State v. Robert Wilks

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 15, 1999
Docket01C01-9708-CC-00382
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Robert Wilks (State v. Robert Wilks) 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. Robert Wilks, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE FILED JUNE 1998 SESSION July 15, 1999

Cecil W. Crowson STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) Appellate Court Clerk ) Appellee, ) No. 01C01-9708-CC-00382 ) ) Hickman County v. ) ) Honorable Cornelia A. Clark , Judge ) ROBERT WILKES, ) (Aggravated Sexual Battery) ) Appellant. )

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

John H. Henderson John Knox Walkup District Public Defender Attorney General of Tennessee P.O. Box 68 and Franklin, TN 37065-0068 Lisa A. Naylor Assistant Attorney General of Tennessee 425 Fifth Avenue North Nashville, TN 37243-0493

Joseph D. Baugh, Jr. District Attorney General and Ronald L. Davis Assistant District Attorney General Williamson County Courthouse P.O. Box 937 Franklin, TN 37065-0937

OPINION FILED:____________________

CONVICTIONS AFFIRMED; SENTENCES MODIFIED

Joseph M. Tipton Judge OPINION

The defendant, Robert W ilkes,1 appeals as of right from his convictions by

a jury in the Hickman County Circuit Court of six counts of aggravated sexual battery, a

Class B felony. For each of the six counts, the trial court sentenced the defendant to

serve thirty years in the Department of Correction as a Range III, persistent offender.

The trial court ordered the sentences to run consecutively to each other and to the

defendant’s current prison sentences. The trial court assessed a fine of twenty-five

thousand dollars for each count for a total fine of one hundred fifty thousand dollars.

The defendant raises four issues on appeal. He contends that:

(1) the evidence is insufficient to support the convictions;

(2) the trial court erred in not acquitting the defendant of counts four and five because count four merely corroborated count two and count five merely corroborated count three rather than establishing separate offenses;

(3) the trial court erred in enhancing the sentence of the defendant from twenty to thirty years and in ordering the six thirty-year sentences to run consecutively to each other and to the sentence the defendant is already serving; and

(4) the trial court erred in assessing a twenty-five thousand dollar fine per count because the defendant is indigent.

We have reviewed the record on appeal, the briefs of the parties, and the applicable

law, and we hold that the evidence is sufficient to support the defendant’s convictions.

We affirm the trial court’s imposition of the maximum thirty-year sentence for each

count, but we modify the trial court’s sentence by ordering that counts one through

three run concurrently to each other and that counts four through six run concurrently to

each other but consecutively to counts one through three for an effective sixty-year

sentence. All six counts will remain consecutive to the defendant’s previously imposed

1 We note that the defendant’s name appears as Robert Wilks in both briefs and throughout the record. However, absent an order of amendment, this court uses the name set forth in the chargin g instrum ent.

2 sentence. We also modify the defendant’s fine to five thousand dollars for each of the

six counts or thirty thousand dollars for the total fine imposed.

David Bruce Westbrooks, an internal affairs investigator for the

Department of Correction, testified that in July and August of 1995, the defendant was

incarcerated in the minimum security annex of Turney Center Industrial Prison and

Farm. He testified that the annex’s visiting gallery contained a “kid’s corner,” which had

a playhouse, games, and books for the children visiting inmates. Westbrook stated that

during visitation, two correctional officers and one administrative staff person worked in

the annex. He testified that officers and staff workers could supervise the visiting

gallery, including the kid’s corner, from an operations cubical, but due to their various

duties throughout the annex, the operations cubical was not staffed continuously during

visitation.

Sheila Sutton Durham testified that she worked as a counselor at Turney

Center. As the custodian of the visitation records in the annex, Durham testified that

the file on William Lee Bramlett, an inmate, contained visitation applications for

Bramlett’s two children: a son, K.B., whose birthday was listed on the application as

June 11, 1989, and a daughter, J.B., whose birthday was listed on the application as

November 1988. She stated that a copy of K.B.’s birth certificate was attached to his

application and that the birth certificate listed his birthday as June 11, 1988. She

testified that J.B.’s application did not have a birth certificate attached to it. She related

that on visitation days, the defendant worked in the kid’s corner of the visiting gallery.

While working in this capacity, the defendant would turn on the television or pass out

books and toys to the children visiting inmates. Durham testified that the defendant’s

name was not on the inmate visitation sign-in sheet for July 22, 1995, but it did appear

on the August 5 and August 12 sheets. Durham stated that while on duty at the annex

on August 5 and August 12, she would have gone into the visiting gallery ten to twenty

3 times each day. She testified that during the time she was in the visiting gallery, she

never saw any impropriety on the part of the defendant.

Joy Lamberson testified that on July 22, 1995, she came to the annex’s

visiting gallery to visit her brother, who was an inmate. While in the visiting gallery, she

stated that she saw the defendant holding a boy on his lap. Lamberson testified that

the defendant had his hands on the boy’s genital area, rubbing it, and that the

defendant was rubbing his own genital area against the boy’s bottom--a movement she

described as hunching. She testified that later that day, she saw the defendant pick up

a little girl, slip his hands inside of her shorts, and move his thumbs between her legs.

Lamberson identified the boy as K.B. and the girl as J.B. She stated that she did not

report these incidents until August 12 because she feared the possible repercussions

for her brother.

Kimberly Brown, daughter of Joy Lamberson, testified that she visited her

uncle at the annex on July 22, 1995. Brown related that while sitting in the visitation

gallery, she saw the defendant sitting in a chair with his legs spread and with a little boy

sitting on the same chair in front of him. She testified that the defendant was fondling

the boy’s crotch and rubbing his own genital area against the boy’s bottom. She

testified that while this incident was taking place, a guard was sitting next to the

defendant reading a paper. Brown said that later she saw the defendant lift a little girl

up to reach something on top of a cabinet in the kid’s corner. She testified that while

lifting her, the defendant put his fingers under her dress and “played” with her. Brown

identified the boy as K.B. and the girl as J.B. She testified that because she did not

want to cause any trouble for her uncle, she waited to report the incidents in a letter to

the warden dated August 13.

4 Constance Elaine Allen testified that she was at Turney Center Annex

visiting her husband on August 5, 1995. She stated that while she was in the visiting

gallery, she saw the defendant sitting with a little boy on his lap. She testified that the

defendant placed his hand inside the boy’s shorts and began touching the boy’s

genitals.

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