State of Tennessee v. Gregory Nelson and Tina Nelson ( 2015 )


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  •             IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT JACKSON
    January 6, 2015 Session
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. GREGORY NELSON AND TINA NELSON
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Lauderdale County
    No. 9132    Joseph H. Walker, III, Judge
    _______________________
    No. W2014-00494-CCA-R3-CD (C) - Filed May 5, 2015
    _______________________
    A Lauderdale County jury convicted the Defendant-Appellants, Gregory Nelson and Tina
    Nelson, of the charged offenses of first degree felony murder during the perpetration of
    aggravated child abuse and aggravated child abuse. Tina Nelson was sentenced to life
    imprisonment for the first degree felony murder conviction and to fifteen years for the
    aggravated child abuse conviction, and Gregory Nelson was sentenced to life
    imprisonment for the first degree murder conviction and to twenty years for the
    aggravated child abuse conviction. In this consolidated appeal, Gregory1 and Tina
    Nelson argue that the evidence is insufficient to sustain their convictions. Upon review,
    we affirm the judgments of the trial court.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Circuit Court Affirmed
    CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. GLENN
    and ROGER A. PAGE, JJ., joined.
    James E. Lanier, District Public Defender; and David S. Stockton, Assistant Public
    Defender, Somerville, Tennessee, for the Defendant-Appellant, Gregory Nelson.
    Lyle A. Jones, Covington, Tennessee, for the Defendant-Appellant, Tina Nelson.
    Robert E. Cooper, Attorney General and Reporter; Jonathan H. Wardle, Assistant
    Attorney General; D. Michael Dunavant, District Attorney General; and Julie K. Pillow,
    Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.
    1
    Because the Defendant-Appellants share the same last name, we will occasionally refer to them
    by their first names in this opinion. We intend no disrespect in doing so.
    OPINION
    The victim, E.N.,2 Gregory and Tina Nelson‟s two-and-a-half-month-old daughter,
    died on May 11, 2011. At the time of her death, the victim had brain hemorrhages, a
    retinal hemorrhage in one eye, optic hemorrhages behind both eyes, and multiple broken
    ribs. The autopsy report stated that the victim‟s cause of death was homicide from a
    closed head injury and that the victim‟s numerous injuries were not from natural causes.
    Gregory and Tina Nelson, who were unable to sufficiently explain the cause of the
    victim‟s extensive injuries, were subsequently indicted for first degree felony murder and
    aggravated child abuse.
    Trial. William Freeman, an emergency medical technician (EMT), testified that
    on May 11, 2011, he responded to a call from the Nelsons‟ residence that their infant was
    not breathing. The original call came in at 7:07 a.m., and the ambulance arrived at the
    Nelsons‟ home at 7:18 a.m. When Freeman arrived, Tina Nelson handed him the victim,
    who was “obviously lifeless[.]” He and another EMT took the victim to the ambulance to
    conduct CPR, place her on a monitor, and evaluate her. They ventilated the victim for
    several minutes until they determined that she had died. During this time, the victim
    never had any cardiac activity and never took a breath. Freeman said the victim had
    nothing blocking her airway. He was surprised to learn that the victim was two and a half
    months old because she appeared to be substantially younger based on her size.
    Freeman stated that Tina Nelson was “pretty much hysterical” when he first made
    contact with her. Once he and the other EMT disclosed that the victim had passed away,
    Mr. Nelson became upset because he thought they “should have gotten there sooner” and
    “had to be restrained by one of the Haywood County officers.” Freeman stated that as
    they were working on the victim, neither Tina nor Gregory Nelson ever came to the
    ambulance to check on her. Once he informed them that their baby had passed away, the
    Nelsons‟ family arrived. At that point, Gregory and Tina Nelson went to a family
    member‟s car, where they were “smoking cigarettes, laughing, cutting up, just as though
    nothing had happened.” He described their behavior as “unusual.” He stated that the
    Nelsons never asked to see the victim while he was at their residence.
    Steve Sanders, the Sheriff of Lauderdale County, testified that he was also present
    at the Nelsons‟ home on May 11, 2011. He described Gregory‟s and Tina‟s demeanor as
    calm. Tina told him that the victim, upon waking, began crying and that she got her out
    of the crib and placed her on the mattress on the floor. She fixed a bottle, gave it to the
    victim, and walked away. When she returned, the victim was unresponsive. She then
    screamed to her husband, Gregory Nelson, and he made the 9-1-1 call. Tina also told
    Sheriff Sanders that they noticed the victim breathing heavily around 8:00 p.m. the
    2
    It is this court‟s policy to use initials when referring to minor victims and their minor siblings.
    -2-
    previous night. When he examined the victim‟s body, he noticed a red mark that
    appeared to be a birth mark on the victim‟s lower back but did not see any bruises or any
    other marks.
    Cheryl Manns, the custodian of the records at the Lauderdale Community
    Hospital, testified that the hospital‟s records showed that the victim, who was dead on
    arrival at the hospital, had been suffering from a cold for the last two days, had
    experienced decreased appetite, and had been taking amoxicillin that had been prescribed
    by a physician. The records also showed that the victim stopped breathing because she
    began choking during a feeding and that the victim‟s father attempted CPR. The records
    noted a “small scab defect to [the victim‟s] right nose.” They also contained the
    following information about the victim: “Recently seen, treated by doctor. EMS called
    at 7:07 [a.m.]. Per family states child not breathing at 6:45 [a.m.]. Called family first to
    get car, then called EMS.” Manns conceded that she could not testify as to whether the
    information contained in the hospital‟s records was true or false, only that this
    information was found within the records.
    Dr. Miguel Laboy, a medical examiner for the Shelby County and West Tennessee
    Regional Forensic Center, testified as an expert in the field of forensic pathology. Dr.
    Laboy stated that he performed the victim‟s autopsy on May 12, 2011, the day after her
    death. After performing an external examination, Dr. Laboy determined that the victim,
    who was two-and-a-half months old at the time of her death, weighed 6.5 pounds and was
    small for her age. He also observed a very small abrasion on the victim‟s nose and a
    half-inch by quarter-inch dark brown bruise under her right jaw. He stated that it was
    unusual to see a bruise under the jaw of an infant because that is a not a prominent area of
    the body, explaining, “[If] someone drop[s] her or they fall and [get] scrape[d], usually
    they‟re going to hit the prominent things like the forehead or the eyebrows or the cheeks,
    the sides of the jaw. [The area under the jaw is] an area that‟s kind of protected[.]”
    Upon conducting the internal examination, he did not find any evidence of bruises
    on the victim‟s scalp. However, he did find “a thin layer of subdural hemorrhage in the
    right inner aspect with blood clots and yellow-green coloration,” as well as a
    “hemorrhage on the left side with also yellow or golden coloration.” In addition, he
    observed a “a patchy subarachnoid hemorrhage and yellow discoloration obvious on the
    right parietal lobe [at the top of the victim‟s head].” He explained that there was blood
    accumulation between the thick membrane under the skull and the brain. There were also
    patchy areas of the brain that had different blood accumulations. He said the areas of
    “yellow-golden discoloration” were caused by multiple bruises that had occurred in the
    past. He also found subdural hemorrhages that were recent injuries that showed “yellow-
    golden” and “yellow, orange, golden” on the parietal lobe. These subdural hemorrhages
    showed “areas of recent bleeding and old bleeding that was reabsorbing.” He also saw
    -3-
    areas of recent bleeding and old bleeding that were reabsorbing in the subarachnoid
    hemorrhage, which was on the back of the brain.
    Dr. Laboy stated that although there could be natural or traumatic causes for
    hemorrhages of this type, he did not find any natural causes for the victim‟s brain
    hemorrhages and concluded that they were from a “traumatic injury.” He also reviewed
    the victim‟s medical records and found nothing that would indicate that these
    hemorrhages were from natural causes.
    In addition to the victim‟s brain hemorrhages, Dr. Laboy found recent “perioptic
    hemorrhage[s]” between the sheath and the optic nerve of both eyeballs. He stated that
    perioptic hemorrhages are caused when there is a traumatic injury that increases the
    pressure, causing the brain to collapse and blood to accumulate in that area. In addition,
    he noted that the victim‟s left eye had a recent retinal hemorrhage, a hemorrhage inside
    the eye, that was also caused by traumatic injury. Dr. Laboy did not find any solid mass
    that could have caused the victim to choke. He said that liquid, like milk or formula,
    would not cause a choking death in an infant, although it might cause the infant to cough,
    throw up, or react in some way. There was no visible milk in the victim‟s lungs or
    bronchial tubes, and there was no evidence that the victim suffered a choking death.
    Dr. Laboy also examined the victim‟s skeletal system and found healing fractures
    on six ribs on the left lateral side and healing fractures on eight ribs on the left posterior
    side. He also found healing fractures on five ribs on the right lateral side. Dr. Laboy
    stated that these fractures were healing with calluses, and there was a recent refracture in
    the ninth left posterior rib with blood around it. He asserted that posterior refractures in
    infants are “more consistent with some inflicted trauma” rather than accidental trauma
    and that the victim‟s fractured ribs were consistent with a squeezing type of inflicted
    trauma. Because the rib fractures were in the process of healing, he concluded they were
    probably less than a month old. Dr. Laboy acknowledged that because all the rib
    fractures, except the most recent fracture, looked microscopically the same, they could
    have been the result of a single event. He opined that the victim‟s bones were normal and
    not brittle.
    When Dr. Laboy examined the victim‟s lungs, he found that the victim had
    chronic bronchiolitis that had been going on for weeks. He also determined that the
    victim had a recent pneumonia occurrence that had been going on for the last day or few
    days. He explained that multiple rib fractures cause pain, which can affect breathing and
    can make a person more likely to develop pneumonia. Dr. Laboy also stated that an
    infant with a brain injury is more likely to develop pneumonia.
    -4-
    Dr. Laboy concluded that the bruise underneath the victim‟s jaw was a recent
    injury because his examination of that area did not show any “recent breakdown of the
    red blood cells[.]” However, he acknowledged that administering CPR on a dead body
    could cause a bruise by impacting, stretching, or pinching an area by artificially making
    the heart pump.
    Dr. Laboy opined that the victim‟s cause of death was a closed head injury. He
    explained that death results from a closed head injury when the inflammation becomes so
    great that it damages the brain. While he noted that an infant can survive trauma to the
    brain, in this case, the victim had evidence of an old brain injury and then a rebleeding
    over that area that likely caused the victim‟s death. He stated that the victim could have
    had an aneurysm, a seizure, or could have died from an inability to get oxygen because of
    a problem in the lungs. He stated that it was unlikely that the victim‟s brain injuries were
    more than a month to a month and a half old.
    Dr. Laboy noted in his report that “the finding of rib fractures raises the index of
    suspicion that the acute intracranial hemorrhage is traumatic in nature.” After reviewing
    the victim‟s histology, cultures, rib fractures, toxicology reports, and after consulting
    with a neuropathologist, Dr. Laboy concluded that the brain hemorrhages and retinal
    hemorrhages were not from natural causes. He stated that his autopsy was more accurate
    than either an MRI or an Ultrasound. Dr. Laboy opined that the areas showing
    reabsorption of blood on the subarachnoid space had been there longer than two or three
    days but not longer than a few weeks. He also stated that there were areas of recent
    hemorrhaging in the subarachnoid space. He acknowledged that there was no bruising on
    the scalp, no skull fractures, and no upper neck injuries. While he admitted that there
    could be natural causes for a subdural hemorrhage or subarachnoid hemorrhage, he did
    not see any evidence that these injuries were from natural causes. He said that natural
    causes for these hemorrhages would include a vascular malformation that breaks and
    bleeds into the subarachnoid space or subdural space, tumors that bleed out to these areas,
    tumors in the dura that bleed, problems with coagulation, and mutations that affect the
    brain. Dr. Laboy acknowledged that Tina Nelson would not have known about these
    brain hemorrhages because they were internal injuries. He also acknowledged that the
    hemorrhaging around the victim‟s perioptic nerve would not be visible to Tina Nelson
    because a person would have to dilate the eye and look inside it to see these injuries.
    When asked if the victim‟s posterior rib fractures could have occurred if someone
    was holding the victim and fell or was knocked down, Dr. Laboy stated, “The scenarios
    can be multiple, so you have to give [me] more specific [details], where they land, how
    they fall, one side, front, actually bending the arms and crushing the infant.” When asked
    if he knew how the rib fractures occurred, Dr. Laboy stated that the fractures “were from
    any trauma that compressed [the ribs] and fractured [them].”
    -5-
    Dr. Laboy acknowledged that at the time of the autopsy, which was one day after
    the victim‟s death, there were no external signs of force or trauma on the victim‟s head.
    However, he said that if an infant were thrown forcefully onto something soft, like a
    mattress on the floor, it would not be unusual not to see any external bruising. He also
    stated that it was possible for the victim to have had external bruising when these injuries
    occurred, and these bruises had healed over time. Dr. Laboy noted that when the treating
    physicians performed an MRI on the victim, the results were normal. He added that the
    symptoms of seizures, respiratory problems, lethargy, and loss of appetite would be
    indicators that a parent should take the child to a doctor or to the emergency room.
    Pat Harwell, the custodian of records for the Jackson-Madison County General
    Hospital, testified that the victim was admitted to the hospital on February 21, 2011, and
    was discharged on March 7, 2011. The social service notes stated that Tina Nelson, who
    appeared “mildly mentally retarded,”3 had “been disabled since birth and receive[d] SSI.”
    The report also noted that Tina Nelson‟s husband, Gregory Nelson, “appear[ed]
    somewhat developmentally delayed but state[d] he [was] not disabled.” The notes
    showed that Tina and Gregory Nelson had a “five-year-old daughter, [B.N.,]” who lived
    with them and that Gregory Nelson‟s severely mentally retarded brother also lived with
    them. The parents disclosed that they had no income other than the social security
    disability checks and the money that Gregory earned from odd jobs around town and that
    neither one of them was able to drive. The reports showed that Tina Nelson could not
    read or write.
