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Kimberly
E. CUNNINGHAM
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Killed her daughter's
alleged rapist
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: October 7, 2003
Date of arrest:
Same day (surrenders)
Date of birth:
February 10, 1972
Victim profile:
Coy Calloway Hundley, 38
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Blount County, Tennessee, USA
Status:
Found
guilty of voluntary manslaughter. She was sentenced to four years
in prison on December 19, 2005. Sentence reduced on appeal to six
months in prison. Died in June 2010
MARYVILLE (WATE) -- A Blount
County mother found guilty in the shooting death of a man she said
raped her young daughter has been sentenced to four years in
prison.
In October, a jury found
Kimberly Cunningham guilty of voluntary manslaughter in the death
of Coy Hundley. The jury said she was not guilty of second-degree
murder.
Voluntary manslaughter
carries a sentence of three to six years in prison or probation.
On Monday, Hundley's family asked that Cunningham receive the
maximum six years but the court ruled for less.
The punishment is not enough
for Hundley's mother, Evelyn Hundley. "I guess I will have to
settle with what they give her, you know. I would of like to seen
her get life cause she did kill my son in cold blood. He wasn't
guilty of what she said. They had no proof whatsoever."
Cunningham and her family
were overwhelmed with emotion as they left the court room. "I feel
really hurt because both side no body won nobody wins in this,"
she told 6 News.
The prosecution argued that
she took a life and needed to be held responsible.
Cunningham broke down in
tears as her daughter took the stand. The 16-year-old girl told
the court he wished she had never told her mother her uncle raped
her. She also blamed herself for her mother's trouble.
One of Cunningham's sisters
also took the stand for the defense. "She is remorseful over Coy's
death and she's concerned about her children how they are going to
get through this."
Judge Kelly Thomas agreed
that learning of her daughter's rape caused Cunningham to act
irrationally. However, he believes she needs to serve time for her
crime.
"You shot Mr. Hundley by the
car and then he fell back and while he was wounded, crawling
across the parking lot, you reloaded and went out and shot him
three times in the head," the judge said.
In April, Cunningham was
acquitted on a charge of first degree murder. The jury couldn't
decide on the lesser charge of second degree murder, prompting a
retrial.
Cunningham admitted in both
trials she shot Hundley, but said it was in a moment of rage after
she had just learned her youngest daughter had been raped twice by
her uncle, Coy Hundley, when she was just nine-years-old.
Cunningham told the jury
when she confronted Hundley, 39, he just laughed at her and asked
what she was going to do about it. "I lost myself," she said, but
also said she doesn't remember pulling the trigger.
Cunningham will be home with
her family for Christmas. "I'm happy to be home with my kids for
Christmas to just support them and show them all the love I have
in my heart for them."
Her attorney, Bruce Poston,
is filing an appeal. It's possible she may be able to stay out of
jail until the appeal process is complete.
Jury finds Cunningham guilty
of lesser murder charge
By Catharyn Campbell - Wate.com
October 28, 2005
MARYVILLE (WATE) -- A Blount
County mother charged in the shooting death of a man she said
raped her young daughter was found guilty of a lesser charge
Friday.
The jury deliberated for
seven hours Thursday and Friday before finding Kimberly Cunningham
guilty of voluntary manslaughter in the death of Coy Hundley.
The jury said she was not
guilty of second-degree murder.
Voluntary manslaughter
carries a sentence of three to six years in prison or probation.
Sentencing is scheduled for December 19.
The jury was handed the case
Thursday morning in the trial that began Wednesday. It was the
second time she had been on trial on murder charges in Hundley's
death.
In April, she was acquitted
on a charge of first degree murder. The jury couldn't decide on
the lesser charge of second degree murder, prompting a retrial.
Cunningham admitted in both
trials she shot Hundley, but said it was in a moment of rage after
she had just learned her youngest daughter had been raped twice by
her uncle, Coy Hundley, when she was just nine years old.
