        IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                          AT JACKSON
                         Assigned on Briefs December 7, 2010

                STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ANTHONY DODSON

              Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Shelby County
                      No. 08-01015    W. Otis Higgs, Jr., Judge


                  No. W2009-02568-CCA-R3-CD - Filed June 2, 2011


        The defendant, Anthony Dodson, was convicted of attempted first degree murder, a
Class A felony, and sentenced to twenty-five years as a Range I, standard offender. The
defendant now appeals, claiming insufficient evidence to support his conviction and that the
sentence imposed by the trial judge was excessive. After reviewing the record, we find error
in neither the defendant’s conviction nor his sentence, and we affirm the judgment of the trial
court.

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

J OHN E VERETT W ILLIAMS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which T HOMAS T.
W OODALL and A LAN E. G LENN, JJ., joined.

Robert Wilson Jones, District Public Defender, and Phyllis Aluko and Robert Felkner,
Assistant Public Defenders, for the appellant, Anthony Dodson.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Deshea Dulany Faughn, Assistant
Attorney General; William L. Gibbons, District Attorney General; and Nicole Germain and
Summer Morgan, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

                                         OPINION

        The defendant in this case challenges his conviction of attempted first degree murder.
At trial, the victim and the defendant gave two vastly different accounts of the events that
transpired during the early morning hours of December 28, 2007. According to the victim’s
testimony, she and the defendant had been boyfriend and girlfriend for approximately eight
months and had been living together in her mother’s home for some time. On the night in
question, she left her job at Federal Express at around three a.m. Thereafter, she attempted
to reach the defendant on his cell phone numerous times. The defendant would either hang
up on her or not answer the phone. When the victim arrived at her home, the defendant’s car
was not there. The victim then became angry at the defendant’s suspicious behavior and
made the decision to throw him out of her house.

       After a period of time, the victim finally reached the defendant by phone. He gave
several different explanations for his whereabouts, but the victim drove around checking out
each of these explanations and found none of them to be credible. She returned to her home,
and the defendant eventually returned home as well, urging reconciliation and making
various excuses for his behavior. The victim, however, refused to be appeased and
responded with a tirade directed at the defendant that culminated with the victim ordering the
defendant to leave her home. In response, the defendant cursed at her but stated that he was
going to vacate the premises. However, while continuing to proclaim his intention to
immediately leave, he, instead, reached under the bed they shared, grabbed a .38 caliber
revolver handgun and a box of bullets belonging to the victim, and proceeded to load the
weapon. After briefly grabbing at his arm, the victim turned and fled in a vain attempt to
reach her panic button before the defendant shot her. The victim was knocked to the ground
by what she presumed was a bullet, and she drifted in and out of consciousness. After some
time, she attempted to get herself up, knocking over a silk tree in the process. The victim
found herself unable to see but eventually kicked out the glass and screen of a window,
causing a gash in her leg. Once the victim made it outdoors, she rested for a time on the
ground in the pouring rain and screamed for help. She eventually heard a “Caucasian”-
sounding man’s voice ask her, “who did this to you?” The victim replied that her boyfriend,
the defendant, had shot her. After that, she lost consciousness and later awoke in a hospital.

        The defendant testified to a very different version of events when he took the stand
in his own defense. He started by explaining his criminal history, which included convictions
for aggravated robbery and kidnaping, as well as a misdemeanor handgun violation. After
explaining these offenses, the defendant related that he became involved with the victim after
meeting her through a chat line during April of 2006, despite his being married at the time.
Although the victim initially told him that she had never been married, he later found out that
she had been and was still married to someone else. Nonetheless, things progressed in their
relationship to the point that the defendant decided to move in with her in November of 2006.
At some point, the defendant discovered that the victim was “bisexual” and was “very
promiscuous with women,” which apparently caused him some concern. His suspicions only
grew sometime later when he discovered the victim engaging in chat line activities on her
computer, even though he had apparently believed that she had ceased all such activities.

