Court Opinion

ID: 4910912
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-14 19:30:48.528853+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:28.113468
License: Public Domain

09/14/2021
         IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                          AT KNOXVILLE
                                Assigned on Briefs June 29, 2021

            STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ZACARIAS SALAS-RUFINO1

                   Appeal from the Criminal Court for Hamilton County
                         No. 302229 Barry A. Steelman, Judge

                                   No. E2020-00986-CCA-R3-CD

Aggrieved of his Hamilton County Criminal Court jury conviction of second degree
murder, the defendant, Zacarias Salas-Rufino, appeals, challenging the admission of
certain telephone calls and the testimony of the medical examiner on the issue of “excited
delirium.” Discerning no error, we affirm.

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

JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CAMILLE R.
MCMULLEN, and ROBERT L. HOLLOWAY, JR., JJ., joined.

Hannah C. Stokes, Chattanooga, Tennessee (on appeal); and Erinn O’Leary, Assistant
District Public Defender (at trial), for appellant, Zacarias Salas-Rufino.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Samantha L. Simpson, Assistant
Attorney General; Neal S. Pinkston, District Attorney General; and Cameron Williams and
Brian C. Bush, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

                                                OPINION

             The Hamilton County Grand Jury charged the defendant with one count of
second degree murder for the death of his estranged wife, Yessica Ruiz, on September 26,
2016.2

             The evidence adduced at the defendant’s May 2019 trial established that four
9-1-1 calls came from 3207 Navajo Drive in Chattanooga on September 26, 2016.

1
        The record indicates that the defendant was also known as Carlos Delposo.
2
        Although the offense giving rise to the charge in this case occurred on September 26, 2016, the
victim did not succumb to her injuries until October 1, 2016. For the sake of clarity, we will use the offense
date of September 26, 2016.
Emergency medical personnel responded to the first call, which had been placed by a man
who identified himself as Carlos, at 6:15 a.m. Emergency personnel “made contact with
an individual. . . . that was having what they told us was chest pains.” The individual
pointed at his chest and indicated “pressure,” but instead of going to the waiting ambulance,
the man turned around, said something in Spanish, and then drove away in a small pickup
truck. Paramedics described the man’s demeanor as “uncooperative and agitated.”

              Emergency medical personnel responded to the second call at 6:50 a.m. and
found “a male, a female, and . . . two kids” “[r]ight inside the door.” The female spoke
only Spanish while the man spoke a mix of English and Spanish. The man, who was sitting
on the couch, told emergency personnel that he did not need an ambulance. Paramedics
performed a “quick assessment” by checking his pulse and respirations and found that
“[h]is pulse was not beating fast.” The man appeared “aggravated at” the presence of
emergency personnel but did not appear to be under the influence. The paramedics left at
6:59 a.m.

               Sometime between 6:55 and 7:15 a.m., Navajo Drive resident Sharon Brown
heard “screaming and yelling and arguing” from her bathroom window. Ms. Brown
glanced out the window and saw the victim and the defendant, whom she knew only as
“Carlos,” arguing. The argument was in Spanish, so Ms. Brown, a native English speaker,
could not understand what they were saying. Eventually, the sound of the argument, which
had gotten significantly louder, traveled to the side of the building. Ms. Brown opened the
door, and “it got louder.” Ms. Brown testified that she had “never heard wails or cries like
that, and screaming and yelling” and that it sounded as though the victim “was fighting for
her life.”

               When “it went quiet,” Ms. Brown went outside and saw the victim “come
out from around the wall,” “walk[] a little way[],” and then fall to the ground “at that rock
wall. She didn’t make it far.” The victim rolled over, and Ms. Brown “saw the blood
coming down her leg,” so she called 9-1-1. The victim crawled to the middle of the yard,
lay “on her side for a few seconds, and then she rolled over on her back” before calling out,
“‘Help me.’” Ms. Brown did not see the defendant but heard him “over there” “[b]eside
the apartment” “doing something loud.” At some point, the couple’s children came
outside, and Ms. Brown took them into her apartment. The children “were very upset.”
Ms. Brown saw no one other than the defendant and the victim from the time she first heard
them arguing to the time the police arrived.

