State v. West

767 S.W.2d 387, 1989 Tenn. LEXIS 28
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by111 cases

This text of 767 S.W.2d 387 (State v. West) 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. West, 767 S.W.2d 387, 1989 Tenn. LEXIS 28 (Tenn. 1989).

Opinions

OPINION

PONES, Justice.

A jury in Union County found defendant guilty of first degree premeditated murder of Wanda Romines and her daughter Sheila Romines, aggravated kidnapping of Wanda and Sheila Romines and aggravated rape of Sheila Romines. At the sentencing hearing the jury found three aggravating circumstances applicable to both victims, to-wit: the murders were especially heinous, atrocious or cruel; they were committed to avoid arrest or prosecution; and they were committed while the defendant engaged in committing first degree murder, rape or kidnapping. See subsections 5, 6 and 7 of T.C.A. § 39-2-203(i). Defendant was sentenced to death for each murder and to forty years imprisonment on each of the three convictions for rape and kidnapping.

These brutal murders were committed by defendant West and Ronnie Martin at the Romines’ home in the Big Ridge community of Union County, between 6:00 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. on 17 March 1986. Defendant and Martin both worked at McDonald’s in [390]*390Lake City, Tennessee. Defendant was twenty-three years of age and Martin was seventeen years of age at the time of the murders. Defendant was Martin’s supervisor at McDonald’s. They had known each other only about two weeks when they embarked upon an episode of drinking and roaming around the countryside in the car of Martin’s mother.

Defendant testified that Martin told him he knew a girl who would give them some sex. It appears that defendant had no prior acquaintance with anyone in the Ro-mines family but Martin was known to the mother and daughter.1 They lay in wait in the vicinity of the Romines’ house until Jack Romines, husband and father of the victims, left the house to go to work about 5:20 a.m. Defendant testified that they knocked on the door, Mrs. Romines admitted them, and Martin introduced him to the mother and daughter and announced that he wanted to borrow some money.

After his arrest defendant made at least five statements about what occurred in the Romines’ house after they were admitted. In his first statements he insisted that he and Martin had left the house together after some sexual activity, and that both mother and daughter were unharmed; that when they got to the car Martin decided to return and get some money from them; that Martin was gone approximately thirty minutes; and that when Martin returned to the car, they drove away. In mid-afternoon on 18 March after his mother had visited him, he made another statement wherein he said that he had seen part of a video taped interview of Martin, who was putting all the blame on him. He then proceeded to put all the blame on Martin.

In his statement of 18 March and later statements, and at trial, he admitted that he was present when the murders occurred but denied that he participated to any extent whatever in inflicting bodily harm upon either victim. He testified that Martin had a pistol and two knives and threatened his life numerous times while they were in the Romines’ house if he did not obey Martins’ orders; Martin directed Sheila to “give him head”. He then forced her to engage in sexual intercourse on top of defendant while Martin entered her anally.

The last statement defendant gave was at his request. It began at 11:52 a.m. and terminated at 1:81 p.m. when a retained lawyer arrived. That statement contained much detail that defendant had never mentioned before. A portion of the new material was that after killing Mrs. Romines in one bedroom Martin and defendant went into Sheila’s bedroom where Martin handed defendant one of the knives and said “I killed the mother and now you kill Sheila”; that defendant refused and threw the knife down on the floor. The statement continued as follows:

The co-worker [Martin], still armed with a gun, got down on his knees, and Sheila started begging to him and asking him why. Co-worker’s reply was, “I owe you, I owe you.” Co-worker was giggling as he said that co-worker would ease the knife in and would work the handle back and forth trying to hurt her. This went on for a while....

Defendant was six foot, one inches tall, weighed one hundred seventy pounds, and had served three years in the military. Martin was five foot, ten inches tall and weighed one hundred forty pounds. Defendant related events that occurred after the initial sexual activity wherein he and one of the victims were in one of the bedrooms or the living room and Martin and the other victim were in another room. It is patently obvious that defendant could have gained the upper hand over Martin and brought the tragic events to a halt if he had been so inclined. As an alternative, he could have easily escaped to a neighbor’s house for help if he was really as cowardly as represented. Those opportunities continued to occur after it became apparent, by defendant’s own admissions, that Martin intended to kill both women. Defendant was asked on direct examination [391]*391why he did not try to stop Martin. His response was “I couldn’t do nothing”. Later on he said that he was incapable of doing what Martin did, and that he “couldn’t even clean a fish”.

Jack Romines testified that he kept a thirty-eight caliber unloaded pistol in the drawer of a chest in Sheila’s bedroom and that it was missing on the afternoon of the murders, along with an envelope containing more than $200 in cash. Investigating officers found a thirty-eight caliber unloaded pistol in a storm drain in Norris, Tennessee, that was identified as the one belonging to Jack Romines. The information that led to the recovery of the gun came from John Allen, who was a friend of Martin’s. There was testimony that at about 4:00 a.m. Martin had stopped at John Allen’s house and gone in and obtained a butcher knife from Allen. Defendant disclaimed any knowledge that Martin had a butcher knife when they entered the Romines’ house.

As an additional excuse for his alleged cowardice in not preventing the murders, defendant said in his later statements and at trial that Martin had threatened to have a friend kill his wife. However, defendant related that threat as occurring the first time when they left the Romines’ house by the back door after both victims had been murdered. Martin allegedly directed defendant to get the car and pick up Martin on the other side of a wooded area. It was then that Martin supposedly threatened that if defendant tried anything “smart,” Martin would make a phone call and defendant would find his wife and child dead when he got home. Defendant’s wife was pregnant with their first child at the time.

Dr. Cleland Blake, a forensic pathologist, testified that Sheila had been stabbed seventeen times in the abdomen. Fourteen of the stab wounds were described as torture type cuts. She had three fatal wounds through the chest wall into the heart to a depth of five and one-half inches. Dr. Blake said that those wounds were inflicted by knives at least that long. It was his opinion that the torture wounds to the abdomen were inflicted prior to the fatal wounds to the heart based upon the manner in which the blood drained. Some of the torture wounds to the abdomen penetrated the liver and the mesentery and there was considerable bleeding from those wounds into the abdominal cavity. Dr. Blake said blood would not have been pumped into the abdominal cavity if the heart had stopped pumping, which it did in less than a minute after the fatal heart wounds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
767 S.W.2d 387, 1989 Tenn. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-west-tenn-1989.