       Later, on an unspecified night, the victim’s cell phone issued an audible buzzing, and
the defendant was able to reach the phone before the victim. He discovered an incriminating
text message on the phone, which appeared to confirm that the victim was engaging in an

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affair with a female coworker. This fact, combined with some other suspicious behavior on
the part of the victim involving an unusual amount of time she was taking off from work, led
the defendant to check up on the victim on the night of December 27, 2007. On that
particular evening, while coming home from his work, he visually determined that the
victim’s car was not located where he thought it ought to be parked. The defendant went to
her house and later left, driving aimlessly around. At approximately three a.m., the victim
called the defendant and insisted that she was at work, but when the defendant tried to call
her back, neither she nor any other Federal Express employee would answer the phone. The
victim called the defendant again and insisted that the defendant was “not calling.” The
defendant responded by accusing her of cheating, stating his intention to leave, and
threatening to inform the victim’s mother that she was a lesbian.

       When the defendant returned to the victim’s house to collect his personal possessions,
the two got into an argument concerning the defendant’s alleged jealousy and whether or not
the defendant was going to tell the victim’s mother about her sexual activities. The
defendant testified that he went to the closet to get his clothes. When he came back, the
victim had dumped out her handbag, and the defendant noticed that she now held a gun in
her hand. The defendant inquired of the victim why she was “playing with that gun” and
unleashed a torrent of aspersions toward her, deriding her for her alleged promiscuity and
sexual orientation. The victim then fired a single bullet at him, which missed and passed
through the window behind him. According to the defendant, he then lunged at the victim
and grabbed her hand. The two commenced wrestling, and, during the struggle, the gun went
off twice. The victim collapsed. The defendant explained that he panicked after the gun
went off and that all his thoughts turned to fleeing the scene. Unable to locate his own keys,
he grabbed those belonging to the victim and drove from the house in the victim’s vehicle.
Before he left, however, he was able to determine that the victim was still alive because she
was “snoring.”

       The defendant then called his own wife, from whom he had been previously separated,
and related what had transpired. Although his wife advised him to turn himself over to the
proper authorities, the defendant told his wife that the victim had merely suffered a grazing
bullet wound and would be all right. Instead, the defendant decided to move to Louisiana
and start working at a new job. He told his wife that after he saved up enough money for a
lawyer, he would return back to Tennessee to face the consequences. The defendant testified
that he worked in Louisiana for five months before he was arrested and brought back to
Shelby County.

        Regardless of the precise circumstances surrounding the shooting, on February 14,
2008, the defendant was indicted by the Shelby County Grand Jury on two counts: attempted
first degree murder and theft of property valued at more than $1000, but less than $10,000.

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On May 18, 2009, the second count of the defendant’s indictment was dismissed for want
of prosecution. The defendant was tried on the remaining charge from May 18-21, 2009.

       In addition to the testimony of the victim, the State presented the testimony of
Lieutenant James Grigsby of the Memphis Police Department, who responded to the call to
the victim’s residence on the night of the crime. Officer Grigsby testified that when he
arrived, he heard a woman yelling for help from her backyard. He further testified that when
he found the woman she was conscious, soaking wet, and visibly injured. The woman
claimed that she was unable to see. A window leading to the victim’s residence was open
nearby, and a window screen was lying outside it on the ground as though someone had
recently gone through it. Officer Grigsby directed other responding officers to enter the
victim’s house through that open window because all the doors to the house were found to
be locked. After determining that the house was empty, he and the other officers moved the
victim back into the house to get her out of the inclement weather. Once inside the house,
Officer Grigsby observed that the victim’s bedroom was in disarray and that there was blood
on the carpet and in the bathroom. He further testified that there was a gun case and a box
of bullets lying on the bed. He also observed a bullet hole through one of the bedroom
windows.

       Officer Grigsby called for an ambulance and asked the injured woman what had
transpired. The woman informed him that she and her live-in boyfriend had argued after he
had been out all night, and she had started throwing all of his clothes by the front door in the
course of ending the relationship. She further stated that the argument had turned physical
and that, ultimately, he had shot her in the head.

        Thereafter, the State presented the testimony of Officer Lavern Jones, a crime scene
investigator with the Memphis Police Department. Officer Jones processed the crime scene
on the night in question and authenticated several photographs she had taken of the location.
From the photographs, she identified a box of live rounds and loose bullets that were
discovered on the bed. She also testified that despite searching, she failed to recover any
spent bullets or shell casings from the crime scene. Before concluding, Officer Jones
identified a bullet hole in the victim’s master bedroom window, various bloodstains, and an
overturned plant from her crime scene photographs.