Wednesday, Cunningham told
the jury when she confronted Hundley, 39, he just laughed at her
and asked what she was going to do about it.
"I lost myself," she said,
but also said she doesn't remember pulling the trigger.
Cunningham's lawyer, Bruce
Poston, said he believed the most severe verdict the jury would
reach was involuntary manslaughter.
Jury acquits woman of
first-degree murder
Knoxville News Sentinel
April 17, 2005
MARYVILLE - After more than 14 hours of
deliberations, a Blount County jury on Friday acquitted a mother
who killed her daughter's alleged rapist of first-degree murder.
But Kimberly E. Cunningham, 33, of Knoxville is
not in the clear. Jurors deadlocked on whether she should be
convicted of a lesser charge.
"They're relieved because Mom goes home
tonight," defense attorney Bruce Poston said of the Cunningham
family's reaction to the jury's announcement. "It was huge that
they rendered a (not guilty) verdict on first-degree murder. By
eliminating first, a new trial starts at (a charge of)
second-degree (murder)."
The difference is vast. A conviction on
first-degree murder would have netted Cunningham a minimum 51-year
prison term. The maximum sentence for second-degree murder is 25
years.
Cunningham shot Coy Calloway Hundley eight
times in the parking lot of Slide Lock Tool Co. on Topside Road in
Alcoa in October 2003. Four of those gunshot wounds were to his
head.
Blount County Assistant District Attorney
General Robert Headrick argued that Cunningham went to Hundley's
workplace armed and planning to kill him. He pointed to the fact
that she emptied her five-shot revolver and then reloaded and
emptied the gun a second time in the fatal shooting.
Headrick could not be immediately reached for
comment Friday evening. Hundley's relatives have declined during
the trial to comment.
Cunningham has testified that on the day of the
fatal shooting she learned that Hundley had allegedly raped her
youngest daughter. She contended she only went to his workplace to
confront him.
She testified Hundley laughed at her and mocked
her. She insisted she did not remember killing him.
She testified that she was already grappling
with allegations that Hundley's teenage son had molested that same
daughter and her son, and she had gotten a permit to carry a gun
after Hundley allegedly threatened her over those allegations.
Poston had urged jurors to acquit Cunningham of
any homicide charge, arguing that she was in a "trance-like" state
and unaware of what she was doing.
The trial, presided over by Judge Kelly Thomas,
was an emotional one, with Cunningham's youngest daughter and son
both testifying about alleged molestation. Her husband of 18 years
buried his head in his hands during his children's testimony.
Emotions ran even higher when, just two hours
after deliberations began Thursday, jurors told Thomas they had a
question.
"Does Tennessee have a death penalty?" they
wrote to the judge.
The question unnerved Poston and left the
Cunningham family in tears.
Thomas answered the panel by saying, "Tennessee
does have the death penalty, but the state is not seeking the
death penalty in this case."
The jury announced their decision around 6:30
p.m. Friday.
Although Poston said he considered the
acquittal a victory, he was shocked the issue of premeditation was
even up for debate. At worst, Poston has argued, Cunningham could
be convicted of voluntary manslaughter, which is the killing of a
person in the heat of passion.
"It still stuns me that when a mother is told
her daughter was raped that a jury wouldn't consider that in the
heat of passion in terms of the shooting," he said.
Under Tennessee law, there is no
one-size-fits-all definition of murder. Instead, there are degrees
with each carrying different penalties. The differences revolve
around how culpable a person is for a death.
A person who plots to kill someone - the
so-called cold-blooded killer - rates the highest charge and the
toughest penalty. Next comes second-degree murder, in which a
person did not plan a slaying but knew exactly what he or she was
doing when committing the murder.
Voluntary manslaughter is the killing of
someone in the heat of passion. The man who finds his wife in a
compromising position with his best friend and kills them in an
eruption of fury is the most familiar example.
Reckless homicide and criminally negligent
homicide involve cases where a person's conduct causes death,
though that person did not intend to kill anyone.