             Sometime in the early morning hours of September 26, 2016, the defendant
knocked on the door of Tolbert Dye, who lived in the same building as the defendant, and
asked to come inside and sit on the couch but did not mention any health problems. When
Mr. Dye told the defendant that he could not come inside because Mr. Dye’s seven
                                             -2-
Chihuahuas were out, the defendant, who was behaving “[n]ormal like,” “walk[ed] back
down the steps, back down to his apartment.” A short time later, Mr. Dye was awakened
by “[a] big old boom” coming from “[s]omewhere right there in the hallway” outside the
apartment shared by the defendant and the victim. He then “heard the door shut. I could
hear [the victim] crying” “[o]h, no, Carlos, oh, no.” Mr. Dye went back to bed because he
did not want to “get in no domestic violence,” and when he woke up again, he saw “some
blue lights and” looked outside to see the victim “lying right there in front of this truck
where the tree is.” He heard the defendant “hollering ‘Jessica, Jessica,’” and “Help me.”

               Chattanooga Police Department (“CPD”) Officer Matthew Ballinger
responded to Ms. Brown’s 9-1-1 call. When he arrived at 3207 Navajo Drive “around 7
o’clock in the morning,” he found “a female lying on the ground covered in blood and there
were two children sitting near her.” Officer Ballinger “tried to talk to her for a second. . .
. It seemed like she was trying to mumble something, but I couldn’t tell what it was.” He
did not stay with the victim “very long, because I had to jump down back onto Navajo
Drive because I heard screaming coming from Navajo Drive.” As Officer Ballinger got
closer to the sound of the screams, he saw the defendant “in the street” “running towards
me at full speed.” Officer Ballinger drew his weapon and ordered the defendant to the
ground. The defendant complied. The defendant, who “seemed very excited,” said
“policia” and “help.” Officer Ballinger handcuffed the defendant and seated him on the
curb because he was covered in blood and had a small injury to his leg. The defendant
continued “spontaneously uttering things” and “yelling” “police” and “help” as he sat on
the curb. His demeanor alternated between “calm to screaming, calm to screaming,” and
he “slumped over at one point.”

                The defendant was transported by ambulance to Parkridge Hospital for
treatment of the injury to his leg. Although the defendant had a slightly elevated blood
pressure, elevated blood sugar, elevated respiratory rate, elevated heart rate, and was
sweating profusely, none of these symptoms was dangerous or indeed serious enough to
warrant treatment. The defendant was oriented to time and place and was able to
communicate his name, date of birth, and address to paramedics. Despite this, the
defendant’s behavior was “paranoid and bizarre.” “[O]ne minute he’s screaming and
yelling; the next, he is calm and cooperative, then he accuses people of killing him, and
he’s afraid of lights.” Paramedics indicated on a report that “‘excited delirium is a
possibility’” even though “[t]he fact that he was sometimes lucid and sometimes erratic . .
. indicated . . . that excited delirium probably wasn’t the case” because “sometimes some
of the responses to patients who are suffering from excited delirium by emergency
responders can be the wrong ones.”

             Doctor Paul Bing treated the defendant at Parkridge Hospital and, following
an observation of the defendant that lasted only minutes, diagnosed the defendant with
                                             -3-
“cocaine and methamphetamine delirium,” which he described as “a state of intoxication
to the extent that you become delirious; in other words, . . . a state of delirium is marked
by confusion, not being in tune with reality, not being aware of really your surroundings
and what’s going on, often with agitation.” Doctor Bing gave the defendant “medicine to
calm him down,” and the defendant “settled down” and “might have even gone to sleep.”
Doctor Bing checked on the defendant after “a few hours” and stitched the cut in the
defendant’s leg. Blood tests indicated that the defendant had used cocaine and
methamphetamine but not alcohol.

