Court Opinion

ID: 9913532
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-28 01:07:57.35286+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:01:25.272915
License: Public Domain

12/27/2023
        IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                          AT JACKSON
                         Assigned on Briefs October 3, 2023

               STATE OF TENNESSEE v. GIORGIO JENNINGS

                 Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County
                      No. 18-00842       Chris Craft, Judge
                     ___________________________________

                           No. W2022-01533-CCA-R3-CD
                       ___________________________________

The Appellant, Giorgio Jennings, was convicted by a Shelby County jury of six counts of
aggravated rape, five counts of aggravated robbery, three counts of aggravated assault,
three counts of facilitation of aggravated assault, three counts of aggravated kidnapping,
aggravated burglary, and employing a firearm during the commission of a dangerous
felony. The trial court sentenced the Appellant to an effective sentence of one hundred and
thirty-two years in confinement. In this appeal, he challenges: (1) the sufficiency of the
evidence supporting his convictions; and (2) the trial court’s imposition of partial
consecutive sentences. After review, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

 Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Criminal Court Affirmed

CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROBERT H.
MONTGOMERY, JR., and J. ROSS DYER, JJ., joined.

Phyllis Aluko, District Public Defender, and Barry W. Kuhn (on appeal), Assistant District
Public Defender, and Charles Waldman, Memphis, Tennessee (at trial) for the Appellant,
Giorgio Jennings.

Jonathan Skrmetti, Attorney General and Reporter; Katharine K. Decker, Senior Assistant
Attorney General; Steve Mulroy, District Attorney General; and Abby Wallace, Assistant
District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

                                       OPINION

      On January 17, 2011, five friends were gathered at 4388 Owen Road in Memphis,
Tennessee, when three masked men with guns entered the home looking for drugs and
money. There was one tall man, and two shorter men. Based on the State’s theory, the
Appellant was the tall man. The tall man and one of the shorter men took the two women,
L.R. and M.J.,1 to the bedrooms and raped them. A third woman, S.H., arrived during the
home invasion, and the tall man and one of the shorter men also raped her. Meanwhile,
the third masked man remained in the living room with the male victims, K.S., S.R., and
M.G.2 He shot two of them in the hand and hit the other with a pistol when they denied
having drugs in the home. The masked men ransacked the home and the victims’ pockets,
taking numerous items.

       One of the items taken, an Xbox, was linked to the Appellant shortly after the home
invasion. The Appellant admitted involvement to the police, but claimed he was the driver.
Three years later, testing confirmed that sperm found on a papasan chair, where one of the
women was raped, belonged to the Appellant. Another three years passed before the
Appellant was located in another state using an alias, and he was apprehended. A Shelby
County grand jury indicted the Appellant on twenty-three counts—six counts of aggravated
rape, six counts of aggravated robbery, six counts of aggravated assault, three counts of
aggravated kidnapping, aggravated burglary, and employing a firearm during the
commission of a dangerous felony.

       Trial. The Appellant’s five day trial began on November 8, 2021. The proof
relevant to the issues raised in this appeal is summarized below.

       L.R. L.R. testified that in January 2011, she was living at 4388 Owen Road with
her then-fiancé K.S. The front door of the home opened into the living room. In the living
room, there was a couch, oversized chair, television, PlayStation, and Xbox. The couch
was against the back wall, under a window looking into the kitchen. The home also
contained two bedrooms, one of which they used as a game room. The game room
contained a television and a papasan chair.

       On January 17, 2011, L.R. and K.S. invited friends over to eat dinner and watch
Jersey Shore. Around 8:00 p.m., L.R. was in the living room with M.J. and M.G., while
K.S. and S.R. were in the kitchen preparing their dinners. Suddenly, three black men with
hoods on their heads and bandanas covering their faces kicked in the front door. The three
men were each holding a gun and told everyone to get on the ground. One of the men
jumped onto the couch, held his gun through the window looking into the kitchen, and told
K.S. and S.R. to come into the living room and get on the ground. One of the guns was a
black Uzi and one was a black and brown revolver. She could not remember what the third
gun looked like. One of the men “was tall and kind of [skinnier]” and wore blue plaid
pajama pants. The other two men were shorter and wore jeans.

        1
           It is the policy of this court to identify victims of sexual offenses by their initials only.
        2
           It is the policy of this court to identify family members of victims of sexual offenses by their
initials only.
                                                   -2-
        L.R. said that after everyone got on the ground, the men made her and M.J. remove
their clothes. They searched everyone, taking their phones. They did not take L.R.’s phone
because, when the men initially entered, L.R. had called 911 and had hidden her phone.
When they made her remove her clothes, she called 911 again and threw her phone under
the couch. The men asked if anyone had a gun, and M.G. told them he had one in his
waistband. The men took M.G.’s gun and “hit him upside the back of the head[.]”

        One of the shorter men then took L.R. to the game room. He asked her to perform
oral sex on him and she told him that she had HIV, which was not true, “just to try to get
him to leave [her] alone.” The man took her back to the living room. When she returned
to the living room, she saw that M.G. and K.S. had both been shot in the hand. At some
point, S.H. arrived at the home, opened the door, and took off running. The men brought
her back inside and made her remove her clothes.

        Next, L.R. said the tall man in the pajama pants hit her on the buttocks and took her
to the bedroom. In the bedroom, he said he had been told they had “dope” and kept asking
her where it was. She told him they had real jobs and did not sell “dope.” He made her
get on her knees, and he inserted his penis into her mouth. He held a gun to her forehead
and threatened to “blow [her] brains out” if she bit down.” He made her bend over the bed
and inserted his penis into her vagina. She told him that he was hurting her, and he said he
did not care. He used a condom when he penetrated her vagina, but not when he penetrated
her mouth. She did not know whether he ejaculated.

        When L.R. returned to the living room, the men were still searching for drugs. They
had flipped over her furniture and ripped into its fabric. At some point, one of the shorter
men took L.R. back to the bedroom. She was unsure if he was the same man who took her
to the game room initially. The shorter man said he wanted a second girl, so another man
brought M.J. to the bedroom. He said he wanted the other one, so the man brought him
S.H. instead. He put a condom on, held a gun to their heads, and inserted his penis into
their mouths. L.R. was unsure if he ejaculated. He made them stop because L.R. started
gagging and S.H. was “crying so bad[.]” He took them back to the living room.