Thomas set a May 17 status conference on
Cunningham's case to determine if prosecutors will seek a trial on
second-degree murder charges or if the case can be resolved with a
plea agreement.
Knoxville lawyer Bruce Poston and the family of
Kimberly Cunningham gather for a hug in the front of a Blount
County courtroom. Cunningham was acquitted Friday of first-degree
murder in the slaying of Coy Callaway Hundley.
Karns woman on trial for
murdering long-time friend
WBIR.com
April 14, 2005
Kimberly Cunningham of Karns
says she knew Coy Hundley for 18 years and thought she knew him
well until her daughter told her Hundley (her uncle) and his son
(her cousin) molested her.
"I wanted to know why he
betrayed us," said Cunningham on the stand.
Cunningham's 16-year old
daughter testified her uncle and cousin started molesting her when
she was 9-years old. In open court, she recounted the first time
Coy Hundley touched her.
"I was in his trailer when
he asked me to take off my clothes," says the now 16-year old. He
took my pants off but left my shirt on. I was wearing a Little
Mermaid t-shirt."
Afraid to tell anyone what
happened, the teen kept it to herself until her mother pressed her
as to why she seemed upset all the time. On October 7, 2003,
Cunningham went to where Hundley worked to tell her what her
daughter told her. Her attorney Bruce Poston says Hundley's
reaction led to his death.
"I told him, 'You raped my
daughter,' and he laughed and stepped back and said, 'What are you
going to do about it,'" said Cunningham.
Cunningham shot him 8 times.
Murder or Vigilante Justice?
By Chris Francescani - ABCNews.go.com
October 19, 2007
Amanda Cunningham said she vividly recalls the
day her Uncle Coy raped her.
"I remember I had my purple Little Mermaid
shirt on," she told ABC News. "He told me to take my clothes off,
and I said no, so he took them off me."
She was 9 years old. Coy Hundley was drunk,
Amanda said, but that wasn't unusual. He would rape her again a
few months later, she testified in court.
Nearly five years later, in the fall of 2003,
Amanda's mother, Kimberly Cunningham, finally learned of the
alleged attacks. What happened next was the talk of Knoxville,
Tenn., for years.
Kimberly got into her car and drove to the tool
company where Hundley worked. She called him out into the parking
lot. Cunningham said that she was praying he would deny the rape.
Instead, she said Hundley, 39, laughed at her.
"What are you going to do about it?" he
allegedly said.
Kimberly shot him five times, reloaded the
weapon and fired five more rounds, killing him.
"I'll never forget him laughing at me," she
testified at trial, according to court transcripts.
Witnesses said that after Kimberly shot
Hundley, she got back into her car, pulled out of the parking lot
and up to the road, put her blinker on and calmly drove away.
Forty-five minutes later, she was in the Alcoa, Tenn., Police
Department, turning in her nickel-plated revolver and telling
police there had been a shooting.
"The person who is a good mother and in control
— and I'm a compassionate person — was completely gone," Kimberly
told ABC News. "You wouldn't believe how tiny she was," Kimberly
said, her voice cracking. "This little thing, she wasn't more than
42 pounds, and for someone to do such vulgar things to her … there
[sic] is simply no words to describe what happened … I just
totally lost control."
On an audiotape of the police interrogation
obtained by ABC News, Kimberly can be heard sobbing. "He raped my
baby!" she told police.
In her first trial in April 2005, a Knoxville
jury acquitted her of first degree murder, but deadlocked on
second degree murder. In a second trial in October 2005, the jury
acquitted Kimberly of second degree murder, but found her guilty
of voluntary manslaughter. She was sentenced to four years in
prison, a sentence that was recently reduced on appeal to six
months in prison.
"If she hadn't reloaded that gun," said Carl
Eppolito, a juror from the second trial, "I would have let her
walk."
For the tight-knit town of Knoxville, nestled
in the shadow of the Smoky Mountains, the case posed the thorniest
of questions: What would you do if you believed your child had
been raped?
