Boyd, Antwoin Dewaun v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 27, 2013
Docket05-12-00479-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Boyd, Antwoin Dewaun v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Affirm and Opinion Filed August 27, 2013

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas

No. 05-12-00479-CR

ANTWOIN DEWAUN BOYD, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 2 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F10-00650-I

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Bridges, Lang, and Myers Opinion by Justice Bridges Appellant Antwoin Dewaun Boyd appeals from his conviction for murder and his

accompanying sentence of 59 years’ imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. In three issues, appellant

argues: (1) the evidence is legally insufficient to support the conviction; (2) the trial court erred

in admitting extraneous offense evidence; and (3) the trial court erred in not delivering disputed

testimony to the jury in response to a jury note. We affirm.

Background

Everette Jarvis was shot and killed outside his apartment on March 30, 2006. His

girlfriend, Phyllissia Dudley, was also shot, but survived the incident. Dudley described Jarvis

as the “bootleg” for the apartment complex, selling beer, cigarettes, and other items.

Dudley testified she had been at Francine “Lisa” Williams’s apartment on March 30.

Around midnight, she and Jarvis went to the store. When they got back, a man named “Marvin” ran up to the car and told Jarvis “it’s going down.” When Dudley and Jarvis walked around the

corner toward Jarvis’s apartment, Marvin and appellant were standing by some bushes. As

Dudley and Jarvis walked past appellant and Marvin, two gunshots were fired. Dudley identified

appellant in court and in a photograph as the person she called, “L.A.” As Dudley turned

around, she saw appellant “take that last shot, that third shot” as he stood over Jarvis. Appellant

then ran away, and Jarvis died.

Dudley testified appellant looked different the night of the shooting, noting he was

skinnier and wearing black clothing. Because this incident took place over six years before trial,

Dudley acknowledged she no longer remembered every detail.

When someone told her she was bleeding, Dudley realized she had also been shot.

An ambulance took her to Parkland Hospital. While she was there, a detective attempted to talk

to her, but she refused, stating she did not want to believe Jarvis was dead. A few hours later,

Dudley described the two suspects to the police, and later identified a photograph of Marvin,

whom she knew. Dudley did not remember being shown appellant’s photograph in 2006 and did

not recall much of her conversation with the officers, because she had been sedated with

morphine. When Dudley did not identify appellant in a photograph shown to her a few days after

the shooting, she explained it was because she was fully sedated and “going in and out.” Dudley

explained to the jury that identifying appellant was “a little fuzzy” for her, because she had only

seen him one or two times. However, she stated she will never forget the way he looked.

Dudley testified she remembered things very clearly after she stopped taking medicine.

Dudley did not know appellant or where he was from, and only learned his name was “L.A.”

from others. Dudley testified appellant’s real name, Antwoin Boyd, kept circulating around the

apartment complex, so she pulled up his picture on the Internet in 2010 and saw that he was “the

right person,” who committed the murder. In the photograph on the internet, appellant was biting

–2– his lip the same way he did on the night of the shooting. Prior to that time, Dudley did not know

appellant’s real name.

She did not remember telling the police that the shooter was 5’7” tall, but remembered

appellant’s face and what he was wearing. Dudley had no doubt that appellant stood over Jarvis

and shot him. Dudley stated, “[Y]ou can’t forget somebody after they done hurt you.”

Brandon Boney testified he was the night supervisor for security guards at Creekwood

Village Apartments on March 30, 2006. Boney was standing at the front gates of the apartment

complex when he heard gunshots. He went around the building and saw a black male with a

bullet wound to his head, a black female who had also been shot and was on top of the man, and

another black female standing nearby. There were several people who came around the area after

the shots were fired. One black female told him that the shooter jumped over a fence into the

parking lot on the north side of the complex. There were no security officers watching the fence

on the north side when the gunshots occurred.

Dallas Police Officer Robert O’Conner testified that, on March 30, 2006, he received a

shooting call around 12:30 a.m. After he arrived at the scene, O’Conner determined that the

victim was already dead. O’Conner talked to people at the scene to try to get information about a

suspect. Officers determined the suspect had gone over a fence leading out of the complex,

about 40 yards from the victim’s body.

Dallas Police Detective Junius Rucker testified that he was the crime scene detective,

who processed the scene. Rucker collected three .380 cartridge casings that were all fairly close

to the victim. No gun was recovered from the scene.

Dallas Police Detective Dale Lundberg testified he responded to the crime scene,

interviewed a few witnesses, showed a lineup, and searched an apartment for a gun. Around

5:00 a.m. on the day of the shooting, Lundberg interviewed Dudley. Dudley gave a description

–3– of the shooter, indicating he was wearing a black jacket. Dudley believed that the person who

was with Marvin was originally from New Orleans. Later that day, Dudley told Lundberg that

she was mistaken about the shooter being from New Orleans.

Francine “Lisa” Williams testified she was on probation in Georgia for fraud in obtaining

public assistance and had been convicted of damage to property. Williams knew Jarvis and

Dudley. Jarvis helped Williams start a candy store in the apartments, while Jarvis ran a bootleg

operation and sold marijuana. Williams also knew Marvin, who spent time at Jarvis’s house.

Williams also knew appellant, who was known as “L.A.,” and saw him regularly at the

apartment complex.

On March 30, 2006, Jarvis and Dudley were at Williams’s house and then went to the

store. Williams had just talked to Jarvis, who said they were back from the store, when she

heard a shot. Williams went out on her balcony, and she could see Jarvis’s feet as he was lying

on the ground by the bushes. Williams testified she saw appellant standing over Jarvis and saw

appellant fire another shot. Appellant then ran toward a wooden fence beside the apartments.

Williams testified Marvin was several feet away when appellant fired the shot. Williams

affirmed that it was appellant, not Marvin, who had the gun.

As appellant and Marvin ran toward the fence, which was near Williams’s apartment, she

saw appellant hand Marvin the gun. Williams went back into her apartment and did not see them

go over the fence. Williams did not leave her apartment until the ambulance and police arrived.

Williams explained she did not tell the police that night what she had seen because she was

scared.

Police officers talked to her the next day in the apartment manager’s office. Williams

explained Detective Trevino showed her a photograph of Marvin and a series of photographs

containing appellant’s photograph, which she identified as the shooter. Williams picked

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