State v. Adrian Wilkerson & Steven Murphy

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 26, 1998
Docket01C01-9610-CR-00419
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Adrian Wilkerson & Steven Murphy (State v. Adrian Wilkerson & Steven Murphy) 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 v. Adrian Wilkerson & Steven Murphy, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE FILED APRIL 1998 SESSION August 26, 1998

Cecil W. Crowson STATE OF TENNESSEE, * No. 01C01-9610-CR-00419 Clerk Appellate Court

Appellee, * Davidson County

VS. * Hon. J. Randall W yatt, Jr., Judge

ADRIAN WILKERSON and * (Especially Aggravated Robbery, STEVEN MURPHY, First Degree Murder, Theft) * Appellants. *

For Appellant Wilkerson: For Appellee:

Mark F. Fishburn John Knox Walkup 100 Thompson Lane Attorney General & Reporter Nashville, TN 37211 (at trial and on appeal) Karen M. Yacuzzo Assistant Attorney General For Appellant Murphy: 425 Fifth Avenue North Cordell Hull Building, Second Floor Jeffery A. DeVasher Nashville, TN 37243-0493 Assistant Public Defender 1202 Stahlman Building Nicholas D. Bailey Nashville, TN 37201 and (on appeal) Katrin Miller Assistant District Attorneys General David Baker Washington Square, Suite 500 Assistant Public Defender 222 Second Avenue North and Nashville, TN 37201-1649 Karl F. Dean Metropolitan Public Defender 1202 Stahlman Building Nashville, TN 37201 (at trial)

OPINION FILED:___________________________

AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED

GARY R. WADE, JUDGE OPINION

The defendants, Adrian Wilkerson and Steven Murphy, were convicted

of especially aggravated robbery, first degree murder, and theft over $1000.00. The

defendants were sentenced to life imprisonment for first degree murder. The trial

court imposed Range I sentences of twenty-five years for especially aggravated

robbery and four years for theft. All sentences are to be served consecutively, for

an effective sentence of life plus twenty-nine years.

In this appeal of right, each defendant presents the following issues:

(1) whether pretrial identification procedures were unnecessarily suggestive requiring suppression at trial; and

(2) whether the trial court erred by instructing the jury on parole eligibility.

The defendant Murphy presents the following additional issues:

(3) whether the evidence is sufficient to support his convictions for especially aggravated robbery and first degree murder during the commission of a felony;

(4) whether the trial court properly admitted a "life photograph" of the victim; and

(5) whether the trial court properly permitted a prosecution witness to testify.

Finally, each defendant challenges the length and manner of his sentence.

We affirm the judgment of the trial court but modify the sentence for

especially aggravated robbery as to each defendant.

On the morning of October 6, 1994, the vehicle of Timothy Thomas, a

Tennessee State University student, was stolen from the school parking lot.

Thomas described the car as a 1984 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme, beige in color

with maroon wheels and bearing the license plate, "PUZZLED." As he reported the

2 missing vehicle to campus security, he received word that police had found his car.

The steering column had been stripped and a screwdriver, which did not belong to

Thomas, was found in the floorboard.

Donald Amos, manager of a chain of movie theaters in Nashville,

testified that in 1994, he employed Keith Davenport to manage the Rivergate 8

Theater. Davenport conducted daily cash transactions of at least $3,000.00 at Third

National Bank. All monies were carried in bank bags labeled "Rivergate 8." On

October 6th, a bank employee informed him that Davenport had been robbed.

Police recovered $3,891.00 from two bank bags labeled "Rivergate 8."

Rodman Davenport, the father of Keith Davenport, testified that he had

received word that his son had been shot during a robbery at Third National Bank.

Three hours after his son was transported to Vanderbilt Hospital, he died. Rodman

Davenport identified a photograph of his son and pointed out the bullet holes in the

vehicle he drove on the date of his death.

Dorothy Seay, who had just cashed a check at the Third National

Bank, was returning to her car when she heard a loud noise. She then observed a

tan 1984 Oldsmobile Cutlass with a dark roof and a dark bra over the front grill travel

from Kroger toward the bank and park in two empty parking spaces near her car.

Ms. Seay observed the driver of the Cutlass stop next to a person she later learned

was Keith Davenport, who was getting into a small, white car. The driver of the

Cutlass, a tall, black man wearing a white shirt and dark pants, exited the passenger

door, shot the victim twice, and then stooped to grab the bank bags. When he

stood up, he looked at Ms. Seay and drove away from the scene. While she did not

see the driver of the Cutlass or its license plate, Ms. Seay insisted that she got a

3 good look at the robber, only twenty to twenty-five feet away. She described the

gun as a .44 or .357 magnum with an eight-inch barrel and brown handles bearing

two circular emblems.

Ms. Seay provided police with a statement describing the robbery and

waited in the bank conference room for a possible identification. Asked to view two

men to determine if she recognized either of them from the shooting and cautioned

to be very careful in rendering a positive identification, Ms. Seay identified the

defendant Wilkerson, who was handcuffed and sitting in the backseat of a police

vehicle, as the person who fired the fatal shot. Later, she identified him at the

preliminary hearing and then at trial. She could not identify the defendant Murphy.

Estella Parker, a teller at Third National Bank, testified that she heard

a gunshot and looked out the bank window. From only fifty feet or so away, she

then heard two more shots and saw a man holding a gun and two bank bags enter

the open passenger door of a slowly moving car. She described the man as a tall,

black man with short hair; he wore a white t-shirt and jeans. Ms. Parker described

the car as an older model Cutlass or Monte Carlo, beige or yellow in color with a

brown top and dark wheels, and the murder weapon as dark brown with a long

barrel. She stated that the victim fell to the ground within two feet of the tall man.

Ms. Parker asserted that nothing blocked her view of the incident. At a showup at

the bank, she identified the defendant Wilkerson, standing in handcuffs with another

man, as the person she saw jump into the car with the bank bags. Although she

was unable to identify the defendant Murphy, she recognized the gun recovered by

police as that used by Wilkerson in the robbery.

Linda Boone, who was in the Third National Bank lobby at the time of

4 the shooting, heard two pops and saw a man lying on the ground in front of her car.

She then observed a black man carrying a "big gun" lean over the victim and

remove a bank bag from underneath his arm. The robber then got into the

passenger side of a car she described as a 1982 or 1983 beige Cutlass with

burgundy top. Ms. Boone could not identify the driver or the person who fired the

shots and she could not see the license plate of the Cutlass.

Grady Welch, who was cashing a check at the Third National Bank,

heard two gunshots outside the bank, looked out the window and saw a black man

wearing a white t-shirt leaning over the victim. He observed the robber reach down

for the bag and then run between cars to a beige car with a dark top. Welch could

not see the robber’s face and could not see the driver of the getaway vehicle. While

he followed the car in his truck, he was unable to see the license plate.

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