        Finally, the State presented the testimony of Dr. Thomas Oliver, a doctor of
neurosurgery, who was the victim’s treating physician at the Regional Medical Center at
Memphis (MED) on the night in question. He testified that he performed emergency
procedures on the victim and dictated an operative report concerning her injury. Dr. Oliver
testified that he performed a CAT scan on the victim and explained the results of that CAT
scan to the jury. From his visual examination of the victim and the results of the CAT scan,

                                              -4-
Dr. Oliver determined that the victim had an entry wound to the back of her head and a
portion of a bullet (as well as accompanying metal fragments) lodged in her brain. He
testified that he operated on the victim to repair the entry hole, wash out the victim’s brain,
and remove numerous bits of metal fragment. He testified, however, that he had to leave the
largest portion of the bullet in place in the victim’s brain because any attempt to remove it
could have caused additional brain damage. He testified that the victim would likely
experience permanent impairment to her vision owing to the damage caused to her optic
nerves by the injury.

        Dr. Oliver further testified that the victim appeared to have a second, “grazing” wound
to the other side of her head, which he closed with staples. He explained that he recovered
no bullets from this area because whatever had caused the injury had not fully entered the
body. Dr. Oliver testified that in order to inflict these injuries, a shooter would have had to
have been located behind the victim’s head. Dr. Oliver further testified that he saw no
powder burns or anything of that nature on the victim’s hair before he shaved it off in order
to perform the operation. After presenting this testimony, the State rested.

       The defendant took the stand in his own defense and testified as described above. The
defense presented no other evidence. On May 21, 2009, the defendant was found guilty of
attempted first degree murder. On September 29, 2009, the defendant was sentenced to
twenty-five years as a Range I, standard offender. A motion for new trial was filed that same
day and was denied by the trial court on November 30, 2009. This appeal promptly followed.

                                                I.

        The defendant’s first claim is that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction
for attempted first degree murder. “When the sufficiency of the evidence is challenged, the
relevant question is whether, after reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
State, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond
a reasonable doubt.” State v. Dorantes, 331 S.W.3d 370, 379 (Tenn. 2011); see also Tenn.
R. App. P. 13(e); Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979). Great weight is given to
the result reached by the jury in a criminal trial; matters such as the credibility of witnesses,
the weight given their testimony, and the proper resolution of any conflicts in the evidence
are ordinarily left in their care. Dorantes, 331 S.W.3d at 379. Consequently, “on appeal,
the State must be afforded the strongest legitimate view of the evidence and all reasonable
inferences that may be drawn therefrom.” Id. (internal quotation omitted). In essence, a
jury’s verdict of guilt strips the defendant of the presumption of innocence and replaces it
with a presumption of guilt that the defendant must strive to overcome on appeal. Id.

       In the case at bar, the defendant was convicted of attempted first degree murder. “A

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person commits criminal attempt who, acting with the kind of culpability otherwise required
for the offense . . . [a]cts with intent to cause a result that is an element of the offense, and
believes the conduct will cause the result without further conduct on the person’s part.”
T.C.A. § 39-12-101 (2011). “First degree murder is . . . [a] premeditated and intentional
killing of another.” T.C.A. § 39-13-202(a)(1). “Premeditation” means the formation of an
“intent to kill,” done: (1) “prior to the act itself” (but not necessarily held “for any definite
period of time” prior to the act), (2) “after the exercise of reflection and judgment,” and (3)
while “sufficiently free from excitement and passion.” T.C.A. § 39-13-202(d).

