee v. Vincent Parker Lee) 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. Vincent Parker Lee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

07/29/2021 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 13, 2021 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. VINCENT PARKER LEE

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Macon County No. 07-132 Brody Kane, Judge1

No. M2020-00572-CCA-R3-CD

Aggrieved of his convictions of rape of a child, aggravated sexual battery, and incest, the defendant, Vincent Parker Lee, appeals. In this appeal, the defendant asserts that the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions of rape of a child; that the trial court erred by permitting the State to ask leading questions of the child rape victim; that the State’s failure to make an election of offenses at the close of its case-in-chief resulted in plain error; that the cumulative effect of the alleged errors deprived him of the right to a fair trial; and that the trial court erred by imposing consecutive sentences. We find no deficiency in the State’s proof and no error in either the trial court’s ruling with regard to the State’s examination of the child rape victim or the consecutive alignment of the sentences. The State’s failure to elect offenses at the close of its case-in-chief was error, but, because the error can be classified as harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, it does not rise to the level of plain error. Consequently, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgments of the Circuit Court Affirmed

JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, P.J., and CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, J., joined.

Brennan M. Wingerter, Assistant Public Defender (on appeal); and Tom Bilbrey, Assistant District Public Defender (at trial), for the appellant, Vincent Parker Lee.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; T. Austin Watkins, Assistant Attorney General; Tommy Thompson, District Attorney General; and Tom Swink and Justin Harris, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

1 The Honorable David E. Durham presided over this case until his retirement. OPINION

The Macon County Grand Jury charged the defendant with five counts of rape of a child and five counts of incest for acts of abuse committed against his step- daughter, J.M., and his daughter, T.M.2

At the September 8, 2009 trial, T.L., the victims’ mother testified that the defendant, her ex-husband, was T.M.’s father and J.M.’s step-father and that the couple also shared a son, S.L. In 2007, the family lived in Macon County. In June of that year, J.M. “came to me and told me that she was molested by my husband.” T.L. confronted the defendant with J.M.’s allegations when he returned home from work, saying that when he pulled into the driveway of the family home, she “ran to the truck and pulled him out of the truck and was hitting him and pushing him.” T.L. told the defendant “what [J.M.] had told me, and he said he didn’t want to hear it from me, he wanted to hear it from her.” The defendant and T.L. went inside, and T.L. encouraged J.M. to tell the defendant what she had previously told T.L. T.L. testified that J.M. repeated the allegations, and the defendant “kept saying, no, I didn’t do that, I didn’t do that. And she said; yes, you did. And he said, well, if I did do that, then why didn’t you stop me, why didn’t you say something.” T.L. said that J.M. told the defendant that “she was scared he would hurt [her] some more.” T.L. recalled that, at that point, the defendant began to cry and say that he “couldn’t have done that.” The defendant then “commenced to begging me to kill him.” T.L. said that she told the defendant to “just get out,” and he “asked me if we could go to counseling to get help.” T.L. testified that she “told him, no, and I kicked him in his chest and he fell on the ground and I was hitting him some more and kicking him some more.” The defendant left, and T.L. went into the residence to lie down with the victim.

T.L. testified that, on the following morning, she “commenced to calling doctors, hospitals, Health Department to ask for a rape kit” and was told that she should call the sheriff’s department. T.L. said that she telephoned the sheriff’s department. T.L.’s grandmother drove T.L. and her daughters to the sheriff’s department. After questioning the girls, an officer drove J.M. and T.M. “to get the rape kits done.”

T.L. recalled that S.L. broke his arm on February 11, 2007, and that he spent the night in the hospital as a result. T.L. stayed at the hospital with S.L. while the defendant stayed home with J.M. and T.M.

Nine-year-old J.M. testified that, at one time, she lived with her mother, father, sister, and brother in Tennessee and that she lived in Florida at the time of trial. 2 As is the policy of this court, we refer to the victims of sexual offenses by their initials. In keeping with our goal of protecting the anonymity of the victims, we also refer to their mother and brother by their initials. -2- J.M. said that she referred to her breasts as “[p]epparonis,” her buttocks area as her “tush,” and her genital area as her “monkey.” J.M. testified that the defendant touched “[m]y monkey and my tush” on the night that T.L. was at the hospital with S.L. after S.L. broke his arm. After saying that it was “kind of hard to” describe how the defendant had touched her, she said that “[h]e stuck his hand inside my underwear” and “was touching me” “[o]n my monkey and my tush.” She said that she knew that the defendant had touched her inside her “monkey” because she “felt it.” J.M. testified that the defendant also touched her with his penis, saying, “He put his thing in my underwear.” She said that she felt the defendant’s penis inside her “monkey.” Eventually the defendant “stopped and he fell asleep.”

J.M. testified that the defendant touched her on another occasion in her bedroom when the family lived “in the house that my brother broke his arm in.” She explained, “He put his hand in my underwear and he was touching me and then he stopped and he went in his room and fell asleep. I was scared. I turned around and then I laid down and fell asleep.” J.M. confirmed that the defendant had put his hand under her “nighties” and had touched her skin. She said that he “just put his hand on” her tush “and then took it off.”

J.M. testified that on yet another occasion, the defendant “put his hand in my underwear under my nightie” and touched her “monkey” with his fingers. She said that the defendant’s finger went inside her “monkey” “only once.” J.M. said that she knew that the defendant’s finger had gone inside her vagina because she “felt it.” J.M. reported that the defendant touched her “every night” and that she “would just lay there and be still.” J.M. said that she disclosed the abuse to her mother and that her mother “packed all his stuff and put it outside.”

During cross-examination, J.M. clarified that the two particular incidents when the defendant penetrated her vagina took place “before and when” S.L. “broke his arm, and after that, whenever I told my mom, that was inside a trailer after my brother broke his arm.”

Seven-year-old T.M. testified that on one occasion when she lived with her mother, father, sister, and brother in a trailer in Tennessee, she awoke to find the defendant “tapping on” her “chochee,” which was her name for her genital area, with “[h]is finger.” She said that the incident occurred after her brother broke his arm.

Macon County Sheriff’s Department Detective Bill Cothron testified that he and Detective Danny Fisher investigated the allegations against the defendant. He interviewed the defendant on June 7, 2007. The video recording of the interview was played for the jury.

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State of Tennessee v. Vincent Parker Lee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-vincent-parker-lee-tenncrimapp-2021.