State v. Henry DeQuan Rhodes

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 10, 2000
DocketM1999-959-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Henry DeQuan Rhodes (State v. Henry DeQuan Rhodes) 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. Henry DeQuan Rhodes, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE FILED FEBRUARY SESSION, 2000 March 10, 2000

Cecil Crowson, Jr. STATE OF TENNESSEE, * Appellate Court Clerk * No. M1999-959-CCA-R3-CD Appellee, * * WILSON COUNTY vs. * * Hon. J. O. Bond, Judge HENRY DEQUAN RHODES, * * (First Degree Felony Murder Appellant * Committed in the Perpetration of * Aggravated Child Abuse)

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

Gregory D. Smith Paul G. Summers Contract Appellate Defender Attorney General and Reporter One Public Sq., Ste 321 Clarksville, Tn 37040 Kim R. Hepler Assistant Attorney General Criminal Justice Division 425 Fifth Avenue North 2d Floor, Cordell Hull Building Nashville, TN 37243-0493

Tom P. Thompson, Jr. District Attorney General

Robert Hibbett Asst. District Attorney General 119 College Street Labanon, TN 37087

OPINION FILED:

AFFIRMED

David G. Hayes, Judge OPINION

The appellant, Henry Dequan Rhodes, was indicted by a Wilson County

Grand Jury for first degree felony murder committed in the perpetration of

aggravated child abuse. Following a jury trial, he was found guilty of the indicted

offense and sentenced to life imprisonment. On appeal, he argues:

I. The evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict of felony murder; and

II. The trial court erred in admitting certain photographs into evidence.

After review, we find no error of law requiring reversal. The judgment of the

trial court is affirmed.

Background

Shortly after 2:00 a.m. on the morning of November 6, 1996, Lieutenant Ed

Denning of the Wilson County Sheriff’s Department responded to an emergency

“call” at 2104 Locust Grove Road. Arriving at the location, he discovered the

appellant, his girlfriend, Christy Yarbrough, and his brother, Deedy Rhodes. Deedy

Rhodes was holding sixteen month old Brian Yarbrough, the son of Christy

Yarbrough. The child was “limp.” Denning believed that the child was either

unconscious or deceased. Denning further noticed the odor of alcohol on the

people present, as if “there had been a party.” The appellant told Lieutenant

Denning that “he had been trying to get Ms. Yarbrough to take the baby to the

doctor, and she hadn’t done it. . . .” The baby was transported to University Medical

Center in Lebanon.

Dr. Scott Giles, the medical examiner for Wilson County and the director of

the emergency room at the University Medical Center, was on duty at the time Brian

2 Yarbrough arrived at the hospital. The call preceding the victim’s arrival stated that

the ambulance team was “bringing in an approximately 18 month old child in full

cardiac arrest.” Dr. Giles met the ambulance when it arrived. He

immediately noticed that the child was covered with linear bruises on his legs and arms as well as some larger bruises on his face. I noticed that he had no heart activity whatsoever which is unusual in a child that young. It takes quite an insult to stop a child’s heart. At that time, I called the ambulance crew to call the police because the child had probably been beaten to death.

The child was moved into the emergency room, where resuscitation was

attempted. Dr. Giles observed that the child “had hemorrhages in the retina in the

back part of his eye which is considered very good evidence that he had been

shaken or received a strong blow to the head.” “The child never established any

cardiac activity or any independent breathing.” Dr. Giles diagnosed the death as the

result of “shaking baby syndrome which is child abuse.” “The immediate cause of

death was intra cranial bleeding as a consequence of blunt force trauma to the

head.” Additionally, Dr. Giles rejected any hypothesis that the victim’s injuries and

ultimate death could have resulted from a fall or other “accident.” By visual

inspection of the victim, Dr. Giles concluded that the injuries occurred “certainly

within the last 12 to 24 hours prior to his arrival [at the hospital.]”

Dr. Charles Harlan performed the autopsy on the child. The autopsy

confirmed Dr. Giles diagnosis that “death occurred as result of blunt force trauma to

the head.” Dr. Harlan concluded that

[t]he blunt force trauma to the head includes a number of different injuries. They include diffuse subarchnoid hemorrhage. . . .There are multiple contusions of the left cheek. A contusion is a bruise indicating that he received multiple blows to the left cheek. There is pulmonary congestion and hemorrhage which is part of the reaction to the injury to the head. There is a right subdural hematoma of 75 ccs that would be about 15 teaspoons that’s located on the right side that is, it is in the space between the arachnoid membrane and durameter. The durameter . . . is the membrane which completely surrounds the brain. The consistency of this membrane is such that it is consistent with having been there for some 8 to 12 hours, most likely 8 to 10 hours prior to the time of death, and that indicates that the point of injury occurred some 8 to 10 hours, perhaps 8 to 12 hours prior to the time of death. There’s also a . . .pooling of blood and soft tissue below the

3 scalp on the back of the head.

There are also multiple parallel linear contusions present here and there on the body . . . .

. . .injuries to the front of the body, which includes the contusions on the left cheek. It includes multiple of the parallel linear contusions which have approximate distance apart of a tenth of an inch, each of them. . . . Of the left and right sides of the body. . . .the various parallel linear contusions and they’re approximately seven in number. Various parallel linear contusions and other straight line linear contusions that are present on the right side of the head. And there are at least four double parallel lines and then multiple single lines, approximately four of those. . . .the left side or view of the head and neck showing again the contusions on the cheek and at least two groupings of parallel linear contusions. The contusion present on the left ear lobe is probably a continuation of the parallel linear contusion grouping that is present slightly above and behind the left ear.

It is my opinion that the multiple parallel linear contusions are caused by the person being struck by some probably cylindrical object of approximately the same size and shape and consistency as a coat hanger. It could be either a coat hanger, a switch, another piece of metal or hard plastic. . . .

...

The contusions on the face are consistent with the face being struck by some object other than the object causing the parallel linear contusions and this could be such things as an open hand, a fist, a skillet, a number of different things. . . .

Lieutenant Anthony Murray, along with other law enforcement officers,

conducted a search of the residence at 2104 Locust Grove Road. During the

search, he discovered “[a] switch off a tree, or limb, small limb” “under the couch” in

the living room. Detective Lieutenant David Kennedy, the lead investigator in the

homicide of Brian Yarbrough, “took a statement” from the appellant “at 8:35 am the

morning of the 6th.” In this statement, the appellant explained that, on November 5,

1996, at approximately 2:00 or 3:00 pm, Christy Yarbrough picked him up at his

grandmother’s house and took him to the Locust Grove address. Later that

afternoon, Christy took Deedy to the store, leaving sixteen month old Brian in the

care of the nineteen year old appellant.

Brian and [the appellant] were sitting on the couch watching TV.

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State v. Henry DeQuan Rhodes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-henry-dequan-rhodes-tenncrimapp-2000.