Court Opinion

ID: 1055510
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-08 20:58:07.596606+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:00:46.444896
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                           AT JACKSON
                               Assigned on Briefs July 12, 2005

                  STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JEFFREY HOPKINS

                        Appeal from the Circuit Court for Tipton County
                            No. 4834     Joseph H. Walker, Judge

                  No. W2004-02384-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 23, 2005

The defendant, Jeffery Allen Hopkins, appeals his Tipton County convictions of first degree felony
murder and especially aggravated robbery, arising from the December 20, 2003 shooting death of
Ricky Lumpkin. The defendant received a sentence of life imprisonment with the possibility of
parole for the felony murder conviction and 20 years for the especially aggravated robbery
conviction. On appeal, the defendant contests the sufficiency of the evidence to support these
convictions. Unpersuaded that the state’s evidence was legally insufficient, we affirm the trial
court’s judgments.

                Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Circuit Court is Affirmed.

JAMES CURWOOD WITT , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JERRY L. SMITH and
NORMA MCGEE OGLE, JJ., joined.

Gary F. Antrican, District Public Defender; and David S. Stockton, Assistant Public Defender, for
the Appellant, Jeffrey Hopkins.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; Seth P. Kestner, Assistant Attorney General;
Elizabeth T. Rice, District Attorney General; and Walter Freeland and Colin Campbell, Assistant
District Attorneys General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

                                              OPINION

               In the light most favorable to the state, the evidence at trial showed that the defendant
shot his male roommate, Ricky Lumpkin, staged the crime scene to give the appearance that the
victim had committed suicide, and then gathered the victim’s puppy and cellular telephone and drove
away in the victim’s truck. The defendant was apprehended nine days after the shooting in Horn
Lake, Mississippi.

             Tipton County Deputy Sheriff Robert Akers testified that on the afternoon of
December 21, 2003, he and Deputy Giambra were dispatched to investigate a possible homicide at
a trailer home located at 531 Randolph Road. When the officers arrived at the trailer, the front door
was closed, but the back door was unlatched and partially open. Deputy Akers entered the trailer and
discovered in the bedroom a male body with a gun in his hand. Deputy Akers did not touch the
body; instead, he secured the trailer by roping it off with crime scene tape, and Deputy Giambra
radioed for a crime scene investigation team. In the meantime, Deputy Akers began filling out a
crime scene log, and he remained at the scene until approximately 11:30 p.m.

                Criminal Investigator Billy Daugherty testified that he responded to the officers’
request for a crime scene investigator. He believed he arrived at the trailer at approximately 3:51
p.m. and met another crime scene investigator, Richard Nessly. The trailer was located in the
Randolph community, “just a couple of miles from the Mississippi River.” The physical address for
the trailer was 1016 Needham Road, on the property behind the residence of the victim’s parents at
531 Randolph Road. A white Corvette, titled in the victim’s name, was parked by the trailer.

                Investigator Daugherty testified that he spoke briefly with Deputy Akers, after which
he entered the trailer through the open back door. In the bedroom, Investigator Daugherty observed
a male figure lying face down on the bed with a small caliber handgun in the his right hand.
Investigator Daugherty also observed “a small amount of blood on the floor and on the bed” and
piles of clothing in the floor by the back door.

                Upon further inspection, Investigator Daugherty noticed things that “disturbed” him
about the apparent suicide. For example, there were bloody shoe prints on the floor and under some
clothing; the victim, however, was shoeless, and his feet were crossed. Investigator Daugherty was
likewise disturbed by the gun being in the victim’s hand. He explained that with shooting suicides,
the victim either drops the weapon or a “cadaveric spasm” occurs, and the victim’s fingers have to
be pried open to remove the gun. The finger of the victim in the trailer was “still laid inside the
trigger guard of the gun, but in a relaxed position,” which Investigator Daugherty said that he had
never before encountered with a suicide.

                Investigator Daugherty testified that he found a “suicide note” on the night stand,
which was addressed to the victim’s mother and contained an apology for committing suicide. To
Investigator Daugherty, the “odd” part of the note was its reference, “Call Jeff. He has my truck and
cell phone.” Another unusual piece of evidence, according to Investigator Daugherty, was the
presence of small splotches of blood on the door handle of the clothes dryer, which appeared to have
been transferred when someone with blood on their hand touched the handle. Investigator Daugherty
said that he “found it to be odd that the victim would shoot [himself] in the back of the head, and
then go in and open the dryer door.” He also discovered blood droplets on the carpet in the
bathroom, a swipe of blood on the curtain behind the night stand, and a blood smear pattern on the
floor between the night stand and the bed that “looked like somebody had actually taken and wiped
blood up from the floor.” Based on the unusual appearance of the crime scene, Investigator
Daugherty requested that the TBI Crime Scene Unit be responsible for processing the scene.