    The reports from February 23, 2011, showed that Gregory Nelson had said he and
    Tina needed to return home as soon as possible because their family was fighting in their
    father‟s home where their five-year-old daughter was staying. Transportation was
    notified to take Tina and Gregory Nelson home that morning. The Department of
    Children‟s Services (DCS) was given a “verbal referral requesting a home evaluation
    prior to [the victim‟s] discharge” from the neonatal unit and requesting a “safety plan.”
    The reports from February 24, 2011, stated that Gregory Nelson informed the staff
    he would be unable to receive training and teaching because they had no family to keep
    their five-year-old child while they were at the hospital. The staff member noted that she
    was concerned about Gregory Nelson not attending the training because Tina Nelson was
    illiterate. This staff member contacted Zandra Carter-Mann, a DCS worker in Lauderdale
    County, who stated that she knew the Nelsons. She “made arrangements for [a] child-
    family team meeting” with the parents and asked that the staff member and the neonatal
    nurse participate in the meeting over the phone.
    3
    Pursuant to the Tennessee Supreme Court‟s opinion in Coleman v. State, 
    341 S.W.3d 221
    , 226
    n.5 (Tenn. 2011), and the recently amended Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-13-203 (2010), we will
    use the term “intellectual disability” rather than “mental retardation” except in quoted material.
    -6-
    The reports from March 2, 2011, showed that after conducting the team meeting
    over the phone, “it was determined by DCS that [the] mother, father will be required to
    visit and bond with newborn at least two times a week prior to the time to start rooming
    in.” DCS planned to monitor Tina‟s and Gregory‟s visits with the victim. The reports
    from March 4, 2011, established that Tina and Gregory Nelson arrived at the Neonatal
    ICU at 8:00 a.m. to stay the weekend and that they had “positive involvement with the
    newborn[.]”
    Harwell acknowledged that the victim had been diagnosed with “intrauterine
    growth retardation,” which meant that the victim had not grown at a normal rate inside
    the womb. She stated that one of the treating physicians ordered a cranial ultrasound for
    the victim, and another physician ordered an MRI. The victim‟s cranial ultrasound
    showed “[n]o gross evidence of intracranial hemorrhage” and listed the following as an
    “impression”:
    Contour irregularity in the roof of the left lateral ventricle is
    nonspecific. This may be an unusual location for hemorrhage. This could
    be a soft tissue nodule versus maybe ectopic grey matter. Follow[]up
    examination is recommended.
    The nursing notes from March 4, 2011, stated that the victim‟s heart rate dropped to 62
    beats per minute. When the nurse explained that the drop in the victim‟s heart rate could
    extend her stay at the hospital, Tina and Gregory Nelson stated that they could not afford
    to repeatedly make trips to the hospital.
    Zandra Carter-Mann, an employee at the Lauderdale County DCS, testified that
    she received a referral from the Jackson-Madison County Hospital regarding the victim
    and the victim‟s five-year-old sister. The hospital staff were concerned about whether
    Tina and Gregory Nelson would be able to meet the children‟s needs. Because the victim
    was born prematurely, the staff wanted the parents to be trained on CPR and wanted to
    ensure that they knew what to do if the victim had respiratory problems. She explained
    that in these situations, the parents must receive training before the infant is discharged
    from the hospital. Carter-Mann stated that after Tina Nelson was discharged from the
    hospital on February 23, 2011, neither she nor Gregory Nelson visited the victim and
    claimed they could not visit because they did not have transportation and were unable to
    find someone to care for their five-year-old child. As a result, DCS informed the Nelsons
    that they would have to visit and bond with the victim and learn to care for her before
    DCS would allow the victim to go home with them.
    Carter-Mann stated that she met with Tina and Gregory Nelson at the Nelsons‟
    home on February 24, 2011, to inform them of the things they needed to do in order to
    -7-
    take the victim home and to assess whether they had the necessary supplies in order to
    properly care for her. At the time, Gregory Nelson was upset because he did not
    understand why DCS was involved. Carter-Mann was aware that Gregory Nelson had
    previously become aggressive with the hospital staff. She stated that the Nelsons had
    baby supplies that had been donated by a church but did not yet have a car seat that was
    the right size for a premature baby.
    While Carter-Mann acknowledged that Tina Nelson was developmentally delayed,
    she said Tina was able to sign DCS paperwork, to participate in meetings, and to
    schedule appointments for her children. Carter-Mann stated that if Tina Nelson had told
    the hospital staff that she could not read or write, this information was inaccurate based
    on her interaction with her. She believed that when Tina and Gregory Nelson worked
    together, they were capable of taking care of the victim and their older child. During her
    meetings, Gregory Nelson often became upset and verbally aggressive and would state
    that he was going to refuse to answer questions. He would also tell his wife not to
    answer their questions, and she would comply. Tina would defend her husband‟s
    aggressiveness and would provide excuses for why they were unable to do the things
    DCS asked of them.
    After the February 24, 2011 meeting, Carter-Mann tried to visit with the Nelsons
    every two weeks so that she could assist them with anything they needed. During these
    unannounced visits, she entered the Nelsons‟ home. Carter-Mann stated that the Nelsons
    did not allow their children to be kept by family members and that Gregory was
    combative and did not have a good relationship with his family. She could not recall a
    time that the victim stayed with anyone other than Tina and Gregory Nelson. During her
    visits, the victim was always dressed appropriately and was always sleeping. At her last
    visit, she noted that the victim was gaining weight.
    In April 2011, a juvenile court staff member notified DCS about some concerns
    they had about the victim. Carter-Mann conducted a home visit the next day, and the
    Nelsons agreed to take the child to the pediatrician to ensure that there was nothing
    seriously wrong with her. During her home visits with the Nelsons from February until
    early May, the only individuals living in the home were Tina and Gregory Nelson, their
    older daughter, and the victim. Carter-Mann never saw any evidence of others living in
    the home.
    Carter-Mann acknowledged that on May 14, 2011, she wrote the following report
    regarding her last visit with the Nelsons after the victim‟s death:
    Assessment worker, Zandra Carter-Mann, went to the home to check
    on the family after [the] loss of their daughter, [E.N.]. Mr. Nelson stated
    -8-
    that he was doing well and Tina was still in bed. AW Carter-Mann asked
    him what happened.
    He reported [that] they had noticed for a couple of days the baby
    wasn‟t feeling good and had taken her to the doctor as they told me they
    would. Mr. Nelson stated that he was holding the baby when she began to
    spit up through her mouth and nose. He said he took the suction and
    cleaned her mouth and nose. He said he began to notice that she started
    changing colors.
    Mr. Greg said Ms. Tina was putting . . . [their older daughter] on the
    bus, and he went to the door and told her to bring the cell phone so he could
    call the ambulance. Mr. Greg said he did CPR on the baby until the
    ambulance arrived, and once there, they started CPR. Mr. Greg said once
    they got to the hospital [E.N.] was pronounced dead.
    Mr. Greg said he really didn‟t know what to do about funeral
    arrangements but donations were being taken up in the community. Mr.
    Greg said Enon, a church on Edith-Nankipoo, had paid for her a plot in full.
    Mr. Greg said [their older daughter] would be with his dad until they were
    feeling better.
    Ms. Tina eventually came out and told worker a story that was
    consistent with Mr. Greg. AW Carter-Mann thanked the family for talking
    to her and told them to call if they needed anything.
    Carter-Mann stated she knew that the Nelsons, including their older daughter and
    the victim, were supported by Tina Nelson‟s disability check of $627 a month and that
    the Nelsons did not own a car and did not have drivers‟ licenses. During her home visits,
    the Nelsons had adequate food for themselves and their children. She said that Gregory
    Nelson had a brother, Timothy, and that Gregory and Timothy had made allegations
    through DCS against each other regarding the safety of Tina and Gregory Nelsons‟
    children. Carter-Mann said that although Timothy was staying with the Nelsons for a
    period of time, he left before the victim came home from the hospital. She noted an
    incident when Gregory Nelson became verbally aggressive with a school employee
    regarding a problem involving his older daughter and later called back and apologized.
    While she acknowledged that Gregory often became verbally aggressive with the DCS
    workers, she said there was never a time when he became physically aggressive with
    anyone from DCS. She also stated that Tina Nelson had never been physically
    aggressive with anyone from DCS.
    -9-
    Carter-Mann stated that it was her opinion that the Nelsons were able to take care
    of the victim‟s needs. She said the Nelsons received training from the hospital about
    administering CPR and caring for premature infants. She said it was not part of her job
    responsibilities to review the training the Nelsons received at the hospital.
    She said that the Nelsons never told her they had trouble determining when the
    victim‟s next feeding needed to occur. Although she never saw the Nelsons feeding the
    victim because the victim was always asleep, Gregory Nelson talked to her about putting
    cereal in the victim‟s bottle. She told Mr. Nelson that the baby was not old enough for
    cereal but interpreted his comment to mean that the victim was eating rather than not
    eating. Carter-Mann said that her last home visit with the Nelsons before the victim‟s
    death was on May 3, 2011, or May 4, 2011. She also visited them after the victim‟s death
    on May 14, 2011. She stated that the Nelsons appeared to be bonding with the victim
    during her visits.
    Carter-Mann admitted that she may have only made four or five home visits with
    the Nelsons prior to the victim‟s death because she tried to visit them every two weeks.
    She said that DCS had never discussed Tina Nelson‟s intellectual delays and was not
    aware of her intelligence quotient (IQ). Carter-Mann completed a closing safety
    assessment on May 27, 2011, wherein she stated that she had no safety concerns
    regarding the Nelsons‟ older daughter following the death of the victim. Carter-Mann
    said she had personally observed Tina Nelson caring for her children and had never
    believed it was appropriate to remove the children.
    Carter-Mann drafted her closing safety assessment before receiving the results
    from the victim‟s autopsy. Once she received the autopsy report, DCS reopened the case,
    and the Nelsons‟ older daughter was removed from their home in August 2011. Carter-
    Mann stated that DCS did not conduct psychological evaluations of the Nelsons because
    she did not find they had any mental impairment that would warrant a psychological
    evaluation. When she told Gregory Nelson that he needed to find a job because he was
    physically able to work, he became angry and told her that DCS could not make him
    work, and Tina Nelson supported Gregory Nelson‟s desire not to work. She said that
    there were several times when Gregory became verbally aggressive with her over issues
    related to the victim, and Tina always sided with her husband. She said that Tina Nelson
    never disagreed with Gregory Nelson during the four or five years that she knew them.
    Kim Coffee, an employee at the Lauderdale County Juvenile Court and the
    chairman of the truancy board, testified that she saw the victim prior to her death on May
    11, 2011. She said that on April 20, 2011, the Nelson‟s older daughter had a truancy case
    before the board. After this case was heard, she learned that the Nelsons and their
    children had been standing outside in fifty-degree weather for two or three hours while
    - 10 -
    they were waiting on a ride home. Coffee said that she became very upset with the
    Nelsons because the victim was dressed only in “very lightweight clothing and a very
    lightweight blanket” at the time. Coffee stated that she was present when Dawn Hemby,
    an investigator with the juvenile court, observed a red spot on the victim‟s right eye.
    When the Nelsons were asked about the victim‟s eye, they replied that the victim was
    “fine” and that they had already “had it checked on.” Coffee said that when she gave the
    Nelsons a ride home that day, she was concerned because the victim “just stared into
    space” and “showed no emotion.” She said the victim “didn‟t smile, she didn‟t laugh, she
    [had] no emotion whatsoever.” She contacted DCS about her concerns regarding the
    children.
    Approximately two weeks after April 20, 2011, Coffee said she received a call
    from a person she knew, who asked to remain anonymous, stating that the Nelsons were
    beating their older daughter. She and Dawn Hemby went to the Nelsons‟ home for a
    welfare check. The Nelsons, who were outside their home, stated that they had not
    beaten their older daughter and that she was currently at Gregory‟s father and
    stepmother‟s home. When they located the Nelsons‟ daughter, they did not observe
    evidence of any injuries. Coffee stated that she never saw the victim when she spoke to
    the Nelsons outside that day.
    Coffee stated that after the dependency and neglect case had been filed regarding
    the Nelsons‟ older daughter, she went to the Nelsons‟ home to pick them up for a pre-trial
    conference with their court-appointed attorneys. Although Tina Nelson knew Coffee was
    giving them a ride, Gregory Nelson was not aware of it, and he was “hollering and
    screaming” about having to leave even after she told him he did not have to attend.
    Gregory eventually got into her car although he continued to yell and act “out of control
    almost.” She said that he was “just fussing, saying he had never harmed that child, and
    he accused his brother of being the one to report it.” Although Coffee had interacted with
    Gregory Nelson in the past, this incident was the angriest she had ever seen him. Coffee
    conceded that Gregory had never been physically abusive to her. She stated that Tina
    Nelson was upset because she thought that Gregory Nelson‟s anger was directed as much
    toward her as it was toward Coffee because she had asked Coffee to give them a ride.
    Dawn Hemby, a youth services officer with the Lauderdale County Juvenile
    Court, testified that she had known Gregory Nelson through his own juvenile proceedings
    and had gotten to know Tina Nelson when the Nelsons‟ older daughter had a case before
    the truancy board on April 20, 2011. Hemby stated that she voiced her concerns about
    the victim to Lotoya Ward, an employee of DCS who was also on the truancy board.
    Ward informed her that DCS had already opened a case on the Nelsons‟ children.
    Hemby said that approximately two or three hours later, someone in the juvenile court
    office notified her that the Nelsons had been standing outside in low fifty-degree weather
    - 11 -
    with the victim and their older daughter, and she and Coffee asked them to come inside
    the building. Hemby said that Coffee asked them why they were standing outside, and
    Gregory Nelson told them that they were afraid they would miss their ride. Coffee
    agreed to give them a ride home, and Hemby asked to hold the victim. As she was
    holding her, she noticed that the victim had “a blood spot” on the white part of her right
    eye. When she asked Tina Nelson what was wrong with the victim‟s eye, Tina said,
    “[T]he doctor said it‟s nothing.” Hemby told her she needed to get a second opinion
    because it was not normal for an infant to have a blood spot on her eye. She said the
    victim was “[a]lmost lifeless” when she was holding her because the victim was not
    crying, cooing, or smiling. Hemby said she and Coffee took the Nelsons back home, and
    when she returned to the courthouse, she contacted Zandra Carter-Mann about the blood
    spot on the victim‟s eye.