He Said They'd 'Never Find My Body'
Kimberly had obtained a gun permit, taken
lessons at a firing range and carried a loaded gun in a black
purse in her car since August 2003, when she learned that
Hundley's eldest son had allegedly molested her son Shane, now 15,
as well as Amanda.
After Kimberly reported this to police, the
Hundleys threatened her, Kimberly testified. Hundley was the
common-law husband of Kimberly's sister Rhonda.
"I was scared of their family," Kimberly said.
"They wanted me to drop it, kept telling me that 'it's gonna come
out of my a--' if I didn't drop it." She said that Hundley and his
friends repeatedly told her that they'd "never find my body."
Feeling helpless and angry, she said, she
smashed the windows in Hundley's son's car. When she called
Hundley at work, she testified, he told her the vandalism made the
two families "even."
Repeated attempts by ABC News to interview
Hundley's son were unsuccessful. Evelyn Hundley, Hundley's mother,
denied that any molestation or rapes had occurred.
"I just think it's unjust," she said. "I don't
believe in the justice system no more. Because she got away with
cold-blooded murder."
Though Kimberly contacted police after her
children told her they'd been molested, no charges were filed
against Hundley's eldest son, according to Evelyn.
Listless and Withdrawn
For nearly five years, Amanda had harbored her
secret, and it was beginning to wear on her. Her mother said that
the A student had become listless and withdrawn. She remembers
Amanda lying on the floor outside her bedroom door, "screaming and
crying" until her mother would let her come in and sleep in her
bed with her.
"I knew there was something wrong with her, but
I didn't know what it was," Kimberly said. Mother and daughter
began to fight bitterly, until one day in the early fall of 2003,
in utter frustration, Kimberly put her daughter in the backseat of
the car and told her she was taking her to the juvenile detention
center.
"Why are you acting like this?" her mother
pleaded with her. Then she had a thought. "Who is bothering you?"
she asked her daughter.
The mother began ticking off the names of the
people in town.
"When she got to [Coy's son's] name, I shook my
head, yes," Amanda said. Her mother went to the police and then
took her young son Shane to McDonald's. He, too, said that Coy's
eldest son had been "touching" him.
Kimberly continued to press Amanda, but Amanda
couldn't bring herself to tell her mother everything. "I didn't
want to tell her because that was more embarrassing to me because
he was an adult," Amanda told ABC News. But the secret distressed
her, she said.
On Oct. 6, 2003, while her mother was putting
Shane to bed, Amanda asked her to come into her bedroom. She said
that she had something she wanted to talk about.
'Every Parent's Nightmare'
"I told her I had been having dreams about
Coy," Amanda said. "She told me she knew there was more to what I
was trying to say."
Amanda finally broke down and told her mother
that Hundley had forced her to perform oral sex on him when she
was 9 and then raped her. She said he had raped her again after
that and threatened her not to tell anybody.
Finally, it all made sense to Kimberly. As Amanda got
dressed for school, her mother slowly absorbed the enormity of
what her daughter had told her.
"She wasn't like, psychotically out of it or
anything," Amanda said. "She just seemed zoned out, like she was
thinking about a lot of things."
By the time Amanda got to school, the man she
said raped her lay dead in a parking lot, with four bullets in his
head and four more scattered throughout his body.
"It's every parent's nightmare," Kimberly's
attorney, Bruce Poston, told ABC News. "This case came down to the
defense saying, 'What would you do if you were in her shoes?'"
'It Got … Meaner and Meaner'
Linda King, 58, a retired secretary from a
General Motors purchasing department in Tennessee, was the final
holdout against a first degree murder conviction for Kimberly in
the first trial. She told ABC News that she was pressured by the
11-mother, one-father jury to convict Kimberly of first degree
murder.
She said that she was called stupid "and worse
things," and that at one point the male foreman pounded his fists
on the table in front of her and threatened to write a note to the
judge saying that she was "illogical, uncooperative and couldn't
see the light of day."
