State of Tennessee v. Jayme Lynn Shaffer ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                                            01/24/2019
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    November 27, 2018 Session
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JAYME LYNN SHAFFER
    Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County
    No. 110925      Scott Green, Judge
    ___________________________________
    No. E2017-02432-CCA-R3-CD
    ___________________________________
    The Defendant, Jayme Lynn Shaffer, pleaded guilty to two counts of theft of property
    valued at more than $1,000 with an agreed effective sentence of three years. The parties
    agreed to allow the trial court to determine the manner of service of her sentence and
    whether she was entitled to judicial diversion. After the hearing, the trial court denied the
    Defendant’s request for judicial diversion but granted her request for a probationary
    sentence. On appeal, the Defendant contends that the trial court erred when it denied her
    request for judicial diversion. After review, we affirm the trial court’s judgments.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Criminal Court Affirmed
    ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS T.
    WOODALL and D. KELLY THOMAS, JR., joined.
    Robert W. White, Sr., Maryville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jayme Lynn Shaffer.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Benjamin A. Ball, Senior
    Assistant Attorney General; Charme Prater Allen, District Attorney General; and William
    Charles Bright, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    I. Facts
    The Defendant was indicted by information for two counts of theft of property
    valued at more than $1,000. The charges indicate that the Defendant took money from
    two businesses, Tactical Advantage Corporation (“TAC”) and SIA, LLC. The Defendant
    pleaded guilty to those offenses on July 10, 2017. A copy of the guilty plea hearing is not
    included in the record.
    The presentence report, which is included in the record, contains an official
    version of the facts and also the Defendant’s version of the facts. They are as follows:
    OFFICIAL VERSION
    ....
    On 08/11/2016 a warrant was issued alleging the Defendant committed the
    offense of theft ($1,000 to $9,999.99). This incident occurred on or about
    Friday, 06/05/2015 and Wednesday, 10/14/2015 at 16:00 . . . in Knoxville,
    Tennessee. On or about 06/05/2015, the Defendant was employed by
    victim business, [TAC], as a book keeper. The Defendant wrote an
    unauthorized check on the victim business Suntrust Bank Account to
    codefendant, Demon Richards, for $1,250. On or about 10/14/2015, the
    Defendant wrote another check to the codefendant for $1,800. The
    Defendant did not have authorization to write checks to the codefendant
    and to deprive the victim business of their money, totaling $3,050. This
    occurred in Knox County, Tennessee.
    On 08/11/2016, a warrant was issued alleging the Defendant committed the
    offense of theft ($1,000 to $9,999.99). This incident occurred on or about
    Monday 11/29/2015 at 8:00 until 11/11/2016 . . . in Knoxville, Tennessee.
    The Defendant was employed as a book keeper for victim business, SIA
    LLC. The Defendant wrote four unauthorized checks on the victim’s
    business bank account to codefendant, Demon Richards. The codefendant
    is not a vendor and did not provide any services or goods to the victim
    business. The Defendant did not have permission from the victim to
    deprive them of $9,805. This occurred in Knox County, Tennessee.
    ....
    DEFENDANT’S VERSION
    “While working at [TAC], I met a guy name[d] Demon Richards. Demon
    and I became friends, and would occasionally meet for dinner and drinks.
    We would talk about o[u]r day, jobs, etc.
    Demon made the suggestion that I write him a check, and he would cash it,
    then give me some money. My first reaction was “no way.” During the
    next several weeks of our friendship, it was mentioned several times, and I
    -2-
    told him I would do it. So I wrote a check to him, he cashed the check. We
    split the money.
    It was by far the worst decision and action I ever made and done. I am in
    no way putting blame on him, for I know I am responsible for my choices.