        L.R. said one of the shorter men was in the living room at all times, armed with a
gun, with K.S., M.G., and S.R. He seemed to be the leader. When the men were walking
out, they saw L.R.’s puppy in a cage and took her. She begged them not to take the puppy
and one of the men said, “bitch, I’ll take whatever I want[.]” The men took her television,
jewelry, laptop, and puppy. They also took the PlayStation, Xbox, Wii, swords, phones,
and wallets. L.R. only saw three men, but it was possible that a fourth man came in at
some point. She thought that there was a fourth person outside because a horn honked and
the leader said “that’s our [c]ue.” When the men left, they told L.R. and her friends to
                                            -3-
“count to [one hundred] and don’t come out.” When they shut the door, L.R. jumped up
and locked it. A few minutes later, L.R. and her friends ran to the neighbor’s house and
had them call 911.

       On cross-examination, L.R. said that the tall man was “over six feet” tall. She
agreed, however, that she had previously testified that he was six feet, five inches tall. She
acknowledged that the men stole “a little sack” of marijuana from the home. She also
discussed the incident that she believed led to the home invasion. The day before, M.G.’s
friend “Heath” came over while she was gone and “supposedly sold some [marijuana] to
some people” outside of her home.

       K.S. K.S. testified that he heard a loud bang while in the kitchen with S.R. He
looked through the window into the living room and saw three masked men, each holding
a gun. The men were black and wore bandanas and hooded sweatshirts. Two of the men
were “medium height” and one of them was “kind of tall.” One of the men immediately
jumped over the couch and put his gun through the window and into K.S.’s face. He
ordered K.S. and S.R. to get down. They complied, and the masked men started screaming,
“Where is the [k]ush? We know it’s here.” K.S. tried to tell them they had the wrong
house.

        K.S. said after twenty to twenty-five minutes, the men made L.R. and M.J. remove
their clothes. Shortly after, S.H. arrived to see if M.G. was at the home. A fourth man
outside saw S.H., held a gun to her, and pushed her into the home. The men made her
remove her clothes. Two of the men took L.R. and M.J. to the bedroom and game room.
Shortly after, they took S.H. to the room where L.R. was. The third man stayed in the
living room with K.S., S.R., and M.G. the entire time “making sure [they] didn’t go
[anywhere].” He walked up and down the hall toward the bedroom and game room, saying
things like “y’all are raping these bitches. We’re gonna have to kill these folks.”

        K.S. stated that after M.G. continued to deny that there were drugs in the home, the
man in the living room asked him which hand he rolled marijuana with. M.G. responded
his left, and the man shot him in his right hand. The man then turned his attention to K.S.
K.S. told the man it was his house but insisted that he did not sell drugs. The man told him
to stick his hand out and shot him in the hand. Then, the man “stuck the gun up [K.S.’s]
ass” and threatened to shoot him if he did not tell him where the drugs were. K.S. continued
to tell him there were no drugs. The man’s gun looked like a small automatic. The other
men had a revolver and “maybe a nine.” Each of the men, at different times, were
screaming “Rob, rape, murder is what we do.” One of the men appeared to be the leader,
but K.S. was not sure how tall he was.

                                            -4-
        K.S. said the men then brought the women back into the living room. One of the
men picked up K.S.’s puppy. He held a gun to the puppy’s head and threatened to shoot
her if K.S. did not tell him where the drugs were. He began counting down. When he got
to one, he said the puppy was too pretty and took her with him instead. The men also took
cell phones, wallets, cash, jewelry, the television, an Xbox, a PlayStation, and K.S.’s
medieval swords and knifes. After all the items had been removed from the home, the men
were talking to each other saying, “let’s get ready to line them up in the back. We’re gonna
have to kill these folks.” They heard a car horn and one of the men said “that’s the code.”
The men ordered everyone to stay on the ground and left. K.S. only recalled seeing three
men, but he knew they had a driver because all three men were in the home when he heard
the car horn. Once the men were gone, K.S., S.R., and M.G. ran to the neighbor’s house
to call the police.

        K.S. then described the drug sale that occurred at his home the day before the home
invasion. M.G., S.R., L.R., and Michael Heath Grant, whom they called Heath, were at
K.S.’s home watching football. Someone knocked on the door, and Heath3 said it was for
him. Without K.S.’s knowledge, Heath had arranged for someone named “Jac” to come
buy marijuana from him. Heath had never sold drugs from K.S.’s home before. Jac bought
the marijuana, but came back ten minutes later and said he wanted his money back because
his friend did not want the marijuana. Heath weighed the marijuana, and there were three
grams missing. At one point, K.S. thought Jac may have orchestrated the burglary.

        M.J. M.J. testified that she and her then-boyfriend S.R. went to L.R.’s home to
have dinner and watch television. While she and L.R. were sitting on the couch in the
living room, two to three men “ran through the door and started ransacking the house.”
The men were each at least five feet, nine inches tall, and one looked taller—six feet, one
or two inches tall. Each of the men had a gun and told everyone to get on the ground. Two
of the guns were “plain black guns” and one looked like a revolver. One of the men jumped
through the window looking into the kitchen and told M.G., S.R., and K.S. to come in the
living room. Everyone got on the ground, and the men started asking where the drugs and
money were. They told L.R. and M.J. to remove their clothes. The men ransacked the
home and went through the women’s purses.

       One of the men took M.J. to the bedroom and shut and locked the door. He held a
gun to her head and made her perform oral sex on him. Then, he told her to stand up, turn
around, and bend over. He inserted his penis into her vagina while holding the gun to the
back of her head. He used a condom the entire time. She did not know what the man

        3
           Because Malik Grant and Michael Heath Grant share the same last name, we will refer to them
by their first and second names respectively throughout this opinion. We intend no disrespect in doing so.
                                                  -5-
looked like because she could only see his eyes. The men were all wearing dark colored
clothing, long pants, and long shirts or hooded sweatshirts.