    Hemby stated that she believed that Tina Nelson was “bullied by” Gregory
    Nelson. She said Tina Nelson appeared capable of taking care of her own affairs because
    she had recently asked her if there was a court order preventing her from visiting her
    older daughter, who had been placed with her grandparents. She stated that the last two
    or three times she had seen Tina, Gregory Nelson had not been with her. Hemby
    believed that Tina was capable of taking care of herself and her children:
    I think [Tina Nelson] . . . may be just a little slow, but not non[-]
    functioning. I think she‟s capable—I don‟t know if she would be capable
    of . . . being able to take care of financial things. And I don‟t really know
    why I think that, but that‟s just the impression that I get of her, that Greg
    pretty much does that. But as far as her cooking or cleaning and taking care
    of the kids, yeah, I think she could [do that].
    Hemby stated that when she went to Irene Nelson‟s to check on whether Tina and
    Gregory‟s older daughter had been physically abused, she carefully examined the child
    and determined that the anonymous call had been unfounded. In fact, the child told her
    that her father had not hit her and that her Uncle Timothy, Gregory‟s brother, was “just
    trying to start stuff.” Hemby said the anonymous call to Coffee was the only time she
    had ever received a referral about Tina and Gregory Nelson abusing one of their children.
    Teresa Simmons, a customer service representative in charge of medical records
    with MedSouth Medical Center, testified that Dr. Randy Isaacs, a pediatrician in that
    medical group, treated the victim four times on March 9, 2011, March 16, 2011, March
    30, 2011, and April 13, 2011. On March 9, 2011, Dr. Isaacs saw the victim as a new
    patient for her two-week physical. On March 16, 2011, Dr. Isaacs conducted a weight
    check on the victim and determined that the victim needed a hearing test. He noted that
    the victim appeared to be “[w]ell developed, well nourished, well hydrated.” Dr. Isaacs
    - 12 -
    noted that the victim had low body heat and weighed three pounds, four ounces when she
    was born. On March 30, 2011, Dr. Isaacs checked the victim‟s weight and discussed the
    victim‟s fussiness, spitting up, and the use of gas drops. On April 13, 2011, Dr. Isaacs
    noted that the victim was wheezing, frequently spitting up, and fussy in the afternoon and
    that he believed the victim might have thrush.
    The office records showed that the Nelsons called Dr. Isaacs‟s office on March 21,
    2011, because the victim had been having gas. A nurse returned that call and suggested
    that they give the victim Mylicon drops and told them to return to the office if the
    problem worsened. The Nelsons also called the office on April 6, 2011, because the
    victim had been spitting up her formula. A nurse returned this call, but the Nelsons did
    not answer.
    Bridget Worlds, the custodian of the records for the Lauderdale County Health
    Department, testified that the records from March 10, 2011, noted that the victim‟s
    parents had “disabled mental capabilities, but seem[ed] to understand infant care and
    formula prep.” On April 7, 2011, Gregory Nelson told a social worker at the health
    department that he believed something was wrong with his daughter because she was
    breathing strangely and spit up often. He believed that the victim‟s formula did not agree
    with her. The social worker encouraged Gregory Nelson to take the victim to the doctor
    if he believed she was not well. On April 28, 2011, Tina Nelson told a social worker that
    they were supposed to take the victim to the doctor on April 27, 2011, but that it was
    raining and too cold to take her out, so she planned to reschedule the appointment. Tina
    said the victim still spit up some and that when she took the victim to Dr. Isaacs‟s office
    the previous week, he prescribed medicine for the victim‟s ear infection. Tina and
    Gregory Nelson said that they were concerned about the victim‟s stools and were giving
    her some apple juice that helped this problem. On May 4, 2011, approximately a week
    prior to the victim‟s death, the victim weighed 7.2 pounds and had no known allergies,
    fever, or illnesses. A nurse on that date determined that the victim‟s eyes were “normal”
    and that the parent-child interaction was “good.” The nurse also determined that the
    victim‟s fontanels and musculoskeletal system were normal. The health department‟s
    records showed that social workers from the HUGS program conducted home visits with
    the Nelsons on March 24, 2011, April 7, 2011, and April 28, 2011.
    Joe Pursell, a Lauderdale County juvenile investigator, testified that after he
    received the autopsy stating that the victim‟s cause of death was homicide, he
    interviewed Tina and Gregory Nelson on August 16, 2011. During this interview, he
    informed the Nelsons of the victim‟s head injuries and broken ribs and asked them how
    these injuries could have occurred. Pursell said that Gregory Nelson‟s attitude was “just
    nonchalant” and that Tina Nelson never showed any type of emotion. Although he had
    seen Gregory and Tina Nelson crying at the hospital the day of the victim‟s death, he
    - 13 -
    never saw them cry again. Pursell advised Gregory Nelson of his Miranda rights, which
    he seemed to understand, and Gregory wrote the following statement:
    Date of May 4-8, I seen [R.C.] push my wife, Tina Nelson, down
    with the baby—with the baby. Hit her head on the floor. I went to tell his
    mother, and all she did was laugh.
    On a couple times I left the baby around my brother, Tim Nelson, so
    me and my wife could have some time alone, and the baby starts crying. I
    asked him what was going on and going around . . . the baby. He said he‟s
    checking to see why she was crying so much.
    Ever since [R.C.] pushed my wife down with the baby she had been
    crying a lot. We took her to the doctor and they said they could not tell
    what was wrong except an earache.
    Pursell said he had known Gregory Nelson since he was a juvenile and had “seen
    him act up between him and his brother and between him and his father.” Gregory told
    Pursell that after Kim Coffee and Dawn Hembry noticed the red spot on the victim‟s eye
    on April 20, 2011, they made a doctor‟s appointment, but the victim died before her
    appointment.
    Pursell also advised Tina Nelson of her Miranda rights, which she also appeared to
    understand, and then Tina wrote the following statement:
    When I delivered the baby in February 21, 2011, from the hospital in
    Jackson, Tennessee, I brought her home from the [hospital]. She started
    crying, so I‟d feed her and take care of her.
    In April and May, I had to get [Timothy] Nelson[, Gregory‟s
    brother,] to watch her because I was doing clothes and I was putting them
    outside.
    And in the months that T[imothy] and Renee and her kids stayed
    with us, I told Tim[othy and R.C., Renee‟s son,] to stop throwing things at
    the baby and to anybody in the house. I didn‟t think that Tim[othy] would
    or would not do anything to the baby or [my older daughter].
    So about April or May I would stay up with the baby in my hands,
    and [R.C.] was running towards the house. He pushed me and the baby
    down. Didn‟t know it hurt the baby at all.
    - 14 -
    And there is one more thing. The kids would play outside, and one
    day [R.C.] and [D.C.][, Renee‟s daughter,] . . . pushed [my older daughter]
    down and start[ed] to laugh about it.
    I went to the bathroom with [the baby] in my arms, and the
    bathroom door was not going open or closed. I think I bumped the baby‟s
    head with the doorknob. Did not think it was going to hurt the baby[‟s]
    head.
    And when May 9 and 10 I had to go to Ripley hospital for an x-ray
    done on my back, I stopped at the dollar store to get baby [Pedialyte] for
    not eating at all.
    Pursell located Gregory‟s brother, Timothy Nelson, and Timothy‟s girlfriend,
    Renee, in Dyer County. Timothy and Renee told him they, along with Renee‟s daughter
    and son, had lived with the Nelsons until April 10, 2011. He stated that Tim Nelson,
    Gregory and Timothy‟s father, later told him that he had picked up Timothy on the side
    of the road on April 10, 2011.
    Pursell said that when he interviewed Tina Nelson, he had to ask her if she could
    explain the victim‟s injuries two or three times before she gave her written statement. He
    later interviewed R.C., Renee‟s son, who said he knew nothing about an incident where
    he pushed or knocked Tina Nelson down while she was holding the victim. Pursell said
    he did not know Tina Nelson‟s IQ but believed she was “below average.”
    Jeremy Booker testified that he was incarcerated at the Lauderdale County Jail at
    the same time as Gregory Nelson. After completing his work in the jail‟s kitchen, he
    overheard a conversation that Gregory Nelson was having with a man in a dark suit:
    One day we had went back into housing. My coworker that was back there
    that was with me had to leave back up to the kitchen, so I stayed back there
    in housing and just stood back against the wall. Greg was sitting over in
    the library with an older gentleman wearing either a dark blue or black suit.
    I never saw his face because he was looking down at the paperwork.
    But the door was standing about an inch and a half to two inches
    wide opened, and I overheard [Greg state] that it was around 2:00 to 2:30 in
    the morning, the baby was crying, we wanted to go back to sleep, he hit her
    in the side, slapped her around, and kicked her in the head.
    - 15 -
    Booker stated that the man with Gregory Nelson that day “was an older gentleman
    in a dark blue or black suit, balding on top, grey hair, but he was looking down at some
    paperwork, and I did not see [his] face.” He said that although he initially thought that
    the man in the suit was an attorney, he was not certain of that. After he heard Gregory
    Nelson make this statement, it disturbed Booker so much that he moved away from that
    area. He never heard the man in the suit speak or ask a question and never heard the rest
    of the conversation. Booker said that he may have been listening at the door for two or
    three minutes.
    When Tina Nelson‟s attorney asked Booker if he was the man talking to Gregory
    Nelson the day of the statement, Booker stated, “It‟s very possible [that you were talking
    to Gregory Nelson that day]. All I know is it was an . . . older gentleman wearing a dark
    blue or black suit, balding on top, and had grey hair.” Booker stated that he was unable
    to pin the date down enough to check the visitor logs in the jail. Booker denied that he
    had received anything in exchange for making this statement and denied that he was
    hoping to receive a benefit for providing this statement to the State.
    Booker stated that he had children of his own and had to move away after he heard
    Gregory Nelson‟s statement because he was “just so infuriated or . . . mad over what I
    had heard that . . . I feared that if I had not moved off to another position that I may have
    actually just caught another assault charge.” As soon as he got back to the kitchen,
    Booker told Pat Coffee, who was Kim Coffee‟s mother and an employee in the jail‟s
    kitchen, about Gregory Nelson‟s statement.
    Booker initially said that he overheard Gregory Nelson make this admission in
    January 2012, and a juvenile investigator came to see him a couple of days later and took
    his statement about what he had heard. However, after reading the first line of his
    statement, which was dated January 11, 2012, and which indicated that Booker had
    overheard Gregory‟s admission two-and-a-half months before giving his written
    statement, Booker acknowledged that he heard Gregory‟s admission around the end of
    October or the beginning of November 2011 rather than January 2012. Booker stated
    that someone came to talk to him shortly after hearing Gregory‟s admission and then Joe
    Pursell took his written statement two and a half months later. Booker said there was no
    question in his mind that he heard Gregory Nelson admit that he hit, slapped, and kicked
    the victim.
    Richard McFall testified that in October 2011 he met with Gregory Nelson in jail.
    At the time, he was representing a woman charged with aggravated assault in Lauderdale
    County and wanted to talk to Gregory Nelson about a lead he had that Gregory‟s brother,
    Jason Nelson, might have been involved in his client‟s case. McFall stated that he met
    with Gregory Nelson in the library and that his interview lasted no longer than five
    - 16 -
    minutes. During that time, he did not notice anyone standing outside the library door.
    McFall stated that he never talked to Gregory about why he was incarcerated. Instead, he
    informed him that he did not want to talk to him about his case and only had some
    questions about his brother, Jason Nelson. McFall stated that during their meeting,
    Gregory Nelson never stated that he hit, slapped, or kicked the victim. He asserted that
    he would have remembered if Gregory had told him any of these things. McFall stated
    that he could not remember if he had signed a sign-in sheet before talking to Gregory
    Nelson that day. He admitted that in October 2011, he was not grey-headed or balding.
    Gregory Nelson, the Defendant-Appellant, testified that a short woman attorney in
    her late forties from his attorney‟s firm visited him while he was incarcerated at the
    Lauderdale County Jail. He also stated that while he was incarcerated he met with
    attorney Richard McFall to talk about a case involving his brother. He said that during
    his meeting with McFall he did not state that he hit or slapped the victim because he
    “wouldn‟t never do nothing [like that].” Gregory Nelson said that he did not meet with
    any grey-haired, balding men to discuss his case while he was in jail.
    When asked about the written statement he gave to Joe Pursell, Gregory said that
    sometime during the period of May 4 through May 8, he saw R.C., his brother‟s
    girlfriend‟s son, push down Tina Nelson, who was holding the victim, which caused the
    victim to hit her head on the side of the door in the living room of their trailer. He did not
    remember the exact date that this incident occurred and was unsure whether R.C.
    intentionally or accidentally knocked them down. Gregory did not believe that Tina took
    the victim to the doctor after this incident. He said that he always made the doctor‟s
    appointments and set up the transportation and that Tina accompanied the victim to the
    doctor.
    Gregory stated that his brother, Timothy Nelson, Timothy‟s girlfriend, and the
    girlfriend‟s two children stayed with him them periodically. He said that he kicked his
    brother Timothy out of his house on May 1, 2011, and that Timothy returned to his house
    on May 4, 2011. When Timothy returned, it “[d]idn‟t work out” because Timothy ate all
    of their food and a representative from DCS saw that they did not have any food in their
    refrigerator. Gregory Nelson also said there was an incident that he mentioned in his
    statement when he left the victim around his brother, Timothy Nelson, while he and his
    wife were in their room, and the victim began crying. When he walked to the front of the
    trailer, he saw Timothy “leaning over the baby bed.” He said it concerned him because
    he “never hardly ever let people get close to [his] baby.” As he approached, Timothy told
    him to “get [his] damn kid.”