                                                -2-
               As Investigator Daugherty waited for the TBI Crime Scene Unit to arrive, he
continued to search through the trailer. He found a notebook on the top of a large stereo speaker in
the living room. He said that the notebook contained “what appeared to be a practice suicide note,
where one had been drafted, just almost similar to the one that [he] had found in the bedroom.”

                On cross-examination, the defense elicited Investigator Daugherty’s opinion that he
did not believe that the victim was shot while he was lying on the bed. He could not say, however,
where the victim and the shooter would have been standing at the time the gun was fired. He noticed
that there did not appear to be any “stippling” around the entry wound in the victim’s head,
indicating to Investigator Daugherty that the shot was fired at a distance greater than 24 to 36 inches.
Although the trailer was searched, the officers found no other signs of a struggle, and the only bullet
recovered was from the victim’s head.

                  The state called the victim’s mother, Rita May Lumpkin, who testified briefly. She
identified the victim as her 45-year-old son, Ricky Lumpkin. She testified that her sister, Frankie
Gideon, had died Friday, December 19, 2003. That evening, Ms. Lumpkin spoke to her son, and
they arranged to leave the next day at 11:00 a.m. to view the body and eat with family members. On
Saturday morning, Ms. Lumpkin noticed that the victim’s 1995 blue Ranger truck was not parked
at the trailer; the victim’s Corvette, however, was present.

                 Ms. Lumpkin identified the defendant by name and as the person she had seen several
times at the trailer with the victim. She added that she had seen the defendant “twice that Saturday
morning coming out to the Corvette.” She believed that the defendant had been around “[s]everal
months on and off, but not constantly.”

               The state showed Ms. Lumpkin the “suicide note” found inside the trailer. She
testified unequivocally that the note was not in her son’s handwriting.

              TBI Special Agent Donna Turner testified that she was a field agent assigned to
Tipton and Lauderdale counties. She was dispatched to the trailer to assist Investigators Daugherty
and Nessly. During the course of the investigation, the defendant became a suspect in the victim’s
death. Agent Turner participated in the defendant’s capture and arrest in Horn Lake, Mississippi on
December 29, 2003.

                Previously, Agent Turner had established telephone contact with the defendant by
asking his friends and relatives to relay a message to call Agent Turner. She first spoke with the
defendant, who called on the victim’s cellular phone, on December 23. Agent Turner testified that
the defendant remarked, “Well, you know I did it.” When Agent Turner tried to persuade the
defendant “to turn himself in to the nearest law enforcement agency,” the defendant balked, saying
that he wanted to spend Christmas with his relatives. The defendant, however, did reveal to Agent
Turner the location of the victim’s truck; it was parked at Super K-Mart in Southaven, Mississippi.
He also promised to surrender on Sunday at 3:00 p.m. at McDonald’s on Getwell in Memphis, but
he did not do so. Agent Turner had another conversation with the defendant on December 29, and

                                                  -3-
she was able to trace his location to Horn Lake. Other agents were dispatched to a Horn Lake
residence where the defendant surrendered without incident.

                 Agent Turner drove to Horn Lake and interviewed the defendant at the local police
department. She advised the defendant of his rights, and he signed a rights waiver and gave a
statement. The defendant’s statement was reduced to writing, and Agent Turner read the statement
out loud for the jury. In his statement, the defendant related that Friday evening, December 19, he
and his “roommate,” the victim, drove to a house in Midtown Memphis to purchase Xanax. The
customary “seller” was away, but the seller’s friend invited them into the residence where they stayed
for approximately one and one-half hours. After they left, the defendant asked the victim to drive
him to see his fiancé, Kristen. The request angered the victim, and the defendant said that the victim
accused him of being “an ungrateful son of a bitch.” In his statement, the defendant claimed that the
victim demanded that he get out of the vehicle, which the defendant did not do, whereupon the
victim started scratching and hitting the defendant. After a time, the victim calmed down. The two
men returned to the trailer and “rolled a joint and smoked it.” According to the defendant’s
statement, the victim gave the defendant an ultimatum to choose between his fiancé and the victim.

                 The defendant said in his statement that the next morning, he again told the victim
that he wanted to see his fiancé; the request prompted the victim to kick the defendant and to
threaten to kill the defendant. The encounter escalated to the point that the victim retrieved his gun
from the bathroom, confronted the defendant in the bedroom, and threatened that if the defendant
“mess[ed] up” one more time “that would be the end of [the defendant].” The defendant told Agent
Turner that he shoved the victim toward the hallway, that the victim fell, and that when he stood up
the victim returned the gun to the bathroom and placed it on the washing machine. When the victim
returned to the living room, he told the defendant that he had a headache from all the screaming and
was going to lie down in the bedroom.