        The defendant argues that the State failed to present sufficient facts to support the
jury’s finding of premeditation. The presence or absence of premeditation, like other forms
of intent, is a question of fact for a jury to determine, and it may be proven by either direct
or circumstantial evidence. State v. Bland, 958 S.W.2d 651, 660 (Tenn. 1997).
Circumstantial evidence from which a jury may infer premeditation includes any evidence
of: “the use of a deadly weapon upon an unarmed victim; the particular cruelty of the killing;
declarations by the defendant of an intent to kill; evidence of procurement of a weapon;
preparations before the killing for concealment of the crime; and calmness immediately after
the killing,” id. at 659, as well as any evidence of the “destruction or secretion of evidence
of the killing,” the “establishment of a motive,” “the use of multiple weapons in succession,”
or the use of “repeated blows” to accomplish the killing, State v. Leach, 148 S.W.3d 42, 53-
54 (Tenn. 2004). These various circumstantial factors that may give rise to an inference of
premeditation are collectively known as the Bland and Leach factors. These factors are not
exhaustive; “[p]remeditation may be established by any evidence from which a rational trier
of fact may infer that the killing was done ‘after the exercise of reflection and judgment.’”
Leach, 148 S.W.3d at 53 (quoting T.C.A. § 39-13-202(d)). Nor is any individual Bland or
Leach factor necessarily completely dispositive of the premeditation inquiry–to the contrary,
many individual factors will only support a jury finding of premeditation if they are found
in conjunction with other factors or evidence. See, e.g., State v. Brown, 836 S.W.2d 530,
542-43 (Tenn. 1992) (evidence of the infliction of “repeated blows” held insufficient,
standing alone, to support a jury finding of premeditation); Meazel v. State, 500 S.W.2d 627,
629 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1973) (“[W]illful killing with a deadly weapon [alone] is not a
sufficient basis for an inference of premeditation and deliberation.”).

       In the present case, however, there was ample evidence from which a jury could infer
that the defendant premeditated this attempted killing. Although there were significant
discrepancies between the testimony of the victim and the defendant, for purposes of
analyzing a sufficiency of the evidence claim, we must accept whichever version of events
most favors the State. Dorantes, 331 S.W.3d at 379. According to the victim’s version of
events, the shooting satisfied two Bland factors – the use of a deadly weapon against an
unarmed victim, and the procurement of a deadly weapon (taken from underneath the

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victim’s bed). In addition, the defendant satisfied three Leach factors – the infliction of
multiple wounds (two gunshots to the back of the head), the secretion of evidence of the
killing (by removing the gun and spent shell casings from the crime scene), and the
establishment of a motive (his desire for revenge and animosity stemming from the victim’s
decision to break up with him).

        Although these factors would be more than enough to support the jury’s premeditation
finding, these factors are bolstered in this case by considerable additional circumstantial
evidence. According to the victim’s testimony, the revolver used by the defendant was
initially unloaded, and the defendant was forced to open and dump out a box of bullets, load
the gun, and close the cylinder before he could fire, giving him considerable time to
contemplate the nature of his actions before he shot. Moreover, while loading the weapon,
the defendant continued to make oral statements to the effect that he was going to leave, thus
confusing the victim and perhaps even delaying her attempt at flight for a few crucial
seconds. The defendant’s rapid ability to craft such an adroit technique to facilitate his effort
to shoot the victim gives rise to a strong inference that killing this victim was precisely his
intent. Finally, although by his own admission he believed her to still be alive after the
shooting, the defendant left the victim alone without ever attempting to render her any kind
of aid or summon any assistance for her. To the contrary, responding officers arrived only
to discover that all of the doors to the victim’s house were locked – meaning that this
defendant took active steps to prevent or delay potentially life-saving aid from reaching the
victim by locking the doors to her house before leaving the crime scene. His act of barring
her doors against potentially life-saving aid provides strong circumstantial evidence that this
defendant formulated an intent to cause her death prior to fleeing the crime scene.

        The defendant seeks to avoid this result by arguing that his version of the events that
culminated in the shooting better match the physical evidence than the version of events
presented by the victim. Of crucial importance to the defendant’s argument is the presence
of the bullet hole in the victim’s master bedroom window. The victim’s testimony does not
seem to account for the angle and trajectory of this bullet. It does, however, match the
defendant’s version of events in which the victim shot at him first and then he accidentally
shot her twice during a struggle over the gun. The defendant combines this discrepancy with
less serious inconsistencies in the victim’s statement in order to claim that the “credible
facts” presented to the jury neither establish premeditation nor defeat the defendant’s claim
of justifiable self-defense. But as we have repeatedly stated, it is not for this court to re-
weigh on appeal the credibility of the facts presented to the jury. See, e.g., Dorantes, 331
S.W.3d at 379.