                 Emergency personnel transported the victim to Erlanger Hospital, where she
remained until her death on October 1, 2016. An autopsy established that the cause of her
death was multiple stab wounds and the manner of death was homicide. A total of 27 stab
wounds covered the victim from head to toe and were “mostly concentrated along the left
arm, the chest, and the right side of her back.” She also suffered stab wounds to the scalp,
mouth, and neck. Only two of the wounds “actually hit vital structures,” and the remainder
“are basically going into subcutaneous fat and muscle and soft tissue.” One of the fatal
wounds was a chest wound that “actually penetrate[d] into the chest cavity and hit[] the
left lung . . . , causing hemorrhage into the chest cavity.” The other was a wound to the
victim’s left thigh that “hit the femoral artery,” causing “a lot of hemorrhage.” The
combination of these two wounds “plus the other wounds -- which are also going to bleed,
although not profusely -- results in enough blood loss that even though these injuries are
repaired surgically, by that time she had not had enough blood going to her brain and
suffered brain death, basically, or anoxic brain injury.”

              The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation conducted forensic testing on a
kitchen knife recovered from the scene near where the victim eventually fell to the ground
and the clothing the defendant was wearing at the time of her death. Forensic testing
established that the blood on the knife blade came from the victim. The DNA profile
obtained from the knife handle indicated three people: the victim, an unknown male, and a
third person. The defendant’s DNA was not present on the knife in an amount detectable
via forensic testing. Blood on the defendant’s shirt came from both the victim and the
defendant.

              Based on the evidence presented at trial, the jury convicted the defendant as
charged of second degree murder, and, following a sentencing hearing, the trial court
imposed a sentence of 25 years’ incarceration, to be served at 100 percent by operation of
law. The defendant filed a timely but unsuccessful motion for new trial followed by a
timely notice of appeal.

              In this appeal, the defendant contends that the trial court erred by admitting
into evidence three 9-1-1 calls placed by the victim in April and May 2016 and a telephone
                                            -4-
conversation between the defendant and his employer following the defendant’s arrest and
by permitting the medical examiner to render an opinion on whether the defendant had
suffered from “excited delirium” at the time of the stabbing.

                                       I. 9-1-1 Calls

               Prior to trial, the defendant moved the trial court to exclude from evidence
three 9-1-1 calls placed by the victim in April and May 2016 as inadmissible hearsay and
impermissible propensity evidence. The State argued that the calls were admissible via the
excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule to establish the defendant’s identity as the
perpetrator, his motive for the killing, the nature of the relationship between the defendant
and the victim, and the defendant’s settled intent to harm the victim.

               At the hearing on the defendant’s motion in limine, CPD Officer Calvin
Cooper testified that he had responded to “more than one call” placed from the 3207 Navajo
Drive residence of a “[f]emale by the name of Yessica Ruiz and a person we were told was
Delposo.” He identified the defendant as the person he knew as “Delposo.” It was Officer
Cooper’s understanding that the defendant and the victim were “boyfriend and girlfriend”
and that they shared two young children. On April 12, 2016, Officer Cooper responded to
“a domestic assault call” placed at approximately “4 or 5 in the morning.” The defendant
told Officer Cooper that the victim “had just returned home by means of another man, and
she was intoxicated, and she was more of the one causing the disorder.” Officer Cooper
recalled that the defendant spoke enough English to communicate with him but that the
victim spoke very little English, “enough just to . . . articulate with her hand motions that
she’d been assaulted in the face.” She indicated with “a closed fist towards her face.”
Officer Cooper also used “a cellphone app called Google Translate” when speaking to the
victim. Officer Cooper “recall[ed] a mark on her face but I don’t recall where it was
exactly.” The victim told Officer Cooper that the defendant had assaulted her, but the
defendant “stated that she came home in that state.” Given that the defendant and the
victim provided “conflicting statements,” Officer Cooper “just transported him to a
different location” because the victim indicated that she did not have anywhere else to go.

              Officer Cooper responded to another domestic violence call at 3207 Navajo
Drive on May 23, 2016, at “1 or 2 in the morning.” When he arrived, he found the
defendant and the victim engaged in an argument. “[S]he was saying he wouldn’t leave
her alone, and he would state that she wasn’t leaving him alone.” Officer Cooper “advised
both parties to go to separate rooms. [The defendant] said he was going to sleep on the
couch and she said she was going to sleep in the bedroom.” Officer Cooper “advised her
to lock the door” and to call back “if there were any problems.” He recalled that “both
parties had been intoxicated.” Officer Cooper responded to a second call later that same
morning and found “[p]retty much the same thing. They were just at it.” The victim told
                                             -5-
him that the defendant “kept knocking at her door.” Again, Officer Cooper asked the
parties if they had somewhere else to go, and the victim said she did not while the defendant
indicated the same address where Officer Cooper had taken him in April.