              In his statement, the defendant next explained that he went to relieve himself in the
bathroom and saw the gun on the washing machine. His statement continues,

               I saw the gun and started freaking out. I blacked out. I came to. I
               was sitting in the living room with the gun pointed at my face. I went
               back to the bedroom and saw [the victim] laying there bleeding.

               I dropped the gun on the floor. I knew I had done it because no one
               else was there. [The victim] had one gunshot wound. I grabbed some
               towels and tried to stop the bleeding, but I couldn’t. He had no pulse.
               I was tripping. I was hyperventilating. I grabbed the bloody towels
               and threw them in the back of the bed or the truck . . . . I got a piece
               of paper and wrote a note. I don’t remember exactly what I wrote, but
               it was pertaining to a suicide note. . . . I got the gun, which was in the
               floor near the hallway. I picked it up, wiped the side of the gun off,
               and put it in [the victim’s] hand. That was to make it look like [the

                                                  -4-
               victim] had shot himself. . . . I got the dog and left in [the victim’s]
               blue truck.

                The next section of the defendant’s statement described the different places he stayed
after leaving the trailer, his conversations with law enforcement officers, how he disposed of the
victim’s truck, and his arrest in Horn Lake. The final portion of the defendant’s statement detailed
his relationship with the victim. He described meeting the victim approximately one year earlier in
Overton Park. The defendant was homeless at the time, and the victim gave him a place to stay in
exchange for doing “chores.” According to the defendant, two months into the relationship, the
victim solicited the defendant to have sex. The defendant declined, but he claimed that the victim
“forced sex on [him] 25 or 30 times.” The defendant denied ever willingly engaging in sex with the
victim, who threatened the defendant with again being homeless and who hit and was verbally
abusive to the defendant. The defendant described the victim as being “like a tick” and always
wanting to know the defendant’s whereabouts and activities.

              The state asked Agent Turner about the victim’s dog that the defendant took with him
when he left the trailer. The agent explained that she first saw the dog with the defendant’s
grandmother; the dog escaped, but it was later recovered and turned over to the victim’s parents.

                 Deputy Richard Nessly was in the chain of custody for some of the evidence. He
testified that on December 31, 2003, he proceeded to the medical examiner’s office in Memphis to
collect fingernail clippings from the victim, the fatal bullet and bullet jacket, and multiple DNA
swabs. He delivered the items to the TBI crime laboratory in Nashville.

               Another chain-of-custody witness, Deputy Shannon Beasley, testified that he received
from Deputy Daugherty and took custody of numerous items collected at the crime scene and a
sealed blood alcohol kit referencing the defendant. Deputy Beasley delivered the items to the TBI
crime laboratory in Nashville.

               Deputy Reserve Officer Richard Singletary, a third chain-of-custody witness, testified
that Deputy Beasley released to him various sealed containers. Deputy Singletary delivered the items
to the TBI crime laboratory in Nashville.

                 TBI Special Agent Sean Nash assisted Agent Turner in investigating the Ricky
Lumpkin homicide. Agent Turner supplied him with the number assigned to the cellular telephone
that the defendant had been using. Agent Nash subpoenaed billing and calling information from
Verizon Wireless regarding the number. Verizon’s records confirmed that the customer assigned
to the cellular telephone was the victim.

               TBI Special Agent Steve Scott was a member of the violent crime response team that
was “called out” to the homicide scene on December 21. Four other response team members
accompanied him to process the scene. Agent Scott identified diagrams of the scene and various
pieces of evidence that were collected. Agent Scott also was assigned to the firearms identification

                                                 -5-
section of the TBI laboratory, and in that capacity, he compared the handgun found in the victim’s
hand with a fired bullet and bullet fragments recovered from the victim’s body. Agent Scott testified
that the bullet recovered was fired from the handgun found at the scene. Working from his notes,
Agent Scott testified that his team collected 13 items at the scene, including the “suicide” note on
the night stand. He received the other suicide note from Deputy Daugherty, who had already
collected the note and placed it in a sealed envelope. The items were packaged, marked for
identification, and transported in the response team’s vehicle to the crime laboratory.

                Special Agent Darrin Shockey, a response team member and latent fingerprint
examiner, testified that he examined and analyzed the second note for the presence of fingerprints.
He explained that he found one fingertip with an identifiable ridge detail on the note. He compared
the fingertip with a known set of the defendant’s fingerprints, but “the tip was not sufficient on the
fingerprint card to be able to make a complete comparison.” Agent Shockey also examined the note
found on the night stand in the trailer, and he found identifiable latent fingerprints on it. He testified
that he compared those latent prints with the defendant’s known fingerprints, and his comparison
revealed that the right and left thumb prints of the defendant matched the latent fingerprints on the
note. Working from postmortem fingerprints of the victim, Agent Shockey was unable to identify
any of the latent prints as being those of the victim.

