Wilkinson v. State

679 S.E.2d 766, 298 Ga. App. 190, 2009 Fulton County D. Rep. 1959, 2009 Ga. App. LEXIS 628
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 3, 2009
DocketA09A0249
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 679 S.E.2d 766 (Wilkinson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkinson v. State, 679 S.E.2d 766, 298 Ga. App. 190, 2009 Fulton County D. Rep. 1959, 2009 Ga. App. LEXIS 628 (Ga. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Barnes, Judge.

James Dean Wilkinson was convicted of simple battery, aggravated assault, two counts of aggravated battery, and kidnapping with bodily injury. He appeals, contending the evidence against him was *191 insufficient as to each count, and the trial court erred in failing to merge the offenses. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the convictions.

When considering whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, determining only the sufficiency of the evidence and not its weight or the credibility of witnesses. The appellant is no longer presumed innocent. Adams v. State, 217 Ga. App. 532 (1) (458 SE2d 171) (1995). Considered in this manner, the State presented evidence sufficient to sustain Wilkinson’s convictions under the standard of Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).

Wilkinson and his two co-defendants were charged as parties to these crimes, which arose from a horrific two-day episode of torture. After a lengthy trial, one of Wilkinson’s co-defendants, Willie Con-nor, was acquitted on all counts. The other co-defendant, Lemuel Rouse, was convicted of all counts, and his convictions were affirmed in Rouse v. State, 295 Ga. App. 61 (670 SE2d 869) (2008). Wilkinson was convicted of aggravated assault, two aggravated battery counts, kidnapping with bodily injury, and the lesser included offense of simple battery on one of the aggravated assault counts.

Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to verdict, it shows that the victim was a self-confessed crack cocaine addict, living with Wilkinson and Wilkinson’s girlfriend in what witnesses described as a crack house. The victim had been working on Rouse’s truck, which was parked at Wilkinson’s house. On March 3, 2006, at the end of a multi-day drug binge, the victim loaned the truck to someone in exchange for $50 worth of crack cocaine. The victim smoked the crack, had something to eat, and then fell asleep while waiting for the truck to be returned.

Rouse shook the victim awake that evening, eight or ten hours later, with a pistol in one hand and a stick in the other. He was very belligerent, shouting, cursing, and asking about his truck. The victim finally confessed he had loaned the truck to someone and Rouse became more enraged, beating the victim on his shoulder and forearm with the stick and fracturing his wrist, shoulder, and kneecap. Rouse knocked the victim onto the bedroom floor and called for someone to bring him something to tie up the victim. Wilkinson came into the bedroom with green nylon string and a roll of electrical tape and when the victim begged them not to tie him up, Wilkinson said, “You made your bed, now you can sleep in it.”

Wilkinson straddled the victim’s legs and wound the string around them while Rouse jacked up the victim’s arms behind him. Then the two men wrapped the string around the victim’s wrists, his neck and back around his bent legs, so that if he tried to straighten them he would choke. Then the men wrapped electrical tape around *192 the string to hold it in place and dragged the victim into the living room face down. Wilkinson kicked him in the back of his legs, and Rouse ran from the kitchen and kicked the victim in the face as if he were kicking a field goal, breaking his nose and knocking out two teeth.

All night long the men returned from Wilkinson’s room intermittently to slap, kick, and torture the victim. At one point, Rouse picked up a propane torch, lit it, and ran it across the victim’s ears, hand, and stomach, then heated up some kind of tube and closed the victim’s hand around it, causing excruciating pain and “cooking a hole” in his palm. The victim screamed so much the men gagged him. Rouse also tried to cut off the victim’s finger with Wilkinson’s bolt cutters, but was too high to concentrate properly and the victim succeeded in thwarting him by repeatedly balling up his fist. Rouse finally gave up and just used the bolt cutters to hit the victim on his feet instead. All night long, “the house was crawling with people” but they just looked at him and left. Some of those people testified that they had come to the house for crack, and did not want to incur Rouse’s wrath by trying to help the victim or calling the police.

At some point someone covered the victim with a blanket. Eventually Wilkinson’s girlfriend gave the victim some water and at dawn insisted that Wilkinson make Rouse take the victim out of the house. Rouse and Wilkinson stretched the victim out and zipped him into a green mummy-style sleeping bag, then dragged him through the front door off the porch and into the back of Rouse’s pickup truck. Rouse drove to his house a very short distance away, parked in his garage, and told the victim not to die in the sleeping bag because he wanted to keep it. Rouse took the victim out of the bag and drove to an abandoned box truck in Wilkinson’s back yard with the victim still bound in the back of the pickup truck.

Rouse backed up, slid the victim into the box truck, and tied him to some two-by-fours wedged between the floor and ceiling, promising to torture the victim until he died. Rouse then scooped up a nest of fire ants, dumped them onto the victim’s back, then stood back and watched while the angry ants bit the victim repeatedly on his neck, arm, armpit, back, and stomach, a sensation the victim described as being eaten alive. Rouse got a phone call from someone asking him to deliver $200 of crack, and said to the caller, “Well, I’m just going to have to kill this m.f-— later. I’ll bring it to you.” He stacked wooden pallets on the victim’s back and left, promising to beat the victim to death when he returned.

The victim began struggling immediately and managed to snatch the two-by-fours loose. With his arms bound behind his back he sawed against a bolt sticking out of the van wall and got the string loose from his hands. His legs were still bound but he knew Rouse *193 would return soon so he jumped out and hopped across a field to a swampy area where he heard children playing. His cries for help roused a woman who came to her porch, saw the victim, and called the police, who found the victim at the edge of the swamp and took him to the hospital.

The police collected many pieces of evidence corroborating the victim’s story. His hands were swollen and blue. In the box truck they found pieces of kite string and electrical tape matching the string and tape wrapped around the victim, partially wedged two-by-fours, pallets, dirt, dead ants, and the bucket used to scoop them up. While executing a search warrant in Wilkinson’s house they found blood on the living room carpet, blood splatter on the sofa, a bolt cutter, a propane torch, matching kite string and electrical tape, a wooden handle or stick with a piece of pipe attached to it, and a bloody white blanket in Wilkinson’s bedroom closet. They found a blood-stained sleeping bag in Rouse’s garage and matched the DNA in the blood to DNA in a sample they took from the victim. In Rouse’s bedroom the police found the victim’s identification, drug paraphernalia, and ammunition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
679 S.E.2d 766, 298 Ga. App. 190, 2009 Fulton County D. Rep. 1959, 2009 Ga. App. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkinson-v-state-gactapp-2009.