      The jury in this case heard the testimony from both parties, reviewed the physical
evidence, and unanimously resolved any and all discrepancies in that testimony and evidence

                                               -7-
against the defendant. It does not matter, and this court need not determine, whether the jury
rejected the defendant’s argument concerning the incongruous bullet hole by concluding that
the victim experienced a minor memory lapse due to the heat of the events, perhaps
combined with her injury; whether they suspected that the defendant fired an additional shot
after the victim lost consciousness in an effort to stage the crime scene to his benefit should
he later be apprehended; whether they concluded that the victim did indeed shoot first but
that, thereafter, the defendant tried to execute her once he gained control of the gun; or
whether they resolved the discrepancies in some other fashion. Whatever the rationale, this
jury ultimately arrived at the seemingly unstartling conclusion that the victim was not
accidentally and unintentionally shot twice in the back of the head. Viewing the evidence
in the light most favorable to the State, “[t]he jury had a rational basis for the verdict[] of
guilt.” Id. at 390.

                                              II.

        The defendant also claims that the twenty-five-year sentence imposed by the trial
court is excessive. “When a defendant challenges a sentence on appeal, he or she bears the
burden of showing that the sentence is improper.” State v. Hester, 324 S.W.3d 1, 70 (Tenn.
2010). The standard of review of a trial court’s sentencing decision is de novo, with a
presumption that the trial court’s determinations are correct, so long as the trial court
considered the proper sentencing principles and the relevant facts and circumstances. Id.;
State v. Carter, 254 S.W.3d 335, 344-45 (Tenn. 2008). Since the Sentencing Act’s revisions
in 2005, the “weighing of various mitigating and enhancement factors has been left to the
trial court’s sound discretion,” and appellate courts have been “left with [only] a narrow[]
set of circumstances in which [we may] find that [the] trial court has abused its discretion in
setting the length of a defendant’s sentence.” Carter, 254 S.W.3d at 345-46.

       In this case, the defendant has not met his burden of demonstrating any sentencing
error. The Sentencing Act requires a sentencing court to impose a sentence within the
statutory range of punishment for the crime at issue, which is determined by the offender’s
class. See T.C.A. § 40-35-210(c). The trial court did so; the defendant concedes that the trial
court correctly determined him to be a Range I, standard offender and that his sentence of
twenty-five years is within the fifteen to twenty-five year range prescribed for those
committing attempted first degree murder, a Class A felony. See T.C.A. § 40-35-112(a).

        Instead, the defendant argues that the trial court (1) considered an inappropriate
enhancement factor, (2) erroneously found one of three enhancement factors to exist, and (3)
failed to consider two mitigating factors in setting his sentence. We disagree.

       The defendant argues that the trial judge “improperly based his [sentencing] decision

                                              -8-
on popular public opinion . . . suggest[ing] that if he did not give the defendant the maximum
sentence, he’d be run out of town.” The transcript of the sentencing hearing does reflect that
the trial judge used a less than ideal turn-of-phrase – “I’d be run out of town” – during the
course of an unusual digression occurring during his lengthy sentencing soliloquy. This
colloquial expression was uttered during a discussion of a hypothetical situation involving
his hypothetical decision to impose a sentence that would allow the defendant to walk out of
the courtroom that day as a free man. Obviously, both this court and the citizens of
Tennessee expect trial judges to sentence those who appear before them pursuant to the
strictures of the Sentencing Act, without regard to personal consequences or shifting vagaries
of public opinion.

       However, reviewing the record as a whole, we do not believe that this judge
considered public opinion as an enhancement factor or impermissibly sentenced the
defendant based on personal consequences. Rather, the trial judge was trying to make a more
general point to the defendant about the invisible harm inflicted on society by violent crimes
such as the one he committed, explaining that “people are scared to death in this community”
and that this fear has had a negative impact on the way community members travel, work,
and carry on their daily lives. Because of this harm the community was suffering from
violent crimes, the trial judge explained that he needed “to be concerned about the deterrent
effect” when setting the defendant’s sentence, a consideration that was plainly permissible
for him to consider. See T.C.A. § 40-35-102(3).