               Special Agent Michael Turbeville, a response team member and a serology/DNA
examiner, identified the evidence that was submitted to him for analysis. The evidence included a
swab from the clothes dryer, a carpet sample taken from the bathroom, and a white shirt. He also
received blood samples from the defendant and blood and body swabs from the victim. From his
analysis, he concluded that the DNA extracted from the clothes dryer, the carpet sample, and the
white shirt matched the victim’s DNA.

               Doctor Teresa Campbell, a forensic pathologist, performed the autopsy on the
victim’s body. She testified that the cause of death was a gunshot wound to the head. The bullet
entered the back of the victim’s head, almost midline. Doctor Campbell found no exit wound, and
her examination revealed that the fatal injury “was not a close gunshot wound.” In her opinion, the
fatal wound was not self-inflicted.

                At the conclusion of Dr. Campbell’s testimony, the state rested its case.

                The defense called the defendant’s grandmother, Linda Shuler. Following numerous
hearsay objections that were sustained, Ms. Shuler testified that the defendant came to her house on
Saturday, December 21, and that the two of them spoke on Sunday. She described the defendant has
having scratches on his face and chest. Based on statements made by the defendant, Ms. Shuler
called E911 after the defendant left her house. She reported that she believed a crime had been
committed. The police came to her house on Sunday and took her information. Ms. Shuler testified
that she again saw the defendant “within a day or two.” At that time, she told the defendant that “he
needed to turn his self in.” Ms. Shuler recalled seeing the defendant arrive in a blue truck, and he
had a cell phone and a little dog with him. According to Ms. Shuler, when her grandson made

                                                   -6-
weekend visits two or three months earlier, he was driving the same truck and had the same cell
phone with him.

                The defendant took the stand in his own defense. He testified that the victim came
home at approximately 7:30 p.m. on Friday evening. He and the victim talked, “smoked a joint,”
and drove to another house. After leaving that house, they stopped at Sonic on Highway 51 in
Millington and ate. They next drove to Midtown to find a person, Eric. Eric was not at his
residence, but the defendant and the victim stayed at the residence approximately one and one-half
hours. The defendant testified that after leaving, he asked to use the victim’s phone, and he called
his girlfriend, Kristen. He recalled arguing with Kristen over the phone, and he wanted the victim
to drive to a house where Kristen was spending the night to “see if everything was okay.” The
defendant said that at that point, the victim began cursing and told the defendant that he was “too
worried about her, [he] need[ed] to quit worrying about her and worry about [the victim] and worry
about [himself].” Also, “some fists were thrown.” Afterward, the victim and the defendant drove
to the trailer.

                The defendant testified that at the trailer, he and the victim argued a little bit but
ended up smoking a joint and going to sleep. The next morning, the defendant renewed his request
for the victim to take him to see Kristen. The victim began cursing again, and the men started
fighting in the living room. At some point, the victim retreated to the bedroom. The defendant
testified that he “got tired of all the abuse, and [he] did what [he] did.” He added, “It was an
accident.” The only other details the defendant provided were picking up the victim’s gun and
shooting the victim as he was lying on the bed.

               The defendant next spoke of his relationship with the victim and how they met. The
defendant, who “was trying to make some money hustling” in Overton Park, first met the victim at
the park. The defendant did not elaborate on the meeting; he testified that after meeting the victim
two or three more times, the victim offered him a place to stay, which the defendant, who was
homeless at the time, accepted. The defendant claimed that “everything was cool for a while,” after
which the victim “started wanting to control“ the defendant and telling him “what [he] could and
couldn’t do.” The defendant described the victim’s behavior as trying to be the defendant’s father.

                Regarding the blue truck, the defendant testified that he had driven it countless times
and that he was even listed as a driver on the victim’s car insurance. The defendant said that he had
his own Cricket cell phone but that after 9:00 p.m., the victim would allow the defendant to use the
victim’s cell phone. The defendant confirmed that the victim had a dachshund puppy, and he
admitted that he intentionally took the puppy with him after shooting the victim. The defendant
denied that he planned to keep the truck, and he specifically denied shooting the victim to take the
truck or to steal the puppy. The victim’s cell phone was in the truck when the defendant left.

               The defendant described his activities after leaving in the truck. He emphasized that
he called Agent Turner, admitted to shooting the victim, and told Agent Turner where he had parked

                                                 -7-
the victim’s truck. He likewise emphasized that he told his uncle, Kristen, another friend, and his
grandmother what had happened.

                  On cross-examination, the defendant said that he moved in with the victim in January
2003. The defendant was evasive about meeting the victim but finally admitted that he was “in
Overton Park turning tricks” and that he engaged in sex with the victim in exchange for money.
Despite the defendant’s earlier testimony that he did not want the victim advertising his alternative
life style, the defendant conceded that he was openly a male prostitute; he insisted, however, that his
close friends were unaware of his prostitution.