       M.J. said when she returned to the living room, the men were again asking where
the drugs and money were. They picked up L.R.’s puppy and threatened to kill her. Then,
they took L.R. and S.H. to the game room. When L.R. and S.H. returned to the living
room, another man grabbed M.J., took her to the game room, and shut and locked the door.
The man was taller and thinner than the first man that raped her. The man forced her to
perform oral sex on him. He then inserted his penis into her vagina while she was lying on
her back on the papasan chair. He held her down with one hand and pointed the gun at her
with the other. He used a condom both times.

        When M.J. returned to the living room again, the men were still looking for drugs.
She saw one of the men using cocaine in the kitchen. At one point, she heard two gunshots.
She later saw that K.S. had been shot in his hand and was bleeding. The men took M.J.’s
cash, wallet, and phone. They also took an Xbox, PlayStation, and the puppy. M.J. heard
a horn honk and one of the men said they needed to go. They tried to tie everyone up with
electrical cords, but were unsuccessful. They carried the television outside to the car, and
one of the men “poked their head back in and said don’t move.” After a few minutes, M.J.
and her friends went across the street and called police. On cross-examination, M.J. said
she did see one of the men bring S.H. into the home.

       S.R. S.R. testified that he was in the kitchen with K.S. when the door swung open
and three masked men entered the home holding guns. The men were wearing hooded
sweatshirts, pants, and bandanas. A taller man wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt came
through the window into the kitchen and pointed a gun at him. The gun looked like a Glock
with an extended clip. The men were asking where was the money. The men patted
everyone down and took S.R.’s wallet, cell phone, and some marijuana from his pockets.

       S.R. said that one of the men appeared to be in control of the situation. He was
shorter, between five feet, nine inches and six feet tall. He kept calling the other men his
boys, calling out times, and telling them what to do. The men kept asking where the “dope”
and money were. One of the men asked K.S. with which hand he rolled marijuana, and he
responded his left. The man then shot K.S. in his right hand. When M.G. denied knowing
where the drugs and money were, the man asked him the same question and shot him in
his hand. S.R. was “almost [] certain” that the man who appeared to be in control was the
one who shot K.S. and M.G. S.R. was also hit with a pistol six times in the back of the
head.

       S.R. said the men then ordered the women to remove their clothes. One of the men
took one woman to the bedroom and another man took the other woman to the game room.
                                           -6-
One man stayed in the living room the entire time to make sure that S.R., K.S., and M.G.
did not get up. The man in the living room jokingly asked the others, “y’all back there
raping them?” S.R. did not remember hearing the other two men speak, but he heard them
sniffing drugs. At some point, S.H. walked in and saw everyone on the floor. She took off
running, and one of the men went out to get her and brought her back in.

       S.R. said the men took a television, PlayStation, Wii, Xbox, puppy, and collectible
weapons. After a car horn honked, someone took the television outside. The men
apparently did not locate the drugs they were looking for. The main perpetrator said, “[W]e
always get the wrong information. It’s always the wrong house.” The men told them to
count to one hundred and left. One of the men “popped his head back in the door” and
jokingly said, “y’all gone have to relocate.” Shortly after, they all went to the neighbor’s
house to try to get help.

       S.R. described the information he provided police to assist with the investigation.
The stolen Xbox was S.R.’s, which he had left at K.S.’s home the day before the home
invasion. Shortly after the home invasion, one of S.R.’s friends told him the Xbox “went
live online.” S.R. checked his Microsoft account, and someone had changed the name to
“Malikgrantdogazz.” He searched the name on Facebook and found an account with the
same name. The profile was private, so S.R. made a fake Facebook page, added all of the
person’s friends, and then added the person. The person made a post on January 18, 2011,
asking for people to play games online with him. Two people commented their account
names, and those names matched the new friends that had been added to S.R.’s Microsoft
account.

       S.R. also described the drug sale at K.S.’s home the day before the home invasion.
S.R. was at the home with a group of people, including a man named Heath. While they
were there, Heath got a phone call from a man named Jac asking for marijuana. Jac came
to the home, and Heath went outside and sold him marijuana. Shortly after, Jac entered
the home complaining that “the bag was light.” Heath weighed the bag and said the man
“pitched out of [his] bag” because it was now “short.” S.R. did not see or know about any
other drug transactions happening at K.S.’s home.

        M.G. M.G. testified that on January 17, 2011, he went to K.S.’s home and his then-
girlfriend S.H. was planning to meet him there later. He was sitting in the living room
when three men came through the front door holding guns. Two of the men had
“semiautomatics with long clips” and one had a revolver. One of the men was taller, maybe
six feet, three inches tall, and was wearing pajama pants. The shorter men were wearing
jeans. The men had shirts tied covering their faces. The men said, “[Y]ou know what this
is. Get on the ground.” The men made K.S. and S.R., who were in the kitchen, come in

                                           -7-
the living room. Thirty seconds after the men entered, S.H. arrived. One of the men
brought her inside.

       M.G. said the men were asking where the drugs were. They beat M.G. in the head
with the gun and put the gun “in [his] butt area” to try to get information from him. The
shorter man, who appeared to be in charge, asked M.G. with which hand he rolled
marijuana, and M.G. responded his left. The man then shot him in his right hand. Next,
the man shot K.S. All three of the men were in the living room when M.G. and K.S. were
shot. M.G. testified that at some point, the men made all of them take off their clothes.
The men took a nine-millimeter Hi-Point pistol that M.G. had in his shorts.

       M.G. stayed on the ground in the living room the entire time the men were in the
home. Two of the men took the women to the bedrooms, while the leader stayed in the
living room with M.G., K.S., and S.R. When the other two men returned to the living
room, they started taking things and flipping over furniture. They took the television,
swords, M.G.’s wallet, and two grams of marijuana. After they had taken the property,
they said, “so, y’all mean to tell us we got the wrong house?” Throughout the night, the
leader was communicating with someone on the outside letting them know when to come
back. M.G. heard a car backing up to the front porch, and the men left five minutes later.
A couple of seconds after they left, they “ducked back in to make sure nobody moved.”
M.G. and the others then went to the neighbor’s house to get help.

