Bailey, Clarence v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 2013
Docket05-11-00503-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Bailey, Clarence v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Allirm and Opinion Filed March 4. 2013

In The Qlourt of 1ppea1 fiftb itrict of Z!Iexa at afta

No. 05-1 1-00503-CR

CLARENCE L BAILEY, Appellant

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 6 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F09-23666-X

OPINION Before Justices Lang-Miers, Myers, and Richter’ Opinion By Justice Lang-Miers

Appellant Clarence L. Bailey appeals his conviction for capital murder. In five issues, he

challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conviction, the trial court’s rulings on

his motion to dismiss the indictment, and the admission of certain evidence. For the following

reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On June 16, 1992, in Garland. Texas, 79-year-old Elma Adkins was in her son’s kitchen

helping him pack to move to a new house a short distance away. At the house with her were her

The Honorable Martin E. Richter, Retired Justice. Court of Appeals, Fifth District of Texas at Dallas, sitting by assignment. sons I 2yearo1d daughter. Melania, I OyearoId son, Adam, and 9yearold son, Mark. Melania

was in the living area and the two boys were playing in the bedroom. Adkins’s son, Ronnie

Tyler, his wife, and their Iwo oldest children had taken a load of belongings to the new house.

Around pm, Melania heard a knock on the door and thought it was her dad coming back from

the new house. Then she heard a kick, “the door flung open,” and two guys with guns came in

the house. The men were wearing black clothing and ski masks. Melania testified that her

grandmother came out of the kitchen, saw the men, cursed, put her hands up in front of her face,

and turned. One of the gunmen shot Adkins on the left side of her face. She fell on the kitchen

floor, where she (lied. The other gunman shot Melania in the shoulder: the bullet exited her body

and shattered the glass fireplace screen. Melania pretended to be dead, but watched the men

through mostly shut eyes. She saw them go toward the bedroom. She also saw a shadow on the

wall outside and thought there was a third person with the gunmen.

Mark and Adam hid in the closet when they heard the gunshots. They opened the closet

door slightly and saw the two gunmen standing in the bedroom. The gunmen shot at the boys

several times and then left. Melania sai(l that as the gunmen left they “were whooping and

hollering like they just did something right. And they ran out the front door.” They removed their

masks as they left, but she did not see their faces.

Melania went to check on her brothers. Mark had been shot in the leg and Adam had been

shot in the side and chest. She moved them to the bathroom, told Mark to help Adam put

pressure on the wounds to stop the bleeding, and locked them in the bathroom. Then she called

911 from the kitchen and described what happened to the operator. The operator stayed on the

The record showed that Ronnie Tyler’s real name was Ronnie Adkins. Tyler testified that he and his family were in the witness protection program, and Tyler was the name he was going by at the time of the murder. For clarity, we will use “Tyler’ in place of the references to “Adkins.”

2 line with Melania until emergency personnel arrived, The children survived hut were unable to

identify the gunmen.

Officer Brian McDulYie was dispatched to the scene. He saw a black nylon cloth or

stocking in the grass. He said it did not appear to be a ski mask. Neighbors told MeDuffie that

they heard tires squealing, and McDuffie found tire marks in the street near the house, One of the

neighbors saw a blue car leaving the area. The neighbors also told McDuffie that the week before

this incident one or more black males were in the neighborhood asking them about the residents

of the house.

McDuffie canvassed the area hotels and motels for (lark—skinned males with a vehicle

matching the descriptions the neighbors gave. I-Ic found a match: Dedrick Jones. from I-fernando,

Mississippi. a town near Memphis, Tennessee. The registration showed an arrival and departure

date the week before the murder.

The police determined that the motive for the murder was a dispute over money Jones

had given to Tyler, a bail bondsman, for Jones’s girlfriend’s bail. The police learned that in the

weeks before the murder, Jones’s girlfriend, Santina Jeffries, was arrested at a bus station in

Houston, Texas, with five kilos of cocaine that she was carrying for a drug dealer in Memphis

named Edward Williams. Her bail was set at $200,000. Tyler agreed to post the bond for a total

of $22,000, which included Tyler’s fee of $2.000. Jones and two other men drove to Tyler’s

house in Garland to give Tyler the money for the bond. The testimony conflicted about whether

Jones ever gave Tyler all the money or only a portion. Shortly before the murder Jones called

Tyler and asked for his bond money back. Tyler agreed to refund all but $500, hut Jones wanted

all of the money back. Jones threatened Tyler, but Tyler thought he was just “throwing his chest

out . . . .“ Jones said, “Man, I’m coming down there to get my money; don’t make me come

down there and . . . do something that I don’t want to do.” Jones also left voicemail messages on

3 Tyler’s answering machine stating, “I am coming to get my money, don’t make me come down

there and do something that I don’t want to do. Tyler last spoke to Jones a day or two before the

intirder. Ii was a short conversation, and Jones said he was coming to get his money and did not

“want to have no problem out of you. . . . And remember, don’t make me (10 anything that I don’t

Want to do

Having determined a motive for the murder, the police identified three suspects during

the course of their investigation: Jones; appellant’s brother, Ronnie Ollie. who was said to he

Jones’s right-hand man; and Jeffries’ brother Anthony Troy Rogers. The State brought charges

against Jones and Ollie in 1993, but they had “rock-solid” alibis. A female friend said Jones was

with her in Memphis when the shootings occurred, and Ollie was involved in a traffic accident iii

Memphis about the same time as the shootings in Garland. The grand jury declined to indict

them. The police were unable to locate Anthony Rogers, and the case went cold.

In 1995, Williams, the drug dealer in Memphis, was serving time in a federal penitentiary

and contacted the Garland police with information about the Adkins murder. He told the police

that he, Jones, and Ollie, grew up together in Mississippi and that Jones and Ollie, among others,

worked for him in his drug business. Williams said he and Jones were at the bus station when

Jeffries was arrested. He said Jones contacted a bail bondsman in Memphis about posting

Jeffries’s bond arid the Memphis bail bondsman in turn called Tyler. Williams said he gave Jones

a kilo of cocaine “to turn into cash” for Jeffries’s bond, but Jones lost the money gambling.

Williams then gave Jones $20,000 in cash. He said Jones and Ollie went to Texas a couple of

times, but each time they came back without Jeffries. Then one morning Jones came to

Williams’s house; Jones had a handgun, either a 357 or .45, a mask, and gloves. Jones said he

was going back to Texas to find Tyler and he “was going to get [Jeffries] out of jail or find Mr.

[Tyler] and kill his family.” Jones said Jeffries’s brother was waiting in the car and that they

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