                The defendant further testified on cross-examination that the victim offered him a
place to stay and steady employment in exchange for helping around the house and that the victim
was seeking a monogamous, homosexual relationship with the defendant. The defendant said that
he did not want to be in a relationship with a man, and he agreed that he did not want to be with a
man unless it was for money. At one point, the defendant moved into an apartment with his mother
for a brief time. He said that the victim still allowed him to drive the truck, even though the
defendant was staying with his mother. The defendant and victim, however, also met “once in a
while” to engage in sex. During this time, the defendant was not working; he quit the job that the
victim had arranged for him and was selling cocaine.

                After substantial prodding by the prosecution, the defendant admitted that he did not
want a regular job; he could make more money – up to $700 per week – as a male prostitute, and he
was also making money selling cocaine. The reality of the situation, the defendant conceded, was
that the defendant was living off of the victim, and if anyone was a “tick,” as the defendant had used
that term in his statement to Agent Turner, it was the defendant and not the victim.

              In terms of the defendant’s motives for shooting the victim, the following exchanges
occurred during cross-examination:

               Q.     Well, did you kill him, then, because you were afraid he was
               going to kill you first?

               A.      That’s, I’d say, 45 percent of why.

               ....

               Q.      Mr. Hopkins, I just want to know your theory about why you
               killed Ricky Lumpkin. Did you kill him because it was an accident?

               A.      It was because of a heated fight.

               Q.      So you killed him because there was a fight?

                                                 -8-
A.     Yes, sir, it was.

....

Q.     The fact of the matter is, you were just mad at him?

A.     Yes, that had another 25 percent of it.

Q.      All right. And you were mad at him because he tried to be
your father?

A.     Yes, sir.

....

Q.     That’s why you shot him in the middle of the back of his head
wasn’t it?

A.     It was because of a heated fight, as I said before.

Q.     A heated fight that made you mad?

A.     Yes, sir.

Q.     The heated fight was about your 14-year-old girlfriend?

A.     Yes, sir. That had another 25 percent of it.

Q.     Ricky Lumpkin would not let you borrow his truck to go see
your 14-year-old girlfriend?

A.     That had nothing to do with the reason he was shot, because
I could have easily taken the gun and just taken the truck and left.
That had nothing to do with it.

....

Q.    Did you give Uncle Dicky any reason that you had killed
Rick?

A.     No, sir, I haven’t.

Q.     Well, did you say you’d been raped?

                                 -9-
               A.      No, sir, I didn’t tell him that.

               ....

               Q.     You’re not suggesting, then, that that is the reason; that you
               were raped and killed him?

               A.      I’m not saying that’s not the reason.

               Q.      Well, tell us, then; is it the reason?

               A.      That’s one of the reasons, yes.

               ....

               Q.      It was not an accident?

               A.      No, it wasn’t an accident.

               Q.      You knew what that gun was?

               A.      Oh, I knew what it was.

               ....

               Q.     . . . You took that cell phone so you could coordinate your
               drug deals and your getting around and about, after you killed your
               roommate; isn’t that right?

               A.      Yes, sir.

               Q.      And you took the truck to get away, didn’t you?

               A.      I don’t know why I took the truck. I just took the truck to
               leave, yeah, basically.

              At the conclusion of the cross-examination, the defense rested its case. Based on the
evidence presented, the jury found the defendant guilty of first degree felony murder and especially
aggravated robbery.

               On appeal, the defendant raises the sole issue of the sufficiency of the convicting
evidence.

                                                 -10-
                A convicted criminal defendant who challenges the sufficiency of the evidence on
appeal bears the burden of demonstrating why the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict,
because a guilty verdict destroys the presumption of innocence and replaces it with a presumption
of guilt. See State v. Evans, 108 S.W.3d 231, 237 (Tenn. 2003); State v. Carruthers, 35 S.W.3d 516,
557-58 (Tenn. 2000); State v. Tuggle, 639 S.W.2d 913, 914 (Tenn. 1982). This court must reject a
defendant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence if, after considering the evidence in a light
most favorable to the prosecution, we determine that any rational trier of fact could have found the
essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307,
319, 99 S. Ct. 2781, 2789 (1979); State v. Hall, 8 S.W.3d 593, 599 (Tenn. 1999).

