State v. Johnny Clark

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 14, 1998
Docket02C01-9708-CR-00307
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Johnny Clark (State v. Johnny Clark) 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. Johnny Clark, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON APRIL SESSION, 1998

FILED STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) April 14, 1998 ) No. 02C01-9708-CR-00307 Appellee ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk ) SHELBY COUNTY vs. ) ) Hon. W. Fred Axley, Judge JOHNNY O. CLARK, ) ) (First Degree Murder) Appellant )

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

Tony N. Brayton John Knox Walkup Asst. Public Defender Attorney General and Reporter 201 Poplar, Suite 2-01 Memphis, TN 38103 Elizabeth T. Ryan Assistant Attorney General Criminal Justice Division AC Wharton, Jr. 450 James Robertson Parkway District Public Defender Nashville, TN 37243-0493

William L. Gibbons District Attorney General

Edgar A. Peterson Asst. District Attorney General Criminal Justice Complex Suite 301, 201 Poplar Street Memphis, TN 38103

OPINION FILED:

AFFIRMED

David G. Hayes Judge OPINION

The appellant, Johnny O. Clark, was found guilty by a Shelby County jury of

premeditated first degree murder. He was subsequently sentenced to a term of life

imprisonment in the Department of Correction. In this appeal as of right, the

appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction.

After a review of the record, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Background

On the evening of March 14, 1995, a host of people, including family,

acquaintances, and others gathered at the 3171 Nathan Street residence of Betty

Clark. Included in this group was nineteen year old, Deron Cathey,1 the victim in this

case. As was customary, Mrs. Clark allowed various people to spend the night at

her home. Mrs. Clark’s home consisted of a living room, three bedrooms, a kitchen

and a bathroom.2 The only entrance to the house was through the front door and

Mrs. Clark kept the only key. On this particular evening, Jerrekcha Clark, Mrs.

Clark’s granddaughter, and her boyfriend, Robert Patterson, went to sleep in the

living room; Mrs. Clark and Eric Johnson, Jerrekcha’s nine year old son, were

sleeping in the front bedroom; Mose Dire, a family friend, and Deron Cathey

occupied the middle bedroom; and Felix Lockett, “an old guy,” and Tony Valentine,

the appellant’s brother, retired to the rear bedroom. Betty Clark is the mother of the

appellant. Although the appellant usually stayed at his mother’s house, he had

been absent from the residence for the past three days.

1 Deron Cathey is also referred to as Desron, Ron, or Darren in the record. He is also referred to by his father’s surname, Taylor.

2 Testimony at trial indicated that the living room and one bedroom were located in the front of the house. A hallway led from the living room to the kitchen. The only access to the two rear bedrooms was through the front bedroom.

2 At approximately 3:15 a.m., on March 15, Tony Valentine was awakened by

the appellant and Mose Dire in the kitchen. The appellant was getting some

clothes. Valentine noticed that Deron Cathey was in the middle bedroom awake.

Valentine confronted the appellant in the kitchen and asked him to leave the home

because of previous altercations with Deron Cathey. 3 The appellant “was like

wanting to go at [Deron] but I told him not to. . . like he wanted to break at him but I

stopped him.” Valentine then escorted the apparently angry appellant to the front

door of the residence and locked the door.

Sometime later that morning, around 5:00 a.m., the appellant returned to his

mother’s house and began knocking on the front door. Jerrechka and Mrs. Clark

were awakened by the noise. Mrs. Clark told Valentine to let the appellant in the

house. Jerrechka and Mrs. Clark then went back to sleep. The appellant

accompanied Valentine to the rear bedroom where he told his brother, “I’m going to

sleep in my bed.” At this time, Valentine noticed that, although Mose Dire was

asleep in the middle room, Deron Cathey was awake and sitting on the bed.

Valentine then went back to sleep.

Shortly thereafter, the sleeping residents were awakened by the sound of

gunfire. Valentine awoke to find the appellant “bent over and shooting [Deron

Cathey].” Mose Dire observed Deron Cathey laying across the bed with his hands

raised palm up in the air. Cathey was not armed with a weapon and begged the

appellant, “[p]lease don’t do this.” After firing multiple gunshots at the unarmed

Cathey, the appellant ran out the front door of the house. Jerrechka Clark noticed

the front door closing, but was unable to identify the person. Tony Valentine then

called for an ambulance and the police.

3 At trial, Valentine explained that, three days earlier, the appellant and Deron Cathey had been involved in a verbal argument regarding Phyllis, the appellant’s girlfriend, and money appare ntly owed to C athey. Cath ey may h ave bee n arm ed with a w eapon during this a ltercation. The appellant’s mother, Betty Clark, confirmed that the appellant and Deron had been arguing over som ethin g for abou t a m onth . In the appe llant’s defe nse , she testifie d tha t Cath ey had told her that he was go ing to kill the ap pellant.

3 Memphis Police Officers Joseph Locastro and J.L. Simpson responded to the

call from the Nathan Street address within two minutes of hearing the dispatch.

They found the victim, Deron Cathey, lying on the floor, between a couch and a bed,

in a bedroom on the east side of the house. The victim had sustained multiple

gunshots wounds. The officers secured the scene, began preliminary

investigations, and identified the appellant as the suspect. However, no weapons

were discovered at the scene nor did the officers locate any spent shells or bullet

holes. All of the witnesses at the scene testified that no weapons were kept in Betty

Clark’s residence, as she forbade them. Around 6:15 a.m, Officer Locastro was

outside on the front porch of the house when he spotted the appellant emerging

from between two houses. The appellant was placed under arrest, but no weapon

was discovered on his person or in the area from which he emerged.

Paramedics from the Memphis Fire Department arrived at the scene at 5:31

a.m. and proceeded to transport the victim to a local hospital. The victim, whose

condition deteriorated in transport, was pronounced dead at 7:54 a.m. Dr. O.C.

Smith performed the autopsy on the victim. He determined that the victim had died

from multiple gunshot wounds. Dr. Smith testified that the victim had been shot four

times: in his right upper lip; in his left back; in his right front chest, and in the

backside of his left upper arm.

At trial, the appellant testified in his own behalf. He stated that he arrived at

3171 Nathan Street at 5:05 a.m. in order to change his clothes. He explained that

[w]hen I reached in my drawer to get my cologne to put on, and [Deron] stepped up to the door and asked me, say, ‘You ready for you ass whooping.’ So I just looked at him and he walked off. And when he walked off, he went to the right where guns are kept there in the house. And so when I put my cologne back in the drawer, I looked. . . up, he was coming toward me and I shot him. I shot him as he stepped into my room coming toward me. . . . I was scared.

4 After the appellant fled the house, he threw the gun in a field located at the

intersection of “Crystal and Baltic.”4 The appellant admitted that he had purchased

the gun, a .38 revolver, earlier that evening for “40 something dollars” from a “guy

named . . . Mac” on the street.

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State v. Johnny Clark, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-johnny-clark-tenncrimapp-1998.