"And that's exactly what he ended up doing,"
King said.
What began as a cordial deliberation in which
several of the women felt Kimberly had acted in a moment of
extreme passion and should not be charged with murder, devolved
into a tense, 11-versus-1 contest of wills.
"It kind of got meaner and meaner," King said,
adding that as time passed several of the other jurors became
"nasty."
Two other jurors had held out with her into the
second day of deliberations, but eventually sided with the others,
she said. King said the other jurors told her they "would come
down from first degree murder, and so now I had to come up from
voluntary manslaughter."
"I told them, 'That's not how this works. It's
not a compromise. This is someone's life we're talking about,'"
said King. "I said I felt this family had been victimized enough
and they needed a chance to recover themselves, and that mother
needed to be with those kids."
The rest of the jury appeared to be deeply
skeptical of Kimberly's family.
"The jury kept saying to me, 'That man is not
here to defend himself,' but I believed what those kids went
through," King said. "I really felt that when this had happened
the first time, with [Kimberly's] nephew, that she had followed
the law. She had tried to go through the system the first time,
and I think she would have gone through the system again the
second time unless Coy Hundley had reacted the way he did,
laughing at her."
Eventually, King said, the tide began to turn.
The jury finally voted to acquit Cunningham of first degree
murder, but became hopelessly deadlocked on second degree murder.
A second trial was ordered.
'It's Wrong to Kill Somebody, but You Want
to Protect Your Family'
The first vote during deliberations in the
second jury trial was relatively evenly split between convicting
on second degree murder and voluntary manslaughter.
"About the only thing we did have an issue with
was whether it was premeditated or a spur-of-the-moment thing,"
said juror David Miles, an electrical engineer.
He said the jury generally agreed from the start that
vigilante justice had to be punished, but it was vexed when it
came to deciding exactly how to punish a woman who had apparently
been through what Kimberly had.
"I think the main feeling was that you
shouldn't take justice into your own hands," Miles said of the
jury deliberations, before adding, "but on the other side of the
coin, if you were thrust into that situation, how would you react?
You are brought up that you're supposed to protect your family at
all costs, so it's really kind of a mixed thing."
He said he felt that what swayed the second
jury toward a voluntary manslaughter charge was the mitigating
factor that Kimberly feared Hundley, who had allegedly threatened
Kimberly after she went to police to complain that Hundley's son
had molested her children.
"Being a father myself, it was very difficult
because I wasn't sure I wouldn't have done the same thing," said
Miles. "You know, it's wrong to kill somebody, but you want to
protect your family and I felt that's where she was at. She felt
she was at the end of her rope. She had been dealing with [threats
and intimidation] for several months, and when she got that latest
piece of news it just broke her spirit. And she felt she had to
take care of it."
The Letter of the Law
Another juror from the second trial, Brenda
Newman, who retired three years ago from her job in a bank, said
she knew from the start that she would have to force herself to
put her personal feelings aside and follow the letter of the law.
"I knew the law would be the first priority,"
she told ABC News. "And that I could not act on my own feelings. I
knew that I had to separate the way I felt as to what I might have
done from what the law is, so I focused in on that the entire
time."
"And it was very difficult,'' she said. "I
could relate to her, especially as a mother. But like I said I
wanted everything to be completely fair because I knew I had to
live with it afterwards. I thought she felt helpless and that she
was trying to protect her children. I did not feel like it was
planned out. I felt like it was just a moment of passion."
Like Miles and other jurors from the second
trial who spoke to ABC News, Newman said the jurors were adamant
that they reach a conclusion on the charges in order to spare
Kimberly's obviously damaged children from having to take the
stand a third time in a third trial.
"Everyone in there agreed that we needed to
come to a decision, but we agreed that it had to be one everyone
could live with," said Newman.
Kimberly is expected to begin serving her
sentence next month. With good behavior, she hopes to be home with
her family by January.