       Thus, although the trial judge let slip the phrase “I’d get run out of town,” he did not
mean it in its literal sense (i.e. as reflecting some actual concern over public opinion or the
personal consequences he might suffer from following proper sentencing procedure). Rather,
he meant it to express, as he explained immediately following, that “nobody would
understand it and I certainly wouldn’t understand it” if he did not give proper weight to the
importance of deterrence in sentencing in light of the social harm caused by the defendant’s
violent crime. That the trial court’s statement was not intended as literal is confirmed by the
fact that the trial judge made it not in reference to giving the defendant the fifteen-year
minimum sentence required for his crime, but to a hypothetical sentence of less than one
year, which would have allowed the defendant to walk free from the courtroom that day.
Reviewing the transcript as a whole, it is plain that the trial judge was not unduly swayed by
public opinion at sentencing nor did he sentence the defendant out of fear for his career or
personal safety. Rather, he merely used a colorful figure of speech to convey his belief that,
as he later clarified, “this case cries out for the maximum punishment” because of the
considerable harm the defendant did to society when he placed the community in a
heightened state of fear by shooting the victim.

       The defendant next claims that the trial judge erroneously applied an enhancing factor

                                              -9-
to lengthen his sentence based on a false assumption that the defendant completely blinded
the victim. The defendant points out that the victim in this case was not permanently
blinded; “the proof at trial revealed that the victim had no bottom peripheral vision in her left
eye, but her right eye was okay.” Once again, while the trial judge did make statements such
as “[t]his lady . . . has lost her eyesight” and “[s]he has lost her vision” at sentencing in
reference to the victim’s injuries, the defendant is reading these statements too literally in
arguing that the trial judge decided to apply an enhancement factor based on erroneous facts.
In making these statements, the judge was merely trying to drive home to the defendant the
harm he had inflicted on the victim by shooting her. Although using descriptive words such
as blinded, lost eyesight, and lost vision to describe the victim’s condition, the trial judge
never actually indicated that he held the incorrect belief that the victim had suffered total
blindness or that her blindness was permanent.

        To the contrary, the trial judge appears to have been well aware of the precise nature
of the victim’s injuries and to have appropriately found them to be worthy of consideration
in setting the defendant’s sentence. Indeed, immediately preceding these statements, the trial
judge summarized a letter he had received from the victim, in which she explained, “I have
suffered peripheral vision loss which makes driving out of the question.” Moreover, the trial
judge had the opportunity to observe the victim at length when she testified at trial, a fact
which, combined with the detailed testimony he heard from the State’s medical expert
concerning the extent of the victim’s injuries, renders it plain to us that the trial court did not
sentence the defendant under the erroneous assumption that she had been completely and
permanently blinded.

       Finally, the defendant argues that the trial judge failed to consider and apply two
mitigating factors – provocation on the part of the victim and the defendant’s expression of
remorse. At his initial sentencing hearing, the trial judge heard argument from the
prosecution that the defendant deserved the maximum sentence due to the presence of three
aggravating factors: the defendant’s lengthy criminal record (in addition to those crimes
necessary to establish his range), the fact that the damage inflicted on the victim was
particularly great, and the fact that this offense was committed while the defendant was
released on parole for another offense. The trial court also heard argument from the
defendant that his sentence should be mitigated based on the fact that he acted under strong
provocation (viz., the victim’s act of pulling a gun on him) and had made a statement of
remorse (albeit one that primarily re-argued his innocence and blamed the victim for the
shooting). The trial court took all of these arguments under advisement and, at the
defendant’s suggestion, delayed handing down a sentence while reviewing the issues.
During the intervening month, he received and reviewed numerous letters written by the
defendant requesting leniency on these and other grounds.



                                               -10-
        The trial court ultimately rejected the defendant’s “plea for consideration.” It is well
established that even if “a trial court recognizes and enunciates several applicable mitigating
factors, it does not abuse its discretion if it does not reduce the sentence from the maximum
on the basis of those factors.” Carter, 254 S.W.3d at 345. In this case, the trial court gave
no indication whatsoever that any of the mitigating factors raised by the defendant and his
counsel were even applicable. It is clear, however, that he carefully considered and rejected
all of the pleas for leniency that had been urged upon him.

                                       CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.




                                                     _________________________________
                                                     JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, JUDGE




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