      M.G. testified about the drug sale at K.S.’s home the day before the home invasion.
He was at K.S.’s home with K.S., S.R., and his friend Heath. A man came to the home to
buy marijuana from Heath. M.G. was not sure what happened, but the man did not get the
marijuana. He had not seen any other drug transactions at K.S.’s home.

       S.H. S.H. testified that she went to L.R.’s home when she got off work. She opened
the front door and saw a man in a hooded sweatshirt with a silver revolver. She shut the
door and turned to run down the steps. The man came outside, put a gun to the back of her
head, and told her to come inside. She threw her wallet across the driveway and put her
phone in her shirt. When she entered the living room, there were two more men, both with
guns. Of the three men, one was “distinguishably taller than the other two.” One of the
shorter men was the one that brought her in the home. The shortest man seemed “a little
older” than the others and appeared to be in charge. The men told her to remove her clothes,
but she just removed her jacket and got on the ground. She slid her phone under the
ottoman, but she could not get it unlocked. The men were asking for marijuana.

       One of the men told S.H. to remove the rest of her clothes. She complied because
he had a gun. The men patted M.G. down and took his gun. She heard a gunshot close to
her head. One of the men then took her to the game room. The taller man was in the game
                                           -8-
room with his penis exposed. He had a gun, but told her he was not going to hurt her. He
made her perform oral sex on him. The man then made her stand up and turn around. He
inserted his penis into her vagina. He was not wearing a condom initially, but at some
point, another man opened the door and gave him a condom.

       S.H. said after she returned to the living room, one of the men took her to the
bedroom. The man with gray plaid pajama pants was in the bedroom already with L.R.
and M.J. Someone took M.J. out of the room. The man in the pajama pants had a gun and
told S.H. and L.R. that they needed to perform oral sex on him together. He inserted his
penis into both of their mouths. They were both crying. He stopped, and they went back
into the living room. The men took everyone’s phones, a gaming system, and a television.
The men were in constant communication with their driver through a cell phone, giving
the driver time estimates. Before they left, they loosely tied S.H. and M.J. with an
extension cord.

       Officer Arica Hutchison testified that on January 17, 2011, she was notified of
multiple 911 calls coming from cell towers near Owen Road. She was driving around the
area to see if she could identify the address the calls were coming from. Thirty to forty-
five minutes after the initial calls, another 911 call identified a home invasion at 4388
Owens Road. Officer Hutchison responded to the scene.

       Michael Heath Grant, who many people called Heath, testified that he was friends
with M.G. and was at K.S.’s home on January 16, 2011. Heath had marijuana, and “an
associate” of his who he knew as Jac and Jac’s cousin came over to buy some. They
ultimately did not want the marijuana and gave it back. When Heath spoke to police, he
identified Jac as Jac Kones,4 who is now deceased. Heath acknowledged having recently
pled guilty to theft.

       Officer Wilton Cleveland testified that based on information from one of the
victims, he learned the IP address that the stolen Xbox was using. Officer Cleveland
searched the house connected to the IP address and did not find the stolen Xbox. He
discovered, however, that the house’s router was open, meaning anyone within a certain
range could connect to it. Several months later, he learned the person using the Xbox
changed the username to “Malikgrantdogazz.” He discovered a Facebook account with the
same username belonging to Malik Grant. They located and interviewed Malik. Malik
lived two houses down from the open router with his mother and two brothers—one of
whom was the Appellant. The mother consented to a search of the home. During the

       4
         Although Heath initially refers to this individual as Jac Konak (spelled phonetically), Heath
confirms on cross-examination that his name is Jac Kones. We will refer to him as Kones to avoid any
confusion.
                                                -9-
search, Officer Cleveland found the collectible swords and PlayStation 3 that had been
stolen. The swords were under the Appellant’s bed. Though the Xbox was not in the home,
Microsoft records showed that the first time the Xbox was used at the new IP address was
on January 18, 2011 at 4:37 a.m., hours after the home invasion.

        Malik Grant, who was fourteen years old when he spoke to the police in April 2011,
testified and denied remembering the contents of his statement. He acknowledged,
however, that the following facts appeared in his statement. The Appellant had a key to
the house police searched and sometimes stayed there. The Appellant brought the Xbox to
the house in the middle of January 2011. Malik connected it to Wi-Fi and played Xbox
online. The Appellant also brought a PlayStation 3 to the house. The Appellant told Malik
that he bought the gaming systems off the street from a “crack head.” Malik acknowledged
that he was serving eight years’ probation for attempted second degree murder.

       Eric Gilliam, formerly a sergeant at the Memphis Police Department, testified that
he was the lead investigator of this case. After receiving information from the victims, he
interviewed Heath about the drug sale that occurred the day before the home invasion. He
then interviewed Jacques Kones and collected his DNA. Sergeant Gilliam was unable to
connect Kones to the home invasion.

       Sergeant Gilliam said he interviewed and took a DNA sample from the Appellant
on April 5, 2011. The Appellant’s statement was entered into evidence. In the Appellant’s
statement, he admitted to bringing the Xbox, PlayStation 3, and swords to his mother’s
house at the end of January 2011. He said he got them from a man named “Shawn[,]” also
known as “PV,” who got them from a home invasion. Shawn offered to pay him if he
drove Shawn to the home. He drove Shawn and two other men to the home and waited in
the car. At some point, he went inside to tell the men “they [needed] to be ready to roll”
because the police had driven by. While he was inside, he saw men and women lying on
the floor. The women were nude. Ten or fifteen minutes after he returned to the car, Shawn
loaded a television and two bags into the car and went back into the house. They also took
a Hi-Point nine millimeter gun and a puppy. The Appellant got tired of waiting and blew
the car horn. The men came running out. As he drove away, Shawn told him he shot two
of the males in the hand because they did not “come up with [any] money or []
[marijuana].” Shawn also told him that he “got some head” from one of the girls.