              During cross-examination, Officer Cooper acknowledged that he did not
make any arrests in relation to the April call because he could not determine who was the
primary aggressor and could not establish that the defendant had actually caused the
victim’s injury. Officer Cooper said that the victim was obviously intoxicated on those
occasions that he responded to 3207 Navajo Drive and that the defendant did not appear to
be intoxicated despite saying that he had consumed “one or two beers.” In any event, the
defendant “wasn’t highly intoxicated to the level that she was.”

               The defendant argued that none of the calls qualified as an excited utterance.
He noted that the victim did not allege any physical altercation in the first May 23 call and
that, although she alleged physical contact in the other calls, Officer Cooper’s testimony
negated her allegations. He argued that the victim’s allegations in the call were “not clear
and convincing proof of an actual event, and that the prejudicial effect of this would
strongly outweigh the probative value.” The State argued that the proof clearly showed a
startling event and argued that any evidence that someone other than the defendant injured
the victim went to the weight of the evidence and not its admissibility. The State argued
that the calls evinced the defendant’s “intent to harm the victim” and that evidence of the
defendant’s intent was particularly relevant given that the defendant had indicated that he
would rely, at least in part, on a voluntary intoxication defense. The prosecutor candidly
acknowledged that “[i]f the defense of intoxication or delirium is not asserted, then I don’t
know that the probative value outweighs the danger of unfair prejudice.” The defendant
said that the purpose of presenting such a defense would be to show that the defendant was
not able to form the requisite mental state for either first or second degree murder. The
prosecutor also argued that the calls were probative of motive, and, in turn, identity and
that they were even more crucial to the State’s case because the trial court had suppressed
the defendant’s statement to the police.

               Questions concerning evidentiary relevance rest within the sound discretion
of the trial court, and this court will not interfere with the exercise of this discretion in the
absence of a clear abuse appearing on the face of the record. See State v. DuBose, 953
S.W.2d 649, 652 (Tenn. 1997); State v. Van Tran, 864 S.W.2d 465, 477 (Tenn. 1993); State
v. Harris, 839 S.W.2d 54, 73 (Tenn. 1992). An abuse of discretion occurs when the trial
court applies an incorrect legal standard or reaches a conclusion that is “illogical or
unreasonable and causes an injustice to the party complaining.” State v. Ruiz, 204 S.W.3d
772, 778 (Tenn. 2006) (citing Howell v. State, 185 S.W.3d 319, 337 (Tenn. 2006)).

              Relevant evidence is “evidence having any tendency to make the existence
                                               -6-
of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less
probable than it would be without the evidence.” Tenn. R. Evid. 401. “Evidence which is
not relevant is not admissible,” Tenn. R. Evid. 402, and even if evidence is deemed
relevant, it may be still be excluded “if its probative value is substantially outweighed by
the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by
considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative
evidence,” Tenn. R. Evid. 403.

               Generally speaking, “[e]vidence of a person’s character or trait of character
is not admissible for the purpose of proving action in conformity therewith on a particular
occasion.” Tenn. R. Evid. 404(a). This rule is subject to certain exceptions, however,
including “evidence of a pertinent trait of character offered by an accused or by the
prosecution to rebut the same.” Tenn. R. Evid. 404(a)(1). In addition, “[e]vidence of other
crimes, wrongs, or acts” may be admissible for “other purposes,” such as proving identity,
criminal intent, or rebuttal of accident or mistake. Tenn. R. Evid. 404(b); State v. Thacker,
164 S.W.3d 208, 239-40 (Tenn. 2005). To admit such evidence, the rule specifies four
prerequisites:

              (1) The court upon request must hold a hearing outside the
              jury’s presence;

              (2) The court must determine that a material issue exists other
              than conduct conforming with a character trait and must upon
              request state on the record the material issue, the ruling, and
              the reasons for admitting the evidence;

              (3) The court must find proof of the other crime, wrong, or act
              to be clear and convincing; and

              (4) The court must exclude the evidence if its probative value
              is outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.

