Antonio Jerrlee Ary v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 2020
Docket09-19-00244-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Antonio Jerrlee Ary v. State (Antonio Jerrlee Ary 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
Antonio Jerrlee Ary v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-19-00244-CR NO. 09-19-00245-CR __________________

ANTONIO JERRLEE ARY, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 75th District Court Liberty County, Texas Trial Cause Nos. CR32278 & CR32279 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found Antonio Jerrlee Ary guilty of burglary of a habitation, with intent

to commit aggravated robbery, and capital murder of Ray Burger. See Tex. Penal

Code Ann. §§ 19.03(a)(2), 30.02(d). The trial court assessed punishment at twenty

years of imprisonment for the burglary and life imprisonment without the possibility

for parole for the capital murder. In two issues on appeal, Ary (1) asserts the trial

court committed reversible error by admitting evidence consisting of text messages

1 he argues pertain to an extraneous offense and (2) challenges the legal sufficiency

of the evidence supporting Ary’s convictions because he contends there was

insufficient evidence to corroborate the accomplice witness testimony. We affirm.

Evidence at Trial

Testimony of Jonathan Johnson

Jonathan Johnson testified that he lived near 1010 Elaine Street with his wife

and children in September 2015. According to Johnson, Michelle and Charles Brown

rented a trailer home at 1010 Elaine Street that was near other trailers, and that

Johnson would talk to them “[e]very once in a awhile when they would dig through

[his] trash and just kind of leave stuff scattered.” According to Johnson, “[n]ormally

there was a lot of traffic in and out [of the trailers at] all times of day and night[,]”

and he agreed that there were “sketchy people coming in and out[.]”

Johnson testified that at approximately 10:45 p.m. or 11 p.m. on September

13, 2015, he was on his front porch and noticed a “blue station wagon like a 350

Magnum” pull up on the street alongside the driveway at 1010 Elaine instead of into

the driveway, which “seemed a little abnormal[.]” According to Johnson, two

African-American males got out of the vehicle, one from the driver’s side back seat

and one from the passenger’s side front seat. Johnson testified he saw the “stocky”

male that got out of the front passenger seat stumble and stabilize himself on a

mailbox, the taller and slender male from the back driver’s seat helped the other male

2 a little, and they “took off to the front side of the trailer which [Johnson] lost sight

of.” Johnson testified that he heard a female voice from inside the car saying, “Hurry

up. Hurry up.” Johnson went inside his house to get a cigarette and was getting ready

to step back out on his front porch when he heard a gunshot from the direction of the

nearby trailers. He testified he ran to his back bedroom, grabbed a gun to protect

himself and his family, looked out the front door peephole to see if anything was

going on, and saw that the car he had seen earlier was gone.

Johnson testified that he heard someone say, “They killed him. They killed

him[,]” and Johnson assumed it was Michelle Brown saying it because she was the

only female he knew to be living there. According to Johnson, people were

frantically running around in the trailer, and when Johnson stepped back outside his

house, he saw the back door of the trailer open and he heard someone screaming,

“You got to get out of here. Get out of here. You don’t need to be here[,]” and then

Johnson saw two white males leave the back of the trailer with a white bag and they

went into the vacant lot next door. Johnson called 911. Johnson testified that the

Browns and another female from inside the trailer house jumped in a red car and

tried to leave, and almost backed into the opposite ditch, and the police arrived and

activated the patrol car’s lights so the red car could not leave. Out of fear of

retaliation, Johnson did not want to provide a statement that night, but he told the

3 first police officer at the scene that he pawould provide a statement the next morning.

According to Johnson, he later gave a recorded statement to law enforcement.

Testimony of Officer Brian Chowns

Officer Brian Chowns with the Dayton Police Department testified that he

was working the evening shift on September 13, 2015, and he was dispatched around

10:30 or 10:45 p.m. to the trailer park on Elaine Street. In-car video from Chowns’

patrol car as he arrived on the scene was admitted into evidence and played for the

jury.

According to Officer Chowns, he was the first officer on the scene, and when

he was walking up to the scene, he heard loud voices from the furthest trailer. As he

was going around the corner at the mailbox he saw a red passenger car reversing

with the passenger side door open “like somebody was still trying to get into the

vehicle as they were trying to flee.” According to Officer Chowns, the vehicle almost

hit him, and it was traveling at a high rate of speed. Officer Chowns noticed the

driver’s face covered in blood, and he determined he “needed to get them stopped to

figure out what exactly was going on.” Officer Chowns stopped the vehicle, and he

pulled his weapon and held the driver at gunpoint, and four people got out of the

vehicle. According to Officer Chowns, the people were all talking at once and saying

that their son had been shot and he was dead in the trailer. Officer Chowns asked

4 them who did it, and they said they did not know but that it was somebody in a silver

passenger car.

Officer Chowns entered trailer “Number 4[]” through the front door and found

a white male lying on the floor in the back bedroom, not moving or breathing, with

a pool of blood around his head from an apparent gunshot wound to the head. The

door to the bedroom “was completely detached from the hinges[]” and the back door

was open. Officer Chowns called EMS and he and Officer Siebert cleared the house

for safety. Chowns testified that the EMT told him that the victim was deceased, and

detectives were notified to start working the scene and collecting evidence.

According to Chowns, the people outside were separated to keep them from

communicating with each other before being interviewed by law enforcement.

Officer Chowns described the people at the scene as upset and crying, and one person

with blood on his face “seemed dazed,” Chowns transported Charles Brown to the

police station.

Testimony of Charles Brown

Charles Brown testified that he and his wife, Michelle, lived in a rented mobile

home or trailer “Number 4” at 1010 Elaine Street in Dayton on September 13, 2015.

According to Brown, T.C. Duncan is a friend of his, and at that time Brown was

letting him stay in one of the bedrooms in the mobile home for a couple of days.

Brown explained that Duncan was dealing methamphetamines and would deliver

5 them to buyers, but that Duncan would sell the drugs outside the trailer and not inside

the trailer. Brown testified that he was using methamphetamines in September 2015,

and he would buy the drugs from Duncan.

Around 9:15 p.m. on the night of September 13, 2015, the Browns, Chucky

Hogan, and Jamie Storey left the mobile home to walk to the Chevron on FM 1960

because Storey, a friend of Duncan’s, wanted to get ice cream.

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