        In the Appellant’s statement, the Appellant described Shawn as five feet, ten inches
tall. He said one of the other men involved was named “D”, and was six feet, one inch tall.
He did not know the third man’s name, but he was the same size as Shawn. The Appellant
is six feet, one inch tall. Shawn had a revolver, but he did not see the other two men with
a weapon. Sergeant Gilliam testified that he located Gabriel Deshaun Humphrey, who the
Appellant confirmed was the Shawn he was referring to. Humphrey was in prison in
                                           - 10 -
Mason, Tennessee. He obtained a DNA sample from Humphrey, but was unable to connect
him to the home invasion.

       Lieutenant Roosevelt Twilley testified that he conducted a second interview of the
Appellant on April 8, 2014, after DNA testing confirmed the Appellant’s semen was on
the papasan chair at the crime scene. The Appellant’s statement was entered into evidence.
This time, the Appellant admitted to entering the “back room,” where one of the other men
was receiving oral sex. The man persuaded the Appellant to “come and get some.” The
blonde woman performed oral sex on the Appellant, but he got nervous and left. He did
not wear a condom. He claimed that he partially ejaculated and was not sure where the
semen went. On June 10, 2014, Lt. Twilley requested an arrest warrant for the Appellant.
He attempted to locate the Appellant numerous times but was unsuccessful. On May 9,
2017, he was notified that the Appellant was seen in Las Vegas, Nevada, using an alias.
At some point, the Appellant was apprehended.

       Agent Donna Nelson, the lab director for the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation
Crime Lab, testified that she analyzed the rape kits of L.R., M.J, and S.H. and items
recovered from the crime scene. She was provided with saliva standards from the
Appellant, Kones, and Humphrey for comparison. Sperm found on the papasan chair was
consistent with the Appellant’s DNA. Sperm belonging to an unknown male was found in
M.J.’s underwear. Agent Nelson confirmed that the sperm in M.J.’s underwear did not
belong to Humphrey, but she did not compare it to the Appellant’s DNA profile or Kones’
DNA profile. Sperm belonging to a second and different unknown male was found on a
pillow case and sheet. Agent Nelson confirmed that the sperm on the pillow case and sheet
did not belong to the Appellant, Kones, or Humphrey.

       The State rested, and the defense did not present proof. The jury found the
Appellant not guilty of the aggravated robbery of S.H. The jury also found the Appellant
not guilty of the aggravated assaults of M.G., K.S., and S.R., but guilty of the lesser
included offenses of facilitation of aggravated assault. The jury convicted the Appellant
as charged for the remaining nineteen offenses.

        Sentencing Hearing. The trial court conducted a sentencing hearing and imposed
an effective sentence of one hundred and thirty-two years.5 For the aggravated rapes, Class
A felonies, and the aggravated robberies and aggravated kidnappings, Class B felonies, the
trial court found that the Appellant was a Range I offender. For the remaining offenses,
Class C felonies and below, the court found that the Appellant was a Range II offender.
The court imposed the following sentences: twenty years for each of the six aggravated

        5
        The sentencing hearing transcript in the record contains only the trial court’s discussion and ruling.
Based on the transcript, it appears that evidence was presented at an earlier hearing.
                                                   - 11 -
rapes, ten years for each of the five aggravated robberies, eight years for each of the three
aggravated assaults, six years for each of the three facilitations of aggravated assault, ten
years for each of the three aggravated kidnappings, six years for aggravated burglary, and
six years for employing a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony. Because
the aggravated burglary was the dangerous felony underlying the firearm conviction, the
court ordered those sentences to run consecutively. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-
1324(e)(1).

       The court ordered that the six aggravated rape sentences be served consecutively.
The court ordered that the remaining sentences be served concurrently with one another,
but consecutive to the aggravated rapes, for an effective sentence one hundred and thirty-
two years. The court imposed partial consecutive sentences based on the dangerous
offender classification, stating:

       This was . . . other than when someone was killed by torture or
       dismemberment, which I’ve had unfortunately, this is the most horrible crime
       that I’ve ever had to try. So, in looking at the sentencing factors, the
       consecutive factors, I find that with no hesitation the [Appellant] is a
       dangerous offender, his behavior indicates . . . no regard for human life, [and]
       no hesitation about committing a crime in which the risk to human life is
       high. And under the Wilkerson factors, I find all three.

The court noted that the circumstances of the offense were “extremely horrifying and
aggravating” and that if he were a victim in this case, he “would have nightmares about
this for the rest of [his] life.” The court found that the sentence was “necessary to protect
society from the [Appellant’s] unwillingness to lead a productive life.” The court noted
that the Appellant was too dangerous because he “basically enslaved and tortured people
for a long time.” After an unsuccessful motion for new trial, the Appellant filed an
untimely notice of appeal, which this court accepted as timely filed in the interest of justice.

                                         ANALYSIS

       I. Sufficiency of the Evidence. The Appellant first challenges the sufficiency of
the evidence supporting each of his twenty-two convictions. The State responds, and we
agree, that the evidence is sufficient to support the convictions.

      When evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence, this court must determine
“whether ‘any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
beyond a reasonable doubt.’” State v. Parker, 350 S.W.3d 883, 903 (Tenn. 2011) (quoting
Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979)). Because a guilty verdict removes the
presumption of innocence and imposes a presumption of guilt, the Appellant bears the
                                             - 12 -
burden of showing why the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. Id. (citing State
v. Rice, 184 S.W.3d 646, 661 (Tenn. 2006)). The State is entitled to the strongest legitimate
view of the evidence and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from that evidence.
State v. Davis, 354 S.W.3d 718, 729 (Tenn. 2011) (citing State v. Majors, 318 S.W.3d 850,
857 (Tenn. 2010)). This court “neither re-weighs the evidence nor substitutes its inferences
for those drawn by the jury.” State v. Wagner, 382 S.W.3d 289, 297 (Tenn. 2012) (citing
State v. Bland, 958 S.W.2d 651, 659 (Tenn. 1997)).

