United States v. Rodney L. Tipton (92-6286) and Robert A. Davis (92-6287)

11 F.3d 602
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 1994
Docket92-6286, 92-6287
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 11 F.3d 602 (United States v. Rodney L. Tipton (92-6286) and Robert A. Davis (92-6287)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Rodney L. Tipton (92-6286) and Robert A. Davis (92-6287), 11 F.3d 602 (6th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

NATHANIEL R. JONES, Circuit Judge.

Defendants appeal their convictions for kidnapping and transporting the victim across state lines (in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(1)), and using a firearm during a crime of violence (in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)). They claim that the trial court: (1) failed to give a required jury instruction; (2) submitted the case to the jury on insufficient evidence; (3) improperly applied the sentencing enhancement for “serious bodily injury 5 ’; (4) made prejudicial comments during trial; and (5) unlawfully sentenced Defendants for conduct for which Defendants had been previously sentenced in state court.

We find that the trial court’s failure to give the jury instruction was not reversible error, and that the other four claims are without merit. Accordingly, we affirm both the convictions and the sentences. Both parties agree, however, that the trial court’s judgment in the case incorrectly states that the victim was held for ransom; it should be corrected to reflect that she was kidnapped and “held for ransom, reward or otherwise.”

I. Facts

According to the testimony of Cynthia Cheryl Blair, on January 7, 1991, at around midnight, Blair had just gotten into her car in a grocery store parking lot in Maryville, Tennessee, when she noticed a small, silver or silver-beige car pull up behind her. The car looked like a Toyota or a Datsun. Then, a man wearing a ski mask and wielding a gun forced his way into Blair’s car. At trial, Blair identified the man as Defendant Robert Davis. While Davis drove the car, Blair thought she saw the silver car from the parking lot following them. Davis instructed Blair to cover her face with a towel so that she could not see his “buddy” or his “buddy’s car.” He then stopped and picked up a man whom Blair identified at trial as Defendant Rodney Tipton.

After driving some distance and taking Blair’s money to buy gas, Davis stopped the car. The two men pulled Blair from the car, undressed her, forced her to perform oral sex on both of them, and raped her. Tipton also sodomized her. They then allowed her to dress, and replaced the towel with the ski mask, placed backwards over her head so that she could not see. They re-entered the car, placing Blair on Tipton’s lap in the passenger seat. Tipton went through Blair’s purse, which contained $300. After they stopped to buy beer and liquor, the defendants removed Blair’s clothes again, put her back on Tipton’s lap, and Tipton raped her while Davis drove.

Looking for a motel, Davis drove the car across the Tennessee border into North Carolina. He stopped at a motel that Blair later identified as the Crossroads of Time Motel. While Davis was out of the car arranging for a room, Blair lifted her mask over one eye and reached for a gun that was on the dashboard. Tipton grabbed her arm and the mask fell off of her head. She then saw Tipton’s face from about one foot away, illuminated by a bright overhead light approximately 25 feet away. Within a few seconds, Tipton managed to wrestle the gun away from her and to pull the mask back over her head. He threatened to kill her.

Davis returned.. The men told her to get dressed, and then removed her mask, instructing her to cover her eyes. She managed to see the outside of the motel while they pulled her into the motel room. Inside, they replaced the mask. Davis raped her again. Then, Tipton shoved the gun to her vagina and threatened to “blow her away.” *605 Davis talked him into raping her again instead. One of the men removed the ski mask in order to kiss her face. She tried not to see the men’s faces, but she did see part of the motel room clearly. After they got dressed, Davis blindfolded her with a pillowcase from the motel room, and they returned to the car.

After driving for a while, they stopped and Davis raped her again. Some- time later, Tipton got out and left. Davis continued driving. Soon after, Davis lost control of the car, swerved off of the road and into a ditch. Davis went to a nearby trader to ask for help. Willis Bivens came out of the trailer and tried, unsuccessfully, to pull the ear out. Then Bivens drove Davis and Blair to the Fort Louden Motel in Vonore, Tennessee. Once they were inside a motel room, Davis fell asleep, and Blair crept out. She went to the motel office and asked the clerk, Joyce Atkins, to call the police. The police arrived within a few minutes and arrested Davis. According to the testimony of one of the police officers, they -found the pillowcase from the Crossroads of Time Motel in the Fort Louden Motel room.

After Blair made a statement to the police at the motel, she was taken to a hospital. The next day, she worked with Detective David Michael Graves of the Maryville Police Department in order to make a detailed composite picture of Tipton, though she did not yet know his name. Detective Graves testified that he passed the composite onto investigators without having any name associated with the picture. Officer Randall Merks of the Blount County Sheriffs Department testified that, when he received the picture, he felt it resembled Tipton. He presented Blair with an array of six photographs, from which she selected an eight year old photograph of Tipton. Tipton was arrested shortly thereafter.

Blair’s testimony was plausible, consistent, and surprisingly detailed. Many details in her testimony were corroborated by Joyce Atkins, Willis Bivens, Vonore Police Chief Harold Davis, Crossroads of Time Motel worker Ricky Hartsell, Detective Graves, Officer Merks, and gas station owner Ben Underwood. The jury saw the composite picture; apparently, they agreed that it looked like Tipton.

In addition, Tipton’s girlfriend, Peggy Cooper, testified that, as of January 7, 1991, she and Tipton were living together in a trailer approximately five minutes from the grocery store parking lot where Blair was abducted. That evening, Tipton had left with Davis in Tipton’s grey Datsun. Tipton did not return home until the next morning.

Cooper’s testimony was contradicted by the testimony of a friend of Tipton’s, Clifford Leroy Parker, who stated that Tipton sold his grey Datsun on January 4,1991, and that Parker never saw Tipton with it again. Parker also testified that he had never seen Tipton carrying a pistol before.

The testimony of people who examined Blair on January 8, 1991, Dr. Edmund Lane and X-ray department head Rita Riehesin, revealed that Blair was bruised, but not in the vaginal or anal areas. Dr. Lane testified that “there was a possibility that [Blair] had been raped,” but no physical proof of it.

There was no physical evidence — no fingerprints, hair, or semen — linking Tipton to the crime. The only evidence that Tipton was one of the perpetrators was Blair’s description of her assailant and her identification of Tipton based upon Blair’s having seen him for only a few seconds during the struggle for'the gun in the parking lot of the Crossroads of Time Motel.

The defendants had already been tried and sentenced in Tennessee state court when trial was held' in federal court on January 7-9, 1992. The federal jury found both Defendants guilty on both counts.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F.3d 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rodney-l-tipton-92-6286-and-robert-a-davis-92-6287-ca6-1994.