    The day of the victim‟s death, Gregory stated that he was feeding the victim when
    “all of a sudden” she started spitting up. As he suctioned formula out of the victim‟s
    - 17 -
    mouth and nose, the victim turned very pale, and her lips turned blue. At the time, Tina
    Nelson was outside the trailer putting their older daughter on the bus. Because Tina had
    the cell phone, he had to call her back inside to call 9-1-1. Gregory said that he wiped the
    victim‟s mouth with a towel and called 9-1-1, asking them to hurry because the victim
    had stopped breathing. He claimed he called 9-1-1 four different times. With assistance
    from the 9-1-1 dispatcher, Gregory performed CPR on the victim on top of the mattress
    in the living room before the ambulance arrived, although the victim never recovered.
    Gregory said the ambulance arrived at his home approximately an hour after his 9-1-1
    call, and he believed the victim died because it took the ambulance too long to arrive. He
    acknowledged that he was upset when the EMTs finally arrived at his house. As soon as
    the ambulance arrived, Tina Nelson gave the victim to the EMT.
    Gregory stated that the night before the victim died, the victim had been sleeping
    with him and Tina on the mattress in the living room because it was cold in their house.
    When they woke up in the morning with their older daughter, they placed the victim in
    her crib. Tina helped their older daughter get ready for school, prepared a bottle for the
    victim, and began feeding the victim before giving the victim to Gregory and walking
    outside to put their older daughter on the bus.
    When asked if he ever pushed the victim out of anger or to make her quiet,
    Gregory said, “No sir. That‟s my kid. No, I wouldn‟t.” He admitted that he had a
    temper. However, he asserted that he had never yelled at the victim and had never
    neglected to feed her. He denied striking the victim, kicking the victim in the head, or
    punching the victim in the ribs.
    Gregory said that Tina did not have trouble telling time but admitted that she had
    trouble with organization. He stated that he had done farming and masonry jobs in the
    past and had gone to school through half of the twelfth grade, although he did not
    graduate. While in school, he attended some special education classes. He stated that he
    had a tumultuous relationship with his family and particularly with his brother, Timothy
    Nelson. He said he had called the sheriff to remove Timothy from his home because he
    ate all the family‟s food, destroyed their property, and did not clean up after himself. He
    stated that Timothy was very intellectually disabled and that Timothy had falsely accused
    him of beating his older daughter.
    Gregory stated that he had never seen Tina treat the victim in an unkind manner
    and did not believe that Tina would have ever hurt the victim. He said there was an
    incident when he “got on to” Tina about bumping the victim‟s head on a doorknob,
    although it did not appear that the victim was injured. Gregory said that he “trusted”
    Tina with the victim. He stated that there was never a time when he was alone with the
    victim. Gregory stated that his stepmother, Irene Nelson, took care of the victim one time
    - 18 -
    outside their house. In addition, he and his mother, Peggy Grimes, occasionally took the
    victim out of their house together.
    Gregory admitted that he had hurt two people in the past but not so severely that
    they had to go to the hospital. He also admitted that he had slapped Tina one time when
    she was yelling at their older daughter. He said he had caught Tina Nelson in lies many
    times. Gregory claimed that he knew the victim had not been okay “for a while” and that
    he had told Tina to take the victim to the doctor. He said the victim had been having
    trouble breathing ever since she got home from the hospital and that he called DCS to let
    them know that something was wrong with the victim. He said the victim sometimes did
    not have a good appetite. Although he admitted that he made the doctor‟s appointments,
    he did not know whether Tina actually took the victim to the doctor because he did not go
    to the doctor with her and did not call the doctor to confirm that the victim had been seen.
    He reiterated that he had never been alone with the victim.
    Although he acknowledged that he and Tina did not visit the victim in the hospital
    often between February 23, 2011 and March 4, 2011, he said this was because they did
    not have money for transportation. His stepmother, Irene Nelson, brought him to the
    hospital one time to see the victim, although he could not confirm the date that this
    occurred. He did not recall a DCS team meeting in which Zandra Carter-Mann told him
    and Tina that they would have to return to the hospital to bond with the victim or the
    victim would not be permitted to go home with them. Although he admitted telling the
    hospital staff that he could not keep coming to the hospital because he had family
    problems, he denied that the victim was an inconvenience to him.
    Gregory stated that Bill Freeman, the ambulance driver who became emotional
    during his testimony about the victim‟s death, was lying when he testified that he and
    Tina Nelson did not follow him to the ambulance when they were performing CPR on the
    victim. He claimed that he went to the ambulance door and asked to see the victim.
    Gregory denied that he was laughing and smoking outside after the ambulance arrived
    and asserted that the victim died in his arms.
    Gregory said that on April 20, 2011, he attended a truancy board hearing for his
    older daughter. While they were waiting on their ride, he told Tina to bring the victim
    inside, and she did. Gregory was unable to explain the red spot on the victim‟s eye that
    Kim Coffee and Dawn Hemby observed on that date. Although he asserted that Tina
    took the victim to the doctor to check on the victim‟s eye after April 20, 2011, he could
    not explain why the last time the victim had been seen by her pediatrician was on April
    13, 2011. He acknowledged that a medical professional did not see the victim until a
    nurse at the health department saw the victim on May 4, 2011, which was at least two
    weeks after the red spot had been observed on the victim‟s eye. He also acknowledged
    - 19 -
    that Zandra Carter-Mann never observed the red spot on the victim‟s eye because the
    victim was always asleep every time she visited their home.
    Gregory stated that he could not explain why the victim had bleeding on her brain.
    He admitted that the victim had old bleeding and new bleeding that had occurred just
    prior to her death. He also could not explain why the victim had six fractured ribs on her
    left lateral side, eight fractured ribs on the left posterior side, and five fractured ribs on
    her right lateral side that were in the process of healing. Although Gregory believed that
    his CPR could have caused the fractures, he was unable to explain how the victim had
    sustained both old and new fractures. He also could not explain how the victim sustained
    the hemorrhage in her eye. Gregory Nelson admitted that either he gave the victim these
    injuries or Tina gave the victim these injuries because they were the only people who
    took care of the victim. He insisted however that Booker‟s testimony that he hit, slapped,
    and kicked the victim was a lie.
    Gregory stated that he had never seen Tina hurt the victim or their older daughter
    and that Tina loved her children. He also stated that he never struck the victim the night
    before she died. He stated that he was not better trained than the investigators and nurses
    who observed the victim up until her death and saw nothing wrong with her. He stated
    that the HUGS representative, who was at his house on April 28, 2011, never called the
    ambulance because of the red spot on the victim‟s eye. Gregory asserted that he never
    ignored anything he thought was important about the victim‟s health. He confirmed that
    he never performed CPR on the victim any time before the day the victim died. He said
    that Tina had never said anything about administering CPR on the victim at any time
    prior to the day she died.
    Irene Nelson, Gregory Nelson‟s stepmother, testified that Gregory had called her
    at 6:55 a.m. on May 11, 2011, and told her that the victim passed away. She called her
    husband, Gregory‟s father, and they arrived at Gregory and Tina‟s home forty-five
    minutes to an hour later. Irene stated that when they arrived, Gregory and Tina were not
    laughing and joking. She said that Tina immediately ran to her, hugged her, and cried
    and that Gregory hugged his father and cried.
    Irene remembered picking up Gregory‟s brother Timothy and Timothy‟s girlfriend
    as they were walking away from Gregory‟s house in early April 2011. After that point,
    she never heard of Timothy and his girlfriend living with Gregory and Tina. She
    acknowledged that it took her and her husband a while to get to Gregory and Tina‟s
    house on May 11, 2011, and could only testify about what she observed when they
    arrived at the house. She was not present when Gregory became aggressive with the
    EMT and had to be restrained by a deputy.
    - 20 -
    Irene stated that the only time she took care of the victim was on Easter Sunday,
    April 24, 2011, when she took the victim and the Nelson‟s older daughter to Gregory‟s
    grandmother‟s house. She said that they stayed with the family for three hours during the
    visit and that Tina and Gregory did not go with them. The victim slept almost the entire
    visit, and when she awakened the victim and fed her, the victim “started crying,
    continuously, nonstop” and would not stop crying “no matter what [she] did.” Irene said
    that she tried patting the victim‟s back and rocking her, but nothing seemed to help. She
    agreed that the victim‟s behavior was a little unusual for an infant because she expected
    the victim to be happy, use the bathroom, and go back to sleep after eating. She did not
    believe that the victim drank much of her bottle before she began crying. By the time she
    returned to Tina and Gregory‟s house, the victim was still crying. She said it was very
    difficult to wake the victim that day. Irene said that other than when Tina took their older
    child to the bus, she did not know of any times when Gregory was alone with the victim.
    She was not aware of anyone else taking care of the victim.
    Dr. Fred Steinberg, who had received a PhD in clinical psychology and had been
    working as a forensic psychologist for the last twenty years after completing additional
    coursework, testified as an expert in the field of forensic psychology. He stated that he
    had been qualified as an expert many times, was licensed to conduct evaluations in
    Tennessee, had consulted with attorneys in over 1000 cases, and had completed
    approximately 300 to 350 evaluations on individuals.
    Dr. Steinberg stated that Tina Nelson‟s results from the Wechsler Adult
    Intelligence Scale test showed that she had an IQ of 53. He explained an average IQ is
    100 and an IQ of 70 or below is in the “extremely low range,” a range that has been
    historically called the “retarded range.” Dr. Steinberg stated that only one percent of the
    population had an IQ of 70. He stated that Tina Nelson, with an IQ of 53, would have the
    intellect of a first or second grade child and “would have difficulty keeping up in
    situations that require thinking and reasoning abilities.” He noted that individuals with a
    lower IQ were “highly suggestible[,]” which meant that an interviewer who asked closed
    questions could be “telegraphing [to the interviewee] the kind of answer [the interviewer
    was] looking for.”
    Dr. Steinberg stated that when he reviewed Tina Nelson‟s written statement to Joe
    Pursell, he made an interesting observation:
    [W]e have a body of psychological literature that suggests . . . that if you
    ask a question several different times to somebody who is highly
    suggestible, a child, a retarded individual, they will want to please you.
    You know, if you ask it a second time, there‟s a high frequency assumption
    - 21 -
    that you didn‟t give the right answer or else why are they asking it again,
    okay.
    So we have a situation here where Mr. Pursell asked Ms. Nelson . . .
    the question several times. And I believe the question was, [“]How could
    that have happened [to the victim]?[”]
    Well, if you look at the statement, Tina went ahead and gave three
    different answers, which very well could have corresponded to each time
    the question was re-asked. This is a common phenomenon, and it‟s very
    possible that she was either unaware of what the cause and effect was in
    each circumstance that she answered, or she was just fishing for something
    that would be acceptable to the interviewer because the question was being
    asked again. I found that fascinating.
    Dr. Steinberg stated that he found evidence that Tina Nelson had difficulty
    thinking and reasoning in both the intelligence test and the Rorschach test, which is a
    personality test using inkblots. He explained that Tina‟s impaired ability to reason and
    think could affect her ability to perceive cause and effect. He stated that the Rorschach
    test “yielded results that were typical of a psychotic type of disturbance, problems in
    thinking clearly and seeing things accurately.” The test also showed that Tina had
    “severe impaired reality testing,” which meant that she had a “different perception of the
    world around [her]” than most other people would. He said that individuals having
    impaired reality testing “just don‟t see things clearly, and to other people it looks like
    [they are] lying. But [they are] not. [They are] just not perceiving it correctly.” Finally,
    the Rorschach test showed that Tina had “severe disruptions indicative of psychotic
    lapses in reasoning, thinking, and thought organization[,]” which was significant because
    Tina had been diagnosed with psychosis prior to this incident.
    Dr. Steinberg gave Tina Nelson the Wisconsin Card Sort Test, which is a
    nonverbal test that “measures planning, carrying out activities effectively, and self-
    regulation” as well as “reasoning ability and the ability to come up with a new solution
    when the old one isn‟t working.” He stated that this test, consistent with the Wechsler
    Adult Intelligence Test, showed that Tina had “an inability to effectively plan and
    problem solve,” which related to the ability to perceive cause and effect. He added, “If
    you can‟t plan and anticipate and reason, you‟re going to have a big deficit in being able
    to appreciate consequences.” He stated that based on his testing and what he had learned
    from others, Tina Nelson would not be the one to make decisions in a relationship.
    Tina Nelson‟s scores on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Test showed that she was
    in less than the first percentile in nearly every subject, which meant that “99 percent of all
    - 22 -
    of the rest of us function[ed] at a level higher” than she did. He stated that if someone
    described Tina as “a little slow,” this would not be an accurate description because Tina
    was “in the very bottom of the mild mental retardation range, almost in the moderate
    mental retardation range, which is significantly low IQ.” However, he stated that
    individuals in the “mild mental retardation range” can follow specific directions when
    they are told what to do and “can be trained within reason, with supervision, to function.”
    He stated that based on the testimony he heard, Tina could follow directions “when she‟s
    told what to do and it‟s set up for her[.]” However, “[w]hen she‟s left to her own
    devices, she doesn‟t have the reasoning ability to make good choices.”
    Dr. Steinberg also “agreed with the previous diagnosis [Tina] was given of major
    depression, recurrent, with psychotic features” and “mild mental retardation.” He
    explained that Tina Nelson had some serious psychiatric issues:
    She has been prone to episodic psychotic kinds of thinking. She‟s had
    some auditory hallucinations on occasion. And, you know, when you add
    this kind of inability to stick to reality on occasion, to an individual who is
    compromised intellectually, you‟ve got more multiple problems, because
    on top of it you have a profound mood disorder, which is further affecting
    her functioning. So this is a young lady that has significant psychiatric
    problems.
    Nevertheless, Dr. Steinberg determined that Tina was competent to stand trial. He
    explained what was involved in making a competency determination:
    [T]he competency determination is based upon several things,
    understanding how the court works, and if you‟re not understanding it,
    being able to retain it, being educated and retain[ing] it; working with your
    lawyer; having an understanding of the charges against you; and so on and
    so forth.
    I found [Tina Nelson] to be able to do that. Sometimes she needed a
    little bit of, you know, education in certain areas. But before I got into this
    field I didn‟t know fully how courts worked either, so I just don‟t think
    that‟s a big issue. You can be educated, you can retain it for your own use,
    at least during the period while you‟re in litigation.