       In addition to the statutory elements, “[t]he identity of the perpetrator is an essential
element of any crime.” Rice, 184 S.W.3d at 662 (citing State v. Thompson, 519 S.W.2d
789, 793 (Tenn. 1975)). The identity of the defendant as the perpetrator may be established
by direct evidence, circumstantial evidence, or a combination of the two. State v. Thomas,
158 S.W.3d 361, 387 (Tenn. 2005). The identification of the defendant as the perpetrator
is a question for the trier of fact after considering all the relevant proof. Id. at 388. The
State can prove identity by establishing that the defendant’s own conduct, or the conduct
of a person for which the defendant is criminally responsible, constituted the offense.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-402.

        Criminal responsibility is “‘not a separate, distinct crime’” but “‘a theory by which
the State may prove the defendant’s guilt of the alleged offense . . . based upon the conduct
of another person.’” State v. Davidson, 509 S.W.3d 156, 214 (Tenn. 2016) (quoting State
v. Lemacks, 996 S.W.2d 166, 170 (Tenn. 1999)). An individual is criminally responsible
for the conduct another person if, “[a]cting with intent to promote or assist the commission
of the offense, or to benefit in the proceeds or results of the offense, the person solicits,
directs, aids, or attempts to aid another person to commit the offense.” Tenn. Code Ann. §
39-11-402(2). A person “acts intentionally with respect to the nature of the conduct or to
a result of the conduct when it is the person’s conscious objective or desire to engage in
the conduct or cause the result.” Id. § 39-11-302(a).

       Under the doctrine of criminal responsibility, a person is liable not only for the target
offense, but also for offenses committed that were the natural and probable consequences
of the target offense. State v. Howard, 30 S.W.3d 271, 276 (Tenn. 2000) (citing State v.
Carson, 950 S.W.2d 951, 954-55 (Tenn. 1997)). Whether an offense was a natural and
probable consequence of the target offense is a determination for the jury as the finder of
fact. Id. The natural and probable consequences doctrine is “based on the recognition that
aiders and abettors should be responsible for the criminal harms they have naturally,
probably[,] and foreseeably put into motion.” Id. Under this doctrine, the State must prove
the following beyond a reasonable doubt: “(1) the elements of the crime or crimes that
accompanied the target crime; (2) that the defendant was criminally responsible pursuant
to Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-11-402; and (3) that the other crimes that were
committed were natural and probable consequences of the target crime.” Id.
                                             - 13 -
       A. Aggravated Rape. The Appellant does not challenge the proof showing that six
aggravated rapes occurred. Instead, he challenges the proof of his identity as the
perpetrator. He contends that none of the three victims identified him, and the sperm and
DNA recovered from the rape kits could not be traced to him. He also contends that he is
not criminally responsible for the aggravated rapes because he did not intend to assist in
their commission. He only intended to assist in theft, of which aggravated rape is not a
natural and probable consequence.

        Because the three men that participated in the home invasion had their faces
covered, the victims instead distinguished between the men based on their heights. Each
of the six victims testified that one of the men was taller than the other two men. The
victims’ descriptions of the tall man’s height ranged from over six feet to six feet, three
inches tall.

        Three of the aggravated rapes—counts 1, 4, and, 6—were committed by the tall
man. In count 1, the State alleged that the Appellant penetrated M.J.’s vagina with his
penis in the game room on the papasan chair. M.J. testified that the perpetrator was taller
than the man that raped her in the bedroom. Though she did not specify whether he was
taller than the third man, the majority of the victims did not notice any difference in the
heights of the two shorter men. The jury thus could have reasonably inferred that the tall
man committed this rape. In count 4, the State alleged that the Appellant penetrated L.R.’s
vagina with his penis in the bedroom. L.R. testified that the perpetrator was the tall man.
In count 6, the State alleged that the Appellant penetrated S.H.’s vagina with his penis in
the game room. S.H. testified that the perpetrator was the tall man.

        The jury could have reasonably inferred that the Appellant was the tall man. The
presence of the Appellant’s sperm on the papasan chair in the game room, along with his
own statement, shows that the Appellant was in the home and committed at least one of
the rapes. Though the Appellant claimed that he was the driver and only briefly entered
the home, five of the victims testified that they only saw three men in the home. Only K.S.
testified to seeing a fourth man bring S.H. into the home, but S.H. and the other four victims
consistently testified that one of the three men already in the home brought S.H. inside.
Therefore, the evidence supports an inference that only three men were in the home, and
one of those men was the Appellant. The evidence also supports an inference that the
Appellant was the person victims described as the tall man. Descriptions of the tall man’s
height ranged from over six feet to six feet, three inches tall. The Appellant is six feet, one
inch tall, and his sperm was found on the papasan chair where M.J. was raped by a taller
man. A rational jury thus could have identified the Appellant as the perpetrator of the
aggravated rapes in counts 1, 4, and 6.

                                            - 14 -
       The remaining aggravated rapes—counts 2, 3, and 5—were committed by one of
the shorter men. In count 2, the State alleged that the Appellant, or one for whom the
Appellant was criminally responsible for, penetrated M.J.’s vagina with his penis in the
bedroom. M.J. testified that the perpetrator was shorter than the man that committed the
rape alleged in count 1. In counts 3 and 5, the State alleged that the Appellant, or one for
whom the Appellant was criminally responsible for, penetrated both L.R.’s mouth and
S.H.’s mouth with his penis in the bedroom. L.R. and S.H. testified that the perpetrator
was one of the shorter men.

        Though the Appellant did not commit these aggravated rapes by his own conduct, a
rational jury could have found that the Appellant intended to assist the shorter man. Despite
the Appellant’s contention that he only intended to assist in theft, the evidence viewed in
the light most favorable to the State shows that all three men shared in a plan to rape the
women. Shortly after entering the home, the men ordered L.R., M.J., and S.H. to remove
their clothes. K.S. testified that each of the three men were shouting, “Rob, rape, murder
is what we do.” And the use of condoms shows that the men either brought condoms with
them to the home invasion, or found condoms in the home and shared them amongst
themselves. Either way, it is evidence of a shared intent to assist in the commission of the
rapes.