Tenn. R. Evid. 404(b).

              Tennessee courts have accepted the use of evidence of a homicide
defendant’s threats or prior violent acts directed toward the homicide victim as a means of
allowing the State the opportunity to establish intent, theorizing that such evidence is
probative of the defendant’s mens rea at the time of the homicide because it reveals a
“settled purpose” to harm the victim. See State v. Smith, 868 S.W.2d 561, 574 (Tenn.
1993); see also State v. Turnbill, 640 S.W.2d 40, 46-47 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1982).
Specifically, our supreme court has ruled that “[v]iolent acts indicating the relationship
                                             -7-
between the victim of a violent crime and the defendant prior to the commission of the
offense are relevant to show defendant’s hostility toward the victim, malice, intent, and a
settled purpose to harm the victim.” Id.

               On appeal, the defendant argues that the 9-1-1 calls do not fall within the
Smith rule because the State failed to present clear and convincing evidence that the
defendant had committed any prior “violent acts” against the victim. Noting Officer
Cooper’s testimony that it was unclear that the defendant had actually assaulted the victim
and that the calls were more in the nature of “verbal disorders,” the defendant asserts that
the trial court erred by admitting them. The defendant’s assertion that the calls did not
constitute evidence of other bad acts arguably cuts against his assertion that evidence rule
404(b) barred their admission. In the calls, the victim claimed that the defendant wanted
to hit her and kill her, that he had hit her before, and that she was afraid of him. Officer
Cooper testified, however, that he saw no evidence from which he could conclude that the
defendant had struck the victim and that the incidents were arguments. In our view, even
if the evidence did not clearly and convincingly establish that the defendant committed a
“violent act” against the victim, it was probative of the querulous and pugnacious nature
of their relationship and of the defendant’s hostility toward the victim, and, accordingly,
relevant to establish his motive for harming the victim and, by extension, his identity as
the perpetrator. Consequently, the trial court did not err by admitting this evidence.
Additionally, the trial court specifically instructed the jury that if it concluded “that the
defendant has committed one or more bad acts other than those for which he is on trial, you
may not consider that evidence to prove his disposition to commit crimes such as those for
which he is on trial” but could consider such evidence only for the limited purpose of “the
nature of the relationship, identity, motive, intent.” Moreover, we easily conclude that,
considering the record as a whole, any error occasioned by the admission of this evidence
was harmless.

                                       II. Jail Calls

              The defendant next asserts that the trial court erred by admitting into
evidence the recording of the defendant’s conversations with his employer following his
arrest, arguing only that the probative value of the evidence was substantially outweighed
by the danger of unfair prejudice occasioned by its admission.

              Prior to trial, the defendant moved the trial court to exclude the recordings
on grounds that the statements made by the defendant’s employer constituted inadmissible
hearsay and that the defendant’s statements, though admissible, were substantially more
prejudicial than probative. The trial court found that the employer’s statements were not
offered for their truth and, thus, not hearsay and that the probative value of the recordings
outweighed the danger of unfair prejudice.
                                             -8-
              The trial court may exclude even relevant evidence “if its probative value is
substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or
misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless
presentation of cumulative evidence.” Tenn. R. Evid. 403. We review the trial court’s
decision to admit or exclude evidence pursuant to evidence rule 403 for an abuse of
discretion.

              In the calls, the defendant discussed the charges against him related to the
victim’s death. It would be difficult to fathom a situation when a homicide defendant’s
discussion of the charges against him and his relationship with the victim would not be at
least marginally relevant at a subsequent homicide trial. That being said, the defendant’s
statements at issue are not particularly probative in that he did not actually describe the
circumstances of the offense. In the same way, they are not particularly prejudicial.
Indeed, the defendant’s assertions in the call that the victim had been having “a lot of
problem with somebody else” tended to support his defense that someone else had killed
the victim. Additionally, the defendant’s employer testified on behalf of the defendant that
the references to domestic violence were actually meant to be a joke. Under these
circumstances, we cannot say that the trial court erred by admitting the jail calls.

