State v. William Charles Jones

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 30, 1997
Docket01C01-9512-CC-00402
StatusPublished

This text of State v. William Charles Jones (State v. William Charles 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. William Charles Jones, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE FILED DECEMBER 1996 SESSION June 30, 1997

Cecil W. Crowson Appellate Court Clerk STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) No. 01C01-9512-CC-00402 ) Appellee ) ) MAURY COUNTY V. ) ) HON. JAMES L. WEATHERFORD, WILLIAM CHARLES JONES, ) JUDGE ) Appellant. ) (Aggravated Assault) ) )

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

Claudia S. Jack John Knox Walkup 22 Public Square Attorney General and Reporter P.O. Box 827 Columbia, TN 38402 Timothy F. Behan Assistant Attorney General 450 James Robertson Parkway Nashville, TN 37243-0493

T. Michael Bottoms District Attorney General

Samuel D. Kennedy Assistant District Attorney 10 Public Square P.O. Box 1619 Columbia, TN 38402

OPINION FILED: ___________________

REVERSED AND REMANDED

William M. Barker, Judge OPINION

The appellant, William Charles Jones, appeals as of right his conviction for the

offense of aggravated assault by a Maury County Circuit Court jury. The trial court

sentenced the appellant to three years as a Range I standard offender, ordering him

to serve six months of that sentence in jail and the remainder on probation. The jury

imposed a $10,000.00 fine. In his sole issue on appeal, the appellant argues that

comments made by the prosecutor during closing arguments amounted to

prosecutorial misconduct. The appellant contends that the prosecutor’s arguments

were so improper, inflammatory, and prejudicial that he was denied due process of

law. After a careful review of the record on appeal, we agree with the appellant.

Accordingly, the appellant’s conviction is reversed and a new trial ordered.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The appellant was tried jointly with four other co-defendants, each being

charged with the aggravated assault of James Terrell Foster late on the evening of

August 29, 1993. As a result of the assault, Foster received serious injuries, was

unconscious for approximately two days, was hospitalized, and had residual

numbness in one of his lower extremities for approximately six months.

The events leading up to the assault began earlier in the day, at approximately

1:30 p.m., when Foster came out of his uncle’s home to find that Kenyan Jones had

laid some money on Foster’s car. When Jones refused to remove the money from the

automobile, the two young men fought briefly, neither sustaining any serious injury.

Foster and Jones had occasion to fight each other again that night at a Columbia night

spot, the 300 Club. Again, no serious injuries were sustained by either. Still later that

same evening at the 300 Club, Terrell Foster’s older brother, Tyrone Jermaine Foster,

became engaged in a fight with Kenyan Jones which progressed to the point that

Tyrone Foster had Jones in a standing choke hold and was choking him to the extent

that Jones’ eyes began to “bug out” and “roll back in his head.”

2 Prior to the time of the fight between Tyrone Foster and Kenyan Jones, a large

crowd had gathered at the 300 Club. Some people were inside the club where a disk

jockey was playing music and food and drinks were available, but many others were

outside in the parking lot and on the street. A witness described the outside scene as

a street party, where between one hundred and three hundred people were gathered,

talking, drinking, and socializing.

As Tyrone Foster was getting the better of Kenyan Jones, a group of people

rushed in to aid Jones and it took several people to break up the fight. Shortly

thereafter, the group of people turned to the victim, who was standing nearby outside

a coin laundry. Testimony revealed that one of the defendants struck the victim,

causing him to be thrown against the wall of a coin laundry. People in the crowd

rushed in and began throwing punches. The victim, knocked down by numerous

blows, lay on the ground trying to defend himself. Many people kicked him, spat on

him, and threw things at him. Several individuals made fruitless efforts to break up the

fight, which continued until the police arrived. The victim was found lying unconscious

on the pavement.

Three of the State’s witnesses present at the scene testified that they saw the

appellant kicking and stomping the victim. They each agreed that appellant either

jumped off a car onto the victim or leaped around a car to get at the victim. However,

their testimony conflicted on several other details, including each one’s presence at

the scene and what they were able to observe. Lisa Owen, a cousin of the victim,

testified that after the fight appellant complained to her that his foot hurt because he

“stomped Terrell too much.” She added that approximately three weeks prior to the

trial, the appellant admitted to her that he was sorry for his actions because he was

drunk that night and did not know what he was doing.

The police did not interview anyone at the scene of the assault, but later

interviewed Lisa Owen while she was at the hospital with the victim. She provided

3 police with names of four of the defendants as the victim’s attackers and later gave a

formal written statement which named all five defendants.

James Terrell Foster, the victim, was unable to identify any of his attackers. He

testified that while he stood near the coin laundry, a man approached him, called him

an obscene name, and swung at him. He responded defensively, but the fight

escalated because so many people were involved. He was unable to conclusively say

whether any of the defendants injured him. Foster testified that he remained

unconscious after falling to the ground until he woke up in the hospital two days later.

In describing his injuries, he stated that he had scratches all over his legs, four

stitches in his head, a large cut from his shoulder down to his lower back, and cuts

over both eyes which caused extensive swelling. His foot was also injured and it

remained numb for six months after the assault. Due to his injuries, Foster testified

that he was unable to pass the physical examination required for entrance into the Air

Force.

Testifying in his own defense at trial, the appellant stated that earlier in the

evening he had attended a local high school football jamboree with friends and then

went to the 300 Club. However, he denied his presence at the fight, claiming that he

was inside the club during the melee. By the time he received word about the fracas

and went outside, the ambulance had already arrived. He testified that he observed

Foster lying on the ground outside the coin laundry, but immediately returned inside at

the urging of police who were at the scene. Appellant denied any participation in the

incident and stated that he did not jump off of anyone’s car for any reason. He stated

that he did not participate in the fight because it did not involve him and he had no

reason to injure Foster.

Appellant, along with two other defendants, was convicted of aggravated

assault and fined $10,000.00 by the jury. One of the defendants was convicted of

simple assault and the remaining defendant was acquitted.

4 CLOSING ARGUMENTS

The appellant argues that he was denied a fair trial when, during closing

arguments, the assistant district attorney: (1) improperly interjected race into the

record; (2) mischaracterized the evidence repeatedly by referring to the assault as

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