Anthony Wade Brown v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 4, 2008
Docket01-08-00081-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Anthony Wade Brown v. State (Anthony Wade Brown v. State) 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
Anthony Wade Brown v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion Issued December 4, 2008

Opinion Issued December 4, 2008


In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-08-00081-CR


ANTHONY WADE BROWN, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 338th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1048441



MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Anthony Wade Brown appeals his conviction for first degree felony murder.  Brown pleaded not guilty.  The jury found Brown guilty, and the trial court assessed punishment at forty-five years’ confinement.  In three issues, Brown contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support a guilty verdict, and that he was unfairly prejudiced by an improperly admitted hearsay statement.  We conclude that the evidence is legally and factually sufficient to support his conviction, and that the contested statement was properly admitted.  We therefore affirm.

Background

          On the evening of November 25, 2005, Anthony Wade Brown and Michael Jnlouis, also known as “Twin” and “Yane” respectively, went to Tyrone Norris’s apartment looking for Christy Wallen.  Norris told Brown and Jnlouis that Wallen was not there, and they left.  Later that night, Wallen arrived at Norris’s home, and he informed her that Brown and Jnlouis were looking for her.  Approximately five minutes later, Jnlouis and Brown returned to Norris’s apartment to find Wallen.  At the same time, Marie Mojica and another man were in the back bedroom of the apartment where they had been drinking, smoking crack cocaine, and watching a movie with Norris.

Norris testified that he let Brown and Jnlouis into the apartment so they could talk to Wallen, and the three of them began to argue about the “stuff” that they believed she had taken from them.  According to Norris, either Brown or Jnlouis slapped Wallen, and Norris told them to take their conflict out of his apartment.  Jnlouis and Brown began to drag Wallen out of the apartment.  Wallen resisted and asked Norris for help, but Norris continued to tell the three of them to “get out of here with it” because he did not want to be involved in the altercation.  Norris testified that Wallen continued to wrestle with the men as they attempted to drag her out of the apartment, and then he heard two gunshots.  He testified that he never saw a firearm, but that he saw sparks when the shots were fired.  He could not tell who fired the shots because it was dark in the apartment.  Norris further testified on cross-examination that there was a third man whom he had never seen before at the apartment with Brown and Jnlouis.  After the gunshots, Norris started “screaming and hollering” in terror and ran out of the apartment. 

Marie Mojica testified that she was in the back bedroom of Norris’s apartment when she heard Wallen asking Norris for help.  She testified that she did not see anyone come into the apartment because she was in the back bedroom, but she heard Wallen arguing with someone over “dope” and became scared.  She testified that there was a woman in the front room where Norris, Wallen, Brown and Jnlouis were.  She heard the woman say, “Twin, don’t mess up your life like this, don’t do this,” and then she heard a gunshot.  She ran out of the apartment to someone’s house across the street.  At trial, Brown objected to the statement as hearsay.  The trial court judge overruled the objection.   

Later, police questioned Norris and Mojica.  Both identified Brown and Jnlouis[1] in police photo spreads as having been at the apartment on the night of the murder.

          Officer A. Arevalo of the Houston Police Department arrived at the scene of the incident and found a dead female lying on her side in a large pool of blood, just inside the threshold of Norris’s apartment.  After preserving the scene, he searched the apartment and found no one else inside. Officer Arevalo then found Norris nearby and identified him as a potential witness.  Officer C. Scales and Officer M. Scott questioned Norris and Mojica in the months following the crime.

          Clay Davis, a criminalist with the Houston Police Department Crime Lab, compared the DNA samples of the items found at the scene with the DNA samples of Norris, Brown, Wallen, and Jnlouis.  Davis’s comparison excluded Brown and Jnlouis from being major contributors to the DNA samples of Wallen’s left and right fingernail scrapings, her pants, and the bandana that was found at the scene. The comparison also excluded Brown as being a contributor to the DNA profile found on the ski mask, but Jnlouis could not be excluded, meaning that there was an extremely high chance that Jnlouis was one of two contributors to the DNA on the mask.

          Dr. Stephen Wilson performed an autopsy on Wallen’s body. He found gunshot wounds on her head, neck, and right hand.  Dr. Wilson also found a number of contusions, abrasions, and scraping injuries on her skin.  He testified that some of them were old injuries, but others were recent and may have been caused by a physical altercation shortly before her death.  Dr. Wilson concluded that Wallen died as a result of a gunshot wound that was inflicted at a close range.  He also found that there was cocaine in her system at the time of the incident.

Christie Carrington testified that Brown and Jnlouis were with her during the entire weekend of Wallen’s murder.  She testified that she picked them up at around three or four o’clock on Friday afternoon and drove them to her house to attend a party there.  She returned them to one of their mothers’ homes on Sunday after she answered a call from the police on either Brown of Jnlouis’s cell phone.  She further testified that neither Jnlouis nor Brown had a car, and that the scene of the murder was thirty-five to forty minutes away from her home.  Carrington had multiple prior theft convictions, and she did not tell the investigating officers that Jnlouis and Brown were with her the night of the murder.

Legal and Factual Sufficiency

          In his first and second issues, Brown contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support a guilty verdict because the State presented no evidence proving that he either caused Wallen’s death or was a party to her murder.

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Anthony Wade Brown v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-wade-brown-v-state-texapp-2008.