Brandon Darrell Wilson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 2010
Docket01-09-00339-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Brandon Darrell Wilson v. State (Brandon Darrell Wilson 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
Brandon Darrell Wilson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 1, 2010

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NO. 01-09-00339-CR

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Brandon Darrell Wilson, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 260th District Court

Orange County, Texas*

Trial Court Case No. D-080345-R (Count Two)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury convicted appellant Brandon Darrell Wilson of robbery and sentenced him to 40 years’ confinement in prison and a $5,000 fine.  See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 29.02 (Vernon 2003).  On appeal, Wilson challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction because his co-conspirator, who initially told police that Wilson was involved in the robbery, testified at trial that he lied to the police about Wilson’s involvement with the crime.

          We affirm.

BACKGROUND

          Just after midnight on May 22, 2008, Wilson went to a gas-station convenience store in Orange County.  Rana Tamang was working alone as the night manager, talking on the phone to a friend.  Wilson took an energy drink from the cooler, walked to the counter, asked for Marlboro cigarettes, pulled a wrapped object from his waistband, put it on the counter, and demanded money.  Tamang, who believed the wrapped object to be a gun, told his friend he was being robbed, fumbled with the cash register, and then gave Wilson money and a package of Marlboro cigarettes.  These events were recorded on video by a surveillance camera.  Wilson fled and jumped into the bed of a dark-colored Ford pickup truck that was waiting outside for him.  Wilson’s roommate, Kelly Mancina, gave the police a statement in which he said he was driving the truck, but he recanted at trial.

          Officer L. Kemp was working as a patrol officer for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, and she responded to the broadcast about the robbery.  Tamang had called his store manager, who came to the convenience store and showed Kemp the surveillance video.  The video recording showed that the robber had facial hair and wore a baseball cap.  Kemp immediately recognized the robber, although she did not know his name.  The store was unable to make a copy of the video recording at that time, so Kemp asked the manager to pause the video recording so she could take a still picture of the robber with her mobile phone.  Then she sent the picture to other officers to solicit help in identifying the robber.

          Officer E. Shannon, who was working as a patrol officer for the City of Pinehurst in Orange County, was with City of Orange Police Officer J. Warner when Warner received the robber’s photo from Kemp.  Shannon recognized the robber as Wilson, because he had dealt with Wilson on other occasions.  In addition, Shannon testified that the truck that Tamang described as the getaway vehicle matched the truck that Shannon knew Wilson drove.  Shannon went to his office, got a picture of Wilson, and gave it to Warner.

          Later that morning, hours after the robbery, Officer J. Davis, a patrolman for the City of Orange Police Department, was working as an investigator on the day of the robbery.  He compiled a photographic lineup, including a recent photograph of Wilson, and showed it to Tamang.  Davis testified that Tamang identified Wilson without hesitiation.  Tamang also testified that he had identified Wilson from a photographic lineup, and Tamang identified Wilson at trial, saying he had no doubt that Wilson was the robber, despite the fact that Wilson appeared different at trial because his face was clean shaven.

          City of Orange Police Detective R. Estrello testified that he had dealt with Wilson in the past and that he immediately recognized him upon viewing the surveillance video.  He said, “No doubt in my mind that was him.”  Detective Estrello and Sergeant Jefferson went to Wilson’s last known address, where his mother told them that Wilson was living with a man named Tony Evans.  Estrello recalled that Wilson was with Evans the last time he dealt with him.  Evans told Estrello that Wilson moved in with Kelly Mancina and his family.  Estrello and Jefferson went to Mancina’s mobile home and found a truck that matched Tamang’s description of the getaway truck.  They also saw Wilson walk up, with a freshly shaved face and cuts on his scalp from where he had recently shaved his head.  Estrello said that the shoes Wilson wore matched those worn by the robber in the convenience store’s surveillance video.  Estrello knocked on the door, and Wilson identified himself.  Estrello attempted to arrest Wilson on outstanding warrants, but Wilson fled on foot, running through neighboring yards and hiding in tall grass.  Approximately 14 hours after the robbery, Estrello arrested Wilson.

          Estrello testified that he spoke with Mancina for over an hour during a recorded interview.  During that interview, Mancina admitted that he was driving the getaway truck and that he knew that Wilson was going to rob the convenience store.  Mancina told the police that they had been driving around and needed money for gas, and Wilson decided to rob the convenience store when his efforts at panhandling proved fruitless.  Mancina told the police that Wilson used Mancina’s son’s toy gun, wrapped in a sock, to threaten Tamang.  Mancina also said that Wilson shaved his head and face that morning, after the robbery.  Finally, Mancina told the police where they could locate the sock-wrapped toy gun, and the police later found it where Mancina said it would be.

         

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