    He stated that she “scored very well” on the test he used to determine whether she was
    competent to stand trial. Dr. Steinberg stated that he believed Tina Nelson understood
    the difference between right and wrong. He acknowledged that knowing the difference
    between right and wrong was a part of his competency evaluation because if the person is
    - 23 -
    charged with violating a law, he or she has to know what is wrong about his or her
    behavior.
    Dr. Steinberg said he evaluated Tina for malingering, which is “faking a
    psychiatric diagnosis.” Although Dr. Steinberg found that Tina “did a little bit of
    embellishment” during her examination, it did not “negate the fact that there were
    psychotic indications there[,]” especially given that she had a history of psychotic
    symptoms for which she had been medicated prior to this incident. He asserted that Tina
    Nelson‟s psychosis and her low IQ existed well before the victim‟s death. He stated that
    because Tina was suggestible, there was a probability that her husband could have told
    her what to say or do, although he had no data showing that that is what occurred in this
    case. He noted that Tina “show[ed] an inability to do what you and I would do, like take
    a baby to a doctor because there was a bump on the [baby‟s] head, or, [because she] was
    knocked over, or whatever.” He said that Tina could have provided three different
    possibilities for the victim‟s injuries to Pursell either because she thought one of these
    three incidents could have caused the victim‟s injuries or because she was fabricating a
    story to make Pursell stop questioning her. However, Dr. Steinberg said that because
    other people gave similar reports regarding these incidents involving the victim, these
    incidents likely occurred.
    Dr. Steinberg noted that Tina Nelson had “auditory hallucinations[,]” or was
    hearing voices, when her grandmother died and when the victim died. He added that it
    was not uncommon for an individual to hear voices when the person has “major
    depression to a psychotic proportion.” He stated that Tina had been prescribed
    antidepressants for her major depression and that this medication could have helped with
    her depression if the medication had been properly adjusted and if she properly took the
    medication. However, he stated that someone like Tina who was “not organized and
    can‟t run [her] own life” would have more trouble regularly taking her antidepressants.
    Dr. Steinberg evaluated Tina Nelson on November 30, 2011, December 1, 2011,
    and December 29, 2011. During these evaluations, he had access to her mental health
    records, which showed that she had a history of major depression for which she received
    treatment in 2002. During these evaluations, Tina disclosed that she had mood swings
    with which her husband was unable to cope. Although Dr. Steinberg stated that it was
    possible that Tina had a bipolar disorder because she had periods when she was agitated
    and periods when she was depressed, he stated that there needed to be more observation
    before Tina could be diagnosed with bipolar disorder. When asked if hearing a baby cry
    while being in an agitated state might be like nails on a chalkboard to someone like Tina,
    Dr. Steinberg stated, “I can‟t say that, because that‟s a specific instance[,] and I didn‟t
    assess that.”
    - 24 -
    Dr. Steinberg also stated that Tina Nelson had been hitting herself in the head and
    that she had “a history of self-injurious behavior.” In 2001, Tina attempted to cut her
    wrists after her grandmother died. Although Tina denied hurting the victim, she
    described periods of upward aggression to individuals other than the victim. He said that
    “apparently [Tina] came from a very abusive kind of situation as a child” and she told
    him that “she chased somebody with a butcher knife in reaction to her grandmother‟s
    death.” He stated that she was “psychotic at the time” and required “antipsychotic
    medication.” She also told him that she was taking hydrocodone, although she denied
    abusing that drug. Dr. Steinberg stated, as in all cases like this, the reliability of Tina‟s
    self-reporting was considered questionable because individuals do not “want to get the
    full punishment, if punishment at all” for what they have done.
    Dr. Steinberg also noted that Tina had limited psychological resources for
    adequate coping, which meant that she was emotionally reactive to her environment.
    When asked if Tina could be emotionally reactive to a baby crying, Dr. Steinberg stated:
    Could be anything. You can‟t say this is happening at a given time.
    That‟s why I say, you know, I‟m not in a position to assess how she was at
    the given time of the alleged incident.
    But what I can say is that she shows these personality characteristics,
    and . . . the jury will make a decision as to whether it‟s relevant or not
    within the context of everybody else‟s testimony.
    He added that individuals like Tina with “low intellectual functioning will function better
    in a very structured environment, when they know exactly what‟s expected of them.”
    However, “if they‟re in a chaotic situation or in a situation in which they just can‟t get it,
    they can‟t figure it out, they can‟t reason, they can‟t do all the things that I said they can‟t
    do, then they may be prone to be over-reactive, hyper-reactive, and be rather emotionally
    reactive.” He also noted that Tina had difficulty in situations in which she feels she is not
    in control. He emphasized that intellectually disabled individuals like Tina needed
    “structured environments” and “can do very fine under those circumstances.” However,
    if they are in a dysfunctional environment, then everyone will suffer.
    Tina Nelson, the Defendant-Appellant, testified that she had two daughters, B.N.,
    who was eight years old, and E.N., the victim, who passed away on May 11, 2011. Tina
    stated that she stayed in the hospital for three days before being discharged and that the
    victim stayed in the hospital for two weeks before coming home with them. She said she
    was unable to visit the victim frequently at the hospital because she had “transportation
    problems.” However, at some point during these two weeks she returned to the hospital
    - 25 -
    to learn how to change diapers, feed and take care of the victim, give her a bath, and
    administer CPR.
    Tina said the victim weighed three pounds, four ounces when she was born. When
    they brought the victim home on March 7, 2011, she, her husband, and her older daughter
    were the only people living in the home. She stated that her husband‟s brother, mother,
    and stepfather as well as her husband‟s father and stepmother visited them. When
    Gregory‟s brother visited them, he also brought his girlfriend, Renee Couples, and
    Renee‟s two children, D.C., who was thirteen years old, and R.C., who was twelve years
    old.
    Tina stated that she and her husband fed the victim when she came home. When
    the victim awoke, she would feed her, clothe her, give her a bath, change her diapers, and
    put her to sleep when it was time for her to have a nap. She said the victim ate every two
    to three hours and when she would cry, she would rock her to sleep, feed her, change her
    diaper, or see what was wrong with her. When the victim was born, the doctors told her
    that the victim was healthy, although she had a low birth weight and had trouble retaining
    her body heat. Once they brought the victim home, she bought some Pedialyte at the
    doctor‟s suggestion because she noticed that the victim was not eating properly.
    Tina Nelson denied seeing any bruises on the victim and denied seeing anyone
    hurting the victim. She denied hurting the victim herself, stating, “I would have hurt my
    own self before I hurt the baby.” When asked what she would have done if she had seen
    her husband hurting the victim, she said, “I would be upset, but I know my husband did
    not do nothing to the baby at all.”
    Tina remembered telling Joe Pursell that R.C. had knocked her down while she
    was holding the victim. She said, “I don‟t know if it hurt the baby, the top [of] the head
    and the ribs.” Although the victim cried when they were knocked down, she did not see
    anything wrong with her. When this incident occurred, she fell backward, and the victim
    landed on the floor with her arm underneath her. They did not take the victim to the
    emergency room after this incident because she did not have transportation. She admitted
    that she did not call Zandra Carter-Mann, the DCS case worker, about this incident and
    did not call the HUGS representative because she had lost her number. Tina claimed that
    she called Dr. Isaacs‟s office about the fall but could not explain why his office did not
    have a record of her call. She also said she reported the fall when she took the victim to
    see Dr. Isaacs about her problems with gas and the formula on April 13, 2011. Tina also
    claimed she spoke to someone in Dr. Isaacs‟s office after Kim Coffee and Dawn Hemby
    saw the red spot on the victim‟s eye, although Dr. Isaacs‟s office did not have a record of
    that phone call. Tina said that Dr. Isaacs‟s office told her to come in, and she told them
    that she was unable to get there because she did not have transportation. She said she
    - 26 -
    eventually got an appointment with Dr. Isaacs on May 9 or 10, but she missed this
    appointment because she had transportation problems. Although she rescheduled the
    appointment for a later date, the victim passed away prior to the appointment. She could
    not explain why her pediatrician‟s office had no record of the appointment on May 9 or
    10. She asserted that she, not Gregory, called Dr. Isaacs‟s office to set up this
    appointment.
    Tina also stated that she bumped the victim‟s head on a doorknob but that it did
    not leave a mark. After that incident, she checked the soft spot on the victim‟s head and
    determined that there were no bruises or marks. She loved both of her daughters and was
    very sad when the victim died. She “almost blacked out” and would have fallen to the
    ground if the EMT had not caught her when they told her the victim had died. She
    denied laughing with Gregory or with Gregory‟s father and stepmother and asserted that
    no one was laughing when the victim passed away.
    Although she said she never saw Gregory‟s brother, Timothy, hurt the victim, she
    recalled an incident when Timothy picked up the victim when she was crying, and when
    she asked him what was wrong with the baby, Timothy told her and Gregory to get the
    victim because he was getting tired of hearing her cry. Gregory later asked Timothy to
    move out because he was eating all of their food.
    Tina stated that she did not know why the victim passed away. She acknowledged
    that she and Gregory were the only people that took care of the victim other than the one
    time that Gregory‟s stepmother, Irene Nelson, took the victim on Easter Sunday.
    Although other family members helped with the victim, she and Gregory were always
    present. Tina acknowledged that Irene told her the victim would not stop crying after she
    gave her a bottle and that it was not normal for a child to cry after eating. Irene also told
    her that the victim‟s bowel movement was strong, and she informed Dr. Isaacs‟s office of
    this issue. She said that Irene had told her to take the victim to the doctor, but she was
    unable to get there because she had problems finding transportation.
    Tina acknowledged that she only went to see the victim in the hospital after the
    staff informed her that they would not allow the victim to come home with her unless she
    visited her. However, she said she did not visit because she had transportation problems.
    Tina said she regularly called the hospital to check on the victim but admitted that she
    could have seen the victim two different times, even with the three-day advance notice
    required for transportation, before she finally visited the victim at the hospital on March
    4, 2011.
    After the victim‟s heart rate fell, Tina and Gregory told the hospital staff that they
    could not keep coming to the hospital because no one was taking care of their older
    - 27 -
    daughter. She and Gregory both went home because she could not control Timothy, who
    was there with Gregory‟s mother. She claimed she was unable to stay at the hospital by
    herself because she had “heart problems and stuff like that, and [Gregory] always stayed
    with me and watch[ed] after me too.”
    Tina admitted that she had told someone at the health department that she had an
    appointment for the victim in May but that it was raining, and they did not go. She
    explained that she and Gregory waited outside in the cold on April 20, 2011, after the
    truancy hearing because they were waiting for a ride that did not appear. She said she did
    not bring her daughters inside to wait because Gregory always watched after her and the
    children.
    Tina acknowledged that the victim was a fussy baby and “was constantly crying”
    even if she tried to rock her to sleep. She did not know how the victim‟s ribs had been
    fractured on both sides and on the back. Tina acknowledged that fractured ribs would
    make a baby hurt and cry but asserted that she did not know how these injuries occurred.
    She also agreed that the bleeding on the victim‟s eyes and brain would make her hurt but
    claimed that none of the doctors she saw told her anything was wrong with the victim.
    Tina admitted that the victim was fine when she left the hospital and that her
    problems started once they got her home and she kept crying. She acknowledged that the
    victim had trouble breathing for a couple of days prior to her death. She also
    acknowledged that the victim slept much of the time and that her appetite was “fair” but
    “[n]ot great.”
    Tina said that Sheriff Sanders‟s testimony that Tina had told him at the scene that
    she had woken up, fixed the victim a bottle, lain the victim on the mattress, and noticed
    that the victim was not breathing when she came back was “all a lie.” She stated that the
    victim died in her husband‟s arms while she was putting her older daughter on the school
    bus. Tina said that the victim had been limp for thirty minutes or so before she handed
    her to the EMT and that she and Gregory were not doing CPR by the time the ambulance
    arrived. Tina claimed that she had gone outside at 6:15 a.m. to put her older daughter on
    the bus, and Gregory asked to use the phone to call 9-1-1 around fifteen minutes later.
    She told Gregory that she was going to wait until 6:30 or 6:45 a.m. to make sure their
    daughter did not miss the bus and that she was unable to check on the victim until after
    the bus picked up their daughter. Gregory said he had done CPR on the victim while
    Tina was getting their older daughter on the bus, and after Gregory yelled to her for help,
    she did CPR on the victim while Gregory repeatedly called 9-1-1. Tina said that the
    victim was alive when she left to put their daughter on the bus and that she was dead by
    the time she got back.
    - 28 -
    When the EMTs took the victim on May 11, 2011, Tina stayed with Gregory‟s
    father and stepmother. She said she did not go to the ambulance to check on the victim
    and did not ask to see her because they were doing CPR. She never asked to see the
    victim after Bill Freeman, the EMT, told her that the victim had died because she was
    “kind of upset at the time.” She claimed she later saw the victim at the hospital. She
    stated that Freeman lied about her smoking and laughing while they were performing
    CPR on the victim.
    Tina acknowledged that she did not cry when she gave her statement about the
    victim to Joe Pursell. She admitted that she often lied, and when she lied, she got in
    trouble and that Gregory had slapped her one time because she had lied. Tina admitted
    that she was depressed and that she had tried to slice her wrists when her grandmother
    passed away in 2001. She said she had never thought about hurting the victim.
    Tina admitted telling Dr. Steinberg that she had mood swings and that Gregory did
    not handle them well. When she had her mood swings, she would get upset and would
    not want to be bothered with anything. When asked how she dealt with the victim‟s
    crying when she had her mood swings, Tina stated, “I can deal with the baby crying. It‟s
    no problem.” She said that when the victim cried so much she could not take it, she
    would bathe her or feed her. She admitted that the victim cried a lot because she was
    hurting.
    Tina said that, other than the day the victim passed away, there were no other
    times that she or Gregory tried to perform CPR on her. The night before the victim died,
    she and Gregory had laid the victim on the mattress. When the victim fell asleep at 9:00
    p.m., she moved her to her crib. During the night, the victim awakened every two or
    three hours, and she and Gregory got up, fed her a bottle, and changed her diaper before
    rocking her to sleep and putting her back in her crib. She said the victim began crying as
    she was trying to awaken her older daughter for school. Tina asserted that Gregory never
    harmed the victim.