       A rational jury could also have found that the Appellant aided the perpetrator. In
counts 3 and 5, one of the men—which the jury could have reasonably inferred was the
Appellant—brought M.J. to the bedroom for the shorter man when the shorter man
requested a second woman. When the shorter man said he wanted the other woman instead,
the man brought him S.H. Though the aid in count 2 is less overt, a rational jury could
have found that the Appellant aided the shorter man. Each of the men, armed with guns,
ordered the women to remove their clothing. The leader stayed in the living room with the
male victims to ensure they could not interfere with the rapes. And K.S. testified that after
the rapes, the men were saying to one another, “We’re gonna have to kill these folks” to
avoid being caught. The evidence is therefore sufficient to support each of the Appellant’s
aggravated rape convictions.

        B. Aggravated Robbery. The Appellant also challenges the proof of his identity
as the perpetrator of the five aggravated robberies. He contends that none of the victims
identified him and he did not enter the home until after the robberies occurred.

        Unlike the aggravated rapes, the victims did not identify which man took which
items. But, as discussed in Section I.A., the Appellant was one of the three men in the
home. Even if the Appellant did not physically take all of the items, the evidence is
sufficient to establish that he is criminally responsible for the aggravated robberies. The
three men had a shared plan to take drugs and money from the individuals in the home.
                                           - 15 -
Each of the three men entered the home, pointed guns at the victims, and ordered them to
get on the ground so the men could take their phones and other belongings. Each of the
men repeatedly asked the victims where the marijuana was hidden. They ransacked the
home, taking a television, Xbox, PlayStation 3, Wii, swords, jewelry, laptop, and puppy.
The Appellant admitted to bringing the Xbox, PlayStation 3, and swords to his mother’s
house. Therefore, a rational jury could have found that the Appellant was criminally
responsible for the aggravated robberies.

       Though the Appellant claims he did not enter the home until after the robberies, the
jury was free to discredit his statements. Even in the Appellant’s version of events,
however, the Appellant agreed to drive the men to the home for payment, knowing that
they planned to take drugs and money, and knowing that at least one of them was armed.
He aided the men by driving them, serving as a lookout, and notifying them when they
needed to leave. The Appellant is therefore not entitled to relief.

        C. Aggravated Assault. The Appellant challenges the proof of his identity as the
perpetrator of the three aggravated assaults, again emphasizing that none of the victims
identified him.

       The State alleged that the Appellant, armed with a gun, ordered L.R., M.J., and S.H.
to undress, causing them to fear imminent bodily injury. The victims did not specify which
of the three armed men was the perpetrator. But a rational jury could have found that it
was the Appellant, or a person for whose conduct he was criminally responsible. Even if
the Appellant did not order the women to undress, he intended to assist the commission of
the offense and provided aid. As discussed in Section I.A., the evidence viewed in the light
most favorable to the State shows that all three men shared in a plan to rape the women.
Ordering the women to remove their clothes was part of this plan. And each of the men
was armed and monitoring the women to ensure they removed their clothes, or monitoring
the men to ensure they did not interfere. Accordingly, the evidence is sufficient to support
the Appellant’s convictions.

       D. Facilitation of Aggravated Assault. The Appellant argues that there is
insufficient evidence to establish that he was criminally responsible for the facilitation of
the aggravated assaults. Specifically, he argues that he did not provide substantial
assistance to the perpetrator because there is no evidence that he was in the home when the
offenses occurred.

       The jury acquitted the Appellant of the three counts of aggravated assault against
K.S., S.R., and M.G. and convicted him of the lesser included offense of facilitation of
aggravated assaults. “A person is criminally responsible for the facilitation of a felony, if,
knowing that another intends to commit a specific felony, but without the intent required
                                            - 16 -
for criminal responsibility under § 39-11-402(2), the person knowingly furnishes
substantial assistance in the commission of the felony.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-403(a).

       We first note a discrepancy between the theory of the offense presented in the
indictment and the theory argued at trial. In counts 16, 17, and 18 of the indictment, the
State alleged that the Appellant used or displayed a deadly weapon, causing K.S., S.R., and
M.G. to reasonably fear imminent bodily injury. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-13-
102(a)(1)(A)(iii). Though the jury was only instructed on aggravated assault based on
reasonable fear of imminent bodily injury, the State argued at trial that the Appellant
committed aggravated assault based on actual serious bodily injury. See id. § 39-13-
102(a)(1)(A)(i). The State alleged that the Appellant shot both K.S. and M.G. in the hand,
and struck S.R. in the head. Neither party addresses this discrepancy.

       Regardless of this discrepancy, the evidence is sufficient to support the Appellant’s
conviction under either theory. The victims testified that the shorter man, who appeared
to be in charge and had a gun, held K.S., S.R., and M.G. in the living room. When they
insisted there were no drugs in the home, the shorter man shot both K.S. and M.G. in the
hand and hit S.R. with a pistol six times. A rational jury could have found that the
Appellant facilitated the shorter man’s aggravated assault, whether that assault was based
on the fear of imminent bodily injury or the actual serious bodily injury. First, the evidence,
viewed in the light most favorable to the State, shows that the Appellant knew that the
shorter man intended to commit aggravated assault. The Appellant indicated in his
statement that he knew the leader was armed and intended to steal drugs and money from
the victims. The jury could reasonably have inferred that the Appellant also knew that the
man would shoot the victims if his threats were unsuccessful. Second, the evidence shows
that the Appellant provided substantial assistance to the shorter man. The Appellant
monitored the remaining victims to ensure they could not interfere with the assaults. Even
in the Appellant’s version of events, he drove the shorter man to the home, warned him
when they needed to leave, and drove him away after the offense. Accordingly, the
evidence is sufficient to support the Appellant’s convictions for facilitation of aggravated
assault.

       E. Aggravated Kidnapping. The Appellant also challenges the proof of his
identity as the perpetrator of the three aggravated kidnappings.