    At the Defendant’s sentencing hearing, the parties presented the following
    evidence: Morgan Alexander Schubert, an owner at SIA Firearms testified that his
    business was a firearms training facility located in Knoxville, Tennessee, which he and
    his partner, Scott Hale, started in November 2015. The Defendant, who was their
    bookkeeper, wrote the first unauthorized check within forty-five days of their opening
    their new business. Mr. Schubert said that he had run several businesses and used
    internal controls to prevent something like this from happening. Their business was so
    new, however, that the business was operating using a temporary checkbook, so those
    controls were not all in place. The Defendant wrote the unauthorized checks out of the
    business’s temporary checkbook. The Defendant removed the check stubs from the
    checkbook and then charged customer accounts to compensate for the stolen money.
    Mr. Schubert testified that the Defendant was aware that he had been diagnosed
    with cancer. Before his diagnosis, it was his job to ensure the books were accurate. After
    his diagnosis, he began chemotherapy and was not able to oversee the bookkeeping as
    closely.
    Mr. Schubert said that there were prompts within the software that told the
    Defendant that she was not making accurate entries, but she made the entries anyway to
    hide her theft. She took money out of the business’s capital account and put the
    inventory item into another vendor who had not supplied them anything.
    Mr. Schubert said that, after his third surgery related to his cancer treatment, he
    was able to walk again and came back to work. He noticed that the check stubs were
    missing from the checkbook, and he questioned the Defendant about it. The Defendant
    quit her employment. After she left, Mr. Schubert had to expend $14,000 in an attempt to
    repair, and then ultimately replace, the accounting software.
    Mr. Schubert testified that the company had invested $800,000 in inventory and
    remodeling and that the business was not profitable at the time that the Defendant took
    money from it.
    Nathan Scott Hale, Jr., testified that he was the managing partner at SIA Firearms.
    Mr. Hale testified that he worked for another armory, TAC, where he became acquainted
    with Mr. Schubert. The two decided to open their own business with Mr. Schubert
    -3-
    providing the financing and Mr. Hale providing the skill and sales. The Defendant was
    the bookkeeper at TAC while he worked there, and she seemed like an intelligent young
    lady, so SIA hired her when they opened to be their bookkeeper also.
    Mr. Hale recalled that Mr. Schubert was diagnosed with cancer two days after they
    opened the store, so more of the responsibilities fell to Mr. Hale. The theft made him feel
    as if he did not live up to those responsibilities, despite his working between seventy and
    eighty hours per week. Mr. Hale said that he had trusted the Defendant.
    The State argued that the granting of judicial diversion was inappropriate given the
    Defendant’s actions. It asserted that she took advantage of a situation wherein she was
    responsible for money and one of the owners got sick and could not oversee the
    Defendant’s work. Her actions were based solely on greed. After this offense, the
    Defendant had been charged with forging a check in Blount County, which, along with
    other factors, showed that her amenability to correction was low.
    The State acknowledged that it had agreed to diversion for the Defendant’s co-
    defendant but stated that the co-defendant did not violate a position of trust and was
    unaware of Mr. Schubert’s cancer diagnosis and treatment. Further, the State’s position
    was that the Defendant had met her co-defendant on a dating app and approached him
    with this opportunity.
    Upon questioning by the trial court, the Defendant’s counsel said that the
    Defendant’s Blount County charge allegedly occurred when she attempted to negotiate a
    check from a business where she worked at the time. Counsel argued that judicial
    diversion was still appropriate because these were non-violent offenses committed by a
    Defendant with a low risk of recidivism and high amenability to correction. Counsel
    asserted that the Defendant had accepted responsibility and expressed remorse.
    The trial court continued the case for thirty days in an attempt to learn the outcome
    of the Blount County charges before sentencing the Defendant.
    At the subsequent hearing, Jennifer Henson from Tennessee Truck Driving School
    in Blount County testified that the Defendant worked for the school in May 2016. The
    school terminated the Defendant’s employment after the Defendant entered an employee
    on the payroll that was not an employee. In order to do this, the Defendant had to enter a
    false name and address into the databank that was responsible for payroll. The Defendant
    entered the information falsely and also reported that this individual was making $52,000
    per year, which would have been $2,000 bi-weekly. The Defendant falsely entered all of
    the information on the fake employee’s I-9 document. The Defendant further falsely
    filled out a W-4 and tax exemption documents.