    ANALYSIS
    I. Motions for New Trial and Notices of Appeal. Before addressing the
    sufficiency of the evidence issue, we must consider the effect of Tina Nelson‟s and
    Gregory Nelson‟s untimely motions for new trial and untimely notices of appeal.
    Following trial and sentencing, the trial court entered judgments of conviction against
    Tina and Gregory Nelson on December 13, 2013. On January 30, 2014, Tina Nelson
    filed a document entitled “Amended Motion for New Trial,” even though she had not yet
    filed an initial motion for new trial. On February 19, 2014, Gregory Nelson filed a
    - 29 -
    “Motion for New Trial or in the Alternative for Directed Verdict.” On February 28,
    2014, Tina Nelson filed a document entitled “Motion for New Trial.”4 That same day,
    the trial court held a hearing on these motions and entered separate orders for Tina and
    Gregory Nelson stating that it lacked jurisdiction to rule on their untimely filed motions
    for new trial but that the appellate court could, in the interest of justice, review the
    sufficiency of the evidence issue raised by both parties. On March 13, 2014, Tina Nelson
    filed her notice of appeal, and on March 17, 2014, Gregory Nelson filed his notice of
    appeal. On April 11, 2014, the trial court entered corrected judgment forms, apparently
    pursuant to Tennessee Criminal Procedure Rule 36.1, showing that Tina Nelson and
    Gregory Nelson were sentenced as Range I, violent offenders with a release eligibility of
    one hundred percent for their aggravated child abuse convictions. See Tenn. R. Crim. P.
    36.1 (adopted effective July 1, 2013) (allowing the correction of an illegal sentence at any
    time). The previously-entered judgment forms for these convictions had incorrectly
    shown that Tina Nelson was classified as a mitigated offender with a release eligibility of
    thirty percent and that Gregory Nelson was classified as a standard offender with a
    release eligibility of thirty percent.
    “A motion for a new trial shall be in writing or, if made orally in open court, be
    reduced to writing, within thirty days of the date the order of sentence is entered.” Tenn.
    R. Crim. P. 33(b). “[T]his thirty-day period is jurisdictional and cannot be expanded.”
    State v. Hatcher, 
    310 S.W.3d 788
    , 800 (Tenn. 2010) (citing State v. Bough, 
    152 S.W.3d 453
    , 460 (Tenn. 2004); State v. Martin, 
    940 S.W.2d 567
    , 569 (Tenn. 1997); State v.
    Stephens, 
    264 S.W.3d 719
    , 728 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2007); Tenn. R. Crim. P. 45(b)(3)).
    Because Tina and Gregory Nelson failed to file their motions for new trial on or before
    January 13, 2014, the trial court no longer had jurisdiction of the case, and their motions
    were a nullity. See Tenn. R. Crim. P. 33(b); State v. Lowe-Kelley, 
    380 S.W.3d 30
    , 33-34
    (Tenn. 2012). “A trial court cannot rule on the merits of a late-filed motion for new trial
    because the judgment has become final and the trial court no longer has jurisdiction over
    the case.” 
    Lowe-Kelley, 380 S.W.3d at 34
    (citing 
    Bough, 152 S.W.3d at 460
    ; 
    Hatcher, 310 S.W.3d at 799-800
    ). An untimely motion for new trial waives all issues except for
    sufficiency of the evidence and sentencing. See Tenn. R. App. P. 3(e); 
    Bough, 152 S.W.3d at 460
    ; but cf. Tenn. R. App. P. 36(b) (“When necessary to do substantial justice,
    an appellate court may consider an error that has affected the substantial rights of a party
    at any time, even though the error was not raised in the motion for a new trial or assigned
    as error on appeal.”).
    In this case, the trial court entered corrected judgments forms for the aggravated
    child abuse convictions on April 11, 2014. It is well-established that an amended or
    4
    The date listed on the Certificate of Service for Tina Nelson‟s “Motion for New Trial” is
    December 20, 2013; however, a line was drawn though this date and the date of February 28, 2014, the
    same date this motion was filed, was written above this date.
    - 30 -
    corrected judgment “operates upon the existing judgment” and “generally does not restart
    the time for filing a tolling motion such as a Rule 33 motion for a new trial or, as the case
    may be, a notice of appeal.” State v. Raygan L. Presley, No. M2007-02487-CCA-R3-
    CD, 
    2008 WL 3843849
    , at *3 (Tenn. Crim. App. Aug. 18, 2008). Therefore, the court‟s
    filing of corrected judgment forms did not make the motions for new trial filed by Tina
    and Gregory Nelson timely.
    Moreover, the amended judgments were entered when the trial court no longer had
    jurisdiction of the case, not only because the original judgments had become final prior to
    the late-filed motions for new trial but also because the corrected judgments were entered
    nearly a month after Tina and Gregory Nelson filed their notices of appeal. See State v.
    Green, 
    106 S.W.3d 646
    , 648 (Tenn. 2003) (“In a criminal case, when a notice of appeal is
    filed, the jurisdiction of the Court of Criminal Appeals attaches, and the trial court loses
    jurisdiction.”); State v. Pendergrass, 
    937 S.W.2d 834
    , 837 (Tenn. 1996) (“The
    jurisdiction of the Court of Criminal Appeals attaches upon the filing of the notice of
    appeal and, therefore, the trial court loses jurisdiction.”). Once a notice of appeal is filed,
    the jurisdiction becomes vested in the appellate court, and the trial court may not amend
    its judgment. 
    Pendergrass, 937 S.W.2d at 837
    (citing State v. Moore, 
    814 S.W.2d 381
    ,
    382 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1991)). Although the trial court no longer had jurisdiction of the
    case because the original judgments had become final and because the notices of appeal
    had been filed, the court, on April 11, 2014, apparently utilized Tennessee Rule of
    Criminal Procedure 36.1 to correct the illegal sentences in the initial judgment forms for
    the aggravated child abuse convictions, which showed an erroneous release eligibility
    percentage.
    In addition, Tina and Gregory Nelson‟s untimely motions for new trial caused
    their notices of appeal to be untimely because they were filed more than thirty days from
    entry of the December 13, 2013 judgments. Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 4
    states that the notice of appeal shall be filed within thirty days of entry of the judgment
    appealed from or within thirty days from entry of an order denying a motion for new trial.
    See Tenn. R. App. P. 4(a), (c). Because the Nelsons‟ motions for new trial were a nullity,
    these motions did not toll the thirty-day time period for filing their notices of appeal,
    which caused their notices of appeal to be untimely. See State v. Davis, 
    748 S.W.2d 206
    ,
    207 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1987); State v. Robert Echols, No. W2013-02044-CCA-R3-CD,
    
    2014 WL 6680669
    , at *11 (Tenn. Crim. App. Nov. 26, 2014).
    Nevertheless, because the timely filing of a notice of appeal is not a precondition
    of this court having jurisdiction of the matter, we may waive the requirement of a timely
    notice of appeal filing “in the interest of justice.” Tenn. R. App. P. 4(a). “„In determining
    whether waiver is appropriate, this court will consider the nature of the issues presented
    for review, the reasons for and the length of the delay in seeking relief, and any other
    - 31 -
    relevant factors presented in the particular case.‟” State v. Rockwell, 
    280 S.W.3d 212
    ,
    214 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2007) (quoting State v. Markettus L. Broyld, No. M2005-00299-
    CCA-R3-CO, 
    2005 WL 3543415
    , at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App. Dec. 27, 2005)). “Waiver is
    not automatic and should only occur when „the interest of justice‟ mandates waiver.” 
    Id. Moreover, “[i]f
    this court were to summarily grant a waiver whenever confronted with
    untimely notices, the thirty-day requirement of Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure
    4(a) would be rendered a legal fiction.” 
    Id. (citing Michelle
    Pierre Hill v. State, No.
    01C01-9506-CC-00175, 
    1996 WL 63950
    , at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App., at Nashville, Feb. 13,
    1996)). Here, Tina and Gregory Nelson filed their notices of appeal approximately three
    months after entry of their judgments. They both raise only the issue of sufficiency of the
    evidence on appeal, and this court is not precluded from reviewing this issue. See Tenn.
    R. App. P. 3(e); 
    Bough, 152 S.W.3d at 460
    . We note that Tina and Gregory Nelson have
    not specifically asked this court to waive the requirement of a timely notice of appeal and
    have not explained their untimely filings; however, given the seriousness of the
    convictions and the particular circumstances of this case, we conclude that the “interest of
    justice” is best served by granting a waiver. See Tenn. R. App. P. 4(a); see also 
    Hatcher, 310 S.W.3d at 804
    ; Crittenden v. State, 
    978 S.W.2d 929
    , 932 (Tenn. 1998).
    II. Sufficiency of the Evidence. Tina and Gregory Nelson argue that because the
    evidence is insufficient to sustain their convictions for aggravated child abuse, the
    evidence is also insufficient to sustain their convictions for first degree felony murder in
    the perpetration of aggravated child abuse. We conclude the proof is sufficient to support
    Tina Nelson‟s and Gregory Nelson‟s convictions.
    When considering the sufficiency of the evidence on appeal, the State is entitled to
    the strongest legitimate view of the evidence and all reasonable inferences which 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)). When a defendant challenges the
    sufficiency of the evidence, the standard of review applied by this court is “whether, after
    reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of
    fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979). Similarly, Rule 13(e) of the Tennessee
    Rules of Appellate Procedure states, “Findings of guilt in criminal actions whether by the
    trial court or jury shall be set aside if the evidence is insufficient to support the finding by
    the trier of fact of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” “Because a verdict of guilt removes
    the presumption of innocence and raises a presumption of guilt, the criminal defendant
    bears the burden on appeal of showing that the evidence was legally insufficient to
    sustain a guilty verdict.” State v. Hanson, 
    279 S.W.3d 265
    , 275 (Tenn. 2009).
    “In the absence of direct evidence, a criminal offense may be established
    exclusively by circumstantial evidence.” State v. Dorantes, 
    331 S.W.3d 370
    , 379 (Tenn.
    - 32 -
    2011) (citing Duchac v. State, 
    505 S.W.2d 237
    , 241 (Tenn. 1973); Marable v. State, 
    313 S.W.2d 451
    , 456-58 (Tenn. 1958)). The standard of review for sufficiency of the
    evidence “„is the same whether the conviction is based upon direct or circumstantial
    evidence.‟” 
    Id. (quoting Hanson,
    279 S.W.3d at 275). Consequently, so long as the
    evidence of the defendant‟s guilt is established beyond a reasonable doubt, the proof need
    not exclude every other reasonable hypothesis except that of the defendant‟s guilt. 
    Id. at 380-81.
    The jury as the trier of fact must evaluate the credibility of the witnesses,
    determine the weight given to witnesses‟ testimony, and reconcile all conflicts in the
    evidence. State v. Campbell, 
    245 S.W.3d 331
    , 335 (Tenn. 2008) (citing Byrge v. State,
    
    575 S.W.2d 292
    , 295 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1978)). Moreover, the jury determines the
    weight to be given to circumstantial evidence and the inferences to be drawn from this
    evidence, and the extent to which the circumstances are consistent with guilt and
    inconsistent with innocence are questions primarily for the jury. 
    Dorantes, 331 S.W.3d at 379
    (citing State v. Rice, 
    184 S.W.3d 646
    , 662 (Tenn. 2006)). When considering the
    sufficiency of the evidence, this court may not substitute its inferences for those drawn by
    the trier of fact in cases involving circumstantial evidence. State v. Sisk, 
    343 S.W.3d 60
    ,
    65 (Tenn. 2011) (citing State v. Lewter, 
    313 S.W.3d 745
    , 748 (Tenn. 2010)).
    Tina and Gregory Nelson were convicted of first degree felony murder and
    aggravated child abuse. As pertinent to this case, first degree felony murder is defined as
    the “killing of another committed in the perpetration of or attempt to perpetrate . . .
    aggravated child abuse[.]” T.C.A. § 39-13-202(a)(2) (2010). A person commits the
    offense of aggravated child abuse when he or she “knowingly, other than by accidental
    means, treats a child under eighteen (18) years of age in such a manner as to inflict
    injury” and “serious bodily injury to the child” results. 
    Id. §§ 39-15-401(a),
    402(a)(1)
    (2010). If the abused child is eight years of age or less, as the victim was in this case, the
    offense is a Class A felony. 
    Id. § 39-15-402(b)
    (2010).
    Aggravated child abuse is a nature-of-conduct offense, which means that “the
    evidence must be sufficient for a rational jury to have concluded, beyond a reasonable
    doubt, that the defendant was aware of the nature of his conduct when he treated the
    victim in such a manner as to inflict injury, and that, in so doing, he acted other than by
    accidental means.” 
    Dorantes, 331 S.W.3d at 386
    (citing 
    Hanson, 279 S.W.3d at 277
    ); see
    State v. Ducker, 
    27 S.W.3d 889
    , 897 (Tenn. 2000) (holding that the evidence was
    sufficient to sustain the convictions for aggravated child abuse when the proof showed
    that the defendant “knowingly parked her car, rolled up the windows, securely fastened
    the children in the car, locked the car and left them inside . . . from approximately 3:45
    a.m. to between 12 and 1 p.m.” regardless of whether the defendant was aware that her
    conduct would cause the children‟s hyperthermia). In order to sustain a conviction for
    - 33 -
    first degree felony murder, the State was not required to prove a culpable mental state
    except that culpable mental state necessary to commit the underlying offense of
    aggravated child abuse. See T.C.A. § 39-13-202(b) (2010).
    The State‟s theory at trial was that (1) either Tina Nelson or Gregory Nelson or
    both of them were responsible as a principal for the aggravated child abuse offense that
    resulted in the victim‟s death or (2) that either Tina Nelson or Gregory Nelson was
    criminally responsible for the acts of the other who committed the aggravated child abuse
    offense that resulted in the victim‟s death. The record indicates that the jury was
    instructed on criminal responsibility for both Tina and Gregory Nelson and that the jury
    was charged with the following two conditions for criminal responsibility:
    A person is criminally responsible for an offense committed by the conduct
    of another, if:
    ...