                  On appeal, the state is entitled to the strongest legitimate view of the evidence and
all reasonable and legitimate inferences which may be drawn therefrom. See Carruthers, 35 S.W.3d
at 558; Hall, 8 S.W.3d at 599. A guilty verdict by the trier of fact accredits the testimony of the
state’s witnesses and resolves all conflicts in the evidence in favor of the prosecution’s theory. See
State v. Bland, 958 S.W.2d 651, 659 (Tenn. 1997). Questions about the credibility of witnesses, the
weight and value of the evidence, as well as all factual issues raised by the evidence are resolved by
the trier of fact, and this court will not re-weigh or re-evaluate the evidence. See Evans, 108 S.W.3d
at 236; Bland, 958 S.W.2d at 659. Nor will this court substitute its own inferences drawn from
circumstantial evidence for those drawn by the trier of fact. See Evans, 108 S.W.3d at 236-37;
Carruthers, 35 S.W.3d at 557.

                                  Especially Aggravated Robbery

                First we review the challenge to the evidence supporting the conviction of especially
aggravated robbery. The indictment in this case specifically identified the property as “a 1995 Ford
Ranger pickup truck, one Motorola cellular telephone and one Dachshund puppy.” A person
commits especially aggravated robbery who commits a robbery with a deadly weapon and when the
victim suffers serious bodily injury. Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-403(a) (2003). Robbery “is the
intentional or knowing theft of property from the person of another by violence or putting the person
in fear.” Id. § 39-13-401(a). “A person commits theft of property if, with intent to deprive the
owner of property, the person knowingly obtains or exercises control over the property without the
owner’s effective consent.” Id. § 39-14-103.

                The defendant contends that the evidence does not support a finding that he intended
to deprive the victim of his property or that the gun was used to accomplish the theft. He insists that
the “phony suicide note” was calculated to prompt a family member to call the cellular phone
number and report the victim’s death, at which time the defendant would return with the victim’s
phone, truck, and puppy. He also insists that the gun was used to kill the victim after which he
simply departed with the victim’s truck, phone, and puppy.

               An argument attacking an especially aggravated robbery conviction, similar to that
advanced by the defendant in this case, was considered and rejected by our court in State v. Wade
P. Tucker, No. M2001-02298-CCA-R3-CD (Tenn. Crim. App., Nashville, July 17, 2002).

                                                 -11-
                 Before analyzing the claim that the intent to steal the victim’s
                 property had not been formed at the time of the assaults, we briefly
                 dispose of the claim that the defendant did not intend to deprive the
                 victim of her property. The trial court essentially held that it was
                 immaterial whether the defendant had a purpose of depriving the
                 victim of her property. We agree. By inserting as an element of theft
                 that the offender must obtain the property “with the intent to deprive
                 the owner” of the property, the legislature obviously did not intend
                 that the offender’s purpose must be the owner’s loss or deprivation.
                 See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-14-103 (1997). If that were the meaning
                 of the element of intent to deprive, almost no asportation of property
                 would be proscribed by Code section 39-14-103. We judicially know
                 that a thief’s primary purpose is to profit or otherwise benefit from his
                 ill-gotten gains; yet, we understand that such a purpose equates to an
                 intent to deprive the owner of the stolen property for purposes of
                 Code section 39-14-103. Thus, regardless of the ultimate motive or
                 purpose, the offense is established when the evidence shows that the
                 defendant intended to deprive the owner of property when the
                 defendant knowingly obtained or exercised control over the property.

Slip op. at 5.

               In this case, regardless whether the defendant’s purpose in taking the truck, phone,
and puppy was – as the defendant put it – “to cover his actions,” he, nevertheless, intended to
commit actions which had the effect of depriving the owner of his property. The conviction,
consequently, is not infirm on this basis.

              As for the claim that the robbery was not accomplished with a deadly weapon, that
argument also was considered and rejected in Wade P. Tucker.

                         In this part, we address whether it is material to a charge of
                 especially aggravated robbery that the defendant may not have
                 intended to steal the victim’s property at the time he shot her. As is
                 pertinent to the present case, the robbery statute requires that the
                 defendant intentionally or knowingly steal property from another “by
                 violence.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-401(a) (1997) (emphasis
                 added). When the robbery is accomplished with a deadly weapon and
                 the victim suffers serious bodily injury, the offense becomes
                 especially aggravated. Id. § 39-13-403(a) (1997). The statutes
                 contain no express requirement that the purpose to steal must
                 coincide with the violence or serious bodily injury or that the assault
                 be for the purpose of theft.

                                                   -12-
        The state relies upon State v. Shawnda James, 1999 Tenn.
Crim. App. LEXIS 865, No. 01C01-9803-CC-00093 (Tenn. Crim.
App., Nashville, Aug. 11, 1999), perm. app. denied (Tenn. 2000), in
which the defendant was convicted of first-degree, premeditated
murder and especially aggravated robbery of the victim, despite her
contention that, because the post-killing theft was an afterthought, she
was guilty of mere theft and not especially aggravated robbery. This
court concluded that defendant James was able to steal the victim’s
property because she previously had shot and killed the victim. Id.,
slip op. at 13. Essentially, the Shawnda James panel held that, based
upon the taking of the victim’s property in the wake of the murder, it
was immaterial whether the defendant intended to commit theft when
she shot the victim.