    -4-
    Ms. Henson said that when she discovered the Defendant’s actions, she contacted
    the payroll company, who provided the Defendant’s user ID as the one that had been used
    to set up the false employee. At this point, the owner of the company terminated the
    Defendant’s employment.
    Defendant’s counsel informed the trial court that the Defendant was employed at
    the time of the sentencing hearing, that her current employer knew of her history, and that
    the employer had written a letter in support of the Defendant being granted judicial
    diversion.
    The Defendant offered her statement to the trial court in which she stated that she
    could not change the past but would like to make it right. She said that she knew that Mr.
    Schubert had a medical issue but that it must have been a brief procedure because he was
    back at the business shortly after the procedure. She reminded the trial court that her
    only past criminal history was one speeding ticket and a seat belt violation and that those
    were ten years ago.
    The trial court denied the Defendant’s request for judicial diversion but granted
    her request for full probation, finding:
    [T]here have been multiple occasions where the State of Tennessee has . . .
    objected to placement [of a defendant] on judicial diversion and this Court
    has overruled their objection and placed someone being prosecuted for theft
    of a business on judicial diversion.
    You did a lot of things right, but you did a lot of things wrong. The
    reason I wanted to hear from Ms. Henson, who testified here just a few
    minutes ago, if you had been caught immediately on the theft that occurred
    that led to the convictions in this case and had been convicted and
    sentenced and thereafter did what I believe you did, and I’m not asking you
    to comment because you have a Fifth Amendment privilege not to, but I am
    convinced that you were setting up a scheme at Tennessee Truck Driving
    School to start collecting paychecks for . . . a ghost employee, someone
    who didn’t exist, and you were going to pocket it.
    So had that occurred and you already been on diversion in this
    instance this Court would not have hesitated in revoking your diversion. So
    I can’t see the logic in placing you on diversion at this point in time.
    -5-
    I toyed with the idea, I’ve gone back and forth about whether or not
    to give you some jail time, I’m not going to do that, because I want you to
    keep your job so that you’re making the money to pay these men back. But
    if there’s any evidence put before this Court that you’re not paying them
    back as you have been ordered to do, or if there is evidence that you are
    suspected and it’s proven that you are involved in some sort of larcenous
    scheme with an employer that you’re with now, or any other employer,
    within the next three years, you are going to the penitentiary, do you
    understand that?
    For each of the two convictions, the trial court sentenced the Defendant to three
    years in the Tennessee Department of Correction, suspended to supervised probation. It
    denied her request for judicial diversion.
    It is from these judgments that the Defendant now appeals.
    II. Analysis
    The Defendant contends that the trial court did not consider the relevant factors for
    determining eligibility for judicial diversion as enumerated in State v. Electroplating, Inc,
    
    990 S.W.2d 211
    , 229 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996). She contends that those factors weigh in
    favor of her being granted judicial diversion. The State agrees that the trial court did not
    consider the relevant factors on the record but contends that the record supports its denial
    of judicial diversion. We agree with the State.
    The standard of review for questions related to probation or any other alternative
    sentence is “‘an abuse of discretion standard of review, granting a presumption of
    reasonableness to within-range sentencing decisions that reflect a proper application of
    the purposes and principles of our Sentencing Act.’” State v. Caudle, 
    388 S.W.3d 273
    ,
    278-79 (Tenn. 2012) (citing State v. Bise, 
    380 S.W.3d 682
    , 707 (Tenn. 2012)). A trial
    court’s decision regarding probation will only be invalidated if the court “wholly
    departed from the relevant statutory considerations in reaching its determination.” State
    v. Sihapanya, 
    516 S.W.3d 473
    , 476 (Tenn. 2014) (order) (per curiam). Under an abuse of
    discretion standard, an appellate court may not substitute its judgment for that of the trial
    court. 
    Id. at 475.
    The application of the purposes and principles of sentencing involves a
    consideration of “[t]he potential or lack of potential for the rehabilitation or treatment of
    the defendant . . . in determining the sentence alternative or length of a term to be
    imposed.” T.C.A. § 40-35-103(5).