    (2) Acting 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; or
    (3) Having a duty imposed by law or voluntarily undertaken to prevent
    commission of the offense and acting with intent to benefit in the proceeds
    or results of the offense, or to promote or assist its commission, the person
    fails to make a reasonable effort to prevent commission of the offense.
    
    Id. § 39-11-402
    (Supp. 2010).
    Criminal responsibility is not a distinct crime but “a theory by which the state may
    prove the defendant‟s guilt based on another person‟s conduct.” State v. Osborne, 
    251 S.W.3d 1
    , 16 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2007) (citing State v. Mickens, 
    123 S.W.3d 355
    , 389-90
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 2003)). In the theory of criminal responsibility, “an individual‟s
    presence and companionship with the perpetrator of a felony before and after the
    commission of an offense are circumstances from which his or her participation in the
    crime can be inferred.” State v. Watson, 
    227 S.W.3d 622
    , 639 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2006)
    (citing State v. Ball, 
    973 S.W.2d 288
    , 293 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1998)). In this situation,
    “[n]o particular act need be shown, and the defendant need not have taken a physical part
    in the crime to be held criminally responsible.” 
    Id. (citing Ball,
    973 S.W.2d at 293)).
    There is no requirement that the State “elect between prosecution as a principal actor and
    prosecution for criminal responsibility[.]” State v. Hodges, 
    7 S.W.3d 609
    , 625 (Tenn.
    - 34 -
    Crim. App. 1998) (citing State v. Williams, 
    920 S.W.2d 247
    , 257-58 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    1995)).
    A. Tina Nelson. Tina argues there was no evidence that she committed any act
    that injured the victim. She also argues she could not have known about the victim‟s
    internal injuries because the victim had no external signs of trauma. Finally, Tina asserts
    that the jury failed to give sufficient weight to Dr. Steinberg‟s testimony showing that her
    IQ of 53 prevented her from forming the required culpable mental state for the charged
    offenses and prevented her from forming the intent required to be criminally responsible
    for any act committed by Gregory Nelson.
    First, Tina Nelson argues that there was no proof showing she committed any act
    that injured the victim. She claims that the evidence established that the victim, who was
    born prematurely, had major health problems from birth that caused her death. We note
    that although the victim was born prematurely, had a low birth weight, had trouble
    retaining body heat, and had some evidence of a brain abnormality, the proof at trial
    established that the victim did not have any intracranial hemorrhages and was healthy
    enough to be discharged from the hospital.
    Despite Tina‟s claim that the victim was born with health problems that caused her
    death, the medical proof shows that the victim‟s injuries were the result of inflicted
    trauma. Dr. Laboy testified that he observed a small abrasion on the victim‟s nose and a
    small bruise from a recent injury under her jaw, which was an unusual place for a bruise
    because this is a protected area not likely to be injured during a fall. Dr. Laboy also
    found subdural hemorrhages on the left and the right side of the victim‟s brain as well as
    a patchy subarachnoid hemorrhage on the top of the victim‟s brain. He explained that
    some of the victim‟s brain hemorrhages were old injuries that had occurred in the past
    where the blood was reabsorbing and some were new injuries that had just recently
    occurred. Although he acknowledged that there could be natural causes for hemorrhages
    of this type, Dr. Laboy opined, after reviewing the victim‟s medical records and
    performing the autopsy, that the victim‟s brain hemorrhages were from a “traumatic
    injury.” He sent the victim‟s brain slides to a neuropathologist, who also opined that the
    victim‟s brain hemorrhages were not from natural causes. Although the victim‟s skull
    was not fractured, Dr. Laboy stated that an impact to a victim‟s head might not cause a
    fracture because the bones of the skull are softer and the blood can cause the bones of the
    skull to become expanded before the infant eventually develops symptoms of lethargy,
    convulsions, or aspirations that can result in death.
    Although Dr. Laboy acknowledged that infants can survive trauma to the brain,
    the victim had evidence of an old brain injury and then a rebleeding over that area that
    likely resulted in her death by causing an aneurysm, a seizure, or an inability to get
    - 35 -
    oxygen. He said it was unlikely that the victim‟s brain injuries were more than a month
    to a month-and-a-half old and concluded that the victim‟s cause of death was a closed
    head injury. In addition to the brain hemorrhages, Dr. Laboy observed recent perioptic
    hemorrhages between the sheath and the optic nerve of both of the victim‟s eyeballs,
    which were caused by traumatic injury causing the brain to collapse and blood to
    accumulate in that area. He also observed a recent retinal hemorrhage in the victim‟s left
    eye, which he believed was also caused by traumatic injury. Dr. Laboy also noted that
    the victim had healing fractures on six ribs on the left lateral side, eight ribs on the left
    posterior side, and five ribs on the right lateral side. He stated that these healing fractures
    could have been the result of a single event and looked to be less than a month old. He
    also observed a recent refracture on the ninth left posterior rib with blood around it. He
    stated that victim‟s fractured ribs were consistent with a squeezing type of inflicted
    trauma. In his autopsy report, Dr. Laboy stated that the existence of the victim‟s rib
    fractures raised the “index of suspicion that the acute intracranial hemorrhage [was]
    traumatic in nature.” Moreover, Dr. Laboy testified that the victim had brain
    hemorrhages, multiple fractures to her ribs, perioptic hemorrhages behind both eyeballs,
    and a hemorrhage inside one of her eyes that were the result of traumatic injury. This
    testimony refuted the claims made by Tina and Gregory Nelson that the victim was
    injured in any of the ways they suggested. Although Dr. Laboy acknowledged that the
    victim had no external signs of force or trauma at the time of the autopsy, he stated that
    the victim would not have had any bruises if she had been thrown onto something soft
    like a mattress or if her bruises had healed over time. Based on this evidence, a rational
    jury could have inferred that the victim‟s injuries were from inflicted trauma rather than
    from natural or accidental causes.
    As to Tina‟s claim that there was no evidence that she injured the victim, we find
    Derrell F. Nunn persuasive. See State v. Derrell F. Nunn, No. E2007-02333-CCA-R3-
    CD, 
    2009 WL 4790211
    (Tenn. Crim. App. Dec. 14, 2009). In that case, the defendants,
    who were the parents of the nine-month old victim, were the sole custodians during a
    time period in which the victim suffered a subdural hematoma that resulted in brain
    damage, retinal hemorrhages, a liver laceration, a bruised kidney, an injured pancreas,
    and fractures to his skull, arm, and leg. 
    Id. at *24-25.
    The jury was instructed on
    criminal responsibility for each defendant based on the parents‟ duty to protect their
    children from child abuse, see 
    Hodges, 7 S.W.3d at 623
    , and the defendants were
    subsequently convicted of aggravated child abuse. 
    Id. at *25.
    On appeal, this court held
    that “[a] rational jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that in the light most
    favorable to the State, one or both Defendants inflicted the injuries on their child before
    calling 9-1-1 on September 5, 2002, and if either Defendant did not inflict the injuries,
    that Defendant was criminally responsible because he or she failed to make a reasonable
    effort to prevent the beating.” 
    Id. at *24.
    In reaching this conclusion, the court noted that
    - 36 -
    the evidence established that the victim‟s near fatal injuries were inflicted while the
    defendants were the victim‟s sole caregivers. 
    Id. at *25.
    Although Tina claims that there was no evidence that she injured the victim, there
    was substantial circumstantial evidence presented at trial that Tina was either principally
    responsible for injuring the victim or was criminally responsible for Gregory Nelson‟s
    acts in injuring the victim. The proof, when viewed in the light most favorable to the
    State, established that Tina Nelson and Gregory Nelson had the sole care and custody of
    the victim prior to her death. Although Irene Nelson cared for the victim for a few hours
    on Easter Sunday, neither Tina nor Gregory claimed that Irene Nelson caused the
    victim‟s injuries. Pat Harwell and Zandra Carter-Mann testified that Tina and Gregory
    Nelson did not visit the victim at the hospital until after they were told that they would
    not be able to take the victim home. Dawn Hemby and Kim Coffee testified that on April
    20, 2011, they observed a blood spot on the victim‟s eye and urged the Nelsons to take
    the victim to the doctor. In addition, they noticed that the victim on that date did not
    laugh, smile, or show emotion and never reacted to her environment, which greatly
    concerned them. Irene Nelson testified that on April 24, 2011, the victim was extremely
    difficult to awaken and would not stop crying after she fed her.
    Most importantly, while Gregory testified that he could have caused the victim‟s
    rib fractures by administering CPR to her the day of her death, he was unable to explain
    how the victim had both new and old rib fractures. Despite Tina‟s and Gregory‟s various
    explanations for the victim‟s injuries, including the possibility that the victim received
    her injuries when R.C. pushed Tina down while she was holding the victim or that
    Timothy Nelson caused the victim‟s injuries, the jury, in convicting Tina and Gregory
    Nelson of the charged offenses, clearly chose to accredit the testimony of the State‟s
    witnesses over the testimony from Tina and Gregory Nelson, and we are precluded from
    reevaluating the credibility of any of the witnesses who testified. 
    Sisk, 343 S.W.3d at 65
    (citing 
    Lewter, 313 S.W.3d at 748
    ); 
    Campbell, 245 S.W.3d at 335
    . Accordingly, we
    conclude that the evidence was sufficient to sustain Tina Nelson‟s and Gregory Nelson‟s
    convictions for first degree felony murder and aggravated child abuse. In reaching this
    conclusion, we note that the dual convictions in this case do not violate the protections
    against double jeopardy. See State v. Watkins, 
    362 S.W.3d 530
    , 548 (Tenn. 2012) (citing
    State v. Denton, 
    938 S.W.2d 373
    , 379 n.14 (Tenn. 1996); State v. Godsey, 
    60 S.W.3d 759
    , 778 (Tenn. 2001)).
    Second, Tina claims that she could not have known about the victim‟s internal
    injuries because the victim had no “external signs of force or trauma” consistent with her
    internal injuries and because no other tests performed on the victim were as accurate as
    the victim‟s autopsy in determining that the victim had intracranial hemorrhages. We
    reiterate that aggravated child abuse is a nature-of-conduct offense. Consequently, the
    - 37 -
    evidence must be sufficient for a rational jury to have concluded, beyond a reasonable
    doubt, that Tina was aware of the nature of her conduct when she treated the victim in
    such a manner as to inflict injury, and that, in so doing, she acted other than by accidental
    means. See 
    Dorantes, 331 S.W.3d at 386
    ; 
    Ducker, 27 S.W.3d at 896
    . Based on the proof
    presented at trial, a rational jury could have found that Tina knowingly hit, slapped, or
    kicked the victim, or was criminally responsible for Gregory‟s acts in knowingly hitting,
    slapping, or kicking the victim. Such a finding is sufficient to support the convictions in
    this case, even if Tina and Gregory were not aware that these acts would result in serious
    bodily injury and death to the victim.
    Finally, Tina argues that the jury failed to give sufficient weight to Dr. Steinberg‟s
    testimony showing that her IQ of 53 prevented her from forming the required culpable
    mental state for the charged offenses and prevented her from forming the intent necessary
    to be held criminally responsible for Gregory Nelson‟s acts. Although Gregory did not
    present any expert testimony regarding the required mental states for the offenses, Tina
    offered testimony from Dr. Fred Steinberg, an expert in the field of forensic psychology.
    “„[P]sychiatric evidence that the defendant lacks the capacity, because of mental
    disease or defect, to form the requisite culpable mental state to commit the offense
    charged is admissible under Tennessee law.‟” State v. Faulkner, 
    154 S.W.3d 48
    , 56
    (Tenn. 2005) (quoting State v. Hall, 
    958 S.W.2d 679
    , 689-90 (Tenn. 1997)); see State v.
    Phipps, 
    883 S.W.2d 138
    , 149 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994) (stating that a defendant may
    introduce proof, including expert testimony, regarding his mental state for the purpose of
    negating the requisite culpable mental state for the charged offense); State v. Shelton, 
    854 S.W.2d 116
    , 122 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1993) (holding that a defendant may present
    “competent evidence, usually expert testimony, of his impaired mental condition to show
    that he was incapable of forming a criminal intent, even though he was not insane”);
    T.C.A. § 39-11-201(a)(2) (Supp. 2010) (stating that no person may be convicted of an
    offense unless the culpable mental state required is proven beyond a reasonable doubt).
    While the use of such evidence is not a defense to a crime, it is a rule of evidence that
    allows proof of the defendant‟s mental condition to negate the requisite culpable mental
    state. 
    Hall, 958 S.W.2d at 688-89
    . In other words,
    diminished capacity is not considered a justification or excuse for a crime,
    but rather an attempt to prove that the defendant, incapable of the requisite
    intent of the crime charged, is innocent of that crime but most likely guilty
    of a lesser included offense. United States v. Cameron, 
    907 F.2d 1051
    ,
    1067 (11th Cir. 1990). Thus, a defendant claiming diminished capacity
    contemplates full responsibility, but only for the crime actually committed.
    State v. Padilla, 
    347 P.2d 312
    (N.M.1959). In other words, “diminished
    - 38 -
    capacity” is actually a defendant‟s presentation of expert, psychiatric
    evidence aimed at negating the requisite culpable mental state.
    
    Id. at 688.
    An expert‟s testimony in the form of an opinion is not objectionable merely
    because it concerns an ultimate issue to be determined by the trier of fact. See State v.
    Shuck, 
    953 S.W.2d 662
    , 668-69 (Tenn. 1997) (citing City of Columbia v. C.F.W. Const.
    Co., 
    557 S.W.2d 734
    , 742 (Tenn. 1977)); see also Tenn. R. Evid. 704. “In Tennessee the
    only ultimate issue about which an expert explicitly cannot offer an opinion is whether
    the defendant was or was not sane at the time of commission of the criminal offense.”