                                   III. Excited Delirium

              Finally, the defendant claims that the trial court erred by permitting the
medical examiner to provide an expert opinion on the issue whether the defendant was
suffering from excited delirium at the time of the stabbing. He argues that the trial court
should have excluded the testimony because the State failed to comply with Tennessee
Rule of Criminal Procedure 12.2, which requires pretrial disclosure of expert testimony
about the defendant’s mental disease, defect, or condition “bearing on the issue of . . .
guilt.” The State asserts that it is not bound by the pretrial notice provision of Rule 12.2
and that the defendant opened the door to the evidence by questioning the medical
examiner about the effects of cocaine in general and about cocaine induced excited
delirium specifically.

              The State did not ask a single question about the effects occasioned by the
ingestion of certain drugs or about excited delirium during the direct examination of the
medical examiner, Doctor Steven Cogswell. During cross-examination, the defendant
asked Doctor Cogswell how cocaine would affect the human body generally, and he replied
that both cocaine and methamphetamine were central nervous system stimulants while
alcohol was a depressant.         Doctor Cogswell agreed that both cocaine and
methamphetamine “have a very individualized response” and that, for that reason, “we
can’t take a particular dose and say this is what this person would have done.” Doctor
                                            -9-
Cogswell agreed that cocaine could cause “delirium,” and, when prompted, explained,
“[D]elirium, technically, is an altered mental state. So there is such a thing as an excited
delirium that [is] frequently associated with cocaine and stimulant abuse . . . .” He said
that any person who ingested cocaine would “get an altered mental state” and would “by
definition . . . have achieved a state of delirium.” He added, “Now, they do not get an
excited delirium because an excited delirium has nearly a hundred percent mortality rate,
so obviously most folks who do cocaine don’t die from it.” Doctor Cogswell testified that
a person suffering from delirium due to stimulant use “might become irritable, you might
become delusional to the point of seeing things that aren’t there, and there’s a fairly broad
spectrum.” He added, “Physiologically, that is, with the body itself, stimulant drugs tend
to increase the heart rate, they cause sweating, they may cause blood pressure to go up,
respiration to go up or become more rapid.” Doctor Cogswell agreed that two different
people could have disparate reactions “from the same quantity of drugs or the same amount,
the actual same specimen of drugs.” He also agreed that, because cocaine is an unregulated
street drug, “you don’t really know what’s in it.”

               During redirect examination by the State, Doctor Cogswell testified without
objection that excited delirium syndrome was “initially called acute exhaustive mania, and
it was seen in mental institutions with schizophrenic patients.” He said that, following the
development of drugs to treat such patients, the syndrome “basically went away.” Excited
delirium experienced a resurgence among cocaine users in Miami in the 1980’s who had
“a very different kind of reaction to the drug than the norm.” Doctor Cogswell explained
that such “people become extremely paranoid and extremely violent,” adding,

              These are the ones you read about or see on TV where they
              take off all their clothes, they run out in the street, they’re
              smashing windows, attacking cars, basically behaving out of
              control. So, of course, police are called and they attempt to
              restrain this person and then they die.

In “excited delirium cases, their brain is driving that, because the brain is constantly being
bombarded with this aberrant pathway thing that’s going on that results in their heart
having [t]his potassium that’s way too low to keep it beating regularly and their hearts just
quit.” Doctor Cogswell estimated that “the fatality rate for excited delirium syndrome is
somewhere over 90 percent. These people are very very hard to save.” Doctor Cogswell
distinguished excited delirium from delirium in general, explaining that “[e]xcited delirium
is a medical emergency that has a very very high mortality. Delirium is just something that
we’ve all experienced” maybe due to alcohol consumption or high fever. Doctor Cogswell
said that those suffering from excited delirium “tend to have a really high body core
temperature . . . that may be the reason for tearing off their clothes,” that they also tend to
be “aggressive towards glass and mirrors,” and that “[t]hey’re a lot stronger than you would
                                             -10-
expect.” He reiterated that “a regular delirium is something that is just an altered mental
state of either perception or the amount of stimulation . . . your level of being obtunded or
essentially semi-comatose or very agitated” and emphasized that “you can have an agitated
delirium, but that’s not the same thing as an excited delirium. That’s just an agitation.”
Doctor Cogswell said that delirium has “a pretty broad spectrum” with excited delirium on
the high end. To determine the degree of delirium along that spectrum, “[y]ou’d have to
look at the clinical picture, what the patient is doing” at the time. Doctor Cogswell testified
that, in preparation for trial, he had reviewed the defendant’s medical records and had
listened to a recording of the 9-1-1 calls from September 26, 2016.

