Aaron Jerrell Bennett v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
Docket10-19-00388-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Aaron Jerrell Bennett v. the State of Texas (Aaron Jerrell Bennett v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aaron Jerrell Bennett v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

No. 10-19-00388-CR

AARON JERRELL BENNETT, Appellant v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

From the 369th District Court Leon County, Texas Trial Court No. 18-0192CR

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The jury convicted Aaron Jerrell Bennett, Appellant, of the offense of burglary of

a habitation. TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §30.02. The jury then assessed Appellant’s

punishment at confinement for twenty-five years, and the trial court sentenced him

accordingly. We affirm.

Appellant presents three issues on appeal. In his first issue, Appellant contends

“[t]hat the evidence is legally insufficient.” Next, Appellant maintains that “[t]he trial court (sic) submission of Appellant’s purported theory of liability as severable was

egregiously harmful.” Finally, Appellant urges us to find that “the failure to charge the

jury with an accomplice witness instruction was egregiously harmful.”

Because Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the

verdict, we will review the evidence in some detail.

In the daytime hours of May 24, 2018, burglars broke into Jamie Ferguson’s home

in Leon County and stole several items from the home. Jamie taught school and was not

at home at the time.

The State charged Appellant with the burglary. The State also charged Thomas

Nitschmann with the burglary.

Immediately before the time that the burglary occurred, Nitschmann was

associated with New Harvest Rehabilitation Ministry. New Harvest Rehabilitation

Ministry was a ministry designed to assist drug and alcohol addicts in recovery;

Nitschmann was a drug addict and had had several convictions for drug offenses as well

as convictions for theft and burglary of a habitation.

In furtherance of the mission of New Harvest, Kenneth Scott with New Harvest

rented two rooms at a Dallas motel; Nitschmann stayed in one of the rooms. Nitschmann

had a conflict of some kind with the group and had decided to leave New Harvest and

go home to Conroe.

Bennett v. State Page 2 Appellant had a room at the same motel and his room was either next or close to

Nitschmann’s room. At some point, Appellant asked Nitschmann if he wanted to buy

some drugs or if he knew anyone who did.

Nitschmann needed a ride to his home in Conroe; he offered Appellant $100 to

take him there. At this point, Nitschmann had been taking methamphetamine and Xanex;

he did not recall whether he used cocaine with Appellant that night, but he said that it

was possible that he did; he was “very high.” Appellant was using “coke.”

Early the next morning, Appellant, Nitschmann, and a female left for Conroe. At

some point, Nitschmann woke up in the backseat. He testified that he remembers seeing

a “Centerville” sign. Appellant, according to Nitschmann, told him that he had two

choices: jump out of the car or get stabbed. Nitschmann said that he pointed to the first

house that he saw and told Appellant that that was where he lived. Nitschmann testified

that despite the threat that Appellant had made, Appellant pulled over and he and

Nitschmann walked up to the house together. They went to the front of the house first

but did not try to gain entry. They then went to the back of the house and, according to

Nitschmann, Appellant kicked in the backdoor and they both entered the house.

Nitschmann stated that he hid in one of the rooms of the house until Appellant left; he

did not know what Appellant did while they were inside the house.

Samuel Pierce, Jamie Ferguson’s relative, testified that, on the date of the burglary,

he saw a red vehicle parked at Jamie’s house. Appellant was standing near the vehicle;

Bennett v. State Page 3 the trunk was open. Appellant apparently saw Pierce and waived at him. When Pierce

could not confirm whether anyone should be at Jamie’s house, he called law enforcement.

Cody Wood, a deputy with the Leon County Sheriff’s Office, responded to the call

and met with Pierce at the scene. Pierce told Deputy Wood that a “white man” had been

walking back and forth between Pierce’s cousin’s house and his niece’s house. Deputy

Wood heard noises from inside a nearby shed. Deputy Wood found Nitschmann inside

the shed and Deputy Wood detained him. Nitschmann was “pretty amped up, sweating

pretty heavy.”

As Deputy Wood talked with Nitschmann, Nitschmann gave inconsistent

accounts of what had happened to him. One of those versions was that he had been

kidnapped in Bryan and forced into the car at knifepoint. When they arrived at Jamie’s

house, he was forced at gunpoint to enter the residence. At one point, Nitschmann said

that his kidnappers were two black men. At another point, he claimed that his

kidnappers were two white men. At yet another point, he maintained that a male and a

female kidnapped him. Deputy Wood testified that Nitschmann’s statements were all

inconsistent and much like statements made by someone under the influence of drugs.

About five days after the burglary, Wayne Sallee, an investigator with the Leon

County Sheriff’s Office, began an investigation into the burglary. Among other things,

Investigator Sallee reviewed the original offense report, photographs made from three

game cameras that were located on the property, and he talked with Nitschmann.

Bennett v. State Page 4 The photographs from the game cameras depicted the red vehicle that was at the

property; the paper tag on the vehicle was visible in the photograph. From information

on the tag, Investigator Sallee was able to determine that Appellant was the owner of the

vehicle, and that Mike Carson Motor Company was the lienholder.

Investigator Sallee learned that personnel at Mike Carson Motor Company had

installed a tracking device on Appellant’s vehicle so that they could know where the

vehicle was if they later needed to know that location. When the operator of the vehicle

turns the ignition off or on, he triggers the tracking device.

Personnel at Mike Carson Motor Company furnished Investigator Sallee with a

report made from information on the tracking device on Appellant’s vehicle. Information

in that report shows that on the night before the burglary, and into the early morning

hours on the day of the burglary, there were multiple activations of the tracking device.

The report from the tracking device showed that the vehicle left the Dallas motel around

7:00 a.m. on the morning of the burglary and the device tracked Appellants route from

the Dallas motel to the 5900 or 6000 block of FM 1119, the general vicinity of Jamie’s home.

The report showed a brief stop at a Centerville Jack-In-The-Box just prior to the stop at

Jamie’s home.

Jamie’s mother notified Jamie that there had been a burglary at Jamie’s home.

When Jamie arrived at her home, she noticed that several items that she normally kept in

a front room were in the front yard. She also noticed that a window in the front of her

Bennett v. State Page 5 house “was smashed.” When she went to the back of the house, Jamie also saw that “[t]he

back door was broke in completely off the hinges, almost” and that a small window

beside the door was also broken. When she went into her home after the burglary, she

saw that the “front bedroom, it was completely just like a tornado had gone through.

Everything was thrown everywhere that was in the closet was all over the room.”

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