State v. Housler

193 S.W.3d 476, 2006 Tenn. LEXIS 431
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 193 S.W.3d 476 (State v. Housler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Housler, 193 S.W.3d 476, 2006 Tenn. LEXIS 431 (Tenn. 2006).

Opinion

WILLIAM M. BARKER, C.J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which CORNELIA A. CLARK, E. RILEY ANDERSON, ADOLPHO A. BIRCH, JR., and JANICE M. HOLDER, JJ. joined.

*479 Pursuant to Rule 11 of the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure, we granted review principally to determine whether the State violated the Appellant’s Due Process rights (1) by introducing into evidence at his murder trial the Appellant’s confession, which contained several known falsehoods, or (2) by advancing allegedly inconsistent theories, arguments, and facts in the Appellant’s and his co-defendant’s respective prosecutions. We hold that a criminal defendant’s confession may be used against him consistent with Due Process protections even when the confession contains peripheral facts known by prosecutors to be false. Further, we hold on the facts presented to us in this case that the State did not pursue inconsistent prosecutions in the respective trials of the Appellant and his co-defendant and that, therefore, we need not address whether a criminal defendant’s Due Process rights could be violated by such inconsistency.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On January 30, 1994, officers of the Clarksville, Tennessee, Police Department discovered the bodies of Kevin Campbell, Angela Wyatt, Patricia Price, and Marcia Klopp inside a Taco Bell restaurant. Each of the four victims, all of whom were employees of the restaurant, suffered multiple gunshot wounds. Officers also discovered that a safe in the business office of the restaurant had been blown open by a shotgun blast and emptied of nearly $3,000 in cash and coins.

The ciime garnered local outrage and national media attention, and within days Courtney B. Mathews, a newly-hired part-time employee of the restaurant, was arrested and charged with the murders and robbery. Mathews was also a military soldier stationed at nearby Fort Campbell, Kentucky.

Work records showed that on January 29, 1994, Mathews clocked in to work at 2:10 p.m., clocked out for a break at 7:39 p.m., clocked back in at 8:12 p.m., and ended his shift at 9:11 p.m.

Mathews resided on Ryder Avenue in Clarksville, four to five miles from the Taco Bell on Riverside Drive. According to Carl Ward, Mathews’ roommate at the time, Mathews arrived home from work at 9:30 p.m. on the night of the murders and went into his room where he placed a shotgun, a .9 millimeter handgun, and either a .22 or .25 handgun, along with shells and ammunition, in a book bag. Mathews also grabbed a bowling-ball bag and a pair of white latex gloves and left the apartment alone. Ward testified that when Mathews left the house, he was wearing two layers of clothes — a Miami Hurricanes sweat suit underneath black pants, a white shirt and a tie, and a black three-quarter length coat. Before he left, Mathews told Ward, who had been examining the guns, to wipe his prints from them.

About an hour after Mathews left work on the evening of January 29, a Taco Bell employee, Jelaine Walker, saw Mathews inside the restaurant again. Walker observed Mathews crouching behind a trash can in the dining area. Mathews said to Walker, “I am gone, you don’t see me.” Company policy prohibited entry of anyone into the restaurant once the dining area was closed at midnight; the drive-through lane generally remained open until 1:00 or 1:30 a.m.

Investigation of the crime scene revealed a disrupted ceiling tile in the men’s bathroom that appeared to have been moved to create an opening after someone had been hiding above. A forensic specialist from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) later confirmed that Mathews’ fingerprints were on a fan vent near the displaced tile.

*480 Witness Frankie Sanford placed an order from the drive-through lane of Taco Bell at 1:30 a.m. on the day of the murders. Inside the restaurant he saw, alive and well, each of the four victims working as normal; he also saw Mathews, in uniform, working.

When John Ballard, a shift manager at the Taco Bell, stopped by the drive-through window at approximately 1:45 a.m., the employees were engaged in normal closing activities. Klopp, the evening manager at Taco Bell on the night of the killings, told Ballard that they had been very busy and hence were unable to close the drive-through window until 1:30 a.m. Ballard left the restaurant around 2:00 a.m.

Witness Allen Ceruti, who at the time was employed by the Tennessee Department of Correction, drove by the Taco Bell at 4:30 a .m. on the day of the murders. He testified that he saw an African-American male partially open the metal rear door of the Taco Bell restaurant from the inside. Mathews is African-American.

When Ballard arrived later the next morning at approximately 7:25 a.m. to open the restaurant, he noticed that the employees’ cars were still in the parking lot. After unlocking the main entrance, Ballard entered the Taco Bell and discovered one of the victim’s bodies. He left and immediately called 9-1-1. Police arrived shortly thereafter, performed a sweep of the building, and found the bodies of the four victims inside. TBI agents were soon called to collect evidence from the crime scene.

In the general work area of the restaurant, twenty-four cartridge cases, all fired from a .9 millimeter gun, were recovered. Eight fired bullets were also found lodged in various places throughout the restaurant. Investigators determined that the cartridge cases, the fired bullets, and the bullet fragments recovered from the victims’ bodies were all fired from the same .9 millimeter gun. The office safe had been broken into after the combination dial was shot off. According to forensic investigators, two different guns, a shotgun and a .9 millimeter, had been used to shoot the safe. Found inside the business office of the restaurant were a Federal brand lead-slug shot shell case, lead fragments from the slug, and an unfired Federal lead-slug shot shell — along with plastic fragments from the safe dial. An audit later revealed that exactly $2,967.68 had been taken from the restaurant.

On the day of the murders, David Lee Rose was working at the- McDonald’s near 1-24 in Clarksville. While he was emptying the trash, he discovered inside several unfired .12 gauge shotgun shells and numerous .9 millimeter bullets (some of which had been chambered in a weapon), some coins in wrappers, a black wallet, and a black leather glove. He also disposed of two half-eaten .hamburgers that were in the bag with the other items. Rose took the ammunition and change home with him. He did not keep the glove or the wallet. When Rose learned about the murders, he returned the shells and bullets to his store manager. Investigators later determined that the chamber markings on the shotgun shells that Rose found matched those on the shotgun shells collected from the crime scene. The chamber markings on the .9 millimeter bullets that he found, however, did not match those found on the bullets collected from Taco Bell. A search of Mathews’ car yielded a bowling ball bag containing $2,576 along with a collection of credit and identification cards strewn about the car’s interior.

Investigators of the Clarksville Police Department searched for evidence along the interstate. Underneath the Red River Bridge on 1-24, they collected several *481

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W.3d 476, 2006 Tenn. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-housler-tenn-2006.