               At that point, the defendant objected, arguing that he had not opened the door
to Doctor Cogswell’s giving an opinion about the defendant’s degree of delirium by asking
questions about the effects of cocaine. Defense counsel said that she had intentionally
limited her questioning of Doctor Cogswell to those “along the lines of what the effects
might have been on [the victim]” and that she had asked those questions “so that the jury
would realize that just because I’m putting on later evidence about him, she didn’t
necessarily have cocaine delirium. The purpose of me asking those questions was in
relation to her, not to him.” The court pointed out that the defendant had specifically asked
Doctor Cogswell about the potential effects of both the defendant’s and the victim’s using
“the same source of cocaine.” Counsel replied that she had done so because she wanted to
“put in front of the jury evidence that somebody who has cocaine in their system may not
necessarily have cocaine delirium.” She also claimed that she was “caught off guard about
this because I had absolutely no idea that Dr. Cogswell was looking at [the defendant’s]
medical records” and claimed that it would be unfair to ask Doctor Cogswell “to elicit an
opinion based on partial evidence that was selected by the D.A.” The trial court found that
the defense had “notice that he’s a witness” and

              that the defense has opened the door to this delirium line of
              questioning because [the State] did not ask a single question
              about delirium in the direct examination. The defense began
              to ask about delirium, what delirium was, led the doctor’s
              testimony on cross-examination into that “delirium” means an
              altered mental status and that all drugs cause an altered mental
              status, that there is an excited delirium that can be caused by
              cocaine, that it is a different thing from just a delirium caused
              by taking drugs in general, the symptoms of an excited
              delirium, that cocaine can cause delirium, the physical
              symptoms of excited delirium, a heart rate increase, sweating,
              respiratory issues, that the vast majority of cocaine on the street
              is not pure. And the doctor answered in response to your
              questioning that you really don’t know what’s in cocaine. I do
                                             -11-
               believe that that opens the door . . . .

The court also ruled “that the defense has opened the door such that Doctor Cogswell can
testify about things that he observed from the medical records related to [the defendant’s]
medical condition, about his behavior that was documented.” The court also allowed the
defendant “to have the benefit of a jury-out hearing” to hear Doctor Cogswell’s testimony
and “make any further objection that you might have.”

              Following the jury-out hearing, the trial court confirmed its ruling that the
defendant had opened the door to Doctor Cogswell’s testimony on this issue. During
further redirect examination, Doctor Cogswell testified that one could be in a state of
delirium and still understand the nature and consequences of one’s actions, saying that the
level of understanding would depend “on how deep or wide your delirium is. It could be
anywhere from a little delirious to extremely delirious, so in that state, yeah, you could be
fairly cognizant.” He said that

               there is no laboratory test for the degree of delirium. You have
               to look at the person and see what they’re doing, how they’re
               acting, how they respond to questions, how they respond to
               what you’re attempting to do. You have to basically interview
               them and see what their connection with reality is, because,
               after all, that’s what the mind-altering drugs are for is to kind
               of take you a little bit away from reality.

Doctor Cogswell reiterated that he had reviewed the 9-1-1 call from September 26, 2016,
the defendant’s medical records from his treatment at the emergency room that day, and “a
video.”3 Based upon his review, he concluded that the defendant was not in a state of
excited delirium on the day of the offense, explaining that the defendant had “multiple
episodes of acting out behavior . . . on a baseline of fairly lucid actions, . . . basically doing
what he’s told to do, go here, sit here, stay here, . . . and responding relatively appropriately
to questions, but then having a break where there would be very inappropriate responses.”

