Boan, Preston Quin v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 30, 2013
Docket05-11-01702-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Boan, Preston Quin v. State (Boan, Preston Quin 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
Boan, Preston Quin v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

AFFIRMED; Opinion Filed July 30, 2013.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-11-01702-CR No. 05-11-01703-CR PRESTON QUINN BOAN, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 296th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 401-80538-07 and 401-80539-07

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Lang, Myers, and Evans Opinion by Justice Lang

Preston Quinn Boan appeals from two jury convictions for injuring his grandparents for

which he was sentenced to forty years and ten years’ confinement concurrently. In a single

issue, Boan asserts the jury’s rejection of his insanity defense was based on factually insufficient

evidence in that it was so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be

manifestly unjust. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

The offenses occurred in the early morning hours of January 26, 2007 and followed an

argument between Boan and his grandfather. Boan, who was living with his grandparents and

aunt at the time, shoved both his grandparents to the ground, repeatedly kicked his seventy-eight-

year-old grandmother in the head, and choked and struck his seventy-six-year-old grandfather

with a wooden rod. He then took his grandfather’s wallet and fled in his grandfather’s truck. Part of the incident in which the assaults occurred was witnessed by Boan’s aunt, who

called 9-1-1. Responding officers found Boan’s injured grandfather on the front porch and

Boan’s grandmother unconscious in the living room. Boan’s grandfather was treated at the

hospital for multiple abrasions and bruises and was released that same day. Boan’s grandmother

was flown to the hospital, where she remained for over two weeks. Boan was arrested six days

after the assaults at a rest stop in western Oklahoma.

Boan gave notice prior to trial that he intended to raise the defense of insanity. He was

examined by Dr. Michael Pittman, a psychiatrist, who concluded he was insane at the time of the

assaults. At the State’s request, he was also examined by Dr. Jack Price, a psychologist, who

concluded he was sane.

At trial, Boan’s aunt testified she was awakened by “[c]rashing noises [and] thuds”

around 4:30 the morning of the assaults. She went to the living room to see what was happening,

found her mother face down in a pool of blood, and witnessed Boan beating her father with a

rod. Boan told her to sit down and that he intended to bind her father’s hands behind his back

with tape. She pleaded with Boan to not tie her father’s hand behind his back because her

father’s shoulders were “in real bad shape.” Boan stopped. Shortly thereafter, Boan left the

house.

Oklahoma highway patrol trooper Kendall Johnson testified he found Boan at a rest stop

asleep in the grandfather’s truck on February 1, 2007. He arrested Boan after learning Boan had

two outstanding warrants. According to Johnson, Boan agreed to answer questions, but Boan’s

answer “seemed to be unusual.” For example, when Johnson asked about the truck, Boan replied

he had “built [it] by hand” and it was “equipped with a nuclear reactor” and “powered by nuclear

propulsion.” When Johnson asked about Boan’s grandparents, Boan stated he “wanted to place

[them] under citizen’s arrest . . . [for] cannibalism” because they looked at him “like [he] was a

–2– plate of scrambled eggs and bacon” and “were trying to eat [him].” Johnson testified he believed

Boan needed a mental health evaluation, but that Boan was “still cognizant” and knew that

cannibalism was an offense. The video-recording of the arrest was played to the jury.

Texas Ranger A.P. Davidson testified he interviewed Boan in Oklahoma. Boan told

Davidson he was “on microwave lockdown” and that his grandparents were going to eat him.

Boan said his grandparents were “zombies” who “had just wandered in off the street” and

“weren’t truly his grandparents.” Also, Boan told Davidson that there was a conspiracy against

him and he was “trying to escape a crime being committed against him, namely murder.” In

Davidson’s opinion, Boan did not actually believe what he was saying. Asked if Boan’s

statements suggested Boan “seemed to believe” conspiracy, murder, and cannibalism were

“wrong,” Davidson replied he did. Davidson’s interview with Boan was recorded and played to

the jury.

Boan’s grandmother testified about the assault by Boan and said Boan later apologized in

letters he sent to her and her husband. Boan also mailed her a letter post-marked November 1,

2008 that stated as follows:

[P]lease contact the White House @ 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, D.C. 20500 and say I’m your POW again and I must be a cyborg and in a max security container home now or you must keep I POW!

Price, the psychologist who examined Boan at the State’s request, testified that prior to

meeting with Boan, he reviewed police reports, law enforcement investigations, the recordings of

Boan’s arrest and interview with Davidson, and a “significant number” of mental health records

from different hospitals. Based upon this information, he believed Boan had “a lot of psychiatric

and psychological problems” that “likely . . . constituted a severe mental illness.” According to

Price, Boan had been given different diagnoses throughout the years, but they all involved “some

kind of mood disorder” with a “psychotic component where he held patently false beliefs . . . [or]

–3– delusions.” The last diagnosis of Boan, received a month before the offenses, was depression

with psychotic features.

Price testified Boan was cooperative during the evaluation, and his thinking was “logical

and goal directed.” Boan’s beliefs, however, were “bizarre at times.” Boan told Price that the

government, “especially . . . the Pentagon,” told him to take certain actions, including to beat up

his grandparents and steal his grandfather’s truck. Boan also told Price that he believed “the

Pentagon wouldn’t tell him to do something . . . wrong.” However, Price remarked Boan

expressed “a lot of anger” about his grandparents and told Price he struck his grandfather

because his grandfather “had an attitude.” Boan told Price he was not surprised he was arrested

because he beat up his grandparents. In Price’s opinion, the assaults on the grandparents were

the result of anger and not delusional beliefs. Price believed Boan knew his conduct was wrong,

as evidenced by his fleeing the scene, and although Boan suffered from a mental illness, he was

not insane at the time of the offenses. Price testified that he would have concluded Boan was

insane at the time of the offenses if, absent any “other factors,” Boan’s knowledge of what is

wrong and right was “eclipsed” by his beliefs that (1) his actions were being controlled by the

Pentagon and the Pentagon told him to act, or (2) he was justified in harming his grandparents

because they were “going to eat him.”

Dr. Pittman, the psychiatrist who examined Boan following Boan’s notice of his intent to

raise an insanity defense, disagreed with Price. He believed Boan was insane at the time of the

offenses. Pittman explained he gave more “credence” to Boan’s account of the events given

following the arrest than Boan’s account of the events during the evaluations. This is because of

the proximity in time of the earlier interviews to the assaults. Additionally, Pittman spoke with

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