    
    Shuck, 953 S.W.2d at 663
    n.3. Therefore, it is appropriate for experts to testify regarding
    the ultimate issue in a case involving diminished capacity, that is, whether because of the
    defendant‟s mental disease or defect, he was unable to act intentionally, knowingly,
    recklessly or with premeditation. See State v. Robert Austin, No. W2005-01963-CCA-
    R3-CD, 
    2007 WL 2624399
    , at *5 (Tenn. Crim. App. Sept. 10, 2007); State v. Antonio D.
    Idellfonso-Diaz, M2006-00203-CCA-R9-CD, 
    2006 WL 3093207
    , at *4 (Tenn. Crim.
    App. Nov. 1, 2006). An expert must show: (1) the defendant had a mental disease or
    defect, and (2) the defendant‟s inability to form the requisite culpable mental state was
    because of the defendant‟s mental disease or defect, rather than the defendant‟s emotional
    state or mental condition. See 
    Hall, 958 S.W.2d at 689
    , 691; Robert Austin, 
    2007 WL 2624399
    , at *5. “It is the showing of a lack of capacity to form the requisite culpable
    mental intent that is central to evaluating the admissibility of expert psychiatric testimony
    on the issue.” 
    Hall, 958 S.W.2d at 690
    (citing 
    Shelton, 854 S.W.2d at 122
    ).
    Although the trial court had no duty to instruct the jury that it may consider proof
    negating the requisite mental state, the record indicates that the trial court in this case did,
    in fact, instruct the jury regarding this issue. See State v. Grose, 
    982 S.W.2d 349
    , 353-54
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1997) (stating that the trial court had no duty to instruct the jury that
    the defendant‟s diminished capacity could be considered in determining whether he was
    capable of forming the requisite mental state for the offense); State v. Rutherford, 
    876 S.W.2d 118
    , 121 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1993) (holding that a special instruction was
    unnecessary because “[t]he effect that the defendant‟s mental retardation would have on
    his ability to form the culpable mental state was just another circumstance for the jury to
    consider in determining if the defendant in fact possessed the required mental state”).
    After the close of proof and prior to closing arguments, the trial court stated that it
    planned to charge the following special jury instruction regarding Tina Nelson‟s culpable
    mental state:
    - 39 -
    The defendant‟s capacity to form the requisite mental state to
    commit an offense is an issue in criminal prosecutions because the general
    criminal law in Tennessee provides that no person may be convicted of an
    offense unless the culpable mental state required is proven beyond a
    reasonable doubt. The effect that the defendant‟s mental disorder or mental
    retardation would have on her ability to form the culpable mental state is
    just another circumstance for the jury to consider in determining if the
    defendant, in fact, possessed the required mental state. The State must
    prove beyond a reasonable doubt the culpable mental state for the accused.
    Culpable mental state means the state of mind of the accused at the time of
    the offense. This means that you must consider all of the evidence to
    determine the state of mind of the accused at the time of the commission of
    the offense. The state of mind which the State must prove is contained in
    the elements of the offenses as outlined in these instructions. You can refer
    to instructions and element[s] of the offenses. Some require intentional,
    knowing, or recklessly.
    In this case you have heard evidence that the defendant might have
    suffered from a mental disease or . . . mental defect or condition which
    could have affected her capacity to form the culpable mental state required
    to commit a particular offense. If you find from the evidence that the
    defendant‟s capacity to form the culpable mental state may have been
    affected, then you must determine beyond a reasonable doubt what the
    mental state of the defendant was at the time of the commission of the
    offense to determine which, if any, offense she may be guilty of.
    We conclude that the aforementioned instruction is substantially the same as
    Tennessee Criminal Pattern Jury Instruction 42.22. See 7 Tenn. Prac. Pattern Jury Instr.
    T.P.I.—Crim. 42.22 (18th ed. 2014). After the trial court indicated that it was going to
    provide the above instruction, both parties requested a photocopy of the instruction so
    they could review it before the jury was charged the following day. The next day, the
    prosecutor and the defense attorneys for Tina and Gregory Nelson stated that this
    proposed charge was acceptable.5
    In State v. Robert Austin, this court considered whether the trial court erred in
    ruling that the defense‟s expert, a clinical psychologist, could not testify about the
    defendant‟s capacity to form the requisite intent for the charged offenses. Robert Austin,
    No. W2005-01963-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2007 WL 2624399
    , at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App. Sept. 10,
    2007). The court noted that although the expert testified that the defendant‟s mental
    5
    The record does not include the portion of the transcript showing the trial court‟s instructions to
    the jury or a written copy of the jury instructions given by the trial court in this case.
    - 40 -
    disease “impacted his capacity” to form the requisite culpable mental state, the expert
    failed to state that the defendant was incapable of forming the required mental state
    because of his mental disease. 
    Id. at *5.
    Although this court concluded that the trial
    court erred in ruling that the expert‟s testimony was inadmissible, it held that the trial
    court‟s ruling was harmless because the expert‟s testimony failed to show that the
    defendant was incapable of forming the requisite culpable mental state for the offense
    because of his mental disease. 
    Id. at *6.
    In State v. Antonio D. Idellfonso-Diaz, an interlocutory appeal, the State argued
    that the trial court erred in ruling the defendant could present expert testimony that he
    lacked the mental capacity required for the offenses. Antonio D. Idellfonso-Diaz, No.
    M2006-00203-CCA-R9-CD, 
    2006 WL 3093207
    , at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App. Nov. 1, 2006).
    At a pretrial hearing, the expert testified that the defendant was suffering from severe
    psychiatric disorders at the time of the offenses. 
    Id. While the
    expert testified that the
    defendant‟s capacity to form the mental states was “impaired to some extent,” he did not
    specifically testify that the defendant lacked the capacity to premeditate or act
    intentionally because of a mental disease or defect. 
    Id. at *4.
    This court concluded that
    the expert‟s testimony was irrelevant and inadmissible, stating, “The fact that the
    [defendant‟s] mental disease impaired or reduced his capacity to form the requisite
    mental state does not satisfy the two-prong requirement in Hall and Faulkner.” 
    Id. After carefully
    reviewing the expert testimony presented in this case, we conclude
    that Dr. Steinberg‟s testimony failed to establish that Tina Nelson lacked the requisite
    mental state for the offenses because of a mental disease or defect. Unlike the experts in
    Robert Austin and Antonio D. Idellfonso-Diaz, Dr. Steinberg‟s testimony did not go even
    so far as to state that Tina Nelson‟s mental disease or defect impacted or reduced her
    capacity to form the requisite mental state. While Dr. Steinberg‟s testimony sufficiently
    established that Tina had a mental disease or defect, it failed to show that Tina was
    incapable of forming the requisite culpable mental state because of this mental disease or
    defect. For this reason, a rational jury could have found that Dr. Steinberg‟s testimony
    was not entitled to any weight, particularly in light of the testimony from Carter-Mann
    that Tina was able to sign DCS paperwork, participate in meetings, and schedule
    appointments for her children and the testimony from Dawn Hemby that Tina appeared
    capable of taking care of herself and her children.
    The jury in this case convicted Tina Nelson of the charged offenses rather than any
    lesser included offenses. Although Tina presented evidence attempting to negate her
    capacity to form the requisite mental state and the jury was specifically instructed on this
    issue, the jury found, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Tina either possessed the mental
    state required for the charged offenses or was criminally responsible for the acts
    committed by Gregory Nelson in the commission of these offenses.
    - 41 -
    Therefore, we conclude, based on the specific proof presented in this case, that the
    evidence failed to establish that Tina Nelson lacked the capacity to form the requisite
    mental states for these offenses. In reaching this conclusion, we decline to make a
    blanket statement that a person‟s IQ will never affect his or her capacity to form the
    requisite culpable mental state. Each case must turn on the particular evidence presented.
    However, because the evidence presented in this case is sufficient to sustain Tina
    Nelson‟s convictions for first degree felony murder and aggravated child abuse, she is not
    entitled to relief.
    B. Gregory Nelson. Gregory Nelson argues that he and Tina could not have
    knowingly injured the victim because the victim‟s injuries could have only been observed
    by a trained medical professional prior to the autopsy. As support, he cites Dr. Laboy‟s
    testimony that no one, other than an ophthalmologist or optometrist who dilated the
    victim‟s eye and looked inside it, could have observed the injuries to the victim‟s eye.
    Gregory also claims that Jeremy Booker‟s testimony regarding Gregory‟s admission to
    physically abusing the victim was at odds with the testimony from Dr. Laboy and Sheriff
    Sanders that there were no external, observable injuries to the victim. While Gregory
    acknowledges that “either or both of them might have been reckless or negligent with
    regard to seeking medical care” for the victim based on their poverty and intellectual
    disabilities, he contends that neither he nor Tina Nelson acted knowingly in inflicting
    serious bodily injury to the victim.
    We again emphasize that aggravated child abuse is a “nature of conduct” crime,
    and, therefore, the evidence must be sufficient for a rational jury to have concluded,
    beyond a reasonable doubt, that Gregory was aware of the nature of his conduct when he
    treated the victim in such a manner as to inflict injury, and that, in so doing, he acted
    other than by accidental means. See 
    Dorantes, 331 S.W.3d at 386
    ; 
    Ducker, 27 S.W.3d at 896
    . In other words, the State did not have to show that Gregory Nelson knew his actions
    would injure the victim, only that he knowingly committed the act or acts that caused the
    serious bodily injury that resulted in the victim‟s death. Given the evidence presented at
    trial, a rational jury could have found that Gregory knowingly hit, slapped, or kicked the
    victim, or was criminally responsible for Tina‟s acts in knowingly hitting, slapping, or
    kicking the victim. As we previously held, such a finding is sufficient to support the
    convictions in this case, even if Tina and Gregory were not aware that these acts would
    result in serious bodily injury and death to the victim.
    The jury in this case convicted Gregory Nelson of charged offenses, first degree
    felony murder and aggravated child abuse, rather than any of the lesser included offenses.
    While Tina Nelson presented expert evidence attempting to negate the requisite culpable
    mental state for these offenses, Gregory presented no such proof, and the jury declined to
    convict him of any lesser offenses. Although Gregory claims that the jury was precluded
    - 42 -
    from considering any lesser included offenses that that might have stemmed from
    “reckless or negligent behavior on the part of either parent,” the record shows that the
    jury was instructed on facilitation of murder in the first degree, murder in the second
    degree, facilitation of murder in the second degree, reckless homicide, facilitation of
    reckless homicide, child abuse, facilitation of child abuse, criminally negligent homicide,
    and facilitation of criminally negligent homicide as lesser included offenses of first
    degree felony murder. In addition, the record shows the jury was instructed on
    facilitation of aggravated child abuse, aggravated assault, facilitation of aggravated
    assault, reckless aggravated assault, facilitation of reckless aggravated assault, child
    abuse, facilitation of child abuse, reckless endangerment, and assault as lesser included
    offenses of aggravated child abuse. The record is devoid of any evidence that the jury
    was prevented from considering these lesser included offenses, including those offenses
    requiring a reckless or negligent mental state. Because the evidence is sufficient to
    sustain Gregory Nelson‟s convictions for aggravated child abuse and first degree felony
    murder, he is not entitled to relief.
    Secondly, Gregory Nelson claims that even if Booker‟s relatively weak testimony
    was true, none of the acts recounted by Booker “produced a single „serious‟ bodily
    injury” required for aggravated child abuse.” In challenging the credibility of Booker‟s
    testimony, Gregory asserts that Booker was unable to remember the exact date Gregory
    made these admissions, could not provide a detailed description of the person in the dark
    suit to whom Gregory was talking when he made these statements, and did not hear both
    sides of the conversation or the entire conversation between Gregory Nelson and the man
    in the dark suit. Gregory further asserts that although Booker claimed he reported
    Gregory‟s admission immediately, the investigators in this case waited ten or eleven
    weeks before obtaining “a vague statement” from Booker about what he overheard.
    Finally, Gregory attacks Booker‟s credibility by asserting that the State never attempted
    to locate the man in the dark suit and never refuted Nelson‟s claim that the only man he
    talked to in jail was attorney Richard McFall.
    We conclude that the proof is sufficient to support a finding that the victim
    suffered serious bodily injury. “Serious bodily injury” is defined as bodily injury that
    involves any one of the following:
    (A) A substantial risk of death;
    (B) Protracted unconsciousness;
    (C) Extreme physical pain;
    (D) Protracted or obvious disfigurement;
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    (E) Protracted loss or substantial impairment of a function of a bodily
    member, organ or mental faculty; or
    (F) A broken bone of a child who is twelve (12) years of age or less[.]
    T.C.A. § 39-11-106(a)(34) (Supp. 2010). “Bodily injury” is defined as “a cut, abrasion,
    bruise, burn or disfigurement, and physical pain or temporary illness or impairment of the
    function of a bodily member, organ, or mental faculty[.]” 
    Id. § 39-11-106(a)(2)
    (Supp.
    2010).
    Although Gregory claims that none of the acts recounted by Booker produced a
    single serious bodily injury required for a conviction for aggravated child abuse, the
    medical testimony shows otherwise. Dr. Laboy opined that the subdural hemorrhages on
    the left and the right side of the victim‟s brain, the subarachnoid hemorrhage on the top
    of the victim‟s brain, the perioptic hemorrhages between the sheath and the optic nerve of
    both of the victim‟s eyeballs, and the retinal hemorrhage inside the victim‟s left eye were
    all the result of traumatic injury. He also noted that the victim had healing fractures on
    six ribs on the left lateral side, eight ribs on the left posterior side, and five ribs on the
    right lateral side that were consistent with a squeezing type of inflicted trauma.
    Moreover, Dr. Laboy stated that the victim had evidence of an old brain injury and then a
    rebleeding over that area that likely caused the victim‟s death by causing an aneurysm, a
    seizure, or an inability to get oxygen. We have already concluded that the proof showed
    the victim‟s injuries were from inflicted trauma rather than natural or accidental causes
    and that the proof is sufficient to support Gregory Nelson‟s convictions. Accordingly, he
    is not entitled to relief.
    CONCLUSION
    The evidence is sufficient to sustain the convictions in this case, and the judgments
    of the trial court are affirmed.
    _______________________________
    CAMILLE R. MCMULLEN, JUDGE
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