         In Shawnda James, this court followed what has been
characterized as the “traditional rule” that the state need not prove
that the defendant assaulted the victim for the purpose of theft, when
the proscriptive statute does not recite that the “force must be used for
the purpose of committing the theft.” See 2 Wayne R. Lafave &
Austin W. Scott, Substantive Criminal Law § 8.11 at 454 (1986).
Rather, the nexus between the theft and the antecedent assault is
supplied when the defendant merely exploits the victim’s disabled
condition by stealing the victim’s property. Id.; accord State v.
McKinney, 265 Kan. 104, 1131, 961 P.2d 1, 7-8 (1998) (“Under
factual circumstances where a defendant shoots his victim and later
decides to take and remove the victim’s personal belongings and
where the act of force and the taking of the property are so connected
as to form a continuous chain of events so that the prior force makes
it possible for the defendant to take property from the victim’s body
without resistance, that is sufficient for a conviction of the crime of
robbery.”); State v. Mason, 403 So. 2d 701 (La. 1981) (holding that
acts of violence need not have been for the purpose of taking the
property); Stebbing v. State, 299 Md. 331, 353-54, 473 A.2d 903,
914-15 (1984) (holding that the taking of property still constituted a
robbery even though the original attack may not have been committed
for the purpose of taking the victim’s property); Chappell v. State,
114 Nev. 1403, 1408, 972 P.2d 838, 841 (1998) (“In robbery cases it
is irrelevant when the intent to steal the property was formed.”).
According to this view, whether the defendant had formed an intent
to steal from the victim at the time of the assault may be immaterial
to whether he committed robbery.

                                  -13-
Wade P. Tucker, slip op. at 5-6; accord State v. Roderick Davis, No. W.2003-02338-CCA-R3-CD
(Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, Dec. 13, 2004), perm. app. denied (Tenn. 2005); State v. Jason R.
Garner, No. W1999-01679-CCA-R3-CD (Tenn. Crim. App., Jackson, Mar. 14, 2003), perm. app.
denied (Tenn. 2003).

               Pursuant to the “traditional rule” outlined above, the state in this case was not
required to prove that the defendant shot the victim for the purpose of theft. The evidence, we hold,
was legally sufficient to support the defendant’s especially aggravated robbery conviction.

                                                   Felony Murder

                From the defendant’s brief and argument on appeal, we glean that the primary thrust
of his challenge to his felony murder conviction is that the state failed to prove that the homicide was
“in the perpetration of” or the “attempt to perpetrate” a robbery. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-
202(a)(2) (2003) (defining felony murder as a killing of another “committed in the perpetration of
or attempt to perpetrate” certain enumerated felonies). This statutory language and the rationale for
the felony murder rule require an analysis different from the determination of evidence sufficiency
for the separate crime of especially aggravated robbery.1

                Consideration of this issue requires that we journey into the legal territory carved out
by our supreme court in State v. Buggs, 995 S.W.2d 102 (Tenn. 1999). We note at the outset that
neither the state nor the defendant discusses or even references the Buggs opinion in the briefs on
appeal. Indeed, the state cites no legal authority whatsoever in support of its argument that a rational
jury could have easily concluded that the defendant committed the offenses of first degree murder
and especially aggravated robbery.

                 Inasmuch as the parties have provided no illumination on the issue, we begin with
a clean slate, guided by the sound principles of appellate review of evidence insufficiency claims and
by the existing precedent of Buggs. As we shall explain, we hold that the evidence was legally
sufficient to support the defendant’s felony murder conviction.

              In Buggs, a felony murder case, the defendant stabbed his girlfriend to death after he
“snapped” during an argument. 995 S.W.2d at 104. Afterward, he stole the victim’s cash and used

         1
            At the time the defendant was indicted, the statute in effect defined felony murder as “[a] killing of another
committed in the perpetration of or attempt to perpetrate any . . . robbery.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-202(a)(2) (2003).
The previous statutory version had included the element of reckless intent, but that element was removed by statutory
amendment effective July 1, 1995. See generally State v. Sledge, 15 S.W .3d 93 (Tenn. 2000). W e mention this change
because the indictment in the record before us alleges that the defendant “on or about December 20, 2003, in Tipton
County, Tennessee, and before the finding of this indictment, did unlawfully, feloniously and recklessly kill Richard L.
Lumpkin during the perpetration of robbery, in violation of T.C.A. 39-13-202.” W e have not been favored with a
transcript of the jury instructions delivered by the trial court; hence, we are unaware which version of the felony murder
statute was charged to the jury. Even so, the defendant’s evidence insufficiency claim is unaffected.

