Brandon Keith Harris v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 2025
Docket06-24-00043-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Brandon Keith Harris v. the State of Texas (Brandon Keith Harris v. the State of Texas) 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 Keith Harris v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-24-00043-CR

BRANDON KEITH HARRIS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 188th District Court Gregg County, Texas Trial Court No. 54,868-A

Before Stevens, C.J., van Cleef and Rambin, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Stevens MEMORANDUM OPINION

After a jury found Brandon Keith Harris guilty of capital murder, the trial court sentenced

him to life in prison. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 19.03 (Supp.). Harris appeals, maintaining

that (1) there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction, (2) the trial court erred when it

denied his motion to quash the indictment, and (3) the trial court erred when it admitted evidence

of Harris’s prior extraneous offenses. We overrule Harris’s points of error and affirm the trial

court’s judgment.

I. Background

There are three critical dates in this case: January 6, 2019; January 29, 2020; and

January 30, 2020. On January 6, 2019, Harris had a physical altercation with one of his

apartment neighbors, Kiara O’Neal. On January 29, 2020, Harris had a meeting with Pancy

Daniels, who was the property manager for the Ware Meadows apartment complex (the

Meadows). Harris and O’Neal lived at the Meadows. The third date is January 30, 2020, and the

events of that day resulted in Harris’s arrest for and conviction of capital murder, with the

alleged underlying offense of retaliation. The events that occurred on those three dates are

interrelated.

A. The January 6, 2019, Incident

1. Pancy Daniels

Daniels testified that, in January 2019, O’Neal, Harris, and Harris’s wife, Molly Jarvis,

were living at the Meadows. On January 6, 2019, Daniels was made aware of a physical

altercation that involved Harris, Jarvis, and O’Neal. Police were called and an arrest was made.

2 Due to the January 6 incident, Daniels terminated Jarvis’s lease agreement. She also informed

Jarvis and Harris that they were banned from coming on the Meadows property. Daniels did not

take any action against O’Neal despite her involvement in the January 6 incident.

2. Kiara O’Neal

O’Neal testified that she became acquainted with Harris because they lived at the

Meadows at the same time. O’Neal described the beginning of their relationship as “fairly close

to each other,” and they knew some of the same people. O’Neal stated, “[A]t one point we did

become a little more familiar with each other where we had became intimate -- intimately

involved at one point, but it wasn’t anything of a continuation.” She stressed that their

relationship was never “romantic” and that, eventually, “[i]t just went right back to being cordial

and friends but nothing -- nothing more.”

On January 6, 2019, Jarvis, knocked on O’Neal’s door and “kind of colorfully” asked

O’Neal if she was having a sexual relationship with Harris. Jarvis told O’Neal that Harris had a

recording that would confirm that they had been having a sexual relationship. O’Neal testified

that she knew Jarvis’s assertion was not true, but because she knew that gossip spread like

“wildfire” inside the apartment complex, she invited Jarvis into her apartment to discuss the

situation. When Jarvis entered O’Neal’s apartment, she told O’Neal that Harris was outside.

O’Neal stepped outside and saw Harris with a “kind of deranged not-really-here look on his face,

like maybe he was intoxicated.”

When all three were inside O’Neal’s apartment, O’Neal agreed to talk to them about

Jarvis’s allegation. Because Jarvis told O’Neal that Harris had a recording proving that her

3 accusation was true, Harris pulled a telephone out of his pocket. He did not show O’Neal the

recording but, instead, put the phone back in his pocket. When he removed his hand from his

pocket a second time, “he launche[d] for [O’Neal’s] throat and that’s when [Harris and O’Neal]

began fighting. After the pair fought for a while, O’Neal ran into her kitchen to retrieve a knife.

When she returned, Jarvis was gone, but Harris was still there. O’Neal testified that she told

Harris to leave her apartment, but he refused to leave. At that point, O’Neal exited her apartment

and went to a neighbor’s apartment. Harris followed her and pushed the neighbor aside so that

he could enter the neighbor’s apartment to gain access to O’Neal. Upon entry, Harris picked up

a lamp and hit O’Neal with it. O’Neal said that she had “another surge of adrenalin,” so she

placed Harris in a headlock and then took him to the ground where they both remained “for a

while.”

Not long after that, O’Neal said that she stopped fighting Harris because Jarvis, who had

returned, was pleading with her to let Harris go. O’Neal then admitted to Jarvis that she had

been in an intimate relationship with Harris. O’Neal testified that Jarvis “didn’t like that and she

assaulted [her].” O’Neal claimed that Jarvis and Harris “began to jump [her] together.” By that

time, they were fighting outside of the neighbor’s apartment. Another of O’Neal’s neighbors,

Brian Robinson, heard the disturbance outside and ended up restraining Harris in a choke hold.

O’Neal said that she returned to her apartment.

3. Brian Robinson

In January 2019, Brian Robinson lived at the Meadows in apartment 705, which was

“right next door” to O’Neal’s apartment. Robinson and his family were watching television

4 when Robinson heard O’Neal and Harris fighting. When he opened his front door, he saw

“[Harris] grabbing [O’Neal].” Robinson said that Harris had his hands around O’Neal’s throat,

and he was “like choking her or something.” At one point, the pair went into a neighbor’s

apartment, but they came right back outside. After their return, Harris bent O’Neal over the

apartment railing while they continued fighting. Eventually, Robinson “grabbed” Harris and

placed him on the ground. When another neighbor tapped Robinson on the shoulder and told

him to let go of Harris, Robinson complied with the request. Harris then proceeded to run to his

apartment stating that he was going to retrieve his gun. Robinson said that, the minute he heard

the word “gun,” he ran to a convenience store and said, “Somebody call 9-1-1.” He told the

person to tell the 9-1-1 operator that “[t]here’s a guy out there with a gun trying to kill -- kill

everybody or whatever.” Robinson said he did not see Harris with the gun because, when he

returned from the convenience store, the police had already arrived and were arresting Harris.

B. The January 29, 2020, Incident

About a year after the fight between O’Neal and Harris, Harris called Daniels asking her

if she would meet him for lunch because “he needed to speak to [her].” After two phone calls

from Harris, Daniels told him that she would meet him at a McDonald’s restaurant. Daniels’s

niece, Tia, who worked for Daniels as her assistant, went with her to meet Harris. Daniels said

that she did not know Harris very well. She explained, “To say I knew of him, I knew his name,

5 yes. I knew his mother’s name and his father’s name.[1] I can say that.” Tia knew who Harris

was, but she did not know him personally.

When Daniels and Tia arrived at McDonald’s, Harris was already there. Tia sat down on

a stool to wait for an order she had placed.

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