State of Tennessee v. Walter Martin

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 16, 2007
DocketW2006-01148-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Walter Martin (State of Tennessee v. Walter Martin) 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. Walter Martin, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs September 11, 2007

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. WALTER MARTIN

Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County No. 04-05112 James C. Beasley, Jr., Judge

No. W2006-01148-CCA-R3-CD - Filed October 16, 2007

The Defendant, Walter Martin, was convicted of rape, a Class B felony, and sentenced to ten years at 100% in the Department of Correction. On direct appeal, he argues that the evidence was insufficient to establish Shelby County as the proper venue for his trial and that he was erroneously sentenced. Following our review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court and the Defendant’s sentence but remand for correction of two clerical errors made in the judgment of conviction.

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

DAVID H. WELLES, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS and ALAN E. GLENN , JJ., joined.

Marvin Ballin, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Walter Martin.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Lacy Wilber, Assistant Attorney General; William L. Gibbons, District Attorney General; and Nichole Germain, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Factual background A grand jury indicted the Defendant for two counts of aggravated rape, alleging that the offenses were committed in Shelby County on June 15, 2004. Subsequently, the Defendant was tried by a jury in Shelby County where the following evidence was presented.

The victim, Riitta-Maija Lehtinen, a United States citizen originally from Finland, testified that on June 14, 2004, she was in Lexington, Kentucky working as an airplane pilot for Shuttle America, which flies passenger aircraft for U.S. Airways Express. As she prepared to pilot a flight from Lexington to Pittsburgh, she received a telephone call at approximately 7:30 p.m. from a “state trooper in Kodiak, Alaska” who informed her that her boyfriend of seven years, also a pilot, had died in an airplane crash. After consulting her supervisor, she was released from her duties and allowed to leave.

Ms. Lehtinen wanted to go to her home in Memphis immediately, so she could then travel to Alaska where her boyfriend had died. Initially, she tried to find a flight, but none would get her home that night. Then, she tried to rent a car, but no car was available. She also decided against taking a bus because it would have been too slow. At that point, she decided to hitchhike to Memphis. She explained that she had hitchhiked once before in Finland but had not ever hitchhiked in the United States.

First, she briefly “caught [a] ride” with someone in a car who took her to the “Kentucky Parkway.” Then, she was picked up by a truck driver who introduced himself as “Rattlesnake.” Rattlesnake drove her to Union City, Tennessee. Before he dropped her off, Rattlesnake inquired over his commercial band radio whether another truck driver was going toward Memphis, and a truck driver who called himself “Indy” responded affirmatively. Ms. Lehtinen testified that this man, who was the Defendant, then picked her up and drove her from Union City to Memphis.

She said that after approximately two and a half or three hours, they had arrived in Memphis and were driving “down on Highway 51,” when the Defendant said he needed to use the bathroom and pulled the eighteen-wheeler truck into a shopping center. Ms. Lehtinen expected him to get out of the truck and relieve himself, but he did not. Rather, according to Ms. Lehtinen, he put a knife to her throat and told her he wanted to have sex with her. She did not see the knife but felt it against her throat. She began to cry and asked him repeatedly “how he could do this to her” because he knew someone very dear to her had died.

Ms. Lehtinen testified that the Defendant physically lifted her into a bed in the back of the cab of the truck and again insisted that he wanted to have sex with her. She pleaded with him; he said he was going to hurt her; and he did “hurt [her] face.” She was scared and “[f]elt really bad” and confused about what was happening. He lifted up her T-shirt and her bra and “started to suck and lick [her] breast.” Then, he pulled down her pants and underwear and “started to lick [her] vagina.”

Ms. Lehtinen stated that she did not attempt to fight. She “didn’t see any point in fighting” because “he’s a man. He—has more strength than I do and if I would start to fight maybe for sure he’s going to kill me or I mean, I didn’t see any point to it.” She did not scream because she did not see anyone at the shopping center and did not “see any point in that either.” Ms. Lehtinen testified that it was “around” 3:00 a.m. when these events were taking place and that they were in a shopping center near Highway 51 in Shelby County.

She testified that the Defendant “put his fingers into [her] vagina,” and then he “penetrated with his penis.” She stated that his penis was inside her vagina for “about three minutes” and that he ejaculated while his penis was inside her.

-2- Afterward, the Defendant got back into the driver’s seat and drove her to a place near the Memphis airport. Ms. Lehtinen testified that it took “probably 10, 15 minutes” to drive from the shopping center where the incident occurred to this location near the airport. She got out of the truck, and he “said he was sorry” and left. Ms. Lehtinen then called 9-1-1. Twenty minutes later, a police officer picked her up near the intersection of I-240 and Airways Boulevard.

The policeman drove her to the “Rape Crisis Center” in Memphis where she told a nurse what had happened to her. The nurse had her take off her clothes and conducted a thorough examination. The examination took about twenty minutes. Then, she was driven to her car, which was parked in the employee parking lot at the airport, and she went home.

Officer Thomas E. Woods of the Memphis Police Department testified that, after being dispatched at approximately 3:45 a.m., he retrieved Ms. Lehtinen from the shoulder of I-240 near Airways Boulevard. According to Officer Woods, she was “distressed” and told him that she had been hitchhiking and was raped by a truck driver in a shopping center off Highway 51 in Memphis. After consulting with his Lieutenant, Officer Woods took Ms. Lehtinen to the Memphis Rape Crisis Center.

Julie Atkeison, a nurse from the Memphis Sexual Assault Resource Center,1 testified that she conducted “a full physical exam” of Ms. Lehtinen the morning after the incident. Atkeison stated that Ms. Lehtinen “was very upset” and that she “was just crying during the whole time that we were talking.” Atkeison did not observe any bruising or any other injury after conducting a speculum exam. Asked whether the absence of injury was medically significant in a rape case, Atkeison explained that “[i]t can be. She is a . . . mature female. She can have babies. So her hymen stretches to allow passage of a baby. So not finding an injury is not significant in someone who is in the age range of 16 to 45 in those child bearing years.” Atkeison also testified that it is “very common not to find injuries” in rape victims.

Atkeison swabbed her breasts and vaginal area for evidence and sent the swabs to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. The Defendant stipulated at trial that the bureau’s DNA analysis revealed that his saliva was present on both her breasts and that his spermatozoa and saliva were present inside her vagina.

Ms. Lehtinen also testified that “[a] few days” after the medical examination, she described the man who raped her, as well as the numbers and markings on his truck, to Sergeant Daniel Parris of the Memphis Police Department.

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State v. Ashby
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State v. Fletcher
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State of Tennessee v. Walter Martin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-walter-martin-tenncrimapp-2007.