                                                          -14-
it to purchase cocaine. Id. Despite Buggs’s characterization of the decision to steal the money as
an “afterthought,” id. at 103, our supreme court held that the evidence was sufficient to convict
Buggs of felony murder committed in the perpetration of a robbery.

                The supreme court first summarized existing Tennessee law as not requiring that the
felony necessarily precede the murder to support a felony murder conviction. “The killing may
precede, coincide with, or follow the felony and still be considered as occurring ‘in the perpetration
of the felony offense, so long as there is a connection in time, place, and continuity of action.” Id.
at ___. That said, the court then acknowledged that, in a felony murder case, when the killing
precedes the commission of the predicate felony, “there is a split of authority [among] the various
jurisdictions as to whether intent to commit the felony must exist concurrently with the commission
of the homicide, or whether intent formed after a killing is nonetheless sufficient to bring a case
within the felony-murder rule.” Id. at 106 (emphasis added). The Buggs court adopted the
“prevailing view” and ultimately concluded that “for the felony-murder doctrine to be invoked, the
actor must intend to commit the underlying felony at the time the killing occurs.” Id. at 107. The
court explained its position,

               Given the fact that the felony-murder rule is a legal fiction in which
               the intent and the malice to commit the underlying felony is
               “transferred” to elevate an unintentional killing to first-degree
               murder, we are reluctant to extend the doctrine to include cases in
               which there was no intent to commit the felony at the time of the
               killing. Thus, in a felony-murder case, intent to commit the
               underlying felony must exist prior to or concurrent with the
               commission of the act causing the death of the victim.

Id. at ___. In terms of proving such intent, the supreme court announced “that a jury may reasonably
infer from a defendant’s actions immediately after a killing that the defendant had the intent to
commit the felony prior to, or concurrent with, the killing.” Id. at 108.

               In reviewing the facts in Buggs and applying the previously announced principles, the
high court concluded that the jury could reasonably have inferred that Buggs formed an intent to kill
the victim prior to or concurrently with the murderous act. The court reasoned,

               The defendant returned home for the express purpose of obtaining
               more money to buy cocaine. When Ms. Beasley attempted to thwart
               this purpose, he stabbed her until she no longer resisted. He then
               proceeded to fulfill his original purpose; he went into a drawer in the
               bedroom where he removed all the cash that remained . . . and went
               back to the crack house, where he spent the remainder of the night
               smocking crack cocaine and consorting with a prostitute.

Id. at ___.

                                                -15-
               In the instant case, we have no hesitation in concluding that the killing and the
underlying felony were closely connected in time, place, causation, and continuity of action. The
question thus becomes whether a rational trier of fact could reasonably infer from the evidence
presented that the defendant intended to commit the theft prior to, or concurrently with, the fatal
assault.

                Based on his actions in staging the victim’s suicide, including information in the
“suicide” note that he had the victim’s truck and cell phone, notifying law enforcement of the
location of the victim’s truck, and cooperating with law enforcement and giving a detailed
confession, the defendant forcefully insists that the only reasonable inference to be drawn was that
he killed the victim and thereafter took the truck, cell phone, and puppy as an afterthought only to
mislead the police into believing that he was elsewhere when the victim had committed suicide. To
be sure, the defendant’s interpretation is one reasonable inference that could be reached by a rational
juror; however, it is most assuredly not the only reasonable inference that can be drawn from the
evidence, and when reasonable inferences collide, a properly functioning adversarial system of
justice respects the jury’s verdict.

                 In our opinion, the jury could rationally infer that the victim’s murder was committed
in the perpetration of a robbery. Practically concurrent with shooting the victim, the defendant began
staging the “suicide.” He, inter alia, wiped up blood, placed the gun in the victim’s hand, and
composed a suicide note. For the staged “suicide” to seem plausible, obviously the defendant needed
an alibi, which required taking the victim’s truck to leave the scene and the cell phone so he could
be reached and appear surprised by news of the victim’s demise. Rather than an afterthought, the
felony reasonably could be viewed as an essential and integral part of the staged suicide calculated
to divert suspicion from the defendant. Consequently, even if stealing the victim’s property was only
a means of confounding the police, a jury nevertheless could reasonably infer that the defendant had
the requisite intent to commit the underlying felony before, or at the very least concurrent with, the
act of shooting the prone victim who posed no immediate threat to the defendant.

               Following the well-settled rules governing our review of the sufficiency of the
convicting evidence, we affirm the defendant’s felony murder conviction.

                In conclusion, the facts, circumstances, and reasonable inferences of this case support
the jury’s verdict finding the defendant guilty of especially aggravated robbery and of first degree
felony murder. The judgments of the trial court are, accordingly, affirmed.

                                                        ___________________________________
                                                        JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE

                                                 -16-