State v. Jones

15 S.W.3d 880, 1999 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 850
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 19, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by152 cases

This text of 15 S.W.3d 880 (State v. Jones) 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. Jones, 15 S.W.3d 880, 1999 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 850 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

GARY R. WADE, Presiding Judge.

The defendant, Randy Lee Jones, was convicted of the first degree premeditated murder of Buster Dewey Caldwell and Marsha Sue Green Anderson. Initially, the trial court imposed concurrent life sentences but two months later ordered consecutive sentences.

In this appeal of right, the defendant presents the following issues for review:

(I) whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the convictions;
(II) whether the trial court erred by permitting the state to impeach witness Mary Perry;
(III) whether the trial court erred by refusing to grant a mistrial or provide a more strongly worded curative instruction following improper impeachment of witness Danny Jones;
(IV) whether the trial court erred by admitting evidence of two prior bad acts by the defendant and evidence of his parole status;
(V) whether the cumulative effect of trial errors resulted in a denial of due process; and
(VI) whether the imposition of consecutive sentences is excessive or constitutes double jeopardy.

We affirm the judgment of conviction of the trial court. Because the trial court erred by imposing consecutive sentences without conducting a sentencing hearing, we remand this matter to the trial court for resentencing.

During the early afternoon of November 14,1995, Mike Kirk, a criminal investigator for the Grundy County Sheriffs Department, was dispatched to the Marsha Anderson residence in Altamont. When he arrived at the scene, Officer Kirk saw two bodies through an open front door. Sheriff Robert Meeks later identified the victims as Buster Caldwell and Marsha Anderson.

TBI Special Agent Raymond DePriest who conducted an analysis of the crime scene determined that the murders occurred while the victims were eating dinner and watching television. The Anderson residence had been ransacked. No DNA evidence was obtained from the scene and no blood evidence linked the defendant to the murders.

Don Carmen, a ballistics expert for the TBI, found a box of .32 caliber H & R magnum cartridges at the residence which were consistent with the bullets removed from Ms. Anderson. Agent Carmen testified that this ammunition is typically used in a .32 H & R magnum revolver manufactured by New England Firearms. While authorities never recovered the revolver used to shoot Ms. Anderson, Agent Carmen found a 20-gauge Winchester shotgun-shell wad on the floor and another live Winchester shotgun-shell in Caldwell’s front pants pocket. Although he could not link the gun to the murder scene through forensic evidence, Agent Carmen identified a 20-gauge single shot shotgun as the likely murder weapon and determined that *884 Caldwell had been shot from a distance of four to twelve feet.

Dr. Charles Harlan, medical examiner for Robertson County, testified that Caldwell died as the result of a shotgun wound to the chest which penetrated his lung. He stated that Caldwell would have been able to move and speak for three to six minutes. Dr. Harlan testified that Ms. Anderson, who had been shot three or four times in the head, died as a result of a fatal gunshot to the back of her head. Alcohol and Valium was detected in the blood of both victims.

TBI investigator Larry Davis testified that on November 15, 1995, Wayne Fults turned in a 20-gauge shotgun thought to be the Caldwell murder weapon. He also found a handwritten note in Ms. Anderson’s kitchen which provided as follows: “B knows who got TV and T. Best buddy R.J. and M.N. Your Pal.” Agent Davis had questioned the defendant shortly after the murders. The defendant stated that he and Caldwell had been friends and that on Sunday, November 12, 1995, Caldwell’s truck had been stolen and his house robbed. The defendant claimed that, while he was at Slatton’s pool hall in Griffith’s Creek, he learned where the truck could be found and on the day after the robbery, he had asked Freddie Meeks, a wrecker operator, to tow the truck back to Caldwell’s. The defendant claimed that Caldwell had accused Bob Rollins of the theft. The defendant explained the handwritten note as follows:

[T]he note ... said it was Michelle Norris [the defendant’s former girlfriend] and either Baby John or me one, that it had the initials, it didn’t say exactly who. [Caldwell] came over to Freddie Meeks’ and I was [there] and he showed me the note and he said read this Randy and I read it and said Buster you know where I am at, I am down Neecie’s I been down there weeks, he said Randy I know you have, he said whoever done this is trying to set you up....

After the truck was towed to Caldwell’s residence, the defendant went to the residence he shared with his girlfriend Denise “Neecie” Laymon, where he ate and went to sleep. The defendant said that on the next morning, November 14, he phoned Caldwell but received a busy signal. . He claimed that during the afternoon, he and Fults traveled to Whitwell to purchase some tires from Danny Jones and that when he returned around 4:00 P.M., he learned that Caldwell and Ms. Anderson had been killed. The defendant denied any part in the murders and denied owning any weapons. When asked if his fingerprints would be found on the shotgun, the defendant had replied in the negative.

Freddie Meeks, a wrecker operator, testified the defendant employed him to tow Caldwell’s truck. The defendant was accompanied by Caldwell and Ms. Anderson. Meeks stated that Caldwell’s truck was not visible from the road but that the defendant was able to direct him to its location. Meeks recalled that Caldwell had confronted the defendant with the note and had asked him how he knew where to find the truck.

Wayne Fults, a first cousin to the defendant, acknowledged a prior conviction for burglary and other charges currently pending against him in Grundy County. He testified that three days before the murders he overheard the defendant threaten to kill Caldwell because he had been “telling his mother stuff and she was telling the cops.” Fults stated that Tim Jones, the defendant’s brother, also heard the defendant make the threat. On the morning of November 14th, before the bodies were discovered, Fults found a shotgun in a car at Whispering Pines, a plot of land owned by the defendant’s family. Fults took possession of the weapon and later that morning, when he and his wife, Deborah, met the defendant and Ms. Laymon, the defendant had asked him if he had found a gun. The defendant told him that the gun needed to be “melted down” because “he’d shot somebody with *885 it” and Ms. Laymon confirmed, “Yeah, he did, he really did.” That afternoon, the defendant told Fults that he shot Caldwell and that DeWayne Asberry shot Ms. Anderson. The defendant revealed that Ms. Laymon was present during the murders. Fults recalled that the defendant also made incriminating statements while visiting Dave and Charlotte Fults. The defendant had stated that “he needed to find that gun.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.3d 880, 1999 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jones-tenncrimapp-1999.