               During further cross-examination by the defendant, Doctor Cogswell
conceded that he could have been “a lot more specific and definitive” about the defendant’s
level of delirium “had I actually interviewed and interacted with him. You know, what
you could do secondhand and thirdhand is somewhat limited, but still, in this case, I think
there’s sufficient data.” Doctor Cogswell agreed that the defendant had been diagnosed
with “intoxication delirium” and that he had not reviewed the entire case file or interviewed
3
         The video reviewed by the doctor was appartently body camera footage of the defendant shortly
after his arrest. By agreement of the parties, the video was not introduced into evidence and not more
explicitly described by any witness at trial.
                                                -12-
any of the witnesses who observed the defendant’s behavior. Nevertheless, he maintained
that he could not say whether that information would cause him to change his opinion
“[w]ithout knowing what that information was.” He allowed that “[g]enerally speaking,”
he would have preferred to have access to all of the potentially relevant material but said
that “the relevant information is frequently buried among a thousand pages of unhelpful
information, so it becomes a matter of practicality.” He explained, “I’m sure that the
nuggets of the important information are in there, but I don’t know how much unimportant
information is with it” and that, for that reason, “I’m sure I probably really don’t” need to
review all of the information. Doctor Cogswell said that most people die from excited
delirium without treatment with “a sedating antipsychotic.”

              Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 12.2 provides in pertinent part:

              (b) Expert Testimony of Defendant’s Mental Condition.

              (1) Notice of Expert Testimony. A defendant who intends to
              introduce expert testimony relating to a mental disease or
              defect or any other mental condition of the defendant bearing
              on the issue of his or her guilt shall so notify the district
              attorney general in writing and file a copy of the notice with
              the clerk.

              (2) Timing. Notice described in Rule 12.2(b)(1) shall be filed
              within the time provided for the filing of pretrial motions or at
              such later time as the court may direct. The court may, for
              cause shown, allow the defendant to file the notice late, grant
              additional trial-preparation time, or make other appropriate
              orders.
                      ....

              (d) Failure to Provide Notice of Expert Testimony or to Submit
              to Mental Examination. If a defendant fails to give notice
              under Rule 12.2(b) or does not submit to an examination
              ordered under Rule 12.2(c), the court may exclude the
              testimony of any expert witness offered by the defendant on
              the issue of the defendant’s mental condition. . . .

Tenn. R. Crim. P. 12.2(b), (d). By their terms, the notice provisions in Rule 12.2 apply
only to the defendant. Indeed, the Advisory Commission Comment to the rule specifies
that “Rule 12.2(b) imposes a notice requirement on the defendant when expert witnesses
are to testify as to the defendant’s mental state.” Tenn. R. Crim. P. 12.2, Advisory Comm’n
                                            -13-
Comment (emphasis added). Accordingly, Rule 12.2 does not avail the defendant of any
relief.

              Moreover, we agree with the State and the trial court that the defendant
opened the door to Doctor Cogswell’s testimony. The State did not ask any questions about
delirium during direct examination. Instead, the defendant broached the subject first on
cross-examination by asking questions about the effects of cocaine, whether the use of
cocaine could cause delirium, and about the symptoms of excited delirium. The defendant
also asked specifically whether it would have been possible for the defendant and the
victim to react differently after having used cocaine from the same source. The defendant
did not, at any point, object to Doctor Cogswell’s qualification to render an opinion on
whether the defendant was suffering from excited delirium at the time of the stabbing but
argued only that the doctor had reviewed insufficient information to render such an
opinion. In our view, the nature of the information reviewed by the doctor would go to the
weight of his opinion and not its admissibility. See generally Payne v. CSX Transp., Inc.,
467 S.W.3d 413, 457 (Tenn. 2015) (“So long as a qualified expert can offer an opinion,
based upon reliable data, that will substantially assist the trier of fact, the expert’s testimony
should be permitted.”) (citations omitted). Under these circumstances, the trial court did
not err by admitting Doctor Cogswell’s testimony.

                                          Conclusion

               Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

                                                      _________________________________
                                                     JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE

                                              -14-