    “Judicial diversion” is a reference to the provision in Tennessee Code Annotated
    section 40-35-313(a) (2014) for a trial court’s deferring proceedings in a criminal case.
    -6-
    See T.C.A. § 40-35-313(a)(1)(A). Pursuant to such a deferral, the trial court places the
    defendant on probation “without entering a judgment of guilty.” 
    Id. To be
    eligible or
    “qualified” for judicial diversion, the defendant must plead guilty to, or be found guilty
    of, an offense that is not “a sexual offense or a Class A or Class B felony,” and the
    defendant must not have previously been convicted of a felony or a Class A
    misdemeanor. T.C.A. § 40-35-313(a)(1)(B)(i)(b), (c). Diversion requires the consent of
    the qualified defendant. T.C.A. § 40-35-313(a)(1)(A). “[A] ‘qualified’ defendant is not
    necessarily entitled to diversion. Whether to grant judicial diversion is left to the
    discretionary authority of the trial courts.” State v. King, 
    432 S.W.3d 316
    , 326 (Tenn.
    2014). Following a determination that the defendant is eligible for judicial diversion, the
    trial court must consider
    (a) the accused’s amenability to correction, (b) the circumstances of the
    offense, (c) the accused’s criminal record, (d) the accused’s social history,
    (e) the accused’s physical and mental health, and (f) the deterrence value to
    the accused as well as others. The trial court should also consider whether
    judicial diversion will serve the ends of justice—the interests of the public
    as well as the accused.
    
    Id. (quoting State
    v. Parker, 
    932 S.W.2d 945
    , 958 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1996)). “Further,
    the trial court must weigh the factors against each other and place an explanation of its
    ruling on the record.” 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 326
    (citing State v. Electroplating, Inc., 
    990 S.W.2d 211
    , 229 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1998) ).
    Although judicial diversion is not a sentence, our supreme court determined that
    the standard of review first expressed in State v. Bise, applies to “appellate review for a
    trial court’s sentencing decision to either grant or deny judicial diversion.” 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 325
    . Importantly, however, the court emphasized that the adoption of the Bise
    standard of review “did not abrogate the requirements set forth in Parker and
    Electroplating, which are essential considerations for judicial diversion.” 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 326
    .
    The trial court need not provide a recitation of all the applicable “factors when
    justifying its decision on the record in order to obtain the presumption of
    reasonableness,” but “the record should reflect that the trial court considered the Parker
    and Electroplating factors in rendering its decision and that it identified the specific
    factors applicable to the case before it.” 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 327
    . When the trial court
    considers each of the factors enumerated in Parker and weighs them against each other,
    placing its findings in the record, as required by Electroplating, Inc., we “apply a
    presumption of reasonableness,” per Bise, and will “uphold the grant or denial so long as
    there is any substantial evidence to support the trial court’s decision.” 
    Id. When “the
                                               -7-
    trial court fails to consider and weigh the applicable common law factors, the
    presumption of reasonableness does not apply and the abuse of discretion standard . . . is
    not appropriate.” 
    Id. Instead, “the
    appellate courts may either conduct a de novo review
    or, if more appropriate under the circumstances, remand the issue for reconsideration.
    The determination as to whether the appellate court should conduct a de novo review or
    remand for reconsideration is within the discretion of the reviewing court.” 
    Id. at 328.
    Although the trial court did not expressly address all of the relevant factors, the
    record in the instant case is sufficient for a de novo review. See 
    King, 432 S.W.3d at 328
    .
    While the record does not include the guilty plea hearing transcript, it does include the
    circumstances of the offense in both the presentence report and as testified to by
    witnesses in the sentencing hearings.