        Two of the aggravated kidnappings—counts 20 and 21—were committed by one of
the shorter men. In count 20, the State alleged that the Appellant removed L.R. from the
living room and took her to the game room where an armed man demanded oral sex. L.R.
testified that the perpetrator was one of the shorter men. A rational jury, however, could
have found that the Appellant was criminally responsible for this aggravated kidnapping
for the reasons discussed in Section I.A., including the shared plan to rape the women and
                                            - 17 -
the Appellant’s participation in ordering the women to undress. In count 21, the State
alleged that the Appellant forced S.H. to enter the home while holding a gun to the back of
her head. S.H. testified that the perpetrator was one of the shorter men. Kidnapping a
person to prevent that person from calling the police and thwarting the planned robbery,
however, was a natural and probable consequence of the aggravated robberies for which
the Appellant was criminally responsible. Therefore, a rational jury could have found the
Appellant criminally responsible for the shorter man’s conduct.

        The victims did not testify which of the three men committed the third aggravated
kidnapping. In count 19, the State alleged that the Appellant, while armed with a gun,
removed M.J. from the living room and took her to the bedroom where L.R. was being
held. L.R. testified that she was in the bedroom with one of the shorter men, and the shorter
man requested a second woman. One of the other men brought M.J. to the bedroom, which
led to the rapes alleged in counts 3 and 5. As discussed in Section I.A., the jury could have
reasonably inferred that the man that took M.J. to the bedroom was the Appellant.
Accordingly, the evidence is sufficient to support each of the Appellant’s aggravated
kidnapping convictions.

       F. Aggravated Burglary. The Appellant argues that there is insufficient evidence
to establish that he intended to commit a felony, theft, or assault when he entered the home.
The Appellant points to his testimony that he only entered the home to warn the men that
the police had driven by.

       The evidence is sufficient to support the Appellant’s aggravated burglary
conviction. As convicted in this case, aggravated burglary occurs when a person, “without
the effective consent of the property owner” enters a habitation “not open to the public,
with intent to commit a felony, theft, or assault.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-14-403(a) (current
version at § 39-13-1003), § 39-14-402(a)(1) (current version at § 39-13-1002). The
evidence established that the Appellant was one of the three men that initially entered the
home to take drugs and money. The Appellant admitted to police that he raped one of the
women while inside the home, but contends that when he entered the home he only
intended to warn the others that the police drove by. The jury, however, was free to
discredit his statements. Accordingly, the Appellant is not entitled to relief.

        G. Employing a Firearm During the Commission of Dangerous Felony. The
Appellant challenges the proof of his identity as the perpetrator of employing a firearm
during the commission of a dangerous felony. He contends that “three men came into the
house with guns, but they were not identified.” As discussed in Section I.A., however, the
evidence shows that the Appellant was one of the three men in the home. The victims
testified that the three men each had a gun during the commission of the aggravated

                                           - 18 -
burglary. The evidence is therefore sufficient to show that the Appellant was the
perpetrator, and he is not entitled to relief.

        II. Double Jeopardy. The Appellant, although he frames it as a sufficiency of the
evidence issue, argues that his convictions for aggravated assault and facilitation of
aggravated assault violate the double jeopardy clause. He claims that these offenses are
lesser included offenses of the aggravated robberies, for which he was also convicted. The
State responds, and we agree, that the Appellant has waived this claim by raising it for the
first time on appeal. To preserve a double jeopardy issue, a defendant must raise it in his
motion for new trial and appellate brief. State v. Harbison, 539 S.W.3d 149, 164 (Tenn.
2018). Because the Appellant failed to raise this issue in his motion for new trial, the issue
is waived, and he is not entitled to relief.

        III. Consecutive Sentencing. The Appellant argues that the trial court erred in
ordering partial consecutive sentences. He contends that his sentence is excessive because
“other than the one instance of committing oral rape, the [Appellant] was sitting in the car
when all of the other offenses were being committed[.]” The State responds, and we agree,
that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in imposing partial consecutive sentences.

        “[T]he abuse of discretion standard, accompanied by a presumption of
reasonableness, applies to consecutive sentencing determinations.” State v. Pollard, 432
S.W.3d 851, 860 (Tenn. 2013). When a defendant is convicted of more than one offense,
the trial court may order the sentences to run consecutively if the court finds, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant fits into at least one of the enumerated
categories. Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-115(b). In this case, the trial court imposed
consecutive sentencing based on the its finding that the Appellant was a dangerous offender
whose behavior indicated no regard for human life and no hesitation about committing a
crime in which the risk to human life was high. See id. § 40-35-115(b)(4). Because the
dangerous offender classification is “the most subjective to apply,” the trial court must
make two additional findings before ordering consecutive sentences based on this
classification. Pollard, 432 S.W.3d at 863 (citing State v. Lane, 3 S.W.3d 456, 461 (Tenn.
1999)). The trial court must find that the aggregate sentence is “reasonably related to the
severity of the offenses” and “necessary in order to protect the public from further criminal
acts.” Id. (quoting State v. Wilkerson, 905 S.W.2d 933, 938 (Tenn. 1995)).

        The trial court did not abuse its discretion by imposing partial consecutive sentences
in this case. The court found that the Appellant was a dangerous offender whose behavior
indicated no regard for human life and no hesitation about committing a crime in which
the risk to human life was high. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-35-115(b)(4). The court also
found that the aggregate sentence was reasonably related to the severity of the offenses and
necessary in order to protect the public from further criminal acts. The court noted that the
                                            - 19 -
offense was “extremely horrifying and aggravating” and the Appellant “basically enslaved
and tortured people.” The Appellant contends that his sentence is excessive because he
only committed one rape. But the jury convicted him of six, and the trial court acted within
its discretion in ordering that the six aggravated rape sentences be served consecutively
based on the dangerous offender classification. Accordingly, the Appellant is not entitled
to relief.

                                     CONCLUSION

        Based on the above reasoning and authority, we conclude that the evidence is
sufficient to support the Appellant’s convictions, and the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in imposing partial consecutive sentences. Accordingly, we affirm the
judgments of the trial court.

                                     ___________________________________________
                                       CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, PRESIDING JUDGE

                                           - 20 -