State v. Carlos Haywood

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 11, 1998
Docket02C01-9707-CR-00289
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Carlos Haywood (State v. Carlos Haywood) 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. Carlos Haywood, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT JACKSON

JULY 1998 SESSION FILED December 11, 1998

STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) No. 02C01-9707-CR-00289 Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk ) Appellee ) ) Shelby County vs. ) ) Honorable John P. Colton, Jr., Judge CARLOS D. HAYWOOD, ) ) (Felony Murder, Attempted Especially Appellant. ) Aggravated Robbery)

FOR THE APPELLANT: FOR THE APPELLEE:

A. C. WHARTON, JR. JOHN KNOX WALKUP Shelby County Public Defender Attorney General & Reporter

BARRY KUHN ELIZABETH T. RYAN Assistant Public Defender Assistant Attorney General (At Trial) Criminal Justice Division 425 Fifth Ave. North WALTER GW INN 2d Floor, Cordell Hull Bldg. Assistant Public Defender Nashville, TN 37243-0493 (On Appeal) 201 Poplar Ave., Suite 201 WILLIAM L. GIBBONS Memphis, TN 38103-1947 District Attorney General

PATIENCE R. BRANHAM LEE V. COFFEE Assistant District Attorneys General 201 Poplar Ave., Suite 301 Memphis, TN 38103-1947

OPINION FILED: ____________________

CONVICTIONS AFFIRMED, SENTENCE MODIFIED.

JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR. JUDGE OPINION

The defendant, Carlos D. Haywood, was convicted in a jury trial in the

Shelby County Criminal Court of felony murder and attempt to commit especially

aggravated robbery. After a bifurcated trial in which the state sought a life sentence

without the possibility of parole, the jury found that the aggravating circumstance did

not outweigh the mitigating circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt and

sentenced the defendant to life with the possibility of parole. The trial court

sentenced the defendant to a consecutive sentence of twelve years as a Range I

offender for attempted especially aggravated robbery, a class B felony. In this

appeal, the defendant contends (1) that the evidence is legally insufficient to sustain

his convictions, (2) that the trial court erred in admitting testimony about the

defendant’s gang affiliation, (3) that admission of five photographs of the victim’s

body taken during the autopsy were unfairly prejudicial, and (4) that his sentence

is excessive. Our review of the record has uncovered no error requiring reversal of

the defendant’s convictions. We find, however, that the trial court incorrectly

applied several enhancement factors to the defendant’s sentence. Therefore, we

affirm the judgment of the trial court but modify the defendant’s sentence for

attempted especially aggravated robbery.

I. Facts

Sometime after midnight on Saturday, June 18, 1995, Barry Brodey

was shot at close range with a shotgun in the parking lot of the Fantasy Warehouse

in Memphis. Hospital personnel pronounced him dead at approximately 2:00 a.m.

On the following Monday, Memphis police officers arrested fifteen-year old Carlos

Haywood and two co-defendants for Brodey’s murder. 1 The evidence at trial

provides us with the following narrative of events.

1 The indictment names as co-defendants Tyre S. Allen and Frederick D. Branch (also known as Frederick Lewis). The cases were severed for trial. Neither Allen nor Branch testified at Haywood’s trial.

2 Barry Brodey, who lived in Indianapolis, Indiana, was attending a

business-related conference in Memphis. On Friday evening, June 17, 1995, he

had dinner with some friends. When he left them at about 11:30 p.m., he said he

was headed back to the Peabody Hotel. Brodey never returned to the hotel.

At about 1:00 a.m., Trudy Blanchard, a shift manager at Fantasy

Warehouse, heard what she thought were backfires in the parking lot. When she

stepped out the front door, she saw someone firing a shotgun into the ground about

four cars down from the door. She stepped back inside and asked the cashier to

call 911. As she opened the door again, the shooter ran directly past her around

the corner of the building. She described him as a young black man, possibly

seventeen or eighteen years old, about five feet five inches in height with short,

black hair. He was carrying a sawed off shotgun in his hands. She walked down the

sidewalk to the place where the shots were fired and found Brodey lying face down

on the pavement between two cars.

A few moments later, Sergeant Michael Williams turned into the

parking lot. He was on routine patrol in the area and frequently checked the

Fantasy Warehouse parking lot because it had recently been the scene of

criminal activity. People in the lot flagged him down and told him there had been

a shooting. They said that the shooter had run around the corner of the building.

Williams then drove around the back of the building and tried to find the suspect.

When he saw no one he returned to the scene where he found a bleeding white

male lying on the pavement between two automobiles. The man’s shoes were off.

Several people were trying to stop the bleeding with a towel or blanket. Parked

nearby was a black Cadillac. The driver’s side door was standing open, the lights

were on, and the engine was running. The back and rear side windows had been

shot out. The sergeant found a handgun and a clip lying in the driver’s seat. The

victim, who was still alive, was taken by helicopter to a hospital where he died.

3 The next day, Capt. Mike Houston received a telephone call from Al

Pritchard. Pritchard, who had been the defendant’s friend for ten years, told

Houston that the defendant fired the shots that killed Brodey. Pritchard and the

defendant had been at the home of another friend before the shooting. Pritchard

knew that the defendant was going “shopping” for some rims.2 The defendant left

carrying a sawed-off Mossberg pump-action shotgun. At 3:00 a.m., the defendant

returned and told Pritchard that when he ordered the driver of a Cadillac to get out

of the car, the driver refused and pulled a gun on him. The defendant then shot

him. Pritchard advised the defendant to get rid of his blood-spattered T-shirt. Later,

after reading in the newspaper that the driver died, Pritchard decided to call the

police.3 After speaking to Houston, Pritchard took the defendant to the parking lot

where he retrieved the shotgun from where he had thrown it in some bushes.

As result of the information provided by Pritchard, Houston obtained

a search warrant and officers ultimately found a sawed-off shotgun under a sofa at

the defendant’s grandmother’s house. At this point, the police arrested the

defendant and brought him and his grandmother, who was his legal guardian, to the

station. His grandmother was present during the interview. She and the defendant

signed and dated the advice of rights form. During the interview, the defendant

confessed to shooting Brodey.

According to the statement, Haywood was asleep in bed when his two

co-defendants came by and invited him to go “shopping” with them. Haywood was

anxious to obtain a set of Vogue-STS rims because Tyre Allen had sold a set for

$1500. The three had been riding around for a while when Tyre spotted the

Cadillac with STS rims as it turned into the parking lot. They followed it in and

stopped the car just beyond the Cadillac. The defendant jumped out carrying the

2 “Shopping,” apparently, is street slang for driving around looking for a vehicle with specific equipment that can be hijacked and then stripped. 3 According to Pritchard, he thought “things were getting out of hand . . . People start getting killed.”

4 shotgun, yanked open the driver’s door and ordered the driver out.

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