    We first note that the Defendant is “qualified” for judicial diversion under the
    requirements of Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-35-313(a)(1)(B) (2014). We
    therefore turn to discuss the factors enumerated in Parker and Electroplating. We
    conclude that the first factor, whether the Defendant is amenable to correction, weighs
    against granting her judicial diversion. As the trial court found, the Defendant committed
    an additional offense after the two offenses in this case. She used her position of trust to
    steal money from her employers in this case. Having been caught in this case, she left
    her employment and took another position with a driving school. There, she created the
    identity of a false employee in a computer system with the intent to pay that employee
    money that the Defendant would then benefit from. The theft from this third employer
    occurred three months before she was charged in this case. Her repeated pattern of
    deceptive acts of theft from her employers weighs heavily against her being granted
    judicial diversion.
    The circumstances of her offenses also do not weigh in favor of her being granted
    judicial diversion. The Defendant took more than $3,050 from her employer, writing two
    checks four months apart to a man, Demon Richards, who then cashed them and gave the
    Defendant half of the money. The State’s position was that the Defendant approached
    Mr. Richards with this scheme, and the Defendant posited that it was Mr. Richards’s idea.
    SIA, a new company, hired the Defendant to be their bookkeeper. Shortly after opening,
    the SIA partner in charge of the finances became ill with cancer, a fact which he says the
    Defendant knew. Forty-five days after the new business opened, and a month after her
    first offenses, the Defendant wrote four checks totaling almost $10,000 to Mr. Richards,
    with whom she split the proceeds. She agreed that the unauthorized checks were not
    detected earlier in part because of Mr. Schubert’s illness, but she said she did not know
    he had cancer or the extent of his illness. We conclude that the Defendant took
    advantage of her position of trust as bookkeeper for two separate companies and also
    took advantage of the fact that one of the SIA partners was sick and unable to oversee her
    -8-
    work more closely. These circumstances do not lend themselves to a grant of judicial
    diversion.
    The Defendant has no mentionable criminal record, which weighs in favor of
    judicial diversion. The Defendant’s social history weighs in favor of diversion to the
    extent that she is a single mother who cares for her child and has good social connections.
    It weighs against diversion to the extent that she met a man on a dating app and then was
    either persuaded herself or she persuaded him to commit repeated crimes against her
    employers. The record evinces that the Defendant is in good physical and mental health
    and that this offense was committed solely based on her own greed.
    Finally, as to deterrence, we conclude that this factor weighs against granting the
    Defendant diversion. The Defendant used her position as a bookkeeper, a position of
    trust, to write unauthorized checks from her employer’s business account. The partners
    of SIA approached the Defendant and asked her to keep the books for a business that they
    were opening. The Defendant took advantage of her employer when the business was
    brand new and the owners had just expended a large amount of capital on inventory. As
    the bookkeeper, she was aware that the business was not yet profitable at the time that
    she stole repeatedly from it. Further, the Defendant committed her offenses shortly after
    the business opened, during a time when the owner in charge of supervising the
    Defendant was ill.
    Ultimately, the Defendant’s continued criminal behavior also impacts our analysis
    of the circumstances of the offenses, as the Defendant’s convictions are more than
    isolated instances of criminal behavior. Rather, they constitute a pattern of theft from
    two different employers. Therefore, the Defendant’s amenability to correction, the
    deterrence value to the Defendant, and the circumstances of the offense weigh heavily
    against the grant of judicial diversion. See State v. Parsons, 
    437 S.W.3d 457
    , 496 (Tenn.
    Crim. App. 2011) (affirming denial of judicial diversion where, even though the
    remaining factors were satisfactory or inconclusive, the defendant’s amenability to
    correction and the circumstances of the offense “weighed heavily” against judicial
    diversion).
    Based on our de novo review of the record, we conclude that the ends of justice
    would not be served by granting the Defendant’s request for judicial diversion.
    Therefore, even though the trial court did not adequately consider all of the necessary
    factors, the record supports the trial court’s denial of judicial diversion.
    III. Conclusion
    -9-
    After a thorough review of the record and relevant authorities, we affirm the trial
    court’s judgments.
    ____________________________________
    ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER, JUDGE
    - 10 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E2017-02432-CCA-R3-CD

Judges: Judge Robert W. Wedemeyer

Filed Date: 1/24/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/24/2019