State v. Fred W. Kincaid, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 27, 1999
Docket03C01-9707-CR-00306
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Fred W. Kincaid, Jr. (State v. Fred W. Kincaid, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of 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. Fred W. Kincaid, Jr., (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE FILED AT KNOXVILLE September 27, 1999

JUNE SESSION, 1999 Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate Court Clerk

STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) ) No. 03C01-9707-CR-00306 Appellee, ) ) BLOUNT COUNTY vs. ) ) Hon. D. Kelly Thomas, Jr., Judge FRED W. KINCAID, JR., ) ) (Rape) Appellant. )

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

Julie A. Martin Paul G. Summers Contract Appellate Defender Attorney General and Reporter P. O. Box 426 Knoxville, TN 37901-0426 Ellen H. Pollack Assistant Attorney General Criminal Justice Division (ON APPEAL) 425 Fifth Avenue North 2d Floor, Cordell Hull Building Nashville, TN 37243-0493 Raymond Mack Garner District Public Defender Michael L. Flynn Natalee S. Hurley District Attorney General Shawn Graham Asst. District Public Defenders Edward P. Bailey, Jr. 419 High Street Asst. District Attorney General Maryville, TN 37804 363 Court Street Maryville, TN 37804

(AT TRIAL)

OPINION FILED:

AFFIRMED

David G. Hayes, Judge OPINION

The appellant, Fred W. Kincaid, Jr., was indicted for aggravated rape and

theft of property under $500. A Blount County jury found him guilty of the lesser

offense of rape and theft as charged in the indictment. The trial court imposed

concurrent sentences of nine years for the rape conviction and eleven months,

twenty-nine days for the theft conviction, to be served in total confinement. In this

appeal as of right, the appellant raises the following issues for our review:

I. Whether the trial court erred in instructing the jury on the lesser offense of rape; 1

II. Whether the evidence was sufficient to support his conviction for rape; and

III. Whether the trial court’s imposition of a nine year sentence for the appellant’s rape conviction is excessive.

Finding no error of law requiring reversal, we affirm.

Background

On November 23, 1994, Mary Laws, Sonya Davidson, and Christie Ivey

rented a room at the Family Inn on Alcoa Highway in Blount County. That evening,

the threesome invited their boyfriends to the room for a party. Mary Laws’ boyfriend,

Brian Walden, attended. The next morning, Mary Laws reserved the room for

another night with the intention of spending time with her boyfriend. After paying for

the room, Mary Laws and the two other females left the motel, returning to their

respective residences to spend Thanksgiving with their families. Mary Laws

returned to the motel room around 3:00 that afternoon and took a nap until 6:00

p.m. Upon awakening, she paged Brian Walden, however, he did not answer the

1 The appe llant d oes not c hallen ge his conv iction and s ente nce for th eft of prop erty.

2 page. She then decided to drive by Walden’s house and the park to see if she

could locate him. Unable to locate her boyfriend, she drove back to the motel. As

she parked her vehicle in the motel parking lot, she noticed a group of people sitting

in a little blue car. Ms. Laws returned to her room and attempted to call Sonya

Davidson.

While she was on the telephone, there was a knock at the door. “[She]

turned around and opened the door and turned back around to pick the phone back

up.” She later testified that she did not look back toward the door because she “just

figured it was either Sonya or Christie. . . . somebody that knew [she] was there.”

As she picked up the telephone, Ms. Laws was pushed from behind onto the bed.

The lights were turned off and Ms. Laws’s clothes were removed by “[f]ifteen, twenty

people.” She was then “forced to have oral sex and natural sex with I don’t know

how many people.” Ms. Laws recognized the appellant as one of the perpetrators

because they had attended the same school. She did observe that all of the men in

the room were African-American. She also identified another intruder as being

Manguel “Smurf” Adams, a cousin of her boyfriend, Brian Walden.2

At some point during the sexual assaults, one of the perpetrators forced an

object into her vagina. The appellant informed police officers that the object was an

unopened beer bottle. This action tore the victim’s labia, causing extreme pain and

bleeding. While some of the intruders held her to the bed, the appellant sexually

penetrated Ms. Laws. Because of the pain from the sexual assaults, the victim

began screaming and attempted to fight off her attackers. At this point, a number of

those present did leave the motel room. Eventually, she was able to make her way

into the bathroom. Ms. Laws related that the appellant followed her into the

bathroom and tried “to comfort [her], telling [her] that he was going to help [her].

2 Mary La ws initially advised Detective Boling that “S mur f” had pa rticipated in this attack. At the insist enc e of h er bo yfrien d, Bria n W alden , she later s igned an af fidav it reca nting this statement. At trial, she admitted that she did this in part because she was in love with Brian Walden.

3 And then he started touching [her].” “He was touching my breasts and trying to

touch my vagina.” “[Ms. Laws] pushed him out of the way and ran out again.” She

noticed that only three of her attackers remained in her motel room, including the

appellant.

While the assaults were taking place, Shelby Renee Garrett, a desk clerk at

the motel, heard noises that sounded like a party coming from Room 203, the room

occupied by Mary Laws. As it was not motel policy to encourage parties, Ms.

Garrett telephoned the room on numerous occasions. Each time someone in the

room answered the telephone, they hung up without responding to Ms. Garrett. On

her final attempt, she heard someone in the background say “just unplug it.” During

this same time period, Ms. Garrett had observed eight to ten black males going

back and forth up the stairs to Room 203, and received a report that a man was

spotted carrying a gun. She then notified motel manager, Kathy Ware, who

immediately left her home for the motel.

When Ms. Ware arrived at the motel, she notified local law enforcement that

she would need assistance in order to evict the people from Room 203. With the

purpose of evicting Ms. Laws, Ms. Ware went up to the room and knocked on the

door. As the door opened, she observed one black male and Ms. Laws in the motel

room; Ms. Laws was putting on a pair of pants. Ms. Ware then asked Ms. Laws to

accompany her to the lobby. The lone male left the room and Ms. Ware did not get

a good look at him. Officer Bud Cooper of the Alcoa Police Department was

dispatched to the Family Inn Motel. He arrived as Ms. Laws was coming down the

stairs from her motel room.

Ms. Ware and Officer Cooper returned to Room 203 to check for any property

damage. Upon returning to the room, they observed beer bottles, condoms, and

condom wrappers strewn all over the room. The bed sheets were stained in blood

4 and a blood stained washcloth and drops of blood were discovered in the bathroom.

After Officer Cooper and Ms. Ware returned to the motel lobby, Ms. Laws informed

them that she had been raped. Ms. Laws also discovered that many of her personal

possessions had been stolen, including her CD player, her wallet containing $100,

her driver’s license, her BP gas card, her ATM card, her pager, approximately fifty

CDS, and a tape player.

Officer Holly Hatcher arrived at the motel and transported the victim to the

emergency room of Blount Memorial Hospital